This is a list of all the questions and their associated study carrel identifiers. One can learn a lot of the "aboutness" of a text simply by reading the questions.
identifier | question |
---|---|
13008 | After her broken questions to her deliverer,"What cut my mail? |
13008 | Gudrun Giuki''s daughter stood without, and these were the first words she spoke:''Where is now Sigurd, the lord of men, that my kinsmen ride first?'' |
13008 | How have I broken from sleep? |
13008 | How shall I get thee help, my hero?" |
13008 | Who has flung from me the dark spells?" |
14320 | And what have ye found in the monarch''s dome, Since last ye traversed the blue sea''s foam? |
14320 | If_ you_ died what more could be sung or said? |
14320 | What hopest thou now but checks and slights, Brief days, lone nights? |
14320 | What nightingale will sing to thee? |
14320 | Whence is it ye come with the flowers of Spring? |
14320 | Where wert thou when the days were long And steeped in Summer''s young delights? |
14320 | Where wert thou when the soft June nights Were faint with perfume, glad with song? |
14758 | But is this all that Galatea has to do? |
14758 | But what, indeed, is genius after all? |
14758 | But who could have warmed up to such a Romeo? |
14758 | On one of these occasions she naively asked Sarah Bernhardt why her portrait did not appear on the walls? |
14758 | The thought must have gone round the house among those who knew the facts-- Can this be only the seventh performance on the stage of this young girl?" |
14758 | Well may it be said of her--"What merit to be dropped on fortune''s hill? |
1593 | Who_ is_ there who has never heard, About the Burdock and the Bird? |
14358 | Ania iti mainaganan ari ditoy bagui? |
14358 | Ania iti parsua ni Apo Dios nga aoan ti matana aoan ti ngioatna quen aoan ti obetna quet mangan ti ladoc- ladoc? |
14358 | Ania ti uppat ti sacana dudua ti tugotna? |
14358 | Aniat aramid a duduat tugaona inganat panacaparsuana? |
14358 | Aripoyot What king(_ ari_) do you name in your body? |
14358 | Ayagan What animal is it, which takes its food through its mouth and excretes it through its eyes? |
14358 | Casano iti panangtiliu iti ugsa a di masapul iti silo, aso, gayang, oen no a aniaman a paniliu? |
14358 | Nano nga sapat nga baba ang naga caon, mata ang nga pamus- on? |
14358 | Pasagad What has four feet but only two foot- prints? |
14358 | Pasagad What work has two seats since its creation? |
14358 | Tabungao What creature of Lord God has no eyes, no mouth, no anus-- and eats_ ladoc- ladoc_? |
14358 | Urayec a maloto How do you take a deer without net, dogs, spear, or other things for catching? |
14154 | As he is not picturesque enough for a villain, she repudiates him with scorn:"Have you the gaunt ferocity of famine in your countenance? |
14154 | Can you darken the midnight with a scowl? |
14154 | Hast thou forgotten it?'' |
14154 | Have you the quivering lip and the Schedoniac contour? |
14154 | In a word, are you a picturesque villain full of plot and horror and magnificent wickedness? |
14154 | Nay, wherefore should they, since that I myself Find in myself no pity to myself?" |
14154 | What kind of a business in life, what manner of glorifying God, or being serviceable to mankind in his day and generation may that be? |
14154 | Would not the owl have shrieked and the cricket cried in my very title page? |
14154 | will he be there?" |
10716 | And what else is any other poetry? |
10716 | And who, with any active sympathy for poetry, can say that Milton felt his theme with less intensity than Homer? |
10716 | But compare Virgil''s"Tantaene animis celestibus irae?" |
10716 | Does he find them pleasant, then, just because they are risky? |
10716 | Does that mean that the epic must be allegorical? |
10716 | For where will the primitive instinct of man, where will the hero, find the chance of creating a value for life? |
10716 | How then can we speak of epic purpose invading drama? |
10716 | Is it honour? |
10716 | Is it, then, only as such a relaxation that supernatural machinery is valuable? |
10716 | Or only as a superlative kind of ornament? |
10716 | V. AFTER MILTON And after Milton, what is to happen? |
10716 | Virgil is more decorous; but can we imagine Virgil praying, or anybody praying, to the gods of the_ Aeneid_? |
10716 | What epic quality, detached from epic proper, do these poems possess, then, apart from the mere fact that they take up a great many pages? |
10716 | Why is the latter celebrated and not the former? |
12455 | ''Never yet have we done homage-- Shall we to a stranger bow? 12455 ''What men are ye, War gear wearing, Host in harness, Who thus the brown keel Over the water street Leading, come Hither over the sea?''" |
12455 | ''What whisper you of Balder''s ire? 12455 He said:''Why would you drown her who is to be my wife, The fair and charming Gudrun? |
12455 | Said he,''Why question further? 12455 Should not the master his pupil Sometimes chastise when he will not observe, and is stubborn in evil? |
12455 | So he went and asked the lady,''What price is the filly? 12455 And Veillintif, had I the heart to die forgetting thee? 12455 Could any one outweigh The joy they felt together, with any wealth or treasure? 12455 Great the honor God hath given us-- Shall we lose that honor now? 12455 How can I refuse her who my heart has won? 12455 If boys were never punished, were thoughtlessness always passed over, Were bad behavior allowed, how would our juveniles grow up? |
12455 | Like Camelot, what place was ever yet renown''d? |
12455 | The god with true and steadfast heart, The sun upon his glittering form, Is not his love for Nanna part Of his own nature, pure and warm? |
12455 | To leave thy mighty heart to break, in slavery to the foe? |
12455 | Who carried here this weapon dread, By which mine uncle was struck dead? |
12455 | Who gave it to this minstrel knight?''" |
12455 | what has now come to pass? |
1219 | ''_ Et Tartuffe_?'' |
1219 | But ask yourself, Is he always to be relied on for justness? |
1219 | Can it be possible, the argument ran, for a truly generous heart to continue beating up to the age of a hundred? |
1219 | DONNA: Credete voi, che''l Turco passi questo anno in Italia? |
1219 | He hits on an invention, to say:''Was it my brain or Providence? |
1219 | How could the Lurewells and the Plyants ever have been praised for ingenuity in wickedness? |
1219 | How, for example, shall an audience be assured that an evident and monstrous dupe is actually deceived without being an absolute fool? |
1219 | MARTINE: Qui parle d''offenser grand''mere ni grand- pere?'' |
1219 | MIRABEL: A fool, and your brother, Witwoud? |
1219 | The world is with him; and certainly it is not much of an ascension they aspire to; but what sort of a figure is he? |
1219 | What is it but an excuse to be idly minded, or personally lofty, or comfortably narrow, not perfectly humane? |
1219 | Where would Pessimist and Optimist be? |
1219 | Would not the Comic view of the discussion illumine it and the disputants like very lightning? |
1219 | { 5} Femmes Savantes: BELISE: Veux- tu toute la vie offenser la grammaire? |
14973 | And why avoid an Expression in use, to introduce one which says precisely the same Thing? |
14973 | Are the narrations of Davila so lively and animated, or do his sentiments breathe such a love of liberty and virtue, as those of Livy and Herodotus? |
14973 | Are the portraits of Thuanus so strong and expressive as those of Sallust and Plutarch? |
14973 | Are the reflections of Machiavel so subtle and refined as those of Tacitus? |
14973 | Are there any other Passions than those that have been handled by_ Otway_ and_ Dryden_? |
14973 | But do they make new Discoveries in the human Heart? |
14973 | Does not the Poet here quite hide his Hero to shew himself? |
14973 | For what Reason has this Passage been always praised by the Criticks? |
14973 | How infinitely superior to all such dazling Ideas, are these simple and natural Words of_ Monimia_ to her angry Brother? |
14973 | If it be now asked to what can we ascribe this superiority of the moderns in all the species of ridicule? |
14973 | In effect, why should_ Chamont_ make such a long- winded Simile almost in the Height of Rage for the Ruin of his Sister? |
14973 | Is that natural? |
14973 | Is there any other Evangelic Moral than that of Dr._ Tillotson_? |
14973 | Is there any other Greatness than that of_ Shakespear_ and_ Milton_? |
14973 | Musick expresses Passions, Sentiments and Images: but what are the Concords that can be giv''n an Epigram? |
14973 | What can be more animated than Raphael''s"Paul preaching at Athens?" |
14973 | What more deeply moving than"The Massacre of the Innocents"by Le Brun? |
14973 | What more graceful than"The Aurora"of Guido? |
14973 | What more tender and delicate than Mary holding the child Jesus, in his famous"Holy Family?" |
14973 | What of its position in poetry? |
14973 | What then would a Work be, that was filled with far- fetched and Problematick Thoughts? |
14973 | Will it be deemed a paradox, to assert, that Congreve''s dramatic persons have no striking and natural characteristic? |
13589 | What country, friends, is this? 13589 And the question naturally follows: Is a drama that does this moral or immoral? 13589 But who has bothered to read it, and what accredited book- reviewer has troubled himself to accord it the notice it deserves? 13589 Ca n''t you give me an idea to get me started-- an idea for another character? |
13589 | Could any actor be unnatural in speaking words so simple, so familiar, and so naturally set? |
13589 | Do I dream? |
13589 | How many people who remember vividly Sir Henry Irving''s performance of_ The Story of Waterloo_ could tell you who wrote the little piece? |
13589 | One of the two orphans launches wide- eyed upon a soliloquy beginning,"Am I mad?... |
13589 | Our feeling in regard to a bad play might be phrased in the familiar sentence,--"This is all very well; but what is it_ to me_?" |
13589 | Shall we clamor for real snow before long, that must be kept in cold storage against the spring season? |
13589 | Stevenson has stated this point in a letter to Mr. Sidney Colvin:"Make another end to it? |
13589 | THE FUNCTION OF IMAGINATION 233 INDEX 241 THE THEORY OF THE THEATRE I WHAT IS A PLAY? |
13589 | WHAT IS A PLAY? |
13589 | What is the matter with his face? |
13589 | What shall I do?" |
13589 | What special kind of mirror did that wise dramatic critic have in mind when he coined this memorable phrase? |
13589 | What, for instance-- to mention only plays which did not fail-- was_ Via Wireless_ about, or_ The Fighting Hope_, or even_ The Man from Home_? |
13589 | Where are the journals of yester- year? |
13589 | Where have our imaginations gone, that we must have real rain upon the stage? |
13589 | Who could imagine Darwin as the hero of a drama? |
13589 | Why, then, is_ Candida_ a better work? |
15544 | Art thou weary, Art thou languid? |
15544 | Your wife sir? |
15544 | ''s honor? |
15544 | Can you beat it? |
15544 | Did you ever see a feather bed with a string tied around the middle, or a bale of hay with the middle hoop busted? |
15544 | Eh What? |
15544 | Goin into one of the big hotels, I said to the clerk"What are your rates?" |
15544 | He kept mixing honey with his peas; I kep kicking him under the table, and finally I got a chanct to whisper"What in h---- was he doin that for?" |
15544 | Here goes the claronet and the bass drum, where''s the rest of the band?" |
15544 | How about my other shirt, did you get it from the Chinks? |
15544 | I say little brighteyes, do you think it possible fer a guy to get hay fever from a grass widow? |
15544 | In trying to get back in camp after taps he runs plum into a sentry who said"Halt, who goes there?" |
15544 | P.S.--I do n''t know why they call us dough boys, for thirty per ai nt much"dough,"is it angel face? |
15544 | Remember that Julie? |
15544 | The only WILL I''m worried about Julie, is WILL I cum back? |
15544 | You never had a tick on you did you Julie? |
13469 | ("For what has more of the ludicrous than Sannio? |
13469 | And shall that man go without his due meed of praise? |
13469 | Can we doubt that this Pantaloon had come from the Italian theatre, after what we have already said? |
13469 | Could anything be more fallacious? |
13469 | Do our readers recollect a Pantomime some years ago, in which he was introduced begging a tart from a pieman? |
13469 | Do they, or can they, understand Pantomime in its present form? |
13469 | Does not this confirm the conjecture, that there existed an intercourse between the Italian theatre and our own? |
13469 | I wonder what Mrs. Mathews would say if she could now visit this terrestrial sphere of ours? |
13469 | If I am asked( after condemning these fooleries myself) how I came to assent or continue my share of expense to them? |
13469 | Rankin, a puritan, contemporary with Shakespeare, wrote a most bitter attack on plays and players, whom he calls monsters;"And whie monsters?" |
13469 | The simple expression,"May I?" |
13469 | They generally appeared about Good Friday and on to Easter; and their performance consisted of a mixture of music(? |
13469 | What better evidence, or instances, of this can we have than in those studies of her handiwork? |
13469 | you are there, you fools, are you? |
13007 | For whom are the benches( in hell) strewn with rings, the halls fairly adorned with gold? |
13007 | Hast thou news in proportion to thy toil? 13007 How is it with the Aesir? |
13007 | It is ill with the Aesir, it is ill with the Elves; hast thou hidden the Thunderer''s hammer? |
13007 | Shall I get there to- day? |
13007 | What shall be Odin''s end, when the Gods perish? |
13007 | Whence shall the sun come on the smooth heaven when Fenri has destroyed this one? |
13007 | Which of the Aesir shall rule over the realms of the Gods, when Surt''s fire is quenched? |
13007 | Who will avenge the deed on Höd and bring Baldr''s slayer to the funeral pyre? |
13007 | Who will be Baldr''s slayer and rob Odin''s son of life? |
13007 | ( 3) In_ Vafthrudnismal_ the only reference is Odin''s question,"What said Odin in his son''s ear when he mounted the pyre?" |
13007 | For if, as it is claimed, the Icelanders had no mistletoe, why should they introduce it into a story to which it did not belong? |
13007 | He looked under the veil, he longed to kiss the bride, but he started back the length of the hall:"Why are Freyja''s eyes so terrible? |
13007 | How is it with the Elves? |
13007 | So many of the mythological poems are in this form that they suggest the question, did the asking of riddles form any part of Scandinavian ritual? |
13007 | The following account is given of their presence in Asgard:( 1) In_ Vafthrudnismal_, Odin asks:"Whence came Njörd among the sons of the Aesir? |
13007 | Then spoke Thrym, lord of the Giants:"Who ever saw a bride eat so eagerly? |
13007 | They did so, and Wodan exclaimed,"Who are these_ Long- beards_?" |
13007 | Two poems of the verse Edda describe it:( 1)_ Vafthrudnismal_: V."What is the plain called where Surt and the blessed Gods shall meet in battle?" |
13007 | Why art thou come alone into Jötunheim?" |
12743 | Do you seriously mean to argue, sir, that drama need not be dramatic? |
12743 | What do you think of X. for the old man? |
12743 | What is it? |
12743 | And what would it matter? |
12743 | Are they going to stop here all the blank morning for a blank tyke?" |
12743 | But how often does our imagination put itself to the trouble of realising this? |
12743 | But is not the Minimum Wage Bill urgent? |
12743 | But what would you? |
12743 | Further on in it he says:"Good work has a fair chance to be recognised in the end, and if not, what does it matter?" |
12743 | Had he lived to the age of fifty so blind that it needed a cinema audience to show him what the general level of human nature really is? |
12743 | How can such novels satisfy a reader who has acquired or wants to acquire the faculty of seeing life? |
12743 | Is it conceivable that so renowned a producer can have so misread and misunderstood the play? |
12743 | Is one ashamed of one''s mother? |
12743 | Is one ashamed of the cosmic process of evolution? |
12743 | Is there any reason, indeed, why we should be so vastly cleverer than our fathers? |
12743 | Now you also have encountered that corpse and are gazing at it; and what do you say to yourself when he comes along? |
12743 | Or ought he to say:"Let me examine this public, and let me see whether some compromise between us is not possible"? |
12743 | What else could the motive be? |
12743 | What else should it be? |
12743 | What would have been Flaubert''s detailed criticism of that book? |
12743 | Whence and how does the novelist obtain the vital tissue which must be his material? |
12743 | Who could assert positively which of the sisters Fleming is the heroine of_ Rhoda Fleming_? |
12743 | Why not? |
12743 | Will aught like this ever happen to me?" |
15313 | 3--T. Hanmer''s(?) |
15313 | And why do you abuse me? |
15313 | And why may n''t an Epick be as short as a Tragick Poem? |
15313 | As, Who will tell me what Hamlet''s natural Temper was? |
15313 | As_ What gar''s thee Greet?_ For,_ What makes thee Grieve?_ How Harsh and Grating is the Sound of_ SPENCER_''s two Words, But Instances were endless. |
15313 | As_ What gar''s thee Greet?_ For,_ What makes thee Grieve?_ How Harsh and Grating is the Sound of_ SPENCER_''s two Words, But Instances were endless. |
15313 | But in order to raise that most delightful Passion, should not the Reader be first prepossess''d in favour of the Party dead? |
15313 | Can I pity a Person because deceas''d, without knowing any thing of his while alive? |
15313 | Dost thou in Conscience think, tell me_ Emilia,_ That there be Women do abuse their Husbands, In such gross kind_? |
15313 | If then I have settled one in my Mind, as sublime, How shall I conceive the other as such? |
15313 | Now if even the warmest Kinds of Poetry delight in Female Personages, How much more Pastoral, which is all Tenderness and Simplicity? |
15313 | Now what is this but imaging almost every thing, or turning as many Thoughts as possible into Images? |
15313 | The Method has been approv''d of in all Ages even in Epick Poetry and Tragedy, and should we go now to defend it in Pastoral? |
15313 | What have I done? |
15313 | What is the Length by Nature fix''d for all Pieces? |
15313 | What makes the finess of these Lines else? |
15313 | Will you not do some rash And horrid Mischief? |
15313 | _ But when I''ve told you, will you keep your Fury Within it''s bound? |
15313 | _ I will be calm; but has_ Castalio_ wrong''d thee?_ Mon.) |
15313 | _ Mine Eyes do itch, doth that boad Weeping?_ Emil.) |
15313 | _ Prithee, why dost talk so?_ Mon.) |
15313 | _ What?_ Mon.) |
14495 | 3--T. Hanmer''s(?) |
14495 | But if this be so, what will become of_ Macrobius, Georgius Valla, Julius Scaliger, Vossius,_ and the whole company of Grammarians? |
14495 | Cruel_ Alexis_ ca n''t my Verses move? |
14495 | For what is more hard than to be always in the_ Country_, and yet never to be_ Clownish_? |
14495 | Hast thou no Pitty? |
14495 | How short is that? |
14495 | Lullus_ says it hath been done,) should we therefore reckon that divine and incomparable Master of_ Heroick_ Poetry amongst the_ Lyricks_? |
14495 | Thus in_ Daphnis_, Did not You Streams, and Hazels, hear the Nymphs? |
14495 | What shall I say of_ Virgil_? |
14495 | When are we like to meet? |
14495 | how concise? |
14495 | how great his disquiets? |
14495 | how troublesome his Marches? |
14495 | to make every thing_ sweet_, yet never_ satiate_? |
14495 | to pipe on a_ slender_ Reed, and yet keep the sound from being_ harsh_, and_ squeaking_? |
14495 | to sing of_ mean_, and_ trivial_ matters,{ 52} yet not_ trivially_, and_ meanly_? |
14495 | what fears and hopes distracted his designs? |
16233 | & Quo tendis? |
16233 | 3--T. Hanmer''s(?) |
16233 | But first it may be demanded, What the Thing we speak of is? |
16233 | Cum affectaretur, Num quid vis? |
16233 | Incipit ille: Si benè me novi, non Viscum pluris amicum, Non Varium facies; nam quis me scribere plures Aut citiùs possit versus? |
16233 | Interpellandi locus hic erat: Est tibi mater, Cognati, queis te salvo est opus? |
16233 | Jamdudum video: sed nil agis: usque tenebo: Persequar: hinc quò nunc iter est tibi? |
16233 | Mecà ¦ nas quomodo tecum? |
16233 | Memini benè; sed meliori Tempora dicam: hodie tricesima sabbata, vin''tu Curtis Judà ¦ is oppedere? |
16233 | Or what the Facetiousness( or_ Wit_ as he calls it before) doth import? |
16233 | Then instead of answering, could I ask such a Person, WHY ARE YOU NOT HANDSOME? |
16233 | Unde venis? |
16233 | WHY ARE YOU NOT GAY, PLEASANT, AND CHEARFUL? |
16233 | WHY HAVE YOU NOT BLACK EYES, AND A BETTER COMPLEXION? |
16233 | What is it then, which like the_ Pow''r Divine_, We only can by_ Negatives_ define? |
16233 | _ Alexander_ the VIth was very busily questioning the Ambassador of_ Venice_, Of whom his Masters held their Customs and Prerogatives of the Sea? |
16233 | magnâ Inclamat voce;&, Licet antestari? |
16233 | quis membra movere Mollius? |
16335 | What business has a Parson with such Books as these? 16335 3--T. Hanmer''s(?) 16335 A Christian who has not the liberty so much as to think of an ill thing, why does he entertain himself with lewd Representations? 16335 A Parson who has not the liberty so much as to think of an ill thing? 16335 And are those fit to correct the Church, that are not fit to come into it_? 16335 But pray let us see a little, has not this Divine quotation a tang of_ Blasphemy_ in''t? 16335 Fancy slip- stocking high? 16335 Has he a mind to discharge his Modesty, and be flesh''d for the Practice? 16335 Has he a mind to discharge his Priestcraft, and flesh himself up for a Poet? 16335 Now by his_ Hollidame_, for I ca n''t forbear that Oath now, what can a squeamish Critick, that would make_ Remarks_ upon the_ Remarker_ call this? 16335 Very good, and who is he so reprobated, that will not allow this to be devout, and admirable good Counsel? 16335 Why does he entertain himself with lewd Comedies? 16335 Would any honest Gentleman, that has his sences, shew his Indulgence and Generosity to Wit or Learning, on such terms as these? 16335 _? 16335 what would this whimsical Gentleman be at? 15705 At you?" |
15705 | By the memory of George Washington you swear that you are not a smugglesome man? |
15705 | Do you think I used the''Kaiser Wilhelm the Grocer''to come from Staten Island? |
15705 | Do you wish to open me further and see? |
15705 | Domestic or imported? |
15705 | Opened in Europe-- yes? 15705 Pajamas?" |
15705 | Put them back, please? |
15705 | They look like a Chinaman''s Sunday trousers-- yes? |
15705 | What have you been drinking? |
15705 | What is it, Mike? |
15705 | What is the verdict? |
15705 | What is this? |
15705 | What is your name? |
15705 | Who are you? |
15705 | Why does a chicken cross the street? 15705 You want it for the hair?" |
15705 | You wear these pajamas? 15705 A foolish member of the Interrogation family whose most fiendish offspring isHow old is Ann?" |
15705 | And he replied,"Why do n''t you go And get another shoe?" |
15705 | At what time in the evening does papa and mamma crawl out of the dumb waiter and how much is the gas bill? |
15705 | Did you hear over the wireless system about the labor strikes and try to smuggle in some cheap labor?" |
15705 | Do n''t you think it is pretty hard lines when I have to make them wash the water on both sides before putting it in the teapot? |
15705 | Do n''t you? |
15705 | Do you know that a wise man can sometimes be a fool and get away with it? |
15705 | From the Latin words"footibus,"meaning"_ put the boots to him_,"and"balloona,"meaning"up in the air, or, who hit me with a public building?" |
15705 | How long did Ann''s sweetheart remain after he learned the bitter truth? |
15705 | How old was Ann when she received a seat? |
15705 | How old will Ann''s mother be when the book gets back? |
15705 | I threw the aluminum blanket off my face and cried:"What is it? |
15705 | In the meantime, however, I figure that I have lost$ 41,894.03 in royalties,$ 74 worth of glory and about 14 cents worth of fame-- tough, is n''t it? |
15705 | What is in this bottle?" |
15705 | What is it?" |
15705 | What is this?" |
15705 | What time does the dinner bell ring and who squares it with the grocer? |
15705 | What were the clerks swearing at after Ann went out? |
15705 | When? |
15705 | Where?" |
15705 | Which train did James take and when does Ann expect him back? |
15705 | Why does Ann converse with callers through the speaking tube? |
15705 | Why? |
15705 | You have been to Europe, have you not?" |
15705 | said the man,"where is the Chink that goes with this wearing apparel? |
15705 | what is this?" |
15705 | what is this?" |
10639 | ***** Do you ask me our duty as scholars? |
10639 | ***** My friend, will you hear me to- day? |
10639 | ***** Why, sir, have I been so careful in bringing down with great particularity these distinctions? |
10639 | All this, I know well enough All this is unnatural because All we do know is that Am I mistaken in this? |
10639 | But out of our shallow and frivolous way of life, how can greatness ever grow? |
10639 | But the question for us is But to go still further But waiving this assumption But we dwell too long But we have faith that But what is the motive? |
10639 | But what then? |
10639 | But why do we speak of But you may say truly But you must remember Can there be a better illustration than Can you doubt it? |
10639 | Can you impair its force by impeaching the motives of any member who voted for it? |
10639 | Do you think it is right and noble to lift up your voice against such, a Savior? |
10639 | Fortunately I am not obliged From time to time Happily for us Has the gentleman done? |
10639 | From"What Think Ye of Christ?" |
10639 | If He bore the cross and died on it for me, ought I not be willing to take it up for Him? |
10639 | If He laid down His life for us, is it not the least we can do to lay down ours for Him? |
10639 | Is a law that has received the varied assent required by the Constitution and is clothed with all the needful formalities thereby invalidated? |
10639 | Is it not possible for us now to make a truce with time, by anticipating and accepting its inevitable verdicts? |
10639 | Is not your cause developing like the spring? |
10639 | License to do what? |
10639 | Oh have we not reason to think well of Him? |
10639 | What are you going to do? |
10639 | What can be more intelligible than What do you say to What do we understand by What has become of it? |
10639 | What good can come of the sterile regrets, these illusory reparations you grant to a vain shade, to insensible ashes? |
10639 | What is more remarkable still What is the answer to all this? |
10639 | What is this but an acknowledgment of What is your opinion? |
10639 | What statesman ever heard of that us a definition of liberty? |
10639 | What then remains? |
10639 | What then? |
10639 | Who finds fault with these things? |
10639 | Why condemn yourself to powerlessness to help opprest innocence? |
10639 | Why interdict to yourselves the means of reparation? |
10639 | Will you not believe in Him? |
10639 | Will you not live for Him? |
10639 | Will you not think well of such a Savior? |
10639 | Will you not trust in Him with all your heart and mind? |
10639 | what is He saying to you? |
10420 | Here is a very noble picture,adds Burke,"and in what does this poetical picture consist? |
10420 | Wer machte denn der Mitwelt Spass? |
10420 | Why,he asks,"must I confine myself to my own small experience, when I feel persuaded that it will interest no one? |
10420 | ("Who is to amuse the present?") |
10420 | A man who calls public attention on him, and appears in a slovenly undress? |
10420 | Am I to bestow applause on some insignificant parade of erudition, and withhold blame from the stupidities of style which surround it? |
10420 | And how is Variety to be secured? |
10420 | And what should we think of Laplace if he were made bitter by the wider popularity of Dumas? |
10420 | Are not both methods right under different circumstances? |
10420 | Can HE be the large and patient thinker, the delicate humourist, the impassioned poet? |
10420 | For we must always ask, What is the nature of the applause, and from what circles does it rise? |
10420 | In how far is success a test of merit? |
10420 | Is it necessary to guard against a misconception of my object, and to explain that I hope to furnish nothing more than help and encouragement? |
10420 | Is such an orator really enviable, although thunders of applause may have greeted his efforts? |
10420 | Is that success, although the newspapers all over the kingdom may be reporting the speech? |
10420 | The often mooted question, What is Imagination? |
10420 | Then why should it justify any other detail not to be reconciled with universal truth? |
10420 | Unless a man sees this clearly for himself how can he show it to others? |
10420 | What are we to say to a man who spends a quarter''s income on a diamond pin which he sticks in a greasy cravat? |
10420 | What influence remains when the noise of the shouts has died away? |
10420 | What is the first object of a machine? |
10420 | Why should I echo what seem to me the extravagant praises of Raphael''s"Transfiguration,"when, in truth, I do not greatly admire that famous work? |
10420 | Why should I pretend to an erudition which is not mine? |
10420 | Why should they? |
10420 | Will the pleasure I feel in pictures be enhanced because other men consider me right in my admlration, or diminished because they consider me wrong? |
10420 | Would he forfeit the admiration of one philosopher for that of a thousand novel readers? |
10420 | You may know the character of a redundancy by this one test: does it divert the attention, or simply retard it? |
14047 | And can there be none without such follies, as no Man in his sense wou''d endure? |
14047 | And does Mr._ Collier_ blame Mr._ Dryden_ for writing naturally? |
14047 | And when the_ Fences_ are thus broken down, what hopes can we have any_ Virtue_ shou''d stand without being impair''d at the least? |
14047 | And who wou''d lightly endure all this, that from their Vows went on to reflect of what they were made? |
14047 | And who wou''d turn Parson to be drunk and beat the Watch? |
14047 | Are not the Religious very much reverenc''d? |
14047 | But after all, why shou''d Mr._ Collier_ blame Mr._ Dryden_ for making_ Dorax_ exclaim against the_ Mahometan_ Priest? |
14047 | But it may be ask''d, Cou''d he not have done that without exposing so many great_ Genius_''s? |
14047 | But the Question is, Whether our Poets have managed it as they ought? |
14047 | But what can Mr._ Collier_ mean by exposing the Stage so? |
14047 | Etheridge_, Mr._ Wicherly_, and even some of Mr._ Dryden_''s Plays? |
14047 | For are then all Diversions alike? |
14047 | Had it not been better to have let Mr._ Durfey_ alone? |
14047 | Has any Body brought themselves under his Character, in hopes to recommend them to the World? |
14047 | Has any Body thought the worse of_ Stillingfleet_,_ Tillotson_, and_ Burnet_, upon this Account? |
14047 | How did Religion labour under heavy Language, and how many People rather absented the Church, than come to hear the Word of God Burlesqu''d? |
14047 | How then shall he that professes the_ Christian Religion_, be able to bear so licentious a Treatment of all that is Good? |
14047 | In what a ridiculous Dress did Religion appear? |
14047 | Is it not natural for such a one as_ Dorax_ to say as much, and especially against such a one as the_ Mufti_ in the Play? |
14047 | Is their nothing in their Works Illustrious, or that cou''d merit Censure? |
14047 | Must all easie Conversation be lost, unless Men have leave to be loose and profane? |
14047 | Or how can that be a Prejudice to the Character of the Christian Clergy? |
14047 | Or who wou''d be proud of an Imitation of any of his Heroes? |
14047 | So that if Mr._ Collier_ should make a Collection of_ D''urfey_''s Works, who is there that wou''d become a Convert? |
14047 | Whence is it then, that the Clergy are so angry? |
14047 | Whether they have not pick''d out a particular Person, and expos''d the Character in general, under the Notion of one Man? |
14047 | Who cou''d refuse resisting of Authority, when instead of_ Damnation_, it was_ coming forth to the Help of the Lord against the Mighty_? |
14047 | Who that had engaged to believe the_ Christian Faith_, cou''d be content to see it exposed in every branch? |
14047 | Whoever learnt to cut a King''s Throat by seeing of Plays? |
13088 | Fear Death? 13088 For whom is it in the last analysis that you legislate? |
13088 | Is it even so? |
13088 | Is it not so much death? |
13088 | Is that music, after all,one may ask,"which leaves so much to the performer, and is that poetry, after all, which leaves so much to the reader?" |
13088 | Say not so,Cried I when I again could find my breath, For I had seen the whiteness of his face,"How shall I come if thee it frighteneth?" |
13088 | Thou dost not seek to know What spirits are these thou seest? |
13088 | Thou who dost honor science and love art, Pray who are these, whose potent dignity Doth eminently set them thus apart? |
13088 | To what end is all this beneficence, all this conscience, all this theory? |
13088 | And how dare any one, if he could, pluck away the coulisses, stage effects and ceremonies by which they live? |
13088 | And what kind of a man was Stevenson? |
13088 | Do the thoughts and phrases which float about in it have a meaning which bears any relation to the meaning they bear in the language of thinkers? |
13088 | Does all the patriotic talk, the talk about the United States and its future, have any significance as patriotism? |
13088 | Does any one believe that the passion of the American people for learning and for antiquity is a slight and accidental thing? |
13088 | Does any one believe that the taste for imitation old furniture is a pose? |
13088 | Does it not tend to close the avenues between the soul and the universe? |
13088 | Does it poetically represent the state of feeling of any class of American citizens towards their country? |
13088 | For what is so useful, so educational, so inspiring, to a timid and conservative man, as to do something inconsistent and regrettable? |
13088 | He himself regards his work as a toy; and how can we do otherwise? |
13088 | Here is Alcott by my door,--yet is the union more profound? |
13088 | His own words give us a picture of him during that ride:--"What said my man when my betossed soul Did not attend him as we rode?" |
13088 | His prologue and overture are excellent, but where is the argument? |
13088 | In the succeeding verses we are lapped into a charming reverie, and then at the end suddenly jolted by the question,"What is it all about?" |
13088 | Is it a wonder that this man was venerated with an almost superstitious regard in Italy, and in the sixteenth century? |
13088 | Is it individualism of any statable kind? |
13088 | Or would you find the nearest equivalent to this emotion in the breast of the educated tramp of France, or Germany, or England? |
13088 | The traveller as he passeth through these deserts asketh of her''who builded them?'' |
13088 | Their natures were electrically repellent, but from which did the greater force radiate? |
13088 | This perpetual splitting up of love into two species, one of which is condemned, but admitted to be useful-- is it not degrading? |
13088 | Thy false uncle-- Dost thou attend me?" |
13088 | What are these thoughts?" |
13088 | What difference does it make whether a man who can talk like this is following an argument or not? |
13088 | What is he that he should resist their will, and think or act for himself? |
13088 | What is natural asceticism but a lack of vigor? |
13088 | What is the one end which all means go to effect? |
13088 | What is the right use? |
13088 | What is there in these figures that they leave us so awestruck, that they seem so like the sound of trumpets blowing from a spiritual world? |
13088 | What matter if Æsop appear a little too much like an American citizen, so long as his points tell? |
13088 | Where is the substantial artistic content that shall feed our souls? |
13088 | Why is it that we refuse to judge him by his own utterances? |
13088 | _ How came he there_? |
13483 | Am I not here your grateful guest, opening the session of this philosophical and historic institution? |
13483 | And who shall tell us the ultimate bounds of these waves of light and sound? |
13483 | Are we to suppose that this was a delusion, or that the sensibility of the man was a genuine aid to the actor? |
13483 | But do we therefore bury ourselves? |
13483 | But may there be moral contamination from what is performed on the stage? |
13483 | But what did it amount to? |
13483 | But you may say-- what is nature? |
13483 | Can such not stir, when it is worth the telling, the hearts of men, to whom it comes as an echo from the past? |
13483 | Could anyone but himself attempt such a wonderful variety, such an amazing contrast of character, and be equally great in all? |
13483 | Granted that his art creates nothing; but does it not often restore? |
13483 | Has not this made the passage far more real and human to you than all the thought you have devoted to it? |
13483 | How can any one be temperate in the midst of his passion, lest it be that his consciousness and his purpose remain to him? |
13483 | If I meditate on patriotism, can I but reflect how grandly the boards have been trod by personifications of heroic love of country? |
13483 | Is it not for ever identified with the noblest instincts and occupations of the human mind? |
13483 | Nay, more; has even the tale that is told no significance in after years? |
13483 | Now, what is the art of acting? |
13483 | That he is simply to declaim the words set down for him, without reference to the expression of his face, his bearing, or his action? |
13483 | To what position in the world of intelligence does the actor''s art entitle him, and what is his contribution to the general sum of instruction? |
13483 | What does he then do? |
13483 | What then do I infer? |
13483 | What was it in their performances that chiefly impressed their contemporaries? |
13483 | When the covers were removed he remarked, on seeing his own sorry fare,"Yes, this is very well; but where''s the entertainment for the man?" |
16736 | How can a man come to know himself? |
16736 | Shall I tell you the secret of the true scholar? |
16736 | Still studying Dante? |
16736 | With every intelligent man or woman the question is not,"Shall I take account of them?" |
16736 | but"How shall I get the most and the best out of them for my enrichment and guidance?" |
13983 | Oh, Rakush, why so thoughtless grown To fight a lion thus alone? 13983 Tell me now, friend Volker, will you stand me by, If these men of Kriemhild''s would my mettle try? |
13983 | Was it this, ah me, I followed over land and sea? 13983 Where is my Roland, sire,"she cried,"Who vowed to take me for his bride?" |
13983 | ''But what a scene was there? |
13983 | AUCASSIN AND NICOLETTE Who would list to the good lay Gladness of the captive grey? |
13983 | And fate to numbers, by a single hand? |
13983 | For fate who fear''d amidst a feastful band? |
13983 | Have I struck thee, brother? |
13983 | Him, while he pass''d, the monster blind bespoke:"What makes my ram the lag of all the flock? |
13983 | His plans are, however, detected by Dido, who vehemently demands, how he dares forsake her now? |
13983 | How could thy master have conveyed His helm, and battle- axe, and blade, Unaided to Mazinderan? |
13983 | How then in the gates of Valhall may the door of the gleaming ring Clash to on the heel of Sigurd, as I follow on my king?" |
13983 | How then may the road he wendeth be hard for my feet to find? |
13983 | In jest or earnest say, Have I offended you? |
13983 | Is it with Rustum only thou wouldst fight? |
13983 | Meanwhile, further to satisfy his curiosity, Adam inquires how the sun and stars move so quietly in their orbit? |
13983 | One of the sufferers confined here suddenly asks Dante,"Who art thou that earnest ere thine hour?" |
13983 | Roland marvelled at such a blow, And thus bespake him soft and low:"Hast thou done it, my comrade, wittingly? |
13983 | Seest thou these lids that now unfold in vain,( The deed of Noman and his wicked train?) |
13983 | She, too, sends Brahmans in all directions, singing"Where is the one who, after stealing half of his wife''s garment, abandoned her in the jungle?" |
13983 | Then, addressing Satan, Gabriel demands why he broke his prescribed bonds? |
13983 | Then, all at once, a voice addresses Dante, who, prompted by Virgil, inquires where the next stairway may be? |
13983 | Then, hearing her order that his bed be removed to the portico, he hotly demands who cut down the tree which formed one of its posts? |
13983 | Then, turning upon his interlocutor, Christ inquires why he is so anxious to promote the one whose rise will entail his fall? |
13983 | Thirsting for information, Dante inquires of him"how bitter can spring when sweet is sown?" |
13983 | What if my lost beloved I may revenge at last?" |
13983 | Why did ye carry with you brides ye loved not, treacherous curs? |
13983 | Why didst thou fail to give the alarm, And save thyself from chance of harm, By neighing loudly in my ear? |
13983 | Why have ye laid my heartstrings bare? |
13983 | Why tear their flesh in Corpes wood with saddle- girths and spurs, And leave them to the beasts of prey? |
13983 | _ 12th Adventure._ Twelve whole years elapse ere Brunhild asks Gunther how it happens his vassal Siegfried has never yet come to Worms to do homage? |
13983 | _ Canto XIV._ The two spirits leaning close together, in their turn question who Virgil and Dante may be? |
13983 | _ Canto XXXIII._ The seven Virtues having chanted a hymn, Beatrice motions to Statius and Dante to follow her, asking the latter why he is so mute? |
13983 | in my friend''s dear spoils arrayed To me for mercy sue? |
13983 | shall we receive good at the hand of God, and shall we not receive evil?" |
13983 | what excuse, what answer do ye make? |
13983 | wherefore dost thou vainly question thus Of Rustum? |
16637 | Do they belong to thee, These twinklings of oblivion? |
16637 | More full of visions than a high romance? |
16637 | More healthful than the leanness of dales? |
16637 | More secret than a nest of nightingales? |
16637 | More serene than Cordelia''s countenance? |
16637 | Thou wilt not hear me; no? |
16637 | What cause hast them to show Of sacrifice unsped? |
16637 | What is more gentle than a wind in summer? |
16637 | What is more soothing than the pretty hummer That stays one moment in an open flower, And buzzes cheerily from bower to bower? |
16637 | What is more tranquil than a musk rose blowing In a green island, far from all men''s knowing? |
16637 | What, but thee Sleep? |
16637 | Why dost thou scorn me so? |
16637 | Why, then, art thou my foe? |
16637 | Wilt thou not hear me, Sleep? |
16637 | Wilt thou not hear me, Sleep? |
16637 | Wilt thou not hear me, Sleep? |
13852 | And what,you demand,"should that guiding principle be?" |
13852 | And could one exclude Sir Isaac Newton''s_ Principia_, the masterpiece of the greatest physicist that the world has ever seen? |
13852 | And now I seem to hear you say,"But what about Lamb''s famous literary style? |
13852 | But amid all this steady tapping of the reservoir, do you ever take stock of what you have acquired? |
13852 | But does it live in the memory as one of the rare great Tennysonian lines? |
13852 | But in what imaginable circumstances can you say:"Yes, this idea is fine, but the style is not fine"? |
13852 | But they are all dead now, and whom have we to take their place?" |
13852 | But what do those people mean who say:"I read such and such an author for the beauty of his style alone"? |
13852 | But what does he polish up? |
13852 | But why ruin the scene by laughter? |
13852 | But why? |
13852 | By what light? |
13852 | Do you ever pause to make a valuation, in terms of your own life, of that which you are daily absorbing, or imagine you are absorbing? |
13852 | Do you suppose that if the fame of Shakespeare depended on the man in the street it would survive a fortnight? |
13852 | Do you suppose they could prove to the man in the street that Shakespeare was a great artist? |
13852 | Does the book seem to you to be sincere and true? |
13852 | Have I got to be learned, to undertake a vast course of study, in order to be perfectly mad about Wordsworth''s_ Prelude_? |
13852 | He seeks answers to the question What? |
13852 | How are you to arrive at the stage of caring for it? |
13852 | How can he effectively test, in cold blood, whether he is receiving from literature all that literature has to give him? |
13852 | How can he put a value on what he gets from books? |
13852 | How do I know? |
13852 | How do you know that his passions are strong? |
13852 | How often has it been said that Carlyle''s matter is marred by the harshness and the eccentricities of his style? |
13852 | How to cross it? |
13852 | How( you ask, unwillingly) can a man perform a mental stocktaking? |
13852 | How? |
13852 | In reading a book, a sincere questioning of oneself,"Is it true?" |
13852 | In the face of this one may ask: Why does the great and universal fame of classical authors continue? |
13852 | Is it a novel-- when did it help you to"understand all and forgive all"? |
13852 | Is it ethics-- when did it influence your conduct in a twopenny- halfpenny affair between man and man? |
13852 | Is it history-- when did it throw a light for you on modern politics? |
13852 | Is it nothing to you to learn to understand that the world is not a dull place? |
13852 | Is it poetry-- when was it a magnifying glass to disclose beauty to you, or a fire to warm your cooling faith? |
13852 | Is it science-- when did it show you order in apparent disorder, and help you to put two and two together into an inseparable four? |
13852 | Moreover, if the style is clumsy, are you sure that you can see what he means? |
13852 | Or am I born without the faculty of pure taste in literature, despite my vague longings? |
13852 | What are the qualities in a book which give keen and lasting pleasure to the passionate few? |
13852 | What causes the passionate few to make such a fuss about literature? |
13852 | What drives a historian to write history? |
13852 | What happens usually in such a case? |
13852 | Where does that come in?" |
13852 | Who will now proclaim the_ Idylls of the King_ as a masterpiece? |
13852 | Why am I not? |
13852 | Why does he affect you unpleasantly? |
13852 | Why is_ Dream Children_ a classic? |
13852 | Why? |
13852 | You think some of my instances approach the ludicrous? |
13852 | instead of to the question Why? |
16418 | 5, S. 3._ Have you not heard it said full oft, A woman''s nay doth stand for naught? |
16418 | A lively woman would be the death of me.... Why should n''t the Sherrick be stupid, I say? |
16418 | And who does not know how useless advice is?... |
16418 | Gold, did I say? |
16418 | If a woman can do that well; who shall demand more from her? |
16418 | In whom else do you see so much grace, and so much virtue; so much faith, and so much tenderness; with such a perfect refinement and chastity? |
16418 | One only passion unreveal''d, With maiden pride, the maid conceal''d, Yet no less purely felt the flame-- O need I tell that passion''s name? |
16418 | They are exuberant of kindness, as it were, and must impart it to some one.--_Henry Esmond._ Who ever accused women of being just? |
16418 | What gentleman is not more or less a Prometheus? |
16418 | Where is any author in the world Teaches such beauty as a woman''s eye? |
16418 | Who but woman, if you please? |
16418 | Who has not his rock, his chain? |
16418 | Why not? |
16418 | Why shouldst not thou like sense within thee feel When I am present, and thy trial choose With me, best witness of thy virtue tried? |
16418 | Yet earth saw one thing, one how fair? |
16418 | You who are ill and sore from the buffets of Fate, have you one or two of these sweet physicians? |
16418 | _ Balaustion''s Adventure._ Men? |
16418 | _ Corsair, Canto 2._ Who hath not proved how feebly words essay To fix one spark of beauty''s heavenly ray? |
16418 | and what a stranger Is woman? |
16418 | never care for gain; The present by the future, what is that? |
16418 | say you have the power To make them yours, rule men, throughout life''s little hour, According to the phrase: what follows? |
16418 | ye lords of ladies intellectual, Inform us truly, have they not hen- peck''d you all? |
15656 | ''But do n''t you think there is a great deal of Merit in dedicating a beautiful Face to the Service of Religion? |
15656 | ''O_ Ceres_, can thy all- seeing Eye_ behold_ this Object, and yet restrain thy Pity? |
15656 | ''What do you pray for? |
15656 | ''Why does it then permit us Life and Thought? |
15656 | ''Ye immortal Gods, who the Devil am I? |
15656 | 3--T. Hanmer''s(?) |
15656 | And are these then the Entertainments for a Christian to be pleas''d with; for one whose_ Salvation_ is to be wrought out with Fear and Trembling? |
15656 | And if we go on to countenance such open and flagrant Defiances of Almighty God, have we not great Reason to fear his heavy Judgments will consume us? |
15656 | And must it not then follow, that_ every one_ that frequents them, is a_ Party_ in the_ Cause_, and_ encourages_ the Undertaking? |
15656 | Are not the Plays,( if not by Design) yet by a natural and necessary Consequence, an_ undermining_ of his Laws, and an_ Attempt_ upon his Government? |
15656 | Are we deceiv''d in its Omnipotence? |
15656 | Can this be thought an Expression of their Charity to their Neighbour, or to be acceptable to Almighty God? |
15656 | Can those, I say, that frequent the_ Play- Houses_, and are not displeased with any of these things, be thought to have any due Sense of Religion? |
15656 | Do you think,_ Madam_, this a just way of Reasoning? |
15656 | Evil treated as Good, and Good as Evil, and all this highly aggravated by being done in cool Blood, upon Choice and Deliberation? |
15656 | If our Femality had no Business in this World, why was it sent hither? |
15656 | Is it reduc''d to find its Pleasure in its Creature''s Pain? |
15656 | Is not this then the very Case I am speaking of? |
15656 | Is the_ Stage_, as''tis now manag''d, any thing else but a downright Rebellion against God and his Holy Religion? |
15656 | Sept. 1946: Anon., LETTER TO A. H. ESQ; CONCERNING THE STAGE( 1698) and Richard Willis''s(?) |
15656 | This may he true, but what then, Will this excuse them? |
15656 | Whether they are not carrying on the Designs of the great Enemy of Mankind? |
15656 | Will the Strictnesses of Virtue and Religion be ever relished by a Mind tinctur''d with such Licentious Representations? |
15656 | or rather, Should not Compassion to the Souls of their Neighbours keep such as have a due Concern for them from going to such Places? |
16639 | Ai n''t he a hairy feller, though? |
16639 | Ai n''t he cute? |
16639 | Ai n''t he got funny hair? |
16639 | Ai n''t he handsome? |
16639 | Ai n''t she cute? |
16639 | But you could tell he was a wit, though, could n''t yuh? |
16639 | Do n''t he look awful meek? |
16639 | Do n''t he look like Charles Dickens, th''great Scotch poet, though? |
16639 | Do n''t she look jist like a settin''hen? |
16639 | Honest, now, he do n''t look a bit like you thought he would, does he? |
16639 | One time he went into a hardware store t''git a tin cup and after he''d looked careful at sev''ral he says,''How much is this one?'' |
16639 | Peters,''she says,''did you know there was a hole in one of th''limbs of yer trousers?'' |
16639 | Then Uncle Ad says,''I s''pose yuh make th''usual reduction t''th''clergy?'' |
16639 | Was n''t that cute of him?" |
16639 | Was n''t that silly? |
15383 | A new esthetic cocoon is broken; where will the butterfly''s wings carry him? |
15383 | But we may stop at once: what does it mean to say that the surroundings appear to the mind plastic and the moving pictures flat? |
15383 | But what is the scholar''s attitude? |
15383 | But why do we appreciate no less the opposite work which the artist is doing? |
15383 | But would it heighten the beauty of the photoplay? |
15383 | Does a beautiful arch or dome or tower of a building imitate any part of reality? |
15383 | How can we implant the idea of harmony by that which is in itself a parody on art? |
15383 | How can we teach the spirit of true art by a medium which is in itself the opposite of art? |
15383 | How does he shape the world? |
15383 | How does nature look when it has been remolded by the artistic temperament and imagination? |
15383 | How does the photoplay differ from a theater performance? |
15383 | How does the theater performance differ in this respect from life? |
15383 | How much of this noblest vehicle of thought can the photoplay conserve in its domain? |
15383 | Instead of feeding them with mere entertainment, why not give them food for serious thought? |
15383 | Is it different with a painting? |
15383 | Is it his aim to reproduce the landscape or the historic event? |
15383 | Is its architectural value dependent upon the similarity to nature? |
15383 | Is not an esthetic judgment of rejection demanded by good taste and sober criticism? |
15383 | Must we not say art is imitation of nature? |
15383 | Or did it start with the first presentation of successive pictures at such a speed that the impression of movement resulted? |
15383 | Or did the development begin with the first photographing of various phases of moving objects? |
15383 | Or does the melody or harmony in music offer an imitation of the surrounding world? |
15383 | Or was the birthday of the new art when the experimenters for the first time succeeded in projecting such rapidly passing pictures on a wall? |
15383 | The question arises: how does the photoplay secure the needed shifting of attention? |
15383 | This is the thesis which we want to prove, and the first step to it must be to ask: what is the aim of art if not the imitation of reality? |
15383 | Was it the first device to introduce movement into the pictures on a screen? |
15383 | What are the causes, and what are the effects of this movement which was undreamed of only a short time ago? |
15383 | What are the chances of the photoartist to bring these feelings to a convincing expression? |
15383 | What are the essential processes in the mind when we turn our attention to one face in the crowd, to one little flower in the wide landscape? |
15383 | What characterizes a particular art as such? |
15383 | What else is the perception of movement but the seeing of a long series of different positions? |
15383 | What invention marked the beginning? |
15383 | What is attention? |
15383 | What is imitated in a lyric poem? |
15383 | What is left in the photoplay? |
15383 | What is left of the real landscape when the engraver''s needle has sketched it? |
15383 | What is left of the tragic events in real life when the lyric poet has reshaped them in a few rhymed stanzas? |
15383 | What is then the difference between seeing motion in the photoplay and seeing it on the real stage? |
15383 | What psychological factors are involved when we watch the happenings on the screen? |
15383 | What was the real principle of the inner development on this artistic side? |
15383 | Who would have been bold enough four centuries ago to foresee the musical means and effects of the modern orchestra? |
15383 | Why do we, nevertheless, see a continuous movement? |
15383 | Why does this satisfy us? |
15383 | Why is it valuable to have a part of nature or life liberated from all connection with the world? |
15383 | Would it be at the same time a solution of the esthetic problem? |
15383 | Would it not involve the expectation that the artistic value would be the greater, the more the ideal of imitation is approached? |
15383 | Would not this color be again an addition which oversteps the essential limits of this particular art? |
17476 | Can he wind into a subject like a serpent, as Burke does? |
17476 | Well,said the editor,"what further proof do you want?" |
17476 | Do you ever think of the irrevocable nature of speech? |
17476 | Have you any witnesses?" |
17476 | Thus: The last time I made a speech, I went next day to the editor of our local newspaper, and said,"I thought your paper was friendly to me?" |
17476 | What constitutes such a personality? |
17476 | What is the salesman to do? |
17476 | What more can I say? |
17476 | What should the speaker do with his hands? |
17476 | What''s the matter?" |
11523 | How much are the$%#@$%s paying you? |
11523 | It''s not about the amount of salary,Raul stated,"it''s...""You mean I''m not wanted here anymore?" |
11523 | Purushottam, can I ask you something? |
11523 | So what? 11523 That''s the answer I get after all that I have done for you? |
11523 | What I mean is, if you become the chief minister, can I be your press secretary? |
11523 | Why not? |
11523 | ( Who brought in the chicken yesterday?) |
11523 | A pause and,"What do you mean?" |
11523 | A reader''s letter was published in Herald a few days later:"Where was your reporter when the firing took place in Vasco? |
11523 | After such sexualist reduction, what forgiveness? |
11523 | Afterall, have n''t we in the Press in Goa been complaining about increasing pressures from the BJP government? |
11523 | All I am asking is, if you become the chief minister, what will you do for me? |
11523 | And at the rate we were going, the gap would fast be closed and surpassed? |
11523 | Anthony nudged me and asked,"Can you imagine Mudaliar in such a scene?" |
11523 | Asking for a raise was invariably met with a simply question,''Do you want to continue?'' |
11523 | Besides, what was the big deal? |
11523 | But how politically unbiased were we allowed to be? |
11523 | But in the event that you do become the chief minister, could you not at least tell me what your disposition will be?" |
11523 | Can one seek for and hope for such a dimension in Goa? |
11523 | Can we rise to the opportunity? |
11523 | Could you please fit the grammer in?) |
11523 | Did he know something that I did n''t? |
11523 | Does it work? |
11523 | Editors and crime-- what''s the connection? |
11523 | Gabru and Cyril D''Cunha were at the desk and Gurudas R.("Kaka") Singbal, Pramod Khandeparkar and Jovito Lopes on the field? |
11523 | Guess what? |
11523 | Had he gone to Baina for a quickie?" |
11523 | He tried a different line,"Are you going to join my competitor and stab me in the chest?" |
11523 | Health not be? |
11523 | How can a newspaper which expects revenue in the form of advertisements from any incumbent government remain loyal to its reader? |
11523 | How can one negotiate for oneself the editorial space to do so? |
11523 | How so? |
11523 | How, I asked myself, is one to distinguish? |
11523 | I explained that it would help me cope with my Company Secretary studies from the comforts of my own home in Margao? |
11523 | Is everything okay?" |
11523 | Is it fair to all concerned? |
11523 | Is it the truth? |
11523 | Is this too much to expect? |
11523 | It was said he took full advantage of the daily''s lable, in those days of the Permit Raj, to import( from Italy?) |
11523 | Labour not be? |
11523 | Neither was I prepared for a question like''Do you know English? |
11523 | Newsroom disobedience is not what it used to be( is it at all what it was?). |
11523 | Now I want to ask you: what will you do for me?" |
11523 | One Sunday( or was it another public holiday? |
11523 | One of the most promising publishing ventures in the history of Goa''s print media was about to take off? |
11523 | Our questions were basic-- why can sanitation not be"sold"? |
11523 | Papa''s dream began to show signs of fatigue? |
11523 | Perhaps some other time? |
11523 | Scope& Challenges? |
11523 | Should it? |
11523 | So how could one be blamed for opting to take a few hours for a harmless passion like watching a football match? |
11523 | So why do journalists from Goa bloom only on alien terrain? |
11523 | Sports editor Nelson Dias, who happened to pass by, asked Lirio:"Arre baba, why do n''t you put the refill in the pen and use it?" |
11523 | Surprising? |
11523 | The elderly not be? |
11523 | The next moment the old man came charging and thundered,"Kal kombeo konnem adleo re?" |
11523 | Was that why he said he could n''t do anything for me? |
11523 | What do you think?" |
11523 | What is a free- sheeter? |
11523 | What was so special about these deaths?" |
11523 | When I told Rajan of my decision, he had just one question in mind: where are you going? |
11523 | Who is willing to explore the new paradigm? |
11523 | Why can education not be? |
11523 | Will it be beneficial to all concerned?" |
11523 | Will it built goodwill and better friendship? |
11523 | Will you find a Kuru nowadays? |
11523 | Will''aparanta''provide it? |
1478 | A good joke? |
1478 | And how is the dear General this evening? |
1478 | And one day this brave handsome man was out making whisky and he had just sampled some when he looked up and what do you suppose he saw? |
1478 | And that is what you Puritan gentlemen of God and volcanoes of Correct Thought snuffle over as a good joke? 1478 Do you mean to say,"gasped Priscilla,"that I can return to earth?" |
1478 | Eh-- what''s that? 1478 Gee-- don''t youse know?" |
1478 | Grandfather was awful brave, was n''t he father? |
1478 | I wonder what this medicine show is like? |
1478 | Madam,said he, turning to Mrs. van der Griff,"Am I to understand that there is liquor in those glasses?" |
1478 | Medicine shows? |
1478 | Mother,said George,"when I get to be eighteen, can I be a soldier just like grandfather up there?" |
1478 | Now tell me, said the King,"is there any chance that a man who sails to the westward will ever return?" |
1478 | Oh do you think so, Aunt Polly? |
1478 | Oh you do n''t want to hear that again, do you children? |
1478 | Shall we go a la salle- a- manger? |
1478 | There will not be a drop of wine served to- night, and now General, shall we go in to dinner? 1478 Was it, by any chance, Colombo?" |
1478 | Well this is the land of religious freedom, is n''t it? 1478 Well, sister, what seems to be the matter here?" |
1478 | Well-- anything else? |
1478 | Well-- what happened then? |
1478 | What charming story did he tell this time? |
1478 | What is the matter with these people? |
1478 | What''s going on to- night? |
1478 | Whom are you, said he,"to be thus wandering in the very unspeakable forest of the very unnamable sorcerer Thyrston?" |
1478 | Why ca n''t I get to sleep? |
1478 | Will you have a drink of champagne wine, General? |
1478 | Would Monsieur like to see the journal? 1478 Yes, are n''t they?" |
1478 | Yes? |
1478 | ("Did Will put the cat out?") |
1478 | ("Or is it me?") |
1478 | And after an interval Colombo said,"There, my dear, do you not see how ridiculous it is to suppose that the earth is anything but round?" |
1478 | And what do you suppose the stranger had?" |
1478 | And when the brave handsome man offered the stranger a drink what do you suppose the stranger said?" |
1478 | Besides-- what good did the war do anyway-- except make a lot of rich people richer? |
1478 | But just as I was leaving I thought,"Priscilla, how about a drink-- just one little drink?" |
1478 | Do you think Priscilla is thinking about marrying anybody in particular? |
1478 | Hello Miles-- shoot many Indians today? |
1478 | I''d love to shoot an Indian, would n''t you, auntie? |
1478 | It would be a blessed relief when the thing was finally done beyond chance of recall; why could n''t that stupid waiter hurry? |
1478 | It''s-- it''s cool for June, is n''t it? |
1478 | JOHN: By whom? |
1478 | Jean( Reading)--Sell my piano? |
1478 | MILES( eagerly): She''s a-- a fine girl, is n''t she? |
1478 | MILES( nervously): Yes, but it-- it is cool for June, is n''t it? |
1478 | MILES: A military man? |
1478 | MILES: Do you really think so, Mrs. Brewster? |
1478 | MILES: Mistress Priscilla is n''t home, then? |
1478 | Need I name her? |
1478 | Of course it is not at all the kind of thing that will sell, is it-- and the metre must be patched up in places, do n''t you think? |
1478 | Old graduates? |
1478 | PRISCILLA: Miles, would you mind closing that window? |
1478 | PRISCILLA: Miles, would you mind passing me that pillow over there? |
1478 | Pat-- Say buddy any chance for a job here? |
1478 | Pat-- Why-- was you across? |
1478 | So I said, did n''t I? |
1478 | THE VOICE: Where in hell did you put the vermouth? |
1478 | That''s what you came here for, did n''t you?" |
1478 | The Lieutenant-- Is there anything we can do to ease the pain? |
1478 | The Lieutenant-- Well, men, do you feel ready? |
1478 | The Streetcleaner''s Son-- That makes a fellow feel pretty good inside, does n''t it? |
1478 | The angel-- Why the hell were n''t you satisfied to stay in heaven? |
1478 | There is a most amusing story about---- The bill, Monsieur? |
1478 | Thyrston?" |
1478 | What did the stranger have?" |
1478 | Will you be so kind as to lead the way with Miss Rhinelander?" |
1478 | You know the reason why I came over here tonight? |
16506 | --Is there no_ Third_, or will such_ Reas''nings_ pass In_ Bridewel''s_ rigid Court, or save the_ Lash_? |
16506 | 990 Why thrive the_ Lewd_, their_ Wishes_ seldom crost, And why_ Poetic Justice_ often lost? |
16506 | All_ Arts_ besides_ improve, Sea, Air_ and_ Land_} Are every day with_ nicer Judgment_ scan''d,} And why should_ this_ alone be at a_ stand_?} |
16506 | And ca n''t you_ thrash_, or_ trail_ a_ Pike_ or_ Pole_? |
16506 | And what a noble Description has the same Prophet of the Fall of Lucifer? |
16506 | Are there no_ Jakes_ in Town, or_ Kennels_ foul? |
16506 | As for that Question of Boileau''s,"What Pleasure can it be to hear the howlings of repining Lucifer?" |
16506 | But here it may be worth the while to enquire, whether the principal Hero in Epic ought to be virtuous? |
16506 | Can they grapple_ Omnipotence,_ or are they sure they can be_ too hard_ for_ Heaven? |
16506 | For if we allow not such a pleasing Variety, how shall we excuse even Virgil himself, who has his Dido, as well a Tasso his Armida and Erminia? |
16506 | Has_ Bankrupt Nature_ then no_ more_ to give, Or by a_ Trick_ persuades Mankind to_ live_? |
16506 | He finds_ Examples_, we the_ Rule_ must make, Tho who without a Guide may not mistake? |
16506 | How few can equal_ Praise_ with_ C----ch_ obtain, Who made_ Lucretius smooth_, and_ chast_, and_ plain_? |
16506 | How oft must he for those_ Life- Touches_ sit,_ Genius, Invention, Memory, Judgment, Wit_? |
16506 | If there''s_ Hereafter_, and a last_ Great Day_, What_ Fire_''s enough to_ purge_ his_ Stains_ away? |
16506 | No_ honester Employment_, that you chuse With such_ vile Drudgery_ t''abase the heav''n born_ Muse_? |
16506 | Or are there too in_ Writing softer Hours_? |
16506 | Or is''t that_ Matter_ nobler_ Mind_ o''erpow''rs, Which boasts her_ native Liberty_ in vain, 380 In_ Mortal Fetters_ and a_ Slavish Chain_? |
16506 | Or_ P----r_ read unmov''d, whose every_ Page_ So just a_ Standard_ to the opening_ Age_? |
16506 | Speak, like the wise_ Italian_, well of all; Who knows into what_ Hands_ he''s doom''d to_ fall_? |
16506 | To the question of the formidable Boileau,"What Pleasure can it be to hear the howlings of repining Lucifer?" |
16506 | What can we there, while more than_ mortal Grace_ Forbids our_ Entrance_, and secures the_ Place_? |
16506 | What gain''d_ Euripides_ by all his_ Sense_, Who madly rail''d against a_ Providence_? |
16506 | What_ Pride_, what_ Luxury_, a foul, an odious Train?} |
16506 | What_ Shoals of Vices_ with''em cross''d the Main?} |
16506 | Who can th''ingenious S----y''s Praise refuse, Who serves a grateful_ Prince_, and grateful_ Muse_? |
16506 | Who dares_ Rebellious Arms_ against him move While his_ Prà ¦ torian Guard_''s his Subjects_ Love_? |
16506 | Who shew''d_ Columbus_ where the_ Indies_ lay? |
16506 | Why should we still be_ lazily content_ 260 With thredbare_ Schemes_, and nothing_ new_ invent? |
16506 | You ask me, What''s the readiest way to_ Fame_, And how to gain a_ Poet''s_ sacred Name? |
16506 | You''ll ask, What GENIUS is, and Where to find? |
16506 | _ Can they_ Thunder_ with a_ Voice like God,_ and cast abroad the_ Rage_ of their_ Wrath? |
16506 | _ Why no more_ must we for ever long And vainly languish for so_ sweet_ a_ Song_? |
16506 | may we not_ copy_ well Tho far th''_ Original_ our_ Art_ excel? |
16506 | nay, how shall we manage Love? |
18018 | --_Land and Water._ Practical Pacifism and Its Adversaries:"Is it Peace, Jehu?" |
18018 | He says to himself:"Why on earth is So- and- so made a peer( or a front bench man, or what not)? |
18018 | How did such a catastrophe come about? |
18018 | I do not say the great newspapers did not deal with it, but_ how_ did they deal with it? |
18018 | Is not everything which it desires suggested, suggested? |
18018 | Is not everything which the regime desires to be suppressed, suppressed? |
18018 | The philosopher said:"All things are a matter of degree; and who shall establish degree?" |
18018 | To distort, to lie? |
18018 | Why was this doctrine originally what I have called it,"plausible and arguable"? |
18018 | Why, in the name of goodness, is this very rich but unknown, and to my knowledge incompetent, man suddenly put into such a position?" |
18018 | the power to keep the people ignorant upon matters vital to us all? |
14637 | ''"Like that?'' |
14637 | ''And always I ask and wonder( Though often I do not know it) Why does this water not smell like water?...'' |
14637 | ''How can a bell sound on into a race?'' |
14637 | ''Mais tu ne seras plus? |
14637 | ''Tell me honestly who of my contemporaries-- that is, men between thirty and forty- five-- have given the world one single drop of alcohol?... |
14637 | ''Vous ne le voulez pas? |
14637 | ''_ Bast_.--James Gurney, wilt thou give us leave awhile? |
14637 | All that remains to be said is that Mr Monro is fond of dogs(''Can you smell the rose?'' |
14637 | And what exactly_ is_ a philosophic critic? |
14637 | And what, indeed, have material things to do with the purification and the peace of the soul? |
14637 | And which( strange question) is the more consoling, the more satisfying, the more acceptable? |
14637 | Are we to look for a music of verbal melody, or for a musical elaboration of an intellectual theme? |
14637 | But can we isolate the philosophic critic in the same way? |
14637 | But what happens in_ The Way of all Flesh_? |
14637 | Can the source be defined or indicated? |
14637 | Do you, because you clothed yourselves in the shreds of a moral respectability which you had not the time( or was it the courage?) |
14637 | Et puis?... |
14637 | How shall we recognise him? |
14637 | How shall we say it? |
14637 | How_ could_ a race be drowsy? |
14637 | I am myself a mouth for blood....''Perhaps we do wrong to ask ourselves whether this and similar things mean, exactly, anything? |
14637 | Into what cloud cuckoo land have we been beguiled by Coleridge''s laudanum trances? |
14637 | Is it not Mr Hardy? |
14637 | Is it not Mr Hardy? |
14637 | Is it not always on the point of degenerating into a jingle-- as much an exhibition of the limitations of a poetical theory as of its capabilities? |
14637 | Is it surprising that we do not trust these gentlemen? |
14637 | Or would he hear the eternal arc- lamps sputter, Only that; and see old shadows crawl; And find the stars were street lamps after all? |
14637 | To be serious nowadays is to be ill- mannered, and what, murmurs the cynic, does it matter? |
14637 | Was it laziness, was it a felt incapacity? |
14637 | What does he do? |
14637 | What does it matter? |
14637 | What if after all, the true end of man be those hours of plenary beatitude he spent lying at the bottom of the boat on the Lake of Bienne? |
14637 | What if the old truth is valid still, that man is born free but is everywhere in chains? |
14637 | What is the secret of poetic power like this? |
14637 | What is''the race of night?'' |
14637 | What right had you to suppose that a man disarmed of tradition is stronger for his nakedness? |
14637 | What right, indeed, have these to condemn the logical outcome of an anarchic individualism which they themselves so jealously cherished? |
14637 | What shall we require of her? |
14637 | What shall we require of poetry? |
14637 | What would he not have found in those mighty seekers, with whom Hardy alone stands equal? |
14637 | What_ can_ it mean? |
14637 | When, when, Peace, will you, Peace? |
14637 | Whence came the power that compelled it? |
14637 | Where are we to call a halt in the inevitable process by which the kinds of literary art merge into one? |
14637 | Which is the more beautiful? |
14637 | Who alive can say,''Thou art no poet-- mays''t not tell thy dreams''? |
14637 | Who but a fool would ask Mr De la Mare to write an epic or Miss Mansfield to give us a novel? |
14637 | Who could hurt him more than he had been hurt already? |
14637 | Who may not well be plunged up to the lips in sorrow at parting from one of whom he can say this in all soberness and truth? |
14637 | Why did you not see that the end of all your devotion was to shift man''s responsibility for himself from his shoulders? |
14637 | Yet even here, where the general beauty is undoubted, is not the music too obvious? |
14637 | _ Present Condition of English Poetry_ Shall we, or shall we not, be serious? |
14637 | _ The Wisdom of Anatole France_ How few are the wise writers who remain to us? |
14637 | or''Hé, que ne suis- je puce?'' |
14637 | quand la paleur Qui blemist nôtre corps sans chaleur ne lumière Nous perd le sentiment?... |
14637 | to analyse, dare to denounce us because our teeth are set on edge by the sour grapes which you enjoyed? |
13029 | ''Where,''cried Reginald Fitzurse,''is the traitor, Thomas Becket?'' |
13029 | And lest they come weeping, accursed, and alone, let us ask, how shall we recognize them? |
13029 | And they said:''Is not this Joseph''s son?''" |
13029 | Are the art schools and the art museums making themselves ready to assimilate a new art form? |
13029 | Are the distributors willing to send out a musician with each film? |
13029 | Are the institutions with a purely literary theory of life going to meet the need? |
13029 | But what, more specifically, are prophet- wizards? |
13029 | By what means shall we block it in? |
13029 | Can you not attain to that informal understanding in pictorial delineations of such people? |
13029 | Having read thus far, why not close the book and go round the corner to a photoplay theatre? |
13029 | He brings to one''s mind the tearful book, much loved in childhood, Parted at the Altar, or Why Was it Thus? |
13029 | Here are two bits from his discourse:--"Strike the dialogue from Molière''s Tartuffe, and what audience would bear its mere stage- business? |
13029 | How are they going to make a practical national distribution of the accompaniment? |
13029 | How are we to step in to the possession of such a destiny? |
13029 | How could memories of Ladies''Entrance squalor be made into Castles in Granada or Carcassonne? |
13029 | How could these people reconstruct the torn carpets and tin cans and waste- paper of their lives into mythology? |
13029 | How does public opinion grip the journalist? |
13029 | How far may it go in cultivating concerted emotion in the now ungoverned crowd? |
13029 | If you are so disposed, consider your answers to these questions: What play or part of a play given in this theatre did you like most to- day? |
13029 | Is it not possible to have a Michelangelo of photoplay sculpture? |
13029 | Is it too much to expect that some American prophet- wizard of the future will give us this film in the spirit of an Egyptian priest? |
13029 | Is there a reform worth while that can not be embodied and enforced by a builder''s invention? |
13029 | Is this also sculpture? |
13029 | Is this photoplay physician such a one? |
13029 | Or between Shakespeare''s Lear and any one else''s Lear? |
13029 | Or what is the type of institution that will ultimately take the position of leadership in culture through this new universal instrument? |
13029 | Prospective author- producer, do you remember Landor''s Imaginary Conversations, and Lang''s Letters to Dead Authors? |
13029 | Prospective author- producer, why not spend a deal of energy on the photoplay successors of the puppet- plays? |
13029 | Should we not look for him in the fulness of time? |
13029 | So without too much theorizing, why not erect our new America and move into it? |
13029 | Suppose the seated majesty of Moses should rise, what would be the quality of the action? |
13029 | There came magicians, saying,"Where is he that is born king of the Jews, for we have seen his star in the east and have come to worship him?" |
13029 | Though no photoplay tableau has yet approximated the brush of Inness, why not attempt to lead Jeanne through an Inness landscape? |
13029 | What becomes of the difference between Shakespeare and Sheridan Knowles in the film? |
13029 | What do I mean by New Arabia? |
13029 | What is the best picture you have ever seen anywhere? |
13029 | What is the high quixotic splendid call? |
13029 | What materials should the photoplay figures suggest? |
13029 | What pictures, seen here this month, shall we bring back?" |
13029 | What possibilities lie in this art, once it is understood and developed, to plant new conceptions of civic and national idealism? |
13029 | What shall be done in especial by this generation of idealists, whose flags rise and go down, whose battle line wavers and breaks a thousand times? |
13029 | What the least? |
13029 | When the use of alcohol is treason, what will become of those all but unbroken lines of slum saloons? |
13029 | When you are appraising a new film, ask yourself:"Is this motion as rapid, as godlike, as the sweep of the wings of the Samothracian?" |
13029 | Where is the inspired camera that will record something of what Inness beheld? |
13029 | Where will the money come from? |
13029 | Where will we find our precedents for such a cavalcade? |
13029 | Where will we get our story? |
13029 | Who do we mean by The Prophet- Wizard? |
13029 | Who will endow the local photoplay and the Imagist photoplay? |
13029 | Who will endow the successors of the present woman''s suffrage film, and other great crusading films? |
13029 | Who will see that the public documents and university researches take on the form of motion pictures? |
13029 | Who will take the first great measures to insure motion picture splendors in the church? |
13029 | Why are our managers so mechanical? |
13029 | Why can not our weekly story be henceforth some great plan that is being worked out, whose history will delight us? |
13029 | Why do men prefer the photoplay to the drinking place? |
13029 | Why do the people love Mary? |
13029 | Why do the people love Mary? |
13029 | Why do they flatten out at the moment the fancy of the tiniest reader of fairy- tales begins to be alive? |
13029 | Why does the audience keep coming to this type of photoplay if neither lust, love, hate, nor hunger is adequately conveyed? |
13029 | Why not ballot on the matter in hand? |
13029 | Why not face this idiosyncrasy of the camera and make the non- human object the hero indeed? |
13029 | Why not have the most beautiful scenes in front of the theatres, instead of those alleged to be the most thrilling? |
13029 | Why not rest the fevered and wandering eye, rather than make one more attempt to take it by force? |
13029 | Why not this for the adventure of the American architects? |
13029 | Why not this new splendor? |
13029 | Why should we not consider ourselves a deathless Panama- Pacific Exposition on a coast- to- coast scale? |
13029 | Why was this model of Notre Dame made with such exquisite pains? |
13029 | Why would you be imitators of these leaders when you might be creators in a new medium? |
13029 | Why? |
13029 | Will this land furthest west be the first to capture the inner spirit of this newest and most curious of the arts? |
13029 | Would not their action be as heroic as their quietness? |
13029 | Young artist in the audience, does it pass you by? |
16746 | It''s a female, is n''t it? |
16746 | So you have seen her? |
16746 | And farther north in the Netherlands, there are Rembrandt and Rubens; and ought not Vandyke to be allowed to stand aloft with them? |
16746 | And the chief huntsman asked,"Which way did he go?" |
16746 | Are not the memories of youth abiding? |
16746 | But who are the spectators that Ibsen saw in his mind''s eye when he imagined his plays bodied forth in the actual theater? |
16746 | But who shall say that this immediate inferiority of the play to the novel is inherent in the form itself? |
16746 | By common consent of mankind who are the supreme soldiers, the supreme painters, the supreme poets? |
16746 | By the side of Michelangelo there is Raphael, also an Italian; and has any one really a right to exclude Titian from their fellowship? |
16746 | Did Thackeray borrow it from the romance or from the libretto? |
16746 | Did any novelist of the eighteenth century reveal a subtler insight into the hidden recesses of feminine psychology than Marivaux? |
16746 | Did any novelist of the seventeenth century lay bare the palpitations of the female heart more delicately than Racine? |
16746 | Did n''t Mark ever tell you? |
16746 | For what could be more beneficent, more salutary? |
16746 | How would it be presented now in the twentieth century if it should be chosen again by Mr. Howells or by Mr. James? |
16746 | How would it have fared in the nineteenth century if Dickens had been attracted to it, or Thackeray? |
16746 | How would this tale have been told in the eighteenth century by the author of''Robinson Crusoe''? |
16746 | Is there no rich variety of self- analysis in''Macbeth,''one may ask, and in''Hamlet''? |
16746 | Is this a case of conveyance, such as is often carelessly called plagiarism? |
16746 | It was in his lecture on Emerson that Matthew Arnold asked:"Who are the great men of letters?" |
16746 | Or did he reinvent it for himself, forgetting that it had already served? |
16746 | The play so worked upon the feelings of this perfervid Scot that he was forced to cry out triumphantly:"Whaur''s your Wully Shakspere noo?" |
16746 | Who will deny that it may be merely the defect of the playwrights of our time? |
16746 | Who, then, are the supreme leaders in the several departments of human endeavor? |
16746 | and can any one of us free himself wholly from the bonds of early environment? |
16746 | by the author of''Clarissa Harlowe''? |
16746 | by the author of''Tom Jones''? |
16746 | by the author of''Tristram Shandy''? |
16746 | or is it a case of unconscious reminiscence? |
18230 | Where are you going to lead me? |
18230 | And is n''t a superficial glance about rather confirmatory? |
18230 | But does n''t it sound as if it ought to be? |
18230 | But in what proportions do they contribute to the result? |
18230 | Have you noticed the small number of new writers who take their chances in the theater? |
18230 | How can you expect then that the truth we tell them can do them any good? |
18230 | How shall one set about composing a dramatic work which shall be fine and shall have some hope of survival? |
18230 | How should one set about composing a dramatic work which shall succeed and make money? |
18230 | My dear friend: What is my way of working? |
18230 | No? |
18230 | The canary once sang; and the ass askt him how he could learn this to do? |
18230 | Well, do you wish me to disengage the philosophy of this garrulity? |
18230 | Well, then? |
18230 | What difference does it make to you as a traveler? |
18230 | What should it be called in dramatic work? |
18230 | You do n''t believe me? |
1395 | Ah, my Lucy, dare I hope for the affection of the best of men? |
1395 | If you take from Virgil his diction and metre, what do you leave him? |
1395 | The Rape of the Lockis very witty, but through it all do n''t you mark the sneer of the contemptuous, unmanly little wit, the crooked dandy? |
1395 | Was ever woman in this manner wooed? |
1395 | Was there ever such a man, my Harriet, so good, so just, so noble in his sentiments? |
1395 | A Amsterdam, chez Jean Boekholt Libraire pres de la Bourse, 1685"? |
1395 | A curious touch, is it not, of pity for the people? |
1395 | Ah, madam, how shall I answer you? |
1395 | And the Great Spirit said:''Pe- shau- ba, do you love the woman?'' |
1395 | And the others? |
1395 | And what subjects shall they be? |
1395 | And who is there to succeed the two who are gone, or who shall be our poet, if the Master be silent? |
1395 | Are they never aweary? |
1395 | But can you call_ this_ true:"There is nobody but is ashamed of having loved when once he loves no longer"? |
1395 | But does not the notion of living on frozen pomatum rather take the gilt off the delight of being an Indian? |
1395 | But how did a religiously minded man regard the gods? |
1395 | Ca n''t you see her stealing with those"feet of ivory,"like Bombyca''s, down the dark side of the silent moonlit streets of Beaucaire? |
1395 | Can anything speak more clearly of the decadence of the art than the birth of so many poetical"societies"? |
1395 | Can you fancy Fielding composing such a scene, Fielding whom Richardson scouts as a profligate? |
1395 | Can you find among our genteel writers of this age, a figure more beautiful, tender, devoted, and in all good ways womanly than Sophia Western''s? |
1395 | Could anything be more delightful? |
1395 | Could so worthy a man have been so absorbed by an unworthy book? |
1395 | Dear Lady Violet,--Who can admire too much your undefeated resolution to admire only the right things? |
1395 | Do husbands and wives often bore each other for the same reason? |
1395 | Do n''t you think, dear Hopkins, that this allusion to_ bas- bleus_, if not indelicate, is a little rococo, and out of date? |
1395 | Do n''t you wish you had lived in Kentucky in Colonel Boone''s time? |
1395 | Do you know an older? |
1395 | Do you know what it is to walk alone all day on the Border, and what good company to you the burn is that runs beside the highway? |
1395 | Do you know whom he reminds me of? |
1395 | Do you remember the lines on the ring which he gave his lady? |
1395 | Do you remember the pretty paraphrase of it in"Love in Idleness"? |
1395 | Does it touch thee at all, oh gentle spirit and serene, that we, who never knew thee, love thee yet, and revere thee as a saint of heathendom? |
1395 | Does one not feel it, the cool of that old summer night, the sweet smell of broken boughs and trodden grass and deep dew, and the shining of the star? |
1395 | E. P. Roe is your favourite novelist there; a thousand of his books are sold for every two copies of the works of Henry Fielding? |
1395 | Even then should a gentleman take advantage of a poor bookseller''s ignorance? |
1395 | Have the dead any delight in the religion they inspire? |
1395 | His only motive would be an aversion to disobliging a_ confrere_, and why should I put him in such an unpleasant position? |
1395 | How comes it that in the fierce fighting days the soldiers were so tuneful, and such scholars? |
1395 | If I lend you it, will you be kind enough to illustrate it on separate sheets of paper, and not make drawings on the pages of the book? |
1395 | If he does not like them, why should he like them because they are forwarded by_ me_? |
1395 | Is it not lucky for swains like you that the soldiers have quite forsworn sonneting? |
1395 | It is a mammoth posing as a kitten, though whatever he says or does, his audience throw up their hands and eyes and ask:"Was there ever such a man?" |
1395 | May a maiden read the book that the young lady studied over Charles Lamb''s shoulder? |
1395 | One can not translate things like this:"_ Ou sont nos amoureuses_? |
1395 | Say, am I Love or Phoebus? |
1395 | Shall we find old age easier if ever we come to its threshold? |
1395 | There he sang of Nicolette,"Was it not the other day That a pilgrim came this way? |
1395 | What apology of Lauzun''s, or Bussy Rabutin''s for faithlessness could equal this?--"Why dost thou say I am forsworn, Since thine I vowed to be? |
1395 | What are human motives, according to Rochefoucauld? |
1395 | What guardsman now writes like Lovelace, and how many of his friends could applaud him in Greek? |
1395 | What has become of it, the lusty old militant world? |
1395 | What he meant by his belief that four times he had,"whether in the body or out of the body,"been united with the Spirit of the world, who knows? |
1395 | What hope or what fears did he entertain with regard to the future life? |
1395 | What is all this but the changeful mood of grief? |
1395 | What knew Samuel of Eustathius? |
1395 | What novelist was ever so rich in both? |
1395 | What of"Pamela"and"Clarissa"? |
1395 | What says his reformed rake, Mr. Wilson, in"Joseph Andrews"? |
1395 | What will become of us, and why do we prefer to Fielding-- a number of meritorious moderns? |
1395 | What, then, is lacking to make Mr. Swinburne a poet of a rank even higher than that which he occupies? |
1395 | When Tanner was grown up, he came back to that neighbourhood, and the first thing he asked was,"Where is Manito- o- geezhik?" |
1395 | When a man was a rake, a poet, a warrior, all in one, what chance had a peaceful minor poet like you or me, Gifted, against his charms? |
1395 | Who can equal that song,"Once you come to Forty Year,"or the lines on the Venice Love- lamp, or the"Cane- bottomed Chair"? |
1395 | Who can tell? |
1395 | Who does not wish he knew as little of Burn''s as of Shakespeare''s? |
1395 | Who ever laughed at mankind with so much affection for mankind in his heart? |
1395 | Who is the author? |
1395 | Who knows? |
1395 | Who said:"To know all is to forgive all"? |
1395 | Why are they not reprinted, as Mr. Arber has reprinted"Captain John Smith''s Voyages, and Reports on Virginia"? |
1395 | Why such a man as Plotinus, with such ideas, remained a pagan, while Christianity offered him a sympathetic refuge, who can tell? |
1395 | Will it bore you, my dear Dick, if I tell you of an old Indian''s death? |
1395 | Will the crown reward you, say, When the fairy gold is fled? |
1395 | Will you be the heroine? |
1395 | _ I d cinerem aut Manes credis curare sepultos_? |
1395 | have I been Or Lusignan or Biron? |
12600 | ''God sent... the crow... a piece... of cheese....''Have you written it? |
12600 | And our wives? |
12600 | Do you think,he asks,"she would give me a few words on''How it Feels to be a Widow?'' |
12600 | Here,he said,"You want to know square sennit? |
12600 | Is Ekaterina Pavlovna in the garden? |
12600 | Why four kisses? |
12600 | :-- Not see? |
12600 | And here is Rossetti''s jaunty English:-- Tell me now in what hidden way is Lady Flora, the lovely Roman? |
12600 | And when the whole crew gathers round to impress upon Dauber the fact of his incompetence,"You hear?" |
12600 | Archipiade, ne Thaïs, Qui fut sa cousine germaine? |
12600 | Behind the veil, forbidden, Shut up from sight, Love, is there sorrow hidden, Is there delight? |
12600 | But can one call_ Daisy Miller_ pitiless? |
12600 | But is there more than the decoration of music in the verses which express the poet''s last farewell to his passion? |
12600 | But what sort of food? |
12600 | But you hate fish? |
12600 | But, it may be asked, are his people real? |
12600 | Chloe is prudent-- would you too be wise? |
12600 | Come life, come death, not a word be said; Should I lose you living, and vex you dead? |
12600 | Could you expect me to rejoice in the inferiority of your connections? |
12600 | Did Swinburne, in going to Putney, go to the Devil? |
12600 | Did he allow Swinburne to have a will of his own? |
12600 | Do it? |
12600 | Fish? |
12600 | Has he also the secret of poetry? |
12600 | Has he not made a perfect book of these things, with a thousand fancies added, in_ The Four Men_? |
12600 | He says that history should be written backwards; and what does this mean but that it should be dyed in prejudice? |
12600 | Here is Villon''s beginning:-- Dictes- moy où, n''en quel pays, Est Flora, la belle Romaine? |
12600 | I shall never tell you on earth, and in heaven, If I cry to you then, will you care to know? |
12600 | In an earlier version, the last line was still more arrogant:-- But where''s the wild dog that has praised his fleas? |
12600 | Is it all an exquisite farce or is it splendidly heroic? |
12600 | Is joy thy dower or grief, White rose of weary leaf, Late rose whose life is brief, whose loves are light? |
12600 | Like du Bellay, he asked himself and his contemporaries:"Are we, then, less than the Greeks and Romans?" |
12600 | Nor in any crowd: yet, strange and bitter thought, Even now were the old words said, If I tried the old trick, and said"Where''s Willy?" |
12600 | Not hear? |
12600 | Or did not Watts- Dunton rather play the part of the good Samaritan? |
12600 | Or hurled the little streets against the great, Had they but courage equal to desire? |
12600 | Or looks at Norfolk, and can dream of grace? |
12600 | Or_ What Maisie Knew_? |
12600 | Rather a good title for an article, is n''t it?" |
12600 | The laugh from underground, the deeper gloom-- are they not all but omnipresent throughout his later and greatest work? |
12600 | The little fox he murmured,"O what of the world''s bane?" |
12600 | The question that has so far not been settled is: Did Watts- Dunton put his hand over Swinburne''s mouth and forcibly stop him from shouting? |
12600 | They are whimpering to and fro-- And what should they know of England who only England know? |
12600 | To congratulate myself on the hope of relations whose condition in life is so decidedly beneath my own?" |
12600 | Was Watts- Dunton, in a phrase deprecated by the editors of a recent book of letters, a"kind of amiable Svengali"? |
12600 | Was there another Troy for her to burn? |
12600 | Was there ever such a pause and gathering of courage as in the verses that follow in which the last of the knights takes his resolve? |
12600 | What are we to eat then? |
12600 | What do you take his age to be?" |
12600 | Where''s Hipparchia, and where is Thaïs, Neither of them the fairer woman? |
12600 | Which would one rather have-- a complete novel or the torso of a novel with the artist''s dream of how to make it perfect? |
12600 | Whither? |
12600 | Who has not felt the same kind of joy as Henry James felt when George Eliot allowed him to run for the doctor? |
12600 | Why did n''t you say so? |
12600 | Why should I not say it when I believe that it is true? |
12600 | Why, what could she have done, being what she is? |
12600 | Would Chloe know if you''re alive or dead? |
12600 | You may interpret the little red fox and the sun and the moon as you please, but is it not all as beautiful as the ringing of bells? |
12600 | _ Youth, Typhoon, Lord Jim, The Secret Sharer, The Shadow Line_--are not all these fables of conquest and redemption? |
12600 | he writes to his brother:-- Why four kisses-- you will say-- why four? |
12600 | quoth another, resignedly,"Dwell they on our deeds?" |
12600 | what are its history and its works weighed with those of Egypt?" |
12600 | who sees majesty in George''s face? |
18095 | And where are the republics of modern times, which cluster around immortal Italy? 18095 Can it be that America under such circumstances should betray herself? |
18095 | How is the spirit of a free people to be formed, and animated, and cheered, but out of the storehouse of its historic recollections? 18095 Do you believe that the number would at least be equal? 18095 Do you believe there would even be found ten upright and faithful servants of the Lord, when formerly five cities could not furnish so many? 18095 Do you have such meetings now? 18095 Is life so dear or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? 18095 Is this a reality? 18095 Now, who are the just and faithful assembled here at present? 18095 O God, where are Thy chosen? 18095 Was it Pericles swaying the Athenian multitude? 18095 What else is to survive the age? 18095 What fairer prospects of success could be presented? 18095 What is it that gentlemen wish? 18095 What means more adequate to accomplish the sublime end? 18095 What more is necessary than for the people to preserve what they themselves have created? 18095 What more of the present is to survive? 18095 What would they have? 18095 Where are ye? 18095 Who are they? 18095 Why stand we here idle? 18095 how did Mozart do it, how Raffael? 18095 is your profession a dream? 18095 or is your Christianity a romance? 16420 )_ And so proceedes to answere the kings question? 16420 And can so blind a witch so conquere mee?_[ Sidenote:_ Ecphonisis_, or the Outcry.] 16420 And wherein I would faine learne, lay this vndecencie? 16420 By good conceit men say, Tell me who was they nurse? 16420 For if that opinion were not, who would acknowledge any God? 16420 For to say truely, what els is man but his minde? 16420 Honour perchance? 16420 In Gods iustice? 16420 In his mercy? 16420 In pompe and pryme of May, By whome sweete boy wert thou begot? 16420 Riches? 16420 The Emperour tooke him suddainly with the word, and said: callest thou me_ ingrate_? 16420 The Oratour vseth another maner of definition, thus: Is this wisedome? 16420 The third me thinks shruggingly saith, I kept not to sit sleeping with my Poesie till a Queene came and kissed me: But what of all this? 16420 What cradle wert thou rocked in? 16420 What hast thou then to drinke? 16420 What was thy meate and dayly foode? 16420 Where were you Sir the day of the battaile, for I saw ye not? 16420 _ And did ye not come by his chamber dore? 16420 _ What life is the liefest? 16420 _ What life list ye to lead? 16420 _ When wert thou borne desire? 16420 _ Who made me shent for her loues sake? 16420 _ Why strive I with the streame, or hoppe against the hill, On search that neuer can be found, and loose my labour still? 16420 _ Wylie worldling come tell me I thee pray, Wherein hopest thou, that makes thee so to swell? 16420 a smoake: but wherein hopest thou then? 16420 alack it taries not a day, But where fortune the fickle list to dwell: In thy children? 16420 and by what merite tell? 16420 and in dissembling of diseases which I pray you? 16420 and with as good authoritie as the Greekes? 16420 how hardlie shalt thou finde, Them all at once, good and thriftie and kinde: Thy wife? 16420 in the skurrill and filthy termes not meete for a kings eare? 16420 it restes in other men: Glorie? 16420 o''faire but fraile mettall to trust, Seruants? 16420 the needy is full of woe and awe, The wealthie full of brawle and brabbles of the law: To be a married man? 16420 what theeues? 16420 what threachours and iniust? 16420 which, whosoeuer haue skil to compasse, and make yeelding and flexible, what may not he commaund the body to perfourme? 16420 yea how almost is it possible that such maner of men should be of any vertue other then their profession requireth? 18769 But what are the laws of dramatic construction? 18769 How did we get over the difficulty? 18769 It was easy enough to kill either of them, but which? 18769 Lilian stared at her a moment and then exclaimed:Mr. Howard, what shall I do with this child?" |
18769 | Routledge, who had put his hands in his pocket, called out:"What''s the girl doing here, anyway, Howard?" |
13089 | Why so? |
13089 | APPENDIX II SOME SUGGESTIONS TO INSTRUCTORS What is the purpose of a course in the writing of arguments? |
13089 | And had James the Second no private virtues? |
13089 | And in what cases shall we apply the principle of forgiveness? |
13089 | And what are the facts about the playing of such men in the universities in which your students would be interested? |
13089 | And what, after all, are the virtues ascribed to Charles? |
13089 | By what method should it be raised? |
13089 | Can you imagine the New York& New Haven Railroad, for example, controlled by the passengers, to the exclusion of the stock holders? |
13089 | Can you imagine the control of any other joint- stock corporation delivered over to those who have no stock or the least stock in it? |
13089 | Did the accident happen through the negligence of the railroad officials? |
13089 | Did the defendant guarantee the goods he sold the plaintiff? |
13089 | Did things so happen or did they not? |
13089 | Do both sides on these questions accept the same view of the bearing of the moral issues? |
13089 | Does a rigid prescription of subjects for examination distort the course for the high school? |
13089 | Does admission by certificate provide sufficient safeguard for the standards of the college? |
13089 | Does he realize how difficult it is to prove such a thing by any external evidence whatever? |
13089 | Does the audience you have in mind affect the decision? |
13089 | Does the author know the subject at first hand, or does he rely on other men? |
13089 | For how many boys are languages easier or harder than history or mathematics or science? |
13089 | Has the plan succeeded in other places largely because of its novelty? |
13089 | His being there is a proof of his intent to aid and abet; else, why is he there? |
13089 | How do you intend to distribute your space between the main issues you will argue out? |
13089 | How far is the condoning of offenses consistent with maintaining the standards of society? |
13089 | How is that to be done? |
13089 | How many boys, who can be named, had their education injured by such prescription? |
13089 | How much should the standard be raised? |
13089 | How much space should the definitions occupy in the completed argument? |
13089 | How much will explanation enter into your argument? |
13089 | If that be so, why will not competition in city affairs bring equally good results to the taxpayer? |
13089 | If the next to the last sentence had read,"Smoking therefore seems to be a cause of low scholarship,"what should you think of the reasoning? |
13089 | In Lincoln''s address at Cooper Institute, what do you think of his attitude towards the South as respects fairness? |
13089 | In a business transaction how far can one push the Golden Rule? |
13089 | In a piece of their own writing, how many of the words are derived from the Latin? |
13089 | In the argument on which you are at work, what chance would there be of inducing agreement between the two sides? |
13089 | In the argument on which you are working, how much of the material in the introduction to the brief shall you use in the argument itself? |
13089 | In the argument on which you are working, what terms need definition? |
13089 | In the proposition,"A gentleman ought not to become a professional baseball player,"what meaning could be given to the word"gentleman"? |
13089 | In which of the arguments in this book does explanation play the smallest part? |
13089 | Is he there to assist, or there to prevent? |
13089 | Is it impartial or partisan? |
13089 | Is it not to be taken for granted, that a man seeks to accomplish his own purposes? |
13089 | Is its treatment of the subject exhaustive and definite, or cursory and superficial? |
13089 | Is the admitted inefficiency of the city government at present due to the system of government? |
13089 | Is the inefficiency of the city government at present due to temporary and removable causes? |
13089 | Is there danger in putting such large powers into the hands of so few men? |
13089 | It simply leaves the inquiry: What was the understanding those fathers had of the question mentioned? |
13089 | Of the authors of the textbooks in science how many? |
13089 | Of the authors whose works they are studying in English literature, how many were trained in Latin? |
13089 | Of the best writers? |
13089 | Of the first class we may take for an example such a question as, Should interscholastic athletics be maintained in---- school? |
13089 | Of the leaders in scholarship in the class how many know Latin? |
13089 | On the question of the value of Latin, for example, just how many of the class know no Latin? |
13089 | Shall a certain public school drop Greek from its list of studies; shall it set up a course in manual training? |
13089 | Shall a given college admit on certificate, or demand an examination of its own? |
13089 | Shall we be better off under the Republican or the Democratic party? |
13089 | Shall we have better local government under the old- fashioned form of city government, or under some form of commission government? |
13089 | Shall we, as a nation, be more comfortable and more prosperous if the powers of the federal government are strengthened and extended? |
13089 | Should class rushes be abolished? |
13089 | Should freshmen be required to be within college bounds at a fixed hour every night? |
13089 | Should honor students be excused from final examinations? |
13089 | Should the standard for entrance or for graduation be raised, or lowered, at your college? |
13089 | Should the universities be allowed to use men in their graduate schools as members of their teams? |
13089 | Should they have special privileges? |
13089 | Should we have more business and more profitable business if we had free trade with the Dominion of Canada? |
13089 | The next cry will necessarily be,"Why not elect the Supreme Court of the United States by popular vote? |
13089 | To die; to sleep;-- To sleep? |
13089 | Was Oliver Cromwell, his bitterest enemies themselves being judges, destitute of private virtues? |
13089 | Was undue influence exerted on the testator? |
13089 | What are they? |
13089 | What college shall a boy go to; shall he be prepared in a public school, or a private day school, or a boarding school? |
13089 | What different meanings would the word"comfort"have had in the days of your grandfather, as compared with the present day? |
13089 | What do you think of the persuasive power of Burke''s speech"On Conciliation with America"? |
13089 | What field are we thinking of when we state this subject? |
13089 | What is the estimate of the relative difficulty of getting into various colleges, and on what figures from schools is the estimate based? |
13089 | What is the frame of government under which we live? |
13089 | What is the question which, according to the text, those fathers understood"just as well, and even better, than we do now"? |
13089 | What products, then, can teachers aim to produce? |
13089 | What should be the grounds of a just valuation of all the subjects that can be presented at admission examinations which include numerous options? |
13089 | What sort of subjects, then, can be used? |
13089 | When he has planned a murder, and is present at its execution, is he there to forward or to thwart his own design? |
13089 | Why not elect the Federal Judiciary everywhere by popular vote? |
13089 | Why? |
13089 | Will a central bank of issue, or some institution like it, establish the business of the country on a basis less likely to be disturbed by panics? |
13089 | Will a competing street- car line make for better and cheaper transportation in the city? |
13089 | Will the adoption of the plan result in more economical administration? |
13089 | Will the adoption of the plan result in more efficient service to the city? |
13089 | Will the direct responsibility of the mayor and councilors to the citizens be a sufficient safeguard for the increased power given to them? |
13089 | Will the liability to recall keep officials from initiating new policies for fear of unpopularity? |
13089 | Will the new plan, if adopted, permanently raise the standard of public servants? |
13089 | and what kind of words are they? |
13089 | of its convincing power? |
13928 | And is not that, perhaps, the supreme merit of acting? |
13928 | And still the question remains: how much of this success is due to the playwright''s skill or to the skill of the actors? |
13928 | Are those quite the words one would use about the play in English? |
13928 | Are we always quite certain what we mean when we speak of an artist? |
13928 | Are we capable of realising the difference? |
13928 | Before saying to himself: what would this particular person say or do in these circumstances? |
13928 | But can it? |
13928 | But how? |
13928 | But is not all art a suggestion, an evocation, never a statement? |
13928 | But is not that a trifle too obvious sentiment for the true artist in artificial things? |
13928 | But is there, anywhere but in Ireland, an attempt to write imaginative literature in the form of drama? |
13928 | But might not the experiment be tried? |
13928 | Could Pachmann himself explain to us his own magic? |
13928 | Does anyone"seriously contest"its right not to"rank as Literature"? |
13928 | Does not gesture indeed make emotion, more certainly and more immediately than emotion makes gesture? |
13928 | Does not the play, for instance, lose a little in its acceptance of those narrow limits of the footlights? |
13928 | Does she deliberately choose the plays most obviously not written for her in order to extort a triumph out of her enemies? |
13928 | Elsewhere, how often do we find even so much as this, in more than a single writer here and there? |
13928 | GREAT ACTING IN ENGLISH Why is it that we have at the present moment no great acting in England? |
13928 | Has the most gradual of stage- moons ever caught the miraculous lunar trick to the life? |
13928 | Has the real hedgerow ever brought a breath of the country upon the stage? |
13928 | Here are two arts helping one another; something is gained, but how much is lost? |
13928 | How is it that in this play the actors obtain a fine result, act on a higher level, than in their realistic Sicilian tragedies? |
13928 | How is it that we get from the acting and management of these two actors a result which no one in England has ever been able to get? |
13928 | How many English actresses, I wonder, would have been capable of dealing adequately with such a scene as that? |
13928 | In casting away his formulas, has he the big human mastery which alone could replace them? |
13928 | Is Mr. Redford capable of discriminating between what is artistically fine and what is artistically ignoble? |
13928 | Is Paderewski after all a Belus? |
13928 | Is it his many coloured soul that"magnetises our poor vertebras,"in Verlaine''s phrase, and not the mere skill of his fingers? |
13928 | Is it not partly the energy, the restless energy, of the English character which prevents our actors from ever sitting or standing still on the stage? |
13928 | Is it reality, is it illusion? |
13928 | Is it technique, temperament, touch, that reveals to us what we have never dreamed was hidden in sounds? |
13928 | Is it through Pachmann''s nerves, or through ours, that this communion takes place? |
13928 | Is not, then, the persistent English habit of"crossing stage to right"a national characteristic, ingrained in us, and not only a matter of training? |
13928 | Is the play weak? |
13928 | Now Busoni can do, on the pianoforte, whatever he can conceive; the question is, what can he conceive? |
13928 | Now, is it possible that Miss Julia Neilson really imagined herself to be capable of rendering this scene as it should be rendered? |
13928 | Or is there in our actor- managers a lack of this very sense of what is required in the proper rendering of imaginative work on the stage? |
13928 | THE SPEAKING OF VERSE Was there ever at any time an art, an acquired method, of speaking verse, as definite as the art and method of singing it? |
13928 | The brothers surprise Vivarce on the stairs: was he coming from the room of Giselle or of Léonore? |
13928 | The question is: could any one man be found on whose opinion all England might safely rely for its dramatic instruction and entertainment? |
13928 | The whole point of the play: has a husband the right to kill his wife or his wife''s lover if he discovers that his wife has been unfaithful to him? |
13928 | There are many more names, if I could remember them; but where is the serious playwright? |
13928 | There is Mr. Pinero, Mr. Jones, Mr. Grundy: what names are better known, or less to be associated with literature? |
13928 | There is something in her aspect, what shall I call it? |
13928 | Undoubtedly the words lose, and does not the voice lose something also, in its directness of appeal? |
13928 | What fine vision was there to bring down? |
13928 | What is the peculiar quality in this artist which acts always with the same intoxicating effect? |
13928 | What should we say if he altered the time of one movement in order to make room for another, in which he would himself be more prominent? |
13928 | What should we say if he rearranged the composer''s score for the convenience of his own orchestra? |
13928 | What should we say if the conductor of an orchestra committed a single one of these criminal absurdities? |
13928 | What should we say if the first fiddle insisted on having a cadenza to himself in the course of every dozen bars of the music? |
13928 | Who is there on our stage who has completely mastered those two first requirements of acting? |
13928 | Who is there that can give us, not the external gesture, but the inner meaning, of some beautiful and subtle passage in Shakespeare? |
13928 | Why leave the ball- room? |
13928 | Why not? |
13928 | Why should not the visible world be treated in the same spirit as the invisible world of character and temperament? |
13928 | Why wear chains for dancing? |
13928 | Would it have been so effective, that is to say, so real? |
13928 | Yet what method is there besides these two methods? |
13928 | and as"Which?" |
13928 | he says to himself: what would it be effective on the stage for this particular person to do or say? |
13928 | what poetry hid in thought or passion was lost to us in its passage across the stage? |
14255 | ( 2) And why not? |
14255 | ( 4)--And man? |
14255 | ( How otherwise Can any one explain the extraordinary fable of Selene and Pan? |
14255 | ( Is there no chemical formula for fixing the impression of the heart?) |
14255 | ( Who ever loved with no hope of return?) |
14255 | ( Why? |
14255 | *** Can only two walk abreast in the path of love? |
14255 | *** To sum up: between men and women The consummation of love is a bodily oblation, the outcome of spiritual obsession.--Must I explain this? |
14255 | *** Was any lover ever loved enough? |
14255 | *** Who can penetrate to the motives of a woman''s coaxings? |
14255 | *** Wouldst thou ask ought of a woman? |
14255 | .. yet what cares she that these discomfort a man? |
14255 | Alack and well- a- day, Can Love ever say what it feels? |
14255 | And Is it given to any to grant all that love beseeches? |
14255 | And Than a great and pure love, can anyone point to anything on earth greater and more purifying? |
14255 | And Unless a woman gives her heart, how can she give her aid? |
14255 | And What takes place in the quiet deeps of a troubled heart, who shall know? |
14255 | And Would ye, O women, know in a word the secret of success with men? |
14255 | And if it did( as no doubt it would), would it be at all bedimmed? |
14255 | And yet The absolute and intimate coalescence of heart with heart-- is not this, after all, the consummation that every lover seeks? |
14255 | And yet Were all love sought bestowed, what sequel? |
14255 | And yet, Would you have had Shelley stick to Harriet Westbrooke? |
14255 | At bottom the real question is this: What will win and keep me another heart? |
14255 | At sight of graceful neck, who speaks of"musculus sterno- cleido- mastoideus"; at touch of moist red lips, who thinks upon the corpuscles of Paccini? |
14255 | Besides Does not a delightful romance envelope the nuptials of strangers? |
14255 | Besides, What more delectable to a girl than to have captured and kept a real man? |
14255 | But Who has yet discovered the secret springs of fascination? |
14255 | But Who shall say to what kissing may lead? |
14255 | But indeed, indeed In love there are heights above heights, depths beneath depths: who shall scale them, who shall plumb? |
14255 | But why? |
14255 | Can it be that If we could explain Love, we should explain the cosmos? |
14255 | Can no one advise it Is there no advice will help it? |
14255 | Cynthia may have blushed in heaven; bit did the blush make her any less lovely to the Latmian? |
14255 | Did ever the same love- light shine in the same eyes twice? |
14255 | Did man keep his head, would woman be quite so sure of his heart? |
14255 | Do we put our finger here upon some curious and recondite cosmic fact utterly transcending our mean comprehension? |
14255 | Do you crave fullness of joy? |
14255 | Does the potency lie in the eyes and the lips, or is there some inscrutable and psychic power? |
14255 | For Is even love aware of all its seeks? |
14255 | For example, How is it that certain eyes and lips will enthrall, while others leave us cold and inert? |
14255 | For, Concerning a man, the only question a woman asks is, not,"Is he right or wrong?" |
14255 | For, after all, Is the star any the less starry to the rapt star- gazer when he finds it to be a tremulous planet? |
14255 | If therefore the whole scheme of the Universe is not a farce, what does this craving of Love for Lover mean? |
14255 | In fact, Do not even the lightest of Laises and Thaises make a show of being swayed by love? |
14255 | In truth, Is there anything more fragile in nature than a woman''s hand? |
14255 | Indeed, Is not a half- hearted love, or a half- hearted acceptress of love, a contradiction in terms? |
14255 | Is a constant heart as hard a thing to manufacture in the world of life as is an immobile thing in the world of matter? |
14255 | Is it any wonder, then, that Woman calls man''s jealousy unreasonable? |
14255 | Is it not true also that It is the first love that amazes, that beautifies, that consecrates? |
14255 | Is the amalgamation impossible? |
14255 | Is the coalescence of thought and feeling outside the bounds of human possibility? |
14255 | Is there a divine duplicity in the human soul? |
14255 | Is there anything about which love does not shed a halo? |
14255 | Is there some archetypal and arcanal secret in this the extreme, the supernal egoism of the human heart? |
14255 | Is this why, Between a man and a woman, a single look will sometimes change the complexion of an intimacy of a life- time? |
14255 | It was made to toil? |
14255 | Love-- love-- love,--given love, what else is needed? |
14255 | Of all of which, what is the moral? |
14255 | On Kisses and Kissing"Sag mir, wer einst das Kussen efrund? |
14255 | On this Human Heart"The heart is deceitful above all things and desperately wicked; who can know it?" |
14255 | Or Did any ever hear of a tired lover? |
14255 | Shall, then, this human heart live for itself; gather and store up for its own delectation, for its own good? |
14255 | So, Does your erstwhile frowning lady smile? |
14255 | Sweet? |
14255 | Was there ever man or woman yet who was not bettered by a true love? |
14255 | What does it want, this human heart, what does it so earnestly desire, so strenuously seek? |
14255 | What happens to the girl? |
14255 | What happens? |
14255 | What is an ideal marriage? |
14255 | What is the attitude to be maintained towards the too complaisant spouse of an honorable friend? |
14255 | What it makes the desires and cravings of this human heart more important, more importunate, to its owner than the measuring of the vastest space? |
14255 | Where shall I find words to express my love for you?" |
14255 | Who shall assimilate them? |
14255 | Who that has seen it was ever deceived by its counterfeit? |
14255 | Who with harsh speech would assail a lady''s ear? |
14255 | Why go to the trouble of explaining away a first love, if the second is no whit its inferior? |
14255 | Why? |
14255 | Why? |
14255 | Will men and women never learn what trouble they lay up in store for themselves by breaking their plighted troths? |
14255 | Will nothing bring the Man and the Woman really together? |
14255 | Will nothing unite the Boy and the Girl? |
14255 | Would the most emancipated woman have love otherwise? |
14255 | Would you appease your own hunger? |
14255 | Would you fill your own cavity, satisfy your craving, attain your desire, find what you seek? |
14255 | Yet Love without hope, has its mitigations; but How alleviate the pain of a love that mistook a simulated love for a true one? |
14255 | Yet if he desisted-- she would also recoil aghast.--What should he do, poor awkward youth? |
14255 | and how shall one interpret his feelings for Amelia Viviani? |
14255 | and to whom, after marriage, he wrote,"Madam, The more I consider your conduct and your letter, the more unwarrantable they appear"? |
14255 | but,"Is he mine or another''s?" |
12001 | Clouds obscure-- But for which obscuration all were bright? 12001 Have you any offer of a paper or papers from my friend John Austin? |
12001 | I grant,said Lessing,"that there is also a beauty in drapery, but can it be compared with that of the human form? |
12001 | What is a classic? |
12001 | What is celebrity? 12001 What want we? |
12001 | And how could he deceive himself into thinking that he could retire to write a history? |
12001 | And shall he who can attain to the greater, rest content with the less? |
12001 | And what has oratory to do with it? |
12001 | And why is it worth your while, at least to dip in a serious spirit into its pages? |
12001 | And why? |
12001 | Apart from the curious compulsion of the reasoning, what is the actual state of the case? |
12001 | Are Englishmen becoming less like Romans, and more like disputatious Greeks? |
12001 | Are not most of us just as blind to the thousand lights and shades in the men and women around us? |
12001 | Burke said,"What is the education of the generality of the world? |
12001 | But is it credible that poets can permanently live by systems? |
12001 | But is it true that First Chambers assume an air of divinity? |
12001 | But this shape is not beautiful, and the end of art is beauty? |
12001 | But what share had legislative innovation in producing these great changes? |
12001 | But what sort of science? |
12001 | But where will Europe''s latter hour Again find Wordsworth''s healing power? |
12001 | But will wise guidance be endured? |
12001 | Did Gambetta consider First Chambers divine? |
12001 | Do you continue in the old belief? |
12001 | Even in his own field of the simple and the pastoral has he touched so sweet and spontaneous a note as Burns''s_ Daisy_, or the_ Mouse_? |
12001 | He may be wrong, but where is the acquiescence, whether sombre or serene? |
12001 | How choose? |
12001 | How could a society whose spiritual life had been nourished in the solemn mysticism of the Middle Ages suddenly turn to embrace a gaudy paganism? |
12001 | How have I described Rousseau''s_ Social Contract_? |
12001 | How long will it last? |
12001 | If so, what becomes of the moral? |
12001 | Is anything gained by pressing us further than that? |
12001 | Is it likely, asks the critic, that Duke Silva would have done this, that Fedalma would have done that? |
12001 | Is it so certain, not another cell O''the myriad that make up the catacomb, Contains some saint a second flash would show? |
12001 | Is it the English or Scottish Crowd that is charged with a wanton desire to recast the Union? |
12001 | Is not that enough? |
12001 | Is that the gay lively labour in which some people would have you believe? |
12001 | Is the best literature produced by the writer who does nothing else but write, or by the man who tempers literature by affairs? |
12001 | Is there a fluidity of character in modern democratic societies which contrasts not altogether favourably with the strong solid types of old? |
12001 | May we browse at large in a library, as Johnson said, or is it forbidden to open a book without a definite aim and fixed expectations? |
12001 | Nunquamne reponam, Vexatus toties rauci Theseide Codri? |
12001 | Of the minor vexations who can tell? |
12001 | Of what avail is intimidation? |
12001 | Or is not system, whether ethical, theological, or philosophical, the heavy lead of poetry? |
12001 | Or is such an expression a"burlesque of the real argument?" |
12001 | Reading a parcel of books? |
12001 | Since when has the disorder been the fault of the physician? |
12001 | Speaking now of the particular kind of knowledge of which I am going to say a few words-- how does literature fare in these important operations? |
12001 | Then are not propositions about democracy being against science very idle and a little untrue? |
12001 | Then is it the Irish Crowd? |
12001 | Then why inspire fright? |
12001 | Then, does the excitement of democracy weaken the stability of national temperament? |
12001 | These have we, and a thousand nooks of earth Have also these, but nowhere else is found, Nowhere( or is it fancy?) |
12001 | They recall the French wit to whom a friend showed a distich:"Excellent,"he said;"but is n''t it rather spun out?" |
12001 | Was that the thing to be done? |
12001 | Was there ever in the world such prodigious nonsense? |
12001 | What French sources, what French models? |
12001 | What are the different recommendations of the rival systems of anonymity and signature? |
12001 | What are the qualities of a good contributor? |
12001 | What but the weakness in a faith supplies The incentive to humanity, no strength Absolute, irresistible, comports? |
12001 | What do the promoters aim at? |
12001 | What do we seek? |
12001 | What does the body that lives through helpfulness To women for Christ''s sake? |
12001 | What is it that makes Plutarch''s Lives"the pasture of great souls,"as they were called by one who was herself a great soul? |
12001 | What is literature? |
12001 | What is the object of the movement? |
12001 | What is to become of us, thus placed between the devil of mob ignorance and corruption, and the deep sea of genteel listlessness and superficiality? |
12001 | What is wisdom? |
12001 | What kind of change, if any, has passed over periodical literature since those two great periodicals, the_ Edinburgh_ and the_ Quarterly_, held sway? |
12001 | What makes a good Review? |
12001 | What tumour that has to be cut out does not involve loss of blood?... |
12001 | What? |
12001 | What? |
12001 | Where blackness bides unbroke, must devils be? |
12001 | Where is the effrontery, the search for methods in the Reign of Terror, the applause for revolutionary models? |
12001 | Which of these two gulfs was duty?" |
12001 | Who has ever advanced such a doctrine? |
12001 | Who shall suppose it possible that Caponsacchi acted thus, that Count Guido was possessed by devils so? |
12001 | Who was it dared lay hand upon the ark His betters saw fall nor put finger forth?''" |
12001 | Who would deny that in Great Britain they are closely connected with the greater or less prosperity of our commerce and manufactures? |
12001 | Why conclude that this style constitutes the one access to the same impression? |
12001 | Why give them an aspect of alarm? |
12001 | Why is this? |
12001 | Why not? |
12001 | Why was it worth while for Mr. Jowett, the other day, to give us a new translation of Thucydides''history of the Peloponnesian War? |
12001 | Why, then, was I bound to take a false view because Lord Holland''s family have inherited his hatred of a great rival?" |
12001 | Why? |
12001 | Would any mercy have been shown to Canning''s character and memory by any of the Whig party, either in society or in Reviews? |
12001 | Would the line have been drawn of only attacking Canning''s executors, who published the papers, and leaving Canning himself untouched? |
12001 | You suffer? |
12001 | [ 1] Then where is the literary Jacobin? |
15717 | And Alfred Douglas? |
15717 | Do you prohibit Galsworthy''s''Man of Property''? |
15717 | Do you prohibit Jacob Tonson''s last novel? |
15717 | Do you really think so? |
15717 | Have you read any of Balzac''s novels? |
15717 | Have you read it? |
15717 | Have you read it? |
15717 | The Cenci? |
15717 | Wells? |
15717 | ***** Can you not now sympathize with the King as he ran through, in his mind, the whole range of British drama? |
15717 | ***** Who am I that I should take exception to the guffaw? |
15717 | ***** Why, then, does the backbone put itself to the trouble of reading current fiction? |
15717 | ..."''How dare you? |
15717 | After this, who can complain against a Library Censorship? |
15717 | And among living practitioners? |
15717 | And even assuming that the truth_ would_ deal a fatal blow, etc., is that a reason for hiding it? |
15717 | And their tone says:"Would you mind very much if we leave this painful subject? |
15717 | And what then? |
15717 | And who that began even"Il Fuoco"could resist it? |
15717 | And why"orgy of lust"? |
15717 | And would the amanuensis have made £ 350 more out of the thing then Mr. Murray himself? |
15717 | And yet, honestly, am I likely at this time of day to be excited by a novel by Henry James? |
15717 | And, not very long ago, was not Sir William Robertson Nicoll defending the genius of Lytton in the_ British Weekly_? |
15717 | Any one read"The Blue Lagoon"yet? |
15717 | Are booksellers people who have a conscientious objection to selling books? |
15717 | As for the intrigue with a typist, has Claudius Clear never heard of an intrigue with a typist before? |
15717 | But are the great towns any better off? |
15717 | But do I write and complain, and ask Mudie''s to withdraw such books altogether? |
15717 | But does this estimable practice aid the living author to send his children to school in decent clothes? |
15717 | But is that a reason for abolishing the sevenpenny? |
15717 | But one would ask: Has it ever read the opening paragraph of"The Return,"perhaps the most dazzling feat of impressionism in modern English? |
15717 | But supposing that in a deeper sense I were? |
15717 | But what do I care about other subscribers?" |
15717 | But whose fault is it that bookshops are so few? |
15717 | But why all this fuss about a simple matter?" |
15717 | But why were the expenses so astounding? |
15717 | But why? |
15717 | By the way, would Canon Lambert as soon send a Miss Lambert to a house infected with mumps as put"Measure for Measure"into her hands? |
15717 | Can one think of Dickens as a man of letters, as one who cared for books, as one whose notions on literature were worth twopence? |
15717 | Can you wonder that it should carry deposits of jam, egg, butter, coffee, and personal dirt? |
15717 | Crosland?" |
15717 | Did she hunt through the files of newspapers for what she might find therein, and was she thus rewarded? |
15717 | Did the mandarins imagine that they were going to stop the sevenpenny, that anything could stop it? |
15717 | Do you know anybody who really buys new books? |
15717 | Do you see the point? |
15717 | Do you want to buy something good, at simply no price at all?" |
15717 | Does Canon Lambert hold that the Hull libraries are to contain no volumes which he would not care for his daughter to read? |
15717 | Hand, the librarian at Leeds, said:"I have n''t read the book through( Why not? |
15717 | Have these men entered into a secret compact not to touch a problem even with a pair of tongs? |
15717 | Have you ever heard tell of such a being? |
15717 | How can the confession affect his reputation? |
15717 | How dare you?'' |
15717 | How many men know England-- I mean the actual earth and flesh that make England-- as Mr. Hudson knows it? |
15717 | How would that suit you?'' |
15717 | I made inquiry and discovered that books with these labels are only given out to persons of( what shall I say?) |
15717 | I thought,"Is Davray at last''stumped''?" |
15717 | In faithfully and decently describing an intrigue with a typist, has one necessarily written a"Justine"? |
15717 | Modern plays being ruled out, you must either have Shakespeare or-- or what? |
15717 | Oh, Colonel Newcome, sugared tears, golden gates, glimmering panes, passings, pilots, harbour bars-- had Mr. George Bourne never heard of you? |
15717 | Or did some tremendous and omniscient expert give her the tip? |
15717 | Or is it that nobody wants to buy books? |
15717 | Shall I even read it? |
15717 | Something ghastly, but where? |
15717 | Synge, author of"The Playboy of the Western World?" |
15717 | The man of taste asked,"Have you read the book?" |
15717 | They write:"Wo n''t you be good enough to let us hear from you?" |
15717 | This is a damning criticism; but what would you have? |
15717 | We presently arrived at this point: He asked impatiently:"Well, who_ is_ there who can write tip- top poetry to- day?" |
15717 | Well, then,--why not"Money"? |
15717 | Wells, why did you not bring down the wrath of God, or at least make the adulterer fail in the problems of flight? |
15717 | What had happened? |
15717 | What is there? |
15717 | What then? |
15717 | When will publishers grasp that an imitative hack knows by the grace of God forty times more about the public taste than a publisher knows? |
15717 | When will publishers grasp this? |
15717 | Where was she? |
15717 | Who among you, indeed, could be relied upon to choose properly a play for a State performance? |
15717 | Who really does buy books? |
15717 | Who the deuce said it was free from faults? |
15717 | Why call that a burden which can never be lifted? |
15717 | Why did Diana of the Crossways marry? |
15717 | Why does Diana Mallory"go to"her preposterous Radical ex- M.P.? |
15717 | Why should the King be supposed to be acquainted with its extreme badness? |
15717 | Why should this phrase drive me to fury? |
15717 | Why, then, Mrs. Humphry Ward being reviewed specially, is not Miss Marie Corelli reviewed specially? |
15717 | Why, therefore, should we deceive ourselves? |
15717 | Why? |
15717 | Would Anne Elliot have made such an inexplicable fool of herself? |
15717 | Would it disappoint? |
15717 | Would the illustrations have so enriched photographers? |
15717 | Would the paper have been so precious and costly? |
15717 | and the landlady replies:"Yes, but how long would that take him?" |
15717 | exclaimed a smart, positive little woman-- one of those creatures that have settled every question once and for all beyond reopening,"Wells? |
18323 | What is a victory like? |
18323 | You ai n''t? 18323 Again, sir, when we look for those who have been most distinguished as men of letters, in the usual sense of the word, where do we find them? 18323 And how generously, sons of New England, have we treated you? 18323 And where, I will ask, is the future of our race to be found? 18323 And who more worthy to preside over such a gospel than the chairman to whom I ask you to return your thanks to- day? 18323 Disregarding professions, view their conduct, and on a doubtful occasion ask,Would Hamilton have done this thing?" |
18323 | Do I err in supposing this an illustration of the supremacy which belongs to the triumphs of the moral nature? |
18323 | Does he convince me of the truth of his statements? |
18323 | Does he persuade me to act as he wishes? |
18323 | Does he proceed in the most effective manner possible? |
18323 | How does this speaker impress me? |
18323 | I may extend the question-- where is to be found the future of mankind? |
18323 | Is it to be with us as with them? |
18323 | Month after month until the months became years we have cried to those who stood upon our walls:"Watchmen, what of the night?" |
18323 | Was there ever child that had more cause for gratitude to its progenitor? |
18323 | Was there ever parent who had juster reason to be proud of its offspring? |
18323 | What are the elements of success in this speaker? |
18323 | What is literature, and who are men of letters? |
18323 | What is the Senate? |
18323 | What language would we rather speak than the tongue of Shakespeare and Hampden, of the Pilgrims and King James''s version? |
18323 | What yachts, as a tribute to ourselves upon their own element, would we rather outsail than English yachts? |
18323 | What''s that in the corner there?" |
18323 | Where are Assyria and Egypt, the civilization of Greece, the universal dominion of Rome? |
18323 | Where is the city or village in our State where you do not own the best houses, run the largest manufactories, and control the principal industries? |
18323 | Who in the imposing troop of worldly grandeur is now remembered but with indifference or contempt? |
18323 | Would we be free? |
14019 | Am I known to wreck of the threats of men? 14019 And after that whom sawest thou there?" |
14019 | And after that whom sawest thou there? |
14019 | And after that whom sawest thou there? |
14019 | And after that whom sawest thou? |
14019 | And after that whom sawest thou? |
14019 | And after that, whom sawest thou there? |
14019 | And after that, whom sawest thou there? |
14019 | And after that, whom sawest thou there? |
14019 | And after that, whom sawest thou there? |
14019 | And after that, whom sawest thou there? |
14019 | And after that, whom sawest thou there? |
14019 | And afterwards whom sawest thou there? |
14019 | And afterwards whom sawest thou? |
14019 | And whom sawest thou afterwards? |
14019 | And whom sawest thou afterwards? |
14019 | And whom sawest thou then? |
14019 | And whom sawest thou there after that? |
14019 | Canst thou say, O Fer rogain, what that great light yonder resembles? |
14019 | Hast thou his like, O Fer rogain? |
14019 | Hast thou then news of Dá Derga''s Hostel? |
14019 | Hostages will you? |
14019 | How is that, O Ingcél? |
14019 | Is thy lord alive? |
14019 | King Marsil was ever my deadly foe, And of all these words, so fair in show, How may I the fulfilment know? |
14019 | Liken thou that, O Conaire,says every one:"what is this noise?" |
14019 | Lords, my barons, survey this land, See the passes so straight and steep: To whom shall I trust the rear to keep? |
14019 | Miscreant, makest thou then so free, As, right or wrong, to lay hold on me? 14019 Not till Roland breathes no more, For from hence to eastern shore, Where is chief with him may vie? |
14019 | Query, whence art thou and whence hast thou come? |
14019 | Question, hast thou seen the house well, O Ingcél? |
14019 | Question, what sawest thou in the champion''s high seat of the house, facing the King, on the opposite side? |
14019 | Say, sire, what grief doth your heart oppress? |
14019 | Thou madman,thus he to Roland cried,"What may this rage against me betide? |
14019 | Well, O woman,says Conaire,"if thou art a wizard, what seest thou for us?" |
14019 | Well, then,says Ingcél to the guides,"what is nearest to us here?" |
14019 | What are the waters and heights and invers that they traverse? |
14019 | What dost thou desire? |
14019 | What is his name? |
14019 | What is that? |
14019 | What is this? |
14019 | What is thy wife''s name? |
14019 | What seest thou here? |
14019 | What then deemest thou,says Ingcél,"of that man''s reign in the land of Erin?" |
14019 | Where is my Roland, sire,she cried,"Who vowed to take me for his bride?" |
14019 | Which be they? |
14019 | Whither shall we betake ourselves? |
14019 | Who gives the welcome? |
14019 | Who is it that fares before us? |
14019 | Who will go on shore to listen? 14019 Who will go there to espy the house?" |
14019 | ***** Liken thou that, O Fer rogain? |
14019 | A dimple of delight in each of her cheeks, with a dappling(?) |
14019 | All his wars in many lands, All the strokes of trenchant brands, All the kings despoiled and slain,-- When will he from war refrain?" |
14019 | And after that whom sawest thou?" |
14019 | And after that whom sawest thou?" |
14019 | And after that whom sawest thou?" |
14019 | And after that, whom sawest thou there?" |
14019 | And afterwards whom sawest thou there?" |
14019 | And on all possessions of men would seize; But in whom doth he trust for feats like these?" |
14019 | And whom sawest thou afterwards?" |
14019 | And whom sawest thou there afterwards?" |
14019 | Apulia-- Calabria-- all subdued, Unto England crossed he the salt sea rude, Won for Saint Peter his tribute fee; But what in our marches maketh he?" |
14019 | As the Franks the other ten descry,"What dark disaster,"they said,"is nigh? |
14019 | CCXV"Dear Roland, and was this thy fate? |
14019 | CLI"Ah, why on me doth thine anger fall?" |
14019 | CLXIII But what availeth? |
14019 | CXLII Count Roland Olivier bespake:"Sir comrade, dost thou my thought partake? |
14019 | Have I struck thee, brother? |
14019 | Have you, then, forgotten Roland''s pride, Which I marvel God should so long abide, How he captured Noples without your hest? |
14019 | He would sound all day for a single hare:''Tis a jest with him and his fellows there; For who would battle against him dare? |
14019 | Hostages asks he? |
14019 | Is it time to fight with a truncheon now? |
14019 | Karl the Mighty may weep and wail; What skilleth sorrow, if succour fail? |
14019 | LII Then did the king on his treasurer call,"My gifts for Karl, are they ready all?" |
14019 | On him the choice for the rear- guard fell, And where is baron could speed so well? |
14019 | Ride onward-- wherefore this chill delay? |
14019 | Roland marvelled at such a blow, And thus bespake him soft and low:"Hast thou done it, my comrade, wittingly? |
14019 | Roland who loves thee so dear, am I, Thou hast no quarrel with me to seek?" |
14019 | Speak, my brother, thy counsel lend,-- How unto Karl shall we tidings send?" |
14019 | Steel and iron such strife may claim; Where is thy sword, Hauteclere by name, With its crystal pommel and golden guard?" |
14019 | The king asked tidings of her and said, while announcing himself:"Shall I have an hour of dalliance with thee?" |
14019 | Then said Conaire on the Road of Cualu:"whither shall we go tonight?" |
14019 | Thick calf- bottoms( ankles?) |
14019 | To head my vanguard, who then were best?" |
14019 | To sorrow sorrow must succeed; My hosts to battle who shall lead, When the mighty captain is overthrown?'' |
14019 | Were he hurt in fight, who would then survive? |
14019 | What doom shall now our peers betide?" |
14019 | What is thy name, O woman?" |
14019 | What sawest thou there after that?" |
14019 | What then? |
14019 | Where art thou? |
14019 | Who are yon, O Fer rogain?" |
14019 | Who has chanted that lay?" |
14019 | Who will follow them and tell them to come towards me in my track?" |
14019 | Why tell the rest? |
14019 | XLV"Speak, then, and tell me, Sir Ganelon, How may Roland to death be done?" |
14019 | XLVII What said they more? |
14019 | XVII"Lords my barons, who then were best In Saragossa to do our hest?" |
14019 | XVIII"Lords my barons, whom send we, then, To Saragossa, the Saracen den?" |
14019 | XXVI The Emperor reached him his right- hand glove; Gan for his office had scanty love; As he bent him forward, it fell to ground:"God, what is this?" |
14019 | XXVII"Sire,"he said,"let me wend my way; Since go I must, what boots delay?" |
14019 | deem''st thou, dastard, of dastard race, That I shall drop the glove in place, As in sight of Karl thou didst the mace?" |
14019 | he cried in pain:"The Archbishop where, and Olivier, Gerein and his brother in arms, Gerier? |
14019 | said Roland,"is this the end Of all thy prowess, my gentle friend? |
14019 | said Roland,"what makest thou? |
14019 | says Conaire,"what is this?" |
18860 | Have I lived,cried Falstaff, in the moment of his discomfiture,"to stand at the taunt of one that makes fritters of English?" |
18860 | But why should these be expected? |
18860 | Dancer( she that became in succession Mrs. Spranger Barry and Mrs. Crawford) and her memorable scream, as Lady Randolph, at"Was he alive? |
18860 | Did the great actress find those attributes in the part( they asked themselves), or did she infuse them into it? |
18860 | Her quiet archness at the question,"Will you go yet?" |
18860 | What are the faculties and attributes essential to great success in acting? |
18860 | What will a man do for the woman whom he loves? |
10454 | ''Ah, my lord,''said he,''may I speak without danger of my life?'' |
10454 | ''Amy,''he exclaimed,''is it possible that this is your performance?'' |
10454 | ''And how do you intend to act?'' |
10454 | ''And if I did love her?'' |
10454 | ''And you have had no teacher?'' |
10454 | ''Are you in earnest, papa?'' |
10454 | ''But Ah- kre- nay was not alone?'' |
10454 | ''But if it should be burned in the meantime?'' |
10454 | ''But what is it to be done with?'' |
10454 | ''But why, father, should there be so dreadful an alternative?'' |
10454 | ''But will not the farmer bear some enmity to poor Luke?'' |
10454 | ''But,''interrupted another voice, evidently a woman''s,''would it not be better to wait and see?'' |
10454 | ''But,''said the judge,''have you considered that eight or nine months have passed since then?'' |
10454 | ''Can you direct me to Mr Egg''s?'' |
10454 | ''Can you direct me to Mr William Egg''s?'' |
10454 | ''Catherine?'' |
10454 | ''Death and fury, wait and see what?'' |
10454 | ''Did you intend it to pair my Prospero and Miranda?'' |
10454 | ''Do you know,''rejoined the corporal with a trembling voice and anxious countenance--''do you know Lucy Fennel?'' |
10454 | ''Do you say so, my father?'' |
10454 | ''Do you say so? |
10454 | ''I thought you told me that this gentleman would remunerate you handsomely?'' |
10454 | ''If you could help it? |
10454 | ''If you did love her? |
10454 | ''In earnest, girl?'' |
10454 | ''In truth it is much handsomer than either of these others,''said the bride;''but you told me nothing of this, Edoardo?'' |
10454 | ''My own Edoardo,''said she, after some moments of silence;''are you quite recovered?'' |
10454 | ''No foolish love affair, I hope?'' |
10454 | ''No matter; but,''he added,''is not this a trick of yours-- a plot concocted by you and Luigia to prevent me from leaving Padua?'' |
10454 | ''Och, do n''t I know that? |
10454 | ''Pray, can you direct me to Billy Egg''s?'' |
10454 | ''Sophia, if I could help it, do you think I would make you weep thus?'' |
10454 | ''Thy sisters have been asleep since the dance was over,''said the aged Indian;''why is Peritana awake?'' |
10454 | ''Unfortunate man,''said he,''what can_ you_ have to tell us?'' |
10454 | ''Well, then,''replied the youth,''I will do as you wish; but what haste with a wreath that is not to be used till Heaven knows when? |
10454 | ''What could its object be?'' |
10454 | ''What do you mean, papa?'' |
10454 | ''What do you mean? |
10454 | ''What is it, papa?'' |
10454 | ''What matters her rank, her relatives, if you do not love her?'' |
10454 | ''What matters it? |
10454 | ''What wo n''t do, dear papa?'' |
10454 | ''What, the Prospero and Miranda I admired so much, papa?'' |
10454 | ''Where is my child?'' |
10454 | ''Why not? |
10454 | ''Why,''said she,''should I demand an account of your actions? |
10454 | ''Would it then be such a pleasant thing to see a tree burning?'' |
10454 | ''Would the Sioux maiden leave her tribe and tread the woods with an Assineboin?'' |
10454 | ''Would_ you_, therefore, endeavour to point out to him the folly of his persistence in following a young lady whom he can never marry?'' |
10454 | ''You are silent, girl?'' |
10454 | ''You will like to have your coffee at six to- morrow morning, then?'' |
10454 | Am I not to be mistress in this house? |
10454 | Am I not to be your wife?'' |
10454 | And what does that rose signify? |
10454 | Are you no longer my own Edoardo? |
10454 | As the other was a father and daughter, here is a mother and son; but if you do n''t like it, what think you of Lear and Cordelia?'' |
10454 | But am I not rich enough for him? |
10454 | But how fared the married pair? |
10454 | But if your father should refuse his consent to our union?'' |
10454 | But is there nothing else against me? |
10454 | But the question was, how was the thing to be done, and where? |
10454 | But was she? |
10454 | But what are you daubing at, Edoardo? |
10454 | But what could a blind man, and one so long absent from Argenteuil, have to communicate? |
10454 | But what did she care what was said of her? |
10454 | But what do you think will be said of you? |
10454 | Could it be a jest? |
10454 | Do you doubt me?'' |
10454 | Do you hear that word, Edoardo? |
10454 | Do you know what I mean to do with those roses? |
10454 | Do you remember exactly the voice that you heard that day on the hill, which replied to your questions and threatened you? |
10454 | Do you think that you could recognise it again-- recognise it so as not to confound it with any other?'' |
10454 | Edoardo, why do you speak so to me? |
10454 | Have I said well, my comrades?'' |
10454 | Have you heard of anything?" |
10454 | He was deeply shocked even when he? |
10454 | How could the criminal be discovered? |
10454 | How, then, did he lose this faculty? |
10454 | In a hard tone of voice, and with an abrupt manner, Luke inquired if she were ready to have him? |
10454 | Is it not a dream? |
10454 | Is it true? |
10454 | Is not this a bride''s wreath, and are not bridal wreaths always made of orange flowers? |
10454 | Like him, I felt assured that a great crime had been committed between Rouen and Paris; but how could it be proved? |
10454 | Must the services of thirty years be blotted out, because I was carried away by excess of zeal? |
10454 | Papa, some day when we have more time we will come and sit here, shall we not?'' |
10454 | Shall we not be one day man and wife?'' |
10454 | Tell me, Herbert, at once, and honestly, have your feelings changed towards Catherine?'' |
10454 | Tell me, tell me what is the matter with you? |
10454 | The simple girl, interpreting that squeeze as an expression of love, said:''Oh, my Edoardo, you will ever love me?'' |
10454 | This a house I do not know? |
10454 | To give master, I suppose, a chance of-- of--''''Of what, Luke?'' |
10454 | What did she care for appearing without those ornaments which women so love, and which add so much to their charms? |
10454 | What harm will it do these flowers to wait for us? |
10454 | What mattered it to her that she was ruining her own health by depriving herself of rest, toiling, and weeping? |
10454 | What prevents you? |
10454 | What was to be done with it till the rest was procured? |
10454 | What was to be done? |
10454 | What, however, of Catherine all this while? |
10454 | When I have said, on bidding her good- night,''Anna, are you not afraid to be left alone here during the night, with no one within call?'' |
10454 | When the guests were retiring, he asked in a careless tone,''By the by, mother, what has become of Catherine?'' |
10454 | Where have you learned botany? |
10454 | Where was your honour if you have forgotten all your sacred promises-- if you have perjured yourself?'' |
10454 | Whether on the road by day, or in the night where they stopped? |
10454 | Which of them do you think will become me best?'' |
10454 | Whither, Edoardo, has departed the beauty, the freshness of your youthful years?--whither your simplicity of heart? |
10454 | Who could have done so daring a deed? |
10454 | Who would take care of it? |
10454 | Why are you disturbed? |
10454 | Why should I think over and debate what you have already considered? |
10454 | Will not all you have be one day mine? |
10454 | Will you not be glad to exchange this miserable hovel for a handsomely- furnished house? |
10454 | Will you swear, by all you hold most dear and sacred, to keep our secret inviolable for the time agreed?'' |
10454 | Would he hunt again in the forest?--would his hand once more strike the grizzly bear?'' |
10454 | Would it give you more pleasure to see this one burning?'' |
10454 | You are a quick, handy maid; and suppose-- suppose''--and here the good old woman took Lucy''s hands in hers--''suppose I teach you lace- making?'' |
10454 | You profess to love my child with strong and unquenchable passion?'' |
10454 | cried Eugene,''can you have the heart to say so?'' |
10454 | exclaimed the soldier,''is this the way you welcome a man home after a long absence?'' |
10454 | for what, I should like to know? |
10454 | he said in a tone of inquiry--''_my_ Catherine?'' |
10454 | no; how can I feel afraid, knowing myself under the protection of One as great and powerful as He is wise and good? |
15413 | And now, sir, I do n''t see as I''m to be better off for this, if I get my second hundred again-- but how is that to be done? |
15413 | And pray, sir, who lives there now? |
15413 | And what may your horse, dogs, and hawks, cost you for a year? |
15413 | And what''s your sign? |
15413 | And you go to the inn, Mr. A., and see them off? |
15413 | But,said the dean,"if it had not been done enough, you could have done it more, could you not?" |
15413 | Ca n''t you answer definitely how big it was? |
15413 | Ca n''t you compare it to some other object? |
15413 | Ca n''t you give the jury some idea of the stone? |
15413 | Cat? |
15413 | Do you know Sheridan? |
15413 | Do you know your husband''s signature? |
15413 | Do you sleep well? |
15413 | How are you now, sir? |
15413 | How? |
15413 | I have aimed at justice,said he to those around him;"but what king can be certain that he has always followed it? |
15413 | I, Sir? 15413 It is cause and effect,"remarked Erskine;"for what is a cataract but a fall?" |
15413 | No effect at all? |
15413 | Of course you counted it? |
15413 | Oh, you did? |
15413 | Oot, oot, my lord, how can you say so of a British clergyman? |
15413 | Pray, Mr. Curran,said the judge,"is that hung beef beside you? |
15413 | Pray, sir, what is your name, and where do you come from? |
15413 | Since you will have it so,replied Bayard,"I will not refuse it; but may I not have the honour to salute your amiable daughters?" |
15413 | Sir William,said the gentleman,"do you descend so far as to salute a slave?" |
15413 | Twenty pence, I suppose you mean? |
15413 | Waiter,said he,"bring me anchovy sauce, and soy; and have you got Harvey''s? |
15413 | Was it a large stone? |
15413 | Were you? |
15413 | What did you say? |
15413 | What have you done, doctor? |
15413 | What is it, my brave fellow? |
15413 | What is the matter? |
15413 | What is the matter? |
15413 | What may the game be worth which you kill in the course of a year? |
15413 | What was its size? |
15413 | What''s that, what''s that Walsingham has been saying to you? |
15413 | What''s this? |
15413 | What, then, do you complain of? |
15413 | Who?--I, sir? |
15413 | Why am I to quit more than you? |
15413 | Why do you leave me? |
15413 | Why then did you not speak before? |
15413 | Why, were you ever in Chester? |
15413 | Yes,said he,"and where else will you see_ such horses_, and_ such men?_"KINGS. |
15413 | ''What''s the matter with you my good fellow?'' |
15413 | ''What? |
15413 | --"And in heaven''s name what was the reply?" |
15413 | --"And pray what would you do?" |
15413 | --"Did you not speak to it? |
15413 | --"How can that be?" |
15413 | --"How so,"replied the king;"can you decide without knowing the question?" |
15413 | --"Of a blue colour, was it not?" |
15413 | --"Then you have nothing to complain of?" |
15413 | A Test.--A cobbler at Leyden, who used to attend the public disputations held at the academy, was once asked if he understood Latin? |
15413 | After looking at it an instant, he said in an inquiring tone,"Scratch?" |
15413 | At last, losing patience, he asked them why they treated him so unmercifully? |
15413 | At length he put a poser--"And pray, sir, how are turnips this year?" |
15413 | At length, after a great many sarcastic remarks, one of them, yawning, said,"Well, what shall we do with ourselves this evening?" |
15413 | Being asked why he failed in this point of etiquette? |
15413 | But why may not nature show itself in tragedy, as well as in comedy or farce? |
15413 | Does not your lordship remember me? |
15413 | He is one of the pleasantest fellows I ever met with; I should be glad to know his name?" |
15413 | He once told a member of the royal family, who asked him how he liked his playing on the violoncello? |
15413 | I remember you well; and how is your wife? |
15413 | In the course of conversation, one of them asked his friend to whom he meant to give his vote? |
15413 | Is it you, cousin Proger? |
15413 | Liston,"cried the manager,"what are you doing there?" |
15413 | Majestic silence,"& c. Use of H.--"What has become of your famous General_ Eel?_"said the Count d''Erleon to Mr. Campbell. |
15413 | Mr. Proger, however, calling to his cousin, Mr. Powell opened the window, and looking out, asked,"In the name of wonder, what means all this noise? |
15413 | On looking about, he saw a man lying on a bed, whom he hailed thus:"Are there any Christians in this house?" |
15413 | One day the king said to him,"You have, I presume, sir, helped many a man into another world?" |
15413 | Pray, madam,_ what is your mistress?_ If that is all her fault, I desire that the woman may be immediately engaged." |
15413 | Sir Joshua Reynolds.--"What do you ask for this sketch?" |
15413 | Some time after, at a review, he jocosely asked a soldier, who had got a deep cut in his cheek,"Friend, at what alehouse did you get that scratch?" |
15413 | Steele& Addison.--A gentleman who was dining with another, praised the meat very much, and asked who was the butcher? |
15413 | The Master of the Rolls then inquired who opposed the petition? |
15413 | The captain, surprised at the boy''s delay, cried out,"Heigh- ho, there, you lazy lubber, why do n''t you let go the painter?" |
15413 | The chief justice rose, and leaning over the bench, said, in a half whisper,"Brother, were you ever in the stocks?" |
15413 | The next day, the doctor coming to see his patient, inquired if he had followed his prescription? |
15413 | The physician felt his pulse, and said,"Do you eat well?" |
15413 | The surgeon turned about, but instead of giving any assistance, exclaimed,"You blockhead, what do you do here with a man that has lost his head?" |
15413 | Then addressing himself to the count, he asked if he recognised him? |
15413 | Upon his answering him how long,--"Why,"said the king,"you staid there long enough; how is it you did not convert the pope?" |
15413 | Was I not right when I said that you would repent of it?" |
15413 | What do you say now?" |
15413 | What, sir, does''_ Nisi Dominus frustra_,''mean?" |
15413 | When Bonaparte the next morning reviewed this regiment, he asked the colonel what he had done with one of his battalions? |
15413 | When, after some difficulty, his majesty was made to comprehend the system, he exclaimed,''Is any man well in England that can afford to be ill? |
15413 | Who is there?" |
15413 | are they gaun to fight by candle licht?" |
15413 | cried he,"I am come to offer you one for life-- will you marry me?" |
15413 | echoed the guest,"pray is he any relation to the essayist?" |
15413 | exclaimed the boy,"am I then to be separated from my mother? |
15413 | exclaimed the gentleman, half petrified with surprise;"pray, sir, what do you mean?" |
15413 | how should you like that, Jones? |
15413 | inquired the officer.--"I am General Mackenzie,"was the reply.--"What, without an uniform?" |
15413 | offered a patent of nobility to the chief of the Grants, the proud Celt refused it, saying,"Wha would then be Laird of Grant?" |
15413 | replied the superintendent;--"the persons on whom you are quartered do n''t grudge it you?" |
15413 | said the boy--"Why so?" |
15413 | said the king,"what ails you?" |
15413 | what are you about there? |
15413 | will no one be bail for you, to save you from prison?'' |
15413 | you teach me music? |
15413 | you vill jump, vill you? |
1594 | ''Do n''t you see that?'' 1594 ''What do you mean?'' |
1594 | ''Yes; what is it?'' 1594 And what was its name?" |
1594 | Did you read the_ Spectator''s_ sarcastic notice of''Vanity Fair''? 1594 Et Tartufe? |
1594 | For who could deem that cruel So fair a face might be? 1594 Have you read Dickens? |
1594 | Is Gunnar at home? |
1594 | Is it a matter of thy life or death? |
1594 | No? |
1594 | Some, who were never out of their mothers''kitchens, may ask how these pirates could eat and digest these pieces of leather, so hard and dry? 1594 Then why are you so eager to be back in Spain?" |
1594 | You want to see your mother? |
1594 | Your brothers and sisters? |
1594 | Your father, then? |
1594 | ''Tis true that I behold no more The valley where we met; I do not see the hawthorn tree, But how can I forget?" |
1594 | ''Who is he spurreth so late to the north?'' |
1594 | ***** The performances of M. Dumas during the Revolution of 1830, are they not written in the Book of the Chronicles of Alexandre the Great? |
1594 | 122)? |
1594 | Ah, why did she flatter my boyish pride? |
1594 | Am I bound to think Jones a bad citizen, a bad man, a bad householder, because his poetry leaves me cold? |
1594 | And how can people say that Dickens could not draw a gentleman? |
1594 | And shall I grieve that it is thus? |
1594 | And so we leave Mr. Esquemeling, whom Captain Morgan also deserted; for who would linger long when there is not even honour among thieves? |
1594 | And where have you such an Irish Sancho Panza as Micky Free, that independent minstrel, or such an Irish Di Vernon as Baby Blake? |
1594 | And who is it that prates about the Irish at Waterloo, and the Irish at Fontenoy, and the Irish at Seringapatam, and the Irish at Timbuctoo? |
1594 | Are the words in the former quotation in the least like anything that a little girl would say? |
1594 | Are we better or worse for no longer believing as Bunyan believed, no longer seeing that Abyss of Pascal''s open beside our armchairs? |
1594 | But is Lorrequer the only man in Ireland who is fond of military spectacles? |
1594 | But was ever so much fame won by writings which might be called scrappy and desultory by the_ advocatus diaboli_? |
1594 | But whereas Dumas could turn out books that_ live_, whoever his assistants were, could any of his assistants write books that live, without Dumas? |
1594 | But who has? |
1594 | But who was the original, or who were the originals, that sat for the portrait of the"Fashionable Authoress,"Lady Fanny Flummery? |
1594 | Ca n''t you fancy sailing into the calm?" |
1594 | Can it be possible that a world which rather neglected_ Barry Lyndon_ was devoted to_ Marchionesses and Milliners_? |
1594 | Can you not fancy Captain Costigan on Dick Swiveller, Blanche Amory on Agnes, Pen on David Copperfield, and that"tiger"Steerforth? |
1594 | Could there be a more simple Tyrtaeus? |
1594 | Could, any candidate in a literary examination name the prototypes? |
1594 | Did Bayly write that ditty or did I? |
1594 | Did any man of letters except Scott ever write of his rivals as Thackeray wrote of Dickens? |
1594 | Did any one ever do such a thing as write a three- volume, novel, or a novel of equal length, which was"a complete, good story"? |
1594 | Did he ever write"a complete, good story"? |
1594 | Did his father perform these mythical feats of strength? |
1594 | Do we not all feel that"David Copperfield"should have been compressed? |
1594 | Do you enjoy being a sneak, and feeling like a sneak? |
1594 | Do you find blushing pleasant? |
1594 | Do you think it agreeable to become shame- faced when you meet people who have conversed with you frankly? |
1594 | Does not the verse clank and chime like sword sheath on spur, like the bits of champing horses? |
1594 | For, indeed, who can be less like the heroic minstrel than the academic philologist? |
1594 | Has any literary ghoul disinterred his old ten- franc articles in_ Galignani_? |
1594 | Has he ever hit on the road to the capital yet? |
1594 | Has the minx any purpose? |
1594 | He did not say, like Mr. Carlyle,"Well, if all my fears are true, what then?" |
1594 | He knew how great an influence he wielded, and who can blame him for using it in any cause he thought good? |
1594 | Homer does not appear to have been acquainted with rubies; but what of that? |
1594 | How Dumas came to divine Homer, as it were, through a language he knew not, who shall say? |
1594 | How does Bayly manage it? |
1594 | How would George Warrington appreciate Mr. Pickwick? |
1594 | I do n''t think it is just, but think Kintoul( Rintoul?) |
1594 | If Mr. O''Connell, like a wise rhetorician, chooses, and very properly, to flatter the national military passion, why not Harry Lorrequer?" |
1594 | If he had failings, who knew them better than he? |
1594 | If we make an exception, which we must, in favour of Chaucer, where is there better verse in story telling in the whole of English literature? |
1594 | Is it likely that Dumas looked on? |
1594 | Is it that Thackeray has converted us? |
1594 | Is it that we do no longer gape on the aristocracy admiringly, and write of them curiously, as if they were creatures in a Paradise? |
1594 | Is it the business of an educated gentleman to live by the trade of an eavesdropper and a blab? |
1594 | Is it the love affairs that we remember in Scott? |
1594 | Is not that enough? |
1594 | Is she a kind of Ethel Newcome of odd life? |
1594 | Is that the kind of emotion which you wish to be habitual in your experience? |
1594 | Nay, are we not left with a confused feeling that he was not far in the wrong, though he had so much the worse of the fight? |
1594 | Need he regard me as a malevolent green- eyed monster, because I do n''t want to read him? |
1594 | Nor did he even extol, though it is more in his own line,"Of what is the old man thinking, As he leans on his oaken staff?" |
1594 | Now, is not that a brave beginning? |
1594 | Now, what could be more unlike than the"ways"of Dickens and Thackeray? |
1594 | Of course you will soon lose the power of blushing; but is that an agreeable prospect? |
1594 | People have wondered_ why_ he fancied himself such a sinner? |
1594 | Plenty of poison is sold: is it well for you to be one of the merchants? |
1594 | That eyes so like a jewel Were only paste for me? |
1594 | The generation of men who are now middle- aged bestowed much time and labour on Greek; and in what, it may be asked, are they better for it? |
1594 | The next is longer and slower: the poet has a difficulty in telling his story:"Wretches,"he cried,"what doom is this? |
1594 | The question is only a form of that wide riddle, Does any theological or philosophical opinion make us better or worse? |
1594 | The very grammar detains or defies the reader; is it the sun that does not give his golden orb to roll, or who, or what? |
1594 | The whole question for you is, Do you mind incurring this damnation? |
1594 | Then he heard a voice dart from heaven into his soul, which said,"Wilt thou leave thy sins and go to heaven, or have thy sins and go to hell?" |
1594 | Then, why maintain Greek in schools? |
1594 | There are love affairs in Dickens, but do we remember or care for them? |
1594 | Undoubtedly; but_ why should you do it_? |
1594 | Was it not De Quincey who was at school with a bully who believed he had been guilty of the unpardonable offence? |
1594 | We are cleverer than Bayly''s audience; but are we better fellows? |
1594 | What are we to think of Estelle? |
1594 | What books do_ you_ wish longer? |
1594 | What did all this mean? |
1594 | What did he nor know? |
1594 | What is Gyp but a Lady Fanny Flummery_ reussie_,--Lady Fanny with the trifling additional qualities of wit and daring? |
1594 | What is a Saga? |
1594 | What is the trick of it, the obvious, simple, meretricious trick, which somehow, after all, let us mock as we will, Bayly could do, and we can not? |
1594 | What would the family solicitor of"The Newcomes"have to say of Mr. Tulkinghorn? |
1594 | Where can we find such a benefactor, and who has lightened so many lives with such merriment as he? |
1594 | Where did he find the trick of it, of the words which are invariably the best words, and invariably fall exactly in the best places? |
1594 | Where do we lose ourselves? |
1594 | Who can say that he has escaped this temptation, and what man of heart can think of his own fall without a sense of shame? |
1594 | Who could have conjectured that even Pope would wander away so far from his matchless original? |
1594 | Who is to imitate him? |
1594 | Who was likely to possess these powers, if not this good- humoured natural force? |
1594 | Who would not give"Lovel the Widower"and"Philip"for some autobiographical and literary prefaces to the older novels? |
1594 | Who( except Alexandre the Great) could write so much, and yet all good? |
1594 | Why can not people keep literature and liking apart? |
1594 | Why did he dislike fair women so? |
1594 | Why do the walls with gouts ensanguined ooze? |
1594 | Why does one like her except because she is such a thorough woman? |
1594 | Why does the_ Nation_ publish these edifying and Christian war songs? |
1594 | Why not, indeed? |
1594 | Why waste time on it, they ask, which could be expended on science, on modern languages, or any other branch of education? |
1594 | Will he die before doing so? |
1594 | Will this not do to sing just as well as the original? |
1594 | Would they make her laugh, as Chicot does? |
1594 | and is it not true that"almost any man you please could reel it off for days together"? |
1594 | and of what work is_ Lords and Liveries_ a parody? |
1594 | and who that reads him will not be ambitious of falling in a glorious war? |
1594 | and will he ever enter it laurelled, and in triumph? |
1594 | and would I have her weep, and lose her healthy appetite and break her healthy sleep? |
1594 | did he lift up a horse between his legs while clutching a rafter with his hands? |
1594 | make her forget, as Porthos, Athos, and Aramis do? |
1594 | or come back from America and do it?" |
1594 | our country, our green and beloved, our beautiful and oppressed?''" |
1594 | take her away from the heavy, familiar time, as the enchanter Dumas takes us? |
1594 | the Dead can ride with speed: Dost fear to ride with me?" |
1594 | what night Clings like a face- cloth to the face of each,-- Sweeps like a shroud o''er knees and head? |
1594 | where is the pathos, the simplicity, the purple splendour of Ouida''s manner, or manners? |
1594 | wretched men, what ill is this ye suffer? |
1594 | { 109} Are the very best women angels? |
14090 | Are Women Ready for the Franchise? |
14090 | Does Capital Punishment Tend to Diminish Capital Crime? |
14090 | Ought Women to Vote? |
14090 | Should Capital Punishment Be Abolished? |
14090 | What Is the Truth about Woman''s Suffrage? |
14090 | Why Have a Hangman? |
14090 | Why? |
14090 | ( 2) Is there anything that I am thinking of in connection with this question that is not essential to it? |
14090 | Admitting that additional revenue is needed, is a graduated income tax the best way of securing the money? |
14090 | And how are we to know what reasons the audience will believe? |
14090 | Are there any terms in any of the above propositions which should be made more clear to an average audience? |
14090 | Are there any terms on the meaning of which two opposing teams might disagree? |
14090 | BRIEF BIBLIOGRAPHY"Does Capital Punishment Prevent Convictions?" |
14090 | But is the new system wiser than the old-- in the matter of making laws, for example? |
14090 | But just what is home rule for cities? |
14090 | But why? |
14090 | But why? |
14090 | But will it do no harm, even if seldom enforced? |
14090 | Can a question have two entirely different sets of issues? |
14090 | Can you see one danger of relying on testimony alone for evidence? |
14090 | Could a graduated income tax be successfully collected? |
14090 | Did you refute his assertion? |
14090 | Did you win? |
14090 | Do n''t they desire good transportation facilities, and are n''t they glad when they have clean streets and honest administration? |
14090 | Do not the citizens of Brooklyn and San Francisco, as the citizens of every American city, like to drink pure water? |
14090 | Do they seem reasonable and natural? |
14090 | Do you answer,"Oh, the recall will never be invoked except in an extreme case of obvious and flagrant injustice"? |
14090 | Do you think it better in refutation to assail the minor points of your opponent or to attack the main issues? |
14090 | Does it convince you? |
14090 | Does the government need additional revenue? |
14090 | During the past week, on what occasions have you personally made use of:( 1) narration;( 2) description;( 3) exposition;( 4) argumentation? |
14090 | Has he any reason to feel more favorably toward one side than toward the other? |
14090 | Have you ever argued? |
14090 | Have you ever debated? |
14090 | He has tested it with the question:"Will it help bring conviction to the audience; how will it affect my hearers?" |
14090 | He would say to himself:"These are the issues: For which am I the better adapted? |
14090 | Honorable Judges, if the city does not have important legislative duties, what do we mean by local self- government? |
14090 | How is the student who wishes to discuss this question to decide upon the meaning of the term? |
14090 | How, then, are we to persuade our hearers to accept our assertions as true? |
14090 | How? |
14090 | I reply,"How do you know?" |
14090 | If it had been preceded by a clear"introduction"and convincing"proof,"do you think that it would have made an effective"conclusion"? |
14090 | If so, then why not make it still more definite and establish one- man power? |
14090 | If you disagree with this assertion, do not believe they aid health, and know X does not smoke cigarettes, how would you refute his contention? |
14090 | If your opponents in a debate quote opinions of others in support of their views, in what two ways can they be refuted? |
14090 | In all your thinking and reading upon the question, constantly try to decide:( 1) What will the other side admit? |
14090 | In explaining this distinction, what form of discourse have you used? |
14090 | In other words, will it make their own experience quickly and strongly support the issues? |
14090 | In which can I do the more good?" |
14090 | In writing? |
14090 | Is he a man who is physically and mentally able to judge what he observes under such circumstances? |
14090 | Is it any wonder that inefficiency and graft infest such a maze of boards, councils and committees? |
14090 | Is that a reason for applying it to city government? |
14090 | Is the defendant his friend or relative or employer? |
14090 | Is the following extract from a high- school student''s brief correct in form? |
14090 | Is there anything left to argue? |
14090 | Is this evidence convincing? |
14090 | Is this evidence sufficient to constitute proof? |
14090 | Keep asking yourself:"How did this question arise? |
14090 | Now how is it with the commission? |
14090 | Now, what evidence shall we use to show that they will be honest? |
14090 | Orally? |
14090 | Otherwise, why give it a separate personality and a separate organization? |
14090 | Should it be ruled by a commission? |
14090 | Should it have one? |
14090 | Someone says:"If that is true, he was a bad man, but can you prove him a thief?" |
14090 | That question, bluntly stated, is this: Is representative government a failure? |
14090 | The issues, then, are: a) Are the inter contests so widely abused in the high schools of Northern Illinois as to warrant their abolition? |
14090 | They must consider, first, whether or not the statements of the witness are probable; that is, are they consistent with human experience? |
14090 | To have a street paved, shall one body legislate; a second group administer; and a third pass upon the validity of the whole thing? |
14090 | Was he in a position to be familiar with the thing he describes? |
14090 | We are ready, then, to answer our question:_"What reasons will those in the audience believe?" |
14090 | We assert:"There is but one issue: Will the students be honest in the examination?" |
14090 | What a judge really says in a charge to the jury is this:"Does your experience warn you that the testimony of some of these witnesses is unsound? |
14090 | What are the best means for the attainment of that end? |
14090 | What are the three necessary steps in the first process? |
14090 | What can those objects of public usefulness be? |
14090 | What do we want to accomplish as good citizens and patriots? |
14090 | What general rule can you make from 9 concerning a statement supported by particular cases? |
14090 | What guaranty can you give that it will not be called into being to harrass and intimidate a good judge? |
14090 | What is meant by"determining the issues"? |
14090 | What is the purpose of all this study? |
14090 | What is the purpose of refutation? |
14090 | What is there about the evidence introduced that should make the audience hesitate to accept it? |
14090 | What must one do to refute correctly and well? |
14090 | What qualities should a proposition for debate possess? |
14090 | What two principal methods may be followed? |
14090 | What, then, is debate as we shall use the word in this work, and what is the relation of argumentation to debate? |
14090 | Which is next? |
14090 | Which is the broader term,"argumentation,"or"debate?" |
14090 | Which offers the better promise of reward? |
14090 | Which requires the more study? |
14090 | Who but the state can supervise a uniform accounting of all cities? |
14090 | Who is responsible for the mistakes of Mr. Hume? |
14090 | Why could he not begin his argument at once? |
14090 | Why do n''t the gentlemen come forward with an organization equally as simple and complete? |
14090 | Why do n''t they give instances where a municipal reviewing body has checked fraud? |
14090 | Why do we believe anything? |
14090 | Why have they done so? |
14090 | Why have you spent so much time learning of this one event?" |
14090 | Why is it being discussed?" |
14090 | Why place the work in the hands of a body that is primarily administrative in character? |
14090 | Why should this tend to make those in the audience believe that the honor system should be adopted? |
14090 | Why then continue a representative body which does not in fact represent? |
14090 | Why, or why not? |
14090 | Why, or why not? |
14090 | Why, or why not? |
14090 | Why, or why not? |
14090 | Why, then, should there not be a legislative body to perform the work of legislation? |
14090 | Why? |
14090 | Why? |
14090 | Will it be convincing to them_? |
14090 | Will the affirmative and the negative teams always agree on the issues? |
14090 | Will the gentlemen give their authority for the statement that these cities had a commission government? |
14090 | Would the students of"A"support soccer as a regular sport? |
14090 | You might naturally reply:"What examinations?" |
14090 | b) Would the proposed plan be more democratic than the present system? |
14090 | c) Would the proposed plan work out in practice? |
17112 | Can any good come out of Nazareth? |
17112 | Hast thou hope? |
17112 | If you ask, what is the first step in the way of truth? 17112 If you ask, what is the second? |
17112 | What is eternity? |
17112 | What is wanting,said Napoleon one day to Madame Campan,"in order that the youth of France be well educated?" |
17112 | A child''s eyes, those clear wells of undefiled thought-- what on earth can be more beautiful? |
17112 | Alexander, CÃ ¦ sar, Charlemagne and I myself have founded empires; but upon what do these creations of our genius depend? |
17112 | And dost thou serve God in newness of life and conversation? |
17112 | And shall I prove ungrateful? |
17112 | And why take ye thought for raiment? |
17112 | Are all old things done away, and all things in thee become new? |
17112 | Are friendship''s pleasures to be sold? |
17112 | But what, it may be asked, are the requisites for a life of retirement? |
17112 | Can gold remove the mortal hour? |
17112 | Do you know what a man is? |
17112 | Do you know what is more hard to bear than the reverses of fortune? |
17112 | Do you think that any one can move the heart but He that made it? |
17112 | Do you wish men to speak well of you? |
17112 | Has not God borne with you these many years? |
17112 | Hast thou a new heart and renewed affections? |
17112 | Have you known how to compose your manners? |
17112 | Have you known how to take repose? |
17112 | How can there be pride in a contrite heart? |
17112 | If not,--what hast thou to do with hopes of heaven? |
17112 | If you ask me which is the real hereditary sin of human nature, do you imagine I shall answer pride or luxury or ambition or egotism? |
17112 | If you ask, what is the third? |
17112 | In life can love be bought with gold? |
17112 | Indeed, who can estimate the interest of knowledge? |
17112 | Is it not as the steps of degree in the Temple, whereby we descend to the knowledge of ourselves, and ascend to the knowledge of God? |
17112 | Is it reasonable to take it ill, that anybody desires of us that which is their own? |
17112 | Is it then saying too much if I say, that man by thinking only becomes truly man? |
17112 | Is that necessary? |
17112 | Is there a heart that music can not melt? |
17112 | It must be so-- Plato, thou reasonest well-- Else whence this pleasing hope, this fond desire, This longing after immortality? |
17112 | Love why do we one passion call, When''tis a compound of them all? |
17112 | MORALITY.--In cases of doubtful morality, it is usual to say, Is there any harm in doing this? |
17112 | Nay, who dare shine, if not in virtue''s cause? |
17112 | O who would trust this world, or prize what''s in it, That gives and takes, and chops and changes, ev''ry minute? |
17112 | Or whence this secret dread and inward horror Of falling into naught? |
17112 | Ought a gentleman to be a loyal son, a true husband, an honest father? |
17112 | RECONCILIATION.--Wherein is it possible for us, wicked and impious creatures, to be justified, except in the only Son of God? |
17112 | SLANDER.--When will talkers refrain from evil- speaking? |
17112 | Seest thou a man diligent in his business? |
17112 | Seest thou a man wise in his own conceit? |
17112 | There is no better rule to try a doctrine by than the question, Is it merciful, or is it unmerciful? |
17112 | There is nothing like fun, is there? |
17112 | This question may sometimes be best answered by asking ourselves another: Is there any harm in letting it alone? |
17112 | To purchase Heaven has gold the power? |
17112 | Too many have no idea of the subjection of their temper to the influence of religion, and yet what is changed, if the temper is not? |
17112 | Unblest with sense above their peers refin''d, Who shall stand up, dictators to mankind? |
17112 | What do people mean when they talk about unhappiness? |
17112 | What does competency in the long run mean? |
17112 | What gem hath dropp''d and sparkles o''er his chain? |
17112 | What is beauty? |
17112 | What is difficulty? |
17112 | What is good- looking, as Horace Smith remarks, but looking good? |
17112 | What is it to be a gentleman? |
17112 | What is the Bible in your house? |
17112 | What is the best government? |
17112 | What is the grave? |
17112 | What is there in the vale of life Half so delightful as a wife; When friendship, love and peace combine To stamp the marriage- bond divine? |
17112 | What then shall the sowers of discord be called, but the children of the devil? |
17112 | What''s a table richly spread, Without a woman at its head? |
17112 | When our country is threatened by dangers and pressed by difficulties who are the best bulwarks of its defence? |
17112 | Whence but from Heaven, could men unskill''d in arts, In several ages born, in several parts, Weave such agreeing truths? |
17112 | Whence? |
17112 | Where is the man who has the power and skill To stem the torrent of a woman''s will? |
17112 | Who hath woe? |
17112 | Why are we so blind? |
17112 | Why not make earnest effort to confer that pleasure on others? |
17112 | Why shrinks the soul Back on herself, and startles at destruction? |
17112 | Why will any man be so impertinently officious as to tell me all prospect of a future state is only fancy and delusion? |
17112 | Would we attain mercy? |
17112 | or how, or why Should all conspire to cheat us with a lie? |
17112 | what would the world be to us, If the children were no more? |
17112 | whither? |
17112 | who hath babbling? |
17112 | who hath contentions? |
17112 | who hath redness of eyes? |
17112 | who hath sorrow? |
17112 | who hath wounds without cause? |
17112 | why? |
12974 | Sister Holly,Ivy quoth,"What is that within you see? |
12974 | What is my name? 12974 What means that star?" |
12974 | (_ Bells outside._) Oh, children, little children, Why do the joy- bells chime? |
12974 | )_ Eh? |
12974 | )__ Head Cook( thunderously)_: Dare n''t? |
12974 | )__ Prince_: Why, what''s the matter? |
12974 | *****= A Christmas Carol.="What means this glory round our feet?" |
12974 | *****= A Gentle Reminder.= Something new about Christmas? |
12974 | Ah, who can tell, Though in every land''tis a magic spell? |
12974 | Am I forgiven? |
12974 | And Everything begins with E-- Does anybody doubt it? |
12974 | And do I love my precious doll? |
12974 | And had none but our own selves to please? |
12974 | And how dare you interfere with our fun? |
12974 | And if he comes head first, how can he get back? |
12974 | And is not War a youthful king, A stately hero clad in mail? |
12974 | And oh, my stars, what''s happened? |
12974 | And what''s the Princess doing here? |
12974 | And why does he come when I am asleep? |
12974 | And why is Christmas better Than many other days? |
12974 | Are you really glad to see such an old- fashioned specimen as I am? |
12974 | Attendant at what school? |
12974 | But if he does that, then why do n''t he catch cold? |
12974 | Did you not mean me? |
12974 | Did you speak? |
12974 | Do n''t you know it''s gone out of fashion? |
12974 | Do you like curds and whey, Father Christmas? |
12974 | Do you spurn me? |
12974 | Er-- what are Brownies? |
12974 | For who is it smiles through the Christmas morn-- The Light of the wide creation? |
12974 | Have you not seen our Santa Claus, With hair so snowy white, sir? |
12974 | How are you all? |
12974 | How dare you call me that? |
12974 | How is it you are not in my livery, if you are in my service? |
12974 | How old is Santa Claus? |
12974 | I thank you, sir? |
12974 | I think she''s very pretty, And I guess that you do, too; And do n''t you wish that I would give Lucindy Ann to you? |
12974 | Is he big, is he little, is he young, is he old? |
12974 | Is it really come again? |
12974 | Is n''t he coming to- night? |
12974 | Is zat vat you mean, heh? |
12974 | Look at that; now what do you say? |
12974 | Near the chimney stockings swing, What to them will Santa bring? |
12974 | Now are you ready Upon your way to go? |
12974 | Now what on earth are we to do? |
12974 | Now, what is all this fuss? |
12974 | O laggard feet, why stay? |
12974 | Oh, hush thee, little dear, my soul, The evening shades are falling; Hush thee, my dear, dost thou not hear The voice of the Master calling? |
12974 | Oh, this pleasant little job is meant for me-- me? |
12974 | Oh, what are we to do? |
12974 | Old Santa Claus is such a bore, Of him we''ve had too much and more; Now what we want is something new, But what is there for us to do? |
12974 | Residence? |
12974 | Surprise us all by being good, wo n''t you? |
12974 | Sweet music''s loudest note, the poet''story-- Didst thou ne''er love to hear of fame and glory? |
12974 | That strife should vanish, battle cease, O why should this thy soul elate? |
12974 | The Magi mused,"more bright than morn?" |
12974 | The winds shall be my heralds-- Come, North Wind, where are you? |
12974 | Then my mamma smiled at me, And she whispered,"Is n''t May Letting secrets fly away?" |
12974 | Vat? |
12974 | Ven? |
12974 | Vy? |
12974 | Vy?? |
12974 | Vy?? |
12974 | What are Brownies? |
12974 | What are you doing here? |
12974 | What brings you here? |
12974 | What do the angels sing? |
12974 | What horror meets my view? |
12974 | What is the music of Christmas again? |
12974 | What is the word they bring? |
12974 | What specific tastes? |
12974 | What''s that? |
12974 | When did a scullion ever wear a sword? |
12974 | When royalty speaks to me, do I swell out? |
12974 | Where does he keep? |
12974 | Who comes here? |
12974 | Who has gone, do you sink? |
12974 | Who? |
12974 | Why do n''t his head get all covered with black? |
12974 | Why have you come so late to ask for work? |
12974 | Why, what were half so sweet As the old, old way of keeping The day our glad hearts greet? |
12974 | Why, who are you, my dear? |
12974 | You do-- eh? |
12974 | Your age, birthplace, parents''names? |
12974 | Your name, young man? |
12974 | Zen vere is your last place? |
12974 | _ 1897_: O children, little children, What light is that afar? |
12974 | _ 1897_: O children, little children, What means its glorious rays? |
12974 | _ Bess_: Not have Santa Claus any more? |
12974 | _ Charlie_: How did you come here, Mr. St. Nicholas? |
12974 | _ Children_: Oh, do n''t you know the story Of the first Christmas time? |
12974 | _ Chorus._-- Christmas it is coming, now, Do n''t you hear the bells, sir? |
12974 | _ Cooklet_: Then who''s to guard it? |
12974 | _ Father Christmas_: So you did not get the pie? |
12974 | _ Fourth girl_: R stands for ready-- for Christmas be ready; R stands for ready-- are_ you_ ready yet? |
12974 | _ Greening( furiously to Head Cook)_: How did you come to engage such a scurvy- looking fellow? |
12974 | _ Greening_: O Princess, how could you take that ragged creature for a gentleman? |
12974 | _ Harry_: Pray, how do you bestow your gifts? |
12974 | _ Head Cook( almost speechless with rage)_: But vat you vant? |
12974 | _ Head Cook( furious, spluttering with rage_): Vat-- vat-- vat-- how dare you? |
12974 | _ Head Cook:_ But if he is so in lof, vy does not your master come to woo the Princess? |
12974 | _ Head Cook_: Afraid-- afraid-- but vat is zere to be afraid? |
12974 | _ Head Cook_: Eh? |
12974 | _ Head Cook_: Shall I tell you what it is? |
12974 | _ Head Cook_: Vy, vat sort of kitchen have you lived in, if you have never seen ze Brownies? |
12974 | _ Head Cook_: You? |
12974 | _ John_: Who are you, sir? |
12974 | _ Kitchen_: Ah, sir, you will be brave and take the place? |
12974 | _ Kitchen_: The scullions gone? |
12974 | _ Kitchenmaid_: O dear, good, kind young man, how can we leave you? |
12974 | _ Koko_: What cries are these? |
12974 | _ Prince( dreamily)_: Eh? |
12974 | _ Prince_: And you came to save me? |
12974 | _ Prince_: I? |
12974 | _ Prince_: What danger threatens you? |
12974 | _ Prince_: Who told you I was called Red Pepper? |
12974 | _ Prince_: Why, what''s this? |
12974 | _ Princess_: Is it not my duty to protect my scullions? |
12974 | _ Princess_: The wolves? |
12974 | _ Sweeting_: No scullion? |
12974 | _ Tip_: How did you manage it? |
12974 | how can you stoop to touch a scullion? |
12974 | how long before Thou come again? |
12974 | tell me now, What without there seest thou?" |
12974 | the shepherd said,"That brightens through the rocky glen?" |
12974 | vy??? |
12974 | vy??? |
12974 | vy??? |
12974 | what chance have I?" |
1974 | ''Did he go?'' |
1974 | Again, does the error touch the essentials of the poetic art, or some accident of it? |
1974 | For what were the business of a speaker, if the Thought were revealed quite apart from what he says? |
1974 | What, for example, would be the effect of the Oedipus of Sophocles, if it were cast into a form as long as the Iliad? |
1974 | Yet what difference is there between introducing such choral interludes, and transferring a speech, or even a whole act, from one play to another? |
11431 | And he swore? |
11431 | And how long,said Alexander,"have I to live?" |
11431 | And you expect me, a stranger on your lake, to find this place without chart, course, distance, latitude, longitude, or soundings? 11431 And you,"replied the pirate,"by what right do you ravage the world? |
11431 | Better than teaching school and writing learned articles? |
11431 | Do n''t you? |
11431 | From far? |
11431 | Have you learned that fame is an icy shadow? |
11431 | Have you? |
11431 | His name? |
11431 | How, friend,replied the archbishop,"has it[_ the homily_] met with any Aristarchus[_ severe critic_]?" |
11431 | I''m a sort of a kind of a nonentity; arn''t I, sergeant Drill? |
11431 | If you once saw me in battle, you''d never forget it; would he, sergeant Drill? |
11431 | In your opinion, who is the greatest genius that France has ever produced? |
11431 | Is the sinful servant more Than his gracious Lord who bore Bonds and stripes in Jewry? |
11431 | My character for valor is pretty well known; is n''t it, sergeant Drill? |
11431 | That gratified ambition can not make you happy? 11431 That was pretty well, egad, eh?" |
11431 | The ladies will be happy to-- eh? |
11431 | Then prithee, sweetheart, do you know the bailiff''s daughter there? |
11431 | Was he a-- ah-- peaceable man? |
11431 | What''s here? 11431 Where were you born?" |
11431 | ( Query,"Seint Eloy"for Seinte Loy?) |
11431 | ... The same Astarte? |
11431 | 1): Have you forgot the elder Dionysius, Surnamed the Tyrant?... |
11431 | Allow me to ask if you think a mariner runs by his nose, like one of Pathfinder''s hounds?" |
11431 | Ask you for whom my tears do flow so? |
11431 | BETTY DOXY, Captain Macheath says to her,"Do you drink as hard as ever? |
11431 | BORS(_ King_) of Gaul, brother of king Ban of Benwicke[ Brittany?]. |
11431 | Bishop Bruno, whither art thou travelling? |
11431 | But Ogier gazed upon it[_ the sea_] doubtfully One Moment, and then, sheathing, Courtain, said,"What tales are these?" |
11431 | But what are these to great Atossa''s mind? |
11431 | Byron refers to it in the lines: Like friar Bacon''s brazen head, I''ve spoken,"Time is, time was, time''s past[?]" |
11431 | C. Dibdin says none who ever saw W. Parsons( 1736- 1795) in"Corbaccio"could forget his effective mode of exclaiming"Has he made his will? |
11431 | Can this last long? |
11431 | Can we the Drapier then forget? |
11431 | Care I for the limb, the thews, the stature?... |
11431 | Clytus? |
11431 | Cowley,_ Who''s the Dupe_? |
11431 | Cui a Deo æternum meritum nisi vero Catholico Recaredo regi? |
11431 | D''ye give it up? |
11431 | D''ye think my niece will ever endure such a borachio? |
11431 | Did he mean all that by shaking his head? |
11431 | Did you think I should live for ever? |
11431 | Do n''t you hear how lord Strutt[_ the king of Spain_] has bespoke his liveries at Lewis Baboon''s shop[_ France_]?... |
11431 | Do you love me?" |
11431 | Doll Tearsheet for a lady of quality in Temple Garden; if he were wiser than he is... of what worth were he to us? |
11431 | ELEAZAR the Moor, insolent, bloodthirsty, lustful, and vindictive, like"Aaron,"in[ Shakespeare''s?] |
11431 | EST- IL- POSSSIBLE? |
11431 | Fond of saying"good things,"and pointing them out with such expressions as"There I had you, eh?" |
11431 | From Corin came it first? |
11431 | Have you not heard the poets tell How came the dainty Baby Bell Into this World of ours? |
11431 | He is stabbed by Deme''trius and Chiron, sons of Tam''ora queen of the Goths.--(?) |
11431 | He rarely finishes a sentence, but runs on in this style:"Dover is an odd sort of a-- eh?" |
11431 | He turned at random to the"Prayer of the Jews,"in Baruch, and was so struck with it that he said aloud to Racine,"Dites, donc, who was this Baruch? |
11431 | His one and only inquiry is"How many quarterings has a person got?" |
11431 | His wife says to him: Here''s a goodly jewel.. Did you not win this at Goletta, captain?.. |
11431 | How dare you infest the seas with your misdeeds?" |
11431 | Iago, speaking of the lieutenant, says: And what was he? |
11431 | If then, Castara, I in heaven nor move, Nor earth, nor hell, where am I but in love? |
11431 | If this had been the case it would, indeed, have been startling; but what are the facts? |
11431 | Is not our nation in his debt? |
11431 | Is not this dying with courage and true greatness? |
11431 | Justice Shallow remonstrated, but Falstaff exclaimed,"Will you tell me, master Shallow, how to choose a man? |
11431 | Now, if the food was in the great- coat, and the great- coat was stolen, how is it that the victuals remained in Sancho''s possession untouched? |
11431 | Or to the dreadful summit of the cliff That beetles o''er its base into the sea? |
11431 | Pilate''s question, QUID EST VERITAS? |
11431 | Shakespeare would have furnished them with a good motto,"Use every man after his desert, and who shall''scape whipping?" |
11431 | Shall sapient managers new scenes produce From Cherry, Skeffington, and_ Mother Goose?_ Byron,_ English Bards and Scotch Reviewers_( 1809). |
11431 | Sinopê,"He who made a tub his home?" |
11431 | Sir Fine- face, sir Fair- hands? |
11431 | The captain was taken up by a coaster from Eye, loaded with cheese--"[ Now, pray, what did parson Prunello say? |
11431 | The lady Astarte his? |
11431 | The measure was agreed to in full council, but one of the sager mice inquired,"Who would undertake to bell the cat?" |
11431 | The sailors trembled at sight of him, and the fiend demanded how they dared to trespass"where never hero braved his rage before?" |
11431 | This Curio, hated now and scorned by all, Who fell himself to work his country''s fall? |
11431 | Thus,"Does your master stay in town, as the saying is?" |
11431 | Was I for this nigh wrecked upon the sea, And twice by awkward wind from England''s bank Drove back again unto my native clime?... |
11431 | Was it not for this that no cortejo ere I yet have chosen from the youth of Sev''ille? |
11431 | Were you at Sedan? |
11431 | What is this jargon? |
11431 | What say you does this wizard style himself-- Hakeem Biamrallah, the Third Fatimite? |
11431 | What says my Æsculapius? |
11431 | What would Sir Roger de Coverley be without his follies and his charming little brain- cracks? |
11431 | What''s the matter with me?" |
11431 | What, however, says history proper? |
11431 | Whatty, what is this? |
11431 | When Crillon heard the story of the Crucifixion read at Church, he grew so excited that he cried out in an audible voice,_ Où étais tu, Crillon_? |
11431 | When like a wretche led in an iron chayne, He was presented by his chiefest friende Unto the foes of him whom he had slayne? |
11431 | Where is the great Alcidês of the field, Valiant lord Talbot, earl of Shrewsbury? |
11431 | Where were they when I, unaided, Rescued thee from thirteen foes? |
11431 | Who can Amiel''s praise refuse? |
11431 | Who in their useless pyramids would live? |
11431 | Who is it thou hast slain? |
11431 | Who knows not Circe, The daughter of the sun, whose charmed cup Whoever tasted lost his upright shape, And downward fell into a grovelling swine? |
11431 | Who would not weep if Atticus were he? |
11431 | Why does he wish to swear away the life of that young man who never did him any harm? |
11431 | Why is Chelmsford Theatre like a half- moon? |
11431 | Why is a pump like viscount Castlereigh? |
11431 | Why should I not, had I the heart to do it, Like to th''Egyptian thief at point of death, Kill what I love? |
11431 | _ Bacchus_ or_ Saturn_? |
11431 | _ Beonê_ or_ Oenonê_? |
11431 | _ Ce''lia_, a poetical name for any lady- love: as"Would you know my Celia''s charms...?" |
11431 | _ Critias_ or_ Crito_? |
11431 | _ Dites, donc, avez- vous lu Baruch?_ Said when a person puts an unexpected question, or makes a startling proposal. |
11431 | can you prefer a man to the interests of Rome?" |
11431 | de quoi servait- il sur la terre? |
11431 | do they run already? |
11431 | in thy anguish What is there left to thee? |
11431 | is he dead? |
11431 | my Galen?... |
11431 | said the prince of darkness;"so you think by these churches and convents to put me and mine to your ban, do you? |
11431 | the hapless husband cried;"young as I am and unprepared?" |
11431 | who comes here? |
20024 | This will furnish amusement, for what is more entertaining than trying the cap on others? |
18104 | ''What is,''sayde he,''this bad vysage?'' 18104 And are there not moods which need heaven, hell, purgatory, and faeryland for their expression, no less than this dilapidated earth? |
18104 | Because the THOU( sweet gentleman) is not sufficiently honoured, nourished, soft- bedded, and lovingly cared- for? 18104 Is there no God, then; but at best an absentee God, sitting idle, ever since the first Sabbath, at the outside of his Universe, and_ seeing_ it go? |
18104 | Know you what it is to be a child? 18104 Tell me,"says Faust,"what would you do if you could attain to everlasting salvation?" |
18104 | The Scriptures, thought I then, what are they? 18104 Was this the face that launch''d a thousand ships, And burned the topless towers of Ilium? |
18104 | What is Nature? 18104 What_ art_ thou afraid of? |
18104 | Who am I? 18104 ''Man,''I said,''who are you that you should not believe in fairy tales? 18104 And didst Thou play in Heaven with all The angels, that were not too tall?... 18104 And the poem ends upon the patter of the little feet--Halts by me that footfall: Is my gloom, after all, Shade of His hand, outstretched caressingly? |
18104 | And then? |
18104 | And what did it feel like to be Out of Heaven, and just like me?... |
18104 | Are they not the authentic guardians of fairyland and of heaven? |
18104 | Are they not the true idealists, the children? |
18104 | Art thou not the''living garment of God''? |
18104 | Art thou not tried, and beaten with stripes, even as I am? |
18104 | But, after all, what is it that the man is trying to say? |
18104 | Charles Lamb has asked,"What has Margaret to do with Faust?" |
18104 | Death? |
18104 | Do we force ourselves on thee, or thou on us?" |
18104 | Hadst Thou ever any toys, Like us little girls and boys? |
18104 | Has the word Duty no meaning?" |
18104 | Have you ever heard of a thing called the New Theology?'' |
18104 | Here are Carlyle''s Eternities and Immensities-- are they not enough? |
18104 | How can we be sure that the ideals which claim us from beyond are realities, and not mere dream shapes? |
18104 | Into what new land, Pallid one, stoney one, naked one? |
18104 | Is_ this_ thy secret then, and is it woe? |
18104 | Must not the whole world around have faded away for him altogether, had he been left for one moment really alone in it?" |
18104 | O Heavens, is it in very deed He, then, that ever speaks through thee? |
18104 | Of thy bright mastership is this the key? |
18104 | On the ground of science, who does not know the defiant and Titanic mood in which knowledge has at times been sought? |
18104 | One of the most elemental questions that man can ask is, What is the relation of the gods to human inquiry and freedom of thought? |
18104 | The poem_ On Christian Behaviour_, which we have quoted, contains the lines--"When all men''s cards are fully played, Whose will abide the light?" |
18104 | The problem of the fairy tale is-- what will a healthy man do with a fantastic world? |
18104 | The problem of the modern novel is-- what will a madman do with a dull world? |
18104 | To which Faust replies--"What, is great Mephistophilis so passionate For being deprived of the joys of heaven? |
18104 | What Act of Legislature was there that_ thou_ shouldst be Happy? |
18104 | What about happiness? |
18104 | What desire, what fulfilment of desire, had wrought so pathetically on the features of these ranks of aged men and women of humble condition? |
18104 | What is it all about? |
18104 | What is the sum- total of the worst that lies before thee? |
18104 | What is this ME?... |
18104 | What secret would thy radiant finger show? |
18104 | What then was that world which interested Bunyan so intensely, and cost him so many pangs of conscience? |
18104 | Wherefore should any set thee love apart? |
18104 | Wherefore, like a coward, dost thou forever pip and whimper, and go cowering and trembling? |
18104 | Who are we that we should judge them? |
18104 | Who that has looked upon the face of one dearly beloved who is dead, has not known the leap of the spirit, not so much in rebellion as in demand? |
18104 | Who would not give much to be able to say the thing he wants to say so exactly and so beautifully as that is said? |
18104 | Whom wilt thou find to love ignoble thee, Save Me, save only Me? |
18104 | Why are all of us the very complex and unaccountable characters that we are? |
18104 | Why did he write them, one still asks? |
18104 | Why does anybody write a diary? |
18104 | Why, then, did he write it? |
18104 | Would the wicked river drag me down by the heels, indeed? |
18104 | and look so beautiful all the time?" |
18104 | is Thy love indeed A weed, albeit an amaranthine weed Suffering no flowers except its own to mount?" |
18104 | that lives and loves in thee, that lives and loves in me?... |
18104 | what is Scripture? |
18104 | why do I not name thee God? |
17903 | The thing is to look at one''s own work from the viewpoint of the audience, and continually ask one''s self such questions as,''Is it clear? 17903 What''s up, Kid?" |
17903 | Where do the good plots come from, anyhow? |
17903 | Where? |
17903 | Who is the masked stranger? |
17903 | --"What''ll we do? |
17903 | --so he has chucked"Little Sis"has he, the rich piker? |
17903 | A certain writer on the photoplay-- we do not recall who-- once wrote a paragraph headed"When do you do your thinking?" |
17903 | And have you stopped to think how broad that statement really is? |
17903 | Are the points properly brought out, that others may see them as I do? |
17903 | Asks her:_ Cut- in leader--_"WHERE DO YOU MEET-- THESE MEN?" |
17903 | Asks:_ Cut- in leader--_"DO YOU KNOW SO MANY?" |
17903 | Bill is all anger--"Why?" |
17903 | But have you a visualization of the story? |
17903 | But how many writers are prepared not only to write the script but also to furnish the dog and direct its acting? |
17903 | But how often would a producer be able to obtain such an effect? |
17903 | But why send a carbon script at all? |
17903 | But will it be_ worth while_ in the case of_ your_ story? |
17903 | Can I follow it without confusion of mind? |
17903 | Can I make it better by altering it? |
17903 | Can you close your eyes and see it on the screen? |
17903 | Could it be called a colorable imitation of any magazine story, book, or play? |
17903 | Do the synopsis and scenario match properly, or have I hinted at action in my synopsis which is not adequately worked out in the continuity? |
17903 | Does it constantly keep my interest stimulated?'' |
17903 | Does it suit the time of year? |
17903 | Does the company make that style of story? |
17903 | Ella makes a proposition, saying:_ Cut- in leader--_"WHY NOT SHARE A ROOM WITH ME? |
17903 | Even if it does, will it offend even one spectator? |
17903 | Florence dressing( suspense: Does she recall that revolver and want to add her tragedy to the dreary ones of"Brickdust Row?") |
17903 | Florence freezing, says:_ Cut- in leader--_"HOW DARE YOU LIFT YOUR HAT TO ME, SIR?" |
17903 | Florence is reserved, chilly, as she says:_ Cut- in leader--_"YOU MEAN-- ABOUT THE PARLORS?" |
17903 | Furthermore, when there are so many good, pleasant, and interesting themes to choose from, why elaborate what is unpleasant or morally objectionable? |
17903 | Have I introduced scenes that would cost too much to produce? |
17903 | He asks Florence:_ Cut- in leader--_"ARE YOU GOING TO CONEY ISLAND?" |
17903 | He commits a crime, but what stronger motive could a man have than the one that drove him on to its commission? |
17903 | How are we to reconcile these two apparently conflicting statements? |
17903 | How shall we isolate him? |
17903 | IS IT NECESSARY TO MEET EVERY TOM, DICK AND HARRY-- OUTSIDE?" |
17903 | IT''S A QUESTION OF-- ARE YOU GOIN''TUH BLAME HER FOR THE VERY THING YOU MADE HER DO?" |
17903 | If, he argues, he is able to write salable photoplays, why should he share his checks with authors''agents or photoplay clearing houses? |
17903 | In conclusion, we offer a short catechism that the writer will do well to consult before sending out his script: Is my plot really fresh? |
17903 | Is it impracticable for the camera? |
17903 | Is it logical? |
17903 | Is it strong enough? |
17903 | Is it too large? |
17903 | Is the cast too small? |
17903 | Is the plot not only possible but_ probable?_ Is the material desired by the producer to whom I am sending it? |
17903 | Is the plot not only possible but_ probable?_ Is the material desired by the producer to whom I am sending it? |
17903 | MAYN''T WE SEE IT TOGETHER?" |
17903 | Maud slowly turns to her sister with a question in her eyes--"Is he guilty?" |
17903 | Oldport laughs at him somewhat sardonically as Blinker says:_ Cut- in leader--_"WILL THOSE PAPERS NEVER BE DONE WITH? |
17903 | On the other hand, does the synopsis tell everything that happens in the scenario? |
17903 | People will later say,''Oh, was_ he_ the one who did that?'' |
17903 | She comes back at him:_ Cut- in leader--_"CAN''T YOU SEE I''M RIDING A BICYCLE UP THE WOOLWORTH TOWER?" |
17903 | She looks at him-- wonders-- says:_ Cut- in leader--_"WHY SHOULDN''T I SAY IT? |
17903 | She wonders-- finally asks:_ Cut- in leader--_"WHAT''S WRONG?" |
17903 | Surprised-- puzzled-- angered-- says:_ Cut- in leader--_"WHO ARE--''THEY''?" |
17903 | The test should be: Is the expensive scene or effect absolutely essential to a proper unfolding of your plot? |
17903 | The valet asks:"Will you pardon me? |
17903 | Thus, while what Mr. Hoagland wrote was written in 1912, the Red Cross flag was seen waving bravely in Paralta''s"Madame Who? |
17903 | To which Father replies:"_ Oh!_ Do you play cards?" |
17903 | WHAT SHALL I DO?" |
17903 | WHY DON''T YOU SEE THESE-- THESE MEN-- AT YOUR HOME? |
17903 | WON''T YOU BELIEVE ME?" |
17903 | Was it not to show how a man''s code of ethics, mistakenly clung to, resulted in his misjudging a perfectly innocent girl, with resultant tragedy? |
17903 | What is he driving at? |
17903 | What shall she do? |
17903 | What was that purpose? |
17903 | What will she do about it? |
17903 | What, then, has been changed in a story which has been raised from a medià ¦ val legend to a modern work of art? |
17903 | While he is wondering''What are they talking about now?'' |
17903 | Why should he invent a new twist when he can steal one? |
17903 | Will it pass the Censors? |
17903 | Yet who can really tell? |
17903 | _ Leader--_ FLORENCE IS DIVINELY HAPPY-- FOR IS SHE NOT WITH HER MAN-- KEEPER OF THE KEYS OF FAIRYLAND? |
17903 | or''How did he get from the house in the woods?'' |
17903 | or''Who is the chap in the long coat?'' |
19170 | ***** Thou who hast follow''d far with eyes of love The shy and virgin sights of Spring to- day, Sad soul, what dost thou in this happy grove? |
19170 | A DREAM My dead love came to me, and said,''God gives me one hour''s rest, To spend with thee on earth again: How shall we spend it best?'' |
19170 | But we, to whom no wings are given Why seek we for a Heaven? |
19170 | But what can Ida fear, Shelter''d upon my breast? |
19170 | Dost thou live A spirit, though afar, With a deep hush about thee, like The stillness round a star? |
19170 | Hast thou no pipe to touch, no strain to play, Where Nature smiles so fair and seems to ask a lay? |
19170 | How keep unquench''d and free''Mid others''commerce and economy Such ample visions, oft in alien air Tamed to the measure of the common kind? |
19170 | How should I sing her? |
19170 | If Winter come to Winter, When shall men hope for Spring? |
19170 | In the mist Of years what dost thou see? |
19170 | Know''st thou it, darling, say? |
19170 | Our life is not the life Of roses and of leaves; Else wherefore this deep strife, This pain, our soul conceives? |
19170 | Shall I take comfort? |
19170 | She, the darling of Want and Woe, Why was she sent, save to work and to go With feet that will ever more weary grow? |
19170 | Still murmurs she, like Autumn,_ This was mine!_ How should she face the ghastly, jarring Truth, That questions all, and tramples without ruth? |
19170 | The Undine of olden days, I read, By the love of a soul from her trammels was freed: Knows there another such dolorous need? |
19170 | Thou proud and pure of spirit, how must thou bear To have thine infinite hates and loves confined, School''d, and despised? |
19170 | What ails my darling so? |
19170 | What is it thou dost hear? |
19170 | Whither? |
19170 | Why thirsts the spirit so For life? |
19170 | _ Ida._ Will he forget me, then, When I am gone away? |
19170 | _ Raymond._ Love, what is this? |
19170 | _ Raymond._ The future? |
19170 | what moves it thus? |
10491 | Beyond the street a tower,--beyond the tower a moon,--beyond the moon a star,--beyond the Star, what? |
10491 | See I not, there, a white shimmer? 10491 What shall I say, brave Admiral, say, If we sight naught but seas at dawn?" |
10491 | Who but the locksmith could have made such music? 10491 ''What know I? 10491 ''_ Shall Rome or Heathen rule in Arthur''s realm? 10491 --But no such word Was ever spoke or heard; For up stood, for out stepped, for in struck amid all these A captain? 10491 A lieutenant? 10491 A mate-- first, second, third? 10491 And do you not see what a pretty and pleasant come- off there is for most of us in this spiritual application? 10491 And what did he say to that, Conn? 10491 And who commanded,--and the silence came,--Here let the billows stiffen and have rest?" |
10491 | And"Are you ready?" |
10491 | And"What mockery or malice have we here?" |
10491 | Are you bought by English gold? |
10491 | Are you cowards, fools, or rogues? |
10491 | Brave Admiral, say but one good word: What shall we do when hope is gone?" |
10491 | Burn the fleet and ruin France? |
10491 | But for that reason, is the fool to be wretched, utterly crashed down, and left in all the suffering which his conduct and capacity naturally inflict? |
10491 | But where, thought I, are the crew? |
10491 | Came not faint whispers near? |
10491 | Did it never strike you that you wanted another watchword also,"fair-_work_,"and another and bitterer hatred,--"foul-_work_"? |
10491 | Did the conqueror spurn the creature, Once its service done? |
10491 | Does a man ever give up hope, I wonder,-- Face the grim fact, seeing it clear as day? |
10491 | For the next, Sir John; let me see.--Simon Shadow? |
10491 | Good my lord captain,--_ Falstaff_.--What, dost thou roar before thou art pricked? |
10491 | Has n''t he a home of his own? |
10491 | Hast thou a charm to stay the morning- star In his steep course? |
10491 | Have you provided me with half a dozen sufficient men? |
10491 | He took her soft hand, ere her mother could bar;"Now tread we a measure?" |
10491 | How doth the good Knight now? |
10491 | I beseech you, which is Justice Shallow? |
10491 | I suppose this is renewable on the usual term? |
10491 | I''ve better counsellors; what counsel they? |
10491 | Is here all? |
10491 | Is it love the lying''s for? |
10491 | It''s Mas''r Davy? |
10491 | King Charles, and who''ll do him right now? |
10491 | King Charles, and who''ll do him right now? |
10491 | King Charles, and who''ll do him right now? |
10491 | King Charles, and who''s ripe for fight now? |
10491 | King Charles, and who''s ripe for fight now? |
10491 | King Charles, and who''s ripe for fight now? |
10491 | King Leodogran rejoiced, But musing''Shall I answer yea or nay?'' |
10491 | Let me see; where is Mouldy? |
10491 | Micawber, would you be willing to tell me the amount of your indebtedness? |
10491 | Now, Mas''r Davy, you''re a- wonderin''what that little candle is for, ai n''t yer? |
10491 | O''K_.--But he says you stole it for the day to go huntin''? |
10491 | O''K_.--Is it yourself, Moya? |
10491 | O''K_.--Oh, Conn, what have you been afther? |
10491 | ON BEING ASKED, WHENCE IS THIS FLOWER? |
10491 | Oh, Sir, she smiled, no doubt, Whene''er I passed her; but who passed without Much the same smile? |
10491 | Or at the casement seen her stand? |
10491 | Or did he think, even till they plunged and fell, Some miracle would stop them? |
10491 | Or is she known in all the land, The Lady of Shalott? |
10491 | Reach the mooring? |
10491 | Said I,"What can the matter be? |
10491 | Shall I admit the officer? |
10491 | Shall I not lift her from this land of beasts Up to my throne and side by side with me? |
10491 | Shall I prick him down, Sir John? |
10491 | Shall I prick him, Sir John? |
10491 | So daring in love, and so dauntless in war, Have ye e''er heard of gallant like young Lochinvar? |
10491 | Something with pale silken shrine? |
10491 | Stand aside; know you where you are? |
10491 | That you might tread upon them, and starve them, and get the better of them in every possible way? |
10491 | That''s the tale: its application? |
10491 | Then the pilots of the place put out brisk and leapt on board;"Why, what hope or chance have ships like these to pass?" |
10491 | Till, at ending, all the judges Cry with one assent"Take the prize-- a prize who grudges Such a voice and instrument? |
10491 | To whom used my boy George quaff else, By the old fool''s side that begot him? |
10491 | Was it prose or rhyme, Greek or Latin? |
10491 | Was the old Mother thryin''to make little o''me? |
10491 | Well, who made him more persevering and more sagacious than others? |
10491 | Well? |
10491 | Were they seven Strings the lyre possessed? |
10491 | What do you suppose fools were made for? |
10491 | What happiness to reign a lonely king? |
10491 | What if, seconds hence, When I am very old, yon shimmering dome Come drawing down and down, till all things end?" |
10491 | What is wise work, and what is foolish work? |
10491 | What is your good pleasure with me? |
10491 | What matter to me if their star is a world? |
10491 | What the difference between sense and nonsense, in daily occupation? |
10491 | What''s his name? |
10491 | Where''s the roll? |
10491 | Where''s the roll? |
10491 | Wherefore Keep on casting pearls To a-- poet? |
10491 | Who bade the sun Clothe you with rainbows? |
10491 | Who filled thy countenance with rosy light? |
10491 | Who found me in wine you drank once? |
10491 | Who gave me the goods that went since? |
10491 | Who gave you your invulnerable life, Your strength, your speed, your fury and your joy, Unceasing thunder, and eternal foam? |
10491 | Who hath proven him King Uther''s son?" |
10491 | Who helped me to gold I spent since? |
10491 | Who is next? |
10491 | Who is this? |
10491 | Who made thee parent of perpetual streams? |
10491 | Who made you glorious as the gates of heaven Beneath the keen full moon? |
10491 | Who raised me the house that sank once? |
10491 | Who sank thy sunless pillars deep in earth? |
10491 | Who''d stoop to blame This sort of trifling? |
10491 | Who, with living flowers Of loveliest blue, spread garlands at your feet? |
10491 | Who? |
10491 | Why is one man richer than another? |
10491 | Why take the artistic way to prove so much? |
10491 | Why weepest thou so sore? |
10491 | Will''t please you rise? |
10491 | Will''t please you sit and look at her? |
10491 | Yet do we ever ask ourselves, personally, or even nationally, whether our work is coming to anything or not? |
10491 | You do n''t mean his name''s Steerforth, do you? |
10491 | _ David_.--Where are you going, Mr. Peggotty? |
10491 | _ Falstaff_.--Is thy name Mouldy? |
10491 | _ Falstaff_.--Is thy name Wart? |
10491 | _ Falstaff_.--Shadow, whose son art thou? |
10491 | _ Falstaff_.--Well, good woman''s tailor, wilt thou make as many holes in an enemy''s battle as thou hast done in a woman''s petticoat? |
10491 | _ Falstaff_.--What disease hast thou? |
10491 | _ Falstaff_.--What trade art thou, Feeble? |
10491 | _ Falstaff_.--Where''s he? |
10491 | _ Heep_.--Is Mr. Micawber in? |
10491 | _ Moya_.--I thought your husband was drowned at sea? |
10491 | _ Moya_.--Why should he be here, Mrs. O''Kelly? |
10491 | _ Peggotty_.--Where''s my coat? |
10491 | _ Peggotty_.--Who''s the man? |
10491 | _ Shallow_.--What think you, Sir John? |
10491 | _ Shallow_.--Where''s Shadow? |
10491 | _ Shallow_.--Where''s the roll? |
10491 | a cricket( What"cicada"? |
10491 | and what is here? |
10491 | cries Hervé Riel;"Are you mad, you Malouins? |
10491 | did stealing steps go by? |
10491 | for''What?'' |
10491 | ses I;"Come back you thafe of the world, where you takin''me to?" |
10491 | ses he,"Is that Conn, the Shaughraun, on my brown mare?" |
14815 | But what broke your Pa up at the roller skating rink? |
14815 | Did n''t have any fun eh? 14815 Did n''t you hang up that gray torn cat by the heels, in front of my store, with the rabbits I had for sale? |
14815 | Did n''t you use to wait on tables there at the Fox House, at Portage? |
14815 | Do n''t you think my Pa is showing his age a good deal more than usual? |
14815 | Does she have any corns? |
14815 | How do yeu dew? |
14815 | How does your Pa take your being fired out? 14815 I presume she enjoys that part of the discourse, eh?" |
14815 | Is there any attachment to it that will make her dream of me all night? |
14815 | Papa, the cruel policeman has murdered little Gip? 14815 Resigned, eh?" |
14815 | So you got him into the Good Templars, eh? |
14815 | The minister got to the''amen,''and Polly shook hisself and said''What you giving us?'' 14815 Then what is it?" |
14815 | Well, in nine cases out of ten they would hit it right, but what do you think is the trouble over to your house, honest? |
14815 | Well, what was it about your leaving the wrong medicine at houses? 14815 What do you think your Pa''s object was in passing himself off for a single man at Oconomowoc?" |
14815 | What is a loan exhibition? |
14815 | What is that stuff on your shirt bosom, that looks like soap grease? |
14815 | What on earth is that you have got on your upper lip? |
14815 | What size do you want? |
14815 | What under the heavens have you done to him now? |
14815 | What was it about your folks getting up in the middle of the night to eat? 14815 What was the health officer doing over to your house this morning?" |
14815 | What will the Democrats do? |
14815 | What''s the-- gurgle-- matter? |
14815 | What''s your Pa invented? 14815 Why, what''s the trouble?" |
14815 | Why,says the manager of the house,"has anybody interfered with your devotions here?" |
14815 | You do n''t want to buy a good parrot, do you? |
14815 | You have not stabbed your father have you? 14815 You want to give her something that will be a constant reminder of you?" |
14815 | A child will naturally ask why do n''t the ministers murder somebody and make a dead sure thing of it? |
14815 | A child will naturally ask, why do n''t the ministers murder somebody, and make a dead sure thing of it? |
14815 | And do you remember how we played it on the professor, and made him believe that I had the chicken pox? |
14815 | And say, we did n''t get much of a breeze the next morning, did we, when we had to clean out the recitation room?" |
14815 | And what is this hades? |
14815 | Are you true to us? |
14815 | As soon as he see it was Ma he said,''Why, sister, the wicked stand in slippery places, do n''t they?'' |
14815 | Atkins looked at his clothes and said,"Where in---- have you been all the time?" |
14815 | But tell me, how did you get even with your Pa?" |
14815 | But there ai n''t nothing mean about me, only I swow it''s pretty cramped quarters, ai n''t it, miss?" |
14815 | But what has your Pa got his nose tied up for? |
14815 | But what''s the matter with your Ma''s parrot? |
14815 | By the way, did the person live? |
14815 | Can I have it here?" |
14815 | Come to figure it up, it is about an even thing, sis,--isn''t it? |
14815 | Dan, who had watched the whole business, slapped us on the shoulder, and said,"How did it work?" |
14815 | Did it ever occur to you how much water a dog could carry in his hair? |
14815 | Did n''t you ever have the mumps? |
14815 | Did you ever try to eat canned peas? |
14815 | Do n''t you think it is a good scheme?" |
14815 | Do n''t you think my Pa is unreasonable to get mad at a little joke that he planned himself?" |
14815 | Do you think a gospel car would catch him for half a dollar? |
14815 | For instance, we answered the bell after it had rung several times, and a sweet little female voice said,"Are you going to receive to- morrow?" |
14815 | Gosh, but do n''t it hurt though? |
14815 | Have we lived to this age to have our word doubted by a Milwaukee editor? |
14815 | He said,''Great God, what have I done? |
14815 | He thought she knew him, and he sat down on a stool and put out his hand and said,"How have you been?" |
14815 | He went up to her, and with a smile that was childlike and bland, he said,"Why, how are you, Samantha?" |
14815 | How do they know that the Lord said more than he wanted to in that prayer? |
14815 | How do you know but there may be somebody dying for a dose of pills?" |
14815 | How long would it take him to collect the money by going around among business men who had been boys themselves? |
14815 | How, I ask you, could means better be adapted to the ends than for the retiring officers of our State to go to setting on fish eggs? |
14815 | I suppose, sir, when you are alone with her, in the parlor, you put your arm around her waist; do you not, sir?" |
14815 | I think Pa will be a different man now, do n''t you?" |
14815 | If Dan Sheenan was the policeman any more he would n''t poison my dog, would he, pa?" |
14815 | If this revision is a good thing, why wo n''t another one be better? |
14815 | It may be asked how this currency can be redeemed? |
14815 | It takes at least three tons of hay and a large quantity of ground feed annually to keep a pair of horns fat, and what earthly use are they? |
14815 | It_ is_ awful, ai nt it? |
14815 | No, it can not be, and yet, do n''t it seem peculiar that all the horses in this broad land are seven years old this spring? |
14815 | Now how do you suppose that got in there?" |
14815 | Now you think you have done it, do n''t you sis? |
14815 | Now, the question is, what is Anna Dickinson going to do with Fanny''s wardrobe? |
14815 | Now, what kind of a way is that? |
14815 | Now, where was there a popular demand to have hell left out of the Bible? |
14815 | O, safe, are you honest? |
14815 | Of course Fanny could throw something over her, a piece of scenery, or a curtain, and go to her hotel, but how would she look? |
14815 | Pa shuddered all over when he felt the icicle going over his bare stummick, and he said,''For God''s sake, gentlemen, what does this mean? |
14815 | Policeman?" |
14815 | Say, did you ever kiss a girl full of aignogg? |
14815 | Say, do you believe that story about Joner being in the whale''s belly, all night? |
14815 | Say, do you think it is right when anything smells awfully, to always lay it to a boy?" |
14815 | Say, there is no harm in a little warm water, is there? |
14815 | Say, what was your Pa running after the doctor in his shirt sleeves for last Sunday morning? |
14815 | Say, what''s good for a black eye?" |
14815 | Say, you do n''t think there is any harm in playing it on an old man a little for a good cause, do you?" |
14815 | Second- hand stone crusher? |
14815 | Sister Perkins, wo n''t you relate your experience?" |
14815 | So we steered him down to the gymnasium and made him rap on the storm door outside, and I said''who comes there?'' |
14815 | Speaking of cows, did it ever occur to you, gentlemen, what a saving it would be to you if you should adopt mooley cows instead of horned cattle? |
14815 | The minister said''great heavens, deacon, are you hurt? |
14815 | The_ Wisconsin_ asks,"What will the Democrats do?" |
14815 | Then she asked what made us so hoarse? |
14815 | WHY NOT RAISE WOLVES? |
14815 | Was his eye very black?" |
14815 | Was your Ma sick again?" |
14815 | We went to the cornucopia, put our ear to the toddy stick and said,"What ailest thou darling, why dost thy hand tremble? |
14815 | Well, do n''t you suppose those boys and girls would study? |
14815 | Well, how did I know? |
14815 | What business have you gone into to make you smell so rank?" |
14815 | What did she do? |
14815 | What do you suppose he did? |
14815 | What do you whistle for, anyway?" |
14815 | What girl would sit down silently and allow another to attach her wardrobe without contesting? |
14815 | What is that smells so about this store? |
14815 | What proportion of the people who wish each other merry Christmas, do you suppose think of the reason that the day is a holiday? |
14815 | What shall I do?" |
14815 | What''s she doing with so much court- plaster?" |
14815 | Where is it? |
14815 | Which would you take first? |
14815 | Who tied that twine to the dog''s tail?" |
14815 | Why did n''t you get number eight? |
14815 | Why do n''t you give away something that is not spiled?" |
14815 | Why not go to raising elephants? |
14815 | Why should cheese be made round? |
14815 | Will they be treated any better in their new home than they have been with us? |
14815 | Will they have that confidence in their new neighbors that they have always seemed to have in us? |
14815 | Wo n''t you go down and take something? |
14815 | You are silent, you can not answer, enough?" |
14815 | You catch the idea? |
14815 | You see? |
14815 | and, where are your folks?" |
14815 | said the grocery man as he fished out the cigar stub and charged the boy''s father with two pounds of prunes, did n''t you and the boss agree?" |
20505 | They look forward to"Hae ye heard this one?" |
20505 | [ Illustration: CLIFF STERRETT, ARTIST_ Creator of"Polly and Her Pals"_] Who has n''t heard about"Pa"and"Ma"and"Polly"and"Neewah"? |
20505 | [ Illustration:"BILLY BENEDICK,"SOCIETY EDITOR]"Billy Benedick"... who is he? |
19724 | And is mine one? |
19724 | O Liberty, can man resign thee Once having felt thy generous flame? 19724 Are there not deep, sad oracles to read In the calm stillness of that radiant face? 19724 Be thou a spirit of health or goblin damned, Bringing with thee airs from heaven or blasts from hell, Be thy intents wicked or charitable? 19724 Beauty, theme of innocence, how may guilt discourse thee? 19724 But why, O king, Why dost thou start, with livid cheek?--why fling The untasted goblet from thy trembling hand? 19724 Can dungeons, bolts, or bars confine thee, Or whips thy noble spirit tame? 19724 Exceeding peace had made Ben Adhem bold, And to the presence in the room he said,What writest thou?" |
19724 | Had the soft light in that adoring eye Guided the warrior where the swords flash''d high? |
19724 | Shall the sleeper be awakened? |
19724 | The village stile-- and has it gone? |
19724 | Was that the leader through the battle storm? |
19724 | What shall be done? |
19724 | Why shake thy joints? |
19724 | thy feet forget to stand? |
19724 | what is it?" |
16732 | _ Forever, Fortune, wilt thou prove An unrelenting foe to love; And, when we meet a mutual heart, Step rudely in, and bid us part? 16732 ***** I can not find it;''tis not in the bond? 16732 2. Who is here so base, that would be a bondman? 16732 A simple Child, That lightly draws its breath, And feels its life in every limb, What should it know of death? 16732 A wounded spirit who can bear? 16732 Am I my brother''s keeper? 16732 And dar''st thou then To beard the lion in his den? 16732 And what is so rare as a day in June? 16732 Are you good men and true? 16732 Art thou a friend to Roderick? 16732 But who can paint Like Nature? 16732 Ca n''t I another''s face commend, And to her virtues be a friend, But instantly your forehead lowers, As if_ her_ merit lessened_ yours_? 16732 Call you that backing of your friends? 16732 Can any mortal mixture of earth''s mould Breathe such divine, enchanting ravishment? 16732 Can imagination boast, Amid its gay creation, hues like hers? 16732 Can such things be, And overcome us like a summer''s cloud, Without our special wonder? 16732 Can the Ethiopian change his skin, or the leopard his spots? 16732 Can there any good thing come out of Nazareth? 16732 Die of a rose in aromatic pain? 16732 Dost thou think, because them art virtuous, there shall be no more cakes and ale? 16732 Else whence this pleasing hope, this fond desire, This longing after immortality? 16732 For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? 16732 Go, poor devil, get thee gone; why should hurt thee? 16732 Hast any philosophy in thee, shepherd? 16732 Hast thou a charm to stay the morning star In his steep course? 16732 Hath thy toil O''er books consumed the midnight oil? 16732 He''s gone, and who knows how he may report Thy words, by adding fuel to the flame? 16732 Hear you this Triton of the minnows? 16732 Here lies what once was Matthew Prior; The son of Adam and of Eve: Can Bourbon or Nassau claim higher? 16732 How long halt ye between two opinions? 16732 I am a Jew: hath not a Jew eyes? 16732 If she be not so to me, What care I how faire she be? 16732 Inform us truly, have they not henpecked you all? 16732 Is it not lawful for me to do what I will with mine own? 16732 Is she not more than painting can express, Or youthful poets fancy when they love? 16732 Is she not passing fair? 16732 Is there no balm in Gilead? 16732 Is this a dagger which I see before me, The handle towards my hand? 16732 Is this that gallant, gay Lothario? 16732 Know ye not that a little leaven leaveneth the whole lump? 16732 Line 1. Who shall decide when doctors disagree? 16732 Line 308. Who breaks a butterfly upon a wheel? 16732 Line 5. Who hath not owned, with rapture- smitten frame, The power of grace, the magic of a name? 16732 My galligaskins, that have long withstood The winter''s fury and encroaching frosts, By time subdued( what will not time subdue?) 16732 Not a word? 16732 O death, where is thy sting? 16732 O grave, where is thy victory? 16732 Oh, who can hold a fire in his hand, By thinking on the frosty Caucasus? 16732 Or cloy the hungry edge of appetite, By bare imagination of a feast? 16732 Or make pale my cheeks with care,''Cause another''s rosie are? 16732 Prithee, why so pale? 16732 Shall I not take mine ease in mine inn? 16732 Shall I, wasting in despair, Dye because a woman''s fair? 16732 Should auld acquaintance be forgot, And days o''lang syne? 16732 Should auld acquaintance be forgot, And never brought to min''? 16732 Sits the wind in that corner? 16732 Some asked how Pearls did grow, and where? 16732 To be, or not to be? 16732 Under which king, Bezonian? 16732 Was I deceived, or did a sable cloud Turn forth her silver lining on the night? 16732 Was ever woman in this humor won? 16732 Was ever woman in this humor wooed? 16732 What art can wash her guilt away? 16732 What can ennoble sots, or slaves, or cowards? 16732 What constitutes a state? 16732 What peaceful hours I once enjoyed? 16732 What shall I do to be forever known, And make the age to come my own? 16732 What stronger breastplate than a heart untainted? 16732 What though the field be lost? 16732 What will Mrs. Grundy say? 16732 What''s Hecuba to him, or he to Hecuba? 16732 What''s in a name? 16732 What, all my pretty chickens, and their dam, At one fell swoop? 16732 When Adam dolve, and Eve span, Who was then the gentleman? 16732 When lovely woman stoops to folly, And finds too late that men betray, What charm can soothe her melancholy? 16732 When shall we three meet again, In thunder, lightning, or in rain? 16732 When yet was ever found a mother Who''d give her booby for another? 16732 Whence and what art them, execrable shape? 16732 Whence is thy learning? 16732 Where be your gibes now? 16732 Whose heart hath ne''er within him burned, As home his footsteps he hath turned Prom wandering on a foreign strand? 16732 Why should a man, whose blood is warm within, Sit like his grandsire cut in alabaster? 16732 Why so pale and wan, fond lover, Prithee, why so pale? 16732 Why, so can I, or so can any man: But will they come when you do call for them? 16732 Will, when looking well ca n''t move her, Looking ill prevail? 16732 Ye are the salt of the earth: but if the salt have lost his savor, wherewith shall it be salted? 16732 can a Roman Senate long debate Which of the two to choose, slavery or death? 16732 can it be That this is all remains of thee? 16732 hast thou wandered there, To waft us home the message of despair? 16732 hath not a Jew hands, organs, dimensions, senses, affections, passions? 16732 is there no physician there? 16732 know ye not, Who would be free, themselves must strike the blow? 16732 my Friend, and clear your looks; Why all this toil and trouble? 16732 once more who would not be a boy? 16732 what power divine Shall henceforth wash the river Rhine? 16732 where are the charms That sages have seen in thy face? 16732 wherefore art thou Romeo? 16732 who can tell how hard it is to climb The steep where Fame''s proud temple shines afar? 16732 will the line stretch out to the crack of doom? 16732 wouldst thou have a serpent sting thee twice? 16732 your flashes of merriment, that were wo nt to set the table on a roar? 16732 your gambols? 16732 your songs? 20843 Which of you copies the other? |
14338 | Child, art thou not one of those dragon- flies, following after me to console me? 14338 Dost thou not wish that even now as faithful lovers we return to those green fields? |
14338 | Is Praxinoe at home? |
14338 | Is it not time,the old man thinks,"that the strings should be broken, the strings of the heart? |
14338 | Oh, Tithonus, what are you making that creaking noise for? 14338 ***** Oh tell me where did Katy live, And what did Katy do? 14338 ***** Quel plaisir? 14338 ***** Tell me, what did Caty do? 14338 A dry cicale chirps to a lass making hay,Why creak''st thou, Tithonus?" |
14338 | A harp in some dark nook she sees Long left a prey to heat and frost, She smites it; can such tinklings please? |
14338 | Ah, who''d have thought such sweetness clung To loose neglected strings like those? |
14338 | And a sweet voice said to him,"Yes, it is really I-- have you forgotten?" |
14338 | And he lay down over them and began to weep bitterly and said,''Has any man yet heard of a father who of his own will slew his children? |
14338 | And it made answer to him saying:''Why indeed should I not gladly devour the flesh of the man who is loaded with infamy? |
14338 | And shall not thus time''s eddying flight Still with our lives our loves restore In death''s despite, And day and night yield one delight once more? |
14338 | And was she very fair and young, And yet so wicked, too? |
14338 | And where did the mediæval imagination get its material for the story? |
14338 | And where may this person come from? |
14338 | And who was this? |
14338 | And why? |
14338 | Are the English right? |
14338 | Are the Latins right? |
14338 | Are women individually considered as gods? |
14338 | As she comes he asks her slyly,--for she has been to the church--"Is it true that nobody ever sees real angels?" |
14338 | Aught like this tress, see, and this tress, And this last fairest tress of all, So fair, see, ere I let it fall? |
14338 | But does that make any possible difference? |
14338 | But does this mean that the sentiment is weakened in the educated class? |
14338 | But what is after all the happiness of mere power? |
14338 | But what is the inference? |
14338 | But, because an apple tree or a pear tree happens to have its roots in the ground, does that mean that its fruits are not beautiful and wholesome? |
14338 | Can not you see the fish gliding over the black border under the dark level of the water, to the net of a hundred fishers? |
14338 | Can they go beyond it with safety, with propriety? |
14338 | Can you not also see in imagination the wild creatures of the forest with their snouts of many shapes, with their fur of all kinds? |
14338 | Can you not see the"dear king of the wood,"with his hat of leaves and his beard of moss? |
14338 | Could a world exist in which the nature of all the inhabitants would be so moral that the mere idea of what is immoral could not exist? |
14338 | Did Katy love a naughty man, Or kiss more cheeks than one? |
14338 | Did he not have the beautiful experience of loving, and was she not in that time at least well worthy of the love that she called forth like music? |
14338 | Did she mean to trouble you? |
14338 | Do you pretend to command the ladies of Syracuse? |
14338 | Does not this read very much like sheer wickedness? |
14338 | Does not this remind us of the Japanese proverb that everybody has three enemies outside of his own door? |
14338 | Does she look, pity, wonder At one who mimics flight, Swims-- heaven above, sea under, Yet always earth in sight? |
14338 | Enfant, n''es tu pas l''une d''elles Qui me poursuit pour consoler? |
14338 | Eunoe, you fool- hardy girl, will you never keep out of the way? |
14338 | Gallant replies Seem flattery, and offend her:-- But-- meet no angels, Pansie? |
14338 | Has this been thus before? |
14338 | Have you felt the wool of beaver Or swan''s down ever? |
14338 | Have you mark''d but the fall of the snow Before the soil hath smutch''d it? |
14338 | Have you seen but a bright lily grow Before rude hands have touched it? |
14338 | He never could have her in this world, but why should he not hope for it in the future world? |
14338 | Holds earth aught-- speak truth-- above her? |
14338 | How are we to make a sharp distinction between what is moral and good and what is immoral and bad in treating love- subjects? |
14338 | How did it come into existence? |
14338 | How had so frail a thing the heart To journey where she trembled so? |
14338 | I long for thee as thirsty lips for streams, O gentle promised angel of my dreams, Why do we never meet? |
14338 | Is it too late, then, Evelyn Hope? |
14338 | Is not all worth, all beauty, lost? |
14338 | Is not the swimmer really a symbol of the superior mind in its present condition? |
14338 | Is she happy? |
14338 | Is she looking at him-- and pitying him as he swims, taking good care not to go too far away from the land? |
14338 | Is woman a religion? |
14338 | It would have been better to have left them alone; for that matter, how many of the existent lives of saints are really true? |
14338 | Lives there whom pain hath evermore passed by And sorrow shunned with an averted eye? |
14338 | MEET WE NO ANGELS, PANSIE? |
14338 | Most assuredly we must not judge the fruit of the tree from the unseen roots; but what about turning up the ground to look at the roots? |
14338 | Nay but you, who do not love her, Is she not pure gold, my mistress? |
14338 | Now again let me put the question: can we imagine such a world? |
14338 | Now as a description of jealousy, not to speak of the literary execution at all, which is the best? |
14338 | Now how much of this passion is a legitimate subject of literary art? |
14338 | Now what is the general result of this little study, the general impression that it leaves upon the mind? |
14338 | Now where is the line to be drawn? |
14338 | Of what worth to me is a woman of diamond any more than a woman of stone? |
14338 | Or have smelt o''the bud o''the brier, Or the nard in the fire? |
14338 | Or have tasted the bag of the bee? |
14338 | Shall I not keep faith with him who was faithful to me even unto death?'' |
14338 | Symonds: Gazing on stars, my Star? |
14338 | Then what said I? |
14338 | Therefore thinkers have to ask,"Will man ever rise to something like the condition of ants?" |
14338 | Thou art as I, Thy soul doth wait for mine as mine for thee; We can not live apart, must meeting be Never before we die? |
14338 | Thunder- rollings carelessly heard, Once that poor little heart they stirred, Why, Oh, why? |
14338 | To keep them on the threshold of hope is diplomatic; to trust to their gratitude is boorish; hope has a good memory, gratitude a bad one"? |
14338 | To what standard will the reader of our contemporary literature be unconsciously moulded? |
14338 | Veux- tu qu''en amoureux fidèles Nous revenions dans ces prés verts? |
14338 | Was it possible that the Finnish people had had during all these centuries an epic unknown to the world of literature? |
14338 | We were fellow mortals, naught beside? |
14338 | Well, am I very wrong in saying that the attitude of men towards women in the West is much like the attitude of men towards gods? |
14338 | Were it not well therefore to consider at least the possible result of a totally opposite tendency,--expansion of fancy, luxuriance of expression? |
14338 | What are"thy pleasant voices, thy nightingales"? |
14338 | What becomes of the beauty of the tree when you do that? |
14338 | What does the President of the United States of America, for example, represent to the American of the highest culture? |
14338 | What if she is dark? |
14338 | What is it to you if we are chatterboxes? |
14338 | What is meant by love? |
14338 | What is the issue? |
14338 | What is the object of art? |
14338 | What is the signification of the great modern silence in Western countries upon this delightful topic? |
14338 | What is the use of being dissatisfied with nature? |
14338 | What is the"Kalevala"as we now possess it? |
14338 | What is there in all the world half so beautiful or half so precious as a living girl such as I discovered? |
14338 | What is this so- called slavish trade? |
14338 | What matter whether those shadowy figures represented original human lives or only human dreams? |
14338 | What mortal ever could describe the charm of manner, voice, smile, address, in mere words? |
14338 | What, we may ask, has been gained by calling jealousy"a flame of the Lord"or by substituting the word"flashes"for"coals of fire"? |
14338 | Where art thou, sweet? |
14338 | Where is the key of the big chest? |
14338 | Where is the loved one''s face? |
14338 | Where waitest thou, Lady, I am to love? |
14338 | While we were staying in their country, did we not think of the French as foreigners? |
14338 | Who was Comatas? |
14338 | Why are you wetting my dress? |
14338 | Why can it not be done in English? |
14338 | Why do n''t you work, as I do? |
14338 | Why does Kullervo use these extraordinary terms? |
14338 | Why does he call her feet sacred? |
14338 | Why fret? |
14338 | Why indeed should I not drink with pleasure the blood of the man who is burdened with crime? |
14338 | Why not return once more to the home of childhood, back to the green fields and the sun? |
14338 | Why refuse to enjoy the present because it can not last for ever?" |
14338 | Why should he try to find fault? |
14338 | Why should not only the novel writers but all the poets make love the principal subject of their work? |
14338 | Why should the poet speak of the girl in this way? |
14338 | Why was Caty not forbid To trouble little Catydid? |
14338 | Yet, after all, why should he complain? |
14338 | You ask, where do the children come from? |
14338 | You can not mean to say that there are no angels now?" |
14338 | You may ask, if the idea or sentiment of divinity attaches to woman in the abstract, what about woman in the concrete-- individual woman? |
14338 | You may have been tempted to say, as I used very often myself to say,"What does it matter where the man got his ideas from? |
14338 | and what art thou? |
14338 | meet no angels, Pansie? |
14338 | which is the better, my work or yours?" |
13814 | ''Ah, why art thou,''she pityingly says,''Pining away before thy hour?'' |
13814 | ''And am I myself other than the stream when I gaze gloomily down into its waters and lose my thoughts in its flow?'' |
13814 | ''Are its rocks quartz, chalk, or mica schist?'' |
13814 | ''Hast thou commanded the morning since thy days; and caused the dayspring to know his place? |
13814 | ''Hast thou entered into the springs of the sea, or hast thou walked in the search of the deep?... |
13814 | ''O, if great Nature be the daughter of a father, is the daughter''s heart not his heart? |
13814 | ''Removed from the bosom of my father, like a young sandal tree rent from the hill of Malaja, how shall I exist in a strange soil?'' |
13814 | ''That it might take hold of the ends of the earth, that the wicked might be shaken out of it?... |
13814 | ''To each man,''he said,[17]''Nature appears different, and the only question is, which is the most beautiful? |
13814 | ''To invent for oneself is beautiful; but to recognise gladly and treasure up the happy inventions of others is that less thine?'' |
13814 | ''When the morning stars sang together, and all the sons of God shouted for joy?... |
13814 | ''Where is the way where light dwelleth, and as for darkness, where is the place thereof?'' |
13814 | ''Whereupon are the foundations thereof fastened? |
13814 | ''[ 11] Might not Werther have written them? |
13814 | (_ Henry VI._) If there were reason for these miseries, Then into limits could I bind my woes; When heaven doth weep, doth not the earth o''er- flow? |
13814 | (_ Richard III._) Why grow the branches when the root is gone? |
13814 | 5:''Die ihr alles hört und saget, Luft and Forst und Meer durchjaget; Echo, Sonne, Mond, und Wind, Sagt mir doch, wo steckt mein Kind?'' |
13814 | And beaming tenderly with looks of love Climb not the everlasting stars on high?... |
13814 | And beaming tenderly with looks of love, Climb not the everlasting stars on high? |
13814 | And how did it stand with German literature up to the eleventh century? |
13814 | And what is Edward but a ruthless sea? |
13814 | And wilt thou have a reason for this coil? |
13814 | And yet if I, sweet Lilli, loved thee not, Should I be happy here or anywhere?) |
13814 | Are not the mountains, waves, and skies a part Of me and of my soul, as I of them? |
13814 | Are not these thoughts, which Humboldt rightly strings together, highly significant and modern? |
13814 | Are the dropping cares Without a feeling in their silent tears? |
13814 | Are the waves Without a spirit? |
13814 | Are ye like those within the human breast? |
13814 | Art thou silent, Gelesiuntha? |
13814 | But have I found it? |
13814 | But where of ye, oh tempests, is the goal? |
13814 | Can we believe it? |
13814 | De quoi gémit la tourterelle? |
13814 | Descends- tu pour me révéler Des mondes le divin mystére, Ces secrets cachés dans la sphère Où le jour va te rappeler? |
13814 | Did he kiss me, you ask? |
13814 | Divine and quiet Mother, comest thou? |
13814 | Do I know it?'' |
13814 | Do you not know that they who are in trouble, and, above all, they who are in love, find their chief relief here? |
13814 | Do you not then observe what a narrow risk I ran, fool that I was, to change such a spot for Tiberine, the depth of the habitable world? |
13814 | Dost not feel its impulse thrill? |
13814 | Dost thou see not How all things are enamoured Of this enamourer, rich with joy and health? |
13814 | Doth not the firm- set earth beneath us rise? |
13814 | Doth not the firm- set earth beneath us rise?... |
13814 | Doth not the love as well as the wisdom and almightiness of the Creator shine forth from this animal? |
13814 | Doux reflet d''un globe de flamme Charmant rayon, que me veux- tu? |
13814 | For what is the modern spirit but limitless individuality? |
13814 | For whom are the flowers on hill and dale? |
13814 | He sees the transitoriness of all earthly things reflected in Nature: L''onde qui baise ce rivage, De quoi se plaint- elle à ses bords? |
13814 | Heinrich von Morungen: How did you get into my heart? |
13814 | Hence too, despite his profound inwardness--''The heart is deceitful above all things and desperately wicked, who can know it?'' |
13814 | If others, for pity alone, cross the Alps to seek their lost slaves, wherefore am I forgotten?--I who am bound to thee by blood? |
13814 | If the winds rage, doth not the sea wax mad, Threatening the welkin with his big- swoln face? |
13814 | In_ Life''s a Dream_ Prince Sigismund, chained in a dark prison, says: What sinned I more herein Than others, who were also born? |
13814 | In_ Rose Love_ he finds the reflection of love in everything: In whom does not Love''s spirit plant his flame? |
13814 | Is not a sick man better cheered by sunshine than by any other refreshment?'' |
13814 | Is not he her deepest feeling? |
13814 | Is not the love of these deep in my heart With a pure passion? |
13814 | Is not the love of these deep in my heart With a pure passion? |
13814 | Is not the neighbourhood of heaven good? |
13814 | Is''t night''s predominance or the day''s shame That darkness does the- face of earth entomb When living light should kiss it? |
13814 | It is the same idea as Goethe''s in_ Knowest thou the Land_? |
13814 | Laura, Cynthia, Cyllene? |
13814 | Let May bud forth in all its splendour; What sight so sweet can he engender As with this picture to compare? |
13814 | Lifts not the Heaven its dome above? |
13814 | Lifts not the heaven its dome above? |
13814 | Live not the stars and mountains? |
13814 | Make me thy lyre, even as the forest is; What if my leaves are falling like its own? |
13814 | Must, my life''s blossom wither, stifled by the weeds? |
13814 | Not fair the forest hanging o''er thy bed? |
13814 | Not grand thy temple of encircling rocks? |
13814 | Now tell me, would thou be Less than the very plants and have no love? |
13814 | O Mount, whose double ridge stamps on the sky Yon line, by five- score splendid pinnacles Indented; tell me, in this gloomy wood Hast thou seen Nala? |
13814 | O Wind, If Winter comes, can Spring be far behind? |
13814 | Or do they who love, fashion themselves dreams? |
13814 | Or do ye find, at length, like eagles, some high nest? |
13814 | Or shall I call thee beautiful Betty of the Sky?" |
13814 | Pontius, dear heart, seest thou what thou hast done? |
13814 | Pourquoi le roseau sur la plage, pourquoi le ruisseau sous l''ombrage, Rendent- ils de tristes accords? |
13814 | Say, where bides the village maid, Late yon cot adorning? |
13814 | Say, where hides the blushing rose, Pride of fragrant morning, Garland meet for beauty''s brows, Hill and dale adorning? |
13814 | Should I not contemn All objects, if compared with these? |
13814 | Should I not contemn All objects, if compared with these? |
13814 | So myth, fable, and legend were interlaced in confusion; who can separate the threads? |
13814 | Sonnet 18: Shall I compare thee to a summer''s day? |
13814 | Springing''neath fair Flora''s tread, Choicest sweets bestowing? |
13814 | Tamora says: My lovely Aaron, wherefore look''st thou sad, When everything doth make a gleeful boast? |
13814 | The All- embracer, All- sustainer, Doth he not embrace, sustain Thee, me, himself? |
13814 | The All- embracer, All- sustainer, Doth he not embrace, sustain, Thee, me, Himself? |
13814 | The gift of prophecy was ascribed to the cuckoo, as its monotonous voice heralded the spring: Kukuk vam haven, wo lange sail ik leven? |
13814 | The question,''Is a place beautiful?'' |
13814 | To him Homer was the Greek_ par excellence_, and who would not agree with him to- day? |
13814 | Viens- tu dans mon sein abattu Porter la lumière à mon âme? |
13814 | Was it the thirteenth- century lyrics, the love- songs of the Minnesingers, which unfolded the germ? |
13814 | Was she more beautiful? |
13814 | What is thy name? |
13814 | What rain or what pure air has striven to bear Flowers far excelling those''tis wo nt to yield? |
13814 | What was the general feeling for Nature in other countries during the latter half of the seventeenth century? |
13814 | Where art thou? |
13814 | Whither roves the tuneful swain Who, of rural pleasures, Rose and violet, rill and plain, Sang in deftest measures? |
13814 | Who are the thousandfold thousands, who all the myriads that inhabit the drop?... |
13814 | Who carries the sun as a torch before me? |
13814 | Who has made the sky firm over me as a dome? |
13814 | Who hath laid the measures thereof if thou knowest, or who hath stretched the line upon it? |
13814 | Who prepares the path of the waters? |
13814 | Who sends springs into the ravines? |
13814 | Why dost thou weep? |
13814 | Why hasten so to the cerulean sea? |
13814 | Why need I tell you of the sweet exhalations from the earth or the breezes from the river? |
13814 | Why should I speak of the ridges of mountains, aptly disposed? |
13814 | Why wither not the leaves that want their sap? |
13814 | Will''t not taste the joys it showers? |
13814 | With the pathos of Job he cries: Who has spread out the ground at my feet? |
13814 | _ Kent_: Where''s the King? |
13814 | _ Night_ is very poetic: And comest thou again, Thou Mother of the stars and heavenly thoughts? |
13814 | _ Sighs for Rest_: O silver brook, my leisure''s early soother, When wilt thou murmur lullabies again? |
13814 | _ Titus_: But how if that fly had a father and a mother? |
13814 | and Do you like the ears of wheat so much? |
13814 | and the very confession of faith of such poetic pantheism is in Faust''s words: Him who dare name, And yet proclaim, Yes, I believe?... |
13814 | in_ King Lear_, Kent asks: Who''s there beside foul weather? |
13814 | of the gentle slope of hills, or of plains widely extended?... |
13814 | or who laid the corner stone thereof? |
13814 | paled beside''Is its soil clay?'' |
13814 | thou sea of love, Eternal spring of health, will not thy waters succour me? |
13814 | what does it there? |
13814 | why consolest thou me not, Answering one word to sorrowful, distressed, Lonely, lost Damajanti? |
13814 | you mountains and deep valleys, is this the last time I shall see my beloved? |
13408 | Above all, what grounds have you for supposing that we can have, or ought to have, a drama based upon true observation of life? 13408 Do you think,"she said,"that it is pleasant to hold an eight or ten guinea hat on your knees, to say nothing of a boa and muff and veil? |
13408 | Indeed; do n''t you think half- a- guinea is enough to pay for a stall without buying a special hat into the bargain? 13408 Sometimes you think,''Are they married?'' |
13408 | Why did you do that? |
13408 | Why do you persist in girding at Mr Tree because he gives beautiful scenery instead of what you think fine plays? 13408 Why not,"asks a fair correspondent, whose letter has incited this article--"why not begin with the last act?" |
13408 | A last matter-- why is it supposed that almost all the characters in a play are wearing new clothes on a first night? |
13408 | An audience is entitled to say,"What care I how good he be if he seem not good to me?" |
13408 | And England? |
13408 | And Pinero-- our exception-- how would"Percival"classify_ His House in Order_, which has a strong story? |
13408 | And what does it matter where the plays come from any more than where the nuts come from? |
13408 | Another question may be asked: Why do people stay away though able to go? |
13408 | Are the soliloquies of Hamlet likely to lure them to the severe intellectual task of reading the play scrupulously? |
13408 | Are there no kind friends on the stage to give unpalatable advice? |
13408 | Are they able to distinguish beautiful blank verse from bombast? |
13408 | Are they content that the great half- washed should remain in their present condition, which exhibits painfully a great lack of education? |
13408 | But was Shakespeare,"Shakespeare"? |
13408 | By- the- by, why has De Quincey gone out of fashion? |
13408 | By- the- by, why was the press that was so indignant about the so- called problem play almost silent concerning these French dramas? |
13408 | Can it be that the triumph that we sometimes see, of the actress over the actor, is partly due to the fact that she reduces make- up to the minimum? |
13408 | Can one imagine any foreign company able to present_ His House in Order_ without entirely destroying the stage illusion and losing the colour? |
13408 | Can they recognize profound thoughts at first hearing, or at all? |
13408 | Could a Gautier who hated music_ honestly_ criticize a symphony; could a blind man_ honestly_ criticize a picture? |
13408 | Could it be-- the thought is painful-- that they did not quite understand_ L''Age d''Aimer_ and imagined that all the people were married? |
13408 | Do newspaper criticisms affect it?" |
13408 | Do services such as this count for nothing? |
13408 | Do the critics exist? |
13408 | Do they merely help themselves out of the common fund of ignorance? |
13408 | Do they think that the public needs no education in theatrical art? |
13408 | Do we make no sacrifices when we come to their aid? |
13408 | Do you believe that British Drama, as you understand it, ever did live, or ever will? |
13408 | Do you think I care to run the risk of removing my hat without even a looking- glass to guide me? |
13408 | Do you think you can flog it into life? |
13408 | Does Mr Cavendish Morton think players were really worse off before the latest refinements in make- up were invented? |
13408 | Does anyone exist who knows really what is the average level of acting in the four countries named? |
13408 | Does it mean anything? |
13408 | Does she ever consider the costumes in relation to the scenery? |
13408 | Does the Syndicate regard any critic who expresses an unfavourable opinion about its wares as"absolutely impartial,"etc.? |
13408 | Does the critic really get jaded? |
13408 | Does the public for such a theatre exist? |
13408 | Does the word_ repoussoir_ mean any thing to her? |
13408 | Has Mr Max made it? |
13408 | Has the Stage Society ever considered the question of a revival? |
13408 | How can an author claim, under such circumstances, to remain the absolute master of his work?" |
13408 | How could they be without our aid? |
13408 | How is he to understand why Hamlet is so rude to Ophelia, yet later on declares that he loved her prodigiously? |
13408 | How is the reader to guess that they all mean the same thing? |
13408 | How is the solicitor treated on the stage? |
13408 | How often have we seen a French, German or Italian performance of an English play concerning English people? |
13408 | How on earth could the critic know whether his suggestions were true? |
13408 | How, I ask you, are these London successes manufactured? |
13408 | I mean,"he added, hastily anticipating a question,"would people go more or less to the theatre, or would the kind of plays and acting change? |
13408 | I suppose it would make a little difference; would the difference be great?" |
13408 | In which would"Percival"place Shakespeare''s? |
13408 | Is Mr Max Beerbohm''s assertion well founded? |
13408 | Is it a really good thing that_ Hamlet_ should be offered to those who have little or no acquaintance with the tragedy? |
13408 | Is it easy to doubt that it is the sentimental treatment which has caused the history of the play to be so different from that of the novel? |
13408 | Is it the true one? |
13408 | Is it unfair that the"jaded"critic should deal with the average play? |
13408 | Is my occupation to become like that of the Moor of Venice-- merely because managers are forgetful? |
13408 | Is not service of this character to be counted? |
13408 | Is there a vicious circle, in which each and all accept as true what others have written? |
13408 | Is there no lesson in this? |
13408 | Is this matter too horrible for the stage? |
13408 | Is this surprising? |
13408 | It comes from the country cousin, and is generally in these words or thereabouts:"What piece ought we to take tickets for?" |
13408 | Need it be added that the training of the body insisted upon by the mime would cause some of our players to move more gracefully on the stage? |
13408 | Need it be added that the"star"actresses of other nations were all eager to appear in these pieces? |
13408 | Shakespeare, indeed, might ask the gallery in the phrase of Benedick,"For which of my bad parts didst thou first fall in love with me?" |
13408 | Suppose that the critic has come to the conclusion that he knows the truth about a play, with what is he to tell it? |
13408 | The curtain rises, and you ask yourself the question,''Will they marry?''" |
13408 | The last prodigious production of_ Faust_? |
13408 | The scornful may answer with the question,"Why begin at all if you''ve nothing better than our ordinary drama?" |
13408 | Then came the charming utterance of quaint old songs-- who can forget Béranger''s"La Grandmère"as it came from her? |
13408 | Under what circumstances are we invited? |
13408 | Was the author making an anticipatory hit at Mr Lauder? |
13408 | Was the great Eleonora as painfully truthful as Mrs Patrick Campbell in_ The Second Mrs Tanqueray_? |
13408 | We use it frequently; who can find a word in the French language that exactly represents it? |
13408 | What about the expense of coming to and fro? |
13408 | What about the navy? |
13408 | What art has ever made progress under laws dictated by the great half- washed? |
13408 | What combination is likely to be formed to fight it; and if there be none, what is the inevitable result? |
13408 | What does your wife do?" |
13408 | What has been the outcome? |
13408 | What is honesty? |
13408 | What is knocking? |
13408 | What is the manager to do? |
13408 | What method does the manager adopt? |
13408 | What native plays have we had by men during the period covered by these four ladies dealing with similar questions? |
13408 | What opinion is he to form of the perfectly idiotic, complex conspiracy between the King and Laertes to get rid of Hamlet? |
13408 | What would happen if fifty of us were to take off our hats and touch up our hair in a room too small for fifteen, before taking our seats? |
13408 | What, then, are the necessary qualifications of the critic who takes his work and himself seriously? |
13408 | When a play is doing good business? |
13408 | Where are the splendid Puritans who howled about_ A Wife without a Smile_? |
13408 | Where were the phrases, such as miasmatic putrescence or putrescent miasma-- I forget which it was-- that used to greet the dramas of Ibsen? |
13408 | Which of our playwrights does not envy the licence of a Capus? |
13408 | Who can imagine a picture gallery as seen by the person who suffers even mildly from colour- blindness? |
13408 | Who is to decide whether the critic in a particular case is"absolutely impartial, absolutely just, and on the most dignified plane"? |
13408 | Who knows whether his wrath has not a touch of the_ spretae injuria formae_? |
13408 | Who would be satisfied that justice had not slept if such evidence were excluded? |
13408 | Who, if names had been altered, would have guessed that the hero of the piece was the author of the immortal poems? |
13408 | Why do the enthusiasts rage and profess that it ought to be endowed? |
13408 | Why do we go to the Theatre? |
13408 | Why do you keep howling against melodrama and musical comedy? |
13408 | Why do you not cease flogging that dead horse, the British Drama? |
13408 | Why does the theatre exist? |
13408 | Why does"Percival"ignore them? |
13408 | Why have you not got a sense of humour? |
13408 | Why not? |
13408 | Why should an exception be made in case of a player? |
13408 | Why should it be otherwise? |
13408 | Why, then, do we go to the theatre? |
13408 | Why, then, should Balzac and Browning have failed where Shakespeare and Sardou have succeeded? |
13408 | Why? |
13408 | Why? |
13408 | Would not_ Dorothy_ have died young but for our intervention? |
13408 | Would the pieces and performances be affected by the suppression of criticism? |
13408 | Would they have combined? |
13408 | Yet who will pretend that any of the pieces that he concocted alone or in conjunction with others is worth the least valuable of his novels? |
13408 | _ The Interviewer_:"How is public taste formed? |
13408 | which generally has an under- surface suggestion, and might be translated into:"For what theatre are you going to get us seats?" |
15119 | But what good came of it at last? |
15119 | What is a church? |
15119 | 1. Who will not mercie unto others show, How can he mercy ever hope to have? |
15119 | 1022 WORDSWORTH:_ Lines composed a few miles above Tintern Abbey._= Kings.= What have kings that privates have not too, Save ceremony? |
15119 | 1120 SPENSER:_ Hymn in Honor of Love._ How could I tell I should love thee to- day, Whom that day I held not dear? |
15119 | 1135 WILLIS:_ Love in a Cottage._ What is love? |
15119 | 1175 ROGERS:_ Human Life._= Memory.= Remember thee? |
15119 | 1241 OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES:_ The Voiceless._== N.=== Name.= What''s in a name? |
15119 | 1262 ALICE CARY:_ Nobility._= North.= Ask where''s the north? |
15119 | 1926 CONGREVE:_ Letter to Cobham._ To- morrow comes and we are where? |
15119 | 2. Who hath not owned, with rapture- smitten frame, The power of grace, the magic of a name? |
15119 | 2051 THOMAS PERCY:_ Willow, Willow, Willow._= Wind.= What wind blew you hither, Pistol? |
15119 | 2088 JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL:_ Irene._ And whether coldness, pride, or virtue, dignify A woman; so she''s good, what does it signify? |
15119 | 317 WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT:_ Alcayde of Molina._= Choler.= Must I give way and room to your rash choler? |
15119 | 461 HERRICK:_ To Daffadills._= Dagger.= Is this a dagger which I see before me, The handle toward my hand?... |
15119 | 517 MOORE:_ As Down in the Sunless Retreats._= Dew.= What gentle ghost, besprent with April dew, Hails me so solemnly to yonder yew? |
15119 | 519 ROBERT BROWNING:_ Deaf and Dumb._= Defence.= What boots it at one gate to make defence, And at another to let in the foe? |
15119 | 723 CAMPBELL:_ Maid''s Remonstrance._= Flood.= Darest thou, Cassius, now Leap in with me into this angry flood, And swim to yonder point? |
15119 | 793_ Lines used by John Ball in Wat Tyler''s Rebellion._= Gentleness.= What would you have? |
15119 | 81 WALLER:_ To Zelinda._ What can ennoble sots, or slaves, or cowards? |
15119 | = Acquaintance.= Should auld acquaintance be forgot, And never brought to mind? |
15119 | = Ambition.= Fling away ambition; By that sin fell the angels: how can man then, The image of his Maker, hope to win by it? |
15119 | = Charity.= Charity itself fulfils the law, And who can sever love from charity? |
15119 | = Creed.= Shall I ask the brave soldier who fights by my side In the cause of mankind, if our creeds agree? |
15119 | = Deportment.= What''s a fine person, or a beauteous face, Unless deportment gives them decent grace? |
15119 | = Doom.= What, will the line stretch out to the crack of doom? |
15119 | = Epitaphs.= Nobles and heralds, by your leave, Here lies what once was Matthew Prior, The son of Adam and of Eve: Can Bourbon or Nassau claim higher? |
15119 | = Error.= Shall Error in the round of time Still father Truth? |
15119 | = Fancy.= Tell me, where is fancy bred; Or in the heart, or in the head? |
15119 | = Fault-- Faults.= Condemn the fault, and not the actor of it? |
15119 | = Fear.= Why, what should be the fear? |
15119 | = Flirtation.= Never wedding, ever wooing, Still a love- lorn heart pursuing, Read you not the wrong you''re doing, In my cheek''s pale hue? |
15119 | = Fortune.= Will fortune never come with both hands full, But write her fair words still in foulest letters? |
15119 | = June.= And what is so rare as a day in June? |
15119 | = Law.= In law, what plea so tainted and corrupt, But, being seasoned with a gracious voice, Obscures the show of evil? |
15119 | = People.= And what the people but a herd confus''d, A miscellaneous rabble, who extol Things vulgar, and, well weigh''d, scarce worth the praise? |
15119 | = Piety.= Why should not piety be made, As well as equity, a trade, And men get money by devotion, As well as making of a motion? |
15119 | = Power.= What can power give more than food and drink, To live at ease, and not be bound to think? |
15119 | = Scotland.= Stands Scotland where it did? |
15119 | = Self- Knowledge.= To know_ thyself_--in others self- concern; Would''st thou know others? |
15119 | = Sex.= Think you I am no stronger than my sex, Being so father''d and so husbanded? |
15119 | = Shelley.= Ah, did you once see Shelley plain, And did he stop and speak to you, And did you speak to him again? |
15119 | = Ships.= Was this the face that launch''d a thousand ships, And burnt the topless towers of Ilium? |
15119 | = Shrine.= What sought they thus afar? |
15119 | = Snow.= Or wallow naked in December snow By thinking on fantastic summer''s heat? |
15119 | = Success.= Didst thou never hear That things ill got had ever bad success? |
15119 | = Thorn.= Why are we fond of toil and care? |
15119 | = Triumph.= Why comes temptation, but for man to meet And master, and make crouch beneath his foot, And so be pedestaled in triumph? |
15119 | = Villain.= Which is the villain? |
15119 | = Weakness.= If weakness may excuse, What murderer, what traitor, parricide, Incestuous, sacrilegious, but may plead it? |
15119 | All leave ourselves, it matters not where, when, Nor how, so we die well: and can that man that does so Need lamentation for him? |
15119 | All things wait for and divine him,-- How shall I dare to malign him? |
15119 | And sell the mighty space of our large honors For so much trash as may be grasped thus? |
15119 | Are friendship''s pleasures to be sold? |
15119 | Banished? |
15119 | Bright jewels of the mine, The wealth of seas, the spoils of war? |
15119 | Busy old fool, unruly sun, Why dost thou thus, Through windows and through curtains call on us? |
15119 | But who bears hunger best, and cold? |
15119 | Ca n''t I another''s face commend, And to her virtues be a friend, But instantly your forehead lowers, As if_ her_ merit lessen''d_ yours_? |
15119 | Can gold remove the mortal hour? |
15119 | Can honor''s voice provoke the silent dust, Or flatt''ry soothe the dull cold ear of death? |
15119 | Custom calls me to''t;-- What custom wills, in all things should we do''t? |
15119 | Dear son of memory, great heir of fame, What need''st thou such weak witness of thy name? |
15119 | Do not your juries give their verdict As if they felt the cause, not heard it? |
15119 | Eight score eight hours? |
15119 | Ever charming, ever new, When will the landscape tire the view? |
15119 | Forever, Fortune, wilt thou prove An unrelenting foe to love; And when we meet a mutual heart, Come in between and bid us part? |
15119 | How begot, how nourishéd? |
15119 | How can we justly different causes frame, When the effects entirely are the same? |
15119 | How could I know I should love thee away When I did not love thee anear? |
15119 | How shall we rank thee upon glory''s page, Thou more than soldier, and just less than sage? |
15119 | I do not set my life at a pin''s fee; And, for my soul, what can it do to that, Being a thing immortal as itself? |
15119 | If thou wilt lend this money, lend it not As to thy friends;( for when did friendship take A breed of barren metal of his friend?) |
15119 | In life, can love be bought with gold? |
15119 | Instinct and reason how can we divide? |
15119 | Is it a thought accepted for a thing? |
15119 | Is the reward of virtue bread? |
15119 | Kings and Tyrants._ Think''st thou there is no tyranny but that Of blood and chains? |
15119 | Let ev''ry man enjoy his whim; What''s he to me, or I to him? |
15119 | Must we count Life a curse and not a blessing, summed- up in its whole amount, Help and hindrance, joy and sorrow? |
15119 | Or both? |
15119 | Or of the Eternal coeternal beam, May I express thee unblam''d? |
15119 | Or that his hallow''d relics should be hid Under a star- y- pointing pyramid? |
15119 | Our Maker bids increase; who bids abstain But our destroyer, foe to God and man? |
15119 | Our cares are all To- day, our joys are all To- day; And in one little word, our life, what is it but-- To- day? |
15119 | Seven days and nights? |
15119 | Shall I be frighted when a madman stares? |
15119 | Shall I give up the friend I have valued and tried, If he kneel not before the same altar with me? |
15119 | Should auld acquaintance be forgot, And days o''lang syne? |
15119 | Sometimes virtue starves while vice is fed, What then? |
15119 | Thomson, void of rhyme as well as reason, How could''st thou thus poor human nature hum? |
15119 | To purchase heaven, has gold the power? |
15119 | Treason doth never prosper: what''s the reason? |
15119 | What art can wash her guilt away? |
15119 | What dotage will not Vanity maintain? |
15119 | What is it to be wise? |
15119 | What is life? |
15119 | What is man? |
15119 | What is the worst of woes that wait on age? |
15119 | What is this thought or thing Which I call beauty? |
15119 | What is your quarrel? |
15119 | What need a man forestall his date of grief, And run to meet what he would most avoid? |
15119 | What needs my Shakespeare for his honor''d bones,-- The labor of an age in piled stones? |
15119 | What stamps the wrinkle deeper on the brow? |
15119 | What then? |
15119 | What tho''on hamely fare we dine, Wear hoddin gray, and a''that? |
15119 | What web too weak to catch a modern brain? |
15119 | What wound did ever heal, but by degrees? |
15119 | What''s fame? |
15119 | When Adam dolve, and Eve span, Who was then the gentleman? |
15119 | When he is forsaken, Withered and shaken, What can an old man do but die? |
15119 | When lovely woman stoops to folly, And finds too late that men betray, What charm can soothe her melancholy? |
15119 | Where art thou, beloved To- morrow? |
15119 | Where is the man who has the power and skill To stem the torrent of a woman''s will? |
15119 | Where''s my serpent of old Nile? |
15119 | Who guess thy certain crown, thy favorite crest, The fashion of thy many- colored robe? |
15119 | Who''s sorry for a gnat... or girl? |
15119 | Why choose the rankling thorn to wear? |
15119 | Why did she love him? |
15119 | Why dost thou shun the salt? |
15119 | Why prate of peace? |
15119 | Why, so can I; or so can any man: But will they come, when you do call for them? |
15119 | With every pleasing, every prudent part, Say, what can Chloe want? |
15119 | You have the Pyrrhic dance as yet, Where is the Pyrrhic phalanx gone? |
15119 | You have the letters Cadmus gave,-- Think ye he meant them for a slave?. |
15119 | _ A Country Town._= Endurance.=''Tis not now who''s stout and bold? |
15119 | and lovers''absent hours, More tedious than the dial eight score times? |
15119 | b. London(? |
15119 | b. Norwich(? |
15119 | be still; Is human love the growth of human will? |
15119 | can you hear a good man groan, And not relent, or not compassion him? |
15119 | do n''t ye hear it roar now? |
15119 | gone without a word? |
15119 | hast thou wander''d there, To waft us home the message of despair? |
15119 | how began it first? |
15119 | i., Line 22. Who finds not Providence all good and wise, Alike in what it gives, and what denies? |
15119 | is it thought or thing? |
15119 | or art thou but A dagger of the mind, a false creation, Proceeding from the heat- oppressed brain? |
15119 | or neither-- a pretext?--a word? |
15119 | shall one of us, That struck the foremost man of all this world, But for supporting robbers;--shall we now Contaminate our fingers with base bribes? |
15119 | what heart of man Is proof against thy sweet, seducing charms? |
15119 | what power divine Shall henceforth wash the river Rhine? |
15119 | what would the world be to us If the children were no more? |
15119 | where are the charms That sages have seen in thy face? |
15119 | where is thy blush? |
15119 | where, Where are thy men of might, thy grand in soul? |
15119 | who can tell how hard it is to climb The steep where Fame''s proud temple shines afar? |
15119 | who may paint thee best, Forever changeful o''er the changeful globe? |
15119 | would''st thou have a serpent sting thee twice? |
18277 | A pilot desires to come safe into port, but if a storm sweeps away his ship, is he, on that account, a less experienced pilot? |
18277 | And did not he, even in his civil capacity, obtain by it honors that are conferred on only the most illustrious conquerors? |
18277 | And for dancing as well as singing, does not music use numbers of which the beating of the time makes us sensible? |
18277 | And how, otherwise, do the most ignorant speak eloquently in anger, unless it be from this force and these mental feelings? |
18277 | And what if a person learned in the law is not assisting? |
18277 | And, indeed, what art do we find coeval with the world, and what is there of which the value is not enhanced by improvement? |
18277 | But does not money likewise persuade? |
18277 | But how many examples can be quoted in our favor? |
18277 | But shall no beauty, no symmetry, be observed in the care of fruit trees? |
18277 | But were we to devote all this idle or ill- spent time to study, should we not find life long enough and time more than enough for becoming learned? |
18277 | But will not the orator express himself in the most perfect manner, when he seems to speak truth? |
18277 | Can he be accurate in comprehending the things then whispered to him, when he is to speak on them instantly? |
18277 | Can he strongly affirm, or speak ingenuously for his clients? |
18277 | Did it not disconcert the audacious measures of Cataline? |
18277 | Did not Appius the Blind, by the force of his eloquence dissuade the Senate from making a shameful peace with Pyrrhus? |
18277 | Did not Cicero''s divine eloquence appear more popular than the Agrarian law he attacked? |
18277 | For who can instruct with more exactness, and move with more vehemence? |
18277 | Has it not, likewise, the two constituent parts of other arts, theory and practise? |
18277 | Has not he who is seen to melt into tears, already pronounced sentence? |
18277 | I shall pass, therefore, to the following question,"Whether rhetoric be an art?" |
18277 | IS ELOQUENCE A GIFT OF NATURE? |
18277 | If I deplore the fate of a man who has been assassinated, may I not paint in my mind a lively picture of all that probably happened on the occasion? |
18277 | If, then, so great a power lies in musical strains and modulations, what must it be with eloquence, the music of which is a speaking harmony? |
18277 | In exordiums are we not most commonly modest, except when in a cause of accusation we strive to irritate the minds of the judges? |
18277 | Is not credit, the authority of the speaker, the dignity of a respectable person, attended with the same effect? |
18277 | Let us consider dumb persons: how does the heavenly soul, which takes form in their bodies, operate in them? |
18277 | Shall I esteem a barren planetree and shorn myrtles beyond the fruitful olive and the elm courting the embraces of the vine? |
18277 | Shall I not picture vividly in my mind the blood gushing from his wounds, his ghastly face, his groans, and the last gasp he fetches? |
18277 | Shall I not see the assassin dealing the deadly blow, and the defenseless wretch falling dead at his feet? |
18277 | Shall he not cry out, beg for his life, or fly to save it? |
18277 | Shall not the assassin appear to rush forth suddenly from his lurking place? |
18277 | Shall not the other appear seized with horror? |
18277 | Should there be an interval for study amidst these avocations, can it be said to be proper? |
18277 | THE POWER OF MENTAL IMAGERY But how shall we be affected, the emotions or passions being not at our command? |
18277 | THE POWER OF SKILFUL COMPOSITION How can a jumble of uncouth words be more manly than a manner of expression which is well joined and properly placed? |
18277 | The rich may pride themselves on these pleasures of the eye, but how little would be their value if they had nothing else? |
18277 | What if one who knows little of the matter tells him something that is wrong? |
18277 | What is more beautiful than the quincunx, which, whatever way you look, retains the same direct position? |
18277 | What of Aristotle? |
18277 | What other reason makes the afflicted exclaim in so eloquent a manner during the first transports of their grief? |
18277 | Where is the occasion, say they, for the first proposition if the second be true? |
18277 | Who could have seen more had he been present? |
18277 | Why do we dig about them? |
18277 | Why do we grub up the bramble- bushes in our fields? |
18277 | Why do we restrain the luxuriance of our vines? |
18277 | Why do we tame animals? |
18277 | Will he be angry when I, who am to excite him to anger, remain cool and sedate? |
18277 | Will he grieve who hears me speak with an expressionless face and air of indifference? |
18277 | Will he not ask the lower class of advocates how he shall behave? |
18277 | Will he not with great unseemliness look about him? |
18277 | Will he shed tears when I plead unconcerned? |
18277 | With all of them, do not the circumstances regulate their respective degrees of slowness and celerity? |
18277 | _ Aristotle and Theophrastus_ And what shall I say of the elegance of the other disciples of Socrates? |
18277 | to what anxieties are we put in securing these things? |
16244 | ''Ah,''said the gardener,''but who filled the sack with them?'' |
16244 | ''And have you counted how many stars there are?'' |
16244 | ''And what are you doing here?'' |
16244 | ''And what is there in the other world?'' |
16244 | ''As the half of my head is scalt,''said the Cogia,''is not an aspre for shaving it too much by half?'' |
16244 | ''But who pulled up these vegetables?'' |
16244 | ''Ca n''t it?'' |
16244 | ''Dear me,''said the Cogia,''do n''t you see that I am a nightingale sitting in the apricot- tree?'' |
16244 | ''Do n''t you think a few good kicks would be a useful lesson to our Hamet?'' |
16244 | ''Do you know so- and- so?'' |
16244 | ''Hallo, Cogia,''he cried,''what does this dust mean?'' |
16244 | ''Hallo, Cogia,''said the man,''what are you about?'' |
16244 | ''Have you counted, then,''said the priest,''the hairs upon your ass?'' |
16244 | ''Ho, Cogia,''said they,''come, where have you got to?'' |
16244 | ''How can a rope strike ten?'' |
16244 | ''How do you know that?'' |
16244 | ''How do you know?'' |
16244 | ''How do you know?'' |
16244 | ''How is this, Cogia?'' |
16244 | ''How should I know my right side in the dark?'' |
16244 | ''How should they know a Turkish belching, even though they hear it?'' |
16244 | ''If I have a son born to me,''said the Cogia,''I owe thanks to God, but what do I owe to you?'' |
16244 | ''Is this a place for selling a ladder?'' |
16244 | ''My dear friends,''replied the Cogia,''to- morrow is the Day of Resurrection, so what need can you have of clothes?'' |
16244 | ''O Cogia Efendi,''said the boys,''what will you do with your slippers in the tree?'' |
16244 | ''O Cogia Efendi,''said the people,''why do you do so?'' |
16244 | ''O Cogia,''said the man,''can a cauldron die?'' |
16244 | ''O Cogia,''said the people,''why do you beat the ox; how can he be in fault?'' |
16244 | ''O Cogia,''said they,''what are you about?'' |
16244 | ''O Cogia,''said they,''why do you mount the horse the wrong way?'' |
16244 | ''O master,''said his wife,''is there oil in the house or rice, or have you brought any that you wish to have broth?'' |
16244 | ''O master,''said the other,''why did you not say so below?'' |
16244 | ''O my lord and father, what do you do here?'' |
16244 | ''O wife,''said the Cogia,''what is the matter with you; is the broth hot?'' |
16244 | ''O you foolish man,''said the Cogia,''can not a ladder be sold anywhere?'' |
16244 | ''Oh,''said the Cogia,''as you believed it could bear a child, why should you not believe that it can die?'' |
16244 | ''What are you about, Cogia Efendi?'' |
16244 | ''What do I want?'' |
16244 | ''What do you want with her?'' |
16244 | ''What do you want with my ox?'' |
16244 | ''What do you want?'' |
16244 | ''What is the matter with you?'' |
16244 | ''What should the cat do with the hatchet?'' |
16244 | ''Where have you been?'' |
16244 | ''Who is that woman?'' |
16244 | ''Who may you be?'' |
16244 | ''Who would have thought,''said the Cogia to his people and his wife,''that my flaying the heifer would have made that fellow''s face look so black?'' |
16244 | ''Why did you break wind in the presence of Timour?'' |
16244 | ''Why do you thank God?'' |
16244 | ''Why, O Cogia?'' |
16244 | ''Why, are we not going to remove hither to- day?'' |
16244 | ''Why,''said he,''is not a cock necessary where there are so many hens?'' |
16244 | ''You are quite welcome,''said the Cogia, and placed before them a large jar of pure water; on seeing which they said,''What is this?'' |
16244 | A few days after a whole troop of men arriving, the Cogia asked them who they were? |
16244 | A person coming up, said,''What are you eating?'' |
16244 | After a little time the Cogia, coming to his senses, said,''O Mussulmen, did you not see how that perfidious camel maltreated me? |
16244 | Another of the priests coming forward said,''How many stars are there in the face of the heaven above us?'' |
16244 | Arriving at the market, he put up the ass to auction; and on a person crying out,''What is the use of this tailless creature?'' |
16244 | As he was going along he met an individual, who said to the Cogia,''To whom are you carrying those things?'' |
16244 | At the end of a week he came again; but the Cogia appearing to have forgot him, said,''Who may you be?'' |
16244 | But, said they,''O Cogia, a month has in all but thirty days, so how can you say that to- day is the forty- fifth?'' |
16244 | Cogia Nasr Eddin, at the time of the Holy Ramadan, thought to himself,''What must I do in order to hold the fast in conformity with the people? |
16244 | Do you not see that I as well as my tomb am old?"'' |
16244 | Forthwith the Cogia let a---; and when Tamerlank said,''Is not that ill manners?'' |
16244 | His mother becoming very angry, said,''What nonsense is the brat talking that he calls himself the son of a whore?'' |
16244 | His wife coming, said,''O Cogia, why have you acted in this manner?'' |
16244 | Is Nekir coming?'' |
16244 | Is it at three or four?'' |
16244 | Must not the kid have become an old goat?'' |
16244 | No sooner did the people see him than they fell to laughing, and the Bey said,''O Cogia, why did you mount that ox, for it ca n''t run?'' |
16244 | Now what becomes of the old moons?'' |
16244 | Now what will you give me for bringing you this piece of good news?'' |
16244 | On Timour saying,''Do n''t you see that they have two legs?'' |
16244 | On the following day the Governor, sending for the Cogia, said to him,''Is such and such a woman your wife?'' |
16244 | One day Hamet having inadvertently broken a bottle of ink over the Cogia,''What is this, Cogia?'' |
16244 | One day some people said to the Cogia''s son,''What is padligean?'' |
16244 | One day the Cogia Nasr Eddin Efendi passing along the bazaar, an individual coming up to him said,''Pray, Cogia, what is the moon to- day? |
16244 | One day the Cogia ascending again into the pulpit, said,''O Mussulmen, do ye not know what I am going to say to you?'' |
16244 | One day the Cogia said to his wife,''O wife, how do you know when a man is dead?'' |
16244 | One day the Cogia said,''O wife, every day I bring home a liver: where do they all go to?'' |
16244 | One day the Cogia was asked,''When there is a new moon, what becomes of the old one?'' |
16244 | One day the two coming to see their father, the Cogia said to them,''Well, daughters, how do things go on with you?'' |
16244 | One day they said to the Cogia,''Pray what may be your horoscope?'' |
16244 | One of the women said,''God knows whether you will die; but if you do, what shall we say when we lament over you?'' |
16244 | Said the Cogia to the Emperor, after wishing him a blessing,''For what may it have pleased you to summon me?'' |
16244 | Said the Cogia''s wife,''O Cogia, why did you drive the matrons away by using such words to them?'' |
16244 | Said the Cogia,''O wife, what did the preacher say?'' |
16244 | Said the Cogia,''Why are you angry with me? |
16244 | Said the Moolahs,''O Cogia, why did you mount backwards?'' |
16244 | Said the shepherd to the Cogia,''Art thou a faquir?'' |
16244 | Said the students,''What do you mean by talking so? |
16244 | Said the wife of the Cogia,''Pray, man, what are you looking at?'' |
16244 | Says his wife to the Cogia,''For fear of whom do you lock up the hatchet?'' |
16244 | Says the Cogia,''How is it that you do n''t know a thing like that? |
16244 | Says the Cogia,''What may your questions be?'' |
16244 | So coming to the Cogia as quick as possible, they said,''O Cogia, to- morrow is the Day of Judgment; what would you do with this lamb? |
16244 | So he went to the inspecting matrons, who, as soon as they saw him, said,''O Cogia Efendi, what have you to do with us matrons? |
16244 | Some people asking him,''Why do you sell ten for what you gave for nine?'' |
16244 | The Cogia accepted the invitation, and mounting his ass, taking the groom along with him, set out, saying,''Now, Tamerlank, where may you be?'' |
16244 | The Cogia coming to the door, said,''What do you want?'' |
16244 | The Cogia forthwith came down and said,''What do you want?'' |
16244 | The Cogia forthwith turning to the priests said,''What are your questions?'' |
16244 | The Cogia hearing a noise from above, thrust his head out of the window, exclaiming,''Holloa, my men: what is all this dispute for? |
16244 | The Cogia one day again mounting the chair in the same manner, said,''O brothers, when I said to ye,"Do you know what I shall say?" |
16244 | The Cogia wrote, and his wife said,''O Efendi of my soul, wo n''t you read to me what you have written?'' |
16244 | The Cogia, when he saw Tamerlank do this, said,''My Emperor, is it not ill manners to do so?'' |
16244 | The Moolah replied,''Can you answer a question which I shall ask?'' |
16244 | The assembly separated quite astonished, and, when they were out, continued to say,''Which are those of us who know? |
16244 | The congregation said,''O Cogia Efendi, how do you know that?'' |
16244 | The gardener seeing him said,''Who are you? |
16244 | The horsemen, on seeing the Cogia run away, followed him to the place where he lay, and said,''O fellow, why do you lie here?'' |
16244 | The individual taking the cow from the Cogia''s hand, began to walk it about, exclaiming,''Who will buy a young girl six months gone with child?'' |
16244 | The learned men having assembled round the Cogia, said,''What was the matter with these fowls?'' |
16244 | The man replied,''Are you mad? |
16244 | The master coming said,''Cogia, what are you doing here?'' |
16244 | The master looking at the Cogia with great surprise, said,''What are you about?'' |
16244 | The owner seeing a little saucepan in the cauldron, said,''What is this?'' |
16244 | The pastry- cook cried out,''Halloa, fellow, what are you about?'' |
16244 | The people, looking at him, said,''Cogia Efendi, for whose death are you in mourning?'' |
16244 | Then one of the priests, coming forward, said,''May it please your Efendiship, my question is this:"Where may the middle of the earth be?"'' |
16244 | Then said the Cogia,''Some of ye do know already, what should I have to say to you?'' |
16244 | Then said the Cogia,''What shall I say to you until you do know?'' |
16244 | Thereupon the Cogia said to them,''Is not that street a public way?'' |
16244 | They take those old moons and make lightning of them; have you not seen them when the heaven thunders, glittering like so many swords?'' |
16244 | What will you give me?'' |
16244 | When he was close by him he said to him,''Salaam''; and the Cogia saying to him,''Peace be unto you,''said,''Moolah Efendi, for what have you come?'' |
16244 | When the people about him said,''Why do you make this request?'' |
16244 | Whereupon the Cogia said,''Hallo, man: why do you cry out? |
16244 | Whereupon the Moolah went away, saying,''If the labourers of Moom are of this description, what must the learned men be?'' |
16244 | Whereupon the other fell to laughing, and said,''Do you call that singing?'' |
16244 | Whereupon the thief said,''What do you want, Cogia Efendi?'' |
16244 | Whereupon they said to the Cogia,''Who burnt our clothes?'' |
16244 | Which are those who do not know?'' |
16244 | Who are you?'' |
16244 | Why had you not sense enough to strip off your clothes as I did, and sit upon them, and when the rain was over, dress yourself and come here?'' |
16244 | and what do you want here?'' |
16244 | he said,''Do n''t you leave your tail in the desert when you come to market?'' |
16244 | said his wife;''why do you cry?'' |
16244 | what are you about? |
15930 | All very well,he thought,"but what does a purchaser have, after all, in the end, but a lot of pictures? |
15930 | And now do you know,smilingly said the poet,"about the Charles River here?" |
15930 | And so you are going to see Phillips Brooks? 15930 And what business is that?" |
15930 | And what have you on hand for this evening? |
15930 | And which did you choose? |
15930 | And you have come on just to see us, have you? |
15930 | And you live, where? |
15930 | Anyhow, you have enough in bank to meet the checks you have given me, and a profit besides, have n''t you? |
15930 | Are you sure you are telling the public about it in the right way? |
15930 | Are you talking at me or through me? |
15930 | Before you go back you must come and see me and tell me all the people you have seen, will you? 15930 Bring me your strongest pair, will you, dear?" |
15930 | But then, no one ever wins in an argument, anyway, do you think so? 15930 But, pardon me, has not Miss Greenaway returned? |
15930 | Can you read Dutch? |
15930 | Can you say grace in Dutch? |
15930 | Did I say that? |
15930 | Did you make that decision this evening? |
15930 | Do I understand, Mr. Dodgson, that you are not''Lewis Carroll''; that you did not write_ Alice in Wonderland_? |
15930 | Got any good, strong rain boots? |
15930 | Guess_ The Eagle_ can stand it better than this boy; do n''t you think so? |
15930 | How do you break in a pipe, then? |
15930 | How much will you give me if I bring you a hundred pictures? |
15930 | How would you advertise it? |
15930 | I think we can help this young man; do you not think so, Louisa? |
15930 | If you had more pictures, you could make more books and so earn more money, could n''t you? |
15930 | In the Netherlands? 15930 It''s a great compliment, though, is n''t it, sir?" |
15930 | Like to get your notes written out before they get stale? |
15930 | Look pretty good, do n''t they? |
15930 | Looked hard for it? |
15930 | More than one pair? |
15930 | Name? |
15930 | No? 15930 No?" |
15930 | Not even Cyrus W. Field or Herbert Hoover? |
15930 | Now, how would you like to see a bear, Curtis? |
15930 | Now, just bring that child into the house and put them on her feet for me, will you? |
15930 | Now, tell me, what good do you think you will get out of it? |
15930 | Oh, what do you care? |
15930 | Should you, indeed? |
15930 | So soon? |
15930 | Then, why do n''t you write the review? |
15930 | These are the letters I gave you late yesterday afternoon, are they not? |
15930 | These letters, you mean? |
15930 | Want some? |
15930 | Want to play ball, hey? |
15930 | Well, my boy, you were n''t in it long, were you? |
15930 | Well, then, would you mind if I gave you a letter for him? 15930 Well,"said the poet,"you see, I am not so busy a man as I was some years ago, and I should n''t like to disappoint a little girl, should you?" |
15930 | Well,was the cheery greeting,"you could n''t wait until eight for your breakfast, could you? |
15930 | What does it mean to vote? |
15930 | What is the history of''The Chambered Nautilus''? |
15930 | What is your name? |
15930 | What reference? 15930 What''s the matter, son? |
15930 | Why do n''t you go to work? |
15930 | Why not send her''Let us, then, be up and doing''? |
15930 | You have read the books? |
15930 | You like books, you say? |
15930 | You mean while I am hunting? |
15930 | You say you are going from me over to see Longfellow? |
15930 | _ Et tu, Brute?_Stockton smilingly replied. |
15930 | A fortnight passed, then one day Mr. Beecher asked:"Well, how are the checks coming in?" |
15930 | A moment for breath- taking came, and the boy said:"Are n''t you ever afraid of being shot?" |
15930 | A promise was given that the surgeon should be seen at once, but the boy was asked:"How about you?" |
15930 | After a while he asked:"Well, how do you think it went?" |
15930 | And going to a bookcase behind him he brought out a book, and handing it to the boy, he said, his eyes laughing:"Can you read that?" |
15930 | And have you followed his shameless advice?" |
15930 | And how many foreign- born would take equal pains to ascertain what I was determined to find out? |
15930 | And on every hand the question was being asked:"How is it done? |
15930 | And then:"Is this the first time you have visited Oxford?" |
15930 | Are n''t they wee?" |
15930 | Are they easier of solution than the material problems? |
15930 | Are they not exquisite little things?" |
15930 | As he let the boy out of his house, at the end of that first, meeting, he said to him:"And you''re going from me now to see Emerson? |
15930 | At the mention of the name Carlyle his eyes lifted, and he asked:"Carlyle, did you say, sir, Carlyle?" |
15930 | Beecher?" |
15930 | Bok did so and then offered him a light; the boy continued, all with his wonderful smile:"If you do n''t mind, would you just light it? |
15930 | Bok handed a cigarette to the boy, who then said:"Mind sticking it in my mouth?" |
15930 | But how about the foreign- born? |
15930 | But how and where? |
15930 | But how? |
15930 | But what is the matter with idealism? |
15930 | But why harbor the original cause? |
15930 | But you have really told me all about it, have n''t you, so why should I read these notices? |
15930 | But, he argued, if he conceded this right to others, why should they not concede to him the privilege of dropping with the blinders off? |
15930 | Do one- tenth of those who use the phrase so glibly know its true meaning, the part it has played in the world? |
15930 | Does he know it? |
15930 | Ever examine one?" |
15930 | Got a cigarette?" |
15930 | Got it here?" |
15930 | Had he within him that peculiar, subtle something that, for the want of a better phrase, we call the editorial instinct? |
15930 | Had n''t I better get busy on another paper for Mr. Burlingame for the next magazine, else he''ll be after me? |
15930 | Have you a book with you?" |
15930 | He conceived the topic"Should America Have a Westminster Abbey?" |
15930 | How far is he, to- day, an American? |
15930 | How good an American has the process of Americanization made me? |
15930 | How is such a high circulation obtained?" |
15930 | How much have you in the bank?" |
15930 | How much will you give me for pictures of special fruit which you have n''t got, like apricots, green- gages, and pineapples?" |
15930 | I am all alone to- day, and you must keep me company, will you? |
15930 | I do n''t think I should get a high mark for penmanship if I were at school, do you?" |
15930 | If General Garfield answered him, would not other famous men? |
15930 | Is it any easier to- day for the foreign citizen to acquire this information when he approaches his first vote? |
15930 | Is it not perhaps like the owner of the bulldog who assured the friend calling on him that it never attacked friends of the family? |
15930 | Is n''t it a beautiful day out?" |
15930 | Is n''t that so, Curtis?" |
15930 | Is not that she?" |
15930 | Is that a bargain?" |
15930 | Is that in the direction of your home?" |
15930 | Is the man who speaks with type less dangerous than he who speaks with his mouth or with a bomb? |
15930 | It was not to me; is it to him? |
15930 | It was the same boy who on his hospital cot the next day said:"Do n''t you think you could do something for the chap next to me, there on my left? |
15930 | Musing a moment, he said:"You say you are an office boy; what time must you be at your office?" |
15930 | No? |
15930 | Now, suppose I copy these lines once more for the little girl, and give you this copy? |
15930 | Now, what do you think?" |
15930 | Phillips,"said the poet,"how are you? |
15930 | See those little books? |
15930 | So long as we do n''t steal the wood or coal, why should n''t we get it?" |
15930 | So, anxious to have some personal souvenir of the meeting, he said:"Mr. Emerson, will you be so good as to write your name in this book for me?" |
15930 | Stuck?" |
15930 | Suddenly the boy heard Miss Alcott say:"Have you read this new book by Ruskin yet?" |
15930 | Suddenly the boy looked around the room and said:"Where''s your gun, Mr. President? |
15930 | Tell me something about_ yourself_?" |
15930 | The President looked at him curiously for a moment, and then said:"Can you wait a few minutes?" |
15930 | The commandant turned to Bok with a peculiar smile on his face and asked:"Do you know who that man is?" |
15930 | Then, looking at the boy quickly, he said:"Do you collect postage- stamps?" |
15930 | This was a novel thought to Bok: why eliminate encores from any concert? |
15930 | Well, and how do you like us so far?" |
15930 | What did I say?" |
15930 | What is the good of a book, I say, if it is too pretty for use? |
15930 | What really is idealism? |
15930 | What sentiment, I wonder, shall I send her?" |
15930 | What was the real thing according to such a boy''s idea? |
15930 | What''s the use of good friends if you do n''t share them? |
15930 | When breakfast was finished, Doctor Holmes said:"Do you know that I am a full- fledged carpenter? |
15930 | When they handed him the fourth, one morning, as he was pinning it up over the others, he asked:"When do you get your money from the newspapers?" |
15930 | Where would the human race be were it not for the ideals of men? |
15930 | Who can say that of himself? |
15930 | Why do n''t they use the back of each picture, and tell what each did: a little biography? |
15930 | Why not begin a collection of autograph letters? |
15930 | Why should not autograph letters from famous persons be of equal service in his struggle for self- education? |
15930 | Why should not the public have an encore if it desired it, and why should a conductor or a performer object? |
15930 | Why?" |
15930 | Yes, it is pretty badly marked up now, for a fact, is n''t it? |
15930 | You know and I know that I am a friend of the family; but does the dog know?" |
15930 | You see how I break my letters? |
15930 | did he?" |
20353 | And hast thou slain the Jabberwock? 20353 Oh, holy father,"Alice said,"''twould grieve you, would it not? |
20353 | The night is fine,the Walrus said,"Do you admire the view?" |
20353 | 10 There was an old person of Ware, Who rode on the back of a bear; When they asked,"Does it trot?" |
20353 | 4 There was a Young Lady of Norway, Who casually sat in a doorway; When the door squeezed her flat, she exclaimed"What of that?" |
20353 | 7 There was an old man who said,"How Shall I flee from this horrible Cow? |
20353 | Bees, Who was stung in the arm by a wasp: When they asked,"Does it hurt?" |
20353 | But do they re- al- ly com- pre- hend What Scho- pen- hau- er''s driving at? |
20353 | Do you think I can listen all day to such stuff? |
20353 | He answered,"My queen Is it manners you mean, Or do you refer to my figure?" |
20353 | Oh, not at all; but what of that? |
20353 | Shall we be trotting home again?" |
20353 | Sitting where the pumpkins blow, Will you come and be my wife?" |
20353 | The padre said,"Whatever have you been and gone and done?" |
20353 | When they said,"Is it small?" |
20353 | Will you please to go away? |
20353 | [_ George du Maurier_ NONSENSE VERSES 1 There was a small boy of Quebec, Who was buried in snow to his neck: When they said,"Are you friz?" |
20353 | wo n''t they be soon upset, you know? |
15151 | And you retire? |
15151 | But, Mr. Bayes, might we not have a little fighting? |
15151 | Can not you, my dear Fred, instruct him better? |
15151 | Can you shout? |
15151 | Do n''t you think it might be considered rather impious to bottle the rain- water? |
15151 | How chances it they travel? |
15151 | In England we are accustomed to deck this adventurous Moor in the costume of his native country-- but is this correct? 15151 Thomas Appleton?" |
15151 | What am I to do now? 15151 What are we supposed to be?" |
15151 | What beard were I best to play it in? |
15151 | What''s that? |
15151 | What''s the use of bothering about a handful of words? |
15151 | Where did you get that coat from, Austin? |
15151 | Where have they got to now? |
15151 | ''And how dare you,''said the manager,''how dare you, madam, without a notice, withdraw yourself from your theatrical duties?'' |
15151 | ''And you have the presumption to decide upon the taste of the town?'' |
15151 | --especial appeal being made to those among the audience of the gentler sex: But, ladies, what think_ you_? |
15151 | Am I smothering you? |
15151 | And does he then recover them with the bright blue or scarlet that is so dear to him, daubing them here and there with his indispensable Dutch metal? |
15151 | Are there, nowadays, any collectors of playbills? |
15151 | Are they hissing me now?" |
15151 | At one of the last rehearsals, Fawcett, the stage manager, inquired of the adapter if he had written a prologue? |
15151 | Besides, was it worth the trouble? |
15151 | Brutus reads within his tent: Let me see, let me see; is not the leaf turned down Where I left reading? |
15151 | But could you, do you think, be so kind as to put my wig on again for me? |
15151 | But for the actors, forbidden to act, what were they to do? |
15151 | But if the thunder is but stage thunder? |
15151 | But was this Desdemona really the first English actress? |
15151 | But what was her amazement to hear, in answer to her demand,"What is your tidings?" |
15151 | But, my good friend, why are you all so offended at and averse to the noble sound of a drum? |
15151 | Do you not know that I am the prologue? |
15151 | Do you not see this long black velvet cloak upon my back? |
15151 | Each of them advancing to speak the prologue, the first exclaims--"What mean you, my masters, to appear thus before your times? |
15151 | For how could the drama exist without its background groups: its soldiers, citizens, peasants, courtiers, nobles, guests, and attendants of all kinds? |
15151 | For otherwise what might happen? |
15151 | For what is more ridiculous than to represent an army with a drum and four men behind it, all which the hero of the other side is to drive before him? |
15151 | For where, indeed, is discoverable an acceptable standard of"good manners and decorum"? |
15151 | Further, it was asked by what right he delegated his power to another? |
15151 | Had n''t we better tell him so, sir?" |
15151 | Had there not been earlier change in the old custom prescribing that the heroines of the British drama should be personated by boys? |
15151 | Had these really appeared, if not at the public theatres, why, then, at more private dramatic entertainments? |
15151 | Hamlet demands of Horatio concerning the ghost of"buried Denmark:""Stayed it long?" |
15151 | Has an audience ever viewed tolerantly a bald Romeo, or a Juliet grown gray in learning how to impersonate that heroine to perfection? |
15151 | Has the ballet declined on this account, or is this to be ascribed to the decline of the ballet? |
15151 | Have you not sounded thrice?" |
15151 | How could he possibly be present at the Haymarket and yet not absent from Drury Lane or Covent Garden? |
15151 | How could these be depicted upon the stage in the face of Mr. Colman''s new ordinance? |
15151 | How to get him off? |
15151 | How to get him on? |
15151 | How to make him look anything like a ghost-- respectable, if not awful? |
15151 | How was faith to be kept with the public? |
15151 | How was their fight to be presented to the spectators? |
15151 | I own my fault: So please you-- may I pick it up again? |
15151 | If Dunstan or the Phoenix best wine has? |
15151 | If the applause is supplied to order, through the agency of a M. Auguste? |
15151 | In how many dramatic works figures this useful property-- the"book of the play"? |
15151 | In the epilogue the spectators were asked:"How do you like her?" |
15151 | In what state would he come down to the theatre? |
15151 | In what? |
15151 | Instead of giving the proper answer, Pinkethman replied:"Why, do n''t you know my name, Bob? |
15151 | Is it in a blue cover, ma''am? |
15151 | Is it natural to suppose that such a man should have retained, during his successful career, the manners and dress of his original country? |
15151 | Kean?" |
15151 | May I venture to offer my own conjecture on the subject? |
15151 | Observing this, a gentleman in the pit inquired of Macklin, who happened to be present:"Pray, sir, do you think such conduct natural?" |
15151 | On one special evening she held the book during the performance of the old farce of"Who''s the Dupe?" |
15151 | Only, in that case, of what good was the Examiner, regarded as a public servant? |
15151 | Or can it be that the dances of the streets have overcome and ousted from their due position the dances of the stage? |
15151 | Or if there be really any advantage in it, why should I, or any single individual, take it over the rest of our brethren? |
15151 | Ought we not rather to admit that, had he done so, his career would in fact not have been successful? |
15151 | Rich, the manager, asked the old man, as he stood in the wings,"if he heard what they were doing?" |
15151 | Should he forget that he was Richard? |
15151 | Should he remember that he was only Mr. Bensley? |
15151 | Should the Moor of Venice appear in a negro''s close woolly curls, or are flowing locks permissible to him? |
15151 | Should the Prince wear flaxen tresses or a"Brutus"? |
15151 | So they have found it out, have they?" |
15151 | Some persons even inquired:"Who is that fellow?" |
15151 | Surveying Garrick''s rueful countenance, Fielding inquired:"What''s the matter? |
15151 | Tell me-- nor count the question too severe-- Why need the dismal powdered forms appear? |
15151 | Terrena demands: Fire, why so hot? |
15151 | The prompter appears on the scene and demands of the carpenter what he means by opening the trap? |
15151 | Then, addressing himself to the gallery, he said:"Hark ye, friends; you know my name up there, do n''t you?" |
15151 | Thereupon an angry gentleman stood up in the pit, and demanded"Why is n''t he here? |
15151 | Upon his mispronouncing the name of Lady Kennegad, Macklin stepped up to him and demanded angrily,"What trade he was of?" |
15151 | Was he prepared to mutilate Portia''s great speech in the"Merchant of Venice?" |
15151 | Was there time to undress and dress again? |
15151 | Was this an allusion merely to the French actresses that had been seen in London some few years before, or were English actresses referred to? |
15151 | What Englishman could not know a Frenchman by this ridiculous figure?" |
15151 | What about the singing of"God save the King"upon the stage? |
15151 | What are those books by the glass? |
15151 | What can he really know of balls and fashionable assemblies? |
15151 | What can it be? |
15151 | What did it contain? |
15151 | What form is this? |
15151 | What is the book? |
15151 | What right had he to exact fees? |
15151 | What was he to do? |
15151 | What were they to do? |
15151 | When my dimensions are as well compact, My mind as generous and my shape as true, As honest madam''s issue? |
15151 | Where''s your dagger? |
15151 | Who can doubt that Hogarth''s famous picture told the truth, not only of the painter''s own time, but of the past and of the future? |
15151 | Who comes here? |
15151 | Who ever saw, but upon extraordinary occasions, Sir Philip Sidney and Sir Francis Drake ride in a coach? |
15151 | Who has done this? |
15151 | Who was"John Orderly,"and how comes his name to be thus used as a watchword? |
15151 | Who, then, was the first English actress, assuming that she was the Desdemona of the Vere Street Theatre? |
15151 | Why brand they us With base? |
15151 | Why every devil dance in scarlet hose? |
15151 | Why should Poll Peachum shine in satin clothes? |
15151 | Why then should he choose to exhibit such a whimsical figure upon them? |
15151 | Why this division of the part between two performers? |
15151 | Will the actor be recognisable? |
15151 | Will you suffer a Whig to be hung?" |
15151 | Wo n''t that_ fetch_ the house?" |
15151 | Would not you, now"--and here he turned to his brewer friend, Mr. Thrale--"rather give away money than porter?" |
15151 | Yet, when has the theatre been thus ordered, or have audiences been so disciplined? |
15151 | You''ve broken the phial, have n''t you? |
15151 | are you mad? |
15151 | base, base? |
15151 | is my beaver easier than it was?" |
15151 | or''What do you mean?'' |
15151 | they always clap him on a black periwig, when it is well known one of the greatest rogues in England always wears a fair one?" |
15151 | was very willing at all times to be amused--"for which great rejoicings"( why rejoicings?) |
15151 | what fun to- day at Medley''s was? |
15151 | what is it to his scene to know How many coaches in Hyde Park did show Last spring? |
15151 | wherefore base? |
15151 | will he really have time to alter his costume? |
15151 | with baseness? |
15151 | with bastardy? |
15151 | Æsop inquires:"How do you spend your evening, sir?" |
11250 | ''Why go ye forth, Lord James,''he said,''With spear and belted brand? 11250 Ai n''t you going to put the boots in?" |
11250 | Alas,said Arthur,"why have you done this deed? |
11250 | And who is that one,said the king,"for whose sake you make all travelers welcome?" |
11250 | Anything wrong? |
11250 | Canst hear,said one,"the breakers roar? |
11250 | Confound you, Brown, what''s that for? |
11250 | Damsel,said Arthur,"what rich sword is that which yonder hand holds above the water? |
11250 | Do you leave such a matter in doubt? |
11250 | Double your two to one? |
11250 | How did you get this sword? |
11250 | How do you mean, you call it? |
11250 | How''s he? |
11250 | Is it for bond or faith you come, Or yet for golden fee? 11250 Is that so?" |
11250 | Not beat at all? |
11250 | Now wottest thou what I am? |
11250 | Now,said Balin,"will you send us a priest that we may receive our sacrament, the blessed body of our Lord Jesus Christ?" |
11250 | Oh, but Tom, are you much hurt? 11250 Please, Brown,"he whispered,"may I wash my face and hands?" |
11250 | Sir Knight,said Arthur,"why do you sit here in full armor thus watching the road?" |
11250 | Sir,said Galahad,"by this shield be many marvels fallen?" |
11250 | Sirs,said Sir Galahad,"what adventure brought you hither?" |
11250 | Then how the deuce will you get out? |
11250 | Throw whom? |
11250 | Well, but you wo n''t go on, will you? 11250 Were there any knights about the stone?" |
11250 | What be they? |
11250 | What can all that mean? |
11250 | What damsel is that? |
11250 | What is that? |
11250 | What knight art thou? |
11250 | What will ye with me? |
11250 | When you are king,asked Sir Ector,"will you be kind to me and my family?" |
11250 | Where are you going? |
11250 | Where shall I meet you? |
11250 | Where? |
11250 | Which do you prefer,asked Merlin,"the sword or the scabbard?" |
11250 | Which is Rience? |
11250 | Who is the head boy of the form? |
11250 | Who is the knight? |
11250 | Who was fighting with Brown? |
11250 | Who''ll stop me? |
11250 | Whose? |
11250 | Why do you laugh? |
11250 | Why sounds yon Eastern music here So wantonly and long, And whose the crowd of armed men That round yon standard throng? |
11250 | Why, bless us,thinks he,"what can be the matter with the young''un? |
11250 | Why, who is he? |
11250 | Will you fight? |
11250 | Would some of your kind people take him up, And bear him hence out of this cruel sun? 11250 After all, what would life be without fighting, I should like to know? 11250 Ai n''t there, Tom? |
11250 | And Enid woke and sat beside the couch, Admiring him, and thought within herself, Was ever man so grandly made as he? |
11250 | And arms, arms, arms to fight the enemy? |
11250 | And if it were so do not keep it back: Make me a little happier: let me know it: Owe you me nothing for a life half- lost? |
11250 | And she abode his coming, and said to him With timid firmness,"Have I leave to speak?" |
11250 | And then came the more subtle temptation,"Shall I not be showing myself braver than others by doing this? |
11250 | And wherefore wail for one, Who put your beauty to this flout and scorn By dressing it in rags? |
11250 | And wottest thou wherefor? |
11250 | Are they scouring the other streets? |
11250 | Arms? |
11250 | Arthur wondered, and said,"Why do you come before me in this unseemly manner, girt with a great sword?" |
11250 | But have you ever thought that you were any more fortunate than other children of other ages in having these interesting things to help you? |
11250 | But where is Arthur all this time? |
11250 | Comfort thyself: what comfort is in me? |
11250 | Do n''t you know it?" |
11250 | Do n''t you know that I expect the sixth to stop fighting?" |
11250 | Do they not remind you of the galloping of a horse, with their regular rise and fall? |
11250 | Does the poem seem to you somewhat rough and jerky? |
11250 | From what court do you come?" |
11250 | Good luck had your good man, For were I dead who is it would weep for me? |
11250 | Had I packed my toothbrush? |
11250 | Harborage? |
11250 | Have I any right to begin it now? |
11250 | Have you slain this good knight by your crafts? |
11250 | He made a wrathful answer:"Did I wish Your warning or your silence? |
11250 | His name? |
11250 | How could he bear it? |
11250 | How should I recover it? |
11250 | I needs must disobey him for his good; How should I dare obey him to his harm? |
11250 | I said:"You are a chemist?" |
11250 | Not eat nor drink? |
11250 | Not five words could he say-- the bell mocked him; he was listening for every whisper in the room-- what were they all thinking of him? |
11250 | O light upon the wind, Thine, Gawain, was the voice-- are these dim cries Thine? |
11250 | On his way he met a maid who called to him,"O Balin, why have you left your own shield behind? |
11250 | Or bring ye France''s lilies here, Or the flower of Burgundie?" |
11250 | Or, if I escaped these dangers for a day or two, what could I expect but a miserable death of cold and hunger? |
11250 | She answer''d meekly,"How should I be glad Henceforth in all the world at anything, Until my lord arise and look upon me?" |
11250 | Should not the dove so white Follow the sea- mew''s flight, Why did they leave that night Her nest unguarded? |
11250 | So I went straight up and saw him, and he said:"Well, what''s the matter with you?" |
11250 | Speak out: what is it thou hast heard, or seen?" |
11250 | Speak, if ye be not like the rest, hawk- mad, Where can I get me harborage for the night? |
11250 | THE MARVELOUS SWORD"Fair sir,"said Sir Launcelot,"will ye come with me unto the court of King Arthur?" |
11250 | The barons and knights laughed in derision and said,"Shall Britain be ruled over by a boy? |
11250 | The giant answer''d merrily,"Yea, but one? |
11250 | Then cried Earl Yniol,"Art thou he indeed, Geraint, a name far- sounded among men For noble deeds? |
11250 | Then said Earl Doorm:"Well, if he be not dead, Why wail ye for him thus? |
11250 | Then said Sir Launcelot,"Cometh this desire of himself?" |
11250 | Then said he to Galahad:"Son, wottest thou what I hold betwixt my hands?" |
11250 | Then said he:"Ye be welcome, but of whence be ye?" |
11250 | Then spake King Arthur to Sir Bedivere:"Hast thou perform''d my mission which I gave? |
11250 | Then spoke King Arthur, breathing heavily:"What is it thou hast seen? |
11250 | There musing sat the hoary- headed Earl,( His dress a suit of fray''d magnificence, Once fit for feasts of ceremony) and said:"Whither, fair son?" |
11250 | They fly o''er flood and fell,-- Why dost thou draw the rein so hard, Good knight, that fought so well?" |
11250 | Three horses and three goodly suits of arms, And all in charge of whom? |
11250 | Well now, what is the length of your regular lesson?" |
11250 | Were it well to obey then, if a king demand An act unprofitable, against himself? |
11250 | What are you singing?" |
11250 | What can it be? |
11250 | What could be more luxurious for any youngster? |
11250 | What good should follow this, if this were done? |
11250 | What harm, undone? |
11250 | What is it thou hast seen? |
11250 | What is it to me? |
11250 | What is this fierce tumult and confusion? |
11250 | What matter if our feet are torn? |
11250 | What matter if our shoes are worn? |
11250 | What record, or what relic of my lord Should be to aftertime, but empty breath And rumors of a doubt? |
11250 | What substitute for it is there, or ever was there, among any nation under the sun? |
11250 | What was to be done in this horrible dilemma? |
11250 | What would you like to see take its place? |
11250 | When Balin heard the voice he turned his horse fiercely and said,"What is it you will with me? |
11250 | When we read this poem, the first question that comes to us is"What_ was_ the''good news from Ghent?''" |
11250 | Where breathes the foe but falls before us With Freedom''s soil beneath our feet, And Freedom''s banner streaming o''er us? |
11250 | Where shall I hide my forehead and my eyes? |
11250 | Who can argue against that? |
11250 | Why do you take its dearest pledge From this our Scottish land? |
11250 | Why had n''t I got housemaid''s knee? |
11250 | Why not? |
11250 | Why this invidious reservation? |
11250 | Will you joust with me?" |
11250 | Wrapt not in Eastern balms, But with thy fleshless palms Stretched, as if asking alms, Why dost thou haunt me?" |
11250 | Yea, truly is it not a sweet surprise? |
11250 | [ 10][ Footnote 10: Can you see any reason for introducing this long account of the finding of Gulliver''s hat? |
11250 | [ Footnote 3: Can you tell from this on about what day Arthur fought this last battle?] |
11250 | [ Illustration: CHILDREN WITH HORNBOOKS] Can you imagine what kind of reading lessons were in this primer? |
11250 | [ Illustration: KING ARTHUR_ Statue by Peter Vischer, in the Hofkirche, Innsbruck_]"Why should I be king of Britain?" |
11250 | [ Illustration: THE PARSON FIDDLED]"What made you think of fiddling in the time of such peril?" |
11250 | [ Illustration:"AIN''T YOU GOING TO PUT THE BOOTS IN?"] |
11250 | has your palfrey heart enough To bear his armor? |
11250 | have ye seen how nobly changed? |
11250 | how fetch it down again? |
11250 | how is it I see you here? |
11250 | my Lord Arthur, whither shall I go? |
11250 | or doth all that haunts the waste and wild Mourn, knowing it will go along with me?" |
11250 | or what hast heard?" |
11250 | or what hast heard?" |
11250 | or what is become of them? |
11250 | said Arthur,"what have you done, Merlin? |
11250 | said Bruce,"why, then, did you make the signal?" |
11250 | said the good woman, in great surprise;"and wherefore are you thus alone?--where are all your men?" |
11250 | says one of them,"you surely do n''t suppose that the fort will not be taken?" |
11250 | shall we fast, or dine? |
11250 | would I be in Arthur''s shoes after fourth lesson?" |
11658 | And Lady Suelva? 11658 And couldst thou love him now?" |
11658 | And is his face to be a counterpart of that one? |
11658 | And must thou torture him to death? 11658 And so Jacob was innocent?" |
11658 | And who orders the king? 11658 Are n''t you neglecting your house- work to attend to me?" |
11658 | Are you afraid to follow? |
11658 | Ca n''t you tell me about it? |
11658 | Canst thou not spare him altogether? |
11658 | Did the King''s Favorite, then, desire him? 11658 Did you hear the girl,"he asked,"the little scamp? |
11658 | Do n''t you make it out so? |
11658 | Do you know what you''re doing, Jane? |
11658 | Doctor McMurray,she said, speaking quite softly,"Doctor McMurray, do you see? |
11658 | From what corner of the yard comes that serenading? |
11658 | Hast thou some scheme? 11658 Her vesper chimes have died away, Where shall we be on Christmas day?" |
11658 | How did it get there? |
11658 | How do I know you? 11658 How fortunate; my study, too,--I suppose that is in order?" |
11658 | How is this? |
11658 | I never desired him to? |
11658 | Is it not early, my angel? |
11658 | Is it the custom here to allow no other man to dance with one''s friends? |
11658 | Is_ that_ the only thing that keeps you here? 11658 Lady,"quoth he,"is the flavor of this pasty pleasing to thy palate?" |
11658 | Love? 11658 Love?" |
11658 | May I have the honor? |
11658 | May I have this dance? |
11658 | Mister,my companion in the smoking- car addressed me rather timidly,"hev you ever bin to Ebenezer?" |
11658 | Mrs. Trent,he said softly,"Mrs. Trent, are the clouds lifting? |
11658 | Mrs. Trent,pleaded the doctor for the last time,"tell me, can you see the Peak?" |
11658 | No sod house? |
11658 | No, Janet, but ca n''t you see how it must look to me? 11658 Nor couldst thou even pity him-- is he not too foul even for pity?" |
11658 | Of all things, do you mean to tell me that you never heard of it? |
11658 | Please,said the Fool anxiously,"why does Preferment ride with the King''s Favorite and never with me?" |
11658 | Pray? 11658 Save her-- her, who stands in my mind for all that I ought to hate?" |
11658 | So? 11658 Stranger,"he said in English,"why have you made my Adela, Senorita de Marcelo, try to hide from me? |
11658 | Tell me,he asked of the Wise Man,"did the King''s Favorite want Preferment more than I? |
11658 | Tell me,he urged,"what is it? |
11658 | The king? |
11658 | The lawyers? |
11658 | Then you forgive me? |
11658 | True, true; and yet hast heard another must be found? 11658 Well, how are all the folks? |
11658 | Well, how are you, old boy? |
11658 | What Spanish colony? |
11658 | What care I for his foul black hide? 11658 What does that mean?" |
11658 | What, Mrs. Trent, you surely would n''t wish trouble to any fellow creature if it could be avoided, would you? |
11658 | What, lady, neither love nor pity? 11658 What?" |
11658 | Where? |
11658 | Who are those huge hairy men, with wild beasts''faces? |
11658 | Who is it? |
11658 | Why Loren, is that you? 11658 Why are thy parted lips so dumb and cold? |
11658 | Why do n''t you say something, David? |
11658 | Why so wroth, fool? |
11658 | Why, you''re not going, doctor? |
11658 | Why,he wondered,"doth not Preferment live with me? |
11658 | Will the_ senor_ with the injured foot recline upon the sofa? 11658 Would it be right?" |
11658 | Would not the king or some one recognize him? |
11658 | You know whose letters they are? |
11658 | You never had a heart, did you, Jane? |
11658 | You think there has been a mistake? |
11658 | You''re not angry with me, are you? |
11658 | A Jew? |
11658 | A spell back, though, when our daughter got married, an''time kind o''hung heavy on our hands, Mandy says,''Why do n''t you go alone, pa? |
11658 | Am I not as fit a man as the King''s Favorite?" |
11658 | An''I be the court fool, pray, noble lady, what art thou? |
11658 | And art thou nought but dust and ashes vile? |
11658 | And did''st thou die on lone Helena''s isle? |
11658 | And how does Preferment come if he is wanted?" |
11658 | And how does one ask him?" |
11658 | And shall the subject of this sketch revolutionize his mode of stove- blacking at the promptings of an untaught spectator? |
11658 | And so, may he love me fearlessly in such a guise?" |
11658 | And what knows he Of angels''doings? |
11658 | And what was the modest subject that the tyro chose? |
11658 | And why have they left thee lying here, this fortnight?" |
11658 | And why? |
11658 | And will Preferment come if he be wanted? |
11658 | Are they all fled, affrighted at the span Of centuries? |
11658 | Are we not friends till Death us part? |
11658 | At last he called:"Mrs. Trent, ca n''t I help you? |
11658 | Besides I was in the right, and does that not make the just hand steady and the pious eye true? |
11658 | Busy? |
11658 | But say, is n''t that a wagon coming?" |
11658 | But tell me, doctor, tell me, are you sure she will not get off? |
11658 | But what can be said in behalf of Mrs. L., a graduate of the Oxford Female College, Ohio, when, in a piece entitled"Genesis,"occurs this passage? |
11658 | But where did you get that rig?" |
11658 | But why disturb the bones of poor Mrs. L., who is but one of the many thousands of contributors to mortal verse? |
11658 | But, apropos of the health bulletin, etc., is Janet Manning here still, or has she gone off to college?" |
11658 | By what right hast thou left thy post before the ladies''hall-- before the chamber of the king''s favorite?" |
11658 | Can you see the Peak?" |
11658 | Could-- would you take me home-- to my father?" |
11658 | D''you s''pose I c''n see it all in one day?" |
11658 | Do n''t you see, Janet, how it sort o''breaks my heart to say yes?" |
11658 | Do n''t you think that if you really loved me as you say you''d be as glad as I was that I could get a better education? |
11658 | Do n''t you think the weather will clear? |
11658 | Do you suppose, dear, that you could feel toward me, after a year at college, just as you do now? |
11658 | Do you think I would not recognize her even if she came in a black cowl and robe? |
11658 | Do you think, although she has not spoken, that I could fail to know her? |
11658 | Dost hear the man? |
11658 | Fear? |
11658 | For instance, what could be more explicit than these lines from"The Brave Page Boys"? |
11658 | Forgive-- forgive her? |
11658 | Had he not told her so that afternoon when they sat together in the barn? |
11658 | Had n''t she said once,"I love you, David,"and was n''t that enough to make him trust her? |
11658 | Has she come out on the balcony?" |
11658 | Hast thou not heard the fame of Anselm''s name? |
11658 | Have you not seen enough of him this night?" |
11658 | Hear ye not? |
11658 | How came he by the curse? |
11658 | How can you expect me to be happy over it? |
11658 | How could you ever keep on loving me? |
11658 | How shall he lure us with a shadow, a ghostly visitant, savoring of the pit and summoned only by the most marrow- freezing incantations? |
11658 | IN ANSWER"S."And thou didst idly dream, Or, careless of thy action, think, To cast a veil o''er all the past And weld anew the broken link? |
11658 | In the dimming light the two continued sitting there together, hardly speaking a word, for what comfort could words bring? |
11658 | Is he a Jew? |
11658 | Is it not enough?" |
11658 | Is there reunition of love with God as at first? |
11658 | It is always much pleasanter to look for fair weather than for foul, do n''t you think so?" |
11658 | Know you not that I was playing with you? |
11658 | Lord, comest thou-- to me? |
11658 | May not American students learn something from this contemporary illustration of the possibilities of organized student life? |
11658 | Must he so surely die?" |
11658 | Must not the friends beneath the sod Still walk amid the trees of God? |
11658 | My other self, why bound by death The compass of our friendship''s reaching? |
11658 | Need I tell you the result, David? |
11658 | On such a night When angels fill the air, and voices sweet, Mysterious, sing their golden songs of peace-- On this glad night to quarrel? |
11658 | Or sunk beneath the wave Of solemn Lethe? |
11658 | Pray, let me sit beside you; all alone My brethren left you? |
11658 | Same as usual?" |
11658 | Shall we attribute it to a coincidence that Mrs. L.''s best poem strikes a very familiar chord? |
11658 | She almost understood--"Shall we have apple dumplings for supper, professor? |
11658 | Stay here all night? |
11658 | THE ENDITING OF LETTERS STUART P. SHERMAN''03"Now for enditing of Letters: alas, what need wee much adoe about a little matter?" |
11658 | TO KEATS SONNET[1] JULIAN PARK''10 Where, where is Ganymede? |
11658 | Tell me, do you not think it will?" |
11658 | The kind you used to like?" |
11658 | They have made him too foul for thee ever to love, have they not?" |
11658 | To thy heathen gods?" |
11658 | To-- rest? |
11658 | What canst thou offer him to compensate for all his loss and misery?" |
11658 | What could she want of Loren? |
11658 | What dost thou here, foul black? |
11658 | What is it that thou tellest me, Swallow from beyond the sea? |
11658 | What is the trouble?" |
11658 | What mighty spell with power rife Can wake thee into Being''s passion strife? |
11658 | What more delightful than to yield yourself entirely to the present mood and wander off somewhere, aimless except to see and feel? |
11658 | What more natural than that she should want to see her old play- fellow again? |
11658 | What spell hath bound ye now? |
11658 | What wealth of fame can mete The loss of love? |
11658 | What''s the matter?" |
11658 | Where are the fair That graced the tales of Ilium years agone? |
11658 | Where are the folks?" |
11658 | Where is fair Psyche, where Apollo brave? |
11658 | Where now is Ganymede, and where is Pan? |
11658 | Where to- day is the forehead fair, Crowned with masses of midnight hair? |
11658 | Who are you that have dared speak to her as you have? |
11658 | Who are you-- and pray, who am I?" |
11658 | Who is he?" |
11658 | Who shall deny me The memory of thine eyes? |
11658 | Why did she have to be all the time hankering after new friends? |
11658 | Why do n''t you want me to make something of myself, David? |
11658 | Why doubt the promptings of our hearts, Or falsify our spirits''teaching? |
11658 | Why should_ he_ complain? |
11658 | Will they treat her as they did Jacob?" |
11658 | Would n''t you feel proud of me if I went off and did something worth while?" |
11658 | are ye forever dumb? |
11658 | he echoed,"What, can they be troubling you again?" |
11658 | is the little cot? |
11658 | what good can reach you Frowning o''er that dog- eared page? |
11658 | what have they done to his hair-- to all his long, pretty locks? |
11658 | what is the torturer to do with that glowing iron in his hand? |
11658 | what lethargy O''ercomes your ancient power? |
10596 | But would you mind,he still went on,"Now would you really care,"he said,"If I should kiss you?" |
10596 | Come little maid, why this despair? 10596 Had offers?" |
10596 | How came they written? |
10596 | She''s thirty- five or so? |
10596 | That I? 10596 They''re more offensive than my buzz- saw hat?" |
10596 | ~What awful debts are these, my son? |
10596 | ''tis true I''m heartless; yes, They''re right, but only right in part; The reason, dear, is-- can''t you guess? |
10596 | ***** This tale is incomplete, I know, But where else could the traveller go? |
10596 | Am I present? |
10596 | Am I? |
10596 | And I can fiddle and Joan can sing, And what were better than this? |
10596 | And does there not seem cause to weep, When I should like so much to sleep, I have to sing this mournful lay, I can not get to bed till day? |
10596 | And hath she done this thing to thee? |
10596 | And in the midst of all of these A demon seemed to dance, Who asked him with a fiendish grin,"I say,''Do you wear pants?''" |
10596 | And oh,_ will_ you publish it soon?" |
10596 | And such an opportunity displayed, If not to seize? |
10596 | And what was that college man''s name? |
10596 | And which Senior was she? |
10596 | And why was ever hung the mystic wreath-- Why should it grow? |
10596 | And why were laughing eyes and lashes made, If not to tease? |
10596 | Are you as heartless as they say? |
10596 | But just as we were starting out, Said she,"For just us two"( A smile played round her mouth)"I think It much too dark, do n''t you?" |
10596 | But what''s the odds? |
10596 | Can all the Graces in thee dwell? |
10596 | Could Pegasus have better spur? |
10596 | Did I believe when she insisted that She did n''t know? |
10596 | Didst ever break señora''s sleep By music''neath her window- case? |
10596 | Do I flatter? |
10596 | Do n''t you? |
10596 | Do you like my clothes? |
10596 | Do you think this shadow dreams Of some shadows on the wall Fifty years ago,--that''s all? |
10596 | Do you think you can trap me? |
10596 | Does it seem too much for a blush to pay If I confess I lost my heart? |
10596 | For better music was your piping meant; Will you confess such earth- restricted wings? |
10596 | Has his weary spirit passed From all care? |
10596 | Has poor uncle breathed his last? |
10596 | He is going to the Greens; No, he''s going to the Dean''s, Is he not? |
10596 | Hoo her hair, Ower- muckle fer the pins, Blaws aboot her everywhere? |
10596 | How can I be true To the red or the blue, When Will is at Harvard, and Tom is at Yale? |
10596 | How can my pen the woes relate That on these happy moments wait? |
10596 | How shall you know her? |
10596 | How should he read her face aright? |
10596 | How would you like a busy throng, A battle, Elizabeth''s retinue? |
10596 | I have? |
10596 | I wonder, if in sending, If you choose your slave by chance, What that twinkle was portending In your glance? |
10596 | I''m really looking well? |
10596 | If eyes that smile till the day''s completeness Droop a little at evening''s close, And tears cloud over their tender sweetness-- Who knows? |
10596 | If lips that laugh while the sun be shining, Curved as fair as the leaf of a rose, Quiver with grief at day''s declining-- Who knows? |
10596 | If the heart that seems to know no aching While the fair, gold sunlight gleams and glows, Under the stars be bitterly breaking-- Who knows? |
10596 | Is it here? |
10596 | Is it here? |
10596 | Is it the sun that shines on earth, Or moonbeams that I see? |
10596 | Is it there? |
10596 | Is it there? |
10596 | Is''t not aright I dream of Flo? |
10596 | It seems to me, had I been there, I would have kissed her-- now would n''t you? |
10596 | It seems to me, had I been there, I''d clasped it tight-- now would n''t you? |
10596 | It seems to me, had I been there, I''d vowed my love-- now would n''t you? |
10596 | It''s Dolly here and Dolly there, Where can the maiden be? |
10596 | Ken ye no the way she rins? |
10596 | Love? |
10596 | May I, dare I, ask the question Which my heart has asked before? |
10596 | Must have seemed quite a crowd, you say, With three in the sleigh? |
10596 | No? |
10596 | Now let him miss the German quiz, and fail to pass astronomy, To football lore what''s physics or political economy? |
10596 | Now which is worse, To cut and shave, or shave and cut? |
10596 | Now,_ what_ have I said that is funny? |
10596 | Oh, can it be? |
10596 | Old love, or new love-- which was the best? |
10596 | Or does she sigh because a bride They once adorned; now cast aside, Left in the garret there to hide, The dust defying? |
10596 | Or shall coy glances, passion- rich, Compel my fond allegiance? |
10596 | Pray, how can a bachelor be at his ease With such artful devices at afternoon teas? |
10596 | Quickly pass the hours, Glides the bark canoe; Heard the rushes something? |
10596 | Return you my affection? |
10596 | Shall Ethel fair, My winter girl, with golden hair, Or Maud, whose dark brown eyes bewitch,-- My summer girl,--now govern? |
10596 | Shall I grieve, if for a prize, Strive my best-- I fail to win it? |
10596 | Shall Love teach Browning in his school? |
10596 | Shall cold Bostonianism rule? |
10596 | She only a woman-- you know the rest? |
10596 | She raised her cup, and I raised also mine; She gave a look, as if"Now are you ready?" |
10596 | She was so sweet, so passing fair, With such a smile, with such an air-- What could I do? |
10596 | So how can a bachelor be at his ease With such variant emotions at afternoon teas? |
10596 | Such flames of song that flashed and fled? |
10596 | Sweetly sound two voices, Shadows hide the view; Heard the rushes something? |
10596 | Tell me, when I bear the treasure, Would you very angry be Should I keep a trifling measure That was hardly meant for me? |
10596 | The balls, the theatres, the row, Who would not find amusement so? |
10596 | Then I falter,"Can you love me, Darling?" |
10596 | They''ve no cane- rushes nor football frays; Whence can their wealth of wisdom flow? |
10596 | Three years have I kept you In care without measure, And now must I tell you good- by? |
10596 | Upon a day one said, with kind intent:"Why sing forever of these trivial things? |
10596 | Was Caballero''s passion deep E''er sung to thy rich- chorded bass? |
10596 | Was she gracious or refusing? |
10596 | Was the song a ballad of a lady fair, Saved from deadly peril by a bold corsair, Or a song of battle and a flying foe? |
10596 | What are all my struggles worth, Since I''ve lost my key? |
10596 | What can you say If I confess I lost my heart? |
10596 | What cometh, who can tell, When morning breaks? |
10596 | What do you mean? |
10596 | What does she care for your despair, Striving peace from your life to hurl? |
10596 | What dream- wrought castles, as night''s clouds dispel, Shall raise their sun- kissed towers upon the lea? |
10596 | What friends shall clasp my hand in fond farewell? |
10596 | What if I answered in whispers low, Begged that she would not say me nay, Asked if my love she did not know, What if I did? |
10596 | What if I drove extremely slow, Was there not cause enough to stay? |
10596 | What if I kissed her? |
10596 | What makes those big tears standing there?" |
10596 | What save these can set the lyre- strings ringing: Love and death? |
10596 | What ships shall rise from out the misty sea? |
10596 | What things else in maiden spirit springing? |
10596 | What thoughts else in God, the world forthbringing? |
10596 | What words else in all the preacher saith? |
10596 | When the light of day comes o''er me, What have I but flunks before me? |
10596 | Where''s Belinda? |
10596 | Where''s Dorothy?" |
10596 | Which rose were you part of? |
10596 | Which? |
10596 | Which? |
10596 | Who blames me, pray? |
10596 | Who can my sound good sense gainsay If I confess I lost my heart? |
10596 | Who helps across de street de gals, But furriners? |
10596 | Who in de caucus has der say, Who does de votin''''lection day, And who discovered U.S.A., But furriners? |
10596 | Who is the bride I lead to church? |
10596 | Why do n''t you like the sleeves? |
10596 | Why longer wait their sweets to share? |
10596 | Why, who but Dorothy? |
10596 | Will ye stand aside, sir? |
10596 | With footsteps flying? |
10596 | Wonder if you''d like to see Her I loved in fifty- three? |
10596 | Would you change this for Surrey? |
10596 | Ye''ll no fret ye mair the noo, Wull ye, sea? |
10596 | Ye''ll no stop yer clatt''rin''din? |
10596 | Yes? |
10596 | You say she ca n''t love if she laughs all the time? |
10596 | _ Brunonian._~Which?~ Blonde or brunette? |
10596 | _ Four- Leaved Clover._~Philosophy.~ Shall I grieve because a maid Swore to love me-- failed to do it? |
10596 | _ I''m glad they did n''t have it in New York, Are n''t you? |
10596 | _ University of California Magazine._"_ Whence all these verses?" |
10596 | _ Wellesley Magazine._~As Toll.~ Lovely Mabel, were you dreaming? |
10596 | _ Wesleyan Literary Monthly._~Love and Death.~_ Love and death_ is all of poets''singing, What sounds else can stir the heavenly breath? |
10596 | _ Will Congress try To introduce new silver laws?_ Do n''t laugh! |
10596 | _ Williams Literary Monthly._~Lizy Ann.~"My darter?" |
10596 | _ You''ve seen the Fair, Of course?_ They''re listening, Jack. |
10596 | away are gone,-- Her Lenten part,-- Does Cupid blunt his darts upon A stony heart? |
10596 | can we, Now death shows him the certainty, Now he has won his peace thro''pain, Wish him back to the doubt again? |
10596 | have you looked o''erhead From lawns where lazy hammocks swing And seen such bird- throats lent a wing? |
10596 | now she''s flown,_ couleur de rose_, With, one might hint( but who would dare?) |
10596 | would it dare tell of_ that_? |
10596 | you do n''t think that will do? |
10596 | ~"When? |
10596 | ~A Ballade of College Girls.~ What do the dear girls learn nowadays, At all the colleges where they go? |
10596 | ~A Reward of Merit.~ The father asked:"How have you done In mastering ancient lore?" |
10596 | ~A Thief''s Apology.~ I stole a kiss!--What could I do? |
10596 | ~And the Hammock Swung On.~"A is the maid of winning charm; B is the snug, encircling arm; How many times is A in B?" |
10596 | ~Comfort.~ With pipe and book, an old armchair, A glowing hearth, what need I care For empty honors, wealth or fame? |
10596 | ~Jacqueminot.~ Are you filled with wonder, Jacqueminot, Do you think me mad that I kiss you so? |
10596 | ~Logic.~ Say, does Fact or Reason err, And, if they both err, which the more? |
10596 | ~The Conversion.~ She told him surely''twas not right To smoke a pipe from morn to night"Indeed,"cried he,"what would you, dear? |
10596 | ~The Critic.~"Are_ you_ a LAMPOON man? |
10596 | ~The Echo from the 17th.~ Who builds de railroads and canals, But furriners? |
10596 | ~To an Imaginary One.~ Say, darling, do you love me true? |
10596 | ~Vindication.~ Pray, why do maidens ever stand beneath The mistletoe? |
10596 | ~What the Wild Waves Said.~ Do you hear the ocean moaning, Ever moaning sad and low? |
10596 | ~When Morning Breaks.~ When morning breaks, what fortune waits for me? |
10596 | ~Who Knows?~ If when the day has been sped with laughter, Mirth and song as the light wind blows, A sob and a sigh come quickly after-- Who knows? |
20406 | Here you sit, Sivard, my foster- brother; will you lend me your good sword for your honour? 20406 Hold your tongue,"said Thorkell;"does the fool think he can give life to a man when his doom is set? |
20406 | Signild, my sister, where got you the golden rings on your hand? |
20406 | What counsel shall we now take? |
20406 | What will you do? |
20406 | Which of you was it that thought it convenient to burn me in my house? |
20406 | Will you promise me quarter? |
20406 | ); the luck of Hermelin(? |
20406 | --"And how shall I bring to your hands the head of Sivard? |
20406 | At last Bolli said:"Mother, will you tell me one thing? |
20406 | Do you not remember how I was assailed and beset at our home- coming? |
20406 | Hedin confesses his vanity to Helgi, and is forgiven, Helgi saying,"Who knows but the oath may be fulfilled? |
20406 | Hogni begs them to let the creature go,--"Why should we have to put up with his squalling?" |
20406 | It has been in my mind to ask you, who was the man you loved best?" |
20406 | Kjartan says to Bolli:"Will you try your swimming against this townsman?" |
20406 | Kjartan spoke, and said to Bolli:"Kinsman, are you willing to take this faith of the king''s?" |
20406 | Says Kjartan:"Seemed the king to you to have no threats for those that refused to accept his will?" |
20406 | Skapti said:"That is something for a man to be proud of; but what do you think of the three, and how are they each of them in courage?" |
20406 | The Duke saw them and began to sigh, and his lady questioned him:--"Ah, my Lord Duke, why do you ponder thus? |
20406 | The authors of that romantic school, if ever they talked shop, may have asked one another,"Where do you put your Felon Red Knight? |
20406 | The creed of Maldon is that of Achilles:[5]"Xanthus, what need is there to prophesy of death? |
20406 | The townsman said:"It may make some difference to know with whom you have been matched; why do you not ask?" |
20406 | The townsman said:"You are a good swimmer; are you as good at other sports as at this?" |
20406 | The_ Teseide_ is the first of the solemn row of modern epics;"reverend and divine, abiding without motion, shall we say that they have being?" |
20406 | Then said Kolbein:"Is there no man here remembers Snorri Sturluson? |
20406 | Then says the stranger:"Who may this man be?" |
20406 | They may be epic in character, in a general way, but how many of them have a claim to the title in its eminent and special sense? |
20406 | What was an author to do when his hero died in his bed, or survived all his feuds and enmities? |
20406 | Where do you put your doing away of the Ill Custom? |
20406 | Where else is there anything like it, for sincerity and for thinness? |
20406 | Will you prefer a paltry legal quibble to the plain open justice of the case?" |
20406 | [ Footnote 76: Li cuens Guillaumes li comença à dire:--Diva, vilain, par la loi do nt tu vives Fus- tu a Nymes, la fort cité garnie? |
20406 | _ Maldon_, l. 45_ sq._,"Hearest thou what this people answer? |
20406 | it is not like a gentleman to try to take in an old man like me; how could you be beaten?" |
20406 | or when a feud could not be wound up in one generation? |
20406 | or your tournaments?" |
20406 | por quoi ne te repenz De ces simples lasses destruire? |
20406 | where are your oaths that you swore? |
20406 | why have I not a little habergeon of my own? |
20406 | why is your head shaved?" |
20526 | Alone? |
20526 | And flit like the butterfly, without volition or effort? 20526 And that is?" |
20526 | And why not the sailor''s health, too? |
20526 | But if fictitious letters are so seldom anything but tiresome, is this because''the age of letter writing is past?''... 20526 By the way, how did you young people happen to make this wonderful discovery?" |
20526 | Have you heard the news? |
20526 | In the first place, then, what is, and what is_ not_, a short story? 20526 Is the man thinking what he will do when he is a widower?" |
20526 | Shall I tell the secret of yours? 20526 Surely you do n''t think I murdered her?" |
20526 | The Lady, or the Tiger? |
20526 | Then you are going toward Vermont? |
20526 | Well, truants, where have you been all this time? 20526 What is it, mother?" |
20526 | What news? |
20526 | What will you have, gentlemen? |
20526 | When will you be back? |
20526 | [ 14] The surest test of a usable plot is,Is it natural?" |
20526 | Does he ever really find it? |
20526 | Frank R. Stockton:"Amos Kilbright;""The Lady, or the Tiger?" |
20526 | Have you done so?" |
20526 | I said one day, about five months after she had come home...."You will know some time, Cicely,"she answered...."Why ca n''t you tell me now?" |
20526 | In"The Legend of Sleepy Hollow,"Irving thus describes the hero(? |
20526 | Is not the kindred of a common fate a closer tie than that of birth? |
20526 | Most of Stockton''s stories are of this type: notably his"The Lady, or the Tiger?" |
20526 | Not a soul would ask,''Who was he? |
20526 | Now, frankly, do you care to read further? |
20526 | Now, what should an old woman wish for, when she can go but a step or two before she comes to her grave? |
20526 | See?" |
20526 | Shall I put these feelings into words?" |
20526 | Stockton did otherwise in"The Lady, or the Tiger?" |
20526 | What are they?" |
20526 | Wherefore, may I ask?" |
20526 | Whither did the wanderer go?'' |
20526 | Who has not heard their name? |
20526 | Who knows but I may take a glimpse at myself and see whether all''s right?" |
20526 | Why not call it"The Orbs of Heaven"?'' |
20526 | Why not give the tale direct, in the character of the old farmer? |
20526 | You know that big gate, about a mile this side of Mr. Denham''s? |
20526 | You wo n''t go west now, will you, Guy?" |
20526 | [ Footnote 12:"Have the Plots Been Exhausted?" |
20526 | [ Footnote 13:"Have the Plots Been Exhausted?" |
20526 | had she a premonition of her awful death? |
10865 | But if the audience happens to misread the playwright''s design, and form exaggerated and irrational expectations? |
10865 | What is the scene,asks M. Sarcey-- here I translate literally--"which you expect, you, the public? |
10865 | Where have I seen this story before? |
10865 | ***** If an abstract theme be not an advisable starting- point, what is? |
10865 | ***** What is to be said of the possibilities of blank verse as a dramatic medium? |
10865 | ***** What, then, is the essence of drama, if conflict be not it? |
10865 | A Julian, or an Attila, or a Savanarola, or a Cromwell?" |
10865 | A character? |
10865 | A situation? |
10865 | And does not this description apply very closely to the part played by another great protagonist-- Othello to wit? |
10865 | And have we not here, perhaps, a clue to one of the most frequent and essential meanings of the word"dramatic"? |
10865 | And how did he"make"it? |
10865 | And why? |
10865 | And, secondly, in what sense can we, or ought we to,"choose"one? |
10865 | And, stranger still, how comes it that so many people are willing to sit at the feet of these instructors? |
10865 | Another point to be considered is this: are Othello and Lear really very complex character- studies? |
10865 | Are there not three courses open to a penniless woman in our social system-- marriage, wage- earning industry, and wage- earning profligacy? |
10865 | Are there, in modern drama, any admissible soliloquies? |
10865 | Are they, indeed, conscious at all? |
10865 | Are we plucking the heart out of her mystery? |
10865 | Are you defending Sardou, or attacking him?" |
10865 | B. Fagan, entitled_ Under Which King?_ offers another small instance of the same nature. |
10865 | But a person more immediately concerned is Robert de Chantemelle, the only son of the house-- will he also accept it quietly? |
10865 | But do we therefore account the skeleton man''s noblest part? |
10865 | But have they given us any insight into her psychology? |
10865 | But how are the heroine and the audience to be assured of the fact? |
10865 | But is Ophelia essential, or merely auxiliary? |
10865 | But is this a reasonable demand? |
10865 | But what is the final, triumphant proof of the theorem? |
10865 | But what would be its practical use to the artist, the craftsman? |
10865 | But where, then, was the use of presenting it? |
10865 | Can it be doubted that Shakespeare had in his mind the rhythm marked by this act- division? |
10865 | Can not we make the specific processes of a murderess''s mind clearer to ourselves and to our audiences?" |
10865 | Can we say the same of a great play? |
10865 | Designing to entrap the robber, what did he do? |
10865 | Do they not rather emerge unbidden from the vague limbo of sub- consciousness?" |
10865 | Do you mean it-- from your inmost heart? |
10865 | Do you think I could sleep? |
10865 | Does he, or does he not, give us in the first act sufficient insight into his story? |
10865 | ELLIDA(_ Gazes at him awhile, as if speechless_): Is this true-- true-- what you say? |
10865 | ELLIDA: In freedom-- and on my own responsibility? |
10865 | Have we not here, then, the distinction between character- drawing and psychology? |
10865 | Hindemarsh?" |
10865 | How can you tell what road you ought to take until you know where you are going?" |
10865 | How comes it that so many people-- and I among the number-- who could not write a play to save their lives, are eager to tell others how to do so? |
10865 | How comes it, then, that there is a constant demand for text- books of the art and craft of drama? |
10865 | How does_ The Merchant of Venice_ open? |
10865 | How had he"prepared"it? |
10865 | How is one to give concentration and distinction to ordinary talk, while making it still seem ordinary? |
10865 | How often, at the end of a first act, does one turn to one''s neighbour and say,"Are Edith and Adela sisters or only half- sisters?" |
10865 | How was his death to be made, not a foregone conclusion, a mere conventional suicide, but the culminating moment of the tragedy? |
10865 | How will Sir Peter receive her excuses? |
10865 | How, then, do we distinguish a dramatic from a non- dramatic crisis? |
10865 | Hélène a widow, and Philippe austere-- what harm can Gotte possibly do? |
10865 | If that does n''t make them sit up, what will?'' |
10865 | If the audience is not to be conceived as ignorant, how much is it to be assumed to know? |
10865 | In the first place, is the architectural metaphor a just one? |
10865 | Is it consistent with the usual and desirable time- limits of drama? |
10865 | Is the death- scene of Cleopatra undramatic? |
10865 | Is the_ Indian Girl_ to sail in spite of it?" |
10865 | Is there, or ought there to be, any analogy between a drama and a finely- proportioned building? |
10865 | LETCHMERE: Qualified? |
10865 | M. Sarcey does not tell us what his interlocutor replied; but he might have said, like the hero of_ Le Réveillon_:"Are you sure there is no mistake? |
10865 | MIRABELL:"Have you any more conditions to offer? |
10865 | Many a play would have remained unwritten if the author had asked himself,"Is there a sufficient obstacle between my two lovers?" |
10865 | May we not say that the dramatic quality of an incident is proportionate to the variety[7] and intensity of the emotions involved in it? |
10865 | Messrs. Hichens and Fagan, for example, might have asked themselves-- or each other--"Are we getting beneath the surface of this woman''s nature? |
10865 | Mrs. Dane: Ca n''t you understand why I have hidden it? |
10865 | Mrs. Warren( passionately): What''s the use of my going to bed? |
10865 | Or a story? |
10865 | Or can we establish a distinction between the two ideas? |
10865 | Or take, again, Ibsen''s_ Ghosts_--in what valid sense can it be said that that tragedy shows us will struggling against obstacles? |
10865 | Or the Banquet scene in_ Macbeth_? |
10865 | Or the pastoral act in_ The Winter''s Tale_? |
10865 | Ought the playwright, at an early stage in the process of each act, to have the details of its scene clearly before him? |
10865 | Ought we, then, to despise it because of the element it has in common with the picture- poster situation of preposterous melodrama? |
10865 | Où est la_ scène à faire_?" |
10865 | Rebecca herself puts it to him:"How can you believe me on my bare word after to- day?" |
10865 | Renshaw, do you imagine that there is no autumn in the life of a profligate? |
10865 | Responsibility? |
10865 | Reverting, now, to the domain of pure craftsmanship, can it be said that"the art of the theatre is the art of preparation"? |
10865 | Shall it be a Phaedra, or a Semiramis, or a Sappho, or a Cleopatra? |
10865 | Shall she speak that word, or shall she not? |
10865 | Sir Daniel pricks up his ears:"We? |
10865 | Sir Daniel: Your uncle? |
10865 | Some people may exclaim:"Why should the dramatist concern himself about his audience? |
10865 | The judicious playwright will often ask himself,"Is it the actual substance of this scene that I require, or only its repercussion?" |
10865 | The question for him, therefore, is: at what moment of the crisis, or of its antecedents, he had better ring up his curtain? |
10865 | The question is: at what stage of the process of composition ought this visualization to occur? |
10865 | The question now arises: ought a theme, in its abstract form, to be the first germ of a play? |
10865 | Then Hélène asks:"What o''clock is it?" |
10865 | Thereupon she addresses him to this effect:"Has it occurred to you to wonder how I got into your friend''s rooms? |
10865 | This is the bare fact: how is it to be conveyed to the child''s parents and to the audience? |
10865 | This theorem having been stated, what is the first obligatory scene? |
10865 | To whose door has not Destiny come in the disguise of a postman, and slipped its decree, with a double rat- tat, into the letter- box? |
10865 | Turning now to the_ Oedipus_--I choose that play as a typical example of Greek tragedy-- what sort of unity do we find? |
10865 | Very often, when the curtain falls on a first or a second act, one says,"This is a fairly good act in itself; but whither does it lead? |
10865 | Vivie: Why not? |
10865 | Was Sarcey right in assuming such a compulsion to be a constant and dominant factor in the playwright''s craft? |
10865 | Was it necessary to inflict on us all that talk about the fox that plays havoc in the garden? |
10865 | We know from the outset that one of two sisters- in- law is unfaithful to her husband, and the question is-- which? |
10865 | What about bed? |
10865 | What are we to say, for example, of Cleopatra, or of Shylock, or of Macbeth? |
10865 | What device, then, does Ibsen adopt to this end? |
10865 | What do we care about his ideas on love, on metempsychosis, on friendship, etc.? |
10865 | What do we imply, then, when we complain that, in a given character, no development has taken place? |
10865 | What do we mean by tension? |
10865 | What else is Ben Jonson''s_ Bartholomew Fair_? |
10865 | What else is Schiller''s_ Wallensteins Lager_? |
10865 | What have we to do with that mischievous beast? |
10865 | What interest can we take in a situation turning on such contrivances? |
10865 | What is a"curtain"; and how can it be avoided? |
10865 | What is a"curtain"; and how should it be led up to? |
10865 | What is character? |
10865 | What is it that he has done? |
10865 | What is it, then, that they have in mind? |
10865 | What is the artistic profit of letting the imagination play around a problem which merely baffles and repels it? |
10865 | What is the characteristic of a fine piece of architecture? |
10865 | What is the common quality of themes, scenes, and incidents, which we recognize as specifically dramatic? |
10865 | What is the essence of Shakespeare''s achievement in this marvellous passage? |
10865 | What is the use of that long story about the cactus with a flower that is unique in all the world? |
10865 | What is the_ erregende Moment_? |
10865 | What is the_ scène à faire_? |
10865 | What practical lessons can we now deduce from this examination? |
10865 | What shall I do? |
10865 | What should we know of_ The School for Scandal_ to- day, if it consisted of nothing but the Screen Scene and two laborious acts of preparation? |
10865 | What was the reason of this? |
10865 | What will Lady Teazle have to say when she is discovered where she has no business to be? |
10865 | What will come of it?" |
10865 | What will the effect be on the future conduct of both husband and wife? |
10865 | What will they say to each other? |
10865 | What, in the first place, do we mean by a"theme"? |
10865 | Where is the conflict in_ As You Like It_? |
10865 | Where shall I go to find the chosen words, the words of pure gold, of diamonds, the immaculate words that are worthy of us? |
10865 | Where, for instance, is the struggle in the_ Agamemnon_? |
10865 | Where, then, are we to seek for the fundamental constituent in dramatic interest, as distinct from mere curiosity? |
10865 | Who''s we?" |
10865 | Whose face has not blanched as he took in its import, almost without reading the words? |
10865 | Whose hand has not trembled as he opened a letter? |
10865 | Whose heart has not sickened as he heard the postman''s footstep pass his door without pausing? |
10865 | Why are people possessed with the idea that the art of dramatic fiction differs from that of narrative fiction, in that it can and must be taught? |
10865 | Why did Ibsen not do so? |
10865 | Why do they exist at all? |
10865 | Why has Providence blessed M. Dupont with"three fair daughters and no more"? |
10865 | Why have I not done so? |
10865 | Why should it be tabu on the stage? |
10865 | Why should not this scene have occurred in the first act? |
10865 | Why trouble us with that dahlia- root, which M. Caussade''s neighbour has thrown over the garden wall? |
10865 | Why, I would fain know, should our stage- picture of life be falsified by the banishment of the postman? |
10865 | Why, then, should we expect or demand a sordid squabble which can lead to nothing? |
10865 | Will the sword of Damocles fall?" |
10865 | Would it have been-- or may it some day prove to be-- possible to transfer this"well- made"drama of real life bodily to the stage? |
10865 | [ 1] Has the conception of the peripety, as an almost obligatory element in drama, any significance for the modern playwright? |
10865 | [ 1] It may be asked whether-- and if so, why-- the theory of the obligatory scene holds good for the dramatist and not for the novelist? |
10865 | [ 1] What, then, is the excuse for such a discussion as is here attempted? |
10865 | [ Footnote 5:"Are the first beginnings of imaginative conception directed by the will? |
10865 | how shall I say it to you? |
10865 | or, in more general terms,"between my characters and the realization of their will?" |
10865 | or,"Did you gather what was the villain''s claim to the title?" |
10865 | second, what do we, or ought we to, mean by"psychology"? |
10865 | the other asks,"Why?" |
10865 | what is to come of it all?" |
10865 | why am I maudling on like this to myself out loud? |
11717 | Cibber-- Cibber-- who be Cibber? |
11717 | Hath your Royal Highness ever seen this Cibber act? |
11717 | Have you brought the sawdust and tar for embalming? 11717 He steps up to Downs, the prompter, and cry''d,''Zounds, Downs, what sucking scaramouch have you sent on there?'' |
11717 | I hate to have a page dragging my train about,she used to cry, with a pout of the pretty mouth;"why do n''t they give Porter those parts? |
11717 | LADY T. Sure I do n''t understand you now, my lord; what ill company do I keep? 11717 Lady T. And do n''t you think a husband under the same obligation? |
11717 | Lady T. Before I know the question? 11717 Lady T. Lord, my Lord, what can I possibly do at home? |
11717 | Lady T. What do you mean? 11717 Lady T. Why, whom would you have her please? |
11717 | Lady T. You insist upon truth, you say? 11717 Lord T. And when they fly wild about this town, madam, pray what must the world think of''em then? |
11717 | Lord T. Do n''t you think, madam, some ladies notions are full as extravagant? |
11717 | Lord T. How, madam, is any woman under less restraint after marriage than before it? 11717 Lord T. Now then recollect your thoughts, and tell me seriously why you married me? |
11717 | Lord T. Pshah-- have I power, madam, to make you serious by intreaty? 11717 Lord T. What does my sister, Lady Grace, do at home? |
11717 | Lord T. Why, madam, if you wo n''t hear of them, how can I ever hope to see you mend them? 11717 Rather a cynical remark, is n''t it?" |
11717 | [ A] Time has avenged the actress for this slight; who, excepting the student of theatrical history, remembers Gildon? 11717 ''Tis all grist that comes to his mill, and what cares he whether that grist representMacbeth"or canine drama? |
11717 | *****"Where in the name of goodness have you all been?" |
11717 | A New Woman? |
11717 | A pretty pert air that-- I''ll humour it-- what''s the matter, child-- are you not well? |
11717 | A pretty picture, was it not? |
11717 | An actress at home? |
11717 | And Barton Booth? |
11717 | And Lady Betty Modish? |
11717 | And Millamant and Romeo? |
11717 | And Oldfield, of what did she think as she gazed into the rounded face of Mr. Congreve, or listened to the merry wit of her devoted liege? |
11717 | And if the actress was thus deified or spiritualised, who drained his glass more fervently than did Arthur Maynwaring? |
11717 | And the women: what of them? |
11717 | And was it not almost three o''clock in the morning before I was able to come to myself again? |
11717 | And when Lady Townley, all graces and ribbons and laces, enters on the scene my lord meekly asks:*****"Going out so soon after dinner, madam?" |
11717 | And who could quarrel with his scepticism? |
11717 | And who was the gratified Centlivre? |
11717 | Are matters so much better now that we can afford to laugh at the incongruity? |
11717 | Are not its colours-- albeit bold and merciless-- tinged with the redeeming hue of naturalness? |
11717 | Are we ourselves exacting where the Thespian is concerned? |
11717 | Ask him how he came by it? |
11717 | Ay, since they will set up for our knowledge, why should not we for their ignorance? |
11717 | But might not his house be oftener full if the auditors were oftener pleas''d? |
11717 | But pray,''says he,''you that are a critic, is the play according to your dramatic rules, as you call them? |
11717 | But the tragedy is forgotten, and why seek to resurrect those once- beloved characters? |
11717 | But whither does distraction lead me to talk of charms? |
11717 | But you are sure these other ladies suspect not in the least that I know of their coming? |
11717 | But, dear madam, what grounds have you for that idle story? |
11717 | But, madam, do n''t you hear what the town says of the jilt, Flirt, the men liked so much in the Park? |
11717 | CHAPTER VII NANCE AT HOME"Home?" |
11717 | Can all the trappings or equipage of a king or hero give Brutus half the pomp and majesty which he receives from a few lines in Shakespeare?" |
11717 | Come, madame, will your ladyship give me leave to end the difference? |
11717 | Could all those shrieks, those swoonings, that rising falling bosom, be constrained? |
11717 | Dead and gone? |
11717 | Did I say so? |
11717 | Did not I give you ten, then fifteen, now twenty shillings a week, to be sorrowful? |
11717 | Did she give it to you, my lord? |
11717 | Did the ghost of poor, dead Farquhar ever arise before her, the reminder of a day when love was younger and passion stronger? |
11717 | Do you suppose this is a principle the men of sense will admire you for? |
11717 | Do you think I wou''d offer such an odious fancy''d thing to anybody I had the least value for? |
11717 | Do you wonder that Nance only contrived to get the plain- spoken Leonora? |
11717 | Does it not seem strange to apply the dear old English noun, so redolent of peace, and quiet, and privacy, to the feverish life of a mummer? |
11717 | Dost thou always hurry back to so attractive a one, thou patronising theatre- goer? |
11717 | Exaggeration did we say? |
11717 | Finally the author of the"Apology"said:"Are you not every day complaining of your being over- labour''d? |
11717 | Had not Anne as gentle blood as that which coursed through the veins of many a lady of rank? |
11717 | Half a crown a day to attend my decease, and dost thou reckon it to me?" |
11717 | Has anything put thee out of humour, love? |
11717 | Have you ever any pleasure at home? |
11717 | Have you the hangings and the sixpenny nails, and my lord''s coat of arms?" |
11717 | He was faithful to Mistress Farquhar unto the end, but who shall say that he had forgotten the old days which began so fairly at the Mitre Tavern? |
11717 | His Royal Highness, upon this accident( was it the Prince of Wales, afterwards George II?) |
11717 | How could there be? |
11717 | How is it possible? |
11717 | How many Whigs and Tories have changed their parties, when their good or bad pretentions have met with a check to their higher preferment?" |
11717 | How many plays in vogue at present will be read with pleasure at that distant period? |
11717 | How much of the vintage of 1898 will stand, equally well, the uncorking process if applied in a century or two from now? |
11717 | How then, sir? |
11717 | If he was surprised, therefore, that Oldfield could act the high- born woman of fashion, the"lady of condition,"who shall blame him? |
11717 | If tradition is to be believed( and what siren is more comfortable to hearken unto than tradition?) |
11717 | Is Lady Betty gone too? |
11717 | Is he not her husband, George of Denmark, and the father of all those children whom she never has succeeded in rearing to man''s, or woman''s, estate? |
11717 | Is the man distracted? |
11717 | Let me not burst in ignorance; but tell Why thy canoniz''d bones, hearsed in death, Have burst their cerements? |
11717 | Much that he gives us in his"General History of the Stage"is only gossip, yet what is there more fascinating than tittle- tattle about players? |
11717 | Must not a man be a vain coxcomb now, to think this creature follow''d one? |
11717 | Must she not have shivered when she entered her house in Lower Grosvenor Street for the last time? |
11717 | My Lord Foppington, have you a mind to your revenge at piquet? |
11717 | Nance Oldfield? |
11717 | Nay, nay, none of your parting ogles-- will you go? |
11717 | Othello''s wrath and Juliet''s woe? |
11717 | Pray, sir, what is there so remarkable about that? |
11717 | Puzzle are not still inculcated? |
11717 | Religious? |
11717 | Shall we close our eyes and choose one at random? |
11717 | She of thy blood? |
11717 | Should your people in tragedy always talk to be understood? |
11717 | Since the slightness of the thing may let you bestow it without any mark of favour, shall I beg it of your ladyship? |
11717 | Sir Peter''s whims and Timon''s gall? |
11717 | Strange, is it not, that the wife who could be so full of constancy, and all the other virtues, previously lived a notoriously loose existence? |
11717 | That he felt so keenly the disgrace(?) |
11717 | That thou dead corse again in complete steel Revisit''st thus the glimpses of the moon, Making night hideous?" |
11717 | The Cardinal, surprised at the unexpected cessation, asked him if a string was broke? |
11717 | The rake, the cynic and the loosely- moraled women were still abroad in the land( have we quite done with them even yet? |
11717 | They played cards, often for highly respectable(?) |
11717 | Was he not the son of genteel parents living in the North of Ireland, and did he not receive a polite education at the University in Dublin? |
11717 | Was not I as cross as the Devil, all the night after? |
11717 | Was not I forc''d to get company at home? |
11717 | Watching me? |
11717 | Well, what have we? |
11717 | Were these sons less grieved when they found that their mother had left them the major part of her fortune? |
11717 | What Nation upon Earth besides our own But by a loss like ours had been undone? |
11717 | What cared Mr. Rich for Thespis or for art? |
11717 | What colour, what reason had you for it? |
11717 | What d''ye think on''t, eh?" |
11717 | What did you say, my lord? |
11717 | What does the Oldfield''s success mean to the Captain? |
11717 | What mattered it if the actor, as Pope related, wore a long wig and flowered gown? |
11717 | What may this mean? |
11717 | What of the belles of the Bath? |
11717 | What of this remarkable comedy? |
11717 | What was that? |
11717 | What''s the first excellence in a lawyer? |
11717 | What''s the second? |
11717 | What''s the third? |
11717 | When I ask''d him where were his actors, and in what manner he intended to proceed? |
11717 | Where the wild humours they portrayed For laughing worlds to see and know? |
11717 | Who can read the speech with which young Hamlet accosts him without trembling? |
11717 | Who could have been more self- assertive than this eighteenth century belle?] |
11717 | Who could love such an unhappy relict as I am? |
11717 | Who is she? |
11717 | Why are you not( said I) where you know you only should be? |
11717 | Why deck''d with all that land and sea afford, Why Angels call''d, and angel- like adored?" |
11717 | Why did he not practice what he preached? |
11717 | Why the sepulchre, Wherein we saw thee quietly inurn''d, Hath op''d his ponderous and marble jaws To cast thee up again? |
11717 | Why, really, madame, upon second view, it has not extremely the mode of a lady''s utensil: are you sure it never held anything but snuff? |
11717 | Why, therefore, should not the preservers of perfidious Albion suggest the aroma of a lamb pasty? |
11717 | With fine language? |
11717 | With how much ease would such a director have brought them to better order? |
11717 | Yet what can give a better picture of old stage life than these quaint and often eloquent records of the past? |
11717 | You ungrateful scoundrel, did not I pity you, take you out of a great man''s service, and shew you the pleasure of receiving wages? |
11717 | [ A query-- if the theatres were patronised only by those who looked solely at the stage, what would be the size of the audiences?] |
11717 | [ Illustration: BARTON BOOTH] Who was this"flying fair"that the swain pursued with such despairing fervour? |
11717 | [ What a picturesque, old- fashioned oath, is it not? |
11717 | _[ Reading the names of the visitors who have called to leave their condolences]_ Mrs. Frances and Mrs. Winnifred Glebe, who are they?" |
11717 | and can the Muse forbear O''er Oldfield''s grave to shed a grateful tear? |
11717 | for what? |
11717 | in woolen? |
11717 | is the puppy mad? |
11717 | is this your way of reasoning? |
11717 | said I, is that all? |
11717 | what must be done? |
11717 | who are you? |
11717 | why a you not vark, Tom?'' |
11717 | your servant, madame, I am a very indifferent judge, you know: what, is it with sleeves? |
12753 | Ah, Tristram,said she,"why wilt thou not fight in this tournament? |
12753 | Ah, well,said Balin, drawing a long breath,"is that indeed the man? |
12753 | Ah,said Sir Bleoberis, amazed;"hast thou then met with them? |
12753 | Alas,said King Arthur,"what hast thou done, Merlin? |
12753 | Art thou that proud knight,said the duke,"who was ready to fight with me? |
12753 | Cometh this desire from himself? |
12753 | Cometh this prayer from thee or from thy son? |
12753 | Fair damsel,answered he,"know ye not that the knight ye love is of all knights the noblest in the world, Sir Lancelot du Lake? |
12753 | Fair damsel,said he"whither lead ye this knight?" |
12753 | For what cause? |
12753 | God be with thee, fair damsel,quoth the king;"what desirest thou of me?" |
12753 | Have I not seen thee,said the king,"at King Arthur''s court? |
12753 | How are ye named? |
12753 | How sayest thou? |
12753 | I consent not,cried Sir Tristram,"for who is here that will give rightful judgment? |
12753 | In whose name shall I greet him? |
12753 | Is he Sir Lancelot? |
12753 | Know ye not then yourself? |
12753 | Madam,said he,"what would you have me do? |
12753 | May I not take the damsel with me I brought hither? |
12753 | May I, then, stand as a proved knight? |
12753 | Now God be thanked,cried he;"but who is he that standeth yonder by himself, and seemeth not a prisoner?" |
12753 | Now tell me, fair sir, at the least,said the squire,"why may this shield be never borne except its wearer come to injury or death?" |
12753 | Now, fair lady,said King Arthur,"what say ye?" |
12753 | Now, mercy,said Sir Gawain, who sat by King Arthur;"what knight is that who doth such marvellous deeds of arms? |
12753 | Ride ye after the knight with the white hound? |
12753 | Seest thou yonder blue pavilion? |
12753 | Shall I not call him traitor,cried she,"who hath worn another lady''s token at the jousting?" |
12753 | Shall I not therefore rather meet them? |
12753 | Shall we be afraid of a dream- reader? |
12753 | Sir Lionel,he cried,"will ye slay your brother, one of the best knights of all the world? |
12753 | Sir knight,said King Arthur,"for what cause abidest thou here? |
12753 | Sirs,said Sir Galahad,"what adventure hath brought ye here?" |
12753 | Take ye no warning from those knights that hang on yonder trees? |
12753 | That is false,said King Arthur;"how shouldst thou know? |
12753 | Then am I sure of thy aid,said the king,"on Tuesday now next coming?" |
12753 | Then wherefore cometh he in such array? |
12753 | Thou hast defeated us, in truth,replied Sir Sagramour,"and on the faith of knighthood I require thee tell us thy right name?" |
12753 | Thou sayest well,replied Sir Lancelot;"but who is he thou hatest so above all others?" |
12753 | Well,said the queen,"is this your answer, that ye refuse us all?" |
12753 | Well,said they,"will ye die?" |
12753 | What are ye, and whence come ye? |
12753 | What art thou,said King Arthur, starting up all pale,"that tellest me these tidings?" |
12753 | What be they? |
12753 | What damsel is that? |
12753 | What hast thou to do between me and my wife? |
12753 | What is her name, and who is he that hath besieged her? |
12753 | What is thy husband''s name? |
12753 | What is thy lord''s name, lady? |
12753 | What is thy lord''s name? |
12753 | What is thy name? |
12753 | What is thy name? |
12753 | What is thy name? |
12753 | What knight is that? |
12753 | What meaneth this? |
12753 | What noise is this? |
12753 | What saw ye, sirs? |
12753 | What saw ye? |
12753 | What sawest thou? |
12753 | What tidings at Camelot? |
12753 | What tidings? |
12753 | What were their names? |
12753 | What will ye do, Sir knight? |
12753 | What will ye do? |
12753 | What wilt thou? |
12753 | Where dwelleth your lady? |
12753 | Where had ye this adventure? |
12753 | Where is Sir Lancelot? |
12753 | Where is the maiden? |
12753 | Where shall I meet thee again? |
12753 | Where,said Sir Galahad,"shall we find a girdle for it?" |
12753 | Wherefore askest thou that? |
12753 | Wherefore make so much sorrow now? |
12753 | Wherefore so smitest thou my horse, foul dwarf? |
12753 | Wherefore? |
12753 | Whither fleest thou? |
12753 | Who are ye, son? |
12753 | Who is he? |
12753 | Who is he? |
12753 | Who is it? |
12753 | Who is it? |
12753 | Who then is he? |
12753 | Why have ye slain my hounds? |
12753 | Why hidest thou thy name, dear lord, from me? |
12753 | Why ridest thou over here without my leave? |
12753 | Why say ye so? |
12753 | Why should I not pass over them? |
12753 | Why should I not,said he,"since for that cause I came here?" |
12753 | Why should I not? |
12753 | Why should ye do so? |
12753 | Why,said Sir Lionel,"will ye hinder me and meddle in this strife? |
12753 | Why,said Sir Tristram,"may not a Cornish knight do well as any other? |
12753 | Wilt thou be warrant for safe conduct, if I go with thee? |
12753 | Wilt thou for ever deem me coward? |
12753 | Wilt thou match those two knights,said the damsel to Sir Beaumains,"or return again?" |
12753 | Ye be welcome,said he,"but whence are ye?" |
12753 | And presently he said within himself,"If I now throw this sword into the water, what good should come of it?" |
12753 | And taking his horse, he rode after him, and said,"Know ye not me, Beaumains?" |
12753 | And the damsel rode on before Sir Beaumains, and said to him,"Why dost thou follow me, thou kitchen boy? |
12753 | And the damsel went into the ship with them, and spake to Sir Percival:"Sir Percival, know ye not who I am?" |
12753 | And they cried to him,"Whence comest thou?" |
12753 | And when he saw him he was filled with joy, and lighted from his horse, and ran to him and said,"Fair brother, when came ye hither?" |
12753 | And when he was unarmed, the damsel said to her lady,"Madam, shall we abide here this night?" |
12753 | Anon came out the knight- hermit, whose name was Sir Baldwin, and asked,"Who is this wounded knight?" |
12753 | Anon she said,"Where is my youngest son, Sir Gareth? |
12753 | Anon the bishop gave him the sacrament, and when he had received it with unspeakable gladness, he said,"Who art thou, father?" |
12753 | Anon, they sent him a fair damsel, bearing his supper, who asked him,"What cheer?" |
12753 | Are there no bigger knights in King Arthur''s court? |
12753 | Art thou called of men a noble knight, and wouldest betray me for a jewelled sword? |
12753 | At noon the damsel came to him and brought his dinner, and asked him as before,"What cheer?" |
12753 | At that a knight came out of the pavilion and said,"Fair knight, why smote ye down my shield?" |
12753 | But Sir Lionel answered, with an angry face,"What vain words be these, when for you I might have been slain? |
12753 | But no sooner was he brought to him than he asked in a loud voice, for what cause he was thus dragged there? |
12753 | But tell mefirst, what soughtest thou thus here alone, and of what land art thou?" |
12753 | But the damsel cheered the Green Knight, and said,"My lord, why wilt thou let a kitchen knave so long stand up against thee?" |
12753 | But thereupon the damsel was full wroth, and said,"Shall I have a kitchen page for this adventure?" |
12753 | But when he told her she must leave her earthly thoughts, she answered,"Am I not an earthly woman? |
12753 | Did not even Shakespeare calmly give cannon to the Romans and suppose every continental city to lie majestically beside the sea? |
12753 | Hearing him cry, Sir Balin fiercely turned his horse, and said,"Fair knight, what wilt thou with me? |
12753 | How say ye?" |
12753 | I am yet a feeble knight, and but for thee had been a dead man now: what wouldest thou I should do? |
12753 | I pray thee tell me who gave thee this sword? |
12753 | Is it not time to stay this slaying? |
12753 | Of what court art thou?" |
12753 | On the morrow, came one of the ladies to Sir Gawain, and talked with him, saying,"Sir knight, what cheer?" |
12753 | On the twenty- fifth day he opened his eyes and saw those standing round, and said,"Why have ye waked me? |
12753 | See ye not what people we have lost in waiting on the footmen, and that it costs ten horsemen to save one of them? |
12753 | Sir Sagramour looked haughtily at Sir Tristram, and made mocking of his words, and said,"Fair knight, be ye a knight of Cornwall?" |
12753 | Sir knight of the Round Table, dost thou withdraw thee from so young a knight? |
12753 | So, on the morrow, King Arthur was armed and well horsed, and asked Sir Damas,"When shall we go to the field?" |
12753 | Soon he found means to ask one who sat near him,"Is there not here a knight whose name is Garlon?" |
12753 | The king being surprised at this, said,"Damsel, wherefore art thou girt with that sword, for it beseemeth thee not?" |
12753 | Then all men asked,"Know ye him, lord?" |
12753 | Then came the queen to him and said,"Sir Lancelot, will ye leave me thus at this high feast?" |
12753 | Then he asked Sir Lancelot,"Was it from this maid who tendeth you so lovingly ye had the token?" |
12753 | Then said King Arthur,"What is thy first request?" |
12753 | Then said King Arthur,"Who are ye, thus groaning and complaining?" |
12753 | Then said Sir Balin le Savage,"What knight art thou? |
12753 | Then said Sir Gawain,"Know ye that knight?" |
12753 | Then said Sir Lancelot, very sad at heart,"Fair maid, what would ye that I should do for you?" |
12753 | Then said Sir Lavaine, marvelling greatly,"How know ye my lord''s name, fair sister?" |
12753 | Then said he to a page who stood without,"What noise is this I hear?" |
12753 | Then said he-- keeping his own visor down--"I pray thee tell me of what country art thou, and what court?" |
12753 | Then said the damsel,"See you that ivory horn hanging upon the sycamore- tree? |
12753 | Then said the king to the damsel Linet,"Why cometh not the Lady Lyones to visit her knight, Sir Gareth, who hath had such travail for her love?" |
12753 | Then said the old man,"Why art thou so sad?" |
12753 | Then the hermit gazed long on Sir Lancelot, and hardly knew him, so pale he was with bleeding, yet said he at the last,"Who art thou, lord?" |
12753 | Then the king asked Sir Gareth whether he would have that lady for his wife? |
12753 | Then turning to Merlin, Arthur said,"Prophesy now, O Merlin, shall Sir Tor become a worthy knight, or not?" |
12753 | Then was Sir Lancelot passing heavy of heart, and said to Sir Bernard and Sir Lavaine,"What shall I do for her?" |
12753 | Then, looking at them both as they lay grovelling on the grass, Sir Tristram said,"Fair knights, will ye joust any more? |
12753 | Then, turning again to the magicians, Merlin said,"Tell me now, false sycophants, what there is underneath that pool?" |
12753 | Therewith the damsel came to King Arthur, and saluted him, and he saluted her, and said,"Lady, what sword is that the arm holdeth above the water? |
12753 | What sin is it to love the noblest knight of all the world? |
12753 | What would you with that beast?" |
12753 | When Sir Marhaus and Sir Tristram were thus left alone, Sir Marhaus said,"Young knight Sir Tristram what doest thou here? |
12753 | When he awoke he saw a woman standing by him, who said to him right fiercely,"Sir Percival, what doest thou here?" |
12753 | When they had saluted each other, Sir Lancelot said,"Fair damsel, knowest thou where any adventures may be had in this country?" |
12753 | When they were landed came a squire and asked them,"Be ye of King Arthur''s court?" |
12753 | Whereat Sir Ector, turning to young Arthur, asked him--"How gottest thou the sword?" |
12753 | Why give ye not your mercy unto them that ask it? |
12753 | Why hast thou slain those children and that fair lady? |
12753 | Will ye soon again speak shame of Cornish knights?" |
12753 | With that came the Black Knight to the damsel, and said,"Fair damsel, hast thou brought this knight from Arthur''s court to be thy champion?" |
12753 | and from whom thou hadst it?" |
12753 | but who may escape the doom of God?" |
12753 | cried Sir Lancelot,"why have ye betrayed me?" |
12753 | cried Sir Lavaine,"what shall I do now?" |
12753 | cried out King Arthur, rising up in wrath;"why hast thou done this, shaming both me and my court? |
12753 | cried out the lady;"will ye take away my hound from me by force?" |
12753 | dear brother, why have ye tarried so long, for your wound hath taken cold?" |
12753 | hast thou slain this good knight by thy crafts? |
12753 | mine own dear father and my brother, why kneel ye thus to me?" |
12753 | my lord King Arthur, what shall become of me now ye have gone from me?" |
12753 | said King Arthur,"where is that knight? |
12753 | said Sir Lancelot;"but what is your brother''s name?" |
12753 | said Sir Tristram;"art thou a knight at all?" |
12753 | shouted he,"who taught thee to distress fair ladies thus?" |
12753 | to joust with any knight that passeth by? |
12753 | what do ye here, within these borders?" |
12753 | what dost thou here? |
12753 | what shall that aid me?" |
12753 | why wilt thou slay this lady? |
12753 | will ye have never done? |
12753 | wilt thou joust?" |
12753 | would ye give the ancient sceptre of this land unto a boy born none know how?" |
12478 | ''A- t- on vu de ma part le roi de Comagène?'' |
12478 | ''Comment est- il possible,''she asks,''qu''on craigne la fin d''une vie aussi triste?'' |
12478 | ''La scène est à Buthrote, ville d''Epire, dans une salle du palais de Pyrrhus''--could anything be more discouraging than such an announcement? |
12478 | ''What do you do here?'' |
12478 | --How is it that words of such slight import should hold such thrilling music? |
12478 | --Know''st thou not ghosts to sue? |
12478 | --how, face to face with splendours such as these, could one question for a moment the purity of the gem from which they sparkled? |
12478 | A devil-- or perhaps an angel? |
12478 | Ai- je donc élevé si haut votre fortune Pour mettre une barrière entre mon fils et moi? |
12478 | All poetry, to be poetry at all, must have the power of making one, now and then, involuntarily ejaculate:''What made him think of that?'' |
12478 | Alzire was not; was she not wedded to the wicked Gusman? |
12478 | Am I not sufficiently unhappy in not having been born among you?'' |
12478 | And what shoulder, and what art, Could twist the sinews of thy heart? |
12478 | And when thy heart began to beat, What dread hand? |
12478 | And, if he did that, of what consequence were the blemishes of his personal character? |
12478 | Are we to dismiss it, as Mrs. Macdonald dismisses it, as merely''psychological''? |
12478 | Art thou after all the tyrant of one world and the father of another? |
12478 | But how has it happened that the judgment of so many critics has been so completely led astray? |
12478 | But if, instead of asking what a writer is without, we try to discover simply what he is, will not our results be more worthy of our trouble? |
12478 | But is there not an enchantment? |
12478 | But then, to use Johnson''s own phrase, could anything be of less''relation to the purpose''? |
12478 | But there is something alarming too; was she perhaps right after all? |
12478 | But what are the conclusions which Mrs. Macdonald builds up from these foundations? |
12478 | But what is it that makes the English reader fail to recognise the beauty and the power of such passages as these? |
12478 | But who cares about what Milton had to say? |
12478 | But who could conceive of such a rhythm being ever applicable to the meaning and sentiment of these sentences from the_ Hydriotaphia_? |
12478 | But, after all, who can doubt that it is at Oxford that Browne himself would choose to linger? |
12478 | But, by this time, what has happened to the second brother? |
12478 | But, if we turn to the contemporaneous pages of Stendhal, what do we find? |
12478 | Could anything be more ingenious, or more neatly put, or more obviously true? |
12478 | Could anything drag more wretchedly than the_ dénouement_ of_ Cymbeline_? |
12478 | Could he himself have said? |
12478 | Dans le fond des forêts alloient- ils se cacher? |
12478 | Did his mind, obsessed and overwhelmed by images of death, crave at last for the one thing stranger than all these-- the experience of it? |
12478 | Did she feel that the time was coming when she should talk no more? |
12478 | Did some obscure instinct urge him forward, at this late hour, to break with the ties of a lifetime, and rush forth into the unknown? |
12478 | Do you blame me? |
12478 | Do you suppose that I am ignorant of all that a Wise Man might urge against my Conduct, my Tales, and my Language? |
12478 | Does Sir Walter mean to assert that Blake is, in this sense too,''consistent''? |
12478 | Does not History show that there have been great Rulers who were good Men? |
12478 | EMIRE: Que pouvez- vous, Madame? |
12478 | Entre Sénèque et vous disputez- vous la gloire A qui m''effacera plus tôt de sa mémoire? |
12478 | Est- ce une illusion? |
12478 | Et repoussées par qui? |
12478 | Everyone, it is true, has heard of him; but who has read him? |
12478 | For such benefits as these who would not be grateful? |
12478 | For what is the principle which underlies and justifies the unities of time and place? |
12478 | From such a state of affairs, what interesting and romantic developments may not follow? |
12478 | Grimm had four months at his disposal; he was undisturbed in his own house; why should he not have burnt the draft page by page as it was copied out? |
12478 | Had Madame d''Epinay merely intended to write a_ roman à clef_? |
12478 | Had he perhaps, in some secret corner of his brain, into which even he hardly dared to look, a premonition of the future? |
12478 | Has he entered into the springs of the sea? |
12478 | Has he forgotten_ Lamia_? |
12478 | Have the Europeans alone the right to please thee? |
12478 | He can express alike the beautiful tenderness of love, and the hectic, dizzy, and appalling frenzy of extreme rage:--... What shall I do? |
12478 | He can not help wondering:''Whether great- ear''d persons have short necks, long feet, and loose bellies?'' |
12478 | He offers one an exquisite dish of whipped cream; one swallows down the unsubstantial trifle, and asks impatiently if that is all? |
12478 | He walked out twice; was he still happy? |
12478 | Her future was uncertain; she had grown scornful of the West-- must she return to it? |
12478 | Her talk, full of the trenchant nonchalance of those days, was both amusing and alarming:''My dear Hester, what are you saying?'' |
12478 | How many among Apollo''s pew- renters, one wonders, have ever read Beddoes, or, indeed, have ever heard of him? |
12478 | How many have so much as glanced at the imposing volumes of_ L''Esprit des Moeurs_? |
12478 | How many persons now living have travelled through_ La Henriade_ or_ La Pucelle_? |
12478 | How wide, one would like to know, was Milton''s''view of humanity''? |
12478 | If Men were told the Truth, might they not believe it? |
12478 | If the Opportunity of Virtue and Wisdom is never to be offer''d''em, how can we be sure that they would not be willing to take it? |
12478 | If there are ghosts to raise, What shall I call, Out of hell''s murky haze, Heaven''s blue pall? |
12478 | In such a world, why should poetry, more than anything else, be mysterious? |
12478 | In this land of faery, is it right to neglect the goblins? |
12478 | In this world of dreams, are we justified in ignoring the nightmares? |
12478 | Is all this evidence to be put on one side as of no account? |
12478 | Is it not thus, then, that we should imagine him in the last years of his life? |
12478 | Is it possible to test a poet''s greatness by the largeness of his''view of life''? |
12478 | Is not that tremendous? |
12478 | Is that wonderful''trente''an''épithète rare''? |
12478 | Is there no way for men to be, but women Must be half- workers? |
12478 | Is there not a flow of lovely sound whose beauty grows upon the ear, and dwells exquisitely within the memory? |
12478 | Is there not a vision? |
12478 | Is this Caliban addressing Prospero, or Job addressing God? |
12478 | It is amusing to note the exclamations which rise to the lips of Voltaire''s characters in moments of extreme excitement--_Qu''entends- je? |
12478 | It is not, of course, as delightful as Boswell; but who re- opens Boswell? |
12478 | It was clear that Necker was not a fool, and yet-- what was it? |
12478 | Je veux savoir son français; que m''importe sa morale? |
12478 | Look at the World at this moment, and what do we see? |
12478 | MOSES All this may be true, my good Friends; but what are the Conclusions you would draw from your Raillery? |
12478 | MR. LOKE Are not you too hasty? |
12478 | May we not guess that he breathed in there, in his boyhood, some part of that mysterious and charming spirit which pervades his words? |
12478 | More complete, perhaps; but would it be more convincing? |
12478 | Ne l''osez- vous laisser un moment sur sa foi? |
12478 | Ne le verrai- je plus qu''à titre d''importune? |
12478 | Or has he walked in the search of the depth? |
12478 | Or let us listen to the voice of Phèdre, when she learns that Hippolyte and Aricie love one another: Les a- t- on vus souvent se parler, se chercher? |
12478 | Or, if he did, would more of him be visible than the last curl of his full- bottomed wig, whisking away into the outer darkness? |
12478 | Où suis- je? |
12478 | Poets, no doubt, were all very well in their way, but really, if they began squabbling with noblemen, what could they expect? |
12478 | Pourquoi, sans Hippolyte, Des héros de la Grèce assembla- t- il l''élite? |
12478 | Pourquoi, trop jeune encor, ne pûtes- vous alors Entrer dans le vaisseau qui le mit sur nos bords? |
12478 | Que dis- tu? |
12478 | Que faisiez- vous alors? |
12478 | Que vois- je? |
12478 | Racine''s way is different, but is it less masterly? |
12478 | Réellement la trouvez- vous belle? |
12478 | The East alone was sympathetic, the East alone was tolerable-- but could she cut herself off for ever from the past? |
12478 | The answer is obvious: why should we not suppose that the writers were not liars at all, but simply novelists? |
12478 | The book is published; but then how can he appear in Paris until he is quite sure of its success? |
12478 | The hero adored by Alzire had, it is true, perished; but then what could be more natural than his resurrection? |
12478 | The type may be a little faded, and the paper a little yellow; but what of that? |
12478 | There can be only one reply: Why_ should_ he? |
12478 | These discrepancies are curious: how can we account for such odd differences of taste? |
12478 | This is a pretty picture, but is it true? |
12478 | Virtue, in fact, is not only virtuous, it is triumphant; what would you more? |
12478 | Voltaire leapt up from the pillows:''Ne savez- vous pas,''he shouted,''que les scorbutiques meurent l''oeil enflammé?'' |
12478 | Vous l''ai- je confié pour en faire un ingrat, Pour être, sous son nom, les maîtres de l''état? |
12478 | Was he, in the depths of his consciousness, aware that this was so? |
12478 | Was it his very coldness that subdued her? |
12478 | Was there ever a more incongruous company, a queerer trysting- place, for Goneril and Desdemona, Ariel and Lady Macbeth? |
12478 | What could have induced such a man, the impatient reader is sometimes tempted to ask, to set himself up as a judge of poetry? |
12478 | What did she lose by it? |
12478 | What ghostly knowledge of eternal love? |
12478 | What has he to do with Shakespeare, with Dante, with Sophocles? |
12478 | What inducement could Bolingbroke have had for such liberality towards a man who had betrayed him? |
12478 | What is it, then, that makes the difference? |
12478 | What mattered it that her marriage vow had been sworn before an alien God? |
12478 | What more could anyone desire? |
12478 | What need is there to say that the noble Peruvians did not hesitate for a moment? |
12478 | What shall it profit a man, one is tempted to exclaim, if he gain his own soul, and lose the whole world? |
12478 | What traces do such passages as these show of''serene self- possession,''of''the highest wisdom and peace,''or of''meditative romance''? |
12478 | What were his true intentions? |
12478 | What wheels? |
12478 | What, then, is the ordinary doctrine? |
12478 | Who can tell? |
12478 | Who can wonder that he was misunderstood, and buffeted, and driven mad? |
12478 | Who can wonder that, in his agitations, his perplexities, his writhings, he seemed, to the pupils of Voltaire, little less than a frenzied fiend? |
12478 | Who lives, but thou and I, My heavenly wife?... |
12478 | Who will match them among the formal elegances of Racine?'' |
12478 | Who would not seek to make them known to others, that they too may enjoy, and render thanks? |
12478 | Why does it sometimes matter to us a great deal, and sometimes not at all, whether virtue is rewarded or not? |
12478 | Why is this? |
12478 | Why should a happy ending seem in one case futile, and in another satisfactory? |
12478 | Why should he not continue indefinitely telling us about''Old Salisbury''and''Old Madagascar''? |
12478 | Why should he stop? |
12478 | Why? |
12478 | Will not this hypothesis fit into the facts just as well as Mrs. Macdonald''s? |
12478 | Would Racine find a place in the picture at all? |
12478 | _ Où sont les neiges d''antan_? |
12478 | and what dread feet? |
12478 | boiling In leads or oils? |
12478 | burning bright''; and who can fail to perceive the difference? |
12478 | can it be true that thou art but the Deity of another universe? |
12478 | fires? |
12478 | of Athalie-- who can forget these things, these wondrous microcosms of tragedy? |
12478 | racks? |
12478 | still linger, perhaps, in the schoolroom; but what has become of_ Oreste_, and of_ Mahomet_, and of_ Alzire_? |
12478 | what flaying? |
12478 | what old or newer torture Must I receive, whose every word deserves To taste of thy most worst? |
14684 | ''Did ye see th''pris''ner afther his arrest?'' 14684 ''Has he been sane iver since?'' |
14684 | ''Ill- mated couples?'' 14684 ''What d''ye propose to do to stand this here testymony off?'' |
14684 | A sinitor:''What''s it used f''r?'' 14684 A what?" |
14684 | An''how was it all this time in dear old Mud Center? 14684 An''why shud we be taxed? |
14684 | Ar- re ye crazy fr''m th''heat? |
14684 | But what do I know about it, annyhow? 14684 But, annyhow, what diff''rence does it make whether th''navy goes to th''Passyfic or not? |
14684 | Cud a lady do that, I ask ye? 14684 D''ye suppose Dorgan, th''millyonaire, wud consint to it? |
14684 | D''ye think he''ll iver sarve out his fine? |
14684 | D''ye think th''soul can be weighed? |
14684 | Did he pay th''fine? 14684 Do I blame th''ladies? |
14684 | Do n''t ye iver take dhrugs? |
14684 | Do n''t ye think Rosenfelt has shaken public confidence? |
14684 | I wondher what we''d do if all thim infeeryor races shud come at us together? |
14684 | Since th''picnic? |
14684 | Thin what happens? 14684 Was th''sojer under th''influence?" |
14684 | Well, what''s to be done about it? 14684 Well,"said Mr. Hennessy,"what diff''rence does it make? |
14684 | What ailed him? |
14684 | What ar- re these Turkish athrocities I''ve been r- readin''about? |
14684 | What ar- re ye talkin''about? |
14684 | What books does he riccomind? 14684 What did they do?" |
14684 | What did they give him? |
14684 | What do ye raaly think? |
14684 | What does it all mean? |
14684 | What else? 14684 What kind iv a game is goluf?" |
14684 | What other nicissities, says ye? 14684 What''s it about?" |
14684 | What''s it all about? |
14684 | What''s that? |
14684 | Which wud ye rather be, famous or rich? |
14684 | Why do they call it rile an''ancient? |
14684 | Will ye go? |
14684 | Will ye have th''avenin''paper or a little iv th''old stuff off th''shelf? |
14684 | Will ye iver cross th''ocean again? |
14684 | Wud ye iver have thought''twas possible that anny wan in this counthry cud even talk iv war with thim delightful, cunning little Oryentals? 14684 ''Ai n''t we intilligent enough?'' 14684 ''An''th''beautifully jooled ladies?'' 14684 ''An''was n''t th''food fine?'' 14684 ''An''who''s that shakin''dice at th''bar?'' 14684 ''Ar- re ye guilty or not guilty?'' 14684 ''As guest or landlord?'' 14684 ''But,''says I,''why shud anny wan so young an''beautiful as ye want to do annything so foolish as to vote?'' 14684 ''Did ye not glide noiselessly through th''wather?'' 14684 ''Dock,''says he,''is it annything fatal? 14684 ''Doctor, what expeeryence have ye had among th''head cures?'' 14684 ''Does that hurt?'' 14684 ''Forward or backward?'' 14684 ''Have ye had a good manny desprit cases to- day?'' 14684 ''Have ye th''watch with ye?'' 14684 ''How am I goin''to get off there?'' 14684 ''How ar- re ye goin''to defind this crook?'' 14684 ''How do ye usually get off a movin''thrain?'' 14684 ''I''m wan iv th''best- timpered men in th''wurruld, am I not? 14684 ''Ill- mated couples? 14684 ''Is it war to hook me father''s best hat that he left behind whin he bashfully hurrid away to escape th''attintions iv Europeen sojery?'' 14684 ''Is it war to shoot my aunt?'' 14684 ''Is robbery war?'' 14684 ''Ladies,''says he,''what can I do f''r ye?'' 14684 ''My Gawd, has my clint no rights in this coort?'' 14684 ''No, what?'' 14684 ''Not th''notoryous shepherd iv that name?'' 14684 ''Now, how does th''sentence r- read?'' 14684 ''Sane?'' 14684 ''Was he in anny way bug befure th''crime?'' 14684 ''Was that war or was n''t it?'' 14684 ''Was there iver a frindship that was annything more thin a kind iv suspension bridge between quarrels?'' 14684 ''Were they all so bad, thim men that I''ve been brought up to think so gloryous?'' 14684 ''What d''ye suppose he''s like, Osman?'' 14684 ''What d''ye want, mum?'' 14684 ''What did that indicate to ye?'' 14684 ''What is it ye want, oh head iv lignum vity?'' 14684 ''What is th''number iv this here cannon- ball express?'' 14684 ''What was he doin''?'' 14684 ''What''s this man charged with?'' 14684 ''What, that little runt? 14684 ''Where''s th''pris''ner?'' 14684 ''Where?'' 14684 ''Whin was that?'' 14684 ''Who''s that man with th''plug hat just comin''out iv th''gamblin''joint?'' 14684 ''Who''s there?'' 14684 ''Why,''says she,''do ye drink this dhreadful poison?'' 14684 ''Wud it be agreeable to me Dimmycratic collague to put both feather beds an''his what''s- ye- call- it in th''same item?'' 14684 ''Ye have n''t sthruck?'' 14684 Ai n''t she goin''to have a grab at annything? 14684 Am I much sunburnt? |
14684 | An''afther all, is n''t it a good thing? |
14684 | An''who did it? |
14684 | Ar- re there anny other kinds? |
14684 | Ar- re there anny two people in th''wurruld that ar- re perfectly mated?'' |
14684 | Ar- re ye goin''to stand that?'' |
14684 | Ar- re ye ready? |
14684 | Besides are n''t we th''hope iv th''future iv th''instichoochion iv mathrimony? |
14684 | Blankets? |
14684 | But I say to thim:''Ladies, is not this a petty revenge on ye''er best frinds? |
14684 | But d''ye think ye give me enough? |
14684 | But does he have to import it fr''m abroad, I ask ye? |
14684 | But if there is such a lot iv this monsthrous iniquity passin''around, do n''t Virginya get none? |
14684 | But what care I? |
14684 | D''ye find th''larned counsel that''s just been beat climbin''up on th''bench an''throwin''his arms around th''judge? |
14684 | D''ye know Sinitor Aldhrich? |
14684 | D''ye suppose a sultan or a king that knew his thrade wud iver let anny wan take a snap- shot iv him? |
14684 | DRUGS"What ails ye?" |
14684 | Did Congress pay anny attintion to us? |
14684 | Did n''t ye know they were? |
14684 | Did ye iver hear iv Alexander th''Gr- reat or Napoleon Bonyparte havin''a snap- shot took iv him? |
14684 | Did ye miss me? |
14684 | Do they look as though they were sufferin''? |
14684 | EXPERT TESTIMONY"What''s an expert witness?" |
14684 | Flannel shirts? |
14684 | Has annything happened since I wint away on me vacation? |
14684 | Has this man iver been outside iv an aviary? |
14684 | Have a cigar?" |
14684 | He wo n''t, but will they? |
14684 | How about th''mother iv prisidents? |
14684 | How can honest citizens an''good women be brought up on such infamyous docthrine? |
14684 | How d''ye expict to get on in th''wurruld th''way ye are goin''? |
14684 | How do we know he is n''t broke like th''rest iv us?'' |
14684 | How many ladies ar- re there in ye''er Woman''s Rights Club?'' |
14684 | How will we get at him?'' |
14684 | How will ye''er honor have th''accursed swine''s flesh cooked f''r breakfast in th''mornin''when I''m through fannin''ye?'' |
14684 | I wondher will they put him away if he do n''t pay ivinchooly? |
14684 | I wudden''t f''r all th''wurruld have th''wurrud go through th''ward:''Did ye hear about Dooley''s soul?'' |
14684 | If ye think th''highest jooty iv citizenship is to raise a fam''ly why do n''t ye give a vote to th''shad? |
14684 | Is he recallin''th''happy days at Barnum''s befure brutal man sunk an ice pick into him an''dhrove him to th''park? |
14684 | Is n''t there enough American spunk? |
14684 | Is our spunk industhree dead? |
14684 | Is she alive, is she dead, does she iver dhream iv him as she ates her hay an''rubs her back agin th''bars iv her gilded cage? |
14684 | Is there no pathrite to demand that we be proticted against th''pauper spunk iv Europe? |
14684 | Is there some wan still there that he thinks iv? |
14684 | No, nor ye''er cousin, nor ye''er aunt? |
14684 | No, nor ye''er sister Katie? |
14684 | PANICS"Have ye taken ye''er money out iv th''bank? |
14684 | Sane, says ye? |
14684 | Sugar? |
14684 | THE JAPANESE SCARE"Did ye go to see th''Japs whin they were here?" |
14684 | Th''coort:''How much money have ye got?'' |
14684 | Think of that, will ye? |
14684 | Threaty rights, says ye? |
14684 | WORK"Ye have n''t sthruck yet, have ye?" |
14684 | What ar- re ye talkin''about? |
14684 | What books does he advise, says ye? |
14684 | What d''ye think ends th''free list? |
14684 | What diff''rence does it make? |
14684 | What do I know about annything? |
14684 | What does he say? |
14684 | What else? |
14684 | What good wud a mustard plasther be again this fatal epidemic that is ragin''inside iv ye? |
14684 | What have they done to injye this impeeryal suffrage that we fought an''bled f''r? |
14684 | What is he like? |
14684 | What is war annyhow?'' |
14684 | What opporchunity has he had, tell me? |
14684 | What was it, says ye? |
14684 | What was there f''r this joynt intelleck an''this household tyrant to talk about? |
14684 | What''ll ye take?" |
14684 | What''s th''difference between that kind iv tistymony an''perjury?" |
14684 | What''s that? |
14684 | What, f''r example, says ye? |
14684 | Where was I? |
14684 | Who do I blame for this wan? |
14684 | Who is it that improves men an''makes thim more ladylike, an''thin quits thim, but th''ladies? |
14684 | Who tells time be a clock? |
14684 | Who wud feed th''goold fish while he was gone? |
14684 | Who wud make a confirmed reader th''cashier iv a bank? |
14684 | Who''ll want to have his soul weighed? |
14684 | Who''s th''American consul in Chicago now? |
14684 | Whose pitchers ar- re those ye see in th''advertisemints iv th''tailorman? |
14684 | Why should he? |
14684 | Why shudden''t there be a tax on bachelors? |
14684 | Wo n''t annybody get up? |
14684 | Wo n''t annybody say that they do n''t know annything about annything worth knowin''about? |
14684 | Wo n''t somebody else get up? |
14684 | Wud ye or wud ye not lave ye''er coat in his hands as ye plunged in th''bank? |
14684 | Wudden''t the bear be surprised? |
14684 | Wudden''t the little infants be surprised? |
14684 | Ye do nt? |
14684 | Ye see these panels on th''wall? |
14684 | Ye''er mother does n''t want it, does she? |
14684 | says I? |
21600 | ; Bonaventura, 1221- 1274; Albertus Magnus, 1195- 1280; Thomas Aquinas, 1225?-1274; Duns Scotus, 1270?-1308? |
21600 | ; William of Occam,?-1347; Roger Bacon, 1214- 1292; Petrus Hispanus,?-1277; Raymond Lully, 1235- 1315.] |
21600 | And for original audacity few things surpass Aucassin''s equally famous inquiry,"En Paradis qu''ai- je à faire?" |
21600 | And if to dog- Latin, why not to genuine French, or English, or German? |
21600 | BALLADS? |
21600 | Ballads? |
21600 | Can you match me Virgil in that?" |
21600 | Did not Heinrich von Veldeke"imp the first shoot on Teutish tongues"( graft French on German poetry)? |
21600 | Do they, on the other hand, owe something to models still farther East? |
21600 | Had the still ingenious, though hopelessly effeminate, Byzantine mind caught up the literary style of the visitors it feared but could not keep out? |
21600 | Is there a better song of May and maidens than"So diu bluomen uz dem grase dringent"? |
21600 | Next to the questions of authorship and of origin in point of difficulty come two others--"Which are the older: the prose or the verse romances?" |
21600 | Or are they, as has sometimes been hinted, copies of Western romance itself? |
21600 | Or was it from deliberate invention? |
21600 | PROSE OR VERSE FIRST? |
21600 | Prose or verse first? |
21600 | This heroine exclaims in reference to her father,"He is an old devil, why do you not kill him? |
21600 | Was it from the uncertain"Albinus"? |
21600 | Was it, as Celtic enthusiasts hold, that, living as he did on Severn bank, he was a neighbour of Wales, and gathered Welsh tradition? |
21600 | When one reads Chrestien or another earlier contemporary, Benoît de Sainte- More, the question is,"What can come after this?" |
21600 | When one reads Layamon the happier question is,"What will come after this?" |
21600 | Where did he get these additions? |
21600 | Why do you couple these?" |
21600 | [ Sidenote:_ Ballads?_] As to the ballads, what has been said about those in Portuguese must be repeated at somewhat greater length. |
21600 | and,"Was there a Latin original of the Graal story?" |
21600 | pfligt s''iht ander varwe? |
19226 | Another long month to get over; Will nobody loosen my chain? 19226 Nay, brother of the sod, What part hast thou in God? |
19226 | Oh, where does faithful Gelert roam? 19226 Still it seems to me,"the dog replied,"that there''s something else to do; His ears look rather too long for me, and how do they look to you?" |
19226 | Who''s there, I wonder? |
19226 | ''Twas well she died before.--Do you know If the happy spirits in heaven can see The ruin and wretchedness here below? |
19226 | A dog''s dumb way may not impart The grief that mortals can express, But who shall say that Cæsar''s heart Mourns his beloved king the less? |
19226 | Ah, Keeper of the Portal, If Love be not immortal, If Joy be not divine, What prayer is mine? |
19226 | And do you still remember when We heard the bright- eyed woodcock whistle Down by the rippling, shrub- edged fen? |
19226 | And is this all that is left of you-- One little grave, and a pang to us? |
19226 | And was it fast To a tin pail? |
19226 | And who than Nina more content When she had gained that dreary cell Where lay in helpless dreariment The master loved so long and well? |
19226 | And would I e''er deserve caress, Or be extolled for faithfulness Like my dog here? |
19226 | And would I, reasoning wisely, pronounce you just a beast? |
19226 | Away from me why do you stare So far out in the distance where I am not? |
19226 | But I got tired o''hearin''An''so I ast him, quick,"If you wuz in a- swimmin''Could it go get a stick?" |
19226 | But why dost thou compare thee to a dog In that for which all men despise a dog? |
19226 | Can I find one to guide me so faithful and kind? |
19226 | Do n''t I dream of the partridge I sprung by the log? |
19226 | Do you?" |
19226 | Dream? |
19226 | From certain death I rescued thee: Why strik''st thou me? |
19226 | Give it us straight, now, guv''nor-- what would you have me do? |
19226 | Has it not A claim for some remembrance in the book That fills its pages with the idle words Spoken of man? |
19226 | He comes around a- braggin'', An''when he would n''t quit I said:"What good''s a baby? |
19226 | He loved us all, and none forgot, He guessed whate''er was done or told, Dreamed of adventures free and bold-- For him is there no future lot? |
19226 | He''s thirsty, too,--see him nod his head? |
19226 | How is it that I shiver so? |
19226 | I had a friend; what cared I now For fifty worlds? |
19226 | I have seen her? |
19226 | I wonder, has he such a lumpish, leaden, Aching thing in place of a heart? |
19226 | I''ve watched thee and protected thee: Why strik''st thou me? |
19226 | If dogs were fashioned out of men What breed of dog would I have been? |
19226 | If love is life and thought is mind, And all shall last beyond the years, And memory live in other spheres, My steadfast friend may I not find? |
19226 | Is it amusing? |
19226 | Is that a string Around your tail? |
19226 | Is the worn- out ball you have always near The dearest of all the things held dear? |
19226 | Is there a way to forget to think? |
19226 | It''s simply this-- does he believe in me? |
19226 | My blood flowed on the sand for thee: Why strik''st thou me? |
19226 | Myself forgetting, sought I thee: Why strik''st thou me? |
19226 | Or a cozy rug by a blazing fire? |
19226 | Or a friendly pat? |
19226 | Or a gentle word? |
19226 | Or a sudden race with a truant cat? |
19226 | Or do you see now once again The glen And fern, the highland, and the thistle? |
19226 | Or is the home you left behind The dream of bliss to your doggish mind? |
19226 | PART IV THE DOG''S HEREAFTER_ Oh, Indra, and what of this dog? |
19226 | QUESTIONS Is there not something in the pleading eye Of the poor brute that suffers, which arraigns The law that bids it suffer? |
19226 | Set myself so high above you, As not to know and love you, And toss you but a bone while I shall feast? |
19226 | Spot? |
19226 | Suppose he was n''t trained to hunt, and never killed a rat, And is n''t much on tricks or looks or birth-- well, what of that? |
19226 | Tears for a useless old hunter like me? |
19226 | The dog laughed out, and the horse replied,"Oh, the cutting wo n''t hurt you, see? |
19226 | Then thou wilt beg as I beg thee:-- Why strik''st thou me? |
19226 | There, stow yer palaver a minit; I knows as my end is nigh; Is a cove to turn round on his dog, like, just''cos he''s goin''to die? |
19226 | Think of my Saviour? |
19226 | Think of my soul? |
19226 | WHY STRIK''ST THOU ME? |
19226 | WHY THE DOG''S NOSE IS COLD"What makes the dog''s nose always cold?" |
19226 | We must be fiddling and performing For supper and bed, or starve in the street.-- Not a very gay life to lead, you think? |
19226 | Were those bad boys All after you, With sticks and stones, And tin cans, too? |
19226 | What claim canst thou make good To angelhood?" |
19226 | What could it mean? |
19226 | What did I do with her, eh? |
19226 | What do you care for a beggar''s story? |
19226 | What has your little doggie done? |
19226 | What is the creature doing here? |
19226 | What spirit art thou of?" |
19226 | When we, at last, shall pass away, And see no more the light of day, Will many hearts as vacant mourn-- As truly wish for our return? |
19226 | Where now shall I go, poor, forsaken and blind? |
19226 | Where, by what ways, or sad or glad, Do you fare on alone? |
19226 | Why are you fastened in a frame? |
19226 | Why art thou the last Llewellyn''s horn to hear? |
19226 | Why do I never hear my name? |
19226 | Why have they placed you on the wall, So deathly still, so strangely tall? |
19226 | Why not reform? |
19226 | Why strik''st thou me? |
19226 | Would a juicy bone meet your heart''s desire? |
19226 | Would poor speech prove my soul''s delight, Or ecstasy drive me dumb? |
19226 | Would you like to hear, Madame, what Pierrot''s teeth have done for me? |
19226 | XIX Mock I thee, in wishing weal? |
19226 | You find it strange? |
19226 | You who but yesterday sprang to us, Are we forever bereft of you? |
19226 | You will spoil my looks, you will cause me pain; ah, why would you treat me so? |
19226 | Your actions"automatic,"not"conscious"in the least? |
19226 | _ Shepherd._ Do you see On that high ledge a cross of wood that stands Against the sky? |
19226 | _ Traveler._ Just where the cliff goes down A hundred fathoms sheer, a wall of rock To where the river foams along its bed? |
19226 | little pup, What''s up? |
22351 | Can You Forgive Her? |
22351 | From Thistles-- Grapes? |
22351 | Love or Marriage? |
22351 | Married or Single? |
22351 | What will he do with It? |
22351 | Which is the Heroine? |
22351 | [ 7714] What will He Do with It? |
22351 | ["Mrs. Eiloart"] The Curate''s Discipline From Thistles-- Grapes? |
22351 | _ CAN YOU FORGIVE HER?_ Engravings. |
22518 | Who plucked my choicest flowers? |
22518 | I was somebody-- who? |
22518 | Johnie wants to know where do you now stay Or with whom do you now play, Or where do you roam? |
22518 | The more he had the more he craved, Great God, can his poor soul be saved? |
22518 | Then who shall say so good a fellow Was only leather and prunello? |
13277 | A gentleman? 13277 An- and the police?" |
13277 | And I feeling something grow very fast, here and here( touching throat and breast),"and I say,''_ You_ have nothing to give me? |
13277 | And this? |
13277 | And what,I asked,"did you say to him?" |
13277 | And you stuck awfully last night? |
13277 | But vy not? |
13277 | But,growled my friend,"why could he not be content with the world''s statement? |
13277 | But,persisted Omassa,"you know him, or how could you speak his name?" |
13277 | Damp in the heels? |
13277 | Did you ever? |
13277 | Do n''t you want it? |
13277 | Do you see that stupid dolt over there? 13277 He call me''poor little wave''--why poor little wave-- wave that mean water?" |
13277 | In the heels, said you? 13277 Not sick, with that white face and those poor curdling hands?" |
13277 | Oh,she said, in deep disappointment,"ca n''t you remember me at all-- not at all?" |
13277 | One day,said the warden,"she asked to see me for a moment, and I exclaimed at sight of her,''What is it that''s happened?'' |
13277 | Well,said he,"did you know who that bust was?" |
13277 | What in the devil? |
13277 | What was he like, your Frank? |
13277 | What you think I do for my Frank Sen''s birsday? 13277 What''s his other name?" |
13277 | What,I asked,"did the child mean by getting a smacking last week?" |
13277 | Why not? |
13277 | Why,I went on,"did you not take that money, dear?" |
13277 | Why,they ask,"did he not describe Crown Princess Victoria"( the late Empress Frederick)"at least-- how she looked, what she wore? |
13277 | Will it hold? 13277 Y- e- es, you cross, I see-- but what for?" |
13277 | Y- your w- what? |
13277 | You do so-- but for_ why_? 13277 Your mutter lets you love her yet-- you would dare?" |
13277 | itlies here now, after all these years; but where are you, Semantha? |
13277 | ( Ca n''t you brush your hair up over that thin place? |
13277 | A curl came to the great actor''s lip, then he said inquiringly,"What for?" |
13277 | A large number of writers ask,"What is the greatest difficulty a young actress has to surmount?" |
13277 | A pity? |
13277 | A scene- hand, noticing my amazed face, said,"You do n''t see it, do you?" |
13277 | After a moment she smiled deprecatingly at Mrs. Holmes and whispered:"You forgive me, other day? |
13277 | After due thought I have cast them all together, boiled them down, and reduced them to this,"What is the bane of a young actress''s life?" |
13277 | And Sam wiped his hand on his breeches leg, and, clearing his throat hard, asked"if I''d mind shakin''hands?" |
13277 | And received for answer,"_ What is_ it? |
13277 | And was she a fool, or did she take him for one?" |
13277 | And who had taught her anything? |
13277 | And, by the way, m''child, what in the devil''s name brings yer on the street alone at this hour, say, tell me that?" |
13277 | Are you still dragging heavily through life, or have you reached that happy shore, where hearts are hungry never more, but filled with love divine? |
13277 | As the comedy bit went on, he smiled up at his father, saying audibly,"I like her-- don''t you, papa?" |
13277 | At once the question rose, was it a wax figure or was it not? |
13277 | Barely three nights had passed when Signor Salvini said to his son,"Why does Miss Morris smile at that man''s exit? |
13277 | Besides, could anything new be found for him in a play he has acted for twenty years? |
13277 | But I am asked, Why does he exist? |
13277 | But how to save the approaching death scene from total ruin? |
13277 | But no, this bed was American, and then why was she so heavy? |
13277 | But to answer her instant"Why?" |
13277 | Ca n''t they read? |
13277 | Could an egotist win and keep such affection and gratitude as that? |
13277 | Could it be? |
13277 | Does this poor lady not read her Bible, then? |
13277 | Does this seem a small matter to you? |
13277 | Don''you tink I can ever be von-- eh?" |
13277 | Finally he sighed and remarked:--"She is an actress, your daughter?" |
13277 | G- go by yourself? |
13277 | Get ahead of every one else; do you understand? |
13277 | He beamed with affectionate interest, as he said impressively,"Well, now you know that a bad''stick''generally costs five dollars in this theatre?" |
13277 | He lifted his high silk hat, and with somewhat florid indignation inquired:"My c- hild, was that in- nfamous cur annoying you shust now? |
13277 | He protested she should not walk home alone; she stopped; she spoke,"Will you please allow me to walk home in peace?" |
13277 | He used to say:"The man there? |
13277 | How many do y- you see at this moment, pray, eh? |
13277 | How, one might ask, had this wretch obtained two good husbands? |
13277 | I answered,"do you suppose I would presume to suggest''business''to a Salvini? |
13277 | I cried,"why did you tell him that?" |
13277 | I exclaimed in bewilderment,"where were whose friends? |
13277 | I exclaimed,"how old are you, and how old am I?" |
13277 | I got muddled, and at last I says,"Semantha, hav''yer got no sponds?" |
13277 | I mentioned it to young Salvini, who cried eagerly,"Did you tell my father-- did he see it?" |
13277 | I say mit my husband dat night,''Vill you keek me hard, if you pleas''?'' |
13277 | I went on,"Is mamma here?" |
13277 | I whispered frantically:"What is it? |
13277 | If I make my bed in hell, behold, thou art there also; whither shall I flee from thy presence?" |
13277 | If you are in earnest, you will simply endure the first year,--endure and study,--and all for what? |
13277 | In an instant the great actor felt the broken spell, knew he had lost his hold upon the people-- but why? |
13277 | In another pile of notes the question appears in this guise,"What is the principal obstacle in the way of the young actress?" |
13277 | Is she here? |
13277 | Is there one among you, who, if you had the chance, would care to strike the bread from the hand of one of these? |
13277 | It does not ask what advantage has acting over other professions, over other arts, but"What advantage has it over other occupations for women?" |
13277 | Laugh? |
13277 | Le Moyne_]"You stuck again, did n''t you, Clara? |
13277 | Mr. Daly, white with anger, came behind the scene, gasping out,"Are they utterly mad?" |
13277 | My heart gave a plunge, and I thought: What is it? |
13277 | No? |
13277 | Not for that you come? |
13277 | Not so very hard a day or night, so far as physical labour goes, is it? |
13277 | Now, will you help me out of this awful life? |
13277 | Of whom are you speaking, and why are you so excited?" |
13277 | Oh, what is wrong? |
13277 | Once, I said,"You walk far, signor?" |
13277 | One girl had fallen from our ranks, but what of that? |
13277 | One morning, as her sick- room toilet was completed, Mrs. Holmes said lightly:--"Omassa, who is Frank?" |
13277 | Ought I to point out one other unpleasant possibility? |
13277 | S- say, you''ve got a mother, have n''t you? |
13277 | Say, Semantha, do n''t it dat you like a Kriss- Krihgle present to make to her, eh?'' |
13277 | Shall I take you out there?" |
13277 | She danced about joyously:"Oh, Sam,"she cried,"the lady''s gived me a present, and I ca n''t help myself, can I?" |
13277 | She hav''not com''yed? |
13277 | She looked at them in her wistful way, and then very prettily asked,"Please might she eat one right then?" |
13277 | She looked me brightly in the eyes and answered:"You do? |
13277 | She paused a bit, then in that same slow way she said,"You never, never used that soap after all, Clara?" |
13277 | She seemed dazed; quite distinctly I heard her say"off"to some one in the entrance,"But what''s the matter?" |
13277 | She was evidently on the very verge of frightened tears, and from old habit I stooped down and said to her,"Where''s mamma, dear?" |
13277 | Sin? |
13277 | Sin? |
13277 | Surely she could not see her own_ lip_? |
13277 | That Sen that like your Mr.--Mrs.; you nurse- lady, you Holmes Sen. Ito-- big Japan fight man, he Ito Sen, you unnerstand me, nurse- lady?" |
13277 | The dresses? |
13277 | The man shivered at the cold, but kept his gleaming eyes fastened on her white face,"Well?" |
13277 | The question is, What social conditions exist behind the scenes? |
13277 | The question is,"What chance has a girl in private life of getting on the stage?" |
13277 | The question, then, that has been put so many times is,"Can there be any compatibility between religion and the stage?" |
13277 | Then he spoke rapidly to his son, who translated to me thus:"How have I missed this''business''all these years? |
13277 | There is but the one Salvini, and how can he help knowing it? |
13277 | Those beautiful and trained artists take pleasure in first presenting the style other women are to follow, and yet they share the honour(?) |
13277 | Und she do n''t laugh at my vurk, nieder, eh? |
13277 | What great weight was upon her? |
13277 | What is it?" |
13277 | What is the idea?" |
13277 | What was it about? |
13277 | What you think of_ that_? |
13277 | What you think that big American man do for help me little Japan baby-- with no sense? |
13277 | When the curtain fell, one of them remarked,"I''d like to know what that woman will do in the next few hours?" |
13277 | When the simplest fashionable gown costs$ 125, what must a ball gown with cloak, gloves, fan, slippers and all, come to? |
13277 | While two motherly bodies ask,"What one thing worries an actress the most?" |
13277 | Why add anything to the sight of this?" |
13277 | Why did they permit him to write of himself?" |
13277 | Why had he no reticence? |
13277 | Why not become a lovely composite girl, my friend, Miss Hope Legion, and let me try to speak to her my word of warning, of advice, of remonstrance? |
13277 | Why not, ven he is so goot? |
13277 | Will it hold that beard securely?" |
13277 | Will these few, well- dressed, well- lighted, music- thrilled moments repay you for the loss of home love, home comfort, home stardom? |
13277 | Will they not, then, be sweetly demure on Sunday for the sake of the"picture,"spare their sisters the agony of craving for like beautiful apparel? |
13277 | Will you kindly set us right?" |
13277 | Yes; but what else can you expect? |
13277 | Yet here it was so bright, and she was-- was, where? |
13277 | You hav''not write for room for zat maid?" |
13277 | You have_ no_ reason for come here, you say? |
13277 | [ Illustration:_ Clara Morris in the 1st Act of"Camille"_] But he objected, asking:"Why the deuce he should go out that bitter night? |
13277 | _ CHAPTER XIII THE BANE OF THE YOUNG ACTRESS''S LIFE_ What is the bane of a young actress''s life? |
13277 | _ CHAPTER XV SOCIAL CONDITIONS BEHIND THE SCENES_"What social conditions exist behind the scenes?" |
13277 | _ CHAPTER XVII A DAILY UNPLEASANTNESS_ What is the most unpleasant experience in the daily life of a young actress? |
13277 | _ what_ was it she could faintly see beyond and below her own nose-- was it shadow? |
13277 | and a moment later, flinging the volume from him, he cried:"Where were his friends? |
13277 | and of course you apprehend trouble with Daly? |
13277 | ca n''t you have that man arrested?" |
13277 | did I not tell you it was a common tale? |
13277 | had she not secured this bit of rosy radiance, and might it not in time be added to, until it should incarnadine the whole fabric of her life? |
13277 | is it that you have zee business with zee people in zee box? |
13277 | religious-- you? |
13277 | sin? |
13277 | spoonge? |
13277 | vill dey murder her alreaty?" |
13277 | w''at is that spoonge?" |
13277 | what is the word?" |
13277 | what yer goin''ter do now?" |
13277 | what''s happened to you?" |
13277 | what''s he doing there, at this time, I''d like to know?" |
13277 | where yer goin''to? |
13277 | why in God''s name_ did n''t_ you speak? |
13277 | you come spik to zose people? |
13277 | you vas to be t''ree-- n''est- ce pas? |
13277 | you_ truly_ know dat?" |
22353 | Basil, St. Augustine, St. Gregory, or St. Thomas, that understood well none but one? |
22353 | Puttenham,(?) |
22353 | Thus to mince the matter, we thought to savor more of curiosity than wisdom.... For is the kingdom of God become words or syllables? |
22353 | why should we be in bondage to them if we may be free, use one precisely when we may use another no less fit, as commodiously? |
12326 | ''Ow am I to iron all this, dear? |
12326 | And the end.... How would you like that to come? |
12326 | And the hills are all covered with--"With what, Teddy? |
12326 | And there''s nothing better, after all, is there? |
12326 | And what part do you take? |
12326 | And when are you coming back-- when will the Lyceum be in its rightful hands again? 12326 Any lady''ere of that name?" |
12326 | Are grass or trees white? |
12326 | Are you acting in the theater? |
12326 | Are you affected by adverse criticism? |
12326 | Are you glad to get back? |
12326 | Besides, who would you have play Romeo? |
12326 | But there are, I suppose, other hotels? |
12326 | Ca n''t you see that the author has n''t described me, but only me in''New Men and Old Acres''? |
12326 | Can I think of you otherwise than lovingly? 12326 D''ye suppose he engaged me for my powers as an actor?" |
12326 | Did I give that impression to anyone? 12326 Did he understand_ really_?" |
12326 | Do you mind letting me have this yard as a pattern? |
12326 | Got a good chef? 12326 Has n''t this chicken rather an odd smell?" |
12326 | Have you any instructions? |
12326 | Have you told him? |
12326 | How are the tortoises? |
12326 | How long can I hold them? |
12326 | How would I like that to come? |
12326 | How? |
12326 | I asked him what there was in''Faust''in the matter of appointments, etc., that he would like left out?'' 12326 Is it raining, Terriss?" |
12326 | It''s a land of vulgarity, is n''t it? |
12326 | Looks like it, does n''t it? |
12326 | May I come in? |
12326 | More what? |
12326 | Musicalis a word of praise in music; why not"theatrical"in a theater? |
12326 | My difficulty is this:--Why in the world did not Hero( or at any rate Beatrice on her behalf) prove an''alibi''in answer to the charge? 12326 No, no-- does snow rhyme with''sleep''?" |
12326 | Now who shall arbitrate? 12326 Now, who shall arbitrate?" |
12326 | Oh, father, why did you do that? |
12326 | P.S.--Can you bring some of the Lyceum armor with you, and two hard- boiled eggs? |
12326 | Paper? |
12326 | Pretty flower, is n''t it? |
12326 | Pretty, is n''t it? |
12326 | Snow? |
12326 | Then, why did n''t you do it? |
12326 | They are saying-- what are they saying? 12326 They generally wear_ white_, do n''t they?" |
12326 | Well, are you ready? |
12326 | Well, my dear, what are you doing here? |
12326 | Well, what do you say? |
12326 | What a wonderful life you''ve had, have n''t you? |
12326 | What can this be? |
12326 | What do you mean? |
12326 | What do you want to be private for? |
12326 | What have I got out of it? |
12326 | What parts are you and Polly now playing? 12326 What year was it, Daddy?" |
12326 | What''s the matter with you, Sally? |
12326 | What''s this about a voice? 12326 Where can I get anything at all like it?" |
12326 | Where have you been all these years? |
12326 | Wherein does the superiority lie? |
12326 | Why did Whistler paint him as Philip? |
12326 | Why should we? 12326 Will you be so very kind as to tell me the name of your character and the two Mr. Irving acted so wonderfully in that play? |
12326 | Will you please explain to Tom about that photograph of the family group which I promised him? 12326 Will you put your shoulder to the wheel with us?" |
12326 | Wo n''t you give me a kiss? |
12326 | Would you put the dresses on? |
12326 | You know Schwab, the baker? |
12326 | You know, at all events, that you have charm? |
12326 | Yours is a very old- fashioned hotel, is n''t it? |
12326 | _ Did_ she? |
12326 | _ Who''s there?_"Do give it up,I said. |
12326 | ''Suppose that the fees were rolling in £10 and more a night-- would you rather the play were a failure or a success?'' |
12326 | After he had been floundering about for some time, Henry said:"Terriss, what''s the meaning of that?" |
12326 | Allen_( our prompter):"Whatever be the play,_ I_ must have a hand in it, For wo n''t I teach the supers how to stalk and stand in it? |
12326 | And Walter Montgomery''s Othello? |
12326 | And may I murmur love in dulcet baritone? |
12326 | And shall I lordly hall and tuns of claret own? |
12326 | And so will some one when I am dead and gone write my life? |
12326 | And the armadillos? |
12326 | And what-- er-- what colors are they?" |
12326 | And wo n''t you send me one of yours in private dress? |
12326 | Are n''t we nearly home? |
12326 | At"Where''s your mother?" |
12326 | BITS FROM MY DIARY What is a diary as a rule? |
12326 | But I never mind; for what does it signify? |
12326 | But for my training, how could I have done it? |
12326 | But why should any one be interested in that? |
12326 | By what magic does she triumph without two of the richest possessions that an actress can have? |
12326 | Can any one with a pictorial sense fail to be delighted by their pageantry? |
12326 | Can you tell us nothing of your life in the world?" |
12326 | Could a girl of fourteen play such a part? |
12326 | Could n''t we rehearse_ our_ scenes?" |
12326 | Did all these things make no impression on you? |
12326 | Do you ever think, as I do sometimes, what you have got out of life?" |
12326 | Do you think Rossetti gave up live stock after this? |
12326 | For weeks I had hesitated between Othello''s"Nothing extenuate, nor write down aught in malice,"and Pilate''s"What is truth?" |
12326 | Had the elevated railway, the first sign of_ power_ that one notices after leaving the boat, begun to thunder through the streets? |
12326 | Has there ever been a dramatist, I wonder, whose parts admit of as many different interpretations as do Shakespeare''s? |
12326 | Have you nothing to tell us about your different homes, your family life, your social diversions, your friends and acquaintances? |
12326 | He had a line,"Whose child is this?" |
12326 | He neglected no_ coup de thà © âtre_ to assist him, but who notices the servants when the host is present? |
12326 | He was much attracted by the part of Caliban in"The Tempest,"but, he said,"the young lovers are everything, and where are we going to find them?" |
12326 | He was not boyish; but ought Romeo to be boyish? |
12326 | He wrote and told me that she had said( where Margaret begins to undress):"Where is it going to stop?" |
12326 | Henry said to me once:"What makes a popular actor? |
12326 | His first suggestion when he came out was:"Grass? |
12326 | How am I going to play the Nurse?" |
12326 | How could any woman fall in love with a cad like Melnotte? |
12326 | How did I come by Fussie? |
12326 | How should a mere child be able to decide? |
12326 | How_ can_ the same critic admire both? |
12326 | How_ can_ you get it?" |
12326 | However, if you wo n''t attack it yourself, perhaps you would ask Mr. Irving some day how_ he_ explains it? |
12326 | I blew my nose hard and tried to keep back my tears, but the first reporter said:"Can I send any message to your friends in England?" |
12326 | I did n''t think much of the supper last night; but still-- the beds are comfortable enough-- I am afraid you do n''t like animals?" |
12326 | I never saw such a mournful city, but why should they turn the gas down? |
12326 | I saw"Les Prà © cieuses Ridicules"finely done, and I said to myself then, as I have often said since:"Old school-- new school? |
12326 | I wonder if Henry and I could have done more with it? |
12326 | I wonder if in all the many hundreds of books written on Shakespeare and his plays this point has been taken up? |
12326 | Ideas he had in plenty--"unpractical"ideas people called them; but what else should_ ideas_ be? |
12326 | If he had failed-- but why pursue it? |
12326 | If the course of that love had run smooth, where should I have been? |
12326 | Irving?" |
12326 | Is it possible that I convey that impression when I try to assume the character of a washerwoman or a fisherwoman? |
12326 | Is that what you think I am going to give the public?" |
12326 | It must have been in the spring of 1876 that I received this note:"Will you come in our box on Tuesday for Queen Mary? |
12326 | It was a splendid chance, no doubt, but of what use would it have been to any one who was not ready to use it? |
12326 | It was the oddest sensation when I said"Oh, good Iago, what shall I do to win my lord again?" |
12326 | It was this kind of thing: Where is our friend Irving going? |
12326 | Mary Shaw''s Rosalind was good, and the Silvius( who played it, now?) |
12326 | Mead one night gave a less poetic reading:"Am I mad or_ drunk_? |
12326 | Mr. Irving let me know you would not act, and proposed that I should go later on-- wasn''t that like him? |
12326 | Mrs. Abingdon, according to Charles Reade, who told the story, had just delivered the line,"How dare you abuse my relations?" |
12326 | Must a careful and deliberate opinion_ always_ deny a great man genius? |
12326 | My dear old companion, Boo, who was with me, resented this very much:"How can you say such things to my Nelly?" |
12326 | Naturally, the Bancrofts wanted someone of higher standing, but was I wrong about J. Forbes- Robertson? |
12326 | Now, who is in a position to say what is the Jew that Shakespeare drew? |
12326 | Of course he will say that he has produced the play and all that sort of thing; but what does that matter, if one can only get one hint out of it? |
12326 | See my graceful hands, they''re the things that dignify; All the rest is froth, and egotism''s dizziness-- Have I not played with Phelps? |
12326 | Shall I be robbed of the only experience of my first eight years of life? |
12326 | Shall I find him changed, I wonder, after two years''absence? |
12326 | Shall I study it up, and will you do it with me on tour if possible? |
12326 | She is exotic-- well, what else should she be? |
12326 | So if any one said to me at this point in my story:"And is this, then, what you call your life?" |
12326 | Stoker and Loveday were daily, nay, hourly, associated for many years with Henry Irving; but, after all, did they or any one else_ really_ know him? |
12326 | Tell me at least, this simple fact of it-- Can I beat Terriss hollow in one act of it? |
12326 | Ten who in ears and eyes Match me; they all surmise, They this thing, and I that: Whom shall my soul believe?" |
12326 | The next day Lacy came up to me:"You did n''t really mean that you are going to wear black in the mad scene?" |
12326 | Then the tone in which he asked:"Is dinner ready?" |
12326 | Then, throwing it off, I said:"Pity the poor blind-- what no one here? |
12326 | There was one scene in which I sang"Where are you going to, my pretty maid?" |
12326 | Tradition said that Juliet must give imitations of the Nurse on the line"Where''s your mother?" |
12326 | Trees?" |
12326 | Vulgarity? |
12326 | Was Henry Irving impressive in those days? |
12326 | Was I so rebellious, after all? |
12326 | Was he right after all? |
12326 | Well then, granting that Hero slept in some other room that night, why did n''t she say so? |
12326 | Were we all people of the stage? |
12326 | What I want now is a cloak-- the simplest you have( perhaps the green one? |
12326 | What Martha was ever so good as Mrs. Stirling? |
12326 | What about Taylor at the Home Office, Charles Lamb at East India House, and Rousseau copying music for bread? |
12326 | What are the hills covered with?" |
12326 | What did it matter to me that I was locked in and that my father and mother, with my elder sister Kate, were all at the theater? |
12326 | What does it matter which, so long as it is_ good enough_?" |
12326 | What does this mean? |
12326 | What first impressed me? |
12326 | What is it to say, for instance, that the cardinal qualities of his Prince of Denmark were strength, delicacy, distinction? |
12326 | What makes a great actor? |
12326 | What more do you want?" |
12326 | What more natural than that his mother should give him the chance of exploiting his ideas in London? |
12326 | What more natural than that my father should offer my services? |
12326 | What sort of_ naturalness_ is this of Hamlet''s? |
12326 | What was a stock company? |
12326 | What was the real Henry Irving? |
12326 | What was the thing that made me homesick for London? |
12326 | What_ do_ you mean?" |
12326 | When Claudio asks her:''What man was he talked with yesternight out at your window betwixt twelve and one?'' |
12326 | When Jerome Lesurques is forced to suspect his son of crime, he has a line:"Am I mad, or dreaming? |
12326 | When Norman was walking with Jefferson one day, some one who met them said:"Your son?" |
12326 | Where are its green fields and its chestnut- trees? |
12326 | Where are we, father?" |
12326 | Where did Hero sleep? |
12326 | Where did you sleep last night? |
12326 | Where''s the pistol? |
12326 | Why are we any of us doing what we have to do?" |
12326 | Why ca n''t I remember something about it? |
12326 | Why could n''t they have come when it was to honor Beecher? |
12326 | Why do n''t you talk as you do to me and Teddy? |
12326 | Why not? |
12326 | Why not?" |
12326 | Why should Henry have done it? |
12326 | Why the devil do n''t you bring down the curtain?" |
12326 | Why was I chosen, and not one of the other children, for the part of Mamilius? |
12326 | Why yearn for plays, to pose as Brutuses or Catos in, When you may get a garden to grow the best potatoes in? |
12326 | Will my wits ever come back to me? |
12326 | Will you give me a piano?"!! |
12326 | Will you swear that she slept in her own room? |
12326 | Will you swear that you do not know where she slept?'' |
12326 | Would n''t Mr. Taylor tell the management what dismissal meant to her? |
12326 | Would n''t he get her taken back? |
12326 | Would not he too have been melancholy, quiet, unassertive,_ almost_ as uninteresting and uninterested as Booth was? |
12326 | Would you like it to have a long run or a short one?'' |
12326 | Would you mind, Miss Terry, telling Mr. Lacy what you are going to wear?" |
12326 | [ 2] Why should he make a boast of it?" |
12326 | _ Bernardo:_ Who''s there? |
12326 | _ Francisco:_ Bernardo? |
12326 | _ George Alexander_ replies:"But I say, Loveday, have I got a part in it, That I can wear a cloak in and look smart in it? |
12326 | _ The lamb bit him!_ Did this set- back in early childhood influence him? |
12326 | you refuse to die by your own hands, do you?" |
15960 | And is not this wealth drawn from our acres? |
15960 | But what influence can this solitary man, this author of genius, have on his nation, when he has none in the very street in which he lives? 15960 Do you then doubt,"she said,"either my heart, or my influence?" |
15960 | For what purpose? |
15960 | Had you remained at home, and been habituated under your mother''s auspices to employments merely domestic, what advantage would you have acquired? 15960 How is it that you do not participate in the general alarm?" |
15960 | Que sçais- je? |
15960 | What speak you of the pope''s authority here? 15960 Why,"says Boileau,"are my verses read by all? |
15960 | ''What ails you?'' |
15960 | A mere actor performing a part? |
15960 | A provincial poet and actor to enter hostilely into the sacred precincts of these Exclusives? |
15960 | And are not the anxieties of even the most successful men of genius renewed at every work-- often quitted in despair, often returned to with rapture? |
15960 | And are you not surprised that I, reasoning as I do, am only sensible of the weakness which I can not throw off?" |
15960 | And can we deny the real existence of the genealogy of genius? |
15960 | And do we suppose that the inventors themselves were not at times alarmed by secret doubts of their soundness and stability? |
15960 | And is he, whose imagination delights in terror and in blood, the very monster he paints? |
15960 | And the unalterable being of intrepidity and fortitude, will he not, commanding even amidst his sports, lead on his equals? |
15960 | Are not the incidents of the great novelist often founded on the common ones of life? |
15960 | Are the original powers of genius, then, limited to a single art, and even to departments in that art? |
15960 | Are there not men of genius the grace of society and the charm of their circle? |
15960 | Are they not accused of the meanest adulations? |
15960 | Are we then to reduce the works of a man of genius to a mere sport of his talents-- a game in which he is only the best player? |
15960 | Are we to attribute them to the king? |
15960 | Are you not the truest man, and the best of critics, who have never ceased to bestow on me your praise-- and what need I more? |
15960 | Ask the man of genius if he have written all that he wished to have written? |
15960 | At what period of life are even the great exempt from the gentle offices of servitude? |
15960 | Before we can discern the beautiful, must we not be endowed with the susceptibility of love? |
15960 | But how did he come prepared to the very dissimilar subjects he proposed? |
15960 | But how did this great philosopher die? |
15960 | But how long, trow ye, did this continue? |
15960 | But how was the comic genius to strike at the follies of his illustrious friends-- to strike, but not to wound? |
15960 | But what if this intractable obstinacy be only resistance of character? |
15960 | But what were the real thoughts and feelings of this presumed despot concerning the duties of a sovereign? |
15960 | Can he whose secret power raises so many emotions in our breasts be without any in his own? |
15960 | Can we doubt of the reality of this faculty, when the visible and outward frame of the man of genius bears witness to its presence? |
15960 | Can we forget the dignified complaint of the Rambler, with which he awfully closes his work, appealing to posterity? |
15960 | Can we then trace in the faint lines of his youth an unsteady outline of the man? |
15960 | Could BUTLER, who excelled in wit and satire, like MILTON have excelled in sentiment and imagination? |
15960 | Could a mere chance occurrence have given birth to those faculties which produced a sublime tragedian? |
15960 | Did Mr. Lodge ever read these"dull treatises?" |
15960 | Does not this evident fact prove that style and thinking have not that inseparable connexion which many great writers have pronounced? |
15960 | Even a good man could not believe in the announcement of the Messiah, from the same sort of prejudice:"Can there anything good come out of Nazareth?" |
15960 | HORACE and OVID wore equally sensible to their immortality; but what modern poet would be tolerated with such an avowal? |
15960 | Had the great Verulam emancipated himself from all the dreams of his age? |
15960 | Has even Holland proved insensible? |
15960 | Has he dared what required intrepidity to achieve? |
15960 | Has he evaded difficulties which he should have overcome? |
15960 | Has he satisfied himself in this work, for which you accuse his pride? |
15960 | Has not the difference between an actual thing, and its image in a glass, perplexed some philosophers? |
15960 | Has not the fate in society of our reigning literary favourites been uniform? |
15960 | Have you not often told me that I am answerable to God for the talents he has endowed me with, if I neglected to cultivate them? |
15960 | Henry once asked, whether he might be saved? |
15960 | How has Visconti obtained that which King Robert, which the pontiff, the emperor, the King of France, could not? |
15960 | How is it acquired, or how is it inherent? |
15960 | Huet''s zealous gentleness( for how could Huet be too rigid?) |
15960 | If Europe be literary, to whom does she owe this more than to these men of letters? |
15960 | If NECKER failed in the cautious reserve of private feelings, who will censure? |
15960 | In the temperament of genius may we not reasonably look for certain indications or predispositions, announcing the permanent character? |
15960 | Is an author to be introduced to the public? |
15960 | Is he a libertine who composes loose poems? |
15960 | Is he an alien to all the wisdom and virtue he inspires? |
15960 | Is he malignant who publishes caustic satires? |
15960 | Is he unfeeling when he is pathetic, indifferent when he is indignant? |
15960 | Is it exquisitely written? |
15960 | Is not great sensibility born with its irritable fibres? |
15960 | Is not this the last extreme of folly? |
15960 | Is our man of genius-- not the victim of fancy, but the slave of truth-- a learned author? |
15960 | Is the author inveterately dull? |
15960 | Is the man of genius an INVENTOR? |
15960 | Is the moralist a moral man? |
15960 | Is the occupation of making a great name less anxious and precarious than that of making a great fortune? |
15960 | Is there but one Collot D''Herbois in the universe? |
15960 | Is there then a period in youth which yields decisive marks of the character of genius? |
15960 | May not men of genius plume themselves with the vainglory of universality? |
15960 | Must not the disposition be formed before even the object appears? |
15960 | Must we agree with Hume, and reproach the king with his indolence and lore of amusement--"particularly of hunting? |
15960 | Must we bend to the artist, who considers us as nothing unless we are canvas or marble under his hands? |
15960 | Must we read as well as paint?" |
15960 | Must we then bow to authorial dignity, and kiss hands, because they are inked? |
15960 | On the same page I find the following note:"What was rumoured of me in that language? |
15960 | Poor moralist, and what art thou? |
15960 | Shall I for ever quit my studies? |
15960 | Shall I strike into some new course of life? |
15960 | Shall we exclaim with Catharine Macaulay against"the despotism of James,"and"the intoxication of his power?" |
15960 | Shall we then hesitate to assert, that this class of literary men forms a useful, as well as a select order in society? |
15960 | Should not EVELYN have inserted an oak- tree in his bearings? |
15960 | Strip it of these, what is it?" |
15960 | Suppose a supply were levied to begin the fray, what certainty could he have that he should not want sufficient to make an honourable end? |
15960 | The king asked with great dissatisfaction,"Is it because he writes the most perfect verses, that he thinks that he is able to become a statesman?" |
15960 | The proper hour of the Sabbath was not agreed on: Was it to commence on the Saturday- eve? |
15960 | Was it a_ foible_ in Hogarth to cast the glove, when he always more than redeemed the pledge? |
15960 | Was it credible that the genius of the celebrated anatomist, which had been nursed under the wing of his brother, should turn on that wing to clip it? |
15960 | Was not CERVANTES very sensible to his own merits when a rival started up? |
15960 | Was the great sentimentalist himself unfeeling, dissolute, and utterly depraved? |
15960 | Was_ Le Contemplateur_ comic in his melancholy, or melancholy in his comic humour? |
15960 | We may apply to some monotonous mannerists these verses of Boileau: Voulez- vous du public mériter les amours? |
15960 | Were we to bend to the foreign despotism of the Roman Tiara, or that of the republican rabble of the Presbytery of Geneva? |
15960 | What is my heart made of? |
15960 | What is there of_ mechanical_ which he does not surpass? |
15960 | What poet would not grieve to see His brother write as well as he? |
15960 | What want they of being kings, but the name? |
15960 | What would Bartholomeo Ghiberti have been, had he not made the gates of St. John? |
15960 | When David would have his people numbered, Joab asked,"Why doth my lord delight in this?" |
15960 | When has there appeared a single genius who at once could free himself of the traditional prejudices of his contemporaries-- nay, of his own party? |
15960 | Whenever the rightful possessor appears, will not the eyes of all spectators be fixed on him? |
15960 | Which is the more honourable? |
15960 | Who dwells not on the single thought or the glowing expression, stamped in the heat of the moment, which came from its source? |
15960 | Who ever pays an"immense debt"in small sums? |
15960 | Who ever saw, but upon extraordinary occasions, Sir Philip Sidney and Sir Francis Drake ride in a coach? |
15960 | Who, having listened to such, has forgotten what a man of genius has said at such moments? |
15960 | Whoever was mindful of the interests of him whose beneficence is only a sacrifice to his pomp? |
15960 | Why am I grown old in seeking so barren a reward as fame? |
15960 | Why did CORNEILLE, tottering to the grave, when RACINE consulted him on his first tragedy, advise the author never to write another? |
15960 | Why did DRYDEN never speak of OTWAY with kindness but when in his grave, then acknowledging that Otway excelled him in the pathetic? |
15960 | Why did LEIBNITZ speak slightingly of LOCKE''s Essay, and meditate on nothing less than the complete overthrow of NEWTON''S system? |
15960 | Why does VOLTAIRE continually detract from the sublimity of Corneille, the sweetness of Racine, and the fire of Crébillon? |
15960 | Why does an excellent work, by repetition, rise in interest? |
15960 | Why does this remarkable similarity prevail through the classes of genius? |
15960 | Why have some of our fine writers interested more than others, who have not displayed inferior talents? |
15960 | Why is Addison still the first of our essayists? |
15960 | Why should they else have treated domestic jealousy as a foible for ridicule, rather than a subject for deep passion? |
15960 | Why was I persuaded not to be a Chartreux?" |
15960 | Will it now be a question whether matrimony be incompatible with the cultivation of the arts? |
15960 | Will not the deep retired character cling to its musings? |
15960 | Would the politician then require a half- learned king, or a king without any learning at all? |
15960 | Would you the public''s envied favours gain? |
15960 | Yet what is this Society, so omnipotent, so all judicial? |
15960 | Yet what less than enthusiasm is the purchase- price of high passion and invention? |
15960 | [ A] Are not most of the dramatic works of that day frequently unreadable from this circumstance? |
15960 | [ A] Does he accept with ingratitude the fame he loves more than life? |
15960 | [ A] In one of these irksome moments, waiting for subsidies, Elizabeth anxiously inquired of the Speaker,"What had passed in the Lower House?" |
15960 | and did he not assert them too, and distinguish his own work by a handsome compliment? |
15960 | and the personages so admirably alive in his fictions, were they not discovered among the crowd? |
15960 | to crouch for a salary brought by the hand of the first valet- de- chambre, or to exult in the tribute offered by the public to an author? |
15960 | why Appears one beauty to thy_ blasting_ eye? |
15960 | why do n''t you get a coach?''" |
18961 | A little later, after a few days or months, how much is really left of it? |
18961 | An appeal for what? |
18961 | And how? |
18961 | And what are these different substances, and how is a mere reader to learn their right use? |
18961 | And what, then, of the point of view towards which it is to be directed? |
18961 | And yet the novelist must state, must tell, must narrate-- what else can he do? |
18961 | And yet, is it so very much the better? |
18961 | And, moreover, these expressions, applied to the viewless art of literature, must fit it loosely and insecurely at best-- does it not seem so? |
18961 | Are we placed before a particular scene, an occasion, at a certain selected hour in the lives of these people whose fortunes are to be followed? |
18961 | Are we prepared to improve upon his method, to re- write his book as we think it ought to have been written? |
18961 | But afterwards? |
18961 | But could he have done more? |
18961 | But how is one to construct a novel out of the impressions that Tolstoy pours forth from his prodigious hands? |
18961 | But is it not clear how the incident would be weakened, so rendered? |
18961 | But the meaning, the import, what I should like to call the moral of it all-- what of that? |
18961 | But the point and reason of the book is not in the dramatic question-- what will happen, will Anna lose or win? |
18961 | But these are images; how is the difference shown in their written books, in Esmond and La Maison Tellier? |
18961 | But when she dies, and Densher is free for Kate again, who will be the worse for the fraud? |
18961 | But which_ is_ the centre, which is the mind that really commands the subject? |
18961 | But_ why_ is she there? |
18961 | Can it be described as a"plot,"a situation, an entanglement, something that raises a question of the issue? |
18961 | Can we feel that Tolstoy has so represented the image of time, the part that time plays in his book? |
18961 | Do they simply disregard her and continue their game as before? |
18961 | Do they try to adapt their style to her inexperience? |
18961 | Does Becky fail in the end? |
18961 | Does anybody dare to suggest that this is a reason for the marked popularity of the method among our novelists? |
18961 | Does he contrive to conceal the trouble, does he make us exceedingly unconscious of it while we read the book? |
18961 | Exactly how and where did it happen? |
18961 | For what is the point and purpose of Vanity Fair, where is the centre from which it grows? |
18961 | He is tremendous, his taste is abominable-- what more is there to say of Balzac? |
18961 | How can he give that sharp impression of himself that he easily gives of his world? |
18961 | How can he manage it? |
18961 | How do we habitually discriminate between these absolutely diverse manners of presenting the facts of a story? |
18961 | How else could the due suggestion of time be given, where there is so little to show for it in dramatic facts? |
18961 | How is anybody, even Strether, to_ see_ the working of his own mind? |
18961 | How is it contrived? |
18961 | How is its development to be handled? |
18961 | How is one to assert a principle which is apparently supported by only one book in a thousand thousand? |
18961 | How is the author to withdraw, to stand aside, and to let Strether''s thought tell its own story? |
18961 | How would he have treated the story, supposing that he had kept hold of his original reason throughout? |
18961 | Is it hope, is it despair? |
18961 | Is it necessary to define the difference? |
18961 | Is it not possible, then, to introduce another point of view, to set up a fresh narrator to bear the brunt of the reader''s scrutiny? |
18961 | Is it not somehow true that fiction, among the arts, is a peculiar case, unusually exempt from the rules that bind the rest? |
18961 | Is it possible to conceive and to name a better? |
18961 | Is not this the result that we have seen? |
18961 | Is that the neatest possible mode of striking it? |
18961 | Is there so much that is good in War and Peace that its inadequate grasp of a great theme is easily forgotten? |
18961 | Is this proceeding of the author the right one, the best for the subject? |
18961 | It is an amusing trick, but exactly what is its object? |
18961 | It spoils the fun of a novel to know how it is made-- is this a reflection that lurks at the back of our minds? |
18961 | May we not conclude that form, design, composition, have a rather different bearing upon the art of fiction than any they may have elsewhere? |
18961 | Neither is subordinate to the other, and there is nothing above them( what more_ could_ there be?) |
18961 | Or can it perhaps be argued that he was aware of the task he set himself, and that he intentionally coupled his two themes? |
18961 | Peter is as full of schemes as ever, but who now supposes that he will_ do_ anything? |
18961 | Such an ingenuous confession, I think it must be admitted, goes to the root of the matter-- could we utter our sense of helplessness more candidly? |
18961 | Tolstoy has shown us a certain length of time''s journey, but to what end has he shown it? |
18961 | What did_ he_ really think of her, how did she appear to him? |
18961 | What does it amount to, that story? |
18961 | What does it matter? |
18961 | What is the issue of a certain conjunction of circumstances? |
18961 | What is the story? |
18961 | What is the subject of War and Peace, what is the novel_ about_? |
18961 | What is to be understood by a"dramatic"narrative, a"pictorial"narrative, a"scenic"or a"generalized"story? |
18961 | What was the novelist''s intention, in a phrase? |
18961 | What were her neighbours to her? |
18961 | What will these people do, how will they circumvent this awkwardness? |
18961 | What wonder if I search my mind in vain, a little later, for the book that Tolstoy wrote? |
18961 | Where are the other Awkward Ages, the many that we might expect if the value of drama is so great? |
18961 | Where then, and how? |
18961 | Which of these vessels of thought and feeling is he to reveal from within? |
18961 | Who and what is this communicative participator in the business, this vocal author? |
18961 | Who can tell, in Dostoevsky''s grim town- scenery, what there is at the end of the street, what lies round the next corner? |
18961 | Who is there that narrates? |
18961 | Why is this a disadvantage, is it asked? |
18961 | With which of the characters, if with any of them, is the writer to identify himself, which is he to"go behind"? |
18961 | XIII What, then, is a dramatic subject? |
18961 | _ Who_ is disposing the scattered facts, whose is this new point of view? |
21272 | ''And did you wear whiskers?'' |
21272 | ''And this?'' |
21272 | ''And was he?'' |
21272 | ''And where did you get this?'' |
21272 | ''How could I have dreamed the French prisoners were watched over like a female charity school, kept in a grotesque livery, and shaved twice a week?'' |
21272 | ''It''s of no use flipping at the Flaming Tinman with your left hand,''she said,''why do n''t you use your right?'' |
21272 | ''What?'' |
21272 | ''Where,''he asks,''are the amusing books from voracious students and habitual writers?'' |
21272 | ''Why speculate upon it?'' |
21272 | ''Yes,''said the second,''pleasant, is n''t it?'' |
21272 | ''You have got a silver plate let into yer head, have n''t ye, corp''el?'' |
21272 | A moment afterwards he added reflectively,''But how may I hope to withdraw a book from that which it has never had?'' |
21272 | And what should more directly lead to charitable thoughts?'' |
21272 | Did Lyly not grow wearied of perpetually riding these alliterative trick- ponies? |
21272 | Do it, corp''el?'' |
21272 | Envious admiration might prompt a less successful writer to exclaim,''Well, is n''t that enough?'' |
21272 | For to what greater extent could one trespass upon an author''s patience, energy, brown paper, string, and commodities generally? |
21272 | He published controversial tracts:''Did So- and- So believe so- and- so or something quite different?'' |
21272 | How much of what is most gravely stated here did John Lyly actually believe? |
21272 | May we not say that the final test of great literature is that it be able to be read in the manner here indicated? |
21272 | My God, is that life?'' |
21272 | Of how many men can it be said, as it_ can_ be said of him, that he was sick all his days and never uttered a whimper? |
21272 | Ought one to look for it in a book confessedly unsatisfactory to its author, and a book which was left incomplete? |
21272 | Out of forty or fifty observations which she makes, the most extraordinary concerns her father; she says,''Is n''t dear papa delightful?'' |
21272 | Perhaps you''ve noticed that she''s got a pretty side to her face as well as a plain one?'' |
21272 | Say to him that you yourself liked to read a catalogue, and his response was pretty sure to be,''Pleasant, is n''t it?'' |
21272 | The reader may imagine some such conversation between the great collector and one of his dazzled visitors:--''Pray, how did you come by this?'' |
21272 | To which the Bibliotaph triumphantly replied,''What other motive is there for reading it at all?'' |
21272 | True, he forgot his lines at one place, but what is a prompter for if not to act in such an emergency? |
21272 | Was it a breath of summer air from Isis that swept out of those pages, which were as white as snow in spite of the lapse of nearly two centuries? |
21272 | Was it this that made him so gentle in his unaffected manly way? |
21272 | What have golfers, and tennis- players, and makers of century runs to do with croquet? |
21272 | What if we are unmannerly or unchivalrous toward them? |
21272 | What is one to make of the colorless expression''a fine style of countenance of the lengthened sort''? |
21272 | What kind of employment is that for an immortal soul?'' |
21272 | Whereupon the corporal,''with a sense that his time was getting wasted,''inquired:''Do she want to see or hear any more, or do n''t she?'' |
21272 | Whether your heart is all right turns out a matter of minor importance; but--_are your clothes all right_? |
21272 | Yet why should one envy him his money, or his unerring hand and eye? |
21272 | You think this a poor philosophy? |
21272 | _ Can you imagine Charles Lamb in the act of reading that book?_ If you can; it''s literature; if you ca n''t, it is n''t. |
17229 | Ah, but mine? |
17229 | And did it go up by the town, Or went it down by the lake? 17229 And is it thou, my little dead child, Come in from out the storm? |
17229 | And was it so strange a sight That you should go like a child Thus to leave me to wait, forgotten, By a passing sight beguiled? |
17229 | And was it the innermost heart of the bliss To find out so, what a wisdom love is? 17229 And was she some friend once cherished, Or was she a sister dead, That you left your own true lover Till the trysting hour had sped?" |
17229 | And what have you met on the road That kept you so long and so late? |
17229 | And who art thou? |
17229 | Are ye sleeping, Margaret? |
17229 | Are you awake, sweet William? |
17229 | But how can I gang the nicht, When I''m new come hame frae sea? 17229 Did life roll back its record, dear, And show, as they say it does, past things clear? |
17229 | How should I be fair and fine? 17229 How should I be white and red, So long, so long have I been dead?" |
17229 | Is there ony room at your head, Saunders? 17229 MY LOVE THAT WAS SO TRUE"ONE OUT- OF- DOORS: SARAH PIATT A ghost-- is he afraid to be a ghost? |
17229 | Mother, Mother, and art thou here? 17229 O is it blood or is it rust That makes the knife so red, Or is it but the red firelight That''s shining on the blade?" |
17229 | O is it with the pale gray gleam That comes before the dawn, Or are ye weary with the road That ye look so ghastly wan? |
17229 | O it''s three maidens, Marjorie, That once I promised to we d."What three things are these, sweet William, That stand close at your side? |
17229 | O love Louise, have you waited long? |
17229 | O mother, come and take your rest, Since Evan stays so late; If we leave the door unbarred for him, What need to sit and wait? |
17229 | Oh, Mrs. B., O Mrs. B., Are these your sorrow''s deeds, Already getting up a flame To burn your widows''weeds? 17229 Oh, do you breathe, lad, that your breast Seems not to rise and fall, And here upon my bosom prest There beats no heart at all?" |
17229 | Oh, false in life, oh, false in death, Wherever thy mad spirit be, Could it not come this night,she saith,"And keep tryst with me?" |
17229 | Oh, is it weed, or fish, or floating hair-- A tress of golden hair, A drownéd maiden''s hair Above the nets at sea? 17229 Oh, lad, what is it, lad, that drops Wet from your neck on mine? |
17229 | Oh, say, is that my father? 17229 Or was it a greater marvel to feel The perfect calm o''er the agony steal? |
17229 | Out with the boat there,someone cried,--"Will he never come? |
17229 | See now; I will listen with soul, not ear: What is the secret of dying, dear? 17229 The deer is couched among the fern, The bird sleeps on the tree; O what can keep my only son, He bides so long from me?" |
17229 | Then have ye laid the quarrel by That was''twixt him and you, And given each other pledge of faith Ye will be friends anew? |
17229 | Thy faith and troth thou sall na get, And our true love sall never twin, Until ye tell wha''comes o''women, Wot ye, who die in strong traivelling? |
17229 | Was it the infinite wonder of all That you ever could let life''s flower fall? 17229 Was the miracle greater to find how deep Beyond all dreams sank downward that sleep? |
17229 | What three things are these, sweet William, That lie close at thy feet? |
17229 | What three things are these, sweet William, That stand beside your head? |
17229 | Who are you, brother? |
17229 | Who speaks? |
17229 | Why standest thou here, dear daughter mine? 17229 Yet I''ll dry my tears for your sake: Why should I tease you, who can not please you Any more with the pains I take?" |
17229 | ''Twas I that stood to greet you on the churchyard pave( O fire of my heart''s grief, how could you never see?) |
17229 | ''Twas I that went beside you in the gray wood- mist( O core of my heart''s heart, how could you never know?) |
17229 | ''Twas the Bridegroom sat at the table- head, And the lights burned bright and clear--"Oh, who is there?" |
17229 | -- Sir Ingoldsby Bray, he said in his rage,"What news? |
17229 | --''What Baron or Squire, Or Knight of the shire Is half so good as a holy Friar?'' |
17229 | 6_ Tlot- tlot; tlot- tlot!_ Had they heard it? |
17229 | A LEGEND: MAY KENDALL Ay, an old story, yet it might Have truth in it-- who knows? |
17229 | A ghost? |
17229 | Am I forbid To cross the room? |
17229 | And art thou saved or art thou lost?" |
17229 | And do they turn and turn in fright, Those little feet, in so much night? |
17229 | And is it for himself she moans, Who is so far away? |
17229 | And one laid hands on his own two hands,"O Brother o''mine,"quoth he,"What can I give to you who live Like gift you gave to me? |
17229 | And she said,"Oh, what evil things Did tonight my senses take?" |
17229 | And the ghost is a whim of an ailing mind? |
17229 | And through the leagues above her She looked aghast and said:"What is this living ship that comes Where every ship is dead?" |
17229 | And why is the old dog wild with joy Who all day long made moan? |
17229 | Are you the old, old dead, Creeping through the long grass, To see the green leaves move And feel the light wind pass? |
17229 | At the creeping mists when the hour grew late? |
17229 | Because it was old Martin''s lot To be, not make, a decoration, Shall we then scorn him, having not His genius of appreciation? |
17229 | Blood will flow, and bullets will fly,-- Oh, where will be then young Hamilton Tighe?" |
17229 | But he is off to Galway town,( And who dare tell her this?) |
17229 | Can ony say Wha is it taks my laddie''s hounds At brak o''day? |
17229 | Canst hear the curlew''s whistle through the darkness wild and drear,-- How they''re calling, calling, calling, Pentruan of Porthmeor? |
17229 | Canst hear the curlews''whistle through thy dreamings dark and drear, How they''re crying, crying, crying, Pentruan of Porthmeor? |
17229 | DRAKE''S DRUM: HENRY NEWBOLT Drake he''s in his hammock an''a thousand miles away,( Capten, art tha sleepin''there below?) |
17229 | Did he enter? |
17229 | Did they love the leaves and wind, Grass and gardens long ago With a love that draws them home Where things grow? |
17229 | Drake he was a Devon man, an''ruled the Devon seas,( Capten, art tha sleepin''there below?) |
17229 | Drake he''s in his hammock till the great Armadas come,( Capten, art tha sleepin''there below?) |
17229 | FIREFLIES: LOUISE DRISCOLL What are you, fireflies, That come as daylight dies? |
17229 | Fain would I hear Of my dainty dear; How fares Dame Alice, my Lady gay?" |
17229 | For faith and charitie, Will ye gie me back my faith and troth That I gave once to thee?" |
17229 | HAUNTED PLACES THE LISTENERS: WALTER DE LA MARE"Is anybody there?" |
17229 | HAUNTED: DON MARQUIS A ghost is a freak of a sick man''s brain? |
17229 | How fares it with brothers and sisters thine?" |
17229 | How had so frail a thing the heart To journey where she trembled so? |
17229 | I gave them the passing word-- Ah, why did I give thee more? |
17229 | I pray it may be Molly''s self The banshee keens and cries, For who dare breathe the tale to her, Be it her man who dies? |
17229 | In the darkness and the dew Come the little, flying flames, Are they the forgotten dead, Without names? |
17229 | Is it thus that you keep your word? |
17229 | Is there ony room at your feet? |
17229 | Is there ony room at your side, Saunders? |
17229 | Lean deeper in the settle- corner lest she find you-- Find and grow fearsome, too afraid to stay: Do you hear the hinge of the oaken press behind you? |
17229 | Lord, Lord, wilt Thou not see? |
17229 | Love master''d fear-- her brow she cross''d;"How, Richard, hast thou sped? |
17229 | Martin? |
17229 | Methought he said,"In this far land, O, is it thus we meet? |
17229 | O, sisters, cross the bridge with me, My eyes are full of sand, What matter that I can not see, If ye take me by the hand?" |
17229 | Oh, when will Sir Ingoldsby Bray come back?'' |
17229 | Oh, who is this comes in Over her threshold stone? |
17229 | Oh, why did my sister hate me so That she would not let me rest? |
17229 | Or did they strangle him as he lay there, With the long scarlet scarf I used to wear? |
17229 | Or is he sleeping, my scarf round his head? |
17229 | Or is it Molly Reilly''s death She cries until the day? |
17229 | Or is it my true love Willy, From Scotland new come home?" |
17229 | Or is''t my brother John? |
17229 | Or the carven cherub- hands Which hold thy shield to the font? |
17229 | Or the gauntlets on the wall Keep evil from its onward course as the great tides rise and fall? |
17229 | Or the great wind, or an army, Or the waves of the wild sea? |
17229 | Out and spake Sir Ingoldsby Bray,"What news? |
17229 | Shall thy hatchment, mouldering grimly in yon church amid the sands, Stay trouble from thy household? |
17229 | She heard the laughter from the house, she heard the fiddle played; She called her dead love to her side-- why should she be afraid? |
17229 | She standeth before the Lord of all:"And may I go to my children small?" |
17229 | Since I from Smaylho''me tower have been, What did my ladye do?" |
17229 | Sir Ingoldsby Bray in his rage drew near, That little Foot- page, he blanch''d with fear;"Now where may the Prior of Abingdon lie? |
17229 | Some people ask:"What cruel chance Made Martin''s life so sad a story?" |
17229 | Step out three steps where Andrew stood,-- Why blanch thy cheeks for fear? |
17229 | THE FETCH: DORA SIGERSON SHORTER"What makes you so late at the tryst, What caused you so long to be? |
17229 | THE GHOST: WALTER DE LA MARE"Who knocks?" |
17229 | That''s the sob and drip of a leaky drain? |
17229 | The Bridegroom in his robe of white, Sat at the table- head--"Oh, who is that who moans without?" |
17229 | The Bridegroom shaded his eyes and looked And his face was bright to see--"What dost thou here at the Lord''s Supper With thy body''s sins?" |
17229 | The dead they are dead, they are out of the way? |
17229 | The delicate odor of mignonette, The ghost of a dead- and- gone bouquet, Is all that tells of her story; yet Could she think of a sweeter way? |
17229 | The ghostly vessels trembled From ruined stern to prow; What was this thing of terror That broke their vigil now? |
17229 | The horse- hoofs ringing clear--_ Tlot- tlot, tlot- tlot_ in the distance? |
17229 | The little live son he clung to her knee-- And frightened his eyes and dim--"Have ye never, my mother, a word for me?" |
17229 | The three ghosts on the sunless road, Spake each to one another,"Whence came that red burn on your foot No dust or ash may cover?" |
17229 | The three ghosts on the windless road, Spake each to one another,"Whence came that blood upon thy hand No other hand may cover?" |
17229 | Their thoughts are in the night and cold, Their tears are heavier than the clay, But who is this at the threshold So young and gay? |
17229 | Then why did ye whiten with fear to- day When ye heard a voice in the calling wind? |
17229 | Then why do you start and shiver so? |
17229 | There in thy breast,''Neath thy silken vest, What scroll is that, false Page, I see?" |
17229 | Though he told me, who will believe it was said? |
17229 | Was it a bird? |
17229 | Was it the trick of a sense o''erwrought With outward watching and inward fret? |
17229 | Were they deaf that they did not hear? |
17229 | Wha is it taks them hence? |
17229 | What are you, fireflies, That come as daylight dies? |
17229 | What do you do there? |
17229 | What flitted in the corridor Like a boy''s shape so dear and slight? |
17229 | What have you found?" |
17229 | What if his hair that brush''d her cheek Was stiff with frozen rime? |
17229 | What is it falling on my lips, My lad, that tastes like brine?" |
17229 | What moved, what stirred? |
17229 | What news from the bold Buccleuch?" |
17229 | What news, what news from Ancram fight? |
17229 | What news? |
17229 | What news? |
17229 | What news? |
17229 | What of the woeful notes that had wailed and fled? |
17229 | What rower plies a reckless oar With mist on flood and strand? |
17229 | What to- day of those pallid wraiths of the night? |
17229 | What was the joyous whisper heard? |
17229 | What was the laughter ran before? |
17229 | What''s a- bringin''of you back aboard?'' |
17229 | When my heart is sair for the sicht O''my lass that langs for me?" |
17229 | When will Sir Ingoldsby Bray come back?''" |
17229 | Where fain, fain, I wad sleep?" |
17229 | Wherefore does he haunt me so; Coming from the misty shadows Of a hundred years ago? |
17229 | Who are then these cavaliers? |
17229 | Who are those who ride so light, Soundless in the flaming light, Where Rheims burns, that was given By France to Mary, Queen of Heaven? |
17229 | Who is he, my midnight guest? |
17229 | Why did ye falter and look behind? |
17229 | Yet in the quiet evening hour What comes, oh, lighter than a bird? |
17229 | Yet, where the moonlight makes Nebulous silver pools A ghostly shape is cast-- Something unseen has stirred.... Was it a breeze that passed? |
17229 | do n''t you hear the bells?" |
17229 | he cried,"hast thou come back To say thou lov''st thy lover still?" |
17229 | he says,"Or are you waking presentlie? |
17229 | she said,"Or, William, are you asleep? |
17229 | she said;"Why dost thou join our ghostly fleet Arrayed in living red? |
17229 | the Bridegroom said,"Whose weary feet I hear?" |
17229 | what news from Ingoldsby Hall? |
17229 | what news? |
17229 | what sound is in the breeze Like the sighing of forest trees? |
16379 | ( NIX_ comes to the King, but goes on with his fishing._) Now what are you doing, sir? |
16379 | (_ Enter_ SCRODGE,_ carrying a door on his back._) Where are you going with that door? |
16379 | (_ Enter_ SECOND SON_ with his spade._) Did you find it? |
16379 | (_ No one comes or answers._) What shall I do? |
16379 | (_ She eats a cake._) What is this? |
16379 | (_ The Hare runs off._) Wife, wife, did you hear? |
16379 | (_ The soldier salutes and goes._) Where do you roll these stones, old men? |
16379 | (_ There is silence._) Again I ask, who among you loves the white man? |
16379 | Ah, he has come, has he? |
16379 | And Pocahontas will be pardoned? |
16379 | And are they not beautiful, child? |
16379 | And do you think you are the king, sir? |
16379 | And fifty knights in velvet coats do wait on him? |
16379 | And what if we will not give her up? |
16379 | And why should I do that? |
16379 | And will you please to call some day? |
16379 | Are eggs brought to us on golden plates? |
16379 | Are they all like these? |
16379 | Are you crazy? |
16379 | Are you crazy? |
16379 | Are you not ready to go? |
16379 | Are you ready to go now, friend? |
16379 | Are you ready? |
16379 | Are you ready? |
16379 | Bed, Bed, where are you going? |
16379 | Burnt your cakes? |
16379 | But who can tell what a colt will do? |
16379 | But you, my men, where will you hide? |
16379 | Can this be true? |
16379 | Can you answer the two questions? |
16379 | Come, will you sell? |
16379 | Did King Alfred pass this way in flight? |
16379 | Did he pass this way, I say? |
16379 | Did you find it? |
16379 | Do I not have feathers like your own? |
16379 | Do n''t you know that the bird can fly over the wall? |
16379 | Do n''t you know that the sun will rise without help? |
16379 | Do you come to offer peace? |
16379 | Do you hear that, Chief Powhatan? |
16379 | Do you hear that, Chief Powhatan? |
16379 | Do you hear that, fingers? |
16379 | Do you hear, Wish- Bird? |
16379 | Do you hear? |
16379 | Do you hear? |
16379 | Do you hear? |
16379 | Do you hear? |
16379 | Do you hear? |
16379 | Do you know that? |
16379 | Do you know what he is like? |
16379 | Do you not know that? |
16379 | Do you speak of my dinner, sirs? |
16379 | Do you think the Danes are still in pursuit? |
16379 | Does it not seem so to you? |
16379 | Every morning? |
16379 | Great chief, is it wise to let so wise a man go from us? |
16379 | Have I not a ring? |
16379 | Have you finished your crabs? |
16379 | Have you looked in other books? |
16379 | Have you seen my colt, sir? |
16379 | He would n''t, eh? |
16379 | How can I show him? |
16379 | How can he be your colt when he is mine? |
16379 | How can that be, sir? |
16379 | How can that be? |
16379 | How can the colt be yours when he is mine? |
16379 | How can we run? |
16379 | How can you fish where is no water? |
16379 | How can you help me? |
16379 | How could that be, sir? |
16379 | How could water get through that thick wall? |
16379 | How dare you muddle the water? |
16379 | How dare you? |
16379 | How do you dare to do so? |
16379 | How goes it in your village? |
16379 | How is this, Farmer Knave? |
16379 | How long will it take the locusts to carry away all the grain? |
16379 | Is it your wish to keep him here? |
16379 | Is not that proof that he is mine? |
16379 | Is there a tree left on the road? |
16379 | Lamb, Lamb, how dare you? |
16379 | Must I guess? |
16379 | Now how is this, Farmer Nix? |
16379 | Now tell me why you grunt, young men? |
16379 | Now what are you men doing? |
16379 | Now who is John, ladies? |
16379 | Now why do you do that? |
16379 | Now why do you not shoot at deer? |
16379 | Now will you help me to get his chickens? |
16379 | Now will you help me to get his chickens? |
16379 | Now, Gotham men, do you all know what to do? |
16379 | Now, what is this you say? |
16379 | Of what use? |
16379 | Oh, you know that, do you? |
16379 | Our king in flight? |
16379 | Rolfe, Rolfe, do you hear that? |
16379 | Shall I bring the horses up, your Majesty? |
16379 | Shall we offer them peace in return for Pocahontas? |
16379 | Shall we run again? |
16379 | She knocks at the door of Captain Smith''s cabin._][ Illustration:] SMITH(_ within._) Who knocks? |
16379 | Should you fall into the Danes''hands now, what will become of England? |
16379 | So it was you who was singing, was it? |
16379 | Suppose he will not take your answers? |
16379 | THE WISE CROW THE WOLF AND THE LAMB"WILL YOU GIVE ME A CAKE?" |
16379 | Then will you pardon the good Abbot, Sire? |
16379 | To help the sun rise? |
16379 | Truly, who are you, John? |
16379 | We are building a wall around it, Sire? |
16379 | Well, are you ready? |
16379 | Well, what can I do for you? |
16379 | Well, what do you want? |
16379 | Well, your Majesty, I-- KING(_ interrupting)._ Do I have fifty knights to wait on me? |
16379 | What can I do to make it right? |
16379 | What can I do? |
16379 | What can I do? |
16379 | What did they say to you? |
16379 | What do you mean, sir? |
16379 | What do you mean? |
16379 | What do you mean? |
16379 | What do you mean? |
16379 | What do you think, dear Queen? |
16379 | What do you want, sir? |
16379 | What do you want, sir? |
16379 | What does it say? |
16379 | What has he done for England? |
16379 | What if there is a cuckoo there? |
16379 | What is all this noise, I say? |
16379 | What is all this noise, sirs? |
16379 | What is it, sirs? |
16379 | What is it? |
16379 | What is it? |
16379 | What is that, sir? |
16379 | What is that? |
16379 | What is that? |
16379 | What is this? |
16379 | What is this? |
16379 | What is this? |
16379 | What is this? |
16379 | What is this? |
16379 | What is this? |
16379 | What shall I do with the ring? |
16379 | What shall I do, Wish- Bird? |
16379 | What shall I do? |
16379 | What shall I do? |
16379 | What shall I do? |
16379 | What shall I do? |
16379 | What shall I do? |
16379 | What shall I do? |
16379 | What shall I do? |
16379 | What shall I do? |
16379 | What shall I do? |
16379 | What shall I look at, Nurse? |
16379 | What shall we do? |
16379 | What shall we do? |
16379 | What shall we do? |
16379 | What shall we do? |
16379 | What will the king say? |
16379 | What? |
16379 | Where are you? |
16379 | Where has this water come from? |
16379 | Where is the Wolf? |
16379 | Where is the wolf? |
16379 | Where? |
16379 | Where? |
16379 | Who among you loves the white man? |
16379 | Who is John, lords? |
16379 | Why build a wall around it? |
16379 | Why did n''t you leave the door at home? |
16379 | Why did n''t you leave your door at home and carry your money? |
16379 | Why did you sing so strangely? |
16379 | Why do n''t you tell us where it is? |
16379 | Why do you carry Peter? |
16379 | Why do you carry a door? |
16379 | Why do you come to me? |
16379 | Why do you drop pebbles in the pitcher? |
16379 | Why do you hide it in the ground? |
16379 | Why do you hide the gold, my father? |
16379 | Why do you laugh so, brothers? |
16379 | Why do you look for us? |
16379 | Why do you speak so strangely? |
16379 | Why do you speak to me? |
16379 | Why do you stop, Peter? |
16379 | Why do you stop? |
16379 | Why not put it on her finger? |
16379 | Why not? |
16379 | Why should you keep it? |
16379 | Why should you roll over? |
16379 | Why, what is this? |
16379 | Why, what is this? |
16379 | Will it tell the north at night? |
16379 | Will it tell the north on water? |
16379 | Will it? |
16379 | Will the Abbot take his head back with him? |
16379 | Will you get up early? |
16379 | Will you give me a cake? |
16379 | Will you let me go in peace? |
16379 | Would you let a woman threaten you with a stick, my lord? |
16379 | Would you like to touch him? |
16379 | Yes, your Majesty? |
16379 | You are a Fairy? |
16379 | You say one hundred men sit down to dine with him? |
16379 | You say your grapes are ripe? |
16379 | You will take her back as your own daughter? |
16379 | Your colt? |
16379 | [ Illustration:"WILL YOU GIVE ME A CAKE?"] |
2566 | Is Miss Mary in? |
2566 | Do you send it to the printers, or where? |
2566 | Excellent, but does this apply to every kind of literary art? |
2566 | How interesting, and that reminds me, you that are a novelist, have you heard how shamefully Miss Baxter was treated by Captain Smith? |
2566 | In the slumber of the winter, In the secret of the snow, What is the voice that is crying Out of the long ago? |
2566 | Is Jane better? |
2566 | Now, do tell me, do you get much for writing all that? |
2566 | Now, why ca n''t you do something like_ Bootles''s Baby_?" |
2566 | What is the silent whisper That echoes in the room, When the days are full of darkness, And the night is hushed in gloom? |
2566 | Where''s your mother? |
21869 | What have our literary critics been about that they have suffered such a writer to drop into neglect and oblivion? |
21869 | What have your parents against me? |
21869 | Am I damned?" |
21869 | And what shall we say of Helen von Donniges? |
21869 | And what was I myself? |
21869 | Are there in the English language, including translations, a hundred books that stand the test as_ Hamlet_ stands it? |
21869 | At such times nobody asks,"Pray, friend, whom do you hear?" |
21869 | Did not The Babes in the Wood come out of Norfolk? |
21869 | Do you betray me? |
21869 | Do you destroy me? |
21869 | Had she a friend in the neighbourhood? |
21869 | Have you not by your own lips and by your letters, sworn to me the most sacred oaths? |
21869 | Have you not filled me with a longing to possess you? |
21869 | Have you not implored me to exhaust all proper measures, before carrying you away from Wabern? |
21869 | His pathos, his humanity-- many fine qualities he has in common with others; but what shall we say of his humour? |
21869 | How many memorials has Norwich to the people connected with its literary or artistic fame? |
21869 | I could thresh his old jacket till I made his pension jingle in his pocket!"? |
21869 | I have said that Captain Marryat was an East Anglian, and have we not a right to be proud of Marryat''s breezy stories of the sea? |
21869 | It sounds like rank blasphemy to question it, but what is poetry? |
21869 | Of how many books can this be said? |
21869 | To what friend could he take her? |
21869 | Was his Jewish faith against him in her eyes? |
21869 | Were they poets at all-- those earlier eighteenth century writers? |
21869 | What can I possibly say that has not already been said by one or other of the Brethren? |
21869 | What does it amount to? |
21869 | What does that matter? |
21869 | What is the''it''that is unrevealed by the courteous Dr. Knapp? |
21869 | What makes an author supremely great? |
21869 | What then do we know of Johnson''s father from the ordinary sources? |
21869 | What then will Norwich do for George Borrow? |
21869 | Where are your means of subsistence? |
21869 | Who are our greatest letter writers? |
21869 | Who would for a moment wish to disparage St. Bonaventure, the Seraphic Doctor, or Aquinas the Angelic? |
21869 | Why had she not obeyed him? |
21869 | or"What do you think of the five points?" |
21869 | { 278b}"What is the best book you have ever read?" |
25933 | Howlate jerstay? |
25933 | Jer goerlone? |
25933 | Jerfind th''ice hard''n''good? |
25933 | Lemmeknow wenyergoagin, woncher? 25933 What makes you stag around so, say? |
25933 | A chemist inquires,"Will the gentleman who left his stomach for analysis please call and get it, together with the result?" |
25933 | He oft would whale Jack with the cat, And say,"My buck, doe you like that? |
25933 | In a church- yard near London the following may be deciphered:"Killed by an omnibus why not? |
25933 | Or did the man kick the ox in the jawbone with such force as to break the ox''s leg, and, if so, which leg? |
25933 | Sidney, Sidney Liest thou here? |
25933 | The catamounts to something, hey?" |
25933 | Then Sue would say, with troubled face,"How koodoo live in such a place?" |
25933 | he cried, when she threatened to leave him, and left,"How could you deceive me, as you have deceft?" |
18464 | ''Whatever''s wrong with him, Doc?" |
18464 | ''Bear it? 18464 ''But how about this cat hunt?'' |
18464 | ''Candor''s the order of the day, is n''t it?'' 18464 ''Do you know,''said he, looking shyly at Hollins,''that I begin to think Beer must be a natural beverage? |
18464 | ''Now, are you sure you can bear the test?'' 18464 ''Oil and vinegar?'' |
18464 | ''Well, Abel,''Eunice rejoined,''how are we to distinguish what is best for us? 18464 ''What shall we call the place?'' |
18464 | ''What''s the matter, uncle?'' 18464 ''_ Var god och gif mig ett stycke vildt._''It is almost intelligible, is n''t it, dear? |
18464 | And by what means do you obtain a livelihood? |
18464 | And do we fall short,said Burke, getting mad,"When it''s touch and go for life?" |
18464 | And do you not at times become very weary and wish for other ways of passing your time? |
18464 | And do you not fear the deadly fire- damp? |
18464 | And how did your papa die? |
18464 | And is your father dead? |
18464 | And what if I were to tell you that your papa did not perish at sea, but was saved from a humid grave? |
18464 | And what is your age, my fine fellow? |
18464 | And who is your best player? |
18464 | And who provides for your mother and her large family of children? |
18464 | But, my brave lad,said the man in low musical tones,"do you not know me, Georgie? |
18464 | Do you know Carrots? |
18464 | Do you not recognize your parent on your father''s side? 18464 Do you reside in this locality?" |
18464 | Do you think, Letitia, that she also takes a cold bath in the morning, among the bacon and eggs, and things? |
18464 | Got any plan in yer own head? |
18464 | Got much of a rickord on Checkers? |
18464 | Has he got a musical bent? |
18464 | Here''s the ghost of Sally Spilkins, from the lan''whar''glories glow: Would her husband like to see her? |
18464 | How could they ever have been human hands and then been put on a mole''s body? |
18464 | How does she set? |
18464 | How? |
18464 | How_ can_ I, sah? |
18464 | I say, ole woman,broke in old Jack,"I say, wot is all this''ere spoutin''about the Square fer?" |
18464 | Is n''t it delightful? |
18464 | Is your name Billings? |
18464 | Is your name Johnson? |
18464 | It''s not that I mind her insolence,she sobbed,"we were going to send her off anyway, were n''t we? |
18464 | Miss Gerda Lyberg? |
18464 | Mr. Timbers,said Corona, with decision,"why should we seek further than the truth? |
18464 | Much of a player, is he? |
18464 | Never wuz''_ skunked_,''wuz ye? |
18464 | Reckon you play the_ fiddle_, too, as well as_ Checkers_? |
18464 | Right shore you''ve give''me your best player? |
18464 | Scale? |
18464 | Stairs? 18464 That must taste fine,"Said the Porcupine,"Did you see him smack his lip?" |
18464 | Then you ca n''t go with us in the morning? |
18464 | Timid? 18464 W''at you mean?" |
18464 | Wall,I say,"you''re sure she is Chambly, w''at you call Ma- dam All- ba- nee? |
18464 | What is the cause of your lameness? |
18464 | What is the matter with the name? |
18464 | What rank in the peerage do these gold- laced garments and big buttons betoken? |
18464 | What shall I say to her, Archie? |
18464 | Where did you count on your stairs? |
18464 | Where''s your chimneys? |
18464 | Who ever heard of an animal dressed in silk clothes? |
18464 | Who set? |
18464 | Who? |
18464 | Whose pass? 18464 Yes,"was the reply;"everybody has seen that; but why?" |
18464 | You do n''t really believe that, do you? |
18464 | _ Durn you!_he snarled out at Wes,"hain''t you never goern to move?" |
18464 | _ Flames and flashes!_says the feller ag''in,"will you_ ever_ stop that death- seducin''tune o''your''n long enough to move?" |
18464 | _ Hur gammal är ni_,Letitia explained, simply meant,"How old are you?" |
18464 | _ Talar ni svensk?_proved to be nothing more outrageous than"Do you speak Swedish?" |
18464 | _ Talar ni svensk?_proved to be nothing more outrageous than"Do you speak Swedish?" |
18464 | _ Talar ni svensk?_she asked, but I had no idea what she meant. |
18464 | _ What!_says he, a- grinnin''like a''angel and a- edgin''his cheer to''rds Wes,"have we a checker- board and checkers here?" |
18464 | ''Do you know the two private galleries of Mr. Smith, the merchant, and Mr. Muller, the chancellor?'' |
18464 | ''We act according to impulse, do n''t we? |
18464 | --"Whose fault is that?" |
18464 | --What do you think the parson found, When he got up and stared around? |
18464 | ..."Shelldrake, however, turning to his wife, said,--"''Elviry, how many up- stairs rooms is there in that house down on the Sound?'' |
18464 | Abel Mallory, for instance?" |
18464 | An ambitious poet once sent him a poem to read entitled"Why do I live?" |
18464 | And is man less than a cow, that he can not cultivate his instincts to an equal point? |
18464 | Are you listening, dear? |
18464 | Be a great, tall, handsome beast, With hoofs to gallop on? |
18464 | But my wife Polly, says she,''What on airth are you thinkin''of, Deacon? |
18464 | But why should they, her botch- work, turn about And stare disdain at me, her finished job? |
18464 | Ca n''t you see that I am having great fun? |
18464 | Caverns of serpents, or grottoes of priceless gems? |
18464 | Colts grew horses, beards turned gray, Deacon and deaconess dropped away, Children and grandchildren-- where were they? |
18464 | Could anything sound more repulsive? |
18464 | Did you ever notice that a railroad company numbers its cars from 1,000, instead of from 1? |
18464 | Do n''t know me dat nam''on de Canton-- I hope you''re not fool wit''me?" |
18464 | Do n''t you think that it is a great improvement on the old Ollendorff system? |
18464 | Do n''t you think, Archie, that the Ibsen inheritances are always most fascinating? |
18464 | Fer if it wurn''t fer spellin''-books and sich occasions as these, where would the Bible be? |
18464 | Gerda,_ hur gammal är ni_?" |
18464 | He flipped the tickets out, I say, And asked:"Now, which one shall it be? |
18464 | He says,"Which way you want to go?" |
18464 | How are we to know_ what_ vegetables to choose, or what animal and mineral substances to avoid?'' |
18464 | How does the cow distinguish between the wholesome and the poisonous herbs of the meadow? |
18464 | I done tol''you all de things a hyar''s foot kin do; w''ats de reason a mole''s foot ain''good fer sump''n, too? |
18464 | I exclaimed with a groan,"why rub it in, Letitia? |
18464 | I know that chemical analysis is said to show it; but may not the alcohol be created, somehow, during the analysis?'' |
18464 | I was sayin''right off, me,"Some woman was mak''de speech, Or girl on de Hooraw Circus, doin''high kick an''screech?" |
18464 | I''ll never see not''ing lak dat, me, no matter I travel de worl'', An''Ma- dam, you t''ink it was scare her? |
18464 | If this woman ever ate, what did she eat and why ca n''t we have the same? |
18464 | Is her husband present?" |
18464 | Is it not so, Abel?''" |
18464 | Is n''t that a fright? |
18464 | Is this the way you answer the question about keepin''the Lord''s day? |
18464 | It was the finish:"Is n''t that lovely? |
18464 | It''s a hideous language, anyway, is n''t it, Archie? |
18464 | Johnson?" |
18464 | Now whatever do you- all reckon this old tabby does? |
18464 | Now, in my book, the only answer to the question''How old are you?'' |
18464 | Now, what are my merits?'' |
18464 | PASS BY IRONQUILL A father said unto his hopeful son,"Who was Leonidas, my cherished one?" |
18464 | Partington Twilight Soap''?" |
18464 | Rather pretty, is n''t it? |
18464 | SHILLABER VII"Are you in favor of the prohibitive law, or the license law?" |
18464 | She merely asked:"How should you draw it?" |
18464 | Shelldrake gave a long whistle, and finally gasped out:"''Well, what next?'' |
18464 | So, when Hollins, turning towards me, as he continued, exclaimed,--''Come, why should not this candor be adopted in our Arcadia? |
18464 | Suppose it''s evil to swear: is n''t it better I should express it, and be done with it, than keep it bottled up, to ferment in my mind? |
18464 | TEACHING BY EXAMPLE BY JOHN G. SAXE"What is the''Poet''s License,''say?" |
18464 | The priest remonstrated:"Why, Mike, how can you deceive him so? |
18464 | The ticket- agent saw my haste;"Where do you wish to go?" |
18464 | Then a gem''en comes along, an''I says,"Would you min''givin''me a push?" |
18464 | Then can we say too much in praise of the men who make us laugh? |
18464 | Thy inner self betrayed I see: Thy coward, craven, shivering ME''"''We think we know one another,''exclaimed Hollins;''but do we? |
18464 | V What is a first love worth, except to prepare for a second? |
18464 | W''en Jeremie Plouffe, ma neighbor, come over an''spik wit''me,"Antoine, you will come on de city, for hear Ma- dam All- ba- nee?" |
18464 | Was n''t it funny, Archie? |
18464 | We ca n''t never choose him, o''course,--thet''s flat; Guess we shall hev to come round( do n''t you?) |
18464 | We see the summer smile of the Earth,--enamelled meadow and limpid stream,--but what hides she in her sunless heart? |
18464 | What could we do? |
18464 | What does the second love bring? |
18464 | What were you saying on the subject, dear? |
18464 | What''s your scale?" |
18464 | Where will you find it? |
18464 | Where''s the points o''compass?" |
18464 | Who will volunteer to take turns sitting up with Henry?" |
18464 | Why ca n''t we strip off these hollow Shams''( he made great use of that word),''and be our true selves, pure, perfect, and divine?'' |
18464 | Why did all the daylight throb With soundless guffaw and dumb- stricken sob? |
18464 | Why should his evil genius haunt him? |
18464 | Why was the place one vast suspended shout Of laughter? |
18464 | Why, what made you think of that, Jesse?'' |
18464 | Will any one-- will you, Enos-- commence at once by telling me now-- to my face-- my principal faults?'' |
18464 | Will you repeat it? |
18464 | Wo n''t it be jolly? |
18464 | Would n''t it lead you to a padded cell? |
18464 | Would"Meanses''Hanner"beat the master? |
18464 | Wut shall we du? |
18464 | You remember something of the society of Norridgeport, the last winter you were there? |
18464 | ai n''t it terrible? |
18464 | beat the master that had laid out Jim Phillips? |
18464 | do n''t I remember when he was poarer nor Job''s turkey? |
18464 | is it not the history of a thousand experiences? |
18464 | said Nancy,"whar y''all bin livin''dat you nuver seed a mole befo''? |
18464 | said she;"what''s that? |
18464 | thought George, in a low, mellow tone of voice,"whom have we here?" |
18464 | what liberty is this?" |
18464 | what pass?" |
18464 | what''s the matter?" |
18464 | why should you worry in choosing whom you shall marry? |
19220 | ''And why, Counsellor, would you wish that I were Saint Peter?'' 19220 And is all this really so?" |
19220 | And now, sir,said he to Cumin,"I do n''t see as I am to be better off for this, if I get my second hundred again; but how is that to be done?" |
19220 | By virtue of your oath, are you positive that this is the same hat? |
19220 | Can you say that without a sigh? |
19220 | Did you examine it carefully before you swore in your informations that it was the prisoner''s? |
19220 | Do you ever expect to visit it again? |
19220 | Have you been long out of your native country? |
19220 | How can you so tamely bear the censures I pronounce against your country? |
19220 | How, do you know my name? |
19220 | Moriarty, sir, is my name, and a good one it is; and what have you to say agen it? 19220 Mr. O''Connell, what part of the fowl shall I help you to?" |
19220 | Of what regiment, pray? |
19220 | One- and- sixpence for a walking- stick? 19220 Then you are a man of family?" |
19220 | This is the same hat? |
19220 | Well, Darby,said the Counsellor, taking him on the cross- examination,"you told the whole truth to that gentleman?" |
19220 | Well, what interesting topic engages your attention now? |
19220 | Well,said O''Connell,"he is found guilty?" |
19220 | What is that you say, fellow? |
19220 | What is the matter? |
19220 | What is your name? |
19220 | What then, sir? |
19220 | What''s that you call me, you murderin''villian? |
19220 | What, Roger, wo n''t you buy the poultry? |
19220 | Why then, sir, I am come to demand of you, whether you are the author of this poem( producing it), and the villanous lines on me? |
19220 | Why, what sort of a creature are you,exclaimed he,"to commit a fault which can not be mended?" |
19220 | Will you have an apple- pie, sir? 19220 Yet you do not seem angry?" |
19220 | You''re an Englishman, Sir? |
19220 | Your share of it; now by virtue of your oath, was not your share of it_ all but the pewter_? |
19220 | ''And pray, monsieur,''rejoined John Bull to the Frenchman,''why_ encore_?'' |
19220 | ''And would you burn me?'' |
19220 | ''And would you,''she asked,''burn me alive?'' |
19220 | ''For what?'' |
19220 | ''Why do you not answer me, sir?'' |
19220 | ( How d''ye do, Pat?) |
19220 | --"Well, my Lord, I was hurrying here as fast as ever I could-- I did not even change my dress-- I hope I shall be excused for coming in my boots?" |
19220 | A junior counsel asked the witness,"What is the meaning of the military phrase,''ride him down?''" |
19220 | Are these the materials of which we suppose anarchy and public rapine to be formed? |
19220 | Ay boys, ai nt ye all dry?" |
19220 | Being asked, upon what subject? |
19220 | But your Riverence, I suppose, has law for it? |
19220 | Can you behold him without shame and indignation? |
19220 | Do you think it wise or humane at this moment to insult them, by sticking up in a pillory the man who dared to stand forth as their advocate? |
19220 | Does he disobey the laws? |
19220 | Has the bigoted malignity of any individual been crushed? |
19220 | Have any alarms been occasioned by the emancipation of our Catholic brethren? |
19220 | Have you not marked how the human heart bowed to the supremacy of his power, in the undissembled homage of deferential horror? |
19220 | Have you not marked, when he entered, how the stormy wave of the multitude retired at his approach? |
19220 | He then spelled aloud the name James-- slowly, thus:--"J-- a-- m-- e-- s.""Now, do you mean those words were in the hat when you found it?" |
19220 | He was about to resume his seat, when the judge, Baron M''Cleland, said, with a peculiar emphasis,"Mr. O''Connell, have you a_ brief_ in this case?" |
19220 | His cause would not allow him to be fair; for why is the rule adopted in this single action? |
19220 | His first compliment when he saw her a little time afterwards was,"Pray, madam, are you as proud and ill- natured now as when I saw you last?" |
19220 | How came you to leave all the Lords that you are so fond of, to come here to see a poor Dean?" |
19220 | How long shall mortals bend to gain? |
19220 | How long shall vice triumphant reign? |
19220 | How long shall virtue hide her face, And leave her votaries in disgrace? |
19220 | How otherwise happens it, that modern slavery looks quietly at the despot on the very spot where Leonidas expired? |
19220 | I wonder where you stole''em: Could nothing but thy chief reproach Serve for a motto on thy coach? |
19220 | In the other case, how does the work of sedition go forward? |
19220 | Is this fancy, or is it fact? |
19220 | Is this the man on whom to fasten the abominable charge of goading on a frantic populace to mutiny and bloodshed? |
19220 | Let me see what should I have had? |
19220 | Now there is a market exactly in the road by which I had to pass-- your Lordship may perhaps recollect the market-- do you?" |
19220 | On our coming in,"Hey- day, gentlemen( says the Doctor), what''s the meaning of this visit? |
19220 | On their arrival, the bear was still on duty, and O''Leary stepped up to him, says:--''_Cianos tha''n thu, a Phadhrig_?'' |
19220 | Or do you wish to prepare them for the revocation of these improvident concessions? |
19220 | Or has the stability of the government or that of the country been weakened? |
19220 | Or is one million of subjects stronger than four millions? |
19220 | Speaking of the liberty of the press, he says--"What, then, remains? |
19220 | The assertion is just; but has he treated you fairly by its application? |
19220 | The officer then said,"Is it true Mr. O''Connell has been shot?" |
19220 | Then you are reconciled to your fate?" |
19220 | Think not so poor a book below thy care; Who knows the price that thou canst make it bear? |
19220 | Well, what does Paddy do? |
19220 | What brought you to this country?" |
19220 | What was it?--what was it?" |
19220 | What''s- your- Name?" |
19220 | When they came to the Phoenix park, Swift remarked a new building which he had never seen, and asked what it was designed for? |
19220 | Where am I to seek it? |
19220 | Where do you think he was hit?" |
19220 | Where is there a possibility of obtaining defensive evidence? |
19220 | Who, then, are the parties? |
19220 | Why, you potato- faced pippin- sneezer, when did a Madagascar monkey like you pick enough of common Christian dacency to hide your Kerry brogue?" |
19220 | Will you have a cherry- pie, sir? |
19220 | Will you have a currant- pie, sir? |
19220 | Will you have a gooseberry- pie, sir? |
19220 | Will you have a pigeon- pie, sir?" |
19220 | Will you have a plum- pie, sir? |
19220 | With what feelings can you regard a rank that he has so tarnished, and a patent that he has so worse than cancelled? |
19220 | let him in by all means.--Well, friend, what do you want to say to me about my coffin?'' |
19220 | none here but you_?" |
19220 | or to refuse a letter from any one? |
19220 | said Swift,"and may I command here, as in my own house?" |
19220 | said he,"is it because I am in your power that you dare to take these liberties with me? |
19220 | who can tell the length of Eternity?'' |
19220 | who would listen to_ him?_ I always walk out of the House when he opens his lips,""Come, Peel,"said Lord Westmoreland,"let me hear your opinion." |
12925 | But,quoth his neighbor,"when the sun From East to West his course has run, How comes it that he shows his face Next morning in his former place?" |
12925 | Is there no hope? |
12925 | What is a church? |
12925 | What is good for a bootless bene? |
12925 | ''tis like a demi- cannon: What, up and down, carved like an apple- tart? |
12925 | ***** What can preserve my life? |
12925 | --Why, so can I, or so can any man; But will they come when you do call for them? |
12925 | Ah, what can ever be more stately and admirable to me than mast- hemmed Manhattan? |
12925 | Among unequals what society Can sort, what harmony, or true delight? |
12925 | And can eternity belong to me, Poor pensioner on the bounties of an hour? |
12925 | And love Earth only for its earthly sake? |
12925 | And lovers''absent hours More tedious than the dial eightscore times? |
12925 | And sting the luckless foot that presses them? |
12925 | And what have kings that privates have not too, Save ceremony, save general ceremony? |
12925 | And what is Fame? |
12925 | And, first, thy youth: what says it to gray hairs? |
12925 | Are there not, dear Michal, Two points in the adventure of the diver, One-- when, a beggar, he prepares to plunge? |
12925 | Are ye still but joggles In ceaseless wash? |
12925 | Art thou that huntress of the silver bow Fabled of old? |
12925 | Ask for whose use the heavenly bodies shine; Earth for whose use? |
12925 | BIRON.--Things hid and barred, you mean, from common sense? |
12925 | BIRON.--What is the end of Study? |
12925 | But how can this include that genuine poetic genius, Byron, who gloried in being neither good nor happy? |
12925 | But what is truth? |
12925 | But why should one read poetry, at all, where there is so much good prose to be read? |
12925 | By the blue rushing of the arrowy Rhone Or the pure bosom of its nursing lake...? |
12925 | Can Nature show so fair? |
12925 | Can any mortal mixture of earth''s mould Breathe such divine enchanting ravishment? |
12925 | Can imagination boast, Amid its gay creation, hues like hers? |
12925 | Charity itself fulfils the law, And who can sever love from charity? |
12925 | Condemn the fault, and not the actor of it? |
12925 | Curious fool!--be still-- Is human love the growth of human will? |
12925 | Dare I say No spirit ever brake the band That stays him from the native land, Where first he walked when clasped in clay? |
12925 | Delights which who would leave, that has a heart Susceptible of pity or a mind Cultured and capable of sober thought? |
12925 | Did ever a dragon keep so fair a cave? |
12925 | Do you ne''er think what wondrous beings these? |
12925 | Do you ne''er think who made them, and who taught The dialect they speak, where melodies Alone are the interpreters of thought? |
12925 | Dost thou deem None rebels except subjects? |
12925 | Doth it not flow as hugely as the sea? |
12925 | Eightscore eight hours? |
12925 | Fixed on this blissful centre, rest; Oh, who with earth would grudge to part, When called with angels to be blest? |
12925 | For what can power give more than food and drink, To live at ease, and not be bound to think? |
12925 | For where is any author in the world Teaches such beauty as a woman''s eye? |
12925 | Forever, Fortune, wilt thou prove An unrelenting foe to love; And, when we meet a mutual heart, Come in between and bid us part? |
12925 | Forgotten? |
12925 | Go, forget me-- why should sorrow O''er that brow a shadow fling? |
12925 | HAMLET.--Is this a prologue, or the posy of a ring? |
12925 | Hast thou betrayed my credulous innocence With vizored falsehood and base forgery? |
12925 | Hath he set bounds between their love and me? |
12925 | Hath thy toil O''er books consumed the midnight oil? |
12925 | Have equal power to adjourn, Appoint appearance and return? |
12925 | His home!--the Western giant smiles, And turns the spotty globe to find it;-- This little speck the British Isles? |
12925 | How do ye vary your vile days and nights? |
12925 | How pass your Sundays? |
12925 | How sweet, how passing sweet is solitude? |
12925 | I am his Highness''dog at Kew; Pray tell me, sir, whose dog are you? |
12925 | I am their mother; who shall bar me from them? |
12925 | INTRODUCTORY ESSAY:"AFTER ALL, WHAT IS POETRY?" |
12925 | In law, what plea so tainted and corrupt But, being seasoned with a gracious voice, Obscures the show of evil? |
12925 | In religion, What damnèd error, but some sober brow Will bless it and approve it with a text, Hiding the grossness with fair ornament? |
12925 | In the nine heavens are eight Paradises; Where is the ninth one? |
12925 | Is it the wind those branches stirs? |
12925 | Is she not more than painting can express, Or youthful poets fancy when they love? |
12925 | Is she not passing fair? |
12925 | Is there no play, To ease the anguish of a torturing hour? |
12925 | JULIET.--O, think''st thou we shall ever meet again? |
12925 | Know ye not then, said Satan, filled with scorn,-- Know ye not me? |
12925 | Love, what is love? |
12925 | O scaly, slippery, wet, swift, staring wights, What is''t ye do? |
12925 | O shame, where is thy blush? |
12925 | O, who can hold a fire in his hand By thinking on the frosty Caucasus? |
12925 | Of course, all versifiers aim at"poetry"; yet, what is poetry? |
12925 | Of its own beauty is the mind diseased, And fevers into false creation:--where, Where are the forms the sculptor''s soul hath seized? |
12925 | One-- when, a prince, he rises with his pearl? |
12925 | Or cloy the hungry edge of appetite By bare imagination of a feast? |
12925 | Or wallow naked in December snow, By thinking on fantastic Summer''s heat? |
12925 | Or who can paint the charm unspeakable, Which links in tender hands two faithful hearts? |
12925 | POLONIUS.--What do you read, my lord? |
12925 | Remember thee? |
12925 | River and sunset and scallop- edged waves of flood- tide? |
12925 | Seven days and nights? |
12925 | Shall I not take mine ease in mine inn? |
12925 | Shall we, whose souls are lighted With wisdom from on high, Shall we to men benighted The Lamp of life deny? |
12925 | Sleep when he wakes? |
12925 | Souls of poets dead and gone, What Elysium have ye known, Happy field or mossy cavern, Choicer than the Mermaid Tavern? |
12925 | Still nought but gapes and bites, And drinks, and stares, diversified with boggles? |
12925 | Tellest thou me of"ifs"? |
12925 | The Lord let the house of a brute to the soul of a man, And the man said,"Am I your debtor?" |
12925 | The flower that smiles to- day To- morrow dies; All that we wish to stay Tempts and then flies: What is this world''s delight? |
12925 | The lamb thy riot dooms to bleed to- day, Had he thy reason, would he skip and play? |
12925 | The sea- gulls oscillating their bodies, the hay- boat in the twilight, and the belated lighter? |
12925 | Think you, if Laura had been Petrarch''s wife, He would have written sonnets all his life? |
12925 | This sacred shade and solitude, what is it? |
12925 | Thy gown? |
12925 | To- morrow is, ah, whose? |
12925 | Treason doth never prosper: what''s the reason? |
12925 | Treating of"The Elements of True Poetry,"he lays down this:"What, then, is poetry? |
12925 | Trust ye? |
12925 | W. COWPER When we shall hear The rain and wind beat dark December, how, In this our pinching cave, shall we discourse The freezing hours away? |
12925 | Warbler, why speed thy southern flight? |
12925 | Was this the face that launched a thousand ships, And burnt the topless towers of Ilium? |
12925 | What are the wild waves saying, Sister, the whole day long, That ever amid our playing I hear but their low, lone song? |
12925 | What beckoning ghost along the moonlight shade Invites my steps and points to yonder glade? |
12925 | What bird so sings, yet so does wail? |
12925 | What care we for tempest blowing? |
12925 | What drink''st thou oft, instead of homage sweet, But poisoned flattery? |
12925 | What exile from himself can flee? |
12925 | What gained we, little moth? |
12925 | What gentle ghost, besprent with April dew, Hails me so solemnly to yonder yew? |
12925 | What has posterity done for us, That we, lest they their rights should lose, Should trust our necks to gripe of noose? |
12925 | What has posterity done for us, That we, lest they their rights should lose, Should trust our necks to gripe of noose? |
12925 | What heavenly treasure in so weak a chest? |
12925 | What infinite heart''s ease Must kings neglect, that private men enjoy? |
12925 | What is a Communist? |
12925 | What is a kiss? |
12925 | What is danger More than the weakness of our apprehensions? |
12925 | What is the end of Fame? |
12925 | What is the worst of woes that wait on age? |
12925 | What jewels and what riches hast thou there? |
12925 | What means this passionate discourse, This peroration with such circumstance? |
12925 | What revels are in hand? |
12925 | What shall I do to be forever known, And make the age to come my own? |
12925 | What shall I render to my God For all his gifts to me? |
12925 | What should it be, that thus their faith can bind? |
12925 | What skilful limner e''er would choose To paint the rainbow''s varying hues, Unless to mortal it were given To dip his brush in dyes of heaven? |
12925 | What stamps the wrinkle deeper on the brow? |
12925 | What then remains, but well our power to use, And keep good- humor still whate''er we lose? |
12925 | What tho''short thy date? |
12925 | What though the field be lost? |
12925 | What though the sea be calm? |
12925 | What would he do, Had he the motive and the cue for passion That I have? |
12925 | What would you have? |
12925 | What wound did ever heal but by degrees? |
12925 | What''s Fame? |
12925 | What''s Hecuba to him, or he to Hecuba, That he should weep for her? |
12925 | What''s this? |
12925 | What, but God? |
12925 | What, gone without a word? |
12925 | When Adam dolve, and Eve span, Who was then the gentleman? |
12925 | When lips invite, And eyes delight, And cheeks as fresh as rose in June Persuade delay, What boots to say Forego me now, come to me soon? |
12925 | Whence is thy learning? |
12925 | Where is our usual manager of mirth? |
12925 | Where is to- morrow? |
12925 | Where yet was ever found a mother Who''d give her booby for another? |
12925 | Which way shall I fly, Infinite wrath, and infinite despair? |
12925 | While Cato gives his little senate laws, What bosom beats not in his country''s cause? |
12925 | Whither are they vanished? |
12925 | Whither away, Bluebird, Whither away? |
12925 | Whither away? |
12925 | Who can paint Like Nature? |
12925 | Who cometh over the hills, Her garment with morning sweet, The dance of a thousand rills Making music before her feet? |
12925 | Who first invented work, and bound the free And holiday- rejoicing spirit down***** To that dry drudgery at the desk''s dead wood? |
12925 | Who has not seen that feeling born of flame Crimson the cheek at mention of a name? |
12925 | Who hath not owned, with rapture- smitten frame, The power of grace, the magic of a name? |
12925 | Who hears him groan, and does not wish to bleed? |
12925 | Who ran to help me when I fell, And would some pretty story tell, Or kiss the place to make it well? |
12925 | Who sees him act, but envies every deed? |
12925 | Who shall decide, when doctors disagree, And soundest casuists doubt, like you and me? |
12925 | Who takes it hold of? |
12925 | Who the silent man can prize, If a fool he be or wise? |
12925 | Who will not mercie unto others show, How can he mercie ever hope to have? |
12925 | Who will not mercie unto others show, How can he mercie ever hope to have? |
12925 | Who, for the poor renown of being smart, Would leave a sting within a brother''s heart? |
12925 | Why did I write? |
12925 | Why did she love him? |
12925 | Why do n''t the men propose, mamma, Why do n''t the men propose? |
12925 | Why should a man whose blood is warm within, Sit like his grandsire cut in alabaster? |
12925 | Why should not Conscience have vacation As well as other courts o''th''nation? |
12925 | Why should the poor be flattered? |
12925 | Why then doth flesh, a bubble- glass of breath, Hunt after honour and advancement vain, And rear a trophy for devouring death? |
12925 | Why to yon mountain turns the musing eye, Whose sunbright summit mingles with the sky? |
12925 | Why wish for more? |
12925 | Why, what should be the fear? |
12925 | Why, who cries out on pride, That can therein tax any private party? |
12925 | Will Fortune never come with both hands full, But write her fair words still in foulest letters? |
12925 | Wilt thou draw near the nature of the gods? |
12925 | With these dark words begins my tale; And their meaning is, Whence can comfort spring When Prayer is of no avail? |
12925 | X POETICAL QUOTATIONS AFTER ALL, WHAT IS POETRY By JOHN R. HOWARD***** AFTER ALL, WHAT IS POETRY? |
12925 | You tell your doctor, that y''are ill; And what does he, but write a bill? |
12925 | _ Can Love be Controlled by Advice_? |
12925 | _ How Shall I Woo_? |
12925 | _ How Shall I Woo_? |
12925 | _ Rejected Addresses: Cui Bono_? |
12925 | _ What are the Wild Waves Saying_? |
12925 | _ What is Life_? |
12925 | _ What is a Gentleman_? |
12925 | _ Why do n''t the man propose_? |
12925 | a sleeve? |
12925 | ah, why, Thou too, whose song first told us of the Spring? |
12925 | and creep into the jaundice By being peevish? |
12925 | attempt ye still to rise By mountains piled on mountains to the skies? |
12925 | attempt ye still to rise, By mountains piled on mountains to the skies? |
12925 | can Sporus feel, Who breaks a butterfly upon a wheel? |
12925 | eh, dull goggles? |
12925 | has lived, Nor in the watches of the night recalled Words he has wished unsaid and deeds undone? |
12925 | hast thou wandered there, To waft us home the message of despair? |
12925 | how say you? |
12925 | keep a week away? |
12925 | or what destroy? |
12925 | was he wise? |
12925 | what dost thou bear Locked up within the casket of thy breast? |
12925 | what heart of man Is proof against thy sweet, seducing charms? |
12925 | what life lead? |
12925 | what masquing stuff is here? |
12925 | where, my lord? |
12925 | who is''t now we hear? |
12925 | who shall lift that wand of magic power, And the lost clew regain? |
12925 | who the exquisite delights can tell, The joy which mutual confidence imparts? |
12925 | will the line stretch out to the crack of doom? |
15933 | A_ what_ in_ which_? |
15933 | And are you going to school here, Jakey? |
15933 | And can you not see? |
15933 | And if I do not love you? |
15933 | And so you have been here one year? 15933 And to- night I may feast Patrasche?" |
15933 | And what about the waves? |
15933 | And what did you see in your glass? |
15933 | And why not there? |
15933 | Are you very much hurt? 15933 Bless me, what''s that?" |
15933 | Bless what? |
15933 | Bottles, Jakey? |
15933 | But thou hast done nothing wrong? |
15933 | But, Jakey, why did your mother come away here to America, and leave your father away there in Germany? |
15933 | But, dear Jakey, how long did they keep your father locked up there with the chains on him? |
15933 | By some queer way or other; is not this the general case and the mystery, young ladies and gentlemen? |
15933 | Ca n''t what? |
15933 | Ca n''t you give me a little bit? |
15933 | Can he have gone up here? |
15933 | Can you hear? 15933 Cruel,"said the dwarf,"they poured unholy water into my stream; do you suppose I''m going to allow that?" |
15933 | Did your father stay always good, Jakey, and did he never drink the beer any more? |
15933 | Did your mother come from Italy, Jakey? |
15933 | Didst thou dream that I should be faithless and forsake thee? 15933 Do they have green faces and white hair? |
15933 | Do you, indeed, mamma? |
15933 | Dost do much of such folly? |
15933 | For ever and ever? |
15933 | Good morning, brother,said Hans;"have you any message for the King of the Golden River?" |
15933 | Ha, ha,laughed Schwartz,"are you there? |
15933 | He may come to- morrow as he used to do? |
15933 | How did he get in? |
15933 | How did you know that, Jakey; you could not see them? |
15933 | How do you think he is gone? |
15933 | How long have you lain here? |
15933 | How old are you, Jakey? |
15933 | I''m very, very hungry, sir; could n''t you spare me a bit of bread before I go? |
15933 | Is it thee, thou poor lad? |
15933 | It is n''t time to stop sewing, is it? |
15933 | Long time he stay dare, and ven he go vay, he tell my fader, if he vill make him mit ze brush? 15933 Nello may come here again, father?" |
15933 | No white children? |
15933 | No, I not sorry; but all ze time I tink, How vill it be? 15933 Perhaps they''ll do something about the yards; who knows?" |
15933 | Pray, sir,said Gluck rather hesitatingly,"were you my mug?" |
15933 | Purple wings? |
15933 | Sary Jane, dear, is n''t the yard down there a little-- dirty? |
15933 | Sary Jane, dear,said the Lady of Shalott, once more,"had you ever thought that perhaps I was a little-- weaker-- than I was-- once?" |
15933 | Sary Jane, dear,said the Lady of Shalott, one day,"how hot_ is_ it up here?" |
15933 | Sary Jane, dear? |
15933 | Sary Jane, dear? |
15933 | Sary Jane, dear? |
15933 | Sir? |
15933 | So you are, very sick indeed, dear Jakey,I said;"but you will not be sorry to die, will you, dear?" |
15933 | Suppose we turn goldsmiths? |
15933 | Surely, he will relent now and let the poor lad come hither? |
15933 | The what? |
15933 | Then if what you think of were ever to come to pass,said the wife, hesitatingly,"would it matter so much? |
15933 | There''s plenty of quantongs over there, eh, mother, and raspberries? 15933 They rushed in upon us, shouting''Nickalees? |
15933 | This is Alois''s name- day, is it not? |
15933 | Thou surely hast not had ill words with the little one? |
15933 | Ven I bees done, ven my moder have make me, von lady ce come dare and ce tell my moder, Vot ce make? 15933 Vill Gott know vare I bees, and vill he fine me here, ven he come? |
15933 | Want? |
15933 | Were you not afraid, Jakey? |
15933 | Were you so fond of the glass? |
15933 | What did you keep us waiting in the rain for? |
15933 | What is cruel? |
15933 | What''s that? |
15933 | What''s your business? |
15933 | What, dear? |
15933 | What, pull it up before you have planted it? 15933 Where is the pain?" |
15933 | Where''s that bairn? 15933 Who are the children that play across there?" |
15933 | Who are you, sir? |
15933 | Who teaches you the letters, Little Jakey? |
15933 | Who''s that? |
15933 | Why do n''t you sell your feather? |
15933 | Why, Jakey,I asked, coaxingly,"what makes you think so?" |
15933 | Why, what ails the child? |
15933 | Why? |
15933 | Will they ring? |
15933 | Would n''t it, sir? |
15933 | Would you give Patrasche a crust? |
15933 | Wull ye never learn to say_ dust_, ye thrawn deevil? |
15933 | You love the birds, Jakey? |
15933 | Your cap, sir? |
15933 | Ze lady come and ce tell me, Vare is Meme? 15933 _ Will_ you pour me out?" |
15933 | ***** Do we make too much of this little child, who has been in her grave in Abbotshall Kirkyard these fifty and more years? |
15933 | After a little, he asked again with great earnestness,--"How vill it be? |
15933 | And ce say von oder time in ze keyhole, Little boy, cause vy you cry? |
15933 | And ce tell my granfader dot he vill not give my fader ze beer? |
15933 | And my moder tell him dot ven my fader have not ze money, he vill keep him in ze house mit him? |
15933 | And quick von man come back mit ze doctor, and ven, mit hees leetle knife, he have make my moder''s arm bleed, ce speak, and ce say, Vare my fader be? |
15933 | And when she looked up, what do you think she saw? |
15933 | Are our Marjories nowadays better or worse because they can not read Tom Jones unharmed? |
15933 | Are you sick, Little Jakey?" |
15933 | Are you still as much attached to 9 times 9 as you used to be?" |
15933 | But pray, dear, where is your father? |
15933 | Can you tell me where the blow was?" |
15933 | Do n''t you think we must be mistaken?" |
15933 | Does she see them run up and down? |
15933 | Have I so found it full of pleasing charms?-- Some drops of joy, with draughts of ill between, Some gleams of sunshine''mid renewing storms? |
15933 | He tell him, dot he vill be good? |
15933 | He would bring him here, and show him all the wonders, and perhaps he would build a new hut over here, and come and live in it? |
15933 | How can I tell?" |
15933 | How is the dear Multiplication table going on? |
15933 | How long did the good man keep you with him in his house?" |
15933 | How long may I stay?" |
15933 | How vill it be? |
15933 | How-- vill-- it-- be?" |
15933 | I exclaimed,"what has happened to this dear treasure? |
15933 | I have heard nothing to- day of the forget- me- not which troubled her so the first week, have you?" |
15933 | I-- a dog?" |
15933 | If Gott not know ven I die, and if he bees not here, vill zey keep me von day and von day, vile he come?" |
15933 | Is he dead?" |
15933 | Is it departing pangs my soul alarms? |
15933 | Jeanie''s glory was"putting him through the carritch"( catechism) in broad Scotch, beginning at the beginning with"Wha made ye, ma bonnie man?" |
15933 | Just see that scuttle, will you? |
15933 | More better than worse; but who among them can repeat Gray''s Lines on a distant prospect of Eton College as could our Maidie? |
15933 | My moder ce tell him, Vare ze money vot he get mit ze vatch? |
15933 | Nickalees?'' |
15933 | Or Death''s unlovely, dreary, dark abode? |
15933 | Or the rat- trap? |
15933 | Perceiving this, he rested his little hand softly on my cheek again, and whispered timidly,--"Vy for you cry?" |
15933 | Perhaps the pretty young lady, with the feathers in her hat, lived somewhere here, too? |
15933 | Remember? |
15933 | Said his sister''s angel to the leader,"Is my brother come?" |
15933 | Said his sister''s angel to the leader,--"Is my brother come?" |
15933 | Said his sister''s angel to the leader,--"Is my brother come?" |
15933 | Sary Jane''s hair had been-- what was it? |
15933 | See him, do n''t you?" |
15933 | She seems now, when still about six, to have broken out into song:--"EPHIBOL( EPIGRAM OR EPITAPH,--WHO KNOWS WHICH?) |
15933 | That is the whole story, General Halbert; and who should know it better than I, Geoffry Hamlyn? |
15933 | Then how should I for heavenly mercy pray, Who act so counter heavenly mercy''s plan, Who sin so oft have mourned, yet to temptation ran? |
15933 | Then passing my hand down over a little coat covered with buttons, I said,--"Surely, so you are a little boy; but what is your name?" |
15933 | They used to say to one another, sometimes, Supposing all the children upon earth were to die, would the flowers, and the water, and the sky be sorry? |
15933 | This is delicious; and what harm is there in her"Devilish"? |
15933 | V."Where did your mother go, Jakey, when she first came into this country? |
15933 | Ven Gott take me i m Himmel, vill he come mit me in ze leetle boat? |
15933 | Vill Gott come, and vill he fine me here? |
15933 | Was it the looking- glass? |
15933 | Well and so-- when she came to herself, where do you think she was? |
15933 | What could that have been out of the Sardonic Dean? |
15933 | What do they say? |
15933 | What do you s''pose the meriky is up here? |
15933 | What do you want, sir?" |
15933 | What has he not done for every one of us? |
15933 | What is the cause, Nello?" |
15933 | What other child of that age would have used"beloved"as she does? |
15933 | What other"pleasant thing"could even the Lady of Shalott discover in that room last summer, at the east end of South Street? |
15933 | What was it? |
15933 | What were they? |
15933 | What wouldst thou have?" |
15933 | What''s the use? |
15933 | What, for example,_ could_ the Lady of Shalott see? |
15933 | When there was a rat caught, she was apt to ask"What?" |
15933 | Where is Himmel?" |
15933 | Where is that, Jakey? |
15933 | Where were you struck? |
15933 | Who else ever, except Shakespeare, so diverted mankind, entertained and entertains a world so liberally, so wholesomely? |
15933 | Who knows what mischief might not come of it in the future?" |
15933 | Who would not, to sit in the sun in that palace? |
15933 | Why may n''t I get across and play there?" |
15933 | Why not? |
15933 | Without Rubens, what were Antwerp? |
15933 | Without him, what should I have been?" |
15933 | You know about him, do you not? |
15933 | You not see him vay high dare? |
15933 | Zen my moder say, Vare ze vatch den? |
15933 | and pray, when did you come here?" |
15933 | and then, if she could but manage to scare the fishes a little,--a very little,--that would be such glorious fun, too,--wouldn''t it, you? |
15933 | and ven ze vinds blow too hard, and ze ship come crash on ze rock, and all ze peoples cry, vill Gott hold me tight in hees arms, like my moder?" |
15933 | and where do you think she was? |
15933 | and zen vill he come in ze big ship, mit ze tree vay high, and mit ze sail? |
15933 | brown? |
15933 | do you suppose I carried it all the way up here for_ you_?" |
15933 | dot he vill love my moder, and get ze bread and ze fire and ze meat? |
15933 | dot he vill make ze peoples mit ze brush? |
15933 | dot he vill not drink ze beer? |
15933 | dot he vill vork? |
15933 | is that you?" |
15933 | just as much as-- And pray, my little creature, what''s your name?" |
15933 | said Gluck again,"what_ is_ that?" |
15933 | said Gluck,"have you really been so cruel?" |
15933 | said Ruth, and she trembled;"please, ma''am, I should like to go now, if it''s all the same to you?" |
15933 | said Schwartz;"do you suppose we''ve nothing to do with our bread but to give it to such red- nosed fellows as you?" |
15933 | shouted her friend,"where are ye, my bonnie wee croodlin doo?" |
15933 | twice!_"and then she happened to look down into the water,--and what do you think she saw there? |
15933 | what can have come over her? |
15933 | what for, indeed, you little vagabond?" |
15933 | what''s that?" |
15933 | where am I now?" |
15933 | where did she stop?" |
15933 | which way? |
15933 | who cares for you?" |
15933 | you not know dot? |
15933 | zen vill he come mit me in ze big boat, mit ze big fire? |
12732 | ''What de matter, now, massa? |
12732 | A glass? 12732 A likely stripling-- not ill- born-- and of her own choosing, too? |
12732 | About my door? |
12732 | After all that you have heard? |
12732 | Alas, can I do nothing to help you? |
12732 | And do you, then, suppose me such a creature? |
12732 | And grace? |
12732 | And how is this to be done? |
12732 | And pray how came you here? |
12732 | And the sponsors? |
12732 | And what cause have you, Jupiter, for such a supposition? |
12732 | And what is this? |
12732 | And what, sir,she demanded,"may be the meaning of all this?" |
12732 | And why not to- night? |
12732 | And why not? |
12732 | And you did dream of it? |
12732 | And you have not seen it? |
12732 | And you really solved it? |
12732 | And you think, then, that your master was really bitten by the beetle, and that the bite made him sick? |
12732 | Are there two Kiplings? |
12732 | Are you out walking so late? |
12732 | Aylmer, are you in earnest? |
12732 | But how did you proceed? |
12732 | But how do you know he dreams about gold? |
12732 | But how was it possible to effect this? |
12732 | But what, in the name of all that is mysterious, is your''Massa Will''going to do with scythes and spades? |
12732 | But why do we speak of dying? 12732 Colonel, what are you going to do?" |
12732 | Danger? 12732 Did I whack you over the knee, old man?" |
12732 | Did you call me? |
12732 | Did you say it was a_ dead_ limb, Jupiter? |
12732 | Do you fancy,he went on,"that when I had made my little contrivance for the door I had stopped short with that? |
12732 | Do you know that you are Limmason-- Lieutenant Limmason, of the White Hussars? |
12732 | Do you know who you are? |
12732 | Do you know,said the monster, when he had finished,"that I have had, and still have, a great liking for you?" |
12732 | Do you mean, I am a prisoner? |
12732 | Do you remember, my dear Aylmer,said she, with a feeble attempt at a smile,"have you any recollection of a dream last night about this odious hand?" |
12732 | Do you think I have no more generous aspirations than to sin, and sin, and sin, and, at last, sneak into heaven? 12732 Eh?--what? |
12732 | Father, what is that? |
12732 | For what price? |
12732 | Georgiana,said he,"has it never occurred to you that the mark upon your cheek might be removed?" |
12732 | Good evening, stranger,said the lime- burner;"whence come you, so late in the day?" |
12732 | Has the day begun already? |
12732 | Have you not tried it? |
12732 | How I know? 12732 How can I tell?" |
12732 | How does he know? |
12732 | How far mus''go up, massa? |
12732 | How high up are you? |
12732 | How much fudder I''s got for go? |
12732 | How? 12732 I, I-- I picked up that wallet?" |
12732 | In any one? |
12732 | In what way? |
12732 | Is he going to cry all night? |
12732 | Is it with this lotion that you intend to bathe my cheek? |
12732 | Is there anything else I can do for you? |
12732 | Is there anything else? |
12732 | Is there anything else? |
12732 | Is there not a man in your town who is brave enough to speak to me? |
12732 | Is this the town,said the Griffin,"where there is a church with a likeness of myself over one of the doors?" |
12732 | Jupiter,cried he, without heeding me in the least,"do you hear me?" |
12732 | May I lead you thither, madam? |
12732 | No, massa, I bring dis here''pissel;and here Jupiter handed me a note, which ran thus: My dear------: Why have I not seen you for so long a time? |
12732 | Not charitable? |
12732 | Now where the dickens did you get that knowledge, Hira Singh? |
12732 | Poor? 12732 Ressaidar Sahib, what the devil made you play that kicking pig of a pony in the last ten minutes?" |
12732 | Say it be lost, say I am plunged again in poverty, shall one part of me, and that the worse, continue until the end to override the better? 12732 She is in a better frame of spirit?" |
12732 | Still your uncle''s cabinet? 12732 That being so,"he said,"shall I show you the money?" |
12732 | That is to say on a week- day? |
12732 | The man that went in search of the Unpardonable Sin? |
12732 | The_ what?_"De bug-- I''m berry sartain dat Massa Will bin bit somewhere''bout de head by dat goole- bug. |
12732 | Then why did you take me from my mother''s side? 12732 They saw me, me? |
12732 | To me? |
12732 | Two or three years ago, did I not see you on the platform of revival meetings, and was not your voice the loudest in the hymn? |
12732 | Very true; but what are they doing here? |
12732 | Was the fellow''s heart made of marble? |
12732 | Well now, Jupiter, do exactly as I tell you-- do you hear? |
12732 | Well, Jup, perhaps you are right; but to what fortunate circumstances am I to attribute the honor of a visit from you to- day? |
12732 | Well, Jup,said I,"what is the matter now?--how is your master?" |
12732 | Well, then, was it this eye or that through which you dropped the beetle? |
12732 | Well, then, what matter? |
12732 | Well, then,said the Griffin,"will you take me to it? |
12732 | Well,cried Legrand, highly delighted,"what is it?" |
12732 | What are you driving at? |
12732 | What are you? |
12732 | What could I do? |
12732 | What de matter, massa? |
12732 | What do you mean? 12732 What has a Queen''s officer to do with a qualified number?" |
12732 | What in the name of heaven shall I do? |
12732 | What is it-- oh, what is it? |
12732 | What is the Unpardonable Sin? |
12732 | What is the matter with you all? |
12732 | What is the meaning of all this, Jup? |
12732 | What more have I to seek? 12732 What shall his name be?" |
12732 | What!--sunrise? |
12732 | What''s that? |
12732 | What''s the use of getting wroth? 12732 Where am I? |
12732 | Where is the hurry? |
12732 | Where shall I go? 12732 Which way mus''go now, Massa Will?" |
12732 | Who can do so? 12732 Why did you hesitate to tell me this?" |
12732 | Why do n''t they put him in the cells till the morning? |
12732 | Why do you come thither? 12732 Why do you keep such a terrific drug?" |
12732 | Why not a glass? |
12732 | Why, who are you? |
12732 | Why, you uncivil scoundrel,cried the fierce doctor,"is that the way you respond to the kindness of your best friends? |
12732 | Will you be good enough to take your seats, please, gentlemen? |
12732 | Would you throw the blight of that fatal birthmark over my labors? 12732 You are to use this money on the Stock Exchange, I think?" |
12732 | You ask me why not? |
12732 | You know me? |
12732 | You mean to punctuate it? |
12732 | _ Very_ sick, Jupiter!--why did n''t you say so at once? 12732 _ What_ does the sentry say?" |
12732 | ); 806*;48†8 ¶60))85;1‡(;:‡*8†83(88)5*†;46(;88* 96? |
12732 | 92"5.:3"4.?" |
12732 | Again he spoke, very slowly,"Where is_ our_ horse?" |
12732 | And are my vices only to direct my life, and my virtues to lie without effect, like some passive lumber of the mind? |
12732 | And den he keep a syphon all de time--""Keeps a what, Jupiter?" |
12732 | And if the old gentleman was sane, what, in God''s name, had he to look for? |
12732 | And the corporal added:--"Master Hauchecorne, will you be kind enough to go to the mayor''s office with me? |
12732 | And then addressing Denis,"Monsieur de Beaulieu,"he asked,"may I present you to my niece? |
12732 | And why did you insist on letting fall the bug, instead of a bullet, from the skull?" |
12732 | And yet, in that strip of doubtful brightness, did there not hang wavering a shadow? |
12732 | At last he asked, but gently,--"What do you propose to do now, Thord?" |
12732 | Be helped by you? |
12732 | But can you not look within? |
12732 | But here, within the house, was he alone? |
12732 | But the discovery gives us three new letters,_ o, u_, and_ g_, represented by ‡? |
12732 | But truly I had not looked for such a shameful punishment as this? |
12732 | But we thought you were going home?" |
12732 | But where are the_ antennae_ you spoke of?" |
12732 | But where was the heart? |
12732 | But-- where is_ the_ horse?" |
12732 | Can not you remove this little, little mark, which I cover with the tips of two small fingers? |
12732 | Can you not read me for a thing that surely must be common as humanity-- the unwilling sinner?" |
12732 | Can you not see within me the clear writing of conscience, never blurred by any wilful sophistry[19] although too often disregarded? |
12732 | Can you not understand that evil is hateful to me? |
12732 | Come, tell me about yourself, I hazard a guess now, that you are in secret a very charitable man?" |
12732 | Dear God, man, is that all?" |
12732 | Did she send any word to her old father, or say when she was coming back?" |
12732 | Did you mean it? |
12732 | Did you never hear of Ethan Brand?" |
12732 | Do I believe in him? |
12732 | Do I not distinguish that heavy and horrible beating of her heart? |
12732 | Do I say that I follow sins? |
12732 | Do you like to see it? |
12732 | Eh? |
12732 | For Christmas? |
12732 | For-- Pray, do you think me beautiful?" |
12732 | Got everything you want,--cheroots, ice, bedding? |
12732 | Had you a thought in your mind? |
12732 | Has anything unpleasant happened since I saw you?" |
12732 | Has n''t he told you what ails him?" |
12732 | Have I a right to do that?" |
12732 | Have I ever seen you-- have you ever seen me-- before this accursed hour?" |
12732 | Have I not heard her footstep on the stair? |
12732 | Have you ever heard of any important treasure being unearthed along the coast?" |
12732 | Have you found it?" |
12732 | Have you no trust in your husband?" |
12732 | He inquired:--"Is Master Hauchecorne of Bréauté here?" |
12732 | How came it to shut so easily and so effectually after him? |
12732 | How did he come here?" |
12732 | How is it possible to extort a meaning from all this jargon about''devil''s seats,''death''s- heads,''and''bishop''s hotels''?" |
12732 | How many limbs have you passed?" |
12732 | I looked for much confusion; for how could I tell whether he was willing to take me for his wife on these sharp terms? |
12732 | I pity the poor; who knows their trials better than myself? |
12732 | I wonder where he came from?" |
12732 | If I go to some other town, shall I not take this trouble there? |
12732 | In a short time, the day for his semi- annual meal would arrive, and then what would happen? |
12732 | Is Messire de Malétroit at hand?" |
12732 | Is he confined to bed?" |
12732 | Is it any wonder, then, that I prize it? |
12732 | Is she not hurrying to upbraid me for my haste? |
12732 | Is that all? |
12732 | Is this beyond your power, for the sake of your own peace, and to save your poor wife from madness?" |
12732 | Is this, then, your experience of mankind? |
12732 | It looked like a snare, and yet who could suppose a snare in such a quiet by- street and in a house of so prosperous and even noble an exterior? |
12732 | Legrand?" |
12732 | Let us talk of each other; why should we wear this mask? |
12732 | Look here, Jupiter, do you hear me?" |
12732 | Monsieur de Beaulieu, how can I look you in the face?" |
12732 | My friends, is that road shut?" |
12732 | Oh, whither shall I fly? |
12732 | Perhaps a couple of blows with a mattock were sufficient, while his coadjutors were busy in the pit; perhaps it required a dozen-- who shall tell?" |
12732 | Shall I help you-- I, who know all? |
12732 | Shall I tell you where to find the money?" |
12732 | So little, is it not? |
12732 | The colonel shook the man gently by the arm, and"Who are you?" |
12732 | The man is surely mad!--but stay!--how long do you propose to be absent?" |
12732 | The two upper black spots look like eyes, eh? |
12732 | To this the priest said nothing, but after a while he asked:"What is your pleasure this evening?" |
12732 | Very well; how is it fastened to the limb? |
12732 | Well and so you have found the Unpardonable Sin?" |
12732 | What absurd or tragical adventure had befallen him? |
12732 | What ailed the door? |
12732 | What are we to make of the skeletons found in the hole?" |
12732 | What could be more natural than to mount the staircase, lift the curtain, and confront his difficulty at once? |
12732 | What could he be dreaming of? |
12732 | What countenance was he to assume? |
12732 | What do you mean?" |
12732 | What does he complain of?" |
12732 | What had he seen? |
12732 | What holds it on?" |
12732 | What in the world is he?" |
12732 | What is to be done?" |
12732 | What make him dream''bout de goole so much, if''tain''t cause he bit by de goole- bug? |
12732 | What new crotchet possessed his excitable brain? |
12732 | What should he want with_ me?_""Oh! |
12732 | What was it-- I paused to think-- what was it that so unnerved me in the contemplation of the House of Usher? |
12732 | What"business of the highest importance"could_ he_ possibly have to transact? |
12732 | When you left the Bishop''s Hotel, what then?" |
12732 | Who knows, we might become friends?" |
12732 | Who was it saw me?" |
12732 | Why did he call him"old fox"? |
12732 | Why is this?" |
12732 | Why was it open? |
12732 | Why, what more would the jade have?" |
12732 | Why? |
12732 | Will she not be here anon? |
12732 | Will you take the glass?" |
12732 | You will not disfigure your last hours by a want of politeness to a lady?" |
12732 | You will, of course, ask,''Where is the connection?'' |
12732 | _ We have put her living in the tomb!_ Said I not that my senses were acute? |
12732 | _ What Was It? |
12732 | ai n''t dis here my lef''eye for sartain?" |
12732 | and is this crime of murder indeed so impious as to dry up the very springs of good?" |
12732 | aye, and then? |
12732 | cried Legrand, apparently much relieved,"what do you mean by telling me such nonsense as that? |
12732 | cried Markheim, with a strange curiosity,"Ah, have you been in love? |
12732 | cried Markheim:"the devil?" |
12732 | de bug, massa? |
12732 | do you know your right hand from your left?" |
12732 | he saw me, did he, that sneak? |
12732 | here fairly screamed Legrand;"do you say you are out to the end of that limb?" |
12732 | or is it because you find me with red hands that you presume such baseness? |
12732 | proceeded Bartrarn,"where might it be?" |
12732 | remarked the visitor;"and there, if I mistake not, you have already lost some thousands?" |
12732 | said Legrand,"but it''s so long since I saw you; and how could I foresee that you would pay me a visit this very night of all others? |
12732 | said the colonel,"or are we supposed to sit up with Little Mildred''s guest until he feels better?" |
12732 | settled to your satisfaction, you will then return home and follow my advice implicitly, as that of your physician?" |
12732 | sternly replied Ethan Brand,"what need have I of the Devil? |
12732 | then you are Ethan Brand himself?" |
12732 | was the skull nailed to the limb with the face outwards, or with the face to the limb?" |
12732 | what I keer for de bug?" |
12732 | what do you mean?" |
12732 | what more to achieve?" |
12732 | what mus''do wid it?" |
12732 | what shall we say to my uncle when he returns?" |
12732 | what_ is_ dis here''pon de tree?" |
12732 | which-- which is your left eye?" |
12732 | who is it?" |
21775 | And dost thou imagine, then, Partridge,cries Jones,"that he was really frightened?" |
21775 | And is your heart still so warm, Maria? |
21775 | And where are you going, Maria? |
21775 | And where will you dry it, Maria? |
21775 | Do you think,replied he,"to terrify me with death?" |
21775 | He''ll drop at last,said the Corporal,"and what will become of his body?" |
21775 | How,cried I,"is that all you are to have for your two shillings? |
21775 | That is what I expect,returned she;"but I think, my dear, we ought to appear there as decently as possible, for who knows what may happen?" |
21775 | Well now, Sophy, my child,said I,"and what sort of a husband are you to have?" |
21775 | Well, my girls, how have you sped? 21775 Well,"said he,"how people may be deceived by faces? |
21775 | Why, who,cries Jones,"dost thou take to be such a coward here besides thyself?" |
21775 | And remember in all the business of your life to ask your conscience this question, Should I be willing that this should be done to me? |
21775 | And yet, must not one sigh to reflect, that the most authentic record of so ancient a family should lie at the mercy of every boy that throws a stone? |
21775 | Can honor teach any one to tell a lie, or can any honor exist independent of religion?" |
21775 | Do you think there are any such fine creatures now living as we then conversed with? |
21775 | Follow you? |
21775 | Give me leave now to ask you how many thousand years God must prolong your life in order to reconcile you to His wisdom and goodness? |
21775 | Have you not taken them for granted in the whole course of your studies? |
21775 | How then could seven or eight hundred years of life be supported? |
21775 | Is it for_ him_ to question the dispensation of the royal favor? |
21775 | It is his by law; what have I to do with it or its history?" |
21775 | Jones asked him what was the matter, and whether he was afraid of the warrior upon the stage? |
21775 | Partridge sat in fearful expectation of this; and now, when the ghost made his next appearance, Partridge cried out,"There sir, now; what say you now? |
21775 | Shall I go on? |
21775 | Sure it is not armor, is it?" |
21775 | Tell me, Livy, has the fortune- teller given thee a pennyworth?" |
21775 | Then turning his eyes again upon Hamlet,"Ay, you may draw your sword; what signifies a sword against the power of the devil?" |
21775 | Under what pretense would any individual of that order assume authority in public affairs? |
21775 | Was there ever anything so delightful as the music of the Paradise Lost? |
21775 | Well, sir, but do you think the esquire ever mentioned a word of the church? |
21775 | What do I gain by this but the dissatisfaction to find that I had been imposed upon? |
21775 | Who can say after this that glass is frail, when it is not half so perishable as human beauty or glory? |
21775 | Who would believe the proud person I am going to speak of is a cobbler upon Ludgate hill? |
21775 | Who would think, by looking in the king''s face, that he had ever committed a murder?" |
21775 | Who''s fool then? |
21775 | Why should not they do something as well as we? |
21775 | Why was Jove himself nursed upon a mountain? |
21775 | Will you? |
21775 | You only show me how industrious you are to find faults in me: why will you not suffer me to be pleased with you? |
21775 | dear sir, do n''t you hear him?" |
21775 | is he frightened now or no? |
21775 | lud have mercy upon such foolhardiness? |
21775 | or why did the goddesses, when the prize of beauty was contested, try the cause upon the top of Ida? |
21775 | what''s become of the spirit? |
21775 | with the same care that you have employed in examining the various consequences drawn from them, and the heterodox opinions about them? |
21679 | And how came you, madame,quoth I,"to this deep knowledge of pleasure? |
21679 | But what have ye to do,said she,"with my marriage?" |
21679 | Damsel,said the King,"what sword is that which the arm holdeth yonder above the water? |
21679 | What damsel is that? |
21679 | What have ye to do,said she,"with my marriage? |
21679 | What signifieth yonder pavilion? |
21679 | Whether liketh you better,said Merlin,"the sword or the scabbard?" |
21679 | After salutation and duty done, with some other talk, I asked her why she would leese[ lose] such pastime in the park? |
21679 | And alle men wondriden, so that thei soughten togidre among hem, seyinge, What is this thinge? |
21679 | And as he went down deeper he said, Grave, where is thy Victory? |
21679 | And does kingly purple, and governing refractory worlds instead of stitching coarse shoes, make it merrier? |
21679 | And if you wrong us, shall we not revenge? |
21679 | And who shall then stick closest to ye, and excite others? |
21679 | Do you not see what feigned prices are set upon little stones and rarities? |
21679 | Frank, are you there?" |
21679 | Had you rather Cæsar were living and die all slaves, than that Cæsar were dead, to live all freemen? |
21679 | Hath not a Jew eyes? |
21679 | He answered,"I am the watchman; how do you do? |
21679 | I THE ANTIQUITY OF ANGLING[58]_ Piscator_--O sir, doubt not that angling is an art: is it not an art to deceive a trout with an artificial fly? |
21679 | If a Christian wrong a Jew, what should his sufferance be by Christian example? |
21679 | If a Jew wrong a Christian, what is his humility? |
21679 | If you poison us, do we not die? |
21679 | If you prick us, do we not bleed? |
21679 | If you tickle us, do we not laugh? |
21679 | Now, as they came up to these places, behold the gardener stood in the way, to whom the pilgrims said: Whose goodly vineyards and gardens are these? |
21679 | Or what are ye within this commonwealth?" |
21679 | Seyinge, What to vs and to thee, thou Jhesu of Nazareth? |
21679 | So saith Solomon,"Where much is, there are many to consume it; and what hath the owner but the sight of it with his eyes?" |
21679 | The person answered,"What is that to you? |
21679 | The question is rather, whether you be capable of learning it? |
21679 | Therefore why should I be angry with a man for loving himself better than me? |
21679 | Was thy own life merry, for example, in the hollow of the tree; clad permanently in leather? |
21679 | What are these but rank pedants? |
21679 | What could a man require more from a nation so pliant and so prone to seek after knowledge? |
21679 | What is a greater pedant than a mere man of the town? |
21679 | What is the matter?" |
21679 | What should ye do then? |
21679 | What''s that good for? |
21679 | When the day that he must go hence was come, many accompanied him to the River- side, into which as he went he said, Death, where is thy Sting? |
21679 | Where, then, most potent, most longed- for treasure, art thou concealed? |
21679 | Who is here so base that would be a bondman? |
21679 | Who is here so rude that would not be a Roman? |
21679 | Who is here so vile that will not love his country? |
21679 | _ Faith._ May I speak a few words in my own defense? |
21679 | _ Judge._ Then did the Judge say to him, Hast thou any more to say? |
21679 | and asked,"What was all this to me?" |
21679 | and what did chiefly allure you unto it, seeing not many women, but very few men, have attained thereunto?" |
21679 | and what works of ostentation are undertaken, because there might seem to be some use of great riches? |
21679 | and where shall the thirsty soul find thee? |
21679 | haste thou cummen bifore the tyme for to destroie vs? |
21679 | should ye suppress all this flowery crop of knowledge and new light sprung up and yet springing daily in this city? |
21679 | what is this newe techyng? |
20586 | And whither shall we ride,they said,"To find the hidden thing That times the course of all our stars And all our auguring?" |
20586 | Hither, page, and stand by me, If thou know''st it, telling, Yonder peasant, who is he? 20586 Is Perry Anders in there, too?" |
20586 | Is there a reason in nature for these hard hearts? |
20586 | Nay, nay,said Hall,"Why take the style of those heroic times? |
20586 | Now tell me, sweet Son, I thee pray, thou art my love and dear, How should I keep thee to thy pay[L] and make thee glad of cheer? 20586 Now, sweet Son, since thou art king, why art thou laid in stall? |
20586 | Why, yes,I said,"we knew your gift that way At college; but another which you had, I mean of verse( for so we held it then), What came of that?" |
20586 | You know,said Frank,"he burnt His epic, his King Arthur, some twelve books,"-- And then to me demanding why? |
20586 | And David-- David jes turned pale!-- Looked at the girls and then at me, Then at the open door-- and then"Is old Squire Hanch in there?" |
20586 | And art Thou come for saving, baby- browed And speechless Being-- art Thou come for saving? |
20586 | And is not war a youthful king, A stately hero clad in mail? |
20586 | And presently David he sobered; and says he,"Hain''t that- air Squire Hanch''s old Buggy,"he says,"and claybank mare?" |
20586 | And what thing fills the night With wheeling spires of angels, And streams of heavenly light? |
20586 | Art Thou a King, then? |
20586 | Art come for saving, O my weary One? |
20586 | Babe of mine-- babe of mine, Must I lose you? |
20586 | But why do the horses whinny and neigh? |
20586 | Can my one poor treasure go? |
20586 | Criminals, then? |
20586 | Dame, what made your ducks to die, Ducks to die, ducks to die; Dame, what made your ducks to die On Christmas day in the morning? |
20586 | Did aught avail Somewhere? |
20586 | Dying-- is it so? |
20586 | For nature brings not back the mastodon, Nor we those times; and why should any man Remodel models? |
20586 | Going, darling, in the night? |
20586 | He says,"Whose sleigh''s that- air a- standin''there?" |
20586 | If one strips the clinging vine There''s resistance-- Shall not I then----? |
20586 | In David''s city doth this sun appear Clouded in flesh, yet, shepherds, sit we here? |
20586 | Long and near, In audience hall, each dusky wayfarer Questioned he of their knowledge, and the star, What message flashed it? |
20586 | More oft than any else beneath the skies? |
20586 | Must the dear eyes close? |
20586 | Must those cheeks, soft- tinged with rose, Pallid grow and chill? |
20586 | My flesh, my Lord!--what name? |
20586 | My sweet little baby, what meanest thou to cry? |
20586 | Or is fit music wanting? |
20586 | Say, heavenly Muse, shall not thy sacred vein Afford a present to the Infant- God? |
20586 | Say, would''st thou heavenly sweetness, Or love of answering meetness? |
20586 | Some far- fetched vision, new to peasant''s sleep, Of paradise stripped bare!--But, why thus keep Secrets for them? |
20586 | Sweet baby, sleep; what ails my dear? |
20586 | Sweet music''s loudest note, the poet''s story,-- Didst thou ne''er love to hear of fame and glory? |
20586 | That strife should vanish, battle cease, O why should this thy soul elate? |
20586 | Then spake King Arthur to Sir Bedivere:"Hast thou performed my mission which I gave? |
20586 | Then spoke King Arthur, breathing heavily:"What is it thou hast seen? |
20586 | Then wherefore in these merry days, Should we, I pray, be duller? |
20586 | Then wherefore should we fear, Seeing here is store of cheer? |
20586 | This lovely lady sat and sang, and to her child she said,--"My son, my brother, my father dear, why liest thou thus in hayd? |
20586 | Thou blessed soul, what canst thou fear? |
20586 | Though other purses be more fat, Why should we pine or grieve at that? |
20586 | Three kings went riding from the East Through fine weather and wet;"And whither shall we ride,"they said,"Where we ha''not ridden yet?" |
20586 | Thus were they found by the few sparse folk of the country- side; But how fared each with other? |
20586 | Was''t not willed? |
20586 | Were it well to obey then, if a king demand An act unprofitable against himself?" |
20586 | What ails my darling thus to cry? |
20586 | What cause of wondering If that one silence of all silences Brake into music? |
20586 | What good should follow this, if this were done? |
20586 | What harm, undone? |
20586 | What is it thou hast seen? |
20586 | What then doth make the element so bright? |
20586 | What things to thee can mischief do? |
20586 | What was it that ye heard? |
20586 | Where and what his dwelling?" |
20586 | Why not thou ordain thy bedding in some great kingès hall? |
20586 | Would''st Thou not? |
20586 | _ Tityrus._ Poor world( said I), what wilt thou do To entertain this starry stranger? |
20586 | after long stress Of heavy shame to bring forgetfulness? |
20586 | at last? |
20586 | hast thou heard Rachel''s wail Where restitution is? |
20586 | if, for hopes like these Angels, who love us, sang that song, and show Of time''s far purpose made the"great light"glow? |
20586 | or what hast heard?" |
20586 | or what hast heard?" |
20586 | past life? |
20586 | the King of Persia cried,"And must ye ride away? |
20586 | the wind of night Playing in cheating tones, with touches light, Amid the palm- plumes? |
20586 | what then? |
22397 | ----_ Who was"Jack Wilson"the Singer of Shakespeare''s Stage?_ London, 1846. |
22397 | Burbage and Brayne made an agreement with the proprietor of that playhouse whereby the Curtain might be used"as an easore"[ easer?] |
22397 | Does it not, however, indicate that there were only two galleries?] |
22397 | On this bank is the bear gardens, in number twain; to wit, the old bear garden[ i.e., the one built in 1583?] |
22397 | P. Did General Harrison Kill"Dick Robinson"the Player? |
22397 | Pope( a scrivener? |
22397 | Possibly one of Shakespeare''s new plays(_ Hamlet_?) |
22397 | Shakespeare, in_ Henry V_( 1599), likens his playhouse to a cockpit: Can this cockpit hold The vasty fields of France? |
22397 | Should we read the date as 1644/5?] |
22397 | The good- natured way in which Shakespeare treats the situation is worthy of special observation:_ Ham._ What players are they? |
22397 | The passage ends with the question from Hamlet:"Do the boys carry it away?" |
22397 | Upon the same night I sent for the Queen''s Players[ at the Theatre?] |
22397 | WHITEFRIARS, about 1605- 1614(?).] |
22397 | Who was"Will, my lord of Leycester''s jesting player"? |
22397 | Why, then, did the Lords issue this order, and why was it not put into effect? |
22397 | Will they pursue the quality no longer than they can sing? |
22397 | [ 326]_ Ham._ How chances it they travel? |
22397 | [ 711][ Footnote 710: Should we place a comma after"Josias"? |
22397 | [ Footnote 117: Did Steevens base his statement on this passage in Aubrey?] |
22397 | [ Footnote 119: Easer?] |
22397 | [ Footnote 412: Did he increase the amount of the rental to £ 25 per annum? |
22397 | [ Footnote 638: An allusion to the smallness of the Salisbury Court Playhouse?] |
22397 | [ Illustration: THE FORTUNE PLAYHOUSE(?) |
22397 | [? |
22397 | _ Benvolio._ The what? |
22397 | _ Ham._ Do they hold the same estimation they did when I was in the city? |
22397 | _ Ham._ How comes it? |
22397 | _ Leatherhead._ What mean you by that, sir? |
22397 | and my Lord Arundel''s Players[ at the Curtain?] |
22397 | and the new[ i.e., the Swan? |
22397 | are they children? |
22397 | are they so followed? |
22397 | do they grow rusty? |
22397 | how are they escoted? |
22397 | or may we cram Within this wooden O the very casques That did affright the air at Agincourt? |
22397 | who maintains''em? |
15585 | ''A boy has eighty- five turnips, and gives his sister thirty,''--pretty present for a girl, is n''t it? |
15585 | ''Bear it? 15585 ''Candor''s the order of the day, is n''t it?'' |
15585 | ''Do you know,''said he, looking shyly at Hollins,''that I begin to think Beer must be a natural beverage? 15585 ''Now, are you sure you can bear the test?'' |
15585 | ''Oil and vinegar?'' 15585 ''We think we know one another,''exclaimed Rollins;''but do we? |
15585 | ''Well, Abel,''Eunice rejoined,''how are we to distinguish what is best for us? 15585 ''What shall we call the place?" |
15585 | A hypo? |
15585 | Ai n''t that a hard life you are laying out for yourself? 15585 An''a long porch?" |
15585 | An''what if I should tell ye I had conscientious scruples agenst lettin''meself be adored for a heavenly personage? |
15585 | And the-- the person? |
15585 | Are you sick? |
15585 | But had n''t you better take a little time to think it over? 15585 But suppose some one should come along and want to be entertained?" |
15585 | Could_ you_ stand such stuff,--say? |
15585 | Do n''t you really think you are going to lose me, girls? |
15585 | Do you know where this house o''Dutton''s is? |
15585 | Do you think we had better keep it up all the time? |
15585 | Does she know who sends them?'' |
15585 | Forgive you? 15585 Furniture goods?" |
15585 | Haou abaout shoes? |
15585 | Haou do you cattle''ate to treat the ten- acre lot? 15585 Has n''t father got enough stamps to see him through?" |
15585 | Has n''t he any family in the town? |
15585 | Has n''t the man any friends? |
15585 | Have you any red calico like this? |
15585 | Have you any red stuff like this? |
15585 | Have you any stuff like this?'' 15585 How came ye to larn the language, annyway?" |
15585 | How much, sir? |
15585 | How would you like to be companion to a literary man? |
15585 | How would you like to play with him? |
15585 | I did n''t know you knew each other, Lottie? |
15585 | I''d''a been glad to get howld av a bit av timporal sovereighnty, do n''t you see? 15585 I?" |
15585 | Inasmuch as to how? |
15585 | Is Turkey- red just like this? |
15585 | Is it me unavoidable duty to live on this perch, Heller? |
15585 | Is it the wife, ye mane? |
15585 | Is n''t that logic? 15585 Is n''t that splendid, Uncle Teddy? |
15585 | Is n''t there anybody to look after him? |
15585 | Is your name Billings? |
15585 | Is your name Johnson? |
15585 | It would come handy, though, to have a man around to see to things and kind o''provide, would n''t it, though? |
15585 | Lives here? |
15585 | Lottie''s going to play, too; so will you and Daniel, wo n''t you, uncle? 15585 Margaret Callaghan,_ is_ that thing your husband?" |
15585 | My dear Billy, sha''n''t you wait a little while to see if you always like her as well as you do now? 15585 Red stuff? |
15585 | Say, will you come and play with me some time? |
15585 | Spend a_ what_? |
15585 | Sure on''t? |
15585 | Sure, mum, he has a family; was n''t he married this blessed mornin''? |
15585 | The diocese of New York? |
15585 | Then Turkey- red is what you want? |
15585 | Trouble? 15585 Want to go back this morning?" |
15585 | Well, Billy Boy Blue, come blow your horn; what haystack have you been under till this time of day? 15585 Well, have you it in any quality of goods?" |
15585 | What Margaret? |
15585 | What are ye afther doin'', Heller? |
15585 | What are ye goin''to do? |
15585 | What can you do? |
15585 | What do you want? |
15585 | What in wonder have you bought a red dress for? 15585 What is Turkey- red?" |
15585 | What means all this? |
15585 | What part of the work do you incline to yourself? |
15585 | What post would suit you? |
15585 | What shade do you want? |
15585 | What shall we do for lamps, if we can not use any animal substance? 15585 What think you of that?" |
15585 | What will become of him? |
15585 | What''s the matter, my boy? |
15585 | What''s yer will, sir? |
15585 | Where do you come from? 15585 Where do you guess?" |
15585 | Where will I find red calico like this? |
15585 | Who else? 15585 Who is it that says a garden is a standing source of pleasure? |
15585 | Why, Daniel Lovegrove, my nephew, what does this mean? 15585 Why, ma, do n''t you know what a toadskin is? |
15585 | With a big pole in front of it? |
15585 | Would n''t you enjoy it more from church, auntie? |
15585 | Yes, the wife; where is she? |
15585 | You are travelling, h''m? |
15585 | You do n''t seem well to- night, Daniel? |
15585 | You have no Tower in America? |
15585 | You shall be the gentleman? |
15585 | _ Our_ Margaret? 15585 ''We act according to impulse, do n''t we? 15585 ...Shelldrake, however, turning to his wife, said,--"''Elviry, how many up- stairs rooms is there in that house down on the Sound?'' |
15585 | Abel Mallory, for instance?" |
15585 | Ai n''t ye got no sinse at all?" |
15585 | Am I dreaming?" |
15585 | An''what business has Dutchmen here, annyway, whin an Irishman has begun the good worrk? |
15585 | And I said--"Why is this thus? |
15585 | And how is Dolly? |
15585 | And is man less than a cow, that he can not cultivate his instincts to an equal point? |
15585 | And then bum- by you will get old or sick ma''be, and who is going to want you around then? |
15585 | And, Nephew Frederick!--h''m!--can you lend me three dollars for the hackman? |
15585 | And, besides, how did the vine know enough to travel in exactly the right direction, three feet, to find what it wanted? |
15585 | Are there any but intimate family friends here this evening?" |
15585 | Are you cold- blooded, or are you insensible?" |
15585 | Are you sick?" |
15585 | As a hardship he ca n''t be beat; and what are the rogues sent to prison for, but to suffer punishment? |
15585 | As he heard this, Billy idled along the edge of the tank for a moment, then faced about and said,--"P''raps I will some day,--where do you live?" |
15585 | At that tender age I writ a Essy for a lit''ry Institoot entitled,"Is Cats to be trusted?" |
15585 | But have the_ pains_ of the garden ever been dwelt upon? |
15585 | But the difficulty is, who will it be? |
15585 | But what of a sermon that takes life out of you? |
15585 | Can you keep a secret?" |
15585 | Caverns of serpents, or grottoes of priceless gems? |
15585 | Could it be possible that Billy was caught in that vortex which whirled me down at ten years,--a little boy''s first love? |
15585 | Could n''t the chafe, now, take an army out in his doubled- barrelled canoes, an''commince the work av convarsion? |
15585 | D''you-- Miss Pilgrim?" |
15585 | Did I never tell you the story? |
15585 | Did n''t I tell ye, Larry, not to be afther ringin''at the owle gintleman''s knocker? |
15585 | Do n''t you think it would be a good plan to learn Billy better before you try to teach him? |
15585 | Do you hesitate? |
15585 | Does he suppose that a man can live thirty- five years in this state of probation, without becoming slightly calloused to a pun on his own name? |
15585 | Does this proposition strike you? |
15585 | Have people, now, been entirely honest in what they have said and written on this theme? |
15585 | Have you been near her? |
15585 | Have you had your breakfast, and taken care of Crab?" |
15585 | He just catches your eye, and, when he says,"Do n''t you think so, sir?" |
15585 | He of the nose nodded eagerly at that, and wrote,"Also you make to be washed my shirt?" |
15585 | He would seem to take me by the throat, saying,''why do n''t you laugh-- why do n''t you burst with merriment?'' |
15585 | He wrote at once,"How much you pay?" |
15585 | How are we to know_ what_ vegetables to choose, or what animal and mineral substances to avoid?'' |
15585 | How could a back- ache over the pea- bed compensate for these felicities? |
15585 | How d''ye do, Miss Pilgrim?" |
15585 | How did you suppose your mother''d feel to see you playing with those ragamuffins?" |
15585 | How does the cow distinguish between the wholesome and the poisonous herbs of the meadow? |
15585 | How old are you?" |
15585 | How on earth did she get there?" |
15585 | I did not think it necessary to answer this remark, but said:"Then you''ve got nothing to match this?" |
15585 | I know that chemical analysis is said to show it; but may not the alcohol be created, somehow, during the analysis?'' |
15585 | I took a long breath to recover from my astonishment at this unimaginable revelation, then said:"Is your feeling returned?" |
15585 | I wondher, Heller, if some av these other islands would n''t furnish us a change of diet? |
15585 | I wrote:"You wish employment?" |
15585 | I''m a stranger, you know; but is there such a lady here as Mrs. Craggs,--Mrs._ Cromwell_ Craggs? |
15585 | I''m not melanancholy on religion, and"--"You do n''t tell me you''re in love?" |
15585 | If I had n''t, how could I ever wear your trousers?" |
15585 | If I should discoorse to these cannebals in their own contimptible language, would it surprise ye, Heller?" |
15585 | In the next moment Heller, bowing with a ceremonious air of respect, inquired,"What are your commands, my lord bishop?" |
15585 | Is it a go? |
15585 | Is it for furniture?" |
15585 | Is it not so, Abel?''" |
15585 | Is it possible? |
15585 | Is that so?" |
15585 | It is always''Who will I marry?'' |
15585 | Know ye not, consumers of flesh meat, that ye are nourishing the wolf and tiger in your bosoms?" |
15585 | Now, is your digestion awry?" |
15585 | Now, suppose they-- or he-- the man whose brains are out-- goes about with his coffin under his arm, like my worthy uncle? |
15585 | Now, what are my merits?'' |
15585 | O, Pen, I did n''t dare to hope I should find--""Oh, Chauncey, is it you?" |
15585 | One day a feller-- a stranger in the camp, he was-- come across him with his box, and says,"What might it be that you''ve got in the box?" |
15585 | Presently, one of them turned around to me and said:"Is it Dave Dutton ye''re askin''about?" |
15585 | Professor, what may be the spiritual condition av things hereaway, do ye think?" |
15585 | Says I,''Put down that poor little pup; ai n''t you ashamed of yourself, Patsy Grogan?'' |
15585 | Shall I adopt a form of religion? |
15585 | Shall I claim property in any created thing? |
15585 | Shall I consume flesh? |
15585 | Shall I interest myself in politics? |
15585 | Shall I stimulate with tea, coffee, or wine? |
15585 | Shall I subjugate cattle? |
15585 | Shall I trade? |
15585 | Shall we go and join the plays?" |
15585 | Shelldrake gave a long whistle, and finally gasped out,--"''Well, what next?'' |
15585 | Smoke? |
15585 | So, when Hollins, turning towards me, as he continued, exclaimed,--''Come, why should not this candor be adopted in our Arcadia? |
15585 | Suppose it''s evil to swear: is n''t it better I should express it, and be done with it, than keep it bottled up, to ferment in my mind? |
15585 | Suppose they should go by some accident, when your father was too old to make any more stamps for himself?" |
15585 | Suppose your parents were to lose all their property, what would become of them without a little son who could make money and keep accounts?" |
15585 | The Funny Fellow spoke to Miss Grasscloth:"''Why are the fishermen who catch these shad like wigmakers?'' |
15585 | The matter with him? |
15585 | There I asked a man:"Where will I find red calico?" |
15585 | They are cheerful, and why should it not be thusly with us?" |
15585 | They said--"Doth not like us?" |
15585 | They then said--"Wilt not marry us?" |
15585 | Uncle Teddy, d''ye know it was n''t a dog- fight, after all? |
15585 | Was it called the''Ridge House''?" |
15585 | Was my name providentially ordered to be Green, that he might pass verbal contumely upon it? |
15585 | We see the summer smile of the Earth,--enamelled meadow and limpid stream,--but what hides she in her sunless heart? |
15585 | Well, if the plans and charts From Andre''s boots he hauled out, Is his name to be bawled out Forever, round these parts? |
15585 | Well, what''s_ he_ good for?" |
15585 | What brought on this sudden attack? |
15585 | What did the grizzly old cuss do, however, but commence darncin and larfin in the most joyous manner? |
15585 | What do ye say now to meself exhibitin''the gift av miracles an''tongues? |
15585 | What does a young blade of twenty- two know? |
15585 | What indeed could invest human flesh with such terrors,--what but this? |
15585 | What is the reason of this thusness?" |
15585 | What is there in me to love? |
15585 | What is there in the Rumbullions to start you off on such a bender of bashfulness as this which I here behold?" |
15585 | What right has any one to explode a petard in the midst of sweet sociality, and blow every thing like sequence and sentiment sky- high? |
15585 | When I entered I approached the"floor- walker,"and handing him my sample, said:"Have you any calico like this?" |
15585 | When she opened her blue eyes innocently, and said,"Miss Crickey?" |
15585 | Where d''you live?" |
15585 | Where does the boy learn such horrid words?" |
15585 | Where will you find it? |
15585 | Who does not chuckle over the humors of Autolycus, rogue and peddler? |
15585 | Who does not thank William the Great for Falstaff, and Hackett for his personation of the fat knight? |
15585 | Who ever heard of such a thing? |
15585 | Who knows but she''d make a likely wife? |
15585 | Who''s that fat lady on the sofa, that laughs so loud?" |
15585 | Why ca n''t we strip off these hollow Shams,''( he made great use of that word,)''and be our true selves, pure, perfect, and divine?'' |
15585 | Why do n''t you bespeak her? |
15585 | Why, what made you think of that, Jesse?'' |
15585 | Why_ is n''t_ he like Daniel?" |
15585 | Will any one-- will you, Enos-- commence at once by telling me now-- to my face-- my principal faults?'' |
15585 | Will whiting be allowed in the community?" |
15585 | Wo n''t you just hand me that gum- cam- phyer bottle, now you are up? |
15585 | Would it make you happy if I was to learn a hymn for you,--a smashing big hymn-- six verses, long metre, and no grumbling?" |
15585 | You have n''t heard, have you,"she continued,"whether or no there was any other damage done by the gale?" |
15585 | You remember something of the society of Norridgeport, the last winter you were there? |
15585 | You''ll forgive me, uncle, for not mentioning her name yet? |
15585 | and not''Who will marry me?''" |
15585 | going?" |
15585 | he whispered, in a choking voice;"can she mean me?" |
15585 | is n''t that unanswerable?" |
15585 | or,"What is your opinion, sir?" |
15585 | said he,"after this treatment, can you ask me if am going?" |
15585 | said she, suddenly, sitting upright on the lounge,"I wo n''t have the horses from Brown''s livery--"The what, auntie?" |
15585 | what are_ you_ stopping the way for?" |
15585 | what have I been thinking of? |
15585 | you do n''t think I mean he''d support them? |
16478 | Ah, indeed? |
16478 | Anecdotes? |
16478 | Can you tell me of any one who will take me out in a boat for a little while? |
16478 | Do n''t you think it''s a hard case? |
16478 | Et ne la vois- tu pas? 16478 Guidez de mes pas l''ardeur incertain, Où dois- je chercher ce que j''ai perdu?" |
16478 | Have you read it? |
16478 | How old is it? |
16478 | Is it your own baby? |
16478 | Is that Miss Kemble? |
16478 | Is the baby ill? |
16478 | No, thank you,said I;"have you read the poems, may I ask?" |
16478 | Oh, then,said I( not laughing),"perhaps it would be better that I should send you those?" |
16478 | Quelle est la sainte qui n''a pas lesoin de Jarretières? |
16478 | What do you mean? 16478 What''s that?" |
16478 | Whose name did you mention,said I to my father, with some wickedness,"just now when you introduced me to that lady?" |
16478 | ( They say"a miss is as good as a mile;"why does it always seem so much worse, then?) |
16478 | A man he was with saying,"Look at that fat Lady L----; is n''t she like a great white cabbage?" |
16478 | And how could D---- have recommended me to read it? |
16478 | And now, what shall I say to you? |
16478 | And what will you do now? |
16478 | And yet what else are we all doing, in soul if not in body? |
16478 | Are not all such groups"Holy Families"? |
16478 | Are not, after all, our convictions our only steadfastly grounded faith? |
16478 | Are these the sort of adversaries to oppose to men like Channing? |
16478 | Are you consulting your own pleasure, or my purse? |
16478 | Are you going to be busy with your pen soon again? |
16478 | As almost my first thought when we reached the lake was,"How can people attempt to describe such places?" |
16478 | As she stood silently looking at it, he said,"What strikes you? |
16478 | As the child said,"Where does the light go when the candle is out?" |
16478 | But is there indeed cause for the terrible anxiety you express? |
16478 | But,"added he, putting his hand under my chin, and raising my face toward him,"how am I to believe that of this laughing face, madam?" |
16478 | Can its manifestation be partial, and restricted to one faculty, or must it be a pervading influence, permeating the whole mind? |
16478 | Come out and see it, wo n''t you? |
16478 | Dear H----, will you not come and pass a month with us? |
16478 | Did my mother tell you in her note that Milman was at the play the other night, and said I had made Bianca exactly what he intended? |
16478 | Did not some traditional princesses of German fairyland dance their shoes and stockings to pieces? |
16478 | Did you ever read Goethe''s"Tasso"? |
16478 | Did you mention my notion about going on the stage in any of your letters to Cecy? |
16478 | Did you read Horace Twiss''s speech on the Reform Bill? |
16478 | Do they mean in the head, I wonder?... |
16478 | Do you hear that poor Lord Grey is said to be haunted by a vision of Lord Castlereagh''s head? |
16478 | Do you know that it is hard upon three o''clock in the morning? |
16478 | Do you know that that play was sent over by Shelley to England with a view to Miss O''Neill acting Beatrice Cenci? |
16478 | Do you know the play? |
16478 | Do you know where that is? |
16478 | Do you not soon think of returning to Town? |
16478 | Do you remember a letter I wrote to you a long time ago about going on the stage? |
16478 | Do you suppose people shrink more from the censure of others than from self- condemnation? |
16478 | Do you think our faults and follies can ever be more effectually sifted, analyzed, and condemned by another than by our own conscience? |
16478 | Do you wish your husband to come here to you? |
16478 | Does he think he could not act in a smaller theater? |
16478 | Everything here is_ so ugly_, even without comparison with that which is beautiful elsewhere; from Italy how should one come back to live in London? |
16478 | Genius, what is it? |
16478 | Hamlet, his feigned(?) |
16478 | Has the truth, as our Church holds it, no fitter expounders than such a preacher? |
16478 | Have I lately given you cause to think I deserve to have such a punishment hung_ in terrorem_ over me? |
16478 | Have you heard that Mr. Hope, the author of"Anastasius,"is just dead? |
16478 | Have you read it? |
16478 | He then said,"Suppose we take steamer thence to Marseilles, and so on to Naples?" |
16478 | How are you all? |
16478 | How are you? |
16478 | How is E----? |
16478 | I looked long at the glorious Titian, the"Bacchus and Ariadne,"which always reminds me of--"Whence come ye, jolly Satyrs, whence come ye? |
16478 | I sang Mrs. Hemans''s"What hid''st thou in thy treasure- caves and cells?" |
16478 | I think not, by any means-- as how should it? |
16478 | I wonder if any country is more blessed of God than this precious little England? |
16478 | I wonder if it will ever be acted? |
16478 | I wonder if these four years can have changed me so much? |
16478 | I wonder what the performance will be? |
16478 | I wonder whether this is really the common experience of people''s dreams? |
16478 | I wonder why nowadays we make all our tragedies foreign? |
16478 | If he was, no one has done him such injustice as himself; and if_ he_ was_ good_, then what was Milton? |
16478 | If so, where does the one begin and the other end? |
16478 | In short, what is your intention in writing with all this affection to a man from whom you have separated yourself?" |
16478 | Indeed, I am very sorry for it, and I heartily wish I were; but I did not think him handsome either, and I wonder why he is not handsomer? |
16478 | Is it a thing positive, of individual inherent quality, or comparative, and composed of mere respective quantity? |
16478 | Is it as good as a second piece of work ought to be? |
16478 | Is it because his own name and the names of his brother and sister are graven, as it were, on its very stones? |
16478 | Is it because? |
16478 | Is it possible that he thinks the thing beyond him? |
16478 | Is it possible this cause should fall to the earth? |
16478 | Is n''t that delicious? |
16478 | Is not that solitary, wandering feeling the very essence of our existence here? |
16478 | Is not that thinking of you, and loving you as best I can? |
16478 | It challenged the astonishment of all our visitors, whose invariable demand was,"What is that curious place in the garden?" |
16478 | It is nothing more than an interesting melodrama, with the advantage of being written in gentlemanly( noblemanly?) |
16478 | It seems as if one must be surrounded by them; I do not mean to the point of merely suggesting the vague"suppose?" |
16478 | Kemble?" |
16478 | MY DEAR H----, Why are you not here to kiss and congratulate me? |
16478 | MY DEAR LADY DACRE, Will you be kind enough to send"Isaure"to my father? |
16478 | MY DEAREST H----, What shall I say to you? |
16478 | May not such things be known of without absolute experience? |
16478 | Mere talent carried beyond a certain point? |
16478 | Miss Inveraretie was a cruel Diana, but who would not be?... |
16478 | Mother and daughter were each devouring a lump of black, strong, greasy plum cake; as a specific, I presume, against( or for?) |
16478 | Mrs. Norton, Chantrey, and Barry Cornwall have come in while I have been finishing this letter; does not that sound pretty and pleasant? |
16478 | My dear, do n''t you think, before you write poetry, you had better learn grammar?" |
16478 | My heart jumped into my mouth at the thought; but how should I ever come back again?... |
16478 | Now, if I do not marry, what is to become of me in the event of anything happening to my father? |
16478 | Once and again my father came to the door, and I heard his anxious"How is she?" |
16478 | Or is genius a precious, inconvertible, intellectual metal, of which some people have a grain and a half, and some only half a grain?... |
16478 | Perhaps I may play it better than most girls of my age would; what will that amount to? |
16478 | Pocahontas thought differently.... Are you acquainted with any of Daniel Webster''s speeches? |
16478 | Qu''en dis- tu? |
16478 | Qui a les premiers droits sur nos coeurs? |
16478 | Qui partage, d''une ardeur sincère, Et nos plaisirs et nos douleurs? |
16478 | Saturday?" |
16478 | Shall I send it to you?" |
16478 | Suppose it does send one to bed with a side- ache, a headache, and a heartache, is n''t it worth while? |
16478 | The circumstances under which I saw it I can tell you, but of the great cataract itself, what can be told except that it is water? |
16478 | This is pretty hard work, is it not? |
16478 | Thursday?" |
16478 | To whom? |
16478 | Was it possible that my appearance suggested to that tiny soul the image of its young lost mother? |
16478 | Was my brother John returned from Germany, when last I wrote to you? |
16478 | Was not that nice? |
16478 | What about?" |
16478 | What can, in spite of his interest, make him so loth to leave that ponderous ruin? |
16478 | What does my poor, dear father expect, but that I shall be bespattered if I am to live on the highway? |
16478 | What has brought you back again?" |
16478 | What is the profit of traveling? |
16478 | What is the use of the poetical imagination, that lower inspiration, which, like the higher one of faith, is the"evidence of things not seen"? |
16478 | What might, could, would, or_ should_ a woman do in such a case? |
16478 | What say you to this French revolution? |
16478 | What shall I say to you? |
16478 | When do you intend to come and see me? |
16478 | Where is my life gone to? |
16478 | Who has not felt their whole blood run backward at sight of one of these folded fate- bearers? |
16478 | Why do such pleasant times ever pass? |
16478 | Why do you threaten me with dancing to me? |
16478 | Will you come to us on Sunday evening? |
16478 | Yet why do I say that? |
16478 | Yet, dearest H----, do not despond: is there_ any_ occasion when despair is justified? |
16478 | You are very fond of him, ai n''t you?" |
16478 | You ask if the interests of the theater and mine are not identical? |
16478 | You really must not be away when I come, for if you are, I wo n''t come, which is good Irish, is n''t it? |
16478 | You see what is hanging over me for Thursday next; shall you go to see me? |
16478 | _ Comprenez- vous_ all this? |
16478 | _ Saturday, 14th._--My last day in Edinburgh for two years; and who can tell for how many more? |
16478 | and another, some time before that, about my becoming a governess? |
16478 | and how is dear A----? |
16478 | and what genial and gentle Shakespeare? |
16478 | did she say that?" |
16478 | does n''t she look like a splendid gold pheasant?" |
16478 | exquisitely pathetic? |
16478 | how is it that we part so carelessly from you, who never can return to us?... |
16478 | or are you so well pleased with your present abode as to prolong your visit? |
16478 | or do you contemplate going to him? |
16478 | or why do they ever come? |
16478 | que voudriez- vous qu''elle dise?" |
16478 | quelle est votre amie?" |
16478 | qui sont sages?" |
16478 | said I, more and more puzzled,"how can I help you?" |
16478 | the art he loves, once had its noblest dwelling there? |
16478 | to read Shakespeare before some hundreds of people?" |
16478 | what can they do, with my father lying disabled there? |
16478 | what do you think?" |
26557 | Florentine Art of the Fourteenth Century? |
26557 | Is this a writing job? |
26557 | The Fourth Dimension? |
26557 | The Style of Walter Pater? |
26557 | And now must he apologize further for using a word upon which writers in these confessedly commercial days appear to have set a_ taboo_? |
26557 | But, you may protest, by what right do the experiences of a magazine free lance pass as"adventures"? |
26557 | Do you see now how the theory works? |
26557 | Does he have it in him to become an executive? |
26557 | Or does he discover a special taste, worth cultivating, for finance, or sport, or editorial writing? |
26557 | Well, why not? |
26557 | What else can he reply, in a general way, but"something of wide appeal, to interest our wide circle of readers"? |
26557 | What sort of themes would you favor when candidates for a place on your speaking program asked you what they ought to discuss? |
26557 | What will you do with it? |
26557 | Who now are rated as successes on the roll call of those cub reporter days? |
26557 | Why brand yourself as a novice even before the manuscript reader has seen your first sentence? |
26557 | Why? |
18720 | A handful of corn? |
18720 | And does she ever miss? 18720 And he spoke to her-- really spoke?" |
18720 | And if you try your fortune in a barn, what do you do? |
18720 | And now what shall I do, where can I go? |
18720 | And that little Circassian-- who is he? 18720 And the Lieutenant,--what did he say?" |
18720 | And then-- Sonia, what then? |
18720 | And what am I to say to these? |
18720 | And what does our Lieutenant advise monsieur to do? |
18720 | And when will he come back, Sonia? 18720 And who may be a- sending presents to Polly now?" |
18720 | And you have spoken to her? |
18720 | And you, Fédor, can you give me a piece of chalk? |
18720 | André, lying down? 18720 But how can we be sure that Dominique''s stories are all true? |
18720 | But tell us, father, is he coming home for good? 18720 Ca n''t do what?" |
18720 | Coming home for good? |
18720 | Could not I be the fiddler? |
18720 | Did you see him? |
18720 | Do n''t you think I had better stay away from the dinner altogether, Tom? |
18720 | Do you like fighting the Arabs in the Desert, then, monsieur? |
18720 | Do you never go to France, monsieur? |
18720 | Do you remember him, Sonia? |
18720 | Does mademoiselle ride? |
18720 | Does she think that because Sonia is poor I do not love her? 18720 Has he gone?" |
18720 | He''s your good old friend, and how could I hate him? 18720 How could she think of such a marriage?" |
18720 | How? 18720 I have done right?" |
18720 | I? |
18720 | If we were once angels, how is it that we have fallen lower? |
18720 | Is not this Vaage? |
18720 | It is impossible to know who is who-- can that really be Natacha? 18720 It was n''t young Cuffy over at the baker''s, nor Jake Tripple, now, was it?" |
18720 | Lower? 18720 May I join the party?" |
18720 | May I, Madame Schoss? |
18720 | Meantime, what am I to say to the Général, the Commandant, and the Capitaine, if they ask to marry you? |
18720 | Nastacia Ivanovna,said she,"if I ever have children, what will they be?" |
18720 | Natacha, is there not some magic at the bottom of it all, heh? |
18720 | No; and you? |
18720 | Now, will you wager your ring or your new ear- drop on that, little sister? |
18720 | Of what use is the mistletoe,said the practical Cicely,"when we are but three women here alone? |
18720 | One of the Rostows, is it not? 18720 Or have you a trinket that you value less to risk in such a cause?" |
18720 | Sonia, are you not cold? |
18720 | Sonia, what is this tune? |
18720 | That I believe is Natacha? |
18720 | That is all, he says; and is n''t it enough, sir, to have all your domestic failings exposed to the world? |
18720 | That one, who is she? |
18720 | Then, mother, if I loved a penniless girl, you would desire me to sacrifice my feelings and my honor-- to marry solely for money? |
18720 | Two truffled turkeys, Garrigou? |
18720 | Wha-- what''s it all mean, girls? 18720 What are you doing in that corner like a party of conspirators?" |
18720 | What are you thinking of? |
18720 | What bell was that I heard just now? |
18720 | What coming home? |
18720 | What do they do with themselves all day long? |
18720 | What happened to me? 18720 What is it?" |
18720 | What is there in it? |
18720 | What next will our young lady want? |
18720 | What reminds you, father? |
18720 | What''s gone amiss, David? 18720 What''s the matter?" |
18720 | What, a little boy like you? |
18720 | What, are you there? |
18720 | Where are you going? |
18720 | Where are you going? |
18720 | Whither are you journeying? |
18720 | Who is there? |
18720 | Why are you wandering about like a soul in torment? 18720 Why do other people see things and I never see anything at all? |
18720 | Why do you terrify them with such nonsense? |
18720 | Why not make them believe that I saw something? |
18720 | Why, dearest mother,she protested,"when should we venture to be happy, if not on Christmas- day? |
18720 | Why, what is the matter? |
18720 | Why, who''s been a- brightening up the gen''ral so Christmas- like? |
18720 | Why? |
18720 | Why? |
18720 | Will we soon see the church? |
18720 | You saw something? 18720 You were in that affair of''59, in Kabylia, were n''t you?" |
18720 | 4, would like to know"How blazes can be cold, now?" |
18720 | A real hussar, or a real monkey of a boy-- which is he, I wonder? |
18720 | An opened trunk, like a cloven pomegranate, displaying within rich trinkets that many a lady might covet? |
18720 | And did not his most blessed majesty King Charles knight with his own royal hand a Lord of Misrule who held court in the Middle Temple?" |
18720 | And don t you remember----?" |
18720 | And how can we show ourselves too joyful for our salvation? |
18720 | And if he had, would this hard, business- encrusted heart have been less cold than the bitter winds that assailed it? |
18720 | And what else besides the turkeys; what else did you see in the kitchen?" |
18720 | And what of? |
18720 | And you, gallant hussar, what regiment do you belong to?" |
18720 | Are you glad?" |
18720 | Are you not frozen?" |
18720 | But how can he go any faster? |
18720 | But what was that on the floor? |
18720 | But what was this? |
18720 | But what will mademoiselle do while her brother is away? |
18720 | But who is it cowers there in the ditch by the highway? |
18720 | Cold as blazes, ai n''t it?" |
18720 | Did I not hear the howl of wild beasts in the distance? |
18720 | Did he see the long- sought Paradise? |
18720 | Did she? |
18720 | Do n''t you know me?" |
18720 | Had he heard truly? |
18720 | Had he, for the first time in a long, and honest, and reputable life, been called a thief? |
18720 | Have you been on a long journey?" |
18720 | Have you put the wine in the flasks?" |
18720 | How came he in the wood? |
18720 | How could he face his dear girls again and tell them of the destitution of to- morrow? |
18720 | How should he know him? |
18720 | How; how could he go to them with these bitter tidings? |
18720 | I am so weary; what shall I do?" |
18720 | If you can laugh in such an atmosphere of melancholy, Annis, what will you do in France?" |
18720 | Is it a glimpse of their little white caps that distracts the celebrant of the Mass? |
18720 | Is it so, my dear boy?" |
18720 | It is all very strange and most delightful, is it not?" |
18720 | Know him? |
18720 | Look at her; does not she remind you of some one? |
18720 | No, no, not good Jake Tripple?" |
18720 | Of the worse than poverty? |
18720 | Of whom shall I think, Annis?" |
18720 | So you are glad?" |
18720 | That might be a fairy palace, out there, built of large blocks of marble and jewelled tiles? |
18720 | The Kabyles got the better of you more than once, did n''t they?" |
18720 | The chief point is, of all your lovers, whom do you love?" |
18720 | Then from the pond they''ve brought eels and golden carp and trout, and----""What size are the trout, Garrigou?" |
18720 | Then said Dolly,"You do n''t speak, father; you are surely not sorry?" |
18720 | Tripple?" |
18720 | Was it his woman''s costume with frizzed- out hair, or was it that radiant smile which he so rarely wore, and which at this moment illumined his face? |
18720 | What did it say, Tom? |
18720 | What did you see?" |
18720 | What do you want?" |
18720 | What does he know or care for my poor little faithful, Loving Scout?" |
18720 | What gift? |
18720 | What gift?" |
18720 | What had he stolen? |
18720 | What had transfigured him so completely? |
18720 | What might not be in the far distance? |
18720 | What''s kept you so long? |
18720 | When shall I see him again? |
18720 | Where is Nicolas?" |
18720 | Where is the turkey you brought? |
18720 | Who knows what I was?" |
18720 | Who knows? |
18720 | Who says that it is lower? |
18720 | Why must I die of weariness?" |
18720 | Why to the left?" |
18720 | Would a coffin rise before her, or would Prince André presently stand revealed against the confused background in the shining glass? |
18720 | Would you have the courage to listen to a story?" |
18720 | and to- morrow?" |
18720 | asked the Général,--"to settle here, or to follow his escadron to the Desert?" |
18720 | exclaimed both in a breath;"what gift? |
18720 | is not this Knud the fiddler?" |
18720 | standing up or lying down?" |
18720 | what is it?" |
18720 | when will it all be? |
16436 | And is mine one? |
16436 | And will it, truly? |
16436 | Are ye out of your mind, my nurse, my nurse,Said Lady Clare,"that ye speak so wild?" |
16436 | But what good came of it at last? |
16436 | Canst hear,said one,"the broken roar? |
16436 | Dear Pig, are you willing to sell for one shilling Your ring? |
16436 | Excuse the liberty I take,Modestus said, with archness on his brow,"Pray, why did not your father make A gentleman of you?" |
16436 | His horsemen hard behind us ride; Should they our steps discover, Then who will cheer my bonny bride When they have slain her lover? |
16436 | Is n''t this Joseph''s son? |
16436 | Nay now, what faith? |
16436 | Now who be ye, would cross Lochgyle, This dark and stormy water? |
16436 | Now, art thou a bachelor, stranger? |
16436 | Or has your good woman, if one you have, In Cornwall ever been? 16436 Shall we fight or shall we fly? |
16436 | Their van will be upon us Before the bridge goes down; And if they once may win the bridge, What hope to save the town? |
16436 | What is the use of life? |
16436 | What shall I say, brave Admiral, If we sight naught but seas at dawn? |
16436 | Where are you going, and what do you wish? |
16436 | Who planted this old apple- tree? |
16436 | You drank of the well, I warrant, betimes? |
16436 | Young man,he said,"by what art, craft, or trade, Did your good father gain a livelihood?" |
16436 | --But no such word Was ever spoke or heard; For up stood, for out stepped, for in struck amid all these-- A captain? |
16436 | A child said,"_ What is the grass?_"fetching it to me with full hands; How could I answer the child? |
16436 | A child said,"_ What is the grass?_"fetching it to me with full hands; How could I answer the child? |
16436 | A lieutenant? |
16436 | A mate-- first, second, third? |
16436 | An Irish liar''s bandage, or an English coward''s shirt? |
16436 | And a day less or more At sea or ashore, We die-- does it matter when? |
16436 | And didst thou visit him no more? |
16436 | And then one wakes, and where am I? |
16436 | And when I goes home to my missus, says she,"Are ye wanting your key?" |
16436 | And where is that band who so vauntingly swore That the havoc of war and the battle''s confusion A home and a country should leave us no more? |
16436 | And with flow at full beside? |
16436 | And"What mockery or malice have we here?" |
16436 | Are there three or four pleasing poems and are all the rest put in to fill up the book? |
16436 | Are you bought by English gold? |
16436 | Are you cowards, fools, or rogues? |
16436 | Brave Admiral, say but one word; What shall we do when hope is gone?" |
16436 | Bright jewels of the mine? |
16436 | Burn the fleet and ruin France? |
16436 | But his little daughter whispered, As she took his icy hand,"Is n''t God upon the ocean, Just the same as on the land?" |
16436 | Can Honour''s voice provoke the silent dust, Or Flatt''ry soothe the dull cold ear of Death? |
16436 | Can storied urn or animated bust Back to its mansion call the fleeting breath? |
16436 | Children dear, was it yesterday We heard the sweet bells over the bay? |
16436 | Children dear, was it yesterday( Call yet once) that she went away? |
16436 | Children dear, was it yesterday? |
16436 | Children dear, was it yesterday? |
16436 | Children dear, were we long alone? |
16436 | Clasp a rare and radiant maiden, whom the angels name Lenore?" |
16436 | Did ye not hear it? |
16436 | Do they hear their father sigh? |
16436 | Do you think I can listen all day to such stuff? |
16436 | Does the tempest cry"Halt"? |
16436 | Exceeding peace had made Ben Adhem bold; And to the presence in the room he said,"What writest thou?" |
16436 | Fear ye foes who kill for hire? |
16436 | For some were sunk and many were shatter''d, and so could fight us no more-- God of battles, was ever a battle like this in the world before? |
16436 | Frets doubt the maw- cramm''d beast? |
16436 | Has the rain wrecked the road? |
16436 | Have you been to Woodstock, near Oxford, England? |
16436 | Have you felt so proud to get at the meaning of poems? |
16436 | Have you practised so long to learn to read? |
16436 | Have you reckoned a thousand acres much? |
16436 | He called aloud,"Say, father, say If yet my task is done?" |
16436 | He laugh''d a laugh of merry scorn: He turn''d and kiss''d her where she stood:"If you are not the heiress born? |
16436 | Hope ye mercy still? |
16436 | How answer his brute question in that hour When whirlwinds of rebellion shake the world? |
16436 | How could I tell That ere the worm within its shell Its gauzy, splendid wings had spread, My little Mädchen would be dead? |
16436 | How much of it can you repeat from memory? |
16436 | I breathed a song into the air, It fell to earth, I knew not where; For who has sight so keen and strong That it can follow the flight of song? |
16436 | I do not fear for thee, though wroth The tempest rushes through the sky; For are we not God''s children both, Thou, little sandpiper, and I? |
16436 | I doubtna, whiles, but thou may thieve; What then? |
16436 | I hear the church- bells ring, O say, what may it be?" |
16436 | I hear the sound of guns, O say, what may it be?" |
16436 | I see a gleaming light, O say, what may it be?" |
16436 | I stay my haste, I make delays, For what avails this eager pace? |
16436 | In the caverns where we lay, Through the surf and through the swell, The far- off sound of a silver bell? |
16436 | In there came old Alice the nurse; Said:"Who was this that went from thee?" |
16436 | Is it love the lying''s for? |
16436 | Is the torrent in spate? |
16436 | Is there, for honest poverty, That hangs his head, and a''that? |
16436 | Is this the Dream He dreamed who shaped the suns And marked their ways upon the ancient deep? |
16436 | Jon, do you remember when you used to spout"Pibroch of Donald Dhu"? |
16436 | Knowst thou what wove yon woodbird''s nest Of leaves and feathers from her breast? |
16436 | Laddie, aged eleven, do you remember how you studied and recited"King Henry of Navarre"every poetry hour for a year? |
16436 | Laddie, do you recollect learning this poem after we had read the story of"Odysseus"? |
16436 | Little Laddie, do you remember learning"The Wind and the Moon"? |
16436 | Must we borrow a clout from the Boer-- to plaster anew with dirt? |
16436 | My father''s trade? |
16436 | My friends-- do they now and then send A wish or a thought after me? |
16436 | Not that, amassing flowers, Youth sigh''d,"Which rose make ours, Which lily leave and then as best recall?" |
16436 | Now who will stand on either hand, And keep the bridge with me?" |
16436 | Now, who shall arbitrate? |
16436 | O masters, lords, and rulers in all lands, How will the future reckon with this Man? |
16436 | O masters, lords, and rulers in all lands, Is this the handiwork you give to God, This monstrous thing distorted and soul- quenched? |
16436 | O why should the spirit of mortal be proud? |
16436 | Oh, let us be married,--too long we have tarried,-- But what shall we do for a ring?" |
16436 | Old year, we''ll dearly rue for you: What is it we can do for you? |
16436 | Or how the fish outbuilt her shell, Painting with morn each annual cell? |
16436 | Or how the sacred pine- tree adds To her old leaves new myriads? |
16436 | Or, is insensibility justifiable? |
16436 | PREFACE Is this another collection of stupid poems that children can not use? |
16436 | Pitying, I dropped a tear; But I saw a glow- worm near, Who replied,"What wailing wight Calls the watchman of the night? |
16436 | Pray, why did not your father make A saddler, sir, of you?" |
16436 | Quoth he:"The she- wolf''s litter Stand savagely at bay; But will ye dare to follow, If Astur clears the way?" |
16436 | Saw the moon rise from the water Rippling, rounding from the water, Saw the flecks and shadows on it, Whispered,"What is that, Nokomis?" |
16436 | Saw the rainbow in the heaven, In the eastern sky, the rainbow, Whispered,"What is that, Nokomis?" |
16436 | Should not the dove so white Follow the sea- mew''s flight? |
16436 | Slave of the wheel of labour, what to him Are Plato and the swing of Pleiades? |
16436 | So daring in love, and so dauntless in war, Have ye e''er heard of gallant like young Lochinvar? |
16436 | That gave you a great deal of pleasure, did n''t it? |
16436 | That old familiar tree, Whose glory and renown Are spread o''er land and sea-- And wouldst thou hew it down? |
16436 | The Wind he took to his revels once more; On down, In town, Like a merry- mad clown, He leaped and hallooed with whistle and roar--"What''s that?" |
16436 | The main idea in"The Lotos- Eaters"is, are we justified in running away from unpleasant duties? |
16436 | Then the pilots of the place put out brisk and leaped on board:"Why, what hope or chance have ships like these to pass?" |
16436 | There were men with hoary hair, Amid that pilgrim band; Why had_ they_ come to wither there, Away from their childhood''s land? |
16436 | They sayde,"And why should this thing be? |
16436 | Thou, heaven''s consummate cup, what need''st thou with earth''s wheel? |
16436 | To man, propose this test-- Thy body at its best, How far can that project thy soul on its lone way? |
16436 | To what warm shelter canst thou fly? |
16436 | Was I, the world arraigned, Were they, my soul disdain''d, Right? |
16436 | Was he devil or man? |
16436 | Was none who would be foremost To lead such dire attack? |
16436 | Was there a man dismay''d? |
16436 | We are six ships of the line; can we fight with fifty- three?" |
16436 | Wha can fill a coward''s grave? |
16436 | Wha for Scotland''s King and law Freedom''s sword will strongly draw, Freeman stand, or freeman fa''? |
16436 | Wha sae base as be a slave? |
16436 | Wha will be a traitor knave? |
16436 | What are tempests to him? |
16436 | What danger lowers by land or sea? |
16436 | What fields, or waves, or mountains? |
16436 | What have you to confide in me? |
16436 | What is he but a brute Whose flesh has soul to suit, Whose spirit works lest arms and legs want play? |
16436 | What is home? |
16436 | What is so rare as a day in June? |
16436 | What is the Flag of England? |
16436 | What is the Flag of England? |
16436 | What is the Flag of England? |
16436 | What is the Flag of England? |
16436 | What is the voice I hear On the winds of the western sea? |
16436 | What love of thine own kind? |
16436 | What matter if I stand alone? |
16436 | What noble Lucumo comes next To taste our Roman cheer?" |
16436 | What objects are the fountains Of thy happy strain? |
16436 | What plant we in this apple- tree? |
16436 | What plant we in this apple- tree? |
16436 | What plant we in this apple- tree? |
16436 | What shall the tasks of mercy be, Amid the toils, the strifes, the tears Of those who live when length of years Is wasting this apple- tree? |
16436 | What shapes of sky or plain? |
16436 | What sought they thus afar? |
16436 | What the long reaches of the peaks of song, The rift of dawn, the reddening of the rose? |
16436 | What thou art we know not; What is most like thee? |
16436 | What though the earlier grooves Which ran the laughing loves Around thy base, no longer pause and press? |
16436 | What though, about thy rim, Scull- things in order grim Grow out, in graver mood, obey the sterner stress? |
16436 | What was done-- what to do? |
16436 | What was he doing, the great god Pan, Down in the reeds by the river? |
16436 | What''s the mercy despots feel? |
16436 | When can their glory fade? |
16436 | When did music come this way? |
16436 | When he heard the owls at midnight, Hooting, laughing in the forest,"What is that?" |
16436 | When will I hear de banjo tumming, Down in my good old home? |
16436 | When will I see de bees a- humming All round de comb? |
16436 | Where, on thy dewy wing, Where art thou journeying? |
16436 | Who has done his day''s work? |
16436 | Who is this that lights the wigwam? |
16436 | Who loosened and let down this brutal jaw? |
16436 | Who made him dead to rapture and despair, A thing that grieves not and that never hopes, Stolid and stunned, a brother to the ox? |
16436 | Who said,"The foot of baby Might tempt an angel''s kiss"? |
16436 | Who will soonest be through with his supper? |
16436 | Who wishes to walk with me? |
16436 | Who would not be proud to have had such a home as Ann Hathaway''s humble cottage or one of the little huts in the Lake District? |
16436 | Whose breath blew out the light within this brain? |
16436 | Whose was the hand that slanted back this brow? |
16436 | Why come you drest like a village maid, That are the flower of the earth?" |
16436 | Why did they leave that night Her nest unguarded? |
16436 | Why do n''t I mark it? |
16436 | Why dost thou stay, and turn away? |
16436 | Why should the vest on him allure, Which I could not on me endure? |
16436 | Why, blockhead, are you mad? |
16436 | Will the boy who took every poetry hour for a whole school year to learn"Henry of Navarre"ever regret it, or will the children who listened to it? |
16436 | Will they ever forget it? |
16436 | Will they look hopelessly through this volume for poems that suit them? |
16436 | Will they say despairingly,"This is too long,"and"That is too hard,"and"I do n''t like that because it is not interesting"? |
16436 | Will ye give it up to slaves? |
16436 | Will ye look for greener graves? |
16436 | Will ye to your homes retire? |
16436 | Winds of the World, give answer? |
16436 | With his great eyes lights the wigwam? |
16436 | Would not they feel their children tread, With clanging chains, above their head? |
16436 | Wrapt not in Eastern balms, But with thy fleshless palms Stretched, as if asking alms, Why dost thou haunt me?" |
16436 | are ye comin''ben? |
16436 | cries Hervé Riel:"Are you mad, you Malouins? |
16436 | do they cry? |
16436 | does your Highland laddie dwell? |
16436 | have you reckon''d the earth much? |
16436 | he cried, in terror;"What is that,"he said,"Nokomis?" |
16436 | is it weed, or fish, or floating hair,-- A tress of golden hair, A drownèd maiden''s hair, Above the nets at sea? |
16436 | is your Highland laddie gone? |
16436 | must I stay?" |
16436 | questioned she-- Her laughing lips and eager eyes All in a sparkle of surprise--"And shall your little Mädchen see?" |
16436 | quoth false Sextus;"Will not the villain drown? |
16436 | say, does that star- spangled banner yet wave O''er the land of the free, and the home of the brave? |
16436 | straight he saith"Where is my wife, Elizabeth?" |
16436 | the very stars are gone; Speak, Admiral, what shall I say?" |
16436 | was that Thy answer From the horror round about? |
16436 | was there ever such a knight, in friendship or in war, As our Sovereign Lord, King Henry, the soldier of Navarre? |
16436 | what ignorance of pain? |
16436 | where are the charms That sages have seen in thy face? |
16436 | where was he? |
16436 | who would inhabit This bleak world alone? |
12879 | And how, then,rejoined the chief,"would the case have been decided in your country?" |
12879 | And if it do, And never prompt the bray of noisy brass, What need''st thou rue? 12879 And thou( addressing the other) a daughter?" |
12879 | And wilt thou, little bird, go with us? 12879 But what does it there, sister, tell me, Sitting lonely against the black sky?" |
12879 | Do you eat gold in this country? |
12879 | Do you ne''er think what wondrous beings these? 12879 Do you not hear the Aziola cry? |
12879 | Does it rain there? |
12879 | Does the sun shine on that country? |
12879 | Give me something this cold day? |
12879 | High over the sails, high over the mast, Who shall gainsay these joys? 12879 O pretty bird, do you not weary Of this gay summer so long and dreary?" |
12879 | Oh, came you from the isles of Greece, Or from the banks of Seine? 12879 Oh, what is the matter with Robin, That makes her cry round here all day? |
12879 | Oh, what was that, sister? 12879 Oh, where does faithful Gelert roam? |
12879 | Only death? 12879 Seest thou not,"Our Lord said,"how the heart of this poor bird"Grows by her love, greater than his who rides Full- face against the spear- blades? |
12879 | Think you my sentence unjust? |
12879 | What bird is that? 12879 What does he call now, loud and plain?" |
12879 | What is that great bird, sister, tell me, Perched high on the top of the crag? |
12879 | What shall I do to be forever known? |
12879 | What shall I do to gain eternal life? |
12879 | What shall I do, lest life in silence pass? |
12879 | Who loved me, when I was weak and old? 12879 Who pitied me, when I grew sick and poor, And neighbors turned me from their door? |
12879 | _ What_ did Don do? |
12879 | ''Afraid you shall fall?'' |
12879 | ''Tis very cruel, too, Said little Alice Neal; I wonder if she knew How sad the bird would feel? |
12879 | ***** CAN THEY SUFFER? |
12879 | ***** DO YOU KNOW? |
12879 | ***** JUDGE YOU AS YOU ARE? |
12879 | ***** WHY NOT DO IT, SIR, TO- DAY? |
12879 | *****"If a man gives bad food to a shepherd Dog, of what sin is he guilty?" |
12879 | 1- 4. Who_ is_ a God like unto thee, that pardoneth iniquity, and passeth by the transgression of the remnant of his heritage? |
12879 | A crimson speck in the bright blue sky, Do you search for the secret of heaven''s deep glow? |
12879 | Already thou hast borne to forsake thy fondly loved brothers, and Draupadi; Why, then, forsakest thou not the dog? |
12879 | And after that-- thou dost not care? |
12879 | And if He foldeth in a sleep eternal Their wings to rest; Or waketh them to fly the skies supernal-- He knoweth best? |
12879 | And not sit both night and day, Wiping all our tears away? |
12879 | And the brown thrush keeps singing,"A nest do you see, And five eggs, hid by me in the juniper- tree? |
12879 | And the splendor of the Pashas there; What''s their pomp and riches? |
12879 | And warmed me, when I was numb with cold? |
12879 | And what does he say, little girl, little boy? |
12879 | And what is so rare as a day in June? |
12879 | And what shoulder and what art Could twist the sinews of thy heart? |
12879 | And when and where shall this mockery cease? |
12879 | And where do you think they built their nest? |
12879 | And who, when I in poverty pined, Has shared my hunger and never whined? |
12879 | And who, when I was left alone In God''s wide world, made my fortunes his own? |
12879 | And, when thy heart began to beat, What dread hand forged thy dread feet? |
12879 | And-- I am not frightened,--are you?" |
12879 | Another, jeering, asked,"How long to- night Shall such a miscreant cur offend our sight?" |
12879 | Are these elements that spring In a daisy''s blossoming, Or in long dark grasses wave Plume- like o''er your favorite''s grave? |
12879 | Are these less sad and real? |
12879 | Birds, joyous birds of the wandering wing Whence is it ye come with the flowers of spring? |
12879 | But I? |
12879 | But are there tame animals in the country that live on the grass and green herbs?" |
12879 | But long it wo n''t be, Unless we are as good as can be?" |
12879 | But suppose the case were otherwise, what could it avail? |
12879 | Ca n''t you guess, sir? |
12879 | Can I find one to guide me, so faithful and kind? |
12879 | Can I see a falling tear, And not feel my sorrow''s share? |
12879 | Can I see another''s grief, And not seek for kind relief? |
12879 | Can I see another''s woe, And not be in sorrow too? |
12879 | Can a father see his child Weep, nor be with sorrow filled? |
12879 | Can a mother sit and hear An infant groan, an infant fear? |
12879 | Can the woodpecker be coming After sap? |
12879 | Care for it? |
12879 | Come, my feathered friend, again? |
12879 | Did He who made the lamb make thee? |
12879 | Did ever man evince more devoted affection? |
12879 | Did fortune try thee? |
12879 | Did he go through the town, Or go sneaking aroun''Through hedges and byways, with head hanging down? |
12879 | Did he push when he was uncurled, A golden foot or a fairy horn Through his dim water- world? |
12879 | Did he stand at the diamond door Of his house in a rainbow frill? |
12879 | Did the shag bring the storm and the cloud, The wind and the rain and the lightning?" |
12879 | Did you hear What happened to Piccola, children dear? |
12879 | Do n''t you hear? |
12879 | Do n''t you know? |
12879 | Do n''t you see? |
12879 | Do they think we enjoy for our music Staccatoes of"scat"? |
12879 | Do you ne''er think who made them, and who taught The dialect they speak, where melodies Alone are the interpreters of thought? |
12879 | Does he who taught in parables speak in parables still? |
12879 | Dost remember their howlings? |
12879 | Dost thou despise the earth where cares abound? |
12879 | Dost thou know who made thee? |
12879 | Dost thou know who made thee? |
12879 | Dost thou the monarch eagle seek? |
12879 | Doth the hawk fly by thy wisdom, and stretch her wings toward the south? |
12879 | Far on the billowy ocean A thousand leagues are we, Yet here, sad hovering o''er our bark, What is it that we see? |
12879 | Fled is that music:--do I wake or sleep? |
12879 | For us they toil, for us they die, These humble creatures Thou hast made; How shall we dare their rights deny, On whom thy seal of love is laid? |
12879 | For what reason, then, art thou come among us?" |
12879 | Four years!--and didst thou stay above The ground, which hides thee now, but four? |
12879 | Gave thee life and made thee feed By the stream and o''er the mead; Gave thee clothing of delight,-- Softest clothing, woolly, bright? |
12879 | Gave thee such a tender voice, Making all the vales rejoice; Little lamb, who made thee? |
12879 | Glad to see you, little bird;''Twas your little chirp I heard: What did you intend to say? |
12879 | Granted that any practice causes more pain to animals than it gives pleasure to man; is that practice moral or immoral? |
12879 | Has all perished? |
12879 | Has it not A claim for some remembrance in the book, That fills its pages with the idle words Spoken of man? |
12879 | Hast thou clothed his neck with his trembling mane? |
12879 | Hast thou given the horse strength? |
12879 | Hast thou taught him to bound like the locust? |
12879 | Hath hope been smitten in its early dawn? |
12879 | Have clouds o''ercast thy purpose, truth, or plan? |
12879 | Have you a warm shelter at night for your bed, Where under your wing you can tuck your brown head? |
12879 | He shook his wings and crimson tail, And set his head aslant, And, in his sharp, impatient way, Asked,"What does Charlie want?" |
12879 | His bulk and beauty speak no vulgar praise: If, as he seems, he was in better days, Some care his age deserves; or was he prized For worthless beauty? |
12879 | How long didst thou think that his silence was slumber? |
12879 | How many long days and long weeks didst thou number, Ere he faded before thee, the friend of thy heart? |
12879 | How would you be If He which is the top of Judgment should But judge you as you are? |
12879 | I do not fear for thee, though wroth The tempest rushes through the sky: For are we not God''s children both, Thou, little sandpiper, and I? |
12879 | In holy books we read how God hath spoken To holy men in many different ways; But hath the present worked no sign nor token? |
12879 | In what distant deeps or skies Burnt the fire of thine eyes? |
12879 | In what furnace was thy brain? |
12879 | Is God quite silent in these latter days? |
12879 | Is it in type, since Nature''s lyre Vibrates to every note in man, Of that insatiable desire Meant to be so, since life began? |
12879 | Is it the faculty of reason, or perhaps the faculty of discourse? |
12879 | Is mother earth With various living creatures, and the air Replenished, and all these at thy command To come and play before thee? |
12879 | Is not heaven_ within_, when you carol so? |
12879 | Is there aught of harm believing That, some newer form receiving, They may find a wider sphere, Live a larger life than here? |
12879 | Is there not something in the pleading eye Of the poor brute that suffers, which arraigns The law that bids it suffer? |
12879 | Know''st thou not Their language and their ways? |
12879 | Life is lovely and sweet; But what would it be if we''d nothing to eat?" |
12879 | Little lamb, who made thee? |
12879 | Never a bird its glad way safely winging Through those blest skies? |
12879 | Never, through pauses in the joyful singing, Its notes to rise? |
12879 | No new state I''ll covet; For how long should I love it? |
12879 | Not one of those who toil''s severest burdens So meekly bear, To find at last of faithful labor''s guerdons An humble share? |
12879 | Now such a story who ever heard? |
12879 | Now, is n''t it true Tom''s the best fellow that ever you knew? |
12879 | O Indra, and what of this dog? |
12879 | O Thou who carest for the falling sparrow, Canst Thou the sinless sufferer''s pang forget? |
12879 | Oh, how can I sing, Unless he will bring My three robins back, to sleep under my wing? |
12879 | Oh, where is the boy, dressed in jacket of gray, Who climbed up a tree in the orchard to- day, And carried my three little birdies away? |
12879 | On what wings dare he aspire? |
12879 | Or is thy dread account- book''s page so narrow Its one long column scores thy creature''s debt? |
12879 | Or off some tree in forests free That fringe the western main?" |
12879 | Or, while the wings aspire, are heart and eye Both with thy nest upon the dewy ground? |
12879 | Passers, crowding the pathway, staying your steps awhile, What is the symbol? |
12879 | Prescient, the tides or tempests to withstand, Build on the wave, or arch beneath the sand? |
12879 | Robbing all the summer long; Do n''t you think it very wrong? |
12879 | Seek''st thou the plashy brink Of weedy lake, or marge of river wide, Or where the rocking billows rise and sink On the chafed ocean side? |
12879 | Shocking tales I hear of you; Chirp, and tell me, are they true? |
12879 | That loving heart, that patient soul, Had they indeed no longer span, To run their course, and reach their goal, And read their homily to man? |
12879 | The first that the general saw were the groups Of stragglers, and then the retreating troops, What was done? |
12879 | The little bird opened his black bright eyes, And looked at me with great surprise; Then his joyous song broke forth, to say,"Weary of what? |
12879 | The question is not"Can they reason?" |
12879 | The spider and the dove,--what thing is weak If Allah makes it strong? |
12879 | The thunder? |
12879 | Then why, dear bird, must you soar so high? |
12879 | Then, after some reflection, he said,"Thou hast a son, friend, I believe?" |
12879 | There''s Tom, an''Tibby, An''Dad, an''Mam, an Mam''s cat, None on''em earning money-- What do you think of that? |
12879 | Think you I''d negotiate For my_ wife_, at any rate? |
12879 | Think''st thou perchance that they remain unknown Whom thou know''st not? |
12879 | Thinkest thou Such fire divine was kindled to be quenched? |
12879 | This presaging stir and humming, Thrill and call? |
12879 | Thomas says you steal his wheat; John complains his plums you eat, Choose the ripest for your share, Never asking whose they are? |
12879 | Thus far a gentleman addressed a bird; Then to his friend:"An old procrastinator, Sir, I am: do you wonder that I hate her? |
12879 | Tiger, tiger, burning bright In the forests of the night, What immortal hand or eye Could frame thy fearful symmetry? |
12879 | Tiger, tiger, burning bright In the forests of the night, What immortal hand or eye Dare frame thy fearful symmetry? |
12879 | Till at length the portly abbot Murmured,"Why this waste of food? |
12879 | To be treated, now, just as you treat us,-- The question is pat,-- To take just our chances in living, Would_ you_ be a cat? |
12879 | To this the bird seven words did say:"Why not do it, sir, to- day?" |
12879 | To what warm shelter canst thou fly? |
12879 | Until I was robbed of my young, as you see? |
12879 | WHO CALLS THE COUNCIL, STATES THE CERTAIN DAY, WHO FORMS THE PHALANX, AND WHO POINTS THE WAY? |
12879 | Want any papers, Mister? |
12879 | Was no mind In that graceful form enshrined? |
12879 | Well, how did it end? |
12879 | What call''st thou solitude? |
12879 | What does all this haste and hurry Mean, I pray-- All this out- door flush and flurry Seen to- day? |
12879 | What does he care for the April rain? |
12879 | What dread grasp Dare its deadly terrors clasp? |
12879 | What else could reveal to the petrel the coming storm? |
12879 | What else is it that should trace the insuperable line? |
12879 | What fair renown, what honor, what repute Can come to you from starving this poor brute? |
12879 | What fields, or waves, or mountains? |
12879 | What is it? |
12879 | What is the happiest morning song? |
12879 | What love of thine own kind? |
12879 | What matter the region,--what matter the weather, So you and I travel, till death, together? |
12879 | What mean the Messieurs of police? |
12879 | What objects are the fountains Of thy happy strain? |
12879 | What shapes of sky or plain? |
12879 | What the anvil? |
12879 | What the hammer? |
12879 | What the hand dare seize the fire? |
12879 | What was it, that passed like an ominous breath-- Like a shiver of fear, or a touch of death? |
12879 | What was it, then? |
12879 | What was the sign? |
12879 | When downward they galloped to where we stood, Whilst I staggered with fear in the dark pine wood? |
12879 | When he heard the owls at midnight, Hooting, laughing in the forest,"What is that?" |
12879 | When our Judge shall reappear, Thinkest thou this man will hear, Wherefore didst thou interfere With what concerned not thee? |
12879 | When the stars threw down their spears, And watered heaven with their tears, Did He smile his work to see? |
12879 | When the wind waved his garment, how oft didst thou start? |
12879 | When they chatter together,--the robins and sparrows, Bluebirds and bobolinks,--all the day long; What do they talk of? |
12879 | Whence come they? |
12879 | Where now shall I go, poor, forsaken, and blind? |
12879 | Where, on thy dewy wing, Where art thou journeying? |
12879 | Wherefore builds he not again Where the wild thorn flowers? |
12879 | Wherefore now fails thy heart? |
12879 | Whistles the quail from the covert, Whistles with all his might, High and shrill, day after day,"Children, tell me, what does he say?" |
12879 | Whither hath the wood thrush flown From our greenwood bowers? |
12879 | Whither or whence, With thy fluttering golden band?" |
12879 | Whither,''midst falling dew, While glow the heavens with the last steps of day Far through their rosy depths, dost thou pursue Thy solitary way? |
12879 | Who Stole the Bird''s Nest? |
12879 | Who Taught? |
12879 | Who bid the stork Columbus- like explore Heavens not his own, and worlds unknown before? |
12879 | Who made the spider parallels design Sure as De Moivre, without rule or line? |
12879 | Who stole four eggs I laid, And the nice nest I made? |
12879 | Who taught the natives of the field and flood To shun their poison and to choose their food? |
12879 | Why does the course Of the mill- stream widen? |
12879 | Why not? |
12879 | Why start the listeners? |
12879 | Why, Mister, What''s a feller to do? |
12879 | Will nobody answer those women who cry As the awful warnings thunder by? |
12879 | Will nobody speak? |
12879 | Will you listen to me? |
12879 | Will you send?" |
12879 | Wilt thou have any other Lord than Allah, Who is not fed, but feedeth all flesh? |
12879 | Would I sell our little Ally, Barter Tom, dispose of Sally? |
12879 | Would you sell your brother? |
12879 | Your little pink feet-- do they never feel cold? |
12879 | [ 3] The"Chapter of the Cattle:"Heaven is whose, And whose is earth? |
12879 | _ An''Mam_? |
12879 | _ Could n''t Dad work_? |
12879 | _ Hymns for Mother and Children._***** WHO STOLE THE EGGS? |
12879 | _ Mean?_ It means that spring is coming; That is all! |
12879 | _ Ought n''t to live so_? |
12879 | and wherefore? |
12879 | as it is to ask,"Do you believe in such or such a doctrine?" |
12879 | at every turn? |
12879 | but"Can they suffer?" |
12879 | did you see my birdies and me-- How happy we were on the old apple- tree? |
12879 | do n''t you see? |
12879 | do you say, Sir Critic? |
12879 | dost remember the day When I fronted the wolves like a stag at bay? |
12879 | have you seen, in your travels to- day, A very small boy, dressed in jacket of gray, Who carried my three little robins away? |
12879 | he cried in terror;"What is that?" |
12879 | he said,"Nokomis?" |
12879 | into no more? |
12879 | nor"Can they speak?" |
12879 | stop just one moment, I pray: Have you seen a boy dressed in jacket of gray, Who carried my three little birdies away? |
12879 | their horrible speed? |
12879 | was thy little purse Perchance run low, and thou, afraid of worse, Felt here secure? |
12879 | what ignorance of pain? |
12879 | what little boy was so wicked?" |
12879 | what the chain? |
12879 | what to do? |
12879 | what was that, like a human shriek From the winding valley? |
12879 | what would be May Without your glad presence,--the songs that you sing us, And all the sweet nothings we fancy you say? |
12879 | why art thou the last, Llewellyn''s horn to hear? |
12879 | why should you cease to smile At death for a beast of burden?" |
12879 | with your bags of sweet nectarine, stay; Have you seen a boy dressed in jacket of gray, And carrying three little birdies away? |
22280 | ''Qui trompe- t- on ici?'' |
22280 | ''Whether this little picture is a likeness or not,''he is ingenuous enough to add,''who shall say?'' |
22280 | -- to the admirable song of the wind of the sea:''Quels sont les bruits sourds? |
22280 | And when time and season fit, what more can the heart of man desire? |
22280 | BALZAC Under which King? |
22280 | But Hugo plain, sober, direct? |
22280 | But frankly, is it not a fact that that fine last speech of his has more availed to secure him immortality than all his verse? |
22280 | But on the other hand is there anything better than Lovelace in the whole range of fiction? |
22280 | Can it be that we have deteriorated so much as that? |
22280 | Could anything, for instance, be better, or less laboriously said, than this poet''s remonstrance_ To an Intrusive Butterfly_? |
22280 | Could he have repeated it had he lived? |
22280 | Did he recognise to the full the fact of Boswell''s pre- eminence as an artist? |
22280 | For is not his work so full of quick, fiery, and delectable shapes as to be perpetual sherris? |
22280 | HOOD How Much of Him? |
22280 | He was no sentimentalist: as what great artist in government has ever been? |
22280 | Here he is successfully himself, and what more is there to say? |
22280 | How comes it that Mr. Gladstone in rags and singing ballads would be only fit for a police- station? |
22280 | How long is it that the wise and good have ceased to say( striking their pensive bosoms),''_ Here_ lies Gay''? |
22280 | How should it be otherwise, seeing that it contains the characteristic utterances of a great artist in life renowned for memorable speech? |
22280 | Hugo declining antithesis and content to be no gaudier than his neighbours? |
22280 | Hugo expressing himself in the fearless old fashion of pre- romantic ages? |
22280 | Hugo without rhetoric? |
22280 | If he writes by preference for people with a thousand a year, is it not the duty of everybody with a particle of self- respect to have that income? |
22280 | In the face of such an argument who can help suspecting Macaulay''s artistic faculty? |
22280 | In what language is he not read? |
22280 | Is Taine a better judge than Mr. Leslie Stephen or Mr. Henry James? |
22280 | Is any name too hard for such a creature? |
22280 | Is it at all surprising that M. Taine should have found heart to say that alone among modern poets Byron''atteint a la cime''? |
22280 | Is it just to his memory that it should be burdened with such a mass of what is already antiquated? |
22280 | Is it not plain as the nose on your face that his admirers admire him injudiciously? |
22280 | Is it possible that any one who has it not can have either wit or sentiment, humour or understanding? |
22280 | Is the fault in ourselves? |
22280 | It is-- how long? |
22280 | LABICHE Teniers or Daumier? |
22280 | Or are Messrs. James and Stephen better qualified to speak with authority than Taine? |
22280 | Shakespeare did not, nor could Homer; and how should Matthew Arnold? |
22280 | The Rembrandt of_ The Syndics_, the Shakespeare of_ The Tempest_ and_ Lear_--what are these but pits for the feet of the Young Ass? |
22280 | The artist of_ Amelia_ and_ Jonathan Wild_, the creator of the Westerns and Parson Adams and Colonel Bath? |
22280 | There is_ Merope_ to bear witness to the fact; and of_ Merope_ what is there to say? |
22280 | Was Thackeray right, then, in resenting the waste of Hood''s genius upon mere comicalities? |
22280 | Was he really conscious that the_ Life_ is an admirable work of art as well as the most readable and companionable of books? |
22280 | What are_ Dombey_ and_ Dorrit_ themselves but the failures of a great and serious artist? |
22280 | What business has he to be trampling among our borders and crushing our flowers with his stupid hobnails? |
22280 | What else should he do? |
22280 | When one is impelled to write this or that, one has still to consider:"How much of this will tell for what I mean? |
22280 | Where else in English fiction is such a''human oak log''as their father, the Kentish yeoman William Fleming? |
22280 | Which is Right? |
22280 | Which is it? |
22280 | Which is to be pitied? |
22280 | Who does not know that extraordinary_ Death of Ivan Iliitch_? |
22280 | Who knows? |
22280 | Why can not he carry his zeal for topsy- turvy horticulture elsewhere? |
22280 | and could any vengeance be too deadly? |
22280 | and what else will be the Tennyson of_ Vastness_ and_ The Gleam_? |
22280 | and where that he is read is he not loved? |
22280 | if in place of such moulds of form as_ Mademoiselle de Maupin_ we might not take to considering stuff like_ Rizpah_ and_ Our Mutual Friend_? |
22280 | or we the whippersnappers of sentiment-- the critics who can neither read nor understand? |
22280 | that Lord Salisbury hawking cocoa- nuts would instantly suggest the purlieus of Petticoat Lane? |
22280 | to English literature''and in awakening all over the Continent so much''appreciation and sympathy for England''? |
25937 | If you have done, will you leave the house, or shall my servants turn you out? 25937 ''Do n''t,"replied that functionary;"I hope you''ve forgot nothink? |
25937 | ''"Is that all, sir?" |
25937 | ''"Will you redeem the bond?" |
25937 | ''And Dickens, with all_ his_ genius, but whose Men and Women act and talk already after a more obsolete fashion than Shakespeare''s?'' |
25937 | ''How much of this behaviour goes on daily in respectable society, think you? |
25937 | ''I wonder shall History ever pull off her periwig and cease to be court- ridden? |
25937 | Assuming that sixty years ago a Secretary of State was much the same sort of man that he is to- day, what are we to think of this spirited colloquy? |
25937 | Before he could turn to run again a second horseman was on him, and with a grim"Hyun-- Would you?" |
25937 | But is it a genuine delineation of the man himself, of his motives, of the working of his mind in speech and action? |
25937 | But what''s the use? |
25937 | Do you know what a scene it was? |
25937 | In which category are we to place the letters of Keats, including those that have been very recently unearthed by diligent literary excavation? |
25937 | Is it some yet imperial hope That with such change can calmly cope? |
25937 | Is such minute matter- of- fact copying a virtue in the novelist? |
25937 | Is this actually a true account of English thought? |
25937 | London,? 1850. |
25937 | Miss''Melia''s gownds-- have you got them-- as the lady''s maid was to have''ad? |
25937 | Or dread of death alone? |
25937 | Shall we see something of France and England besides Versailles and Windsor? |
25937 | The force which is shaping the future, is it with the Ritualists or with the undogmatical disciples of a purely moral creed? |
25937 | They are mainly irresponsible creatures: how could they be otherwise, when everything depends on the sword, and a woman can not wield it? |
25937 | Turn out this fellow; do you hear me?"'' |
25937 | What has been the effect of this altered situation upon the writer of history at the present time? |
25937 | What has been the upshot and consequence of this Turkish system? |
25937 | What if the extra allowances have really no attraction? |
25937 | What should we all be if we had not one another to check us and to be learned from? |
25937 | What these crimes were he does not say; and how many of us could answer the question off- hand? |
25937 | What will Europe say when you shed torrents of blood on a point of form?'' |
25937 | What, then, are the conclusions which we may draw from this brief survey of the more prominent and typical Indian novels? |
25937 | When his friends urge him to study for the purpose of rising in the service, civil or military, he asks:''What then? |
25937 | Why have these verses made such an effect that they are familiar to all of us, and fresh as when they were first read? |
25937 | Why shall History go on kneeling to the end of time? |
25937 | how vexest thou this man?'' |
25937 | or is it not rather a defect arising out of a misunderstanding of the principles of his art? |
10921 | ''Have you done enough, sir?'' 10921 ''What is the meaning of this?'' |
10921 | A meloncholy tale, in sooth,said Mary;"but what proof is there?" |
10921 | Am I humbled? 10921 Am I not now made amends?" |
10921 | And Felix? |
10921 | And Iclea? |
10921 | And do you know this letter? |
10921 | And have I had no suffering? |
10921 | And how came you,replied he, with looks of unparalleled effrontery,"so basely to presume to open this letter?" |
10921 | And how could you so basely presume to write this letter? |
10921 | And how much am I going to sell? 10921 And is it thee that dares set foot in this house, after what has come to pass? |
10921 | And is that Old Thady? |
10921 | And is this really true? |
10921 | And pray, may I ask, which was the favoured lover? |
10921 | And were you indeed married? |
10921 | And what do you call behaving well? |
10921 | And what is Miss Portman to believe,cried one of Belinda''s friends,"when she has seen you on the very eve of marriage with another lady?" |
10921 | And who can you be to know Mary Barton? |
10921 | And why? |
10921 | And you love him now? |
10921 | Anna-- Lady Anna,he exclaimed,"art_ thou_ here? |
10921 | Are you afraid of me, Camille? |
10921 | Are you mad? 10921 Art thou the person,"he demanded earnestly,"from whom Aurelia received this child?" |
10921 | But I suppose, sir,he replied,"you are apprised of my incapacity to support her as she deserves?" |
10921 | But could you not,I said,"give me some description of life on Mars?" |
10921 | But how is it possible for you, Georges,I interrupted,"to appear to me in the body you wore on earth?" |
10921 | But if the father of this beautiful Romola makes collections, why should he not like to buy some of my gems himself? |
10921 | But tell me, what temptation was it that could thus obliterate your virtue? |
10921 | But what is the matter with you, my dear boy? 10921 Caldas,"she cried,"have you not punished me enough? |
10921 | Can you guess it? 10921 Could we get away?" |
10921 | Could you share the life of a poor man, then, Esther? |
10921 | Did Mr. Peter ever come home? |
10921 | Do n''t you remember that document about the Spanish succession which you discovered and sent to me? 10921 Do you know this, sir-- this pocket- book?" |
10921 | Do you know, Camille, that the soul is able to choose its mortal covering? 10921 Do you love me, or do you love Mademoiselle Marguerite?" |
10921 | Do you remember Esther, Mary''s aunt? |
10921 | Do you think I do n''t see as plainly as any of you that Belinda Portman is a composition of art and affectation? |
10921 | Dost thou deem the mock blessing of yon mad hermit a spousal rite? |
10921 | Dost thou know,replied Anna firmly,"that thy life and liberty are in my power?" |
10921 | Dost thou not see the hand of fate in this meeting with Anna? |
10921 | Euclid, my lad-- why, what''s that? |
10921 | Gone, child? |
10921 | Have I not felt how feeble have been my sentiments for Anna, for Jane of Huntly, for all who have succeeded her whom I met in France long ago? |
10921 | Have you come through the wild forest? |
10921 | Have you considered well what it would be?--that it would be a very bare and simple life? 10921 Have you lost your tongue?" |
10921 | Have you not heard that young Mr. Carson was murdered last night? |
10921 | Have you so? |
10921 | How could you believe such a thing of me, my king? |
10921 | How could you,I cried,"add to my miseries by the story of her death?" |
10921 | How, where-- where? 10921 How?" |
10921 | How? |
10921 | How? |
10921 | I am surprised,said the baronet,"what he can intend by this?" |
10921 | I did not curse him, child, did I? |
10921 | I fear,she began,"that you must have some reason for...""For not marrying, is n''t it? |
10921 | I grant you took it,Wild said;"but, pray, who proposed or counselled the taking of it? |
10921 | I know all.... Have you nothing to say? |
10921 | I think, sir, you''re keeping company wi''Mary Barton? |
10921 | I? |
10921 | Is Will Wilson here? |
10921 | Is a matter touching my honour a jest? 10921 Is it about her being a heretic?" |
10921 | Is it really you? 10921 Is not my boy gone-- killed-- out of my sight for ever? |
10921 | Is there no hope for us? |
10921 | Is this your gratitude to me for saving your life? 10921 La, Mr. Adams,"said Mrs. Slipslop,"do you think my lady will suffer any preambles about any such matter? |
10921 | M. Mauperin de Villacourt? |
10921 | Maggie,said Philip one day,"if you had had a brother like me, do you think you should have loved him as well as Tom?" |
10921 | Mary,he asked,"art thou much bound to Manchester? |
10921 | May I hope to look into these rolls? |
10921 | May I speak a word wi''you, sir? |
10921 | Melpomene, hast thou forgot thyself to warble? |
10921 | Monsieur Odiot,she said,"would you mind seeing me home? |
10921 | Monsieur de Champcey,she said, in a cold, hard voice,"were there any scoundrels in your family before you?" |
10921 | Mr. Lyon at home? |
10921 | Murphy, say you? 10921 Noémi?" |
10921 | Of whom do you speak? |
10921 | Oh, Lady Delacour,cried Belinda,"how can you trifle in this manner?" |
10921 | Oh, father, what? |
10921 | Oh, sir,he said wildly,"say you forgive me?" |
10921 | Old Thady, how do you do? |
10921 | Shalt go home before thee go''st to the preaching? |
10921 | She is dead? |
10921 | So you still live? |
10921 | Sure, ca n''t you sell, though at a loss? 10921 Tell me, Renée,"said Denoisel,"have you never felt, I wo n''t say love, but some sentiment for anybody?" |
10921 | Tell me-- where he is? |
10921 | They are going to stop him? |
10921 | Think of you,I answered;"can such advice be necessary? |
10921 | To- morrow or next day? |
10921 | Tom, where are you? 10921 Was it a dream?" |
10921 | Well, Renée, how is the water? |
10921 | Well, an''who said you''d ever left off being a comfort to me? |
10921 | Well, and will you consent to ha''un to- morrow morning? |
10921 | Well, what of it? |
10921 | What am I to write, father? |
10921 | What could be the matter with him? |
10921 | What cross? |
10921 | What did you mean,she said, as we walked on together,"by claiming to be a relation of mine?" |
10921 | What do you mean? |
10921 | What do you mean? |
10921 | What is it, then, that you really love? |
10921 | What kind of a marriage is this you have made, that you must not speak to your relative? 10921 What shall I say?" |
10921 | What should I do; what can I do? |
10921 | What would I ha''thee do? |
10921 | What would my papa have me do? |
10921 | When it''s all mine, and a great deal more, all lawfully mine, was I to push for it? |
10921 | Where are all the friends? 10921 Where in the wide world am I to find hundreds, let alone thousands?" |
10921 | Where is Mariana? |
10921 | Where is my darling Olivia? |
10921 | Who are you, M. le Clown? |
10921 | Who art thou? |
10921 | Who could know the noble Croesus without loving him? 10921 Who has done this barbarous action?" |
10921 | Who says so? |
10921 | Why do you bring in her name? |
10921 | Why should I want to get into the middle class because I have some learning? 10921 Why so?" |
10921 | Why, mother,said Seth,"how is it as father''s working so late?" |
10921 | Why, what have we done to you, Dinah, as you must go away from us? |
10921 | Why, what''s the matter with thee-- thee''st in trouble? |
10921 | Why? |
10921 | Why? |
10921 | Will they make me take her? 10921 Will you not confide in me, my boy?" |
10921 | With thee? |
10921 | Would not my sufferings, had they been ten times greater, have been now richly repaid? |
10921 | Wouldst thou go without one word to me? |
10921 | You are not going to be married to Harold Transome, or to be rich? |
10921 | You are out of prison? |
10921 | You do n''t believe I go to Lady Delacour''s to look for a wife? 10921 You have been out? |
10921 | You have given it all up? |
10921 | You love her? |
10921 | You think so? 10921 You''ll manage to pay for a brick grave, Tom, so as your mother and me can lie together? |
10921 | You''ll take the child to the parish to- morrow? |
10921 | Adam only said after that,"I may tell your uncle and aunt, may n''t I, Hetty?" |
10921 | After giving a deep and sore sigh, she inquired,"How did he behave? |
10921 | Am I wretched enough?" |
10921 | An angel? |
10921 | And Iclea?" |
10921 | And Reverchon? |
10921 | And can a boy have the confidence to talk of his virtue?" |
10921 | And do you know for whom?" |
10921 | And do you think so little of your Amelia as to think I could or would survive you?'' |
10921 | And how could she prove Jem''s innocence without admitting her father''s guilt? |
10921 | And how was she to redress the wrong she had done to Jem in denying him her heart? |
10921 | And now he took her hand, and asked her the simple question,"_ Do_ you love me?" |
10921 | And where have you been?" |
10921 | And why is Latin more necessitous for a footman than a gentleman? |
10921 | And-- shall I avow it? |
10921 | Are our souls immortal, or do they perish with our bodies? |
10921 | Are you come back to live here then?" |
10921 | Are you quite sure?" |
10921 | As I was walking along the terrace, she came up and took my arm, and said,"Are you really my friend, Maxime?" |
10921 | Besides, were we to go to the other side of the Loire at the command of Blücher? |
10921 | Bourjot? |
10921 | Buche and some of the old soldiers hated this; but what did it matter who was king, and what these fools wanted us to shout? |
10921 | But Seth, with an anxious look, had passed into the workshop, and said,"Addy, how''s this? |
10921 | But did she ever give you to believe that the boy was hers-- was mine?" |
10921 | But how comes a young man like you, with the face of Messer San Michele, to be sleeping on a stone bed? |
10921 | But the angry knight snatched it away, and hurled it into the river, exclaiming,"Are you still connected with them? |
10921 | But where was Silas Marner while this strange visitor had come to his hearth? |
10921 | But where were their souls? |
10921 | But who made it so as there was no arbitrating and no justice to be got? |
10921 | But why had she come and sat beside me if she did not want to talk? |
10921 | But why was such force used? |
10921 | But why?" |
10921 | But you-- how is it all? |
10921 | But, Wilhelm, he loves her with his whole heart, and what does not such a love deserve? |
10921 | Ca n''t you understand? |
10921 | Can you deny your share?" |
10921 | Can you not guess? |
10921 | Can you say that you have done more than execute my scheme? |
10921 | Can you show me the way to a more lively quarter, where I can get a meal and a lodging?" |
10921 | Could Agra Jenkyns be the long lost Peter? |
10921 | Could Ney, an old soldier of the Revolution, though he had kissed the hand of Louis XVIII., betray the country to please the king? |
10921 | Could this be the little sister come back to him in a dream-- his little sister whom he had carried about in his arms for a year before she died? |
10921 | Did I not encourage her emotion? |
10921 | Did I not-- but what is man that he dares so to accuse himself? |
10921 | Did you notice?" |
10921 | Do I not ever think of you?" |
10921 | Do I see my lost daughter? |
10921 | Do not children touch everything that they see? |
10921 | Do you ever see cows dressed in gray flannel in London? |
10921 | Do you hear, Egyptian? |
10921 | Do you make paper paths for every guest to walk upon in London? |
10921 | Do you not know I am your uncle Kühleborn, who brought you to this region, and that I am here to protect you from goblins and sprites? |
10921 | Do you not know, miserable wretch, that I have sworn to preserve my reputation, whatever it cost? |
10921 | Do you not recollect my saying that only invisible things are real? |
10921 | Do you remember I read your thoughts when we first met, and answered them before you spoke? |
10921 | Do you think I could be taken in by one of the Stanhope school?" |
10921 | Do you think I''m an idiot? |
10921 | Do you think you will win my hand-- and, what is more important to you still, my wretched wealth-- by this trick? |
10921 | Dost repent heartily of thy promise, dost not, Sophy?" |
10921 | Dost thou know where my son is, all through thee?" |
10921 | Father''s forgot the coffin?" |
10921 | For what will become of me if you forsake me? |
10921 | From such ideas what good could come? |
10921 | Gone, hey? |
10921 | Hast not gin thy consent, Sophy, to be married to- morrow?" |
10921 | Hast thou not wedded another after thine espousal of her?" |
10921 | Have you courage to know more? |
10921 | Have you ever thought of finding him a suitable wife?" |
10921 | He had but to carry our gems to Venice; he will have raised money, and will never rest till he finds me out?" |
10921 | Her reply amazed the listeners, for she said,"If one has no soul, as I have none, what is there to harmonise?" |
10921 | How and when had the child come in without his knowledge? |
10921 | How can all the fine powers of the immortal soul ever develop along with such degraded instruments of knowledge?" |
10921 | How comest thou, my child, at this important moment?" |
10921 | How did it fit in with the rest of the data which Lecoq had so brilliantly collected? |
10921 | How had it been made? |
10921 | I dance, yes... but do you think I am allowed to talk to my partner? |
10921 | If so, the question arose, what would become of the money that everybody said the old miser had put by? |
10921 | Is Albert with you, and what is he to you? |
10921 | Is it to Sir Philip Baddely''s fortune--£15,000 a year-- you object, or to his family, or to his person? |
10921 | Is n''t the current strong here?" |
10921 | It was but a passing thought, and yet what was the meaning of Mr. Falkland''s agonies of mind? |
10921 | Jem cut her short with his hoarse, stern inquiry,"Who is this spark that Mary loves?" |
10921 | Jem must be saved, and she must do it; for was she not the sole repository of the terrible secret? |
10921 | Marguerite?" |
10921 | Mr. Riley took a pinch of snuff before he said,"But your lad''s not stupid, is he? |
10921 | Oh, who can express my emotions? |
10921 | Or why should you, who are the labourer only, the executor of my scheme, expect a share in the profit? |
10921 | Peter?" |
10921 | Poor captain would be glad of that, mum, would n''t he? |
10921 | Shall you never repent?--never be inwardly reproaching me that I was not a man who could have shared your wealth? |
10921 | She answered with fierce earnestness,"Where have I been? |
10921 | She revolted against his assumption of superiority.... Did he love her one little bit, and was that the reason why he wanted her to change? |
10921 | She said:"It is-- oh, sir, can you be Peter?" |
10921 | Something Esther said made Felix ask suddenly,"Can you imagine yourself choosing hardship as the better lot?" |
10921 | Suddenly I saw Charlotte''s bonnet leaning out of the window, and she turned to look back-- was it at me? |
10921 | Surely you wo n''t put this in-- castle, stables, and appurtenances of Castle Rackrent?" |
10921 | Tell me now, how my messengers pleased you and your countrymen?" |
10921 | The lady asked several questions, and then, turning to the old gentleman, said,"Dear uncle, may I be generous at your expense?" |
10921 | Then why was she favouring the suit of the count? |
10921 | They must n''t say any harm o''Tom, eh?" |
10921 | Thou knowest where Canada is, Mary?" |
10921 | Thou mayest deem this unwomanly-- indelicate; but in love we are equal, and why may not one make reparation as the other?" |
10921 | Was I in fault that, while I was pleasantly entertained by the charms of her sister, her feeble heart conceived a passion for me? |
10921 | Was it because she still only half believed the slanders spread against me that Marguerite again asked me to go for a walk with her? |
10921 | Was it possible, after all, that Mr. Falkland should be the murderer? |
10921 | Was she a fair, young, blue- eyed daughter of Eve? |
10921 | We still hoped for the continuance of peace, but who could say how long the peace would last? |
10921 | What am I about to say? |
10921 | What amends can I ever make you for those unkind suspicions which I have entertained, and for all the sufferings they have occasioned you?" |
10921 | What can you do now? |
10921 | What did this new discovery imply? |
10921 | What do they mean by saying that Albert is your husband? |
10921 | What do you think of trying Madame Rosiéres?" |
10921 | What have I been doing? |
10921 | What is his occupation?" |
10921 | What is it, my darling Noémi?" |
10921 | What is it?" |
10921 | What is to be the outcome of all this wild, aimless, endless passion? |
10921 | What news?" |
10921 | What sin? |
10921 | What sort of creature must he be who merely likes Charlotte? |
10921 | What were the wealth and prosperity that Mr. Harry Carson might bring to her now that she had suddenly discovered the passionate secret of her soul? |
10921 | What would he have thought had he known that his daughter had listened to the voice of an employer''s son? |
10921 | What would it avail me to tarry in the great city unless I had my discourses with me? |
10921 | What''s it sinnify about her being a Methody? |
10921 | When he beheld Bartja, he stood transfixed, then whispered to him,"Unhappy boy, you are still here? |
10921 | Where have ye been this many a year?" |
10921 | Whither am I going? |
10921 | Who could fail to admire the beauty of the young heroes, your friends, and especially of your handsome brother Bartja? |
10921 | Who is there?" |
10921 | Who was it that had said five hundred florins was more than a man''s ransom? |
10921 | Who would know, if Marner was dead, that anybody had come to take his hoard of money away? |
10921 | Who''s afraid?" |
10921 | Whose entire being were not absolutely filled with her? |
10921 | Why do I not write to you? |
10921 | Why do I thus deceive myself? |
10921 | Why had Madeline sent the cashier this elaborately disguised letter? |
10921 | Why had she pawned it for Lagors? |
10921 | Why had she wished him to leave France, confident as she was, so she told him, of his innocence? |
10921 | Why is it that I am compelled to this confidence? |
10921 | Why not? |
10921 | Why should I remain? |
10921 | Why should it not? |
10921 | Why should she not marry Adam? |
10921 | Why, then, should the state of a prig differ from all others? |
10921 | Will magistrates who punish lewdness, or parsons who preach against it, make any scruple of committing it? |
10921 | Will you turn to the passage in Homer from which that subject was taken?" |
10921 | With your tender nature, how can you altogether cast away the instinct of a parent?" |
10921 | Wo n''t you? |
10921 | Would it grieve thee sore to quit the old smoke- jack?" |
10921 | You know his jealousy of you; and your visit to the Egyptian to- night....""My visit? |
10921 | _ I.--Rich and Poor_"Mary,"said John Barton to his daughter,"what''s come o''er thee and Jem Wilson? |
10921 | _ Was_ it a dream? |
10921 | and the people I shall live among, Esther? |
10921 | cried I,"is my young landlord, then, the nephew of one who is represented as a man of consummate benevolence?" |
10921 | cries the lady,"did ever mortal hear of a man''s virtue? |
10921 | de Porhoet betrayed my secret? |
10921 | de Porhoet? |
10471 | Ah, Nanon,she would say,"why has he never written to me once all these years?" |
10471 | Ah, my Nicolette,he said,"Are you living, are you dead? |
10471 | And what of that? |
10471 | Are those the kind of birds you mean? |
10471 | Are you any better than we convicts are? |
10471 | Are you my prisoner? |
10471 | Are you really worse? 10471 Are you so absorbed in your work, Balthazar?" |
10471 | Are you waiting,he said,"for me to introduce my wife? |
10471 | Barley& Co. of Cavendish Square? |
10471 | But how can that be? |
10471 | But how can we? |
10471 | But if I ca n''t get the money? |
10471 | But what has happened? |
10471 | But where can I find such a girl? |
10471 | But where is the soup? |
10471 | But who will strike the blow? |
10471 | But, Coquette-- don''t you see it can not end here? |
10471 | But, to make a clean breast of it, are you her lover? |
10471 | Buy? |
10471 | Ca n''t you see? |
10471 | Clemene,he said,"did you not hear that one of the princes of your people arrived in Surinam yesterday? |
10471 | Coquette,he said,"have you resolved to make your life miserable? |
10471 | Did n''t you know my mother and my uncle were bankers? |
10471 | Die of old age? |
10471 | Die? 10471 Die?" |
10471 | Do n''t you know that Pamphila is a witch? |
10471 | Do n''t you think that some day or other he will ask you to marry him? |
10471 | Do you consent to Northumberland''s assassination? |
10471 | Do you hear what I say? 10471 Do you know Aucassin, the brave young son of Count Garin?" |
10471 | Do you know Taillefer, the wealthy banker? |
10471 | Do you not know me, then? |
10471 | Do you rebuke me,Balthazar asked,"for being superior to common men?" |
10471 | Do you think my floors are going to open, and tables, waiters, and guests pop up before your eyes? |
10471 | Do you wish for some asparagus, sir? |
10471 | Do you wish to buy anything? |
10471 | For me, I mean; for me? |
10471 | Has Taillefer''s wine got into your head already? |
10471 | Have they conquered us nobly in battle? 10471 Have you really forgiven me?" |
10471 | Have you seen nothing? |
10471 | Hermann, where are you? |
10471 | His infinite love? 10471 How is it that the King of the Mountains is found walking in the streets of Athens?" |
10471 | I am sure,cried Catherine hastily,"I did not mean to say anything wrong; but it is a nice book, and why should I not call it so?" |
10471 | I do not understand,she replied;"why all this secrecy-- all this mystery?" |
10471 | I have fought against this for many a day; but now, Coquette, wo n''t you look up and give me one kiss before we part? |
10471 | I tell him that? |
10471 | If I warrant to bring you safe and sound to our farm, Lorna, will you come with me? |
10471 | Is it a joke or a mystery? |
10471 | Is she dead? |
10471 | Is she solemn? 10471 Is the Manse to be turned topsalteery, and made a byword a''because o''a foreign hussy?" |
10471 | Is there any chance for her? |
10471 | Mademoiselle Victorine? |
10471 | Measure what? |
10471 | Mercy? |
10471 | Mr. Schultz, is he dictating the terms of our ransom? |
10471 | Now you will try to be better, wo n''t you? |
10471 | Now, Emile, just tell me what are you all shouting about? |
10471 | Now, will ye say it? |
10471 | Oh, what have we done? |
10471 | On what part of the Earth would you like to land? |
10471 | Penniless? |
10471 | Shall I sing you a new song, sire? |
10471 | Surely,I said to him,"you do not suspect that we will break our word with you? |
10471 | Then you are a spirit? |
10471 | Then, how do we live? |
10471 | Trying to cast a spell on our food? |
10471 | Vespers? |
10471 | Well, mamma,said Lydia,"and what do you think of my husband? |
10471 | Well? |
10471 | What are you doing? |
10471 | What are you? 10471 What can I do in the mountains now?" |
10471 | What can I do? |
10471 | What did they say? |
10471 | What do you think of my wife''s style of letter- writing? 10471 What do you think?" |
10471 | What do you want to walk away for? |
10471 | What does he mean? |
10471 | What does it matter? |
10471 | What have you done with my sweet lady? |
10471 | What is that? |
10471 | What is the matter, Coquette? 10471 What is your motive for this offer?" |
10471 | What is your name? |
10471 | What makes God so merciful to sinners? |
10471 | What of that? |
10471 | What will become of you? 10471 What would you gain if you took the Saracen maid to bed? |
10471 | What''s the matter with the old scoundrel lying beside you? |
10471 | What''s the matter? |
10471 | When have I not loved you? |
10471 | Where can my cousin be? |
10471 | Where is Jane? 10471 Where is my wife, Edward Kallem? |
10471 | Which do you mean? |
10471 | Who are you? |
10471 | Who has dared to marry the daughter of my chief headman without my consent? |
10471 | Who is it that win to heaven? 10471 Why are you distressed? |
10471 | Why are you looking at me like that? |
10471 | Why do you do that? |
10471 | Why does not some brigand chief, with a good connection, convert his business into a properly registered joint- stock company? |
10471 | Why not make it quite respectable and regular? |
10471 | Why should I sing for you, if I do not want to? 10471 Why should we be slaves to these white men?" |
10471 | Wretched weather for drowning oneself, is n''t it? |
10471 | You have never formed a wish all the time you had it? |
10471 | You here? |
10471 | You here? |
10471 | You love me? |
10471 | You see that hole in the rock there? 10471 You see this crank?" |
10471 | You will marry him, and make him fancy that you love him? |
10471 | You will not rob me of my only friend? |
10471 | You will stay here, my dear Lucius, wo n''t you? |
10471 | Your only friend? 10471 Am I to die like a dog? 10471 And now, do you pity me, Miss Dashwood? 10471 And pray when am I to wish you joy? |
10471 | And was n''t I cunning? |
10471 | And what business had a man of my age with a kite?" |
10471 | And women? |
10471 | And yet how many were the examples to justify even the blackest suspicions? |
10471 | And, then, do you think I would wait till I found a knife? |
10471 | Another man? |
10471 | Are my ideas so scanty? |
10471 | Are they coming? |
10471 | Are we become their captives by the chance of war? |
10471 | As he stood there, he said to himself:"But yes, why should n''t they combine in a given time?" |
10471 | Blindfolded, Jane groped for the block, crying,"What shall I do? |
10471 | But does Aucassin forget His sweet lady, Nicolette? |
10471 | But how is your acquaintance to be long supported under such extraordinary dispatch of every subject for discourse? |
10471 | But how was it that it had come so suddenly, and ravaged her dear, sweet, tender body so furiously? |
10471 | But no one shot at me; and I went up to Carver Doone and took him by the beard, and said:"Do you call yourself a man?" |
10471 | But now, really, do you not think''Udolpho''the nicest book in the world?" |
10471 | But surely they were worthy to be accused? |
10471 | But whatever is the matter with the women?" |
10471 | But whom should he get as companions in this wild enterprise? |
10471 | But, could such love endure through life? |
10471 | Can I speak plainer? |
10471 | Coquette was playing and singing"The Flowers o''the Forest,"when Leezibeth crept in, and said shamefacedly:"Will ye sing that again, miss? |
10471 | Could Henry''s father----? |
10471 | Could deformity be triumphed over by beauty of face? |
10471 | Could it be possible? |
10471 | Delicate, tender, fully feminine, was it not?" |
10471 | Did he make the Sign of the Cross? |
10471 | Did that mean that Edward did not suspect him? |
10471 | Did you observe him closely? |
10471 | Do n''t you remember leaving it in the garret?" |
10471 | Do n''t you understand? |
10471 | Do you know that you are quite rude?" |
10471 | Do you know why men die? |
10471 | Do you not know Oroonoko?" |
10471 | Do you remember the letter he was dictating when we arrived? |
10471 | Do you think he ought to enter?" |
10471 | Do you think it is worth getting captured for the sake of meeting her?" |
10471 | Do you white people think that I, the king of Coromantien, can be treated like the captives that I have taken in war and sold to you? |
10471 | Does he forget-- Aucassin-- his Nicolette? |
10471 | Does it grieve you to think of what I ask?" |
10471 | Eli Böen, eh? |
10471 | Emma, why is it that they are your enemies?" |
10471 | Fanny, will twenty minutes after four suit you?" |
10471 | For did not the great city hold in it Coquette? |
10471 | Grandet marry M. Adolphe des Grassins or M. le Président? |
10471 | Had he killed her? |
10471 | Had his reason failed him? |
10471 | Has she escaped?" |
10471 | Has she fled? |
10471 | Have I explained away any part of my guilt?" |
10471 | Have you heard of Hæmus, the famous Thracian brigand? |
10471 | He hesitated a moment-- will she call him back? |
10471 | His poor wife asked herself in despair,"Is he going mad?" |
10471 | How can Emma imagine she has anything to learn herself while Harriet is presenting such a delightful inferiority? |
10471 | How can I use a sword? |
10471 | How could I help doing so, after all your kindness to me? |
10471 | How was Emma to bear the change? |
10471 | I SHALL SHRINK WITH EACH WISH, AND SO SHALL THY LIFE, WILT THOU TAKE ME? |
10471 | If I get you a dot of a million, will you give me two hundred thousand francs? |
10471 | If I marry you, will you study to please me and carry out all my demands, whatever they are, without a murmur or a sullen look?" |
10471 | Is it wrong for me to speak to Lord Earlshope when I do see him kind to me? |
10471 | Is n''t he the image of his modest, beautiful mother? |
10471 | Is not he a charming man? |
10471 | Is she prudish? |
10471 | Is she queer? |
10471 | Is this just? |
10471 | Is twenty per cent, commission on such a transaction too much? |
10471 | It can not be anything to you surely?" |
10471 | It is nothing to you-- my going away? |
10471 | Kallem?" |
10471 | Love you? |
10471 | Lucius, do n''t you remember your kinswoman, Byrrhena? |
10471 | Magic? |
10471 | Must it be so?" |
10471 | My dear,"she added, looking at Coquette,"I am sorry to have disturbed you; but do you know who I am? |
10471 | My uncle does expect it, does he not? |
10471 | No? |
10471 | Now, how were his sentiments to be read? |
10471 | One of them, who carried a basket, and was eating a piece of bread and butter, said to Lemulquinier:"Is it true you make diamonds and pearls?" |
10471 | Or, more likely, that he had forgiven him? |
10471 | Porriquet?" |
10471 | Ragni innocent? |
10471 | Say, tree, dost thou venture to go? |
10471 | Say, what shall we go and buy?" |
10471 | Shall we join forces?" |
10471 | Shall we let vile creatures such as these flog us and bruise us as they please?" |
10471 | Shall, then, this savage, brutal alien avoid the consequences of his fearful crime?" |
10471 | She looked after him-- will he turn around? |
10471 | Should he wish to win the heart of Foedora? |
10471 | Should she see him enter-- a tottering and enfeebled old man, broken by the sufferings which he had borne so proudly for science? |
10471 | So, now, why should I sing for you, if I do not want to?" |
10471 | Some woman, eh? |
10471 | Tell me, if I go to heaven, can I come back in spirit and hover near them? |
10471 | The father then entered the room, and his son said to him in an angry voice:"Why have you not got our house ready to sail away? |
10471 | There came a night when she beckoned her husband to her and asked him in a scarcely audible voice:"Tom, am I going to die?" |
10471 | They heard Eli outside, calling gently:"Are n''t you coming, mother?" |
10471 | This man had neither parents nor friends, and when Arne said to him,"Have you no one at all, then, to love you?" |
10471 | To this Marianne replied,"Is this fair? |
10471 | To- day a son of his has come into our house, and to him we''ve given our only daughter.... Birgit, ca n''t we, too, join our hearts to- day?" |
10471 | Was Walpurga right after all? |
10471 | Was he thinking of going away? |
10471 | Was it that her noble act was construed as further evidence of weakness? |
10471 | Was n''t your mother a Miss O''Flaharty?" |
10471 | Were lovers''glances to be exchanged over the child''s cradle? |
10471 | What can I do to you? |
10471 | What could more plainly speak the gloomy workings of a mind not wholly dead to every sense of humanity, in its fearful review of past scenes of guilt? |
10471 | What has happened?" |
10471 | What have you done with my wife?" |
10471 | What have you done?" |
10471 | What if it were true what the strange old man had said? |
10471 | What is Pamphila doing to- night? |
10471 | What is it? |
10471 | What is your name?" |
10471 | What man could believe nowadays in magic? |
10471 | What should a man of the rank and wealth of Titus have to do in a thieves''cavern? |
10471 | What was it he heard in the stillness of the night? |
10471 | What''s that? |
10471 | When is your turn to come? |
10471 | Where have you been? |
10471 | Where is all our property, then?" |
10471 | Where is it?" |
10471 | Where is the king?" |
10471 | Which of us was the dearer to you? |
10471 | Who is it with her? |
10471 | Who sent you here to collect our plants? |
10471 | Who was that old man over there, sitting beside a dancing- girl that Raphael had seen at Taillefer''s? |
10471 | Why did n''t you ask me for an annuity of a thousand pounds instead of using up ten years of my life on a silly wish? |
10471 | Why had he not known of this in time? |
10471 | Why had he not let it remain the base of their intercourse? |
10471 | Why should we two be for ever miserable? |
10471 | Will he?" |
10471 | With a loving smile, she asked:"Were you on the point of resolving nitrogen?" |
10471 | Would I not come to give them welcome? |
10471 | Would Sören Kule come and live in it? |
10471 | Would he not, then, tell them plainly what they had done to make him so angry? |
10471 | You saw them at the ball; they did not know that I was ill, did they?" |
10471 | You wanted to die, eh? |
10471 | You will not grudge this last pleasure to a poet and man of learning, will you?" |
10471 | You''ll have me, wo n''t you? |
10471 | _ D-- n;_ is that bad enough?" |
10471 | remains there no more mercy?" |
10471 | was she innocent? |
21629 | Altho who is so foolish, even if young, as to be assured that he will live even till the evening? |
21629 | But why do I refer to others? |
21629 | But why say more? |
21629 | Can heights be reached by a level path? |
21629 | Do you see how, in Homer, Nestor very often proclaims his own virtues? |
21629 | Doth not that thing hurt a Pilot, which hindereth him from entring the Port? |
21629 | For what comfort has life? |
21629 | For what did Africanus want of me? |
21629 | For what is more delightful than old age surrounded with the studious attention of youth? |
21629 | For where can that age be better warmed either by basking in the sun or by the fire, or again be more healthfully refreshed by shades or waters? |
21629 | For who can love either him whom he fears or him by whom he thinks he himself is feared? |
21629 | For who was unapprized of the ferocious disposition of Nero? |
21629 | Hast thou rather he should be pressed? |
21629 | He also heard a traveler they met on the road, say,"They are in pursuit of Nero": and another ask,"Is there any news in the city about Nero?" |
21629 | He will not allow it to be a burden either to himself or to any one else: he will give it-- why do you prick up your ears? |
21629 | He, therefore, who at all hours dreads impending death, how can he be at peace in his mind? |
21629 | His hope is but a foolish one; for what can be more foolish than to regard uncertainties as certainties, delusions as truths? |
21629 | In that case what king will be safe? |
21629 | In the first place-- to whom can life be"worth living,"as Ennius says, who does not repose on the mutual kind feeling of some friend? |
21629 | In truth, as far as he is concerned, who can deny that his end was glorious? |
21629 | Is he not right in allowing these to turn the scale against petty, ridiculous, and short- lived movements of his wretched body? |
21629 | Is it then desirable that the gods should show no mercy upon sins and mistakes, and that they should harshly pursue us to our ruin? |
21629 | Is there no strength in old age? |
21629 | May I not draw an argument from the condition of mankind? |
21629 | Neither even do you possess the strength of Titus Pontius the centurion; is he, therefore, the more excellent man? |
21629 | Now it was besieged publicly, publicly set fire to; and what were the motives for the war? |
21629 | Of what importance, then, can it be to lengthen that which, however much you add to it, will never be much more than nothing? |
21629 | Shall we not leave even such a resource to old age, as to teach young men, instruct them, train them to every department of duty? |
21629 | Shall, then, well- instructed old men be afraid of that which young men, and they not only ignorant, but mere peasants, despise? |
21629 | Then asking his friends who were admitted into the room,"Do ye think that I have acted my part on the stage of life well?" |
21629 | There are also some of early youth; does settled age, which is called middle life, seek after these? |
21629 | There are pursuits peculiar to boyhood; do therefore young men regret the loss of them? |
21629 | Think you that the people could do any wrong to such a man when they tore away his prætorship or his toga? |
21629 | To such questions how shall I answer? |
21629 | Was not Cicero a great orator? |
21629 | Was not then Demosthenes, they ask, a great orator? |
21629 | What can be more delightful than to have one to whom you can speak on all subjects just as to yourself? |
21629 | What charge is that against old age, since you see it to be common to youth also? |
21629 | What pleasures, therefore, arising from banquets, or plays, or harlots, are to be compared with these pleasures? |
21629 | What then? |
21629 | What therefore sayeth thou? |
21629 | What trouble has it not, rather? |
21629 | Where at least the ceremonial of sorrow?" |
21629 | Where would be the great enjoyment in prosperity if you had not one to rejoice in it equally with yourself? |
21629 | Whether, then, would you rather have this strength of body, or Pythagoras''strength of intellect, bestowed upon you? |
21629 | Which causeth his endeuours to be vaine? |
21629 | Which eyther beareth him back, or detaineth and disarmeth him? |
21629 | Who could devote less than one day to mourning for two sons? |
21629 | Why need I adduce that the wisest man ever dies with the greatest equanimity, the most foolish with the least? |
21629 | Why should I allude to irrigations, why to the diggings of the ground, why to the trenching by which the ground is made much more productive? |
21629 | Why should I speak of Publius Licinius Crassus''study both of pontifical and civil law? |
21629 | Why should I speak of the advantage of manuring? |
21629 | Why should I speak of the greenness of meadows, or the rows of trees, or the handsome appearance of vineyards and olive grounds? |
21629 | Why should I, in the case of vines, tell of the plantings, the risings, the stages of growth? |
21629 | Would it not have been far better to pass an easy and quiet life without any toil or struggle? |
21629 | Ye good gods, do I say this in that very city in which Lucretia and Brutus removed the yoke of kings from the necks of the Romans? |
21629 | Yet who would say that nature has dealt grudgingly with the minds of women and stunted their virtues? |
21629 | You ask, what this post is? |
21629 | [ 12] Wherefore do I adduce this? |
21629 | an employment, indeed, than which what can be more noble? |
21629 | for how few households have remained possest of all their members to the end? |
21629 | or of the present Publius Scipio, who within these few days was created chief pontiff? |
21629 | said he,"have I then neither friend nor foe?" |
21629 | what is there in man''s life that can be called long? |
21629 | what one is there that has not suffered some loss? |
21629 | what was the object to be gained, that so severe a calamity was incurred? |
21629 | when they bespattered his sacred head with the rinsings of their mouths? |
21629 | where the rules of conduct under impending evils, studied for so many years? |
25968 | exactly what? |
25968 | exactly when? |
25968 | what kind? |
25968 | And as for the"_ How_?" |
25968 | As soon as we read the word"Fire"we ask,"When?"--"Where?"--"What?"--"Why?"--"How?" |
25968 | But if it were written in this way and the editor decided to slash off the last paragraph, what would go? |
25968 | But which one is of the greater importance? |
25968 | For instance, can we say that"Mr. and Mrs. Smith acted as chaperons"? |
25968 | He does not try to answer the question"_ why_?" |
25968 | He immediately asks where?--what burned?--when?--how much was lost? |
25968 | He must continually ask himself"how many?" |
25968 | If the real news of the story were in the last paragraph it would go in the slashing, and what would be left? |
25968 | In this example, the name overshadows a striking loss of property and the story begins with the answer to_ Who?_| NEW YORK, Nov. |
25968 | It must begin with the most striking part of the event and answer the reader''s_ Where?__ When?__ How?__ Why?_ and_ Who?_ concerning it. |
25968 | It must begin with the most striking part of the event and answer the reader''s_ Where?__ When?__ How?__ Why?_ and_ Who?_ concerning it. |
25968 | It must begin with the most striking part of the event and answer the reader''s_ Where?__ When?__ How?__ Why?_ and_ Who?_ concerning it. |
25968 | It must begin with the most striking part of the event and answer the reader''s_ Where?__ When?__ How?__ Why?_ and_ Who?_ concerning it. |
25968 | It must begin with the most striking part of the event and answer the reader''s_ Where?__ When?__ How?__ Why?_ and_ Who?_ concerning it. |
25968 | Naturally he would be taken to the hospital, but why put the emphasis of the whole sentence on that point? |
25968 | Now, what is the most interesting thing in the story? |
25968 | Question-- Were you there? |
25968 | The answer to_ Where?_ is more interesting than the fire itself. |
25968 | The first important question in the whole matter is"Who does dramatic reporting?" |
25968 | The question"what?" |
25968 | The unusual time would be interesting; the answer to_ When?_ would be the feature. |
25968 | Then why begin with his name when his action is of greater interest to all but a few of our readers? |
25968 | Therefore the reporter begins with the answer to_ What?_ the name of the building, as in the following cases:| GLENS FALLS, N. Y., Aug. |
25968 | Very often action is brought in merely for its human interest; thus:|"How long has it been since you have||had a maid?" |
25968 | Which? |
25968 | Who cares what street the fire was on until he knows more about the fire? |
25968 | Why is this? |
25968 | Why not begin the story in this way and leave something for the rest of the story? |
25968 | Why? |
25968 | |||| Q.--How long were the raw sugar clerks||in your office? |
25968 | |||| Q.--So yours was a busy office? |
25968 | |||| Q.--Were you connected with the docks? |
25968 | |||| Question.--How much money was paid||through your office in the course of a||year? |
25968 | ||||"Now, what did your committee do in||1908, when the anti- race track legislation||was pending?" |
25968 | ||||"Say, do you know that I have spent||pretty nearly$ 1,000 for strings for that||violin? |
25968 | ||||"To whom?" |
25968 | ||||"What did it cost you for two rooms and||bath at the Hotel Belmont, where you lived||last year?" |
25968 | ||||"What for?" |
25968 | ||||"What number?" |
25968 | ||||"You are a member of the executive||committee of the Metropolitan Turf||Association?" |
25968 | ||||*****||||"How much did you pay in 1908?" |
21196 | Ai nt you a buster? |
21196 | And what is that, pray tell me, love, that paddles off so fast? |
21196 | And you say you''re an American? |
21196 | Ay, is it so? |
21196 | Bailed out, was he? |
21196 | Bettina,said she, addressing her maid in a voice as clouded and rich as the south wind on an à � olian,"how am I to- day?" |
21196 | But what kind of perishable things? |
21196 | Fiddlesticks, is it, sir? 21196 From what part of America?" |
21196 | Had the sufferin''s he had undergone made him delerious? |
21196 | Have you two barns? |
21196 | How do you expect to get over the river when you go back? |
21196 | Lady Albina,said I, in my softest tone,"how are you?" |
21196 | My dear,said I to Mrs. Sparrowgrass,"where did you get these fine potatoes?" |
21196 | My dear,said Mrs. Sparrowgrass,"why do n''t you sell that boat?" |
21196 | On their heads? |
21196 | Sell it? 21196 Throw that in my face agin, will you? |
21196 | Town? |
21196 | What State? |
21196 | What has become of your pontoon train? |
21196 | What was that? |
21196 | What''s that? |
21196 | What,replied Bill,"do you mean to say you do n''t know what a hanthem is?" |
21196 | Where are we now, sir? 21196 Where do you usually put the horses of clergymen who come to see your master?" |
21196 | Who sold the best apples in your town? |
21196 | Who told you that I swore? |
21196 | Why dassent you? |
21196 | Why did you leave their communion, Mr. Dickson, if I may be permitted to ask? |
21196 | Why not? 21196 Why,"says he,"how would the rest of the wimmin round Jonesville feel if I should pick out one woman and wait on her?" |
21196 | Yes, sir; nice ones, ai n''t they? |
21196 | You ai n''t got nuffin''more to say? |
21196 | You ai n''t? 21196 You are not going to waste your ground on muskmelons?" |
21196 | You want a passage to America? |
21196 | *****_ Old Gentleman_( to driver of street- car):"My friend, what do you do with your wages every week-- put part of it in the savings bank?" |
21196 | --What do you think the parson found, When he got up and stared around? |
21196 | A catbird? |
21196 | Am I to be sacrificed, broiled, roasted, for the sake of the increased vigor of a few vegetables? |
21196 | And now, Melissy Bedott, you ai n''t to have nothin''more to dew with them gals-- d''ye hear? |
21196 | And where''s Kier? |
21196 | Before the whole set school to boot---- What evil genius put you to''t?" |
21196 | Besides, there were two bolted doors and double- deafened floors between us; how could she recognize my voice, even if she did hear it? |
21196 | But at last a wonderful diamond ring, An infant Kohinoor, did the thing, And, sighing with love, or something the same,( What''s in a name?) |
21196 | But my wife Polly, says she,''What on airth are you thinkin''of, Deacon? |
21196 | But what kind of an explanation could I make to him? |
21196 | But when the blow was struck, when I had passed''em by and invited some other, some happier woman, how would them slighted ones feel? |
21196 | But who was to give me back my peas? |
21196 | But why harrow the feelings by lifting the curtain From these scenes of woe? |
21196 | Colts grew horses, beards turned gray, Deacon and Deaconess dropped away, Children and grandchildren-- where were they? |
21196 | Dickson?" |
21196 | Dis razor hurt you, sah?" |
21196 | Do you see that tree there?" |
21196 | For what says the ballad? |
21196 | Had the sufferin''s of the night, added to the trials of the day, made him crazy? |
21196 | He give the old mare a awful cut and says he:"I''d like to know what you want to be so aggravatin''for?" |
21196 | Her hair is almost gray; Why will she train that winter curl In such a spring- like way? |
21196 | His shipmate listened for awhile, and then said:"I say, Bill, what''s a hanthem?" |
21196 | How can she lay her glasses down, And say she reads as well, When, through a double convex lens, She just makes out to spell? |
21196 | How did he git thar? |
21196 | How didst thou acquire this paramount honor and dignity?" |
21196 | How do you s''pose I can do anything with you a- tossin''round so?" |
21196 | How do you s''pose they would enjoy the day, seein''me with another woman, and they droopin''round without me? |
21196 | I says to him in stern tones:"Is this pleasure, Josiah Allen?" |
21196 | I should like to know what arthly reason you had to s''pose old Crane was agreeable to me? |
21196 | In what other painful event of life has a good man so little sympathy as when overcome with sleep in meeting time? |
21196 | Is this the way you answer the question about keepin''the Lord''s day? |
21196 | It skairt him awfully, and says he,"What does ail you, Samantha? |
21196 | JAMES T. FIELDS THE OWL- CRITIC A Lesson to Fault- finders"Who stuffed that white owl?" |
21196 | MR. C."Well, then, I want to know if yu''re willing I should have Melissy?" |
21196 | One day I saw Mr. Bates walking along, and I hailed him:"Bates, those are your cows there, I believe?" |
21196 | One day a feller-- a stranger in the camp, he was-- come acrost him with his box, and says:"What might it be that you''ve got in the box?" |
21196 | Out spoke the ancient fisherman:"Oh, what was that, my daughter?" |
21196 | Pray, what do you know of a woman''s necessities? |
21196 | Putting my head out of the carriage, I said in a petulant and weary tone,''Do you want to see me?'' |
21196 | Recollect wut fun we he d, you''n I on''Ezry Hollis, Up there to Waltham plain last fall, ahavin''the Cornwallis? |
21196 | Says I,"What is the matter, Josiah Allen? |
21196 | Scrutinizing it closely, he turned to the widow and in a low tone asked,''Who sent the pick?''" |
21196 | See-- how long''s Miss Crane ben dead? |
21196 | Somebody ought to get up before the dew is off( why do n''t the dew stay on till after a reasonable breakfast?) |
21196 | Step up an''take a nipper, sir; I''m dreffle glad to see ye;"But now it''s,"Ware''s my eppylet? |
21196 | The fowls of the air have peas; but what has man? |
21196 | Thought ye left me with agreeable company, hey? |
21196 | Wal, I guess I had set there ten minutes or more, when all of a sudden I thought, Where is Josiah? |
21196 | Want Melissy, dew ye? |
21196 | We ca n''t never choose him o''course-- thet''s flat; Guess we shall hev to come round( do n''t you?) |
21196 | Well, what''s_ he_ good for?" |
21196 | What are you off here for?" |
21196 | What can be done with five or six o''clock in town? |
21196 | What if I was? |
21196 | What if my trousers are shabby and worn? |
21196 | What if, seconds hence When I am very old, yon shimmering doom Comes drawing down and down, till all things end?" |
21196 | What is a garden for? |
21196 | What is the matter?" |
21196 | What may not be done at those hours in the country? |
21196 | What''s that in the corner there?" |
21196 | When the flow of language was exhausted he said:"Are you troo?" |
21196 | Where ish de himmelstrahlende Stern---- De shtar of de shpirit''s light? |
21196 | Where ish de lofely golden cloud Dat float on de mountain''s prow? |
21196 | Who ever heard of a comet without a tail, I should like to know? |
21196 | Why did n''t you stay till mornin''? |
21196 | Why, Cappen-- did ye ever hear of such a piece of audacity in all yer born days? |
21196 | With the hoe, the rake, the dibble, the spade, the watering- pot? |
21196 | Wo n''t Stewart, or some of our dry- goods importers, Take a contract for clothing our wives and our daughters? |
21196 | Wo n''t some kind philanthropist, seeing that aid is So needed at once by these indigent ladies, Take charge of the matter? |
21196 | Wo n''t somebody, moved by this touching description, Come forward to- morrow and head a subscription? |
21196 | Wut shall we du? |
21196 | You could n''t come here a minute, could you, without a lot of other wimmen tight to your heels?" |
21196 | You was in a awful takin''to come with''em, and what will they think to see you act so?" |
21196 | [_ Exit Mr. Crane._(_ Enter Melissa, accompanied by Captain Canoot._)"Good- evenin'', Cappen Well, Melissy, hum at last, hey? |
21196 | _ She_: Did n''t you? |
21196 | ai n''t it terrible? |
21196 | are you not a member of the African church?" |
21196 | who said you would n''t?" |
21196 | who would rise at dawn to hear the skylark if a catbird were about after breakfast? |
21407 | ''But what do I love, when I love thee? |
21407 | ''Is His Majesty coming to Dux?'' |
21407 | ''So hopeless is the world without'': but is the world within ever quite frankly accepted as a substitute, as a truer reality? |
21407 | ''Why not, monseigneur? |
21407 | ''Why travel, when one can travel so splendidly in a chair? |
21407 | ''You have all the Italians, then?'' |
21407 | All that queer excitement of_ The Master- builder_, that''ideal''awake again, is it not really a desire to open one''s door to the younger generation? |
21407 | Am I not thy sire? |
21407 | And does one not hear Beddoes in the grim line, spoken of the earth: Naked as brown feet of unburied men? |
21407 | And then myself? |
21407 | Are they bulls or birds, or a mirage of the desert? |
21407 | Art thou very flesh and blood? |
21407 | But is it the younger generation that finds itself at home there? |
21407 | But is it, for all its splendid scraps and patches, a single masterpiece? |
21407 | But what, precisely, is it that the Goncourts understood by_ un roman vrai_? |
21407 | But, in his expressed aversion for trochaic and dactylic measures, is he not merely recording his own inability to handle them? |
21407 | But, speech once admitted, must not that speech, if it is to collaborate in supreme drama, be filled with imagination, be itself a beautiful thing? |
21407 | But, the poem once written, only one question remains: is it a good or a bad poem? |
21407 | Can the greatest drama be concerned with less than the ultimate issues of nature, the ultimate types of energy? |
21407 | Can we conceive of_ Bothwell_ even on the stage which has seen_ Les Burgraves_? |
21407 | Canst thou slay thy bride by fire? |
21407 | Did I say dead? |
21407 | Do we not seem to find here an anticipation of Verlaine''s''Art Poétique'':''_ Pas la couleur, rien que la nuance_''? |
21407 | Do you remember Pater''s phrase about Leonardo da Vinci,"curiosity and the desire of beauty"?'' |
21407 | Does it not suggest a view of Casanova not quite the view of all the world? |
21407 | Does not a similar disillusion await him in London? |
21407 | Does not something of the kind happen with us poets? |
21407 | Dost thou hear not How heavy sounds her note now? |
21407 | Dost thou think To live, and look upon me? |
21407 | Earth for her heather, does she now forget What pity knew not in her love from scorn, And that it was an unjust thing to be born? |
21407 | Given the character and the situation, what Ibsen asks at the moment of crisis is: What would this man be most likely to say? |
21407 | Has not Ibsen, in the social dramas, tried to make poems without words? |
21407 | Has not every artist shrunk from that making of himself''a motley to the view,''that handing over of his naked soul to the laughter of the multitude? |
21407 | Hast thou forgiven me? |
21407 | Have I seen them? |
21407 | Have you ever seen a cat pawing at the glass from the other side of a window? |
21407 | He would be the last to permit me to say that he has found what he sought; but( is it possible to avoid saying?) |
21407 | Here and there the lines become lyric, as in Thou rose, Why did God give thee more than all thy kin, Whose pride is perfume only and colour, this? |
21407 | How many more discreet and less changing lovers have had the quality of constancy in change, to which this life- long correspondence bears witness? |
21407 | I had, it is true, difficulty in believing him; but what is one to do? |
21407 | I wonder why these little things move me so deeply? |
21407 | If Ibsen gets no other kind of beauty, does he not get beauty of emotion? |
21407 | In_ The Lady from the Sea_, how far is the symbol which has eaten up reality really symbol? |
21407 | Is he, in these phrases that are meant to seem so humble, really apologising for what was the essential quality of his genius? |
21407 | Is it not allegory intruding into reality, disturbing that reality and giving us no spiritual reality in its place? |
21407 | Is it not rather the work of the intelligence than of the imagination? |
21407 | Is it not that one distinguishes only a voice, not a personality behind the voice? |
21407 | Is it something inherent in the form, one of the reasons in nature why a novel can not be of the same supreme imaginative substance as a poem? |
21407 | Is it, more than once or twice, inevitable? |
21407 | Is not this intellectual sensitiveness the corollary of a practical cold- heartedness? |
21407 | Is there any other instance in our literature of a perfection of technique so unerring, so uniform, that it becomes actually fatiguing? |
21407 | It is scarcely two months since I came back from the grave: is it worth while to be anything but radiantly glad? |
21407 | Let us admit, by all means, that a diamond is flawed; but need we compare it with this and that fine specimen of quartz? |
21407 | Music? |
21407 | Or can there be beauty in an intensity of emotion which can be at least approached, in the power of thrilling, by an Adelphi melodrama? |
21407 | Savez- vous pourquoi j''ai si patiemment traduit Poe? |
21407 | She too was unforgetting: has she yet Forgotten that long agony when her breath Too fierce for living fanned the flame of death? |
21407 | Such foolish words were more unmeet for spring Than snow for summer when his heart is high: And why should words be foolish when they sing? |
21407 | The idea, certainly, is one and coherent; every scene is an illustration of that idea; but is it born of that idea? |
21407 | The soul behind those eyes? |
21407 | There is a Shakespearean echo, but is there not also a preparation of the finest Swinburnian harmonies, in such lines as these? |
21407 | There was also to be a modern study: could this have been_ Emerald Uthwart_? |
21407 | Those are his own words, not used of himself; but do they not do something to define what can, after all, never be explained? |
21407 | To those we love, are we not fond of telling many things about ourselves which they know already? |
21407 | To what was this curious difficulty or timidity in composition due? |
21407 | Was he not at London already, since its odours, its atmosphere, its inhabitants, its food, its utensils, were all about him?'' |
21407 | What is more romantic than_ The Way of the World_? |
21407 | What then is the link between these successive periods, the principle of development, the real Donne in short? |
21407 | What would French poetry be to- day if Baudelaire had never existed? |
21407 | Where is_ Les Demoiselles de Bienfilâtre_? |
21407 | Who else could have written this crabbed, subtle, strangely impressive poem? |
21407 | Why is it that there are so few novels which can be read twice, while all good poetry can be read over and over? |
21407 | Why? |
21407 | Wilt thou slay me? |
21407 | Would it not be wonderful? |
21407 | Yet he would always have asked of a follower, with Zarathustra:''This is my road; which is yours?'' |
21407 | Yet there are no great characters in Ibsen; and do not great characters still exist? |
21407 | Yet what has Shelley said? |
21407 | Yet why? |
21407 | but who in our time has wrought so subtle a veil, shining on this side, where the few are, a thick cloud on the other, where are the many? |
21407 | how can one deliberately renounce this coloured, unquiet, fiery human life of the earth?'' |
21407 | is it not rather_ Peer Gynt_ back again, and the ride through the air on the back of the reindeer? |
21407 | is it, above all, a poem? |
21407 | not, What would be the finest, the most deeply revealing thing that he could say? |
21407 | the temperament under that at times almost terrifying mask? |
21407 | with Lear and with Oedipus? |
17953 | ''Did ye?'' 17953 ''They-- who?'' |
17953 | ''Tis I, Clerk Saunders, your true love; You''ll open and let me in? |
17953 | ''What did ye see?'' 17953 ''What did you see?'' |
17953 | A soldier, and afraid? |
17953 | And are we, then, so much poorer than in days of yore? |
17953 | And do you really believe all this nonsense, Creswell? |
17953 | And how far,asked the clergyman,"is the moor from Lanreath?" |
17953 | And that date, too, is far off? |
17953 | And what is his birth-- his family? |
17953 | And what might that have been? |
17953 | And you have not seen it? |
17953 | Are ye come light- handed, ye son of a toom whistle? |
17953 | But do you know what I was tould about Father Philip, Bartley? |
17953 | But,said I,"what has all this, terrible as it is, to do with the fright you took at my telling you that I had heard the sound of the broken shoe? |
17953 | By my soul, I''ll go no further, then,said he to himself;"what use is it for me?" |
17953 | By whose order has this been done? |
17953 | Can it be possible,he inquired of himself,"that the appearances of last night can have any connection with the dreadful events of to- day? |
17953 | Can you talk? |
17953 | Did any of you see a strange woman lavin''the house a minute or two before ye came in? |
17953 | Do you charge any of my people with having taken it? |
17953 | Do you go so soon, my darling? 17953 Do you see those withered trees over there?" |
17953 | Have you never had a curiosity yourself to pass a night in that house? |
17953 | How and what is the end? 17953 How do I know? |
17953 | How does that happen, nurse? |
17953 | How long is it since the house acquired this sinister character? |
17953 | How would drinkin''the bottle get me money? |
17953 | How-- where? |
17953 | In the name of goodness, what''s over you, honest woman? |
17953 | Is not the end still remote? |
17953 | Is there ony room at your head, Saunders, Is there ony room at your feet? 17953 Is this Imlogue- Fada? |
17953 | It is here-- husht, now-- husht, I say-- I will say_ the thing_ to her, may n''t I? 17953 My good neighbour,"said he to Mrs Sullivan,"what strange woman is this, who has thrown the parish into such a ferment? |
17953 | O wha is that at my bower door, Sae weel my name does ken? |
17953 | O''are ye sleeping, Margaret? |
17953 | Or impress our senses with the belief in them-- we never having been_ en rapport_ with the person acting on us? 17953 Pray what do you precisely understand by a_ Lianhan Shee_?" |
17953 | Really haunted?--and by what?--ghosts? |
17953 | Sarah Polgrain,said I;"and who is Sarah Polgrain?" |
17953 | Shall I die at last, ages and ages hence, by the slow, though inevitable, growth of time, or by the cause that I call accident? |
17953 | Somewhere the money must be, if there is a word of truth in your story,said Sir John;"I ask where you think it is-- and demand a correct answer?" |
17953 | Teig O''Kane,said the little grey man again,"is n''t it timely you met us?" |
17953 | Teig O''Kane,says he,"the third time, is n''t it lucky and timely that we met you?" |
17953 | That? 17953 Thin, why do n''t you come to your supper, Mary,"said the husband,"while the sowans are warm? |
17953 | To what extent can thought extend? 17953 To what extent human will in certain temperaments can extend?" |
17953 | Turn round to the light,said he;"why, Mary dear, in the name of wondher, what ails you? |
17953 | Was that you, sir? |
17953 | Well, my good man, what brings you hither? |
17953 | Well, you dyvour bankrupt,was the first word,"have you brought me my rent?" |
17953 | Well,returned my mother,"you shall both come and sleep in the little spare room next us; but what has alarmed you?" |
17953 | Well,said he, dryly,"I concede the right-- what would you ask?" |
17953 | Well,said he,"but why should you all appear so blanched with terror? |
17953 | What did you see? |
17953 | What do you think of that for a Christmas play? 17953 What is he?--in any business?" |
17953 | What is it that ye want with me, freend? |
17953 | What is the matter? |
17953 | What mean ye, John? |
17953 | What''s that? |
17953 | What?--what? |
17953 | Where does he live? |
17953 | Where is Mr Richards? |
17953 | Where? |
17953 | Who and what is that gentleman? |
17953 | Who are coming? |
17953 | Who is that speaking to me? |
17953 | Why-- hem-- nothin''at all sure, only----"Only what? |
17953 | Will you ate anything? |
17953 | Will you drink it? |
17953 | Will your honour please to see if that bit line is right? |
17953 | Woman,said she,"I spoke you kind an''fair, an''I wish you well-- but----""But what?" |
17953 | Would not!--and why? |
17953 | You are not at all frightened? |
17953 | You corpse, there on my back,says he,"will you be satisfied if I bury you down here?" |
17953 | You corpse, up on my back? |
17953 | You see this little bottle? 17953 ''But,''said our bishop,''on what authority do you allege that I am intrusted with faculty so to do? 17953 ''Old Midsummer yesterday was it? 17953 A night or two afterwards, being again awakened by the step, my mother asked Creswell:Who slept in the room above us?" |
17953 | A sudden peace seemed to fall upon my mind-- or was it a warm, odorous wind that filled the room? |
17953 | Am I living? |
17953 | Am I not a hypocrite, mocking Him by a guilty pretension to His power, and leading the dark into thicker darkness? |
17953 | Am I to be night and day tormented? |
17953 | And if a speck of dust be a cosmos-- the universe-- of revolving worlds? |
17953 | And swift- footed Achilles answered him and said:--"Why, dearest and best- beloved, hast thou come hither to lay upon me these thy several behests? |
17953 | And the Prebendary? |
17953 | And troth when they fand them, they didna mak muckle mair ceremony than a Hielandman wi''a roebuck-- It was just,"Will ye tak the test?" |
17953 | And what could I say? |
17953 | And why? |
17953 | And yet he doubted, and said to his Daughter,"Is this your Mother?" |
17953 | As I was turning away, a beer- boy, collecting pewter pots at the neighbouring areas, said to me,"Do you want anyone in that house, sir?" |
17953 | Asked again, why she so terrified the lad? |
17953 | Asked what, and by whom? |
17953 | At length he glanced angrily around him:--"Well,"said he,"what is it now, ye poor infatuated wretches, to trust in the sanctity_ of man_? |
17953 | At length she crossed herself devoutly, and exclaimed,"Queen of saints about us!--is it back ye are? |
17953 | But enough; do you comprehend my theory?" |
17953 | But what of the other visitants from regions that are unblessed? |
17953 | But yet it may be true, Steenie; and if the money cast up, I shall not know what to think of it.--But where shall we find the Cat''s Cradle? |
17953 | Ca n''t you tell us what has happened, or what put you in such a state? |
17953 | Can I frustrate the accidents which bring death upon the young?" |
17953 | Can you tell me the day and hour of your birth?" |
17953 | Could I have-- Hah!--Could I have departed? |
17953 | Could a change have come over me? |
17953 | Demanded by his lordship, what was the succour that I had come to entreat at his hands? |
17953 | Do I not distinguish that heavy and horrible beating of her heart? |
17953 | Do good spirits dwell then so near us, or are they sent on such messages?" |
17953 | Do n''t you know_ it_ does n''t care about your holy water? |
17953 | Do you think, if I take you with me, I may rely on your presence of mind, whatever may happen?" |
17953 | Does not every cheek get pale when I am seen? |
17953 | Dougal Driveower, are ye living? |
17953 | Ezekiel suddenly exclaimed,"In the name of God, what wantest thou?" |
17953 | For what object?" |
17953 | Had this been done in the dark?--must it not have been by a hand human as mine?--must there not have been a human agency all the while in that room? |
17953 | Had_ I_ done so in my youthful time, I would n''t now-- ah-- merciful mother, is there no relief? |
17953 | Have I not heard her footstep on the stair? |
17953 | Have you been an eye- witness to any of those strange sights?" |
17953 | He is English, then? |
17953 | He presently came in again, walked round, and came behind her as before; she turned her head and said,"Pray, sir, who are you, and what do you want?" |
17953 | He said,''Do you see that box?'' |
17953 | He said,''What is thy disease?'' |
17953 | He said,''Will you see it done?'' |
17953 | Houses call ye them? |
17953 | How am I to believe a''this?" |
17953 | How, then, had the Thing, whatever it was, which had so scared him, obtained ingress except through my own chamber? |
17953 | Hush!--What sounds are those? |
17953 | I showed some surprise, I do not doubt, and, perhaps, some fear as well; but I only said:"How do you know him, Margaret?" |
17953 | I strove to speak-- my voice utterly failed me; I could only think to myself,"Is this fear? |
17953 | I''m told she paid you a visit? |
17953 | I_ will_ know your thoughts;--do you suppose that I have this money?" |
17953 | If it was cowld, I''d be axin''you to draw your chair in to the fire; but, any way, wo n''t you sit down?" |
17953 | Inquired if she knew my thoughts, and what I was going to relate? |
17953 | Inquired, what sign she could give that she was a true spirit and not a false fiend? |
17953 | Is he the owner of the house?" |
17953 | Is it not so?" |
17953 | Is it thunder? |
17953 | Is she not hurrying to upbraid me for my haste? |
17953 | No?--now is it possible ye did n''t?" |
17953 | Oh whither shall I fly? |
17953 | Or ony room at your side, Saunders, Where fain, fain, I wad sleep?" |
17953 | Questioned wherefore not at rest? |
17953 | Recovering myself, I called out to know if I could render assistance-- if she wished to ride? |
17953 | Sarah Polgrain, looking earnestly into the man''s eyes, said:"You will?" |
17953 | Shall I bury you here?" |
17953 | So this story has gained much belief in the parish?" |
17953 | Some have pretended to say that this appearance of blood was but dew; but can dew redden a cambric handkerchief? |
17953 | Surely you are not afraid of only a storm?" |
17953 | The Laird drew it to him hastily--"Is it all here, Steenie, man?" |
17953 | The door was opened; but by whom, think you, good reader? |
17953 | The ghost, did I say? |
17953 | Three slow, loud, distinct knocks were now heard at the bed- head; my servant called out,"Is that you, sir?" |
17953 | Turning at length to the man, Mr Dodge inquired,"Are you, then, acquainted with my good friend Mills?" |
17953 | Was it possible that the poor fellow had taken just one more whisky- and- soda than he could conveniently carry? |
17953 | What could she be doing there? |
17953 | What house would shelter me? |
17953 | What if it be reflected infinitely, if it penetrate to the uttermost depths of creation? |
17953 | What is a law but a thought? |
17953 | What is a sceptic? |
17953 | What is an infidel? |
17953 | What is his name?" |
17953 | What on earth can I do with the house?" |
17953 | What was it-- I paused to think-- what was it that so unnerved me in the contemplation of the House of Usher? |
17953 | When he came in to the meal he said, before she could put her question,''What''s the meaning of them words chalked on the door?'' |
17953 | When within a step of where he stood, she paused, and, riveting her eyes upon him, exclaimed,--"Who and what am I? |
17953 | Where do you say the place was?" |
17953 | Where has he been that he got no bed?" |
17953 | Whereupon the Doctor enquires what he meant by this? |
17953 | While I was thus gazing, silent and wondering, Mr J---- said:"But is it possible? |
17953 | Who can foresee the danger to which your majesty may expose your sacred person?" |
17953 | Who could she be?--or what had she done, that the finger of the Almighty marked her out for such a fearful weight of vengeance? |
17953 | Who on earth could she be, and how had she got there? |
17953 | Who told you I would n''t marry the girl?" |
17953 | Why can I not shake the thoughts of it from my conscience? |
17953 | Why this foreboding of more evil-- and whence have you it, John?" |
17953 | Why, will you never pity me? |
17953 | Will it crimson the finger- tips when you touch it? |
17953 | Will she not be here anon? |
17953 | Will you promise to do thus?" |
17953 | Would_ I_ have plunged into scepticism, had I not first violated the moral sanctions of religion? |
17953 | Yet what could occasion so unseasonable a visit to a place that for a considerable time had been closed? |
17953 | Yet why can I not believe? |
17953 | You thought me dead, and you flew to avoid punishment; did you avoid it? |
17953 | _ Sir John._"Ye took a receipt then, doubtless, Stephen; and can produce it?" |
17953 | _ We have put her living in the tomb!_ Said I not that my senses were acute? |
17953 | and am I now at length given over to the worm that never dies? |
17953 | ay or no? |
17953 | cried the Count in his turn,"do you not hear a strange noise which seems to proceed from the council- chamber? |
17953 | he says,"Or are ye waking presentlie? |
17953 | husht, husht, I say-- let me alone-- I will do it-- will you husht? |
17953 | inquired Mrs Sullivan, as she started from her chair, and ran to her in a state of alarm, bordering on terror--"Is it sick you are?" |
17953 | is it for your children you are troubled?" |
17953 | said I, rather disappointed;"have you not seen nor heard anything remarkable?" |
17953 | said Teig,"must I bring you there? |
17953 | said he, and the sweat running from his forehead;"who spoke to me?" |
17953 | said he,"shall I go over again to the churchyard?" |
17953 | said his sobbing wife, struck with the prophetic tone of his speech--"is the measure of our sorrows not yet filled? |
17953 | shouted the other, in tones of mingled fierceness and terror;"do you want to give_ me_ pain without keeping_ yourself_ anything at all safer? |
17953 | shouted the other,"are you going to get me killed?" |
17953 | what may this be?" |
17953 | what was it I would ask? |
17953 | what''s comin''over me? |
17953 | why should God accept an unrepentant heart? |
17953 | you believe it is all an imposture? |
20956 | WHAT CAN I GIVE HIM? |
20956 | What aileth thee, Stephen? 20956 What aileth thee, Stephen? |
20956 | ( A ragged girl in Drury Lane was heard to exclaim,"Dickens dead? |
20956 | A northern Christmas, such as painters love, And kinsfolk shaking hands but once a year, And dames who tell old legends by the fire? |
20956 | And at home they''re making merry''neath the white and scarlet berry-- What part have India''s exiles in their mirth? |
20956 | And what was in those ships all three, On Christmas day in the morning? |
20956 | And what was in those ships all three, On Christmas day, on Christmas day? |
20956 | And why should not that land rejoice, And darkness flee away, When on its dim, benighted hills Has dawned the glad new day? |
20956 | Are catches gone, and dimpled Dolly, With cakes and ale? |
20956 | Are we as creeping things, which have no Lord? |
20956 | Are we no more than these save in degree? |
20956 | Art thou wode,[I] or thou ginnest to breed? |
20956 | Be there here any pretty maids? |
20956 | But let no footsteps beat the floor, Nor bowl of wassail mantle warm; For who would keep an ancient form Thro''which the spirit breathes no more? |
20956 | But were there ever any Writhed not at passéd joy? |
20956 | But what are the little footprints all That mark the path from the churchyard wall? |
20956 | But where Thou dwellest, Lord, No other thought should be; Once duly welcomed and adored, How should I part with Thee? |
20956 | But who is this? |
20956 | Christmas, old Christmas, Christmas of London, and Captain Christmas? |
20956 | Drain we the cup-- Friend, art afraid? |
20956 | From whence does the Son come? |
20956 | From where and from what place? |
20956 | Good ivy, What birdés hast thou? |
20956 | He might go back for to cry,_ What you lack?_ But that were not so witty: His cap and coat are enough to note That he is the love o''the city. |
20956 | He said, God bless you every one, And your bodies Christ save and see: Little children, shall I play with you, And you shall play with me? |
20956 | Here are regions of light, here are mansions of bliss, Oh, who would not climb such a ladder as this? |
20956 | How can I bid Thee enter here Amid the desolation drear Of lukewarm love and craven fear? |
20956 | How shall I speak the wonder of thy snow? |
20956 | How to those-- New patriarchs of the new- found under world-- Who stand like Jacob, on the virgin lawns, And count their flocks''increase? |
20956 | How will it dawn, the coming Christmas- day? |
20956 | How will it dawn, the coming Christmas- day? |
20956 | I bid God bless them every one, And their bodies Christ save and see: Little children, shall I play with you, And you shall play with me? |
20956 | I pray thee, said the Carnal, Tell me before thou go, Was not the mother of Jesus Conceived by the Holy Ghost? |
20956 | If we may ask the reason, say The why and wherefore all things here Seem like the spring- time of the year? |
20956 | Is it the mother, then, who died Ere the greens were sere last Christmas- tide? |
20956 | Lacketh thee either meat or drink In King Herod''s hall?" |
20956 | Little mother, why must you go? |
20956 | Look to the presence; are the carpets spread, The dais o''er the head, The cushions in the chairs, And all the candles lighted on the stairs? |
20956 | Making but dull cheer, Shepherds though ye be? |
20956 | My God, no hymn for Thee? |
20956 | My saull and lyfe, stand up and see Quha lyes in ane cribe of tree, Quhat babe is that, so gude and faire? |
20956 | My wife e''er cried,''''Tis rash,''tis rash:''How could I know the stock- thief''s ways? |
20956 | No clog to blaze? |
20956 | No single tear, no mark of pain: O sorrow, then can sorrow wane? |
20956 | No wit to wing? |
20956 | Now if the lanes and the allies afford Such an ac- ativity as this; At Christmas next, if they keep their word, Can the children of Cheapside miss? |
20956 | Now of all the trees by the king''s highway, Which do you love the best? |
20956 | Nowell, nowell, nowell, nowell, Who ys there that syngith so, nowell, nowell, nowell? |
20956 | O faint not ye for fear-- What though your wandering sheep, Reckless of what they see and hear, Lie lost in wilful sleep? |
20956 | O grief, can grief be changed to less? |
20956 | Oh, slender figure and small wet feet, Where do you haste through the lamp- lit street, And out and away by the fortress gate? |
20956 | Or smell like to a mead new- shorn, Thus on the sudden? |
20956 | Outlanders, whence come ye last? |
20956 | PAGE Who''s There? |
20956 | Pray whither sailed those ships all three, On Christmas day in the morning? |
20956 | Pray whither sailed those ships all three, On Christmas day, on Christmas day? |
20956 | Sons, said I well? |
20956 | The children play by the white bedside, The world is merry for Christmas- tide, And what would you do in the falling snow? |
20956 | The shepherds sing; and shall I silent be? |
20956 | Then will Father Christmas die, too?" |
20956 | They sleep by now in the ember- glow, Hushed to dream in a child''s delight, For wonders happen on Christmas night: Little mother, why must you go? |
20956 | To sailors lounging on the lonely deck Beneath the rushing trade- wind? |
20956 | To see this babe all innocence; A martyr born in our defence; Can man forget the story? |
20956 | Under the holly bough, Where the happy children throng and shout, What shadow seems to flit about? |
20956 | What Christmas ghost can make us chill-- Save these that troop in mournful row, The ghosts we all can raise at will? |
20956 | What are the wraiths of mist That gather anear the window- pane Where the winter frost all day has lain? |
20956 | What bleaker shelter can there be Than my cold heart''s tepidity-- Chilled, wind- tossed, as the winter sea? |
20956 | What can I give Him, Poor as I am? |
20956 | What is thee befall? |
20956 | What sudden blaze of song Spreads o''er th''expanse of heaven? |
20956 | What though i''the churchyard graves be dug; And sweethearts be forsook? |
20956 | What though the traveller toil and tug Where sleety drifts be shook? |
20956 | What wonder? |
20956 | Where are the silken sheets That Jesus was wrapt in? |
20956 | Where is the golden cradle That Christ was rockéd in? |
20956 | Where''s Thy angel- guarded throne, Whence Thy laws Thou didst make known, Laws which heaven, earth, hell, obeyed? |
20956 | Where, O royal Infant, be Th''ensigns of Thy majesty; Thy Sire''s equalizing state; And Thy sceptre that rules fate? |
20956 | Who is''t will not be merry And sing down, down, aderry? |
20956 | Who of His years or of His age hath told? |
20956 | Who show''d a token of distress? |
20956 | Why does the chilling winter''s morn Smile like a field beset with corn? |
20956 | Why should we then suspect or fear The influences of a year, So smiles upon us the first morn, And speaks us good as soon as born? |
20956 | Will Father Christmas die?" |
20956 | [ J] Lacketh thee either gold or fee, Or any rich weed? |
20956 | _ Car._ Have you ne''er a son at the groom porter''s, to beg or borrow a pair of cards quickly? |
20956 | _ Car._ Shall John Butter o''Milk- street come in? |
20956 | _ Chor._--What sweeter music can we bring, Than a carol for to sing The birth of this our heavenly King? |
20956 | _ Chris._ Are you ready, boys? |
20956 | _ Chris._ Come, you put Robin Cupid out with your water''s and your fisling; will you be gone? |
20956 | _ Chris._ How now? |
20956 | _ Chris._ No matter for your pedigree, your house: good Venus, will you depart? |
20956 | _ Chris._ Will you peace, forsooth? |
20956 | _ Christina G. Rossetti._[ Illustration:"What Can I Give Him?"] |
20956 | _ Cup.__ And which Cupid-- and which Cupid--__ Ven._ Ay, that''s a good boy, speak plain, Robin; how does his majesty like him, I pray? |
20956 | _ Gam._ No body out o''Friday- street, nor the two Fish- streets there, do you hear? |
20956 | _ Nowell, etc._ And a little Child On her arm had she;"Wot ye who is this?" |
20956 | _ Nowell, etc._ Quoth I,"Fellows mine, Why this guise sit ye? |
20956 | _ Nowell, etc._"How name ye this Lord, Shepherds?" |
20956 | _ Robert Herrick._ WHO CAN FORGET? |
20956 | _ Shakespeare._ WHO''S THERE? |
20956 | _ The snow in the street and the wind on the door._ Through what green sea and great have ye past? |
20956 | are no latter waits to sing? |
20956 | his own face shall serve, for a punishment, and''tis bad enough; has Wassel her bowl, and Minced- pie her spoons? |
20956 | shall we proclaim where we were furnish''d? |
20956 | these aside He laid; Would the emblem be-- of pride By humility outvied? |
20956 | to sacred rage, I rose, forefinger high in air, When Harry cried, some war to wage,"Papa is hard times ev''ywhere? |
20956 | what Numbers to the Theme can rise? |
20956 | what''s the matter there? |
20956 | what''s the matter? |
20956 | where am I, trow? |
20956 | where is Cupid? |
20956 | will he give eight- pence a day, think you? |
20956 | would you have kept me out? |
26604 | Why not rest from your labors now? |
26604 | Are not flowers the stars of the earth? |
26604 | But, sir, you will allow that some players are better than others? |
26604 | Can it be true, what is so constantly affirmed, that there is no sex in souls? |
26604 | Can the power that kills be the same that is killed? |
26604 | God can afford to wait; why can not we, since we have Him to fall back upon? |
26604 | He is given a freedom of his will; but wherefore? |
26604 | Is it possible that a book at once so simple and sublime should be merely the work of man? |
26604 | Must it not necessarily be something superior and surviving? |
26604 | Necker._~Questions.~--There are innumerable questions to which the inquisitive mind can, in this state, receive no answer: Why do you and I exist? |
26604 | The act of the soul, which in that fatal instant is in one sense so great an act of power, can it at the same time be the act of its own annihilation? |
26604 | The question of common sense is always:"What is it good for?" |
26604 | To be happy we must forget the past, and think not of the future; and who that has a soul or mind can do this? |
26604 | Was it but to torment and perplex him the more? |
26604 | What honest boy would pride himself on not picking a pocket? |
26604 | What is depth, after all? |
26604 | What is matter? |
26604 | What is the soul? |
26604 | What medicine can procure digestion? |
26604 | What will alleviate incurable evils? |
26604 | What will recruit strength? |
26604 | What, then, is it worth? |
26604 | Why not on Christianity, wholesome, sweet, and poetic? |
26604 | Why was this world created? |
26604 | You can hear''em rattle as they walk.--_Douglas__ Jerrold._~Heaven.~--The love of heaven makes one heavenly.--_Shakespeare._ Where is heaven? |
26604 | what does man here below? |
26604 | ~Obedience.~--To obey is better than sacrifice.--_Bible._ How will you find good? |
16405 | ''But let us send a civil message to the gossips, Sandie; and hadnae ye better say I am sair laid with a sudden sickness? 16405 ''Now, Sandie, my lad,''said his wife, laying an arm particularly white and round about his neck as she spoke,''are you not a queer man and a stern? |
16405 | And did the spectre seem to be there, when you looked out? |
16405 | And what about the cigar- case? |
16405 | And what is this? |
16405 | And where can I find him? |
16405 | And you are certain you did_ not_ see him? |
16405 | And you are coming? |
16405 | And you did dream of it? |
16405 | Are ye there, docther? |
16405 | Are you quite sure? 16405 Are you sure it was he?" |
16405 | At the light? |
16405 | Aylmer, are you in earnest? |
16405 | Both times? |
16405 | But how could it? 16405 But how will you get across by night from Blackwater to Stockbridge with seventy- five thousand pounds in your pocket?" |
16405 | But is n''t all that true, father? |
16405 | But nothing followed? 16405 But now that he has come back?" |
16405 | But we must take all we can get, pa- sy; must n''t we? 16405 But why do we speak of dying? |
16405 | But you''re going to the party? |
16405 | By this time you will fully understand, sir,he said,"that what troubles me so dreadfully is the question, What does the spectre mean?" |
16405 | Can you describe his appearance? |
16405 | Can you remember if he was absent on the fourth instant? |
16405 | Can you tell me who took the Blackwater tickets of that train? |
16405 | Could I dream of a branch line that I had never heard of? 16405 Danger? |
16405 | Darling, what is it? 16405 Dead? |
16405 | Did Mr. Dwerrihouse leave the station in this person''s company? |
16405 | Did it cry out? |
16405 | Did it ring your bell yesterday evening when I was here, and you went to the door? |
16405 | Did it wave its arm? |
16405 | Did you go up to it? |
16405 | Did you see Mr. Raikes in the train, or on the platform? |
16405 | Did you see me ask for his ticket, sir? |
16405 | Did you, or did you not, meet Mr. John Dwerrihouse at Blackwater station? 16405 Do you consider the consequences of your words? |
16405 | Do you know if he was in the 4.15 express yesterday afternoon? |
16405 | Do you see it? |
16405 | Dr. Renton,she said, faintly,"I have a sick child,--how can I move now? |
16405 | Father, what have you done? |
16405 | Flanagan,said Dr. Renton, stopping at the first landing,"do you have this noise every night?" |
16405 | For cheapness, eh? 16405 For no other reason?" |
16405 | Georgiana,said he,"has it never occurred to you that the mark upon your cheek might be removed?" |
16405 | Had who, Beary- papa? |
16405 | He is not known to have been down the line any time yesterday, for instance? |
16405 | How can you answer so positively? |
16405 | How did he die, father? |
16405 | How far did you conduct that 4.15 express on the day in question, Somers? |
16405 | How is it, papa? 16405 How was it that you were not relieved at Clayborough? |
16405 | I have not called out,I said, when we came close together;"may I speak now?" |
16405 | I heard the voice of that lad Andrew Lammie; can the chield be drowning, that he skirls sae uncannilie? |
16405 | In Heaven''s name,I whispered,"what was the matter just now? |
16405 | Into the tunnel? |
16405 | Is it with this lotion that you intend to bathe my cheek? |
16405 | Is that all, pa- sy? 16405 Is the man dead?" |
16405 | Is there any path by which I can come down and speak to you? |
16405 | Is there one minute to spare? |
16405 | James, if my daughter told you to set fire to this house, what would you do? |
16405 | Like me? |
16405 | Matter? 16405 Mr. John Dwerrihouse, I think?" |
16405 | Mr. John Dwerrihouse, the late director? |
16405 | Mr. Rollins, this is a serious matter; what are you going to do about it? |
16405 | Mrs. Flanagan, what kind of a looking man gave you this letter at the door to- night? |
16405 | Mrs. Miller,he replied, in a hasty voice,"what do you mean? |
16405 | My good fellow, what should I do there? 16405 My good sir, have I not been telling you so for the last half- hour?" |
16405 | Naise? 16405 Not the man I know?" |
16405 | Not the man belonging to that box? |
16405 | Nothing more? |
16405 | O, how did this happen, how did this happen? |
16405 | Pa in the sulks to- night? |
16405 | Poor? 16405 Quite true, guard,"I replied;"but do you not also remember the face of the gentleman who travelled down in the same carriage with me as far as here?" |
16405 | See here, Joe, what do you make of this? |
16405 | Should you know him if you saw him? |
16405 | That mistake? |
16405 | The_ what_ on the end of his nose? |
16405 | Then why did you take me from my mother''s side? 16405 There were two gentlemen standing here a moment ago,"I said to a porter at my elbow;"which way can they have gone?" |
16405 | There? |
16405 | Well, Mrs. Miller,he said,"what is it this evening? |
16405 | What about the fire in the chimney of the blue room,--should I have heard of that during my journey? |
16405 | What ails you, my dear husband? |
16405 | What did you say? |
16405 | What do you mean? |
16405 | What does it seem to do? |
16405 | What has your being in Devonshire to do with the matter? |
16405 | What is its warning against? |
16405 | What is that? |
16405 | What is the danger? 16405 What is the matter?" |
16405 | What made pa so cross and grim, to- night? 16405 What of that? |
16405 | What other reason could I possibly have? |
16405 | What was his name, father? |
16405 | What''s all this? |
16405 | What''s the matter with pa? 16405 When were you in Devonshire?" |
16405 | Where am I? 16405 Where?" |
16405 | Wherefore sought ye to peril your own lives fruitlessly,said Mark,"in attempting to save the doomed? |
16405 | Who is it? |
16405 | Who was he, father? |
16405 | Who wrote it to you? 16405 Why did you hesitate to tell me this?" |
16405 | Why do n''t she get another house, and swindle some one else? |
16405 | Why do n''t you sail in and rescue some of them? |
16405 | Why do you come hither? 16405 Why do you keep such a terrific drug?" |
16405 | Why impossible? |
16405 | Will that be enough, Netty? |
16405 | Will the Union be dissolved, then, pa- sy,--when the Whigs are beaten? |
16405 | Will you come to the door with me, and look for it now? |
16405 | With what? 16405 With whom, pray?" |
16405 | Wo n''t you sit near the fire, ma''am? |
16405 | Would you throw the blight of that fatal birthmark over my labors? 16405 Yet how account for the way in which Mr. Langford asserts that it came into his possession?" |
16405 | You are an East Anglian director, I presume? |
16405 | You do not mean to say that you have seventy- five thousand pounds at this moment upon your person? |
16405 | You had no feeling that they were conveyed to you in any supernatural way? |
16405 | You know who sent it, sir, do n''t you? |
16405 | You sent me nothing to- night, sir? |
16405 | You would n''t turn her out in this cold winter, when she ca n''t pay you,--would you, pa? |
16405 | You would n''t? 16405 You''ll do it, James,--will you?" |
16405 | Yull go up? 16405 _ I_, sir?" |
16405 | A visitor was a rarity, I should suppose; not an unwelcome rarity, I hoped? |
16405 | Above all, what had he been doing throughout those mysterious three months of disappearance? |
16405 | And what are you dressed up in this way for, to- night? |
16405 | And what are you going to give me for a present, to- morrow, pa- sy?" |
16405 | And what are you going to give me, so that I can make_ my_ presents, Beary?" |
16405 | And you?" |
16405 | And-- look here; have you got anything to eat in the house? |
16405 | Answer:''What Danger? |
16405 | Are we already at Blackwater?" |
16405 | Are you in want of-- have you-- need of-- food?" |
16405 | Are you sure that he had not alighted by means of that key before the guard came round for the tickets?" |
16405 | Be this one of our men?'' |
16405 | But what has all that to do with haunted shallops, visionary mariners, and bottomless boats? |
16405 | But what ran most in my thoughts was the consideration, how ought I to act, having become the recipient of this disclosure? |
16405 | But why does that surprise you?" |
16405 | Can I be the bearer of any message from you?" |
16405 | Can not you remove this little, little mark, which I cover with the tips of two small fingers? |
16405 | Cerebrum or cerebellum, papa- sy? |
16405 | Could I beg? |
16405 | Could I dream of a hundred and one business details that had no kind of interest for me? |
16405 | Could I dream of the seventy- five thousand pounds?" |
16405 | Could anything be more mysterious? |
16405 | Could he have dreamed? |
16405 | Could it be? |
16405 | Dawn''t ye knoo? |
16405 | Did he still dream? |
16405 | Did n''t you? |
16405 | Did you say he died of want?" |
16405 | Did you see that person distinctly?" |
16405 | Do you consider that you are bringing a charge of the gravest character against one of the company''s servants?" |
16405 | Do you think I can see Mrs. Miller to- night?" |
16405 | Do you think I will rob you of the gift sent you by some one who had a human heart for the distresses I was aggravating? |
16405 | Dr. Renton, you know these people''s tricks? |
16405 | Driven,--by what? |
16405 | Ef it had n''a- been for they poor swiles, how could I stan''it? |
16405 | Feller''s dead, an''who''s a- goin''to touch_ me?_ Ca n''t do it. |
16405 | Fred looked at him, and then at Mike and me, with a puzzled expression which seemed to ask: Is this a crazy freak, or an absurd, insulting joke? |
16405 | Had he much to do there? |
16405 | Had you a conflagration on the occasion of your last visit to Dumbleton?" |
16405 | Hang it, everybody does the best he can with his property,--why should n''t I?" |
16405 | Hard times, James? |
16405 | Has anything happened? |
16405 | Have you no trust in your husband?" |
16405 | He actually told you that he had the seventy- five thousand pounds in his pocket?" |
16405 | He answered in a low voice,"Do n''t you know it is?" |
16405 | How dared he show himself along the line? |
16405 | How did he look?" |
16405 | How did we contrive to get into this train? |
16405 | How is it?" |
16405 | How many miles to Babylon? |
16405 | How should he have ventured again into the light of day? |
16405 | How, without his knowledge, could the treasures worth a king''s ransom, that adorn yonder coop, have been smuggled in or arranged there? |
16405 | I caught up my lamp, turned it on red, and ran towards the figure, calling,''What''s wrong? |
16405 | I had proved the man to be intelligent, vigilant, painstaking, and exact; but how long might he remain so, in his state of mind? |
16405 | I said,''who''s this? |
16405 | I suppose we are bound for the same destination?" |
16405 | I wonder where the cummers will anchor their craft?'' |
16405 | I''ve increased his rent twice, hoping to get rid of him so; but he pays without a murmur; and what am I to do? |
16405 | If it came, on those two occasions, only to show me that its warnings were true, and so to prepare me for the third, why not warn me plainly now? |
16405 | In the forehead? |
16405 | Is anything wrong?'' |
16405 | Is that so?" |
16405 | Is that true?" |
16405 | Is there nothing else?" |
16405 | Is this beyond your power, for the sake of your own peace, and to save your poor wife from madness?" |
16405 | It''s not right; is it? |
16405 | James, you''ve got a wife and children, hav''n''t you?" |
16405 | Langford?" |
16405 | Langford?" |
16405 | Let the vessels run their own way to destruction: who can stay the eastern wind, and the current of the Solway sea? |
16405 | Let them keep her at home''? |
16405 | Miller?" |
16405 | Miller?" |
16405 | Mrs. Flanagan, you''ll stay up with Mrs. Miller to- night, wo n''t you?" |
16405 | My wife has an idea about it, and she may be right--""What idea?" |
16405 | Nathalie, bending over the leaves, laid her finger on the last, and asked,"What are those closing sentences, father? |
16405 | Nothing came of this?" |
16405 | Now was nae that a bonnie and a fearful sight to see beneath the light of the Hallowmass moon? |
16405 | Now, I advise you, as a friend, to give up selling rum for the future; you see what it comes to,--don''t you? |
16405 | Occiput or sinciput, deary?" |
16405 | P- o- o- r pa. Where does it ache, papa- sy, dear? |
16405 | Please to overlook it all, and-- but I will speak of this presently; now-- I am a physician; will you let me look now at your sick child?" |
16405 | Say, when shall it be?" |
16405 | So you only go as far as Mallingford to- night?" |
16405 | Surely you have something to tell us of the state and temper of the country after the war?" |
16405 | That light was part of his charge? |
16405 | The headache?" |
16405 | Was it a spiritual instinct? |
16405 | Was it not? |
16405 | Was this the case?" |
16405 | Were ever facts so strangely incongruous, so difficult to reconcile? |
16405 | What can I do? |
16405 | What can_ I_ do?" |
16405 | What did I want? |
16405 | What do you mean by--_it?_""Oh! |
16405 | What do you mean?" |
16405 | What does it mean?" |
16405 | What else could they do?" |
16405 | What had I said?" |
16405 | What has happened? |
16405 | What have you to say in reply?" |
16405 | What is it,--what have you seen?" |
16405 | What is your trouble?" |
16405 | What makes him be a great bear? |
16405 | What safer claim to public remembrance has the old Huguenot, Peter Faneuil, than the old Englishman, Mr. Middlecott? |
16405 | What was it to me whether or no he was absent without leave? |
16405 | When did you do this deed?" |
16405 | When he opened them again, it was broad daylight, and his first thought was, had he overslept himself? |
16405 | Where are you going, fairy?" |
16405 | Where did you get that, Nathalie?" |
16405 | Where did you go to- night? |
16405 | Where else should I be?" |
16405 | Where is it? |
16405 | Where is the danger? |
16405 | Where is the keeper? |
16405 | Where were the high- strung nerves now, the elastic frame, the bounding heart? |
16405 | Where were you on the afternoon and evening of the fourth of the present month?" |
16405 | Where''s Mrs. Flanagan? |
16405 | Where''s the watchman?" |
16405 | Where?'' |
16405 | Where?'' |
16405 | Who knows''em? |
16405 | Who was I? |
16405 | Who''s a- goin''to touch_ me?_ Called in a watchman. |
16405 | Why are you here? |
16405 | Why are you weeping? |
16405 | Why had I come there to do him an ill turn with his employers? |
16405 | Why not go to somebody with credit to be believed, and power to act?" |
16405 | Why not tell me how it could be averted,--if it could have been averted? |
16405 | Will you permit me to see the case again?" |
16405 | Wo n''t you bear with me a little longer, and we will yet make it all right with you?" |
16405 | You are surely ill?" |
16405 | You know it was you sent it, sir?" |
16405 | brother, what are you doing now?'' |
16405 | do you think so?" |
16405 | he exclaimed,"what horrible mystery is this? |
16405 | he whispered,"_ what was it, then, that you saw in the train?_"What was it that I saw in the train? |
16405 | he whispered,"_ what was it, then, that you saw in the train?_"What was it that I saw in the train? |
16405 | or wud she come down to ye?" |
16405 | to- night?" |
16405 | what''s this?" |
16405 | who could have thought it? |
16405 | you know their lying blazon of poverty, to gather sympathy? |
10135 | ''More''--? |
10135 | ''We will suppose,''said the miser,''that his symptoms are such and such; now, doctor, what would_ you_ have directed him to take?'' 10135 A brawl?" |
10135 | A person could do a great deal with such a sum of money as that-- couldn''t a person, Cobbs? |
10135 | A smoker, and no pipe about''ee? |
10135 | Ah, what''s the matter with''you''? |
10135 | Alone? |
10135 | Am I talking of_ that_? 10135 And do you know where your brother is at the present time?" |
10135 | And now, Dupin, what would you advise me to do? |
10135 | And the paper on the walls? |
10135 | And what is the difficulty now? |
10135 | And what may be this glad cause? |
10135 | And what, after all,_ is_ the matter on hand? |
10135 | And you? |
10135 | And, pray, who are you, if I may be so bold? |
10135 | Are we grown old again so soon? |
10135 | Are you going to your grandmamma''s, Cobbs? |
10135 | Are you really a thief? |
10135 | Are you, indeed, sir? 10135 As I was sayin'', she''s got a kind o''trouble in her breest, doctor; wull ye tak''a look at it?" |
10135 | But I ca n''t do nothing without my staff-- can I, William, and John, and Charles Jake? 10135 But ca n''t you-- lovely as you are, you beautiful thing!--speak for yourself?" |
10135 | But could not the cavity be detected by sounding? |
10135 | But did Ponce de Leon ever find it? |
10135 | But did enny ob you ebber read, or hab read to you, dat he ebber cas''''em out o''enny udder woman? |
10135 | But how can it be otherwise? |
10135 | But if I had been born lord of Brisetout, and you had been the poor scholar Francis, would the difference have been any the less? 10135 But what is the man''s calling, and where is he one of, that he should come in and join us like this?" |
10135 | But what other people? |
10135 | But what purpose had you,I asked,"in replacing the letter by a_ facsimile_? |
10135 | But what right have you,said Tom,"to cut down Deacon Peabody''s timber?" |
10135 | But,says Mrs. Bargrave,"how can you take a journey alone? |
10135 | Ca n''t you hear it rattle in the gibbet? |
10135 | Can you tell me the way to--? |
10135 | Coming here? |
10135 | Do you mean ca n''t I tell the lies? 10135 Do you mean he''s capable of putting it to them?" |
10135 | Do you remember the story they tell of Abernethy? |
10135 | Do_ you, sir? 10135 Does n''t he want, then, to know--?" |
10135 | Doing what? |
10135 | Doubles or quits? |
10135 | Gain? |
10135 | Glad to swear they never had anything to do with such a creature? 10135 Going to set up in trade, perhaps?" |
10135 | Gratifying, Cobbs? 10135 Have n''t you got the man after all?" |
10135 | Have you any money? |
10135 | Have you? |
10135 | He has come back--? |
10135 | Hey-- what? |
10135 | How do you ever hope to fill that big hogshead, your body, with little things like bottles? 10135 How is this known?" |
10135 | How much was the reward offered, did you say? |
10135 | How''s Rab? |
10135 | How? 10135 How?--in what way?" |
10135 | I wonder if it is_ my_ man? |
10135 | In which way do you mean? |
10135 | Indeed, sir? 10135 Is there a constable here?" |
10135 | Is there any more in that bottle? |
10135 | Is there anything you want just at present, sir? |
10135 | Is this yer a d--- d picnic? |
10135 | Its susceptibility of being produced? |
10135 | Late to be traipsing athwart this coomb-- hey? |
10135 | Lost that too? |
10135 | May Rab and me bide? |
10135 | Mrs. Harry Walmers, Junior, fatigued, sir? |
10135 | Murray Brush--? |
10135 | My dear lord,answered Villon,"do you really fancy that I steal for pleasure? |
10135 | My dear old friends,repeated Doctor Heidegger,"may I reckon on your aid in performing an exceedingly curious experiment?" |
10135 | My dear sister, what fault is in the ring? |
10135 | No? 10135 Not as a grandmamma, Cobbs?" |
10135 | Nothing more in the assassination way, I hope? |
10135 | O-- you here? |
10135 | Oh, it''s only you, is it? |
10135 | One of hereabouts? |
10135 | Or why was he so terrified at sight o''the singing instrument of the law who sat there? |
10135 | Perhaps a fellow murdered? |
10135 | Please may I--the spirit of that little creatur'', and the way he kept his rising tears down!--"please, dear pa-- may I-- kiss Norah before I go?" |
10135 | Put it,said Villon,"that I were really a thief, should I not play my life also, and against heavier odds?" |
10135 | She''s a widow--? |
10135 | Sit up, ca n''t you? |
10135 | So far as his labors extended? |
10135 | Then are n''t you her lover? |
10135 | Then what''s the matter with his at least rallying--? |
10135 | There was never anything the least serious between us, not a sign or a scrap, do you mind? 10135 Well, travellers,"he said,"did I hear you speak to me?" |
10135 | Well, well,replied the constable, impatiently;"I must say something, must n''t I? |
10135 | Were any of them bald? |
10135 | What a man can it be? |
10135 | What are you doing on my grounds? |
10135 | What bairn? |
10135 | What did you think of me? |
10135 | What do you laugh at, my dear sir? 10135 What do you think my grandmamma gives me when I go down there?" |
10135 | What does that mean? |
10135 | What have you to do with Latin? 10135 What is it, sir?" |
10135 | What is our life? 10135 What may be the exact nature of your plans, sir?" |
10135 | What proof have I that all you have been telling me is true? |
10135 | What should you think, sir,says Cobbs,"of a chamber candlestick?" |
10135 | What''s the case? |
10135 | When did the negro or North American Indian ever come in contact with the tribes of South America? |
10135 | When will you want the rhino? |
10135 | Where does he think to fly to?--what is his occupation? |
10135 | Where''s Rab? |
10135 | Where_ are_ they, please-- now that they_ may_ be wanted? 10135 Which side is it?" |
10135 | Who is this? |
10135 | Who then is the person in question for you--? |
10135 | Why should you do this? |
10135 | Why so? |
10135 | Will you seat yourself,said the old man,"and forgive me if I leave you? |
10135 | Would it meet your views, sir, if I was to accompany you? |
10135 | Would you like another situation, Cobbs? |
10135 | You are a sworn constable? |
10135 | You are cold,repeated the old man,"and hungry? |
10135 | You are not going, too? |
10135 | You do n''t live in Casterbridge? |
10135 | You explored the floors beneath the carpets? |
10135 | You have, of course, an accurate description of the letter? |
10135 | You include the_ grounds_ about the houses? |
10135 | You looked among D----''s papers, of course, and into the books of the library? |
10135 | You looked into the cellars? |
10135 | You see,said the poet,"you can not separate the soldier from the brigand; and what is a thief but an isolated brigand with circumspect manners? |
10135 | You''ll lie for me like a gentleman? |
10135 | You''ll''handle''them? |
10135 | You_ wo n''t_, Julia? |
10135 | ''Look h''yar, sarpint,''says she,''hab you got anudder ob dem apples in your pocket?'' |
10135 | ''Wot you mean, you triflin''sarpint,''says she,''a fotchin''me dat apple wot ai n''t good fur nuffin but ter make cider wid?'' |
10135 | A medlar the fewer on the three- legged medlar- tree!--I say, Dom Nicolas, it''ll be cold to- night on the St. Denis Road?" |
10135 | Again: have you ever noticed which of the street signs, over the shop doors, are the most attractive of attention?" |
10135 | Ai n''t dat so, Brudder?" |
10135 | Ai n''t dat so, Jake?" |
10135 | Aih? |
10135 | Aih? |
10135 | Am I talking of what_ we_ know? |
10135 | And all the while, do n''t you see? |
10135 | And do n''t we all wish a house on fire not to be out before we see it? |
10135 | And her stockings-- did you note them? |
10135 | And how do you expect to get to heaven? |
10135 | And is not this boy- nature, and human nature, too? |
10135 | And then to him or to her, it did n''t matter which,"Good- bye, dear good Mr. Pitman-- hasn''t it been nice after so long?" |
10135 | And what had he been? |
10135 | And what of Rab? |
10135 | Are you not making game of me? |
10135 | As the embers slowly blackened, the Duchess crept closer to Piney, and broke the silence of many hours:"Piney, can you pray?" |
10135 | At length I said:"Well, but, G----, what of the purloined letter? |
10135 | Besides, do you imagine he''d come and ask me?" |
10135 | But supposing a young gentleman not eight year old was to run away with a fine young woman of seven, might I think_ that_ a queer start? |
10135 | But was she going to give up because he was embarrassed? |
10135 | But,"said she,"we ought to do as they did; there was a hearty friendship among them; but where is it now to be found?" |
10135 | Cobbs, do you think you could bring a biffin, please?" |
10135 | Daze it, what''s a cup of mead more or less? |
10135 | Did n''t Mr. Oakhurst remember Piney? |
10135 | Did you not really meet with her?" |
10135 | Did you not tell me you were alone in the house? |
10135 | Did you put anything particular in it?" |
10135 | Did you suppose I had n''t wit enough to see that? |
10135 | Do n''t you see, you sweet man?" |
10135 | Do n''t you see,"Mr. Pitman candidly asked,"what that by itself must have done toward attaching me to her? |
10135 | Do you know her, then?" |
10135 | Do you think I could forget that? |
10135 | Does any curious and finely ignorant woman wish to know how Bob''s eye at a glance announced a dog- fight to his brain? |
10135 | Does anybody s''pose I''s gwine ter b''lieve dat fool talk?" |
10135 | Even supposing Master Harry had n''t come to him one morning early, and said,"Cobbs, how should you spell Norah, if you was asked?" |
10135 | For example, an arrant simpleton is his opponent, and, holding up his closed hand, asks,''Are they even or odd?'' |
10135 | French?" |
10135 | Going the same way?" |
10135 | Gwine to pay him fur preachin''?" |
10135 | Had it fallen in the house? |
10135 | Had the changes of a lifetime been crowded into so brief a space, and were they now four aged people, sitting with their old friend, Doctor Heidegger? |
10135 | Have ye any lanterns?" |
10135 | Have you heard of her?" |
10135 | Have you seen the book?" |
10135 | He had done so what he liked with her-- which had seemed so then just the meaning, had n''t it? |
10135 | He put me off, and said, rather rudely,"What''s_ your_ business wi''the dowg?" |
10135 | His teeth and his friends gone, why should he keep the peace and be civil? |
10135 | How can I get hold of so_ many_ precious gentlemen, to turn them on? |
10135 | How can_ they_ want everything fished up?" |
10135 | How did Boots happen to know all this? |
10135 | How do they know what_ did n''t_ pass between us, with all the opportunities we had? |
10135 | How does it run so far?" |
10135 | How in fact could you feel interest unless you should know, within you, some dim stir of imagination? |
10135 | How is such wilful neglect to be accounted for? |
10135 | How is this? |
10135 | How many angels, do you fancy, can be spared to carry up a single monk from Picardy? |
10135 | How should I, or how can I, know her, Birkendelly, unless you inform me who she is?" |
10135 | I dare say you''ve seen dead men in your time, my lord?" |
10135 | I presume you have at last made up your mind that there is no such thing as overreaching the Minister?" |
10135 | I put myself absolutely in your place; you''ll understand from me, without professions, wo n''t you? |
10135 | I saw him-- when was it? |
10135 | I''ll fling over you--""Fling over me--?" |
10135 | If she_ had_ to go in for another-- after having already, when I was little, divorced father-- it would''sort of''make, do n''t you see? |
10135 | Is it not a kind of theft?" |
10135 | Is she far gone?" |
10135 | Is there no difference between these two?" |
10135 | Matrimonial?" |
10135 | May I help myself to wine? |
10135 | May I tell her that too?" |
10135 | Mr. Walmers, he said to him when he gave him notice of his intentions to leave,"Cobbs,"he says,"have you anythink to complain of? |
10135 | Mrs. Drack was not refined, not the least little bit; but what would be the case with Murray Brush now-- after his three years of Europe? |
10135 | Now this mode of reasoning in the school- boy, whom his fellows termed''Lucky,''what, in its last analysis, is it?" |
10135 | Now, would you deem it possible that this rose of half a century could ever bloom again?" |
10135 | Or do you think yourself another Elias-- and they''ll send the coach for you?" |
10135 | Pray, ma''am, where is my boy?" |
10135 | Says Mrs. Bargrave,"How came you to order matters so strangely?" |
10135 | Seen a good deal? |
10135 | She curtsied, looked at James, and said,"When?" |
10135 | She gave Mrs. Brack pleasure in short; and who could say of what other pleasures the poor lady had n''t been cheated? |
10135 | She put it to Mr. Pitman quite with resentment:"Do you mean to say you''re going to be married--?" |
10135 | She that used to wait on the table at the Temperance House? |
10135 | She then started up, extended her shrivelled hands, that shook like the aspen, and panted out:"Aih, aih? |
10135 | She was delighted to oblige him; but still, when he came up, he looked disappointed, and never said,"Luna, I love you; when are we to be married?" |
10135 | She would often draw her hand across her own eyes, and say,"Mrs. Bargrave, do not you think I am mightily impaired by my fits?" |
10135 | Should not I have been the soldier, and you the thief?" |
10135 | Should not I have been warming my knees at this charcoal pan, and would not you have been groping for farthings in the snow? |
10135 | THE BOOTS AT THE HOLLY- TREE INN_ Charles Dickens_( 1812- 1870) Where had he been in his time? |
10135 | Therefore trust me and even-- what shall I say?--leave it to me a little, wo n''t you?" |
10135 | This had accompanied the inevitable free question"Was she engaged to_ him_ now?" |
10135 | Was it an illusion? |
10135 | Was it delusion? |
10135 | Were her shoes black or green? |
10135 | What could I say? |
10135 | What did he die of?" |
10135 | What did we ever do that was secret, or underhand, or any way not to be acknowledged? |
10135 | What good will that do you?" |
10135 | What harm, in the sight of God or man, Julia,"he asked in his fine rich way,"did we ever do?" |
10135 | What on earth was to be done about them? |
10135 | What right has a man to have red hair when he is dead?" |
10135 | What was he saying then?" |
10135 | What was the curiousest thing he had seen? |
10135 | What was to be done? |
10135 | What was to be done? |
10135 | What''s the good of curfew, and poor devils of bell- ringers jumping at a rope''s- end in bell- towers? |
10135 | What''s the object of your journey, sir? |
10135 | What''s the unlucky callant saying about the 9th of August? |
10135 | What''s the use of day, if people sit up all night? |
10135 | What, for example, in this case of D----, has been done to vary the principle of action? |
10135 | Whaten an engagement has he on St. Lawrence''s Eve? |
10135 | When Master Harry took her round the waist, she said he"teased her so"; and when he says,"Norah, my young May Moon, your Harry tease you?" |
10135 | Where is she?" |
10135 | Where the deuce are you flying at that rate?" |
10135 | Where the deuce can she have sprung from? |
10135 | Who and what may you be?" |
10135 | Who, at all events, would ever for a moment credit you, in the luxuriance of that beauty, with the study, on your own side, of such truths as these? |
10135 | Why do I like you, do you think, Cobbs?" |
10135 | Why now, look you here, how long have I been in this room with you? |
10135 | Why was that gentle, modest, sweet woman, clean and lovable, condemned by God to bear such a burden? |
10135 | Why, what are all these requisitions we hear so much about? |
10135 | Will you go before, or after?" |
10135 | Wot you all want wid him? |
10135 | Would it not have been better, at the first visit, to have seized it openly and departed?" |
10135 | Yes, he glared-- how could n''t he, with what his mind was really full of? |
10135 | Yet was he going to see how their testimony, on each side, would, if offered,_ have_ to conflict? |
10135 | You did not take to pieces all the chairs?" |
10135 | You might-- do a little more, I think; eh?" |
10135 | _ Did_ you bring any luggage with you, sir?" |
10135 | cried Susan, at the end of some energetic remarks,"is dar enny pusson h''yar who kin count up figgers?" |
10135 | said Colonel Killigrew, who believed not a word of the doctor''s story;"and what may be the effect of this fluid on the human frame?" |
10135 | so that, this proving quite vividly possible, why did the light it lifted strike her as lurid? |
10135 | what are you to call them?" |
10135 | who ever heard of such an idea?" |
27224 | And what in the fortune and circumstance of his life? |
27224 | Does it seem to be an integral part of the story, coming from its essential emotion and free from obtrusive moralizing, or not? |
27224 | Effective or not, as your markings indicate? |
27224 | If so, is it obtrusive or not? |
27224 | If so, what? |
27224 | Is the style diffuse and thin, or does it accomplish much with few words? |
27224 | So far as it is concerned with experience, is it a reviving of what we have experienced or an addition to our knowledge of life? |
27224 | Were the others less in need of grace?''" |
27224 | Why does the author delay so long in telling us that she is writing of a dog? |
27224 | Why? |
27224 | _ M_2_? |
27224 | _ M_3_? |
27224 | _ a._ Do you detect in this story any purpose beyond that of recounting a series of happenings? |
27224 | _ a._ Do you see any change in the method of presenting MacLure here? |
27224 | _ a._ Do you think a death- bed scene a good subject for literary presentation or not? |
27224 | _ a._ Does the story state facts and happenings merely, or does it get hold of vital sensations and revive them? |
27224 | _ a._ How does this make an advance upon the preceding in the revelation of MacLure? |
27224 | _ a._ How is character presented? |
27224 | _ a._ Upon what is the interest of the story especially dependent? |
27224 | _ a._ What devices are employed to make us interested in Adah? |
27224 | _ a._ What has been accomplished in your sympathies by this? |
27224 | _ a._ What is the artistic purpose of the first two paragraphs? |
27224 | _ a._ What symbols do you notice that you have employed most largely? |
27224 | _ b._ Are the characters well chosen for their reactions among themselves? |
27224 | _ b._ Are the incidents presented rapidly and coherently, or slowly and disconnectedly? |
27224 | _ b._ Are we made to feel that her dependence upon the dog is natural and deserving of sympathy or not, and if so, how? |
27224 | _ b._ Does it in any way get nearer to elemental human feeling? |
27224 | _ b._ Does she let her own feeling for the girl and dog appear or not? |
27224 | _ b._ Does the development of the story center about any idea or attitude toward life? |
27224 | _ b._ Has this been through direct statement of things calling for your sympathies, or through"effects"? |
27224 | _ b._ How is it an advance in the development of the story or not? |
27224 | _ b._ If so, in what ways does it seem to do that? |
27224 | _ b._ If you were to write the story, would you think it prospectively a difficult thing to arouse interest in a dog? |
27224 | _ b._ Is the story written in the way of direct statement or of suggestion? |
27224 | _ b._ Would you call it a difficult thing to present or not? |
27224 | _ c._ Are the incidents so managed as to maintain interest in the expectation of the dénouement or not? |
27224 | _ c._ Are the things they do and say continually consistent or not? |
27224 | _ c._ Are there any incidents in the story that a reader might for any reason be unwilling to accept? |
27224 | _ c._ Do you find anything objectionable here? |
27224 | _ c._ Does it anywhere appeal directly to sensation? |
27224 | _ c._ For what frequent purpose would you say that the writer employs_ F_2_? |
27224 | _ c._ Has that been done here or not? |
27224 | _ c._ In general does it seem to you subjective or objective in method? |
27224 | _ c._ Is the method cumulative and gradual, or direct and insistent? |
27224 | _ c._ Is there a clearly defined plot or not? |
27224 | _ c._ Was Part I. preparation for this or not, and if so, how? |
27224 | _ c._ What excellences and what faults do you find in the story? |
27224 | _ d._ Are they sufficiently individualized to escape the appearance of the conventional and to hold interest? |
27224 | _ d._ Can you say in what the art of the story especially consists? |
27224 | _ d._ Do you find in this any feeling for the mystery of existence? |
27224 | _ d._ Does the plot have a climax of entanglement, or does it fail in developing this feature of the story interest? |
27224 | _ d._ Does the story seem to have sufficient unity of purpose and plan or not? |
27224 | _ d._ Does this have a definite climax and dénouement, and if so, where? |
27224 | _ d._ Has the interest of the whole story depended upon incident or upon showing of character? |
27224 | _ d._ If so, how is the handling such as to disguise the difficulty or not, as the case may be? |
27224 | _ d._ If so, what are some of the author''s devices and how successfully employed? |
27224 | _ d._ Would you say that the method here is objective or subjective? |
27224 | _ e._ Is there any increase in intensity of feeling in this or not, and if so, how is it indicated in the symbols you have employed? |
27224 | _ e._ What symbols do you find that you have employed largely, and for what purpose have the devices for which two of these stand been employed? |
27224 | _ e._ What would you probably have thought of the story were its art less delicate and sure? |
27224 | _ f._ Has MacLure now been presented to us with full showing of his distinguishing characteristics or not? |
27224 | _ f._ What is the especially appealing thing in the portrait of MacLure? |
27224 | _ f._ Would you say that the author puts much or little meaning into his words? |
27224 | _ g._ Are the inferences which you are made to draw logical or emotional, and do they seem to you delicate and subtle or simple and direct? |
27224 | _ g._ Does this appeal touch in any fashion upon our sense of a something inscrutable governing our lives? |
27224 | _ h._ Which of the different sorts of subject- matter( see section 9) seem to you to be the more largely employed here? |
27224 | and do we find in him a vital human nature? |
27224 | serve in any particular way to round out our knowledge of MacLure, and if so, in what way? |
26150 | ''Am I no gaun to the ploy, then?'' 26150 ''And I positively must not ask you how you have come by all this money?'' |
26150 | ''Are you mad?'' 26150 ''Ay-- and is it even sae?'' |
26150 | ''D''ye hear that, Provost?'' 26150 ''Heard ye ever the like o''that, laird?'' |
26150 | ''Madge,''said Ratcliffe,''have ye ony joes now?'' 26150 ''Perhaps,''said Mannering,''at such a time a stranger''s arrival might be inconvenient?'' |
26150 | ''So ye hae gotten your auld son married? 26150 ''This is your mother, is it not?'' |
26150 | ''Well, my good friend,''said Tyrrel,''the upshot of all this is, I hope, that I am to stay and have dinner here?'' 26150 ''Wha kens what would be the upshot o''a second marriage?'' |
26150 | ''Wha''s this o''t?'' 26150 ''What needs ye be aye speering then at folk?'' |
26150 | All are good maids, but whence come the bad wives? |
26150 | And for eating-- what signifies telling a lee? 26150 Are ye fou already, Watty Walkinshaw? |
26150 | Didna I see when gentle Geordie was seeking to get other folk out of the Tolbooth forby Jocky Porteous? 26150 Ratcliffe, speaking apart to Madge, asked her''whether she did not remember ony o''her auld sangs?'' |
26150 | Taken from an inscription upon a churchyard in Scotland--''I, John Moody, cives Abredonensis, Builded this kerk- yerd of fitty( Foot- dee?) |
26150 | Tweed said to Till,''What gars ye rin sae still?'' 26150 Wha can help sickness?" |
26150 | What signifies what I desired, man? 26150 Where''s the use o''vilifying ane''s country, and bringing a discredit on ane''s kin, before Southrens and strangers? |
26150 | Who so bold as blind Bayard? |
26150 | Who so bold as blind Bayard? |
26150 | ''And that I am to have the Blue room for a night or two-- perhaps longer?'' |
26150 | ''And whase man wad ye be? |
26150 | ''And what for should ye?'' |
26150 | ''But what''s the need o''this summering and wintering anent it? |
26150 | ''I do not know that,''replied the Duke;''ilka man buckles his belt his ain gate-- you know our old Scots proverb?''" |
26150 | ''Maybe I am,''replied Meg,''maybe I am not; and if I be, what for no? |
26150 | ''The pockmantle?'' |
26150 | ''Then you refuse to give us them?'' |
26150 | ''Weel, Will,''said the Earl,''what''s this you''ve got noo?'' |
26150 | ''What can have brought your mother and you down the water so late?'' |
26150 | ''What for no?'' |
26150 | --_Bride of Lammermoor._ Here''s the wine, but where''s the wa- nuts? |
26150 | --_Italian._ What better is the house where the daw rises soon? |
26150 | A fat man riding upon a lean horse was asked how it came to pass that he was so fat while his horse was so lean? |
26150 | A''are gude lasses, but where do the ill wives come frae? |
26150 | And wha wad ye hae to maister ye but me, Cuddie, lad?''" |
26150 | Ane would like to be lo''ed, but wha would mool in wi''a moudiewort? |
26150 | At a preliminary consultation, Lord Gray remarked,"It is well said, but wha will bell the cat?" |
26150 | But what is that portmanteau?'' |
26150 | Did ye ever fit counts wi''him? |
26150 | Does this very old proverb mean, that if a woman nurses for one year, it takes seven years to recover from the effects of it? |
26150 | I asked him what ailed him? |
26150 | If that be true, what signifies your gear? |
26150 | Is it not because they are always dissatisfied with the"mouter"which the miller takes? |
26150 | It''s no"What is she?" |
26150 | Literally, why are you so rude or unkind to me when I am so anxious to please or be kind to you? |
26150 | Mistress before folk, gudewife behint backs; whaur lies the dishclout? |
26150 | Spoken jocularly to persons who, when they go to visit a friend, ask,"Will they come in?" |
26150 | That is, Would you really try to make us believe anything so false or absurd as we know such a thing to be? |
26150 | That''s my tale, whaur''s yours? |
26150 | There''s a difference between"Will you sell?" |
26150 | Trot faither, trot mither; how can the foal amble? |
26150 | Wad ye gar us trow that the mune''s made o''green cheese, or that spade shafts bear plooms? |
26150 | Was there ever the like o''that? |
26150 | Wha can haud wha will awa? |
26150 | Wha can help misluck? |
26150 | Wha comes oftener, and brings you less? |
26150 | Wha daur bell the cat? |
26150 | Wha may woo without cost? |
26150 | What maks you sae rumgunshach and me sae curcuddoch? |
26150 | What puts that in your head that didna put the sturdy wi''t? |
26150 | What will ye get frae an oily pat but stink? |
26150 | What''s like a dorty maiden when she''s auld? |
26150 | What''s waur than ill luck? |
26150 | Whaur wad the profit o''that be, I wonder? |
26150 | When a hundred sheep rin, how mony cloots clatter? |
26150 | Wot ye not, if you bring him to life again, he will be sure to do you some capital injury?''" |
26150 | _ Wha_, who, who? |
26150 | and"Will you buy?" |
26150 | but"What has she?" |
26150 | cried Bryce Snailsfoot,''you that lived sae lang in Zetland to risk the saving of a drowning man? |
26150 | demanded Ravenswood;''the broad blaze which might have been seen ten miles off-- what occasioned that?'' |
26150 | how sell you your maut? |
26150 | said Cuddie,''d''ye think I am to be John Tamson''s man, and maistered by women a''the days o''my life?'' |
26150 | said Meg;''and has the puir bairn been sae soon removed frae this fashious world? |
26150 | said the clergyman....''Is it anything that distresses your own mind?'' |
26150 | then you have slain and burnt, and sacked, and spoiled?'' |
26150 | what''s that?'' |
18422 | ''... Quis jam locus... Quæ regio in terris nostri non plena laboris?'' 18422 A State?" |
18422 | And pray, my young sir,asked a stern matron of forty,"will you please to tell us what is the appropriate sphere of woman?" |
18422 | And who are those gentlemen up there on the elevation looking so pale and frightened and eating nothing? |
18422 | Are ye, are ye,he would say, with a voice of exultation, and yet softened with melancholy,"Are ye our children? |
18422 | But whereabouts on your person? |
18422 | But,said I, anxiously,"do you really regard that circumstance as reflecting disparagingly upon the man''s work in the next room?" |
18422 | But,said the corporal,"President Lincoln knows, does n''t he?" |
18422 | Do you pretend to say Iowa has sent 39,000 men into this cruel Civil War? |
18422 | Have yez? 18422 How many men has she sent to this cruel war?" |
18422 | Is this one part of the great reward, for which my brethren and myself endured lives of toil and of hardship? 18422 Now, how could you get wounded in the face while on the retreat?" |
18422 | Now,he says,"we have arrived at the stairs; will you kindly tell me which way the stairs run?" |
18422 | Surely,said he,"you noticed that two- thirds of the works in the next room are already sold?" |
18422 | Well, perhaps, by and by? |
18422 | Well,he said,"you Dutch did lick us on the Excise question, did n''t you?" |
18422 | Well,says he,"where''s Iowa?" |
18422 | What are you looking at, Mike? |
18422 | What do you mean? |
18422 | What is that? |
18422 | What is that? |
18422 | What may that be? |
18422 | What shall I do to make my son get forward in the world? |
18422 | Will you now kindly give the location of the hall in which the accident occurred? |
18422 | ( Need I say I mean his fishing- smack?) |
18422 | A friend came along, and seeing that the man did not look as pleasant as usual, said to him,"What is the matter? |
18422 | A traveller passing through Concord inquired,"How do all these people support themselves?" |
18422 | After that I had a very good mind to come back to America, and say, like the Queen of Uganda:"There, what did I tell you?" |
18422 | And can you not help the world abroad as well as at home? |
18422 | And how comes it that the workers of evil just as instinctively aim to fraudulently use it or silence it, and with such poor success? |
18422 | And the Cavaliers, who missed their stirrups, somehow, and got into Yankee saddles? |
18422 | And was not Eve, the first of orthodox women, the type of every feminine perfection? |
18422 | And what does a poet want that he does not find in New England? |
18422 | And what has Virginia done for our Union? |
18422 | And what was the answer? |
18422 | And who doubts it? |
18422 | And why not? |
18422 | And, if we should care to pursue the subject farther back, what about Ethan Allen and John Stark and Mad Anthony Wayne-- Cavaliers each and every one? |
18422 | Another servant came to him and said,"Sir, shall I take your order? |
18422 | Are they not? |
18422 | Are we a degenerate people? |
18422 | Are we going to cure it by more tinkering? |
18422 | Are we to be daunted, therefore, because the conditions are new? |
18422 | Beasley?" |
18422 | But did they forget the principles on which they acted because the conditions were unprecedented? |
18422 | But the question has also been asked, here and there-- and very naturally-- is a Minister to a foreign Court to be appointed for such a purpose? |
18422 | But to speak more seriously: Is modern journalism, then, nothing but a reflection of the frivolity of the day, of the passing love of notoriety? |
18422 | But what is a critic? |
18422 | But what is culture? |
18422 | But when, after your long meal, you go home in the wee small hours, what do you expect to find? |
18422 | But where meanwhile is the substance of power? |
18422 | Did not John Bull, in his rough methods with the Celestial Empire, sometimes literally act"like a bull in a China shop"? |
18422 | Did they not discover new applications for old principles? |
18422 | Did you ever have anything to do with indorsements?" |
18422 | Do I err in supposing this an illustration of the supremacy which belongs to the triumphs of the moral nature? |
18422 | Do we need to look further for a reply to the question,"Why are the New Englanders unpopular?" |
18422 | Do you ever think of him? |
18422 | Do you ever think of his career, that of the prototype of our own Washington? |
18422 | Do you know what the effect will be? |
18422 | Do you remember to what circumstance Chicago owed its fame? |
18422 | Does he belong to the flag of the country? |
18422 | Does he rest under the eagle and the Stars and Stripes? |
18422 | Does that flag protect him? |
18422 | Does this scene of refinement, of elegance, of riches, of luxury, does all this come from our labors? |
18422 | Edwin Arnold, the author of"The Light of Asia,"said:"Do you think you can do all this?" |
18422 | Else how could this noble city have been redeemed from bondage? |
18422 | For what does America stand? |
18422 | Great heavens, men, do you want to live forever?" |
18422 | Have we lost the old principle and the old spirit? |
18422 | Have we not been rook- shooting with Mr. Winkle, and courting with Mr. Tupman? |
18422 | Have we not played cribbage with"the Marchioness,"and quaffed the rosy with Dick Swiveller? |
18422 | Have we not ridden together to the"Markis of Granby"with old Weller on the box, and his son Samivel on the dickey? |
18422 | Have we not together investigated, with Mr. Pickwick, the theory of Tittlebats? |
18422 | Have we not walked with him in every scene of varied life? |
18422 | He poked his head out of the upper berth at midnight, hailed the porter and said,"Say, have you got such a thing as a corkscrew about you?" |
18422 | Her friend said,"Shall I pour some water in your whiskey?" |
18422 | His reward was what? |
18422 | How can I best serve them?" |
18422 | How can it be that any man should make a decent portrait of his fellow- man in these days? |
18422 | How did they achieve it? |
18422 | How shall we account for this reception? |
18422 | How was I to prove that what I have said is true? |
18422 | I am not here to urge a return to the Puritan life; but have you forgotten that the Puritans came into a new world? |
18422 | I am not only unlike other gentlemen, taken by surprise, but I am absolutely without a subject, and what am I to say? |
18422 | I came to civilization, and what do you think was the result? |
18422 | I know that what I say is true when I charge the Chairman with irony, for do not I feel his iron entering my soul? |
18422 | I mean by that, the lawyer says in a dignified way,"What principle is involved, and how can I best serve my client, always forgetting myself?" |
18422 | I regard true beauty as the divinest gift which woman has received; and was not Pandora, the first of mythical women, endowed with every gift? |
18422 | I said to him:"I never felt better in all my life; how do you feel?" |
18422 | I said:"What does that mean to me? |
18422 | I was received by the Paris Geographical Society, and it was then I began to feel"Well, after all, I have done something, have n''t I?" |
18422 | I will confess that I do not know what I mean by this; for what is beauty? |
18422 | I would enter a protest, but what use? |
18422 | If we give up that Constitution, what are we? |
18422 | In that hour of trial which you and I, sir, know to have been a menace and a reality to whom did she turn for succor? |
18422 | Is he an American-- is he of us? |
18422 | Is it a place?" |
18422 | Is it spelled with an O or a W?" |
18422 | Is it wonderful that we are delighted to see him, and to return in a measure his unbounded hospitalities? |
18422 | Is n''t it strange that two of the smallest sections of the earth should have produced most of the grandest history of the world? |
18422 | Is there a New Englander here who would wipe"Bunker Hill"from his list for any price in Wall Street? |
18422 | Is this magnificent city, the like of which we never saw nor heard of on either continent, is this but an offshoot from Plymouth Rock? |
18422 | Is this modern ideal to survive throughout the future? |
18422 | It has been said that a good woman, fitly mated, grows doubly good; but how often have we seen a bad man mated to a good woman turned into a good man? |
18422 | MR. PRESIDENT AND GENTLEMEN:--[3]_Voulez- vous me permettre de faire mes remarques en français? |
18422 | May we not foresee the nature of the difference? |
18422 | Not the lawyer in politics; but"What is there in it for the people I represent? |
18422 | Now what are you going to do with a people like that? |
18422 | Now, here we are asked, why did Virginia go into the War of Secession? |
18422 | Now, what are we going to do? |
18422 | Now, who achieved that? |
18422 | Of our sweethearts the humorist hath it:--"Where are the Marys and Anns and Elizas, Lovely and loving of yore? |
18422 | One question, with its answer, and I shall have done: Are these Southerners in Wall Street divorced in spirit and sympathy from their old homes? |
18422 | Respecting the exact nature of the proposition I shall not reveal? |
18422 | Said some one to him when the prayer was over,"My dear brother, why were you so hard upon the Hottentot?" |
18422 | Said the man,"To Ireland? |
18422 | Shakespeare naturally said what every artist must feel; for what is an artist? |
18422 | Shall we learn the lesson which is taught us in this recent war? |
18422 | Shall we not imagine our foe in the future, as might well be the case, to be superior to the one over which we have been victorious? |
18422 | Shall we rest on the laurels which we may have won, or shall we prepare for the future? |
18422 | Should your country decide to keep the Philippines, what would be the consequences? |
18422 | That is the fact of the matter; nobody can deny that; but what are we going to do? |
18422 | The General said:"Why do n''t you work?" |
18422 | The President, Cornelius N. Bliss, proposed the query for Dr. Wayland,"Why are New Englanders Unpopular?" |
18422 | The commonplace question:"How is the weather going to be?" |
18422 | The first inquiry of the lawyer and politician is,"What is there in it?" |
18422 | The next question is, is there any practical means of improving this state of things? |
18422 | The old gentleman says:--"General, what troops are these passing now?" |
18422 | The politician, and not the statesman, says,"What is in it?" |
18422 | The question now arises, is such a state of things necessarily connected with a Republican government? |
18422 | The"Daily Telegraph''s"proprietor cabled over to Bennett:"Will you join us in sending Stanley over to complete Livingstone''s explorations?" |
18422 | Then how did we lose it? |
18422 | They are laughing in their sleeves and saying:"Watch him, watch him; did you ever hear lawyers talk as much for nothing? |
18422 | They may have their faults, but who has not? |
18422 | They opened that highway to you, and shall no honor be given to them? |
18422 | To which she returned the still more laconic autograph,"Wo n''t I?" |
18422 | Under all the circumstances, who will dispute the magnificence of that showing? |
18422 | Was the inexorable unrelaxing determination with which they, being so few and so poor, maintained their point somewhat wrought into their faces? |
18422 | We have had tariffs, have we not, every few years, ever since we were born; and has not the farmer become discontented under these conditions? |
18422 | Well, what about this Forefathers''Day? |
18422 | Well, what moved in your splendid Dix when he gave that order? |
18422 | What New England Society has ever made so good a showing of hospitality and good cheer? |
18422 | What am I to talk about? |
18422 | What are the Dutch? |
18422 | What are the ethics of the press of Chicago? |
18422 | What are the truths that have gone into her blood and made her strong and beautiful and dominant? |
18422 | What do you mean by 39th?" |
18422 | What has Virginia done for our common country? |
18422 | What is it? |
18422 | What is the Senate? |
18422 | What is the charm that unites so many suffrages? |
18422 | What is the matter now? |
18422 | What is the result? |
18422 | What is to become of our English landscape if it is to be simply a sanitary or advertising appliance? |
18422 | What made your section great, dominant, glorious in the history of our common country? |
18422 | What man would part with the fame of Harrison and of Perry? |
18422 | What more can a poet desire? |
18422 | What names has she contributed to your historic roll? |
18422 | What reflecting mind can contemplate some of those characters without being made more kind- hearted and charitable? |
18422 | What river is this?" |
18422 | What then was the course of Virginia? |
18422 | What was the answer? |
18422 | What would a poet sing about, I wonder, who lived on the Kankakee Flats? |
18422 | What, then, is the part of Her Majesty''s Government in this critical and difficult circumstance? |
18422 | When he got through she said,"How did you like that?" |
18422 | When he had finished his remarks a French gentleman sitting beside me inquired:"Where is he from?" |
18422 | Whence came these qualities? |
18422 | Where is there such a galaxy of great men known to history? |
18422 | Where will you look for its parallel? |
18422 | Who are Still first in colleges and letters in this land? |
18422 | Who asks what State you are from, in Europe, or in Africa, or in Asia? |
18422 | Who had the first chance on your destiny, your character, your development? |
18422 | Who in the imposing troop of worldly grandeur is now remembered but with indifference or contempt? |
18422 | Who is here to deny it? |
18422 | Who to- day are the first to rally to the side of a good cause, on trial in the community? |
18422 | Who, east or west, advocate justice, redress wrongs, maintain equal rights, support churches, love liberty, and thrive where others starve? |
18422 | Whoever saw a satisfactory definition of love? |
18422 | Why did n''t we see it before? |
18422 | Why should they not feast and why should they not dance? |
18422 | Why should we not welcome him as a friend? |
18422 | Why, I repeat it, the intense unpopularity of New England? |
18422 | Why? |
18422 | Will not old principles be adaptable to new conditions, and is it not our business to adapt them to new conditions? |
18422 | Will you have some of the chicken soup?" |
18422 | Would he gaze at you with sad, sad eyes, and weep over you as the degenerate sons of noble sires? |
18422 | Yes, but what would you have, gentlemen? |
18422 | Yet how should we get on without them? |
18422 | You, the father, come home, and you say:"Fannie, what are you doing in the kitchen? |
18422 | [ 3] TRANSLATION.--Will you kindly allow me to make my speech in French? |
18422 | [ A Voice:"Which is the eighth Commandment?"] |
18422 | and the woman replied,"For God''s sake, have n''t I had trouble enough already to- day?" |
18422 | enforcing it with the following quotations:"Do you question me as an honest man should do for my simple true judgment?" |
18422 | go back to Africa? |
18422 | is that a thunder- cloud in the North? |
18422 | maiden fair, wilt thou be mine? |
18422 | that makes 22,000 men?" |
18422 | where is Minnesota?" |
17228 | ''Do you want laws to prevent you from marryin niggers?'' 17228 ''Do you want niggers for sons- in- law?'' |
17228 | ''Do you want to be marched up to the polls by those who tell you how to vote, beside a nigger?'' 17228 Am I awake, or am I dreamin?" |
17228 | And my children-- is they little beasts and beastesses? |
17228 | And no Kentuckian ever marries a nigger? |
17228 | And why give them votes who will use em agin us? |
17228 | Are you a Postmaster? |
17228 | But spozn,sed I,"that it_ shood_ be pizoned? |
17228 | Ca n''t yoo make yoose uv sich a man ez me? |
17228 | Cood any boddy be more nootraller than that? |
17228 | Den a yaller feller ai n''t but a half a beast, is he? |
17228 | Did n''t he marry a nigger-- a full- blooded nigger? 17228 Did n''t he marry a nigger?" |
17228 | Did they run away? 17228 Do I?" |
17228 | Do yoo want to know my definition uv the word''conservative?'' |
17228 | Ham come from the same fadder and mudder as the odder two? |
17228 | Hev yoo got wun? |
17228 | How knowest thou? |
17228 | How so? |
17228 | How,retorted I,"do yoo know I''m from Noo Gersey, not hevin spoken a word in yoor hearin?" |
17228 | I hev devoted myself to the task uv bindin up the wounds uv my beloved country--"Did you stop anybody very much from inflictin them sed wounds? |
17228 | I know it wood,replied Johnson;"but where kin we find sich a one? |
17228 | Is my old woman a old beastesses, too? |
17228 | Kentucky went heavy into the sin biznis, and whar is Kentucky? 17228 Kin I o''ercloud that smilin cheek?" |
17228 | Kin it be,mused I, pensively,"that we are doin the devil''s work, and are we to be finally rewarded in the manner I saw in my vision? |
17228 | Kin this be endoored? |
17228 | Missee-- what? |
17228 | None uv your kind uv Democrats jined in this unholy croosade, and fell afore our deth- deelin swords-- did they? |
17228 | So do I,replied I;"but what hev yoo agin him, aside from his obnoxious political opinions?" |
17228 | To celebrate the battle uv Noo Orleans? 17228 Wat are you blubberin for?" |
17228 | Wat is these? |
17228 | Wat prizns wuz yoo incarcerated in? |
17228 | Wat''s the matter with the eyes uv all the delegates? |
17228 | Well, Mas''r,sed the old imbecile,"is I a beest?" |
17228 | Well? |
17228 | What are yoo here for? |
17228 | What in thunder,sed one uv em,"did they mean by pilin on the agony over the the Yanks we killed? |
17228 | What''n thunder, then, are yoo here for, beggin a post offis? 17228 What, my faithful servitor, dost thou most desire?" |
17228 | Where? |
17228 | Who are you, my gentle friend? |
17228 | Who''ll do the work about the house? |
17228 | Who''ll dress us, and wash us, and wait on us? |
17228 | Why the result in yoor Deestrict? |
17228 | Why? 17228 Why?" |
17228 | Wich State are yoo from? |
17228 | Will you have Andrew Johnson President or King? |
17228 | Wuz they lazy? 17228 Yoor name?" |
17228 | ), and who shall stay our hand? |
17228 | ), or A. Johnson''s? |
17228 | After Peerse he d run the machine four yeers, wat wuz there left? |
17228 | Agin then I repeet, DO YOU WANT TO MARRY A NIGGER? |
17228 | Ai nt that the kind uv stock we want, and the kind wich hez alluz set us up? |
17228 | Ai nt the bulk uv em rather degraded and low than otherwise? |
17228 | Am I datin my letters from"Post Orifis, Confedrit × Roads?" |
17228 | Androo Johnson may possibly be on the high road to Dimocrisy; but, ez yet, what ashoorence hev we? |
17228 | Are they constitooshnel Dimokrats? |
17228 | Are they to go back on that holy determinashen to preserve the Anglo Sackson race on this continent in its purity? |
17228 | Are yoo back into the Yoonyun uv your own free will and akkord? |
17228 | Are you in favor uv elevatin the Afrikin to a posishen where he kin be yoor ekal, or perhaps yoor sooperior? |
17228 | Are you quite shoor-- quite shoor? |
17228 | Assoomin a intellectual look, I retorted,"Do you know Charles Sumner?" |
17228 | But I ask yoo, did Noer hev three sons?" |
17228 | But what uv that? |
17228 | DO YOU WANT TO MARRY A NIGGER? |
17228 | Deekin, why ca n''t yoo go to the devil by a straight road, ez I do?" |
17228 | Democrisy? |
17228 | Did n''t he--""Mrs. P.,"sed this Illinoy store- keeper, wich his name it wuz Pollock,"do yoo object to miscegenation?" |
17228 | Do we turn to the courts? |
17228 | Do we turn to the people? |
17228 | Do yoo approve uv the canin uv Grinnell by Rosso? |
17228 | Do yoo consider the keepin out uv Congris eleven sovrin states a unconstooshnel and unwarrantid assumption uv power by a secshnal Congris? |
17228 | Do yoo hev the most implicit faith in Androo Johnson, in all that he hez done, all that he is doin, and all he may hereafter do? |
17228 | Do you want the nigger aforesed to be mayors uv your towns, with all the hatred they hev towards us? |
17228 | Does he propose to organize a new party, made up uv sich Republikins ez he can indoose to foller him and the Dimocrisy? |
17228 | Does he think we kin carry sich a load ez he is for nothin? |
17228 | Doth it not pain em?" |
17228 | Ef I am a traitor, sed he, warmin up, who is the Judis Iscariot? |
17228 | Ef I die, who''d swing around the cirkle? |
17228 | Ef my niggers run off, who so prompt in their pursoot ez the Democratic marshals, wich alluz returned em to me ef it wuz possible? |
17228 | Ef so, hedn''t I better quit and repent?" |
17228 | Ef they are to support the President, they want, and will hev, the post orifises, for uv what use is it to support a man and pay yoor own expenses? |
17228 | Ef yoo die, who mourns? |
17228 | Eko answers, When? |
17228 | Ez a Christian, woodent it be better to marry em than to add a violation uv the commandment to the sin uv amalgamashen? |
17228 | Ez a sentinel on the watch- tower, I look out, and what do I see? |
17228 | For wat''s the yoose uv sich a cuss ef it''s to be removed jist when you want it to stick? |
17228 | Good God!--where are we driftin? |
17228 | He asked em, ef he was Judis Iskariot who wuz the Saviour? |
17228 | He he d bin Alderman uv his native town, and Vice- President; he wuz too modest to make a speech; but ef he wuz Joodas Iskariot, who wuz the Saviour? |
17228 | He tried to earn his bread; but wat cood he do? |
17228 | He was sacrificin hisself for them-- who he d made greater sacrifices? |
17228 | Hevent yoo got a pardon in yoor pockit, which dockyment is all that saves yoor neck from stretchin hemp? |
17228 | Hevent you diskivered that yoo are whipped? |
17228 | Hevent you found out that yoo are subjoogated? |
17228 | Hez he suffered nothin? |
17228 | Hez there bin, as yit, any well authenticated case uv the removal uv a Ablishnist, and the apintment uv a constooshnel Democrat in his stead? |
17228 | How cood he be servant unto his brethren except thro amalgamashen? |
17228 | How did Androo Johnson treet us? |
17228 | How wuz we reseeved? |
17228 | How, let me ask, in the name of High Heaven, wood yoo like to be tried for hoss stealin afore a nigger jury? |
17228 | I asked who wuz the Saviour ef I wuz Joodis Iskariot? |
17228 | I coodent let Dimocrisy alone, and the eggins-- the ridin upon rails-- the takin uv the oath-- but why shood I harrow up the public buzzum? |
17228 | I looked into the fucher, and wat did I see, ez them two men-- one sneekin, and tother ashamed uv hisself-- walked up that aisle? |
17228 | I mite say more, but wherefore? |
17228 | I onst saw a woman skinnin live eels, and I reproached her, saying,--"Woman, why skinnest thou eels alive? |
17228 | I replied,--"Wood_ yoo_ be glad, or wood this congregashun be glad, to hev me in the Post Orfis in the place uv that Ablishnist?" |
17228 | In Mexico? |
17228 | In breef, wat wuz the sense, my brethren, in puttin new wine into old bottles?--uv patchin old cloth with new? |
17228 | In the North? |
17228 | In the South? |
17228 | In the name uv Dimocrisy let me ask,"WHERE IS THE OFFICES?" |
17228 | In what partikeler hez Androo Johnson showed hisself to be a Dimokrat? |
17228 | Is Ablishnists to still retain the places uv trust and profit? |
17228 | Is Androo Johnson all my fancy painted him, or is he still a heaven- defying persekooter uv the Democratic Saints? |
17228 | Is Stanton, and Seward, and Welles histed out uv the cabinet, and Vallandigum, and Brite, and Wood apinted in their places? |
17228 | Is a oath so hard to break? |
17228 | Is a tailor to say''_ must not_''to shivelrus Georgy? |
17228 | Is he not amenable to all the laws, even ez we is? |
17228 | Is he not taxed ez we are, and more than most uv the Democrisy, for many uv em own property? |
17228 | Is it troo, or is it not troo? |
17228 | Is n''t it singler that men, when they go to the devil, alluz go in squads? |
17228 | Is not the Afrikin a man? |
17228 | Is the Northern Dimocrisy still troo?" |
17228 | Is the giant Republican actually dead, or is he in a trance? |
17228 | Kin I go and borrer eighteen dollars and sixty- three cents uv one uv them? |
17228 | Kin it be? |
17228 | Kin they offer fairer? |
17228 | Kin they read? |
17228 | Kin they write? |
17228 | Mountin the rostrum, I ejaculated,--"''MEN AND BRETHREN, DO YOO WANT TO MARRY A NIGGER?'' |
17228 | My brethren, wich is the bottles? |
17228 | My gentle friend,_ will_ they use their ballot agin us? |
17228 | My liege, why wuz the NIGGER not made the central figger this year, ez before? |
17228 | NASBY''S OPINION ON THE CAUSE OF THE PRESIDENT''S DEFEAT XXXVIII.--ANDREW JOHNSON PRESIDENT OR KING? |
17228 | Now, why do n''t our father, the Government, fulfil the Skripter? |
17228 | O, why wuzn''t we content to wear it? |
17228 | On his return wat did he see? |
17228 | Onless we amalgamated with em, how wood the male niggers be our brethren? |
17228 | Our wise men may make laws to keep him in his normal speer, but uv wat avail is they? |
17228 | Paul may plant and Apollus water; but uv what account is the plantin and waterin to me ef I do n''t get the increase? |
17228 | Pogram?" |
17228 | Ruther than risk that offis I''d chaw striknine, for uv what akkount is a Dimokrat, who hez wunst tasted the sweets uv place, and is ousted? |
17228 | Shall we continue to enjoy that comfort? |
17228 | Shall we go to Brazil? |
17228 | Shel she appeel in vain? |
17228 | Shel we desert Androo Johnson, after all the trouble he hez bin to in gettin back to us? |
17228 | So long ez Dimocrats are kept out, what care I who hez the places? |
17228 | Some may censure us for too much zeal in this matter, but what else cood we hev dun? |
17228 | Takin for a text the passage,"The wagis uv sin is death,"I opened out ez follows:--"Wat is sin? |
17228 | Thad Stevens? |
17228 | The Illinoy store- keeper, uv the name uv Pollock, resoomed,--"I wuz about askin wat them niggers is ez is nearly white?" |
17228 | The grosery keepers wanted to know what we wuz a going to hev meetin on week days for? |
17228 | The skool teachers we will tar and feather, and whar is the bloo- koted hirelins to make us afeerd? |
17228 | Their little talk about debts, and slavery, and sich, is the earth they''re droppin onto us for fun; but shel we, like ijeots, cut the rope? |
17228 | Then why, I triumphantly ask, is he not entitled to a vote? |
17228 | They are another race; they''r beasts; and who''d marry em but jist sich men ez Sumner and them other Ablishnists?" |
17228 | They come to the Corners to sell the produx of their lands; do they leave their money at his bar? |
17228 | They hev become sassy and impudent, and say,"Go to; are we not men?" |
17228 | They spozed the South wood submit to hoomiliatin condishns? |
17228 | Uv wat danger is preechers to these men, when yoo coodent git one uv em within gun- shot uv one? |
17228 | WHO IS TO HEV THE POST OFFISIS? |
17228 | Wat are you sheddin pearls for?" |
17228 | Wat better is a nobleman? |
17228 | Wat chance wood yoo hev wen arrestid for small misdemeanors, afore nigger judges? |
17228 | Wat chance wood yoor children hev in a skool uv wich all the teechers wuz niggers? |
17228 | Wat did I see? |
17228 | Wat does this fact prove? |
17228 | Wat he d we to go into this canvass with? |
17228 | Wat hez worked this change? |
17228 | Wat if a corrupt and radikle Congress does override your vetoes, and legislate for these cuss- ridden people? |
17228 | Wat shel we do? |
17228 | Wat then? |
17228 | Wat uv_ my_ bowels? |
17228 | Wat wuz the sence uv our askin our people to vote for Kernels for Congris wich he d, doorin the war, drafted their sons? |
17228 | Wat wuz the yoose uv our assoomin what we did not hev? |
17228 | Wat wuz the yoose uv talking Constooshnel Amendments to men who spozed that Internal Improvements and a Nashnel Bank wuz still the ishoo? |
17228 | Wat''s the use, I askt, uv my preachin agin nigger equality, so long ez my Deekins practis it? |
17228 | We do n''t like to do it, but shel skripter be violated? |
17228 | We served sin faithfully, and where are we? |
17228 | We shel hev sum fites: there''s Amakelitish post masters and Phillistine collectors to displace, but with a second Jaxon at our he d what can we fear? |
17228 | We will burn his school houses, and destroy his spelling books( for shall the nigger be our superior? |
17228 | What Androo Johnson means by dictatin to the Convenshuns uv sovereign States? |
17228 | What cood they hev bin thinkin uv? |
17228 | What did he do? |
17228 | What do yoo think about it, Deekin? |
17228 | What is a dozen tradesmen and two hundred and fifty niggers to the gellorious old Dimocratic John Guttle? |
17228 | What is it all about? |
17228 | What would they do if they he d their rites?" |
17228 | What''s the yoose uv any oath_ he_ takes?" |
17228 | When Ham wuz cust by Noar, wat wuz that cuss? |
17228 | When will reason return to the people? |
17228 | Wher is the Elisha who''ll wear it?" |
17228 | Where is the President?" |
17228 | Where kin we look for comfort? |
17228 | Where shall we find refuge? |
17228 | Where''s the ring for our finger, and the shoes for our feet? |
17228 | Who furnisht him his licker for eight months, and who hez the best rite for the first dig at the proceeds uv the position? |
17228 | Who is the Collectors, the Assessors, et settry? |
17228 | Who knows? |
17228 | Who pays for the Halls? |
17228 | Who pays the Powder? |
17228 | Who pays the music? |
17228 | Who will deliver us? |
17228 | Who will pluck us from the pit into wich we hev fallen? |
17228 | Who wuz the Saviour? |
17228 | Who''d sling the flag and the 36 stars at the people, and who''d leave the Constooshn in their hands? |
17228 | Who''s got em? |
17228 | Why do n''t it put onto us a purple robe? |
17228 | Why do n''t it see us afar off, and run out to meet us? |
17228 | Why do yoo talk uv wat South karliny will and wo nt do? |
17228 | Why harrow up the public bosom, or lasserate the public mind? |
17228 | Why wuz we not satisfied with it? |
17228 | Why,"sed he,"do yoo think I use all the shot I hev? |
17228 | Wich is new wine? |
17228 | Wilkes Booth''s gost came in, and wanted to know what he wuz to hev in the new deal,"for,"sed he,"ef''t had n''t bin for me, where''d yoo all hev bin? |
17228 | Will Androo Johnson, wich Ablishnists call Moses, but wich we, for obvious reasons, style the 2d Jaxon, heed that cry? |
17228 | Will he do it? |
17228 | Will you heed her cry? |
17228 | Wood he go through with it? |
17228 | Wood he lock horns with Wade and Sumner, and dare the wrath uv Thad Stevens? |
17228 | Wood he? |
17228 | Wood it trouble that eminent patriot Breckenridge, after all the times he swore to support the Constitution, to sware to it wunst more? |
17228 | Wuz Thad Stevens? |
17228 | Wuz dey all brudders?" |
17228 | Wuz it any wonder that we went under? |
17228 | Wuz not our experience in 1864 sufficient to deter em from makin any experiment wich involved abandonment uv any uv our principles? |
17228 | Wuz the cuss a mistake? |
17228 | Wuz the experiment a success? |
17228 | Wuz the nigger not the race that wuz cussed? |
17228 | Wuz this bauble the price uv yoor honesty and yoor principle? |
17228 | [ Illustration: DO YOU KNOW CHARLES SUMNER?] |
17228 | _ By the Court_.--Did they drink together? |
17228 | and hezn''t he he d nineteen yaller children, every one uv wich he compelled, agin their will, to marry full- blooded niggers? |
17228 | and wat harm is noosepapers to em, when they ca n''t read? |
17228 | and where''s the fatted calf he ought to kill? |
17228 | and wood it trouble him to break it any more than it did in''61? |
17228 | by pledgin us to give up the ijee uv seceshen, and by pledgin on us to pay the Nashnel Yankee debt?" |
17228 | for ef they cood, how many uv us wood to- day be holdin our places? |
17228 | how cood they be so blind ez to refoose these olive branches?" |
17228 | or will he persist in clingin to the black idol he embraced four years ago? |
17228 | think yoo yoo''d hev if hauled up afore a nigger mayor on a charge uv disorderly conduct? |
17228 | to the trumpets? |
17228 | to, uv a half dozen niggers wich wuz consumed when it wuz burned, wat more kin I want? |
17228 | uv yoor salary to a fund to be used for the defeat uv objectionable Congrismen in the disloyal states North? |
17228 | why, indeed? |
28921 | / And are not men asham''d of dismal wars?" |
28921 | A stander- by took me to task In some such words, I think, as these:"Are n''t you ashamed, be who you may, To mourn the burial of this plague?" |
28921 | Again, what is harsher than this epigram? |
28921 | For example, in this epigram to what point are so many trite similes piled up? |
28921 | For example, what could be more resourcefully developed than this epigram? |
28921 | For example, who can tolerate this German epigram? |
28921 | For what is our aim in reading books except to nourish and fashion judgement? |
28921 | How shall your honors fail? |
28921 | I sighed and said,"What is the point Of such expense? |
28921 | Or than this distich? |
28921 | Or when you read the line_ Quadrupedante putrem sonitu quatit ungula campum_,[2] does n''t the sound of running horses strike your ears? |
28921 | T. Hanmer''s(?) |
28921 | That no one meets you willingly, That where you come they go, that vast Areas of silence circle you-- Why so? |
28921 | They say... A drink? |
28921 | What''s there in Bacchus''ivy? |
28921 | When you hear, for example, the well- known_ procumbit humi bos_, do you not seem to hear the blunt sound of the falling bull? |
28921 | Who would put up with what I do? |
28921 | Why do you dream of Cirrha, bare Permessis? |
28921 | Why, then, title an epigram_ To Gargilianus_ or_ Cecilianus_, which gives no idea of what the epigram is about? |
28921 | With every last hair lost behind, ahead, What has the bald man left to lose? |
28921 | You want them short? |
28921 | You want to know what harm you do? |
28921 | [ 27] Similarly, why in another well- known epigram is the same idea repeated again and again? |
28921 | [ 46] and in this: Though you send presents to old men and widows Why should I call you, sir, munificent? |
28921 | [ 49] And what would the following epigram be if it had not been perfected and prepared for by the handling? |
28921 | and by Thomas Pecke,_ Parnassi puerperium_, London, 1659:"Can there be many strings; and yet no Jars? |
15718 | And was he pleased? |
15718 | Are You a Good or a Poor Penman? |
15718 | Are you certain your drains are not stopped up? |
15718 | Are you full- up, George? |
15718 | Broke down? |
15718 | But I tell you--"I know, dear; but what are we going to do about it? 15718 But how?" |
15718 | But supposing the electric apparatus failed? |
15718 | But what am I goin''to do till then? 15718 But where does the dignity come in?" |
15718 | Can you take the first train? |
15718 | Did n''t you feel anything, my boy? |
15718 | Do n''t you want to know how these trucks are going to make you money? |
15718 | Do you really think you have a right to devote so much time to outside work? |
15718 | Done los''something, boss? |
15718 | Ella,said Miss Bartelme, looking up from her desk,"why did n''t you tell me the truth when you came in here the other day? |
15718 | Got any friends in the army? |
15718 | Got anything else? |
15718 | Got ta job? |
15718 | Have n''t you any reasons at all? |
15718 | Have n''t you ever talked it over at home or at school? |
15718 | Have n''t you ever thought about it? |
15718 | How are you, Steve? 15718 How do you feel now?" |
15718 | How many times have I got to tell all of you to put the head of my bed toward the engine? |
15718 | How would you like to go into a good home where some one would love you and care for you? |
15718 | I do n''t know-- is that a good position? |
15718 | If you have n''t anything to write about, why write at all? |
15718 | Is n''t that it? |
15718 | Is this point essential to the accomplishment of my aim? |
15718 | Really, you know,he mused,"does it pay Society to reward its individuals in inverse ratio to their usefulness?" |
15718 | Saturday afternoons off? |
15718 | Say, Mis''Cronan, there was n''t no real dragon, was they? |
15718 | Say, kid, ai n''t it the limit that a woman ca n''t vote on her own business? |
15718 | Suppose I have company for dinner and the Home Assistant is n''t through her work when her eight hours are up, what happens? |
15718 | Suppose I wanted to buy them anyway? |
15718 | Supposing the motor driving the gyroscopes broke down; what then? |
15718 | THEY CALL ME THE''HEN EDITOR''THE STORY OF A SMALL- TOWN NEWSPAPER WOMAN By SADIE L. MOSSLER"What do you stay buried in this burg for? |
15718 | That meant perpetuity to us, do n''t you see? |
15718 | Them soldiers have a pretty easy life, do n''t they? |
15718 | They was n''t no really dragon, was they? |
15718 | Think you''ll like to soldier with us? |
15718 | Vat, Minna, you ai n''t goin''to stay out of de mill today and lose your pay? 15718 Was n''t it so?" |
15718 | We got out some paper today, did n''t we? |
15718 | Well, could n''t I stand on a box? |
15718 | Well, have you ever seen the chauffeur at night, after being out all day with the car? 15718 Well, how old are you, Steve?" |
15718 | Were you lost in the cave, as Tom Sawyer and Becky Thatcher were? |
15718 | What can I do for you? |
15718 | What do you mean,she declared,"by putting it in the paper that I served light refreshments at my party?" |
15718 | What does it mean anyway? |
15718 | What has he done to show that? |
15718 | What is the reason that so many Arbor day trees die? |
15718 | What kind of a position? |
15718 | What made you think you needed motor trucks? |
15718 | What part of my material will make the strongest appeal to the readers of this newspaper? |
15718 | What shall I write about? |
15718 | What time d''ye have to get to work in the morning? |
15718 | What would my readers ask this person if they had a chance to talk to him about this subject? |
15718 | What''s your name? |
15718 | Why do you want to be a chauffeur? |
15718 | Why do you want to leave school? |
15718 | Why, Ella, would n''t you like to have a kind friend, somebody you could confide in and go walking with and who would be interested in you? |
15718 | Will the reader like this? |
15718 | Will these girls from offices and stores do their work well? 15718 Will you contribute$ 500 to get rid of them?" |
15718 | With Briddie? |
15718 | Would you like to be a machinist? |
15718 | Would you like to be a plumber? |
15718 | You in the army? |
15718 | ( 2) HOW MUCH HEAT IS THERE IN YOUR COAL? |
15718 | ( 3) WHO''S THE BEST BOSS? |
15718 | ( 3)(_ Kansas City Star_) MUST YOUR HOME BURN? |
15718 | ( 3)(_ New York Times)_ FARM WIZARD ACHIEVES AGRICULTURAL WONDERS BY ROBERT G. SKERRETT Can a farm be operated like a factory? |
15718 | ( 4)"SHE SANK BY THE BOW"--BUT WHY? |
15718 | ( 4)(_ Good Housekeeping_) GERALDINE FARRAR''S ADVICE TO ASPIRING SINGERS INTERVIEW BY JOHN CORBIN"When did I first decide to be an opera singer?" |
15718 | ( 4)(_ San Francisco Call_) DOES IT PAY THE STATE TO EDUCATE PRETTY GIRLS FOR TEACHERS? |
15718 | ( 5) HOW SHALL WE KEEP WARM THIS WINTER? |
15718 | ( 6) DOES DEEP PLOWING PAY? |
15718 | ( 6)(_ The Outlook_) GROW OLD ALONG WITH ME BY CHARLES HENRY LERRIGO Are you interested in adding fifteen years to your life? |
15718 | ( 7)(_ Country Gentleman_) SIMPLE ACCOUNTS FOR FARM BUSINESS BY MORTON O. COOPER Is your farm making money or losing it? |
15718 | A picture of a young woman feeding chickens in a backyard poultry run that accompanied an article entitled"Did You Ever Think of a Meat Garden?" |
15718 | After the sick man''s job? |
15718 | And he? |
15718 | And if you''re no scholar, how can you become a full professor? |
15718 | And the kind of woman who should attempt the summer camp for girls as a means of additional income? |
15718 | And were they not checks of a denomination far larger than those we selfishly cashed for ourselves? |
15718 | And what other flower, at whatever price per dozen, will give you such abundance of beauty without a fear of frosts? |
15718 | And what then? |
15718 | And what was a poor professor doing at Newport? |
15718 | And will not Sue lose, possibly, some of the gentle manners and dainty ways inculcated at home, by close contact with divers other ways and manners? |
15718 | And with those who succeed, what have they more than I? |
15718 | And yet, when willing to stop being a lady, what could one do? |
15718 | Are concrete examples and specific instances employed effectively? |
15718 | Are figures of speech used effectively? |
15718 | Are important ideas placed at the beginning of sentences? |
15718 | Are the paragraphs long or short? |
15718 | Are they well- organized units? |
15718 | BY KATHERINE ATKINSON Does it pay the state to educate its teachers? |
15718 | But even when the way has been paved for it, the question,"Why do you want to leave school?" |
15718 | But how about the porter who is not so smart-- the man who has the lean run? |
15718 | But it was that latter part that held me back, that and one other factor:"Those who won,"and"What do they get out of it more than I?" |
15718 | But meanwhile, why be too down- hearted? |
15718 | But what about the employees-- the clerks and the factory workers? |
15718 | By what means are the narrative passages made interesting? |
15718 | Camouflage? |
15718 | Can fickle nature be offset and crops be brought to maturity upon schedule time? |
15718 | Can she trust any one else to watch over her in the matter of flannels and dry stockings? |
15718 | Can you beat it?" |
15718 | Company reputation? |
15718 | Could an article on the same subject, or on a similar one, be written for a newspaper in your section of the country? |
15718 | Could any parts of the article be omitted without serious loss? |
15718 | Could the parts be rearranged with gain in clearness, interest, or progress? |
15718 | Did the writer accomplish his purpose? |
15718 | Did the writer aim to entertain, to inform, or to give practical guidance? |
15718 | Do n''t you understand that it is much easier for me to help you if you speak the truth right away?" |
15718 | Do normal school and university graduates continue teaching long enough to make adequate return for the money invested in their training? |
15718 | Do the descriptive parts of the article portray the impressions vividly? |
15718 | Do the paragraphs begin with important ideas? |
15718 | Do the sentences yield their meaning easily when read rapidly? |
15718 | Do the words, figures of speech, sentences, and paragraphs in this article suggest to you possible means of improving your own style? |
15718 | Do we seem very amusing to you? |
15718 | Do you know what it is to lie awake at night and plan your campaign for the following day? |
15718 | Do you know what they have called me, the old men and women who are wise-- the full- bloods? |
15718 | Do you know? |
15718 | Do you want the rest of the children workin''ten hours a day too? |
15718 | Does it have more than one appeal? |
15718 | Does it seem to be particularly well adapted to the readers of the publication in which it was printed? |
15718 | Does the article contain any material that seems unnecessary to the accomplishment of the purpose? |
15718 | Does the article march on steadily from beginning to end? |
15718 | Does the article suggest to you some sources from which you might obtain material for your own articles? |
15718 | Does the writer seem to have had a definitely formulated purpose? |
15718 | Does this pay? |
15718 | Finally:"Would you like to be a doctor?" |
15718 | For what does it profit a tired teacher if she fill her camp list and have no margin of profit for her weeks of hard labor? |
15718 | From the time of"Mistress Mary, quite contrary, How does your garden grow?" |
15718 | From the_ Journal of Heredity_ was gleaned material for an article entitled"What Chance Has the Poor Child?" |
15718 | Gone as you look at the tiny hand, is n''t it? |
15718 | Got anybody you can let me have for to- day?" |
15718 | Got anything else?" |
15718 | Had we a right not to have children? |
15718 | Had we a right to have children? |
15718 | Have n''t I already dragged you down-- you, a lovely, fine- grained, highly evolved woman-- down to the position of a servant in my house? |
15718 | Have they been"in"on this"big shove toward prosperity?" |
15718 | Have they found it a"nice"town to live in? |
15718 | Have you ever given thought to the accidentalism of many great discoveries? |
15718 | Have you felt that you would_ like_ to take a month''s vacation, but with so many"irons in the fire"things would go to smash if you did? |
15718 | Have you followed the chain of accidents, coincidences, and fortunate circumstances? |
15718 | He must ask himself,"What is my aim in writing this article?" |
15718 | He ought to ask himself,"How widespread is the interest in my subject? |
15718 | How could they waken the public to woman''s bitter necessity for shorter hours? |
15718 | How did they accomplish the next move? |
15718 | How does the Home Assistant plan work in households where two or more helpers are kept? |
15718 | How far back should we be were it not for these fortuitous circumstances? |
15718 | How far did the character of the subject determine the methods of treatment? |
15718 | How long is a second? |
15718 | How much of it was based on his personal observations? |
15718 | How much of the article was based on his personal experience? |
15718 | How much will it appeal to the average individual? |
15718 | How would you state this apparent purpose in one sentence? |
15718 | How''s that for equality? |
15718 | How? |
15718 | I have done both and ought to know.... Can it be merely because the one is done strictly in the home or because no one can see you do it? |
15718 | I''d stand a good chance of losing a customer, would n''t I? |
15718 | I''m so glad to learn of it; but is n''t it tedious to cut the celery into such small bits?" |
15718 | If a person has ability, will not the world learn it? |
15718 | In an article in the_ Philadelphia Ledger_ on"What Can I Do to Earn Money?" |
15718 | Is it practical?" |
15718 | Is it sane? |
15718 | Is it the tunes or the words or we ourselves? |
15718 | Is not the dear old fellow always absent- minded on the stage? |
15718 | Is such a policy safe? |
15718 | Is that the old idea? |
15718 | Is the article easy to read? |
15718 | Is the article of general or of local interest? |
15718 | Is the article predominantly narrative, descriptive, or expository? |
15718 | Is the beginning an integral part of the article? |
15718 | Is the beginning skillfully connected with the body of the article? |
15718 | Is the diction literary or colloquial, specific or general, original or trite, connotative or denotative? |
15718 | Is the length of the article proportionate to the subject? |
15718 | Is the length of the beginning proportionate to the length of the whole article? |
15718 | Is the material so arranged that the average reader will reach the conclusion that the writer intended to have him reach? |
15718 | Is the purpose a worthy one? |
15718 | Is the subject so presented that the average reader is led to see its application to himself and to his own affairs? |
15718 | Is the title attractive, accurate, concise, and concrete? |
15718 | Is the tone well suited to the subject? |
15718 | Is the type of beginning well adapted to the subject and the material? |
15718 | Is there any evidence that the article was timely when it was published? |
15718 | Is there any other type better adapted to the subject and material? |
15718 | Is there variety in paragraph beginnings? |
15718 | Is there variety in sentence length and structure? |
15718 | Is there variety in the methods of presentation? |
15718 | It looks dull, does n''t it? |
15718 | It sounds fanciful, does n''t it? |
15718 | Mary Antin herself accepted the Is this paragraph girls''invitation to attend the graduation out of logical order? |
15718 | Now is n''t that just like a husband? |
15718 | One day it flashed upon me:''Why invest in city property? |
15718 | Or is it merely because it is unskilled labor? |
15718 | Overalls on, sleeves rolled up, face streaming with perspiration? |
15718 | Precincts 1, 4, 5 of the 9th Ward"So yez would be afther havin''me scratch Misther Troy?" |
15718 | Price? |
15718 | QUESTION BEGINNINGS( 1)(_ Kansas City Star_) TRACING THE DROUTH TO ITS LAIR What becomes of the rainfall in the plains states? |
15718 | Repairing the mechanism, polishing the brass? |
15718 | Say, how much do you want for them anyhow?" |
15718 | Should Carl be blamed? |
15718 | Should I be blamed? |
15718 | Should only the financially fit be allowed to survive-- to reproduce their species? |
15718 | Some of them have a habit of dropping in at the New Haven ticket offices and demanding:"Is Eugene running up on the Merchants''to- night?" |
15718 | That I should go to school every day, while I worked-- who could dream of such a thing? |
15718 | That appealed to me as printable, but where to put it in the paper? |
15718 | That is not why he was called an economist; but can you blame my brothers for doing their best to break the engagement?... |
15718 | The compulsion of the thing, or the appeal of the phrase-- which? |
15718 | The direct question,"Do you know why the sky is blue?" |
15718 | The fact that Columbus, one of her Is this comment by countrymen, had discovered the country the writer effective? |
15718 | The following are typical question titles and sub- titles:( 1) WHAT IS A FAIR PRICE FOR MILK? |
15718 | The house is still standing at Rossville, Ga. Do you know what the old people tell us children when we wish we could go back there?" |
15718 | The housekeeper who has been in the habit of coming into her kitchen about half past five and saying,"Oh, Mary, what can we have for dinner? |
15718 | The new plan seems expensive? |
15718 | Then he added:"But what could you expect? |
15718 | Then, looking up and taking in the big, raw- boned physique of the youngster,"Ever think of joinin''?" |
15718 | There''s raisins in this rice puddin'', ai n''t there?" |
15718 | They''ve got us down-- are we going to let them keep us down? |
15718 | Tired to death?" |
15718 | To what extent are narration and description used for expository purposes? |
15718 | To what type does it conform? |
15718 | To which type does this article conform? |
15718 | Troy to contend with again?" |
15718 | Troy, pledged body and soul to the manufacturers? |
15718 | Troy? |
15718 | WHO''LL DO JOHN''S WORK? |
15718 | Was any of the material obtained from newspapers or periodicals? |
15718 | Was there any law compelling them to give their money to their Alma Mater? |
15718 | We, moreover, in return for our interest in education, did we not shamelessly accept monthly checks from the university treasurer''s office? |
15718 | Were n''t they in the hands of the"big cinch,"as a certain combination of business men in St. Louis is known? |
15718 | Were we? |
15718 | Whadd''ye think the man wanted to paint the picture for if there was n''t a dragon? |
15718 | What Some Recent Tests Have Demonstrated( 7) SHALL I START A CANNING BUSINESS? |
15718 | What appears to have suggested the subject to the writer? |
15718 | What becomes of the older porters? |
15718 | What better than that a woman should set the tune for that voice? |
15718 | What can be done for Lemuel? |
15718 | What color are they?" |
15718 | What could be done? |
15718 | What could the papers do? |
15718 | What department is showing a profit? |
15718 | What did it mean? |
15718 | What has happened? |
15718 | What has he done? |
15718 | What have I, a college professor''s wife, to confess? |
15718 | What if he had been in haste, or had been driven off by the queen''s yellow- jacketed soldiers? |
15718 | What if he had no curiosity, if he had not been a paper- maker, if he had not enjoyed acquaintance with Voelter? |
15718 | What is he? |
15718 | What is life insurance but the bet of an unknown number of yearly premiums against the payment of the policy? |
15718 | What is the character of the sub- title, and what relation does it bear to the title? |
15718 | What kind of a salesman do you call yourself anyway?" |
15718 | What main topics are taken up in the article? |
15718 | What next?" |
15718 | What of it? |
15718 | What one is piling up a loss? |
15718 | What other methods might have been used to advantage in presenting this subject? |
15718 | What phases of it are likely to have the greatest interest for the greatest number of persons?" |
15718 | What portions of the article were evidently obtained by interviews? |
15718 | What possible subjects does the article suggest to you? |
15718 | What reports, documents, technical periodicals, and books of reference were used as sources in preparing the article? |
15718 | What type of beginning is used? |
15718 | What was you calc''lating askin''for showin''me where you found it?" |
15718 | What, for the average reader, is the source of interest in the article? |
15718 | When a writer undertakes to choose between the two, he should ask himself,"Are the facts worth remembering?" |
15718 | When we get''em linked together with speedways, where''ll you find anything prettier?" |
15718 | When? |
15718 | Where did you get your recipe?" |
15718 | Where is de_ fleisch_ and de_ brot_ widout your wages?" |
15718 | Where? |
15718 | Who is John Browning? |
15718 | Who? |
15718 | Why are so many responses received to the other advertisement?" |
15718 | Why ca n''t a mistake be made in either direction?" |
15718 | Why ca n''t this farm bureau put on a spraying service?" |
15718 | Why did they fail? |
15718 | Why do n''t the people around here drain their country?" |
15718 | Why is a signed name to an article necessary, when everyone knows when the paper comes out that I wrote the article? |
15718 | Why is it, then, that the people make such a sorry exhibition of themselves when they attempt to sing the patriotic songs of our country? |
15718 | Why not a little farm? |
15718 | Why not in my own department? |
15718 | Why not? |
15718 | Why should I pay back the money? |
15718 | Why? |
15718 | Why? |
15718 | Why? |
15718 | Will you help me to get a job?" |
15718 | Will you mind if I eat supper here?" |
15718 | Will you?" |
15718 | With what other flower can you do that? |
15718 | Would You Rather Work For a Man or For a Machine? |
15718 | Would n''t you rather they worked her nine hours a day instead o''ten-- such a soft little kid with such a lot o''growin''to do? |
15718 | Would the beginning attract the attention and hold the interest of the average reader? |
15718 | Would you rather not have a good interested worker for eight hours a day than none at all? |
15718 | You never heard of him? |
15718 | You never step on your own toe, do you, or hit yourself in the face-- if you can help it? |
15718 | and what do you get out of it? |
15718 | and,"What do I expect to accomplish?" |
15718 | and,"Will they furnish food for thought?" |
15718 | ¶"How old are you?" |
18823 | And de boat,continued Johnson,"was to strike a snag and smash to pieces, and eberybody go into de water, who would you save?" |
18823 | Johnson,said Billy Rice,"who would you save, yo''mudder or yo''wife?" |
18823 | Tell you what, boss,says''Rastus, after a moment''s reflection:"ca n''t you put it in that I am just as honest as my instincts will let me be?" |
18823 | Then what do you mean by''maistly,''if you have not lived here most of your life? |
18823 | Then,said he,"repeat the first speech of Sir Peter Teazle,''When an old bachelor marries a young wife, what is he to expect?''" |
18823 | Well,he said,"wo n''t you try me on the statutes? |
18823 | What do you mean by''maistly''? 18823 Why not,"he was asked,"have n''t you all the materials?" |
18823 | Will ze lady and ze gentleman haf table d''hote or a la carte? |
18823 | You do n''t remember me? |
18823 | ''Spose you was in de boat, in de middle of de river, wid yo''wife and yo''mudder- in- law?" |
18823 | Again, sir, when we look for those who have been most distinguished as men of letters, in the usual sense of the word; where do we find them? |
18823 | Ah, is there not a wider sovereignty over the race, and a deeper homage from human nature than ever can come from an allegiance to power? |
18823 | And how was this obtained? |
18823 | And now for the outlook in other senses than that of material prosperity, how is it? |
18823 | And shall we not proclaim That blood of honest fame, Which no tyranny can tame By its chains? |
18823 | And what is the next resting- place in our pilgrim''s progress-- the pilgrim of Outre- Mer? |
18823 | And what is this"yore and gore"fiction when you analyze it? |
18823 | And yet who has given a sword or spread a feast to that purest flame of chivalrous heroism, Richard Wainwright? |
18823 | Are the echoes which resound in this hall Irish or American echoes? |
18823 | Are we, of the Chamber of Commerce, worthy of the blessings that have come down to us out of the glorious past? |
18823 | But is it because of such triumphs as these that the name of Scotland appeals so powerfully to the heart and the imagination of men? |
18823 | But shall we dare to think that the coming generation will have no songs and no singers? |
18823 | But what can I say to thank you for the kind manner in which you have received me? |
18823 | But what can I say, Mr. Chairman, of the Chamber of to- day? |
18823 | But what of the problem itself? |
18823 | But what would that occasion have amounted to, either in the fact of it or in the celebration of it, if the English had not been there? |
18823 | But where did we miscarry even in that calculation? |
18823 | But why am I talking about smashed crockery when I am told that it is the very life of your trade? |
18823 | By what fair rule shall the stigma be put upon one section, while the other escapes? |
18823 | Can any undergraduate of either institution, can any recent graduate of either institution, imagine a man responding to that toast? |
18823 | Can we not come together for the future? |
18823 | Can we solve it? |
18823 | Can you imagine a Scotsman, however matter- of- fact and commonplace, offering such a definition of his native land? |
18823 | Could we have done that in the sight of God or man? |
18823 | Could we have left them in a state of anarchy and justified ourselves in our own consciences or before the tribunal of mankind? |
18823 | Could we have required less and done our duty? |
18823 | Counsel asked him,"Were you born here?" |
18823 | Despairing, here I stop, And my poor offering drop,-- Why stammer I when thou art here to sing? |
18823 | Did I say before the dawn? |
18823 | Did we ask their consent to liberate them from Spanish sovereignty or to enter Manila Bay and destroy the Spanish sea- power there? |
18823 | Did we need their consent to perform a great act for humanity? |
18823 | Did you come here when you were a child?" |
18823 | Do you? |
18823 | Does not that record honor him, and vindicate his neighbors? |
18823 | For, what have we not done on a little oatmeal? |
18823 | Has it not always been so? |
18823 | How did you know that I was a Democrat?" |
18823 | How did you know that I was a minister?" |
18823 | How shall we distinguish between Irishmen and Americans? |
18823 | How then have their deeds become the source of song and story? |
18823 | How was the doubt that stood, all unwilling, between outstretched hands and sympathetic hearts, to be, in fact, dispelled? |
18823 | I could get anudder wife, but where under the blue canopy of hebben could I get anudder dear old mudder?" |
18823 | If in the years of the future they are established in government under law and liberty, who will regret our perils and sacrifices? |
18823 | If this had been revealed to him, would it not have required all the glow of his imagination and all the strength of his judgment to believe it? |
18823 | If we can benefit these remote peoples, who will object? |
18823 | In what spirit shall we meet them as they arise? |
18823 | Is it not manifest destiny that old Nieuw Amsterdam, the present New York, should become a greater city than any on the earth to- day? |
18823 | Is it not that of one language in common between the two nations? |
18823 | Is it quite safe for your children to grow up in ignorance of your past, while you are looking down upon the century of the future? |
18823 | Is there anything more delightful in this world than to be flattered and fed? |
18823 | It seems to me that the old English phrase with regard to a man in difficulties, which asks:"What is he going to do about it?" |
18823 | Just as they were approaching a station, she said to a gentleman, in the compartment with her:"Will you assist me to alight at this station, sir? |
18823 | MR. CHAIRMAN:--I have the honor to propose the toast of"Mere Man"[ laughter], but why"Mere Man,"I want to know? |
18823 | May I not speak here of this gift of the Players? |
18823 | May I venture to suggest that there are some ways by which it is possible for us to minimize the danger we find in these discontents? |
18823 | May we not therefore claim the indistinguishable unity of nationality, of sentiment, and of feeling? |
18823 | Now, what remains? |
18823 | One of the boys inquired,"What am I to be punished for, sir?" |
18823 | Or deceive them, when we are educating them to the utmost limit of our ability? |
18823 | Or have robbed a people who, twenty- five years from unrewarded slavery, have amassed in one State$ 20,000,000 of property? |
18823 | Or outlaw them when we work side by side with them? |
18823 | Or that we intend to oppress the people we are arming every day? |
18823 | Remembering some past occurrences on occasions like this, we agree with the pupil who was asked by his teacher,"What is the meaning of elocution?" |
18823 | Shall man no longer behold God and nature face to face? |
18823 | Shall we build the sepulchre of poetry? |
18823 | Shall we ever think of Monmouth pleading for his life with James II, without remembering the picture which hung last year upon these walls? |
18823 | Shall we express ourselves only in histories and criticisms? |
18823 | Shall we not have new thought, new work and new worship? |
18823 | The fact is that it has been partly due to a certain-- may I speak of our ancestors as having been qualified by a certain dulness? |
18823 | Upon their judgment and conscience can we not rely? |
18823 | Was it necessary to ask their consent to capture Manila, the capital of their islands? |
18823 | Was it suppression in Virginia and natural causes in Massachusetts? |
18823 | Was it, in fact, a reproduction of a new song, or a mystification of a great modern, careless of fame and scornful of his time? |
18823 | Was this Weltschmerz, which we thought a malady of our day, endemic in Persia in 1100? |
18823 | We commit the highest destinies of this Republic, which some of us hope bears the hope of the world in her womb-- to whom? |
18823 | Well, I accept the fact, although I find it hard to realize, and I ask myself, what is there to show for this half lifetime that has passed? |
18823 | Well, I think I can paraphrase that and say,"When a young man enters the theatrical profession, what is he to expect?" |
18823 | Well, now, gentlemen, what are you laughing at? |
18823 | What are you to say for us who graduated under President Day? |
18823 | What can I say in reply to all that the kindly feeling of my friend has dictated? |
18823 | What could the critic do with Claude Monet thirty- five years ago? |
18823 | What could the critic do with Robert Browning when he appeared? |
18823 | What did Washington do for us? |
18823 | What do we ask of you? |
18823 | What does it signify to us? |
18823 | What does it typify, sirs? |
18823 | What dreams romantic filled my brain, And summoned back to life again The Paladins of Charlemagne, The Cid Campeador?" |
18823 | What else is there for this Republic to do? |
18823 | What has the critic done thus far with Walt Whitman, the greatest spiritual democrat this nation has ever produced? |
18823 | What invites the negro to the ballot- box? |
18823 | What is it in the Puritan heritage, externally so bare and cold, that make it intrinsically so poetic and inspiring? |
18823 | What is it in the sense of material prosperity? |
18823 | What is literature, and who are men of letters? |
18823 | What is that agency? |
18823 | What is that cause? |
18823 | What is the character of that monument? |
18823 | What is the first hallowed spot in the Transatlantic pilgrimage of every true American? |
18823 | What is the testimony of the courts? |
18823 | What is the true Mecca of his heart? |
18823 | What is this Constitution for which we have been fighting, and which must be preserved? |
18823 | What more, or what less, should he do and do his duty? |
18823 | What nation was ever able to write an accurate programme of the war upon which it was entering, much less decree in advance the scope of its results? |
18823 | What other court in the world has that power? |
18823 | What people, penniless, illiterate, has done so well? |
18823 | What resulted? |
18823 | What solution do they offer? |
18823 | What solution, then, can we offer for the problem? |
18823 | What then did the college do to justify our speaking of the war now? |
18823 | What to him is friend or foeman, Rise of moon or set of sun, Hand of man or kiss of woman? |
18823 | What were some of the distinctive features in the character of the old Domine? |
18823 | When will he have the civil rights that are his?" |
18823 | When will the black man cast a free ballot? |
18823 | When will the blacks cast a free ballot? |
18823 | Where is"the West"? |
18823 | Wherein lies the wonderful spell?"] |
18823 | Who can circumscribe it? |
18823 | Who can measure it? |
18823 | Who can, except by the simple rule of three, which never errs, determine its progress? |
18823 | Who is to stop it? |
18823 | Who mentions the scores of seamen who begged to be of the immortal seven who were his companions in that forlorn hope? |
18823 | Who repeats the names of the young officers who pleaded for Hobson''s chance to risk his life in the hull and hell of the Merrimac? |
18823 | Who will not rejoice in our heroism and humanity? |
18823 | Who would not rather be a great man than a great king? |
18823 | Who would not rather be a great woman than a great queen? |
18823 | Whom have we with us to- day? |
18823 | Why all the honor that we pay them? |
18823 | Why did n''t I dream a novel by Turgenef, or Bjornsen? |
18823 | Why do you laugh? |
18823 | Why do you laugh? |
18823 | Why is this? |
18823 | Why not? |
18823 | Why should we disguise from ourselves that there are great prejudices to the profession of an actor? |
18823 | Why then? |
18823 | Why was wampum good money in its time? |
18823 | Why? |
18823 | Will you permit me to thank you and your honored President for your gracious reception of me to- night? |
18823 | Would you not prefer to go home and sleep upon what you already have? |
18823 | You do n''t have electric lights or anything of that kind? |
18823 | and de boat strike a snag?" |
18823 | was dumb? |
13457 | And pray, sir, what may I be worth in the tariff of his Excellency''s good graces? |
13457 | And that lady who is painted? |
13457 | And that young lady with fair hair? |
13457 | And the other? |
13457 | And this is his birthday-- you have n''t made any mistake? |
13457 | And what about your boy? |
13457 | And what do you think of them? |
13457 | And what may your horse, dogs, and hawks stand you in? |
13457 | Are n''t they famously good? |
13457 | Arst him,whispers Mr. Wells,"how many he killed? |
13457 | Believe what? 13457 Believed what?" |
13457 | Betty,I asked one of my parishioners,"why do you make these ill- natured, irritating speeches to your next- door neighbour?" |
13457 | But am I to look at my watch? 13457 But,"you inquire,"is it not true that Joe was once a pirate?" |
13457 | But,you object,"if game is so rare in Tarascon, what do the Tarascon sportsmen do every Sunday?" |
13457 | Can I tell you what? |
13457 | Colonel, perhaps, and aide- de- camp to his Imperial Majesty? |
13457 | Do n''t you, sir? 13457 Do you ever come to London?" |
13457 | Do you wish to dishonour yourself? 13457 General, then-- Monsieur le Général?" |
13457 | Have you ever edited an agricultural paper before? |
13457 | Have you seen any numbers of_ The Pickwick Papers_? |
13457 | How was the_ Rambler_ published, ma''am? |
13457 | In the house where she was a servant? |
13457 | Is it not_ extraordinary? |
13457 | It is not painted to the life, For where''s the trousers blue? 13457 My dear doctor,"said he to Goldsmith,"what harm does it do to a man to call him Holofernes?" |
13457 | Now,said Lamb,"you old lake poet, you rascally poet, why do you call Voltaire dull?" |
13457 | Oh, they do n''t, do n''t they? 13457 People are kind to you?" |
13457 | Pooh, ma''am,he exclaimed to Mrs. Carter,"who is the worse for being talked of uncharitably?" |
13457 | Son of the Queen? |
13457 | The Prince merely said as he passed you--"Well, what did he say? |
13457 | Think of it? 13457 Uncle,"I said, with a great effort,"will you buy that doll for me?" |
13457 | Well, that''s whimsical enough; and how much may that lady be worth, according to his estimation? |
13457 | Well, what will happen to you? |
13457 | What can I do for you? |
13457 | What do you think of Guy Fawkes and Judas Iscariot? |
13457 | What is the meaning of all this? |
13457 | What may the game be worth which you kill in the course of a year? |
13457 | What ought you to do next? |
13457 | What ought you to do on Sunday? |
13457 | What would you? |
13457 | Which is Adam and which is Eve? |
13457 | Who is the Princess Alice? |
13457 | Who is this for? |
13457 | Who stole Pat Doolan''s pig? 13457 Whom do we mourn this time?" |
13457 | Why? |
13457 | With me, sir? |
13457 | You are sure of it? |
13457 | You going to Parry, sir? |
13457 | You know that, do n''t you? 13457 You know to read the future?" |
13457 | You''ve heard of Alabama, I dare say? 13457 Your baggage, registair free, sir?" |
13457 | Your old missus is dead, ai n''t she, Joe? |
13457 | _ My dear fellow,said Jerrold,"why go to the other extreme?_"*****"_ What a magnificent- looking man!" |
13457 | _ Tell_ you, you cornstalk, you cabbage, you son of a cauliflower? 13457 ''And this you call--?'' 13457 ''Tis yours? 13457 (_ Anglicè_,You ox- headed lout, are you stone deaf? |
13457 | ***** And is W. Bullar going to work upon you with his"simple mysticism"? |
13457 | ***** King James said to the fly,"Have I three kingdoms, and thou must needs fly into my eye?" |
13457 | *****"Why do I smile?" |
13457 | *****"_ Do you approve of clergymen riding?" |
13457 | A Morris Greek- and- Gothic song? |
13457 | A faded and recumbent stranger, pausing in a profound reverie over the rim of a basin, asked me what kind of place Calais is? |
13457 | A sunset, a man- of- war, a thunderstorm? |
13457 | A tender Tennysonian lyric? |
13457 | Abbé?" |
13457 | About twice in a year, however, I do not mind asking you one thing which is easily answered, how you and Mrs. Carlyle are? |
13457 | After a little time the comptroller looked down, looked up and said to Wordsworth,"Do n''t you think, sir, Milton was a great genius?" |
13457 | After an awful pause the comptroller said,"Do n''t you think Newton a great genius?" |
13457 | After service was performed his reverence, dropping the question of"Who stole Pat Doolan''s pig?" |
13457 | Ai n''t I a monster? |
13457 | All the while, until Monkhouse succeeded, we could hear Lamb struggling in the painting- room and calling at intervals,"Who is that fellow? |
13457 | Am I not thy father and thy brother, And thy mother? |
13457 | And are you not convinced that this race is between Marquis Sardanapalus and Earl Heliogabalus? |
13457 | And do n''t you pity the poor Asiatics and Italians who comforted themselves, on their resurrection, with their being geese and turkeys? |
13457 | And if they go from home, their reason is equally cogent,"What does it signify how we dress here, where nobody knows us?" |
13457 | And this hillock itself-- who could paint it, With its changes of shadow and light? |
13457 | And thou-- what needest with thy tribe''s black tents Who hast the red pavilion of my heart? |
13457 | And what do you think of_ bofen- yed_? |
13457 | And yet our fathers deem''d it two: Nor am I confident they err''d; Are you? |
13457 | And yet, Suppose for once-- suppose, Ninette-- NINETTE But what? |
13457 | And you bet you he_ did_ learn him, too? |
13457 | Are you for eking out your shadowy list with such names as Alexander, Julius Caesar, Tamerlane, or Genghis Khan?" |
13457 | As soon as he has caught your question he bursts out laughing, flings himself suddenly back, and exclaims, with a splutter:"How many ha''I killed? |
13457 | As you pronounce it, does not William''s photograph present itself to your mental eye? |
13457 | Besides, I heard enough to show Their love is proof against the snow:--''Why wait,''he said,''why wait for May, When love can warm a winter''s day?''" |
13457 | But do you know that that is not a reliable article for a steady drink? |
13457 | But touch that''ome of culture? |
13457 | But what will you lack when your mates go by With a girl who cuts you dead? |
13457 | But what''s odds? |
13457 | But where will you look when they give the glance That tells you they know you funked? |
13457 | But why? |
13457 | But, do you know? |
13457 | Can any man charge God, that he hath not given him enough to make his life happy? |
13457 | Can we think no wealth enough but such a state for which a man may be brought into a præmunire, begged, proscribed, or poisoned? |
13457 | DOES MAMMA KNOW? |
13457 | Did you all bathe and"rux"yourselves well about in the brine? |
13457 | Did you ever read any of the works of Janin?--No? |
13457 | Did you read in F. Newman''s book? |
13457 | Do n''t you believe in the transmigration of souls? |
13457 | Do n''t you yearn towards those dear souls? |
13457 | Do you ever see cows dressed in grey flannel in London? |
13457 | Does not man, these enthusiasts ask, Most nearly approach the divine When engaged in the soul- stirring task Of filling his body with wine? |
13457 | Does not the epithet describe the man? |
13457 | Does not this daisy leap to my heart set in its coat of emerald? |
13457 | Extraordinary, though, was it not? |
13457 | For what did Dr. Allen... say when he felt Spedding''s head? |
13457 | From B to C.--Whenever the fairer sex enter Parliament( breathes there a man with ears so deaf as to doubt their powers of parlance?) |
13457 | GUARDIAN ANGELS[ Sidenote:_ Disraeli in"Tancred"_]"What should I be without my debts?" |
13457 | HORTENSE Graceful? |
13457 | Have I permission? |
13457 | Have a cup of tea?" |
13457 | Have not beggars been frequently known, When satisfied, soaked and replete, To imagine their bench was a throne And the civilised world at their feet? |
13457 | Have you any philosophy? |
13457 | Have you any red silk umbrellas in London? |
13457 | Have you had any experience in agriculture practically?" |
13457 | Have you read Thackeray''s little book--"The Second Funeral of Napoleon"? |
13457 | He put the paper on his lap, and, while he polished his spectacles with his handkerchief, he said,"Are you the new editor?" |
13457 | He sings, and without any shame He murders all the finest music: Does he prescribe? |
13457 | He''d make a lovely Guy, would n''t he?" |
13457 | He''s a bishop now, but he do n''t forget his old friends, do he?" |
13457 | Hoby quietly said:"How did that happen, Sir John?" |
13457 | How am I to find out when a quarter of an hour has passed?" |
13457 | How is it possible to be happy with two mould candles ill snuffed? |
13457 | How is your wife?" |
13457 | How long is the Queen''s family likely to hold out? |
13457 | How many? |
13457 | How secure at least the greatest amount of happiness compatible with your condition? |
13457 | How should they have any? |
13457 | How will you make yourself most happy in it? |
13457 | I am living( did I tell you this before?) |
13457 | I have not done much in that way: the storms have been so furious-- unkind of them, eh? |
13457 | I offer my arm to Dolores or Florentina( is not this familiarity strange? |
13457 | I said to the guide,"Son, did you know what kind of an infernal place this was before you brought me down here?" |
13457 | I say, who stole_ poor_ Pat Doolan''s pig?" |
13457 | I simply ask you, as a man and a brother, if that was any way for him to do? |
13457 | I went into the street and said to a demure, douce young Highlander,''Do ye think the Germans are coming?'' |
13457 | I wonder will He come again and tell it us? |
13457 | I''scaped pirates by being ship- wracked; was the wrack a benefit therefore? |
13457 | If I saw him sulky, or anythin'', up I''d go, an''''What''s matter?'' |
13457 | In brief, I am content, and what should providence add more? |
13457 | Is he listening? |
13457 | Is it football still and the picture show, The pub and the betting odds, When your brothers stand to the tyrant''s blow And England''s call is God''s? |
13457 | Is it naught to you if your country fall, And Right is smashed by Wrong? |
13457 | Is it not said of every baby? |
13457 | Is it not---(never, Eddy, say"ai n''t it")-- A marvellous sight? |
13457 | Is it true, I mean? |
13457 | Is n''t it Scotland?... |
13457 | Is n''t that consummate? |
13457 | Is not this all funny? |
13457 | Is not this wild rose sweet without a comment? |
13457 | Is there an analogy, in certain constitutions, between keeping an umbrella up and keeping the spirits up? |
13457 | Is this exegetical? |
13457 | Is this æsthetic? |
13457 | It changes occasionally to bright yellow, which is( is it?) |
13457 | It is Winckelmann, is n''t it, who says that when you come to the age of expression in Greek art you have come to the age of decadence? |
13457 | Jacotot Did not supply that lace, I know; And where, I ask, has mortal seen A hat unfeathered? |
13457 | LOVE IN WINTER[ Sidenote:_ Austin Dobson_] Between the berried holly- bush The blackbird whistled to the thrush:"Which way did bright- eyed Bella go? |
13457 | Lamb got up, and, taking a candle, said,"Sir, will you allow me to look at your phrenological development?" |
13457 | Lamb seemed to take no notice; but all of a sudden he roared out,"Which is the gentleman we are going to lose?" |
13457 | Lamb took hold of the long- clothes, saying,"Where, God bless me, where does it leave off?" |
13457 | Lamb, who was dozing by the fire, turned round and said,"Pray, sir, did you say Milton was a great genius?" |
13457 | Lamb?" |
13457 | Lamb?" |
13457 | Look, Speckle- breast, across the snow,-- Are those her dainty tracks I see, That wind beside the shrubbery?" |
13457 | May I trust that you will give your immediate attention to this most important subject? |
13457 | Monsieur, what say you? |
13457 | Mr. Testator hazarded,"At ten?" |
13457 | My answer at last was, as to the boys, I want them to be_ like me_; and as to the girls"in whose hands can they be so safe as in_ yours_? |
13457 | NINETTE And then? |
13457 | NINETTE What looks, you mean? |
13457 | NINON But are they? |
13457 | NINON Shall I? |
13457 | NINON Suppose it were not so? |
13457 | NINON Why, if that_ could_ occur, What kind of men should you prefer? |
13457 | NINON(_ touching her cheek suspiciously_) Has he a scar on this side? |
13457 | Next Sunday, after the service of the day, he called out with a loud voice, fixing his eyes on the suspected individual,"Who stole Pat Doolan''s pig?" |
13457 | Now, was that any way for that old man''s nephew to impose on a stranger and orphan like me? |
13457 | Now, what do you think of that?--for I really suppose you wrote it?" |
13457 | Of a passion, an emotion, a mood? |
13457 | Oh my benefactor, can you make him laugh? |
13457 | One day a feller-- a stranger in the camp, he was-- come across him with his box, and says:"What might it be that you''ve got in that box?" |
13457 | Or why, at any rate, should not the clergyman be born full- grown and in Holy Orders, not to say already beneficed? |
13457 | Our rude forefathers deem''d it two: Can you imagine so absurd A view? |
13457 | Quite true, but expression of what? |
13457 | Shall I not know that it blows quite soon enough, without the officious Warden''s interference? |
13457 | Shall you be at Sheffield? |
13457 | Should one almost wonder if carpenters were to remonstrate that since the peace their trade decays, and that there is no demand for wooden legs? |
13457 | Somewhere in Ameriky, is n''t it? |
13457 | Sublime or graceful,--grave,--satiric? |
13457 | The King can do no wrong? |
13457 | The child said it was delightful, and added:"Does mamma know? |
13457 | The fondest words that ever fell From Lady Clara, when they met, Were,"How d''ye do? |
13457 | The gossiping tone does proceed into the universal, does it not? |
13457 | The lord seeing that,"Sirrah,"says he,"do you not know me, that you use no reverence?" |
13457 | The president of the society came up and bathed my head with cold water, and said:"What made you carry on so towards the last?" |
13457 | Their dress is very independent of fashion; as they observe,"What does it signify how we dress here at Cranford, where everybody knows us?" |
13457 | Till I know that, how can I understand the Review? |
13457 | To which I as frankly smiled, and said,"How did you know me so soon?" |
13457 | Twain, on showing the visitor into the sanctum, and finding her spouse thus engaged, said:"''Now, Mark, you_ know_ you love that baby-- don''t you?'' |
13457 | WHERE? |
13457 | Wad ye stop the pipers? |
13457 | Was he far wrong? |
13457 | Was it U.T.''s? |
13457 | Was it experience that guided the pencil of Raphael when he painted the palaces of Rome? |
13457 | Was it not precisely the story for a vicar to tell? |
13457 | Was it this? |
13457 | Was n''t it grand? |
13457 | Was the one I had fallen in love with at all beautiful? |
13457 | We can not live without destroying animals, but shall we torture them for our sport-- sport in their destruction? |
13457 | Well, what''s_ he_ good for?" |
13457 | Well, who said they did? |
13457 | What a change? |
13457 | What am I to do in these times with such a family of children? |
13457 | What are Agincourt and Waterloo in the presence of such sweetness? |
13457 | What are all the poor folks to do during the winter? |
13457 | What could they do if they were there? |
13457 | What degree of endurance have I not calculated? |
13457 | What do they do? |
13457 | What expedient in negotiation is unknown to me? |
13457 | What farmers are to employ all these? |
13457 | What is the meaning of"exegetical"? |
13457 | What is the moral support derived by some sea- going amateurs from an umbrella? |
13457 | What is your_ bête noire_?--(What is my which?) |
13457 | What landlord can find room for them? |
13457 | What more can I request to you than this? |
13457 | What need hath Nature of silver dishes, multitudes of waiters, delicate pages, perfumed napkins? |
13457 | What play of the countenance have I not observed? |
13457 | What say you, Mr. Lamb? |
13457 | What was your thought? |
13457 | What''s odds?" |
13457 | What''s the odds?" |
13457 | What, have n''t you heard him tell how they boarded a Spanish ship, and cut the throats and broke the heads of the swarthy crew? |
13457 | What, with hands That hang like this? |
13457 | When this story was told at the Club, one of those listeners who always want something more called out,"Well, and what did Waters say?" |
13457 | Where are they gone? |
13457 | Where will you look, sonny, where will you look When your children yet to be Clamour to learn of the part you took In the War that kept men free? |
13457 | Where? |
13457 | Who comes next on the list?" |
13457 | Who criticise the Indian campaigns? |
13457 | Who do up the heavy leaders on finance? |
13457 | Who does not recognise the son in those accents? |
13457 | Who edit the agricultural papers, you-- yam? |
13457 | Who has not seen illustrious snobs in satin, and sweet, modest gentlewomen in homely print and serge? |
13457 | Who review the books? |
13457 | Who said it? |
13457 | Who will there be to comfort me, Or who will be my friend? |
13457 | Who write the dramatic critiques for the second- rate papers? |
13457 | Who write the temperance appeals, and clamour about the flowing bowl? |
13457 | Why do certain voyagers across the Channel always put up that article, and hold it up with a grim and fierce tenacity? |
13457 | Why do they call, sonny, why do they call For men who are brave and strong? |
13457 | Why is this? |
13457 | Why should not chickens be born and clergymen be laid and hatched? |
13457 | Why should we not all be baronets? |
13457 | Why should we not raise ourselves, every man of us, on his own private hoist, to the Peerage? |
13457 | Why should we? |
13457 | Why, that all his bumps were so tempered that there was no merit in his sobriety-- then what would have been the use of a Conscience to him? |
13457 | Why, what put it into your head that you could edit a paper of this nature? |
13457 | Will you say it was naught to you if France Stood up to her foe or bunked? |
13457 | Will you send a strangled cheer to the sky And grin till your cheeks are red? |
13457 | Will you slink away, as it were from a blow, Your old head shamed and bent? |
13457 | Wordsworth seemed asking himself,"Who is this?" |
13457 | You do n''t think, do you, that these poor souls are incapable of appreciating_ delicacy_? |
13457 | You feel the atmosphere-- what?... |
13457 | You may remember that I lectured in Newark lately for the young gentlemen of the Clayonian Society? |
13457 | You think it? |
13457 | You would n''t? |
13457 | [ Sidenote:_ Horace Walpole_] Can we easily leave the remains of such a year as this? |
13457 | _ Pastor_.--"Did I not see old Nanny Smith talking with you at your door just now?" |
13457 | and the"What then, sir?" |
13457 | at a little cottage close by the lawn gates, where I have my books, a barrel of beer, which I tap myself( can you tap a barrel of beer? |
13457 | by despising to- day, and looking up cloudward? |
13457 | can you bring soothing tears to those parched orbs?" |
13457 | can you doubt me?" |
13457 | do you think one can remember a thing for ever?" |
13457 | do you want to be killed a second time? |
13457 | he asked in another letter;"if so, will you allow me to call upon you?" |
13457 | how, sir?" |
13457 | my Jones, What is become of you?" |
13457 | quoth she,"deare_ Moll_, you must not deeme him olde; why, he is but forty- two; and am not I twenty- three?" |
13457 | then what are you?" |
13457 | this wide- stretching wold( Look out_ wold_) with its wonderful carpet Of emerald, purple, and gold? |
13457 | was abruptly but anxiously asked--"Oh, why did n''t you go in?" |
13457 | was it good? |
13457 | what is that comes gliding in, And quite in middling haste? |
13457 | what''s this?" |
13457 | who is''t now we hear? |
13457 | why did n''t you_ tell_ me you did n''t know anything about agriculture?" |
13457 | why, madam, that Charles Lamb was a backbiter?" |
13457 | you know him then?" |
27357 | And if you rise like men and demand that your Elders hearken to your voice, who shall gainsay you? |
27357 | And now, sir, I want to know if you''d like to put yourself in the way of earning a hundred pounds? |
27357 | And to what do I owe the honor of this visit, Master-- ah--? |
27357 | Are you the master of the ship? |
27357 | Aye, but still-- ROBINSON Well? |
27357 | CARVER And what do you propose to us? |
27357 | CARVER Do the terms satisfy you, Pastor Robinson? |
27357 | CARVER Do you not know where we are? |
27357 | CARVER Generous? |
27357 | CARVER Here? |
27357 | CARVER Indeed-- why? |
27357 | CARVER The seams sprung? |
27357 | CARVER What? |
27357 | CARVER Who shall govern us, Master Kieft? |
27357 | CARVER Why should the Dutch West India Company make us such a generous offer? |
27357 | CARVER Yes, and what else? |
27357 | CARVER Your pardon, sir, will you come here at once? |
27357 | CARVER[_ off_] Oh, Pastor Robinson? |
27357 | CARVER[_ off_] Will you come in, Master Weston? |
27357 | Can you not take your bearings now? |
27357 | Have I the honor of addressing Master Robinson? |
27357 | Have no government? |
27357 | Have we really made land? |
27357 | How long? |
27357 | If this cabin is poor, Captain, what do ye call what us folks has to put up with, all crowded into the common cabin like sheep er worse? |
27357 | Is it really land? |
27357 | Is that true? |
27357 | JONES And what''s that to you, sir, begging your pardon? |
27357 | JONES Aye, mate, have you the position? |
27357 | JONES Belikes''twill be a month or more before I can make the_ Mayflower_ seaworthy-- CARVER A month? |
27357 | JONES Can it be that forty English freemen ca n''t vote down twelve masters? |
27357 | JONES Eh? |
27357 | JONES Have you got the money with you? |
27357 | JONES Have you never heard of mutiny? |
27357 | JONES How should I? |
27357 | JONES Look you, Master Carver-- CARVER Well, Captain? |
27357 | JONES Perhaps not so well-- why do n''t you land here? |
27357 | JONES The carpenter has gone over the ship timber by timber-- CARVER Well? |
27357 | JONES The snow lies so deep it would cover a man''s head-- the land is blotted out, and even the sea freezes-- PETER Then how could we get ashore? |
27357 | JONES Under the charter, eh? |
27357 | JONES What do you expect-- with the storms we''ve had? |
27357 | JONES What do you want me to do? |
27357 | JONES What do you want? |
27357 | JONES[_ calling_] Where away? |
27357 | KIEFT Are you Pastor Robinson, then? |
27357 | KIEFT Are you going to sign or not? |
27357 | KIEFT But you are planning an emigration to the New World, are you not? |
27357 | KIEFT Can we not finish our business first? |
27357 | KIEFT Does Master John Robinson dwell here? |
27357 | KIEFT Is it a bargain? |
27357 | KIEFT May I come aboard? |
27357 | KIEFT Then shall we sign the articles? |
27357 | KIEFT Where do you expect to make land? |
27357 | KIEFT You are going to lose your bearings-- JONES Me-- a sailor-- lose my bearings? |
27357 | KIEFT You are sailing for northern Virginia, are you not? |
27357 | Land? |
27357 | Law, sir, and who would n''t? |
27357 | May I come aboard? |
27357 | Mayhap-- ROBINSON Is it not a generous offer? |
27357 | Now, where is the inkhorn? |
27357 | PETER And once ashore, how could we find a fair place to build our homes? |
27357 | PETER Aye-- who-- who, indeed? |
27357 | PETER How long will that take ye? |
27357 | PETER Indeed, why? |
27357 | PETER Mutiny? |
27357 | PETER Two months? |
27357 | PETER Why ca n''t we land right here, Captain? |
27357 | PETER[_ calling_] Why ca n''t we land here? |
27357 | ROBINSON And all your company demands is a monopoly in the fur trade? |
27357 | ROBINSON And for this you would expect of us-- what? |
27357 | ROBINSON And what has King James ever done for us but persecute us, drive us from our homes, and make of us pilgrims upon the face of the earth? |
27357 | ROBINSON And you make no other conditions than those you mention? |
27357 | ROBINSON Can you offer them in writing so that our people may consider them? |
27357 | ROBINSON Do you think the land is disputed? |
27357 | ROBINSON Indeed, and why not? |
27357 | ROBINSON No word yet from Elder Brewster? |
27357 | ROBINSON What is it? |
27357 | ROBINSON Why indeed, but that we may establish for them a colony in the New World? |
27357 | ROBINSON Yes? |
27357 | Surely you can do better than that? |
27357 | VOICE Captain Jones? |
27357 | WESTON Has your company established any plantations there? |
27357 | WESTON Your pardon, Master Robinson, did you say"Articles of Emigration"? |
27357 | What do you want? |
27357 | What is your offer, Master Weston? |
27357 | What think you, Elder Carver? |
27357 | Where, Master Weston, does your company propose that we settle? |
27357 | Who governs you now? |
27357 | Who''s hailing the_ Mayflower_? |
27357 | Will you enter? |
27357 | [_ etc._] CARVER Captain, tell us, is this Virginia that lies before us? |
27357 | [_ knock_] ROBINSON Will you see who''s at the door? |
27357 | [_ mob agrees_] CARVER Tear up the charter? |
27357 | [_ rattle of paper_] ROBINSON I can think of nothing more we should consider, can you, Elder? |
10993 | A right and a wrong one-- eh? 10993 A visitor-- do you call me so?" |
10993 | Always quite alone? |
10993 | And Timéa? |
10993 | And how do you know that? |
10993 | And in the name of God, and your own happiness, since this is the state of you both, let me put it out of your power to part? |
10993 | And now, my dearest Phoebe,said Holgrave,"how will it please you to assume the name of Maule? |
10993 | And that I had been a performer in a travelling circus? |
10993 | And thou wouldst see the world, poor fool? 10993 And what answer did you receive?" |
10993 | Are you all ready, boys? |
10993 | Are you not ashamed of yourself, Thomas Grimes? |
10993 | Art mad? |
10993 | Better? 10993 Budge,"I said, with all the sternness I could command;"do you know me?" |
10993 | But please, may n''t I talk about home to you? |
10993 | But then you are Catholics? |
10993 | Can you deny that you''ve been off and on lately between flunkeydom and the Cause, like a donkey between two bundles of hay? 10993 Can you say the same by him?" |
10993 | Can you wonder if our friends suspect you? |
10993 | Dear Mackworth, can you forgive me? |
10993 | Did anyone ever see a man like Gilliatt? |
10993 | Did you never hear of Clifford Pyncheon? |
10993 | Did you not know it? 10993 Djali, what day of the month is it?" |
10993 | Djali, what month in the year is this? |
10993 | Do n''t you want me to tell you a story? |
10993 | Do you know what he has asked of me? |
10993 | Do you mean Judge Pyncheon? |
10993 | Do you remember when the Doctor lectured you and East when you had been getting into all sorts of scrapes? |
10993 | Do you suppose I love Lord Frederick? 10993 Does he think we was all fools afore he came here?" |
10993 | Eh? 10993 Expect?" |
10993 | For the last time, will you be mine? |
10993 | For what did I say in the train this morning, Bettina, and only a little while ago in the carriage? |
10993 | For who but a savage could behold beauty like yours without owning its power? 10993 Has anything happened to disturb you-- anything remarkable in Cousin Hepzibah''s family-- an arrival, eh? |
10993 | Hast thou here found happiness at last? |
10993 | Hast thou? |
10993 | Have you any love left for her yet? |
10993 | Her cousin, and from the country? |
10993 | How are your Southdowns looking, Jim? |
10993 | How did you learn all this? |
10993 | How do you explain the charge brought against you? |
10993 | How do you like the face? |
10993 | How is Scapegrace Hamlyn? |
10993 | How long ago did her mother die? |
10993 | How old is Elsie? |
10993 | How should I know? |
10993 | How, no? |
10993 | How? |
10993 | How? |
10993 | I say, Scud,said he at last,"what right have the Fifth Form boys to fag us as they do?" |
10993 | Is anyone there? |
10993 | Is each human soul on its arrival here assigned a fitting place and level among his or her spiritual fellows? |
10993 | Is nobody going to notice me or my boy, I wonder? |
10993 | Is not this better,he murmured,"than what we dreamed of in the forest? |
10993 | Is this you, Hepzibah? |
10993 | Jim,I began again,"do you ever think of poor little Mary now?" |
10993 | Jim,said I,"I wonder what is going on at Drumston now?" |
10993 | Look now, Susie,said Miss Bettina,"is n''t this just the sort of vicarage you hoped it would be?" |
10993 | May I venture to ask your name? |
10993 | My dear Dr. B----, will he die? |
10993 | My fault? |
10993 | Never saw me? 10993 Now,"she said to Tom, as she prepared to go,"will you be good, and torment no sea- beasts until I come again?" |
10993 | Oh, Hardress,shrieked the affrighted girl,"you are not in earnest now?" |
10993 | Oh, what does he mean by chunt, Budge? |
10993 | Organ- grinder? |
10993 | Perhaps you would grant him what he has requested? |
10993 | Phoebe? 10993 Please, Brown,"he whispered,"may I wash my face and hands?" |
10993 | Rose Salterne, the mayor''s daughter, the Rose of Torridge? |
10993 | Shall I never have courage enough to tell him what he is? |
10993 | Since when,returns the dean tranquilly,"have you been suffering from this distressing illusion?" |
10993 | Sir Ascelin is not a very wealthy gentleman? |
10993 | Tell me, without reserve, art thou content with thy condition, or dost thou wish to be again wandering and inquiring? 10993 The monk died suddenly?" |
10993 | To whom does this treasure belong? |
10993 | Toddie,I said,"are n''t you glad papa and mamma are coming?" |
10993 | We are to let him go? |
10993 | Well, old woman, where''s the old man? |
10993 | What are you laughing at? 10993 What business have I here?" |
10993 | What do you know about Vendale? |
10993 | What do you mean by those strange words? 10993 What do you mean by''circles''?" |
10993 | What do you mean? |
10993 | What do you want of me, Elsie Venner? |
10993 | What does all this mean? |
10993 | What has happened? |
10993 | What is all this? |
10993 | What is it that moves you so? |
10993 | What is it, Budge? |
10993 | What is it? 10993 What is it?" |
10993 | What is that to thee or me? 10993 What is wrong? |
10993 | What is your plan? |
10993 | What passions can infect those,said the prince,"who have no rivals? |
10993 | What would you have me say? |
10993 | What''s that, Ouardi? |
10993 | What''s the matter? |
10993 | Where are those flowers? |
10993 | Where are you off to, Monsieur le Curé? |
10993 | Where else should I be except where Arthur is? |
10993 | Where have you been, sir, not to have heard of the celebrated Dean Maitland? |
10993 | Who has brought this man into the House? 10993 Who is that man?" |
10993 | Who is the scoundrel? |
10993 | Who put pebbles in the sea- anemones''mouths to make them fancy they had caught a good dinner? 10993 Who speaks?" |
10993 | Who''ll list? |
10993 | Who''s hurt? 10993 Who?" |
10993 | Whose son are you, my gallant fellow? |
10993 | Why am I not to go to the Choughs? 10993 Why ca n''t you give a fellow his degree quietly,"says Tom,"without making him come and kick his heels here for three weeks?" |
10993 | Why did n''t you come and tell Uncle Harry, and let him try to comfort you? |
10993 | Why does not some man of God go boldly into the lecture- room of the sorceress, and testify against her? |
10993 | Why six only, captain? |
10993 | Why, whatever shall I do without you? |
10993 | Why, whom should it belong to but you? 10993 Why?" |
10993 | Why? |
10993 | Will you obey me if I give you a chance? |
10993 | Without paying his ransom? |
10993 | Wo n''t you have some? |
10993 | Woman,broke out the judge,"what is the meaning of all this? |
10993 | Would you mind stopping for a moment, captain? 10993 Yes; but do any of them go in the sort of way you do? |
10993 | Yes? |
10993 | You are sure, my dear? |
10993 | You are the monk from the monastery of El Largani who disappeared after twenty years? |
10993 | You did n''t see her, then? |
10993 | You have heard me speak of Danny Mann''s sister, who lives on the side of the Purple Mountain, in the Gap of Dunlough? 10993 You will not, surely you will not fail me?" |
10993 | You wo n''t go away again, dear boy? 10993 You-- you pity that man then?" |
10993 | You? 10993 ''Where, then, are they?'' 10993 ***** And what is passing meanwhile on the ownerless island? 10993 ***** And where was Tom Thurnall all the while? 10993 A man made his way out of the crowd, and standing before her, pale and anxious, said,You would marry him, Miss Dérouchette?" |
10993 | A tall, sharp- nosed young man bawled in my ear,"I say, young''un, do you know why we''re nearer heaven here than our neighbours?" |
10993 | Am I to tell him that I hate him, I who owe everything to him, and who brought him no dowry but a loveless heart?" |
10993 | And because I''m your friend, you assume that my end will be the wrong one?" |
10993 | And shall I tell thee what that world is like? |
10993 | And this is the little fellow who is to share your study? |
10993 | And thou wouldst go into the world from which I fled?" |
10993 | And what did he find? |
10993 | And what did she always wear a necklace for? |
10993 | And what is he going for?" |
10993 | And who is going with him? |
10993 | And who knows what may happen to the world in fifty years? |
10993 | And, as you do n''t, to kiss her in the passage as you did tonight----""So you were sneaking behind to watch me?" |
10993 | Are you never going to look at me again?" |
10993 | Are you ready, Brown? |
10993 | Are you so blind,"she exclaimed,"as to believe I do not care for Mr. Dorriforth? |
10993 | Arthur''s child?" |
10993 | At guns? |
10993 | Because there happens to be a pretty barmaid there? |
10993 | Before Tom left for the East old Mark Armsworth took him aside, and said,"What do you think of the man who marries my daughter?" |
10993 | Bless your dear soul, what ails you?" |
10993 | Budge rushed at Tom, exclaiming,"See my goat, papa?" |
10993 | Burton?" |
10993 | Burton?" |
10993 | But has n''t he been dead a long while?" |
10993 | But is Clifford in the parlour? |
10993 | But to this hope there succeeded a moment when the agonised thought,"How if there be no Christ?" |
10993 | But who else is there I care to see? |
10993 | Can this be you? |
10993 | Can you realise what misery means? |
10993 | Canst thou do nothing for me? |
10993 | Charles hurried home in time for the funeral, and when all was over a servant came up to him, and asked him would he see Mr. Ravenshoe in the library? |
10993 | Could it be that----? |
10993 | Did they say that I had been a beggar?" |
10993 | Did you bring us anything?" |
10993 | Do n''t you call it degrading to be pulling in the torpid in one''s old age?" |
10993 | Do n''t you know me?" |
10993 | Do you hear that? |
10993 | Do you know that?" |
10993 | Do you suppose I_ can_ love him? |
10993 | Does she look at any one of them as she does at you?" |
10993 | First floor''s Ashmy Ward-- don''t you hear''um now through the cracks in the boards, apuffing away like a nest of young locomotives? |
10993 | For what could be done? |
10993 | Gwynplaine, you will think of me, wo n''t you? |
10993 | Hamlyn? |
10993 | Has God some fearful fate in store for sinners, which may one day fall upon me as it has already fallen upon them?'' |
10993 | Have you not neglected our meetings? |
10993 | Have you not picked all the spice out of your poems? |
10993 | Have you other resources? |
10993 | He felt the time had come for flight, but whither? |
10993 | He fixed his eyes upon her and added,"Hester, hast thou found peace?" |
10993 | He startle me? |
10993 | He turned from street to street, trying to escape from the city, and at last found himself entrapped in a_ cul- de- sac._ What was to be done? |
10993 | Here is a man who for two months has done all he could to hide from me that he loves me.... Jean, do you love me?" |
10993 | How could there be? |
10993 | How did he behave, knowing that? |
10993 | How had it come there? |
10993 | How was it Gwynplaine was restored to his inheritance? |
10993 | How, most courteous victor?" |
10993 | I ai n''t so much of a coward, am I, Jeff? |
10993 | I am deaf, you did not know that? |
10993 | I am the happiest of women in the affection he has proved to me, but I wonder if it would exist under ill- treatment? |
10993 | I asked myself,''since neither earth, hell, nor heaven knows them more? |
10993 | I could have fallen down-- fool that I was!--and worshipped-- what? |
10993 | I roared, as my younger nephew caressed his loathsome doll,"where did you get that box?" |
10993 | I seem to you like some awful beast, eh? |
10993 | I wonder how we should have liked to have been turned out for some bachelor just because he had pulled a good oar in his day?" |
10993 | I wonder if she married that fellow Hawker?" |
10993 | I''m afraid I''ve made you very anxious; but it was not my fault; and I knew you would be certain I should come at last, eh?" |
10993 | If it be the flesh, it will avenge itself; if it be of the Spirit, who are we that we should fight against God? |
10993 | If you have seen the world, why should not I? |
10993 | If you want nothing, how are you unhappy?" |
10993 | In him the race of Leofric, of Godiva, of Earl Oslac, would become extinct, and the girl would marry-- whom? |
10993 | In three weeks may I go and ask him myself if he will have me for his wife? |
10993 | Is it for us to pry into them? |
10993 | Is it thou?" |
10993 | Is not this he who was said to be so like Hereward? |
10993 | Is this felicity genuine or feigned?" |
10993 | Is this true?" |
10993 | Is this your French honour? |
10993 | Is this your French law? |
10993 | Let thy husband be to the world as one already dead, and breathe not the secret, above all, to the man thou wottest of?" |
10993 | Lilian is thinking of the prisoner, Lennie wondering aloud,"How does Alma_ like_ having to go to hell for lying about Henry?" |
10993 | Lord Elmwood, do you love this woman?" |
10993 | Meantime, what of Quasimodo? |
10993 | Need I tell the remainder of my story? |
10993 | Now I want to know your secret?" |
10993 | Now tell me who was he?" |
10993 | Now, was not this very odd? |
10993 | Of what does he suspect me, Budge?" |
10993 | Of what, pray?" |
10993 | On the other hand, what was the matter with her eyes, that they sucked your life out of you in that strange way? |
10993 | Once, when he passed near me, I heard him cry out:"Is there no living soul in all this void and voiceless desert?" |
10993 | One of the young heroes ran out from the rest, and scrambled up behind, where, having righted himself with,"How do, Jem?" |
10993 | Our life is from God, and may not God take His own again? |
10993 | Presently the old man asked me where I was born, and what my profession was? |
10993 | She is not ill?" |
10993 | She then asked:"Why did I not keep him longer in suspense? |
10993 | Should I separate from him who has no one but me to love him? |
10993 | Stand any here that question God''s judgement on a sinner? |
10993 | Suppose we drop the subject?" |
10993 | Surely you must have heard of Judge Pyncheon?" |
10993 | Tell me, Susie, may I?" |
10993 | Tell me, should he not agree to be my husband?" |
10993 | That''s ze way she wocks-- see?" |
10993 | The man a''n''t hurt-- don''t you see him stirring? |
10993 | The vicar was"knocked all of a heap"at Jim''s announcement; but, recovering a little, said,"You hear him? |
10993 | Then she whispered,"What did her mother die of, Sophy?" |
10993 | Then the sheriff, rising, offered his seat with a bow to Gwynplaine, saying,"My lord, will you please to be seated?" |
10993 | There are land- babies, and why not water- babies? |
10993 | They had gone two or three miles before Hawker said:"That young fellow I shot when you were after me, is he dead?" |
10993 | This ruffian Krisstyan could expose the foundation of his wealth, and how could he live discredited before the world? |
10993 | Thou wouldst see the world?" |
10993 | Timéa promised to be a faithful and obedient wife, but on the wedding- day when Timar said,"Do you love me?" |
10993 | Was it possible? |
10993 | Well, perhaps I am mad-- mad with the horror of my unbelief; but why should it not be as I say? |
10993 | What could it mean? |
10993 | What could my uncle make me but a tailor-- or a shoemaker? |
10993 | What could there be to vex him? |
10993 | What else could I look for, being what I am, and leading such a life as mine?" |
10993 | What had I-- a man of thought, the bookworm of great libraries-- to do with youth and beauty like thine own? |
10993 | What happened in those three years? |
10993 | What is this? |
10993 | What is to be done now?" |
10993 | What regiment did you enlist in?" |
10993 | What sort of a fellow is this who is cold and hungry, and who stays outside?" |
10993 | What were they all thinking of him? |
10993 | What wonder if he longed for a son to pass his name down to future generations? |
10993 | What would be the result if Timéa gets it? |
10993 | What would folks say? |
10993 | What''n thunder''r''y''abaout, y''darned Portagee?" |
10993 | What''s happened?" |
10993 | What''s she after?" |
10993 | What''s this last?" |
10993 | What''s your name? |
10993 | Where do you come from?" |
10993 | Where is the place?" |
10993 | Who are you? |
10993 | Who are you?" |
10993 | Who but her cousin, Tom Troubridge? |
10993 | Who but some French conqueror, or at best some English outlaw? |
10993 | Who did that to you?" |
10993 | Who do you think is coming to see you this morning?" |
10993 | Who else was there to raise her four good feet from the floor and call her his darling little sister? |
10993 | Who is it, Cousin Hepzibah?" |
10993 | Who knew of this route but he and his mates? |
10993 | Who lists? |
10993 | Who lists? |
10993 | Who said''Those that will be foul, foul they will be''?" |
10993 | Who would he be? |
10993 | Who''ll make his fortune?" |
10993 | Why are all eyes fixed on those four weather- beaten mariners, decked out with knots and ribbons by loving hands? |
10993 | Why did not you take them with the rest of the plate?" |
10993 | Why had he ever consented to be Lord Clancharlie? |
10993 | Why mark her out from the rest, when all did more than nobly? |
10993 | Will you have me for your husband? |
10993 | Will you let me stay here? |
10993 | Worn''t them your words?" |
10993 | You are sure you will not mind being plain Madame Reynaud?" |
10993 | You understand?" |
10993 | You will remember the old Green Box, wo n''t you, and poor blind Dea? |
10993 | l''Officier?" |
10993 | she only opened wide her eyes, and asked,"What is love?" |
10993 | to the child? |
10993 | to the guard, he turned round short to Tom, and began,"I say, you fellow, is your name Brown?" |
10993 | was it possible that even now it might not be too late?--that there was indeed One Who could make my sin as though it had never been? |
23761 | And those women? |
23761 | Can I do anything for you? |
23761 | Children? |
23761 | Have n''t you anything else, my dear? |
23761 | How was this done? |
23761 | Is that the man? |
23761 | Well? |
23761 | What is it? |
23761 | What? 23761 Where am I going?" |
23761 | Where are you going, Bill? |
23761 | Where are you going? |
23761 | Where is the traveler''s lodging? |
23761 | Who is my mother and who are my brethren? |
23761 | Who was Starr King? |
23761 | Your authority? |
23761 | ***** When was he born? |
23761 | And Wendell Phillips? |
23761 | And moreover, what if there are? |
23761 | And what have we to oppose to them? |
23761 | And what should a boy of twenty- three know about a nation''s financial policy? |
23761 | And-- stay!--who ever had so much that was worth while to express? |
23761 | Are fleets and armies necessary to a work of love and reconciliation? |
23761 | As much as to say:"What difference is it about how long I have studied? |
23761 | Because the defense was unsuccessful? |
23761 | But when shall we be stronger? |
23761 | But who was William Lloyd Garrison? |
23761 | But why was she so quiet? |
23761 | Can the present prime ministers of earth say as much? |
23761 | Can you assign any other possible motive for it? |
23761 | Can you imagine anything more complete in way of endowment than all this? |
23761 | Charges-- what charges? |
23761 | Charges? |
23761 | Did Destiny ever do more for mortal man? |
23761 | Do I resign them to the custody of the gods, undiminished and unimpaired? |
23761 | Do we blame a blind man whom we see rushing towards a precipice?" |
23761 | Do you hear me, Mother, crying and calling for you? |
23761 | Do you say this is the language of o''erwrought emotion? |
23761 | Does n''t this make us wonder what this world would have been without its lawmakers? |
23761 | Does success gild crime into patriotism, and want of it change heroic self- devotion to imprudence? |
23761 | Does the gentleman remember that freedom to preach was first gained, dragging in its train freedom to print? |
23761 | Florence was prosperous and so was Saint Mark''s, and have we not said that there is something in pure prosperity that taints the soul? |
23761 | Has Britain any enemy in this quarter of the world, to call for all this accumulation of navies and armies? |
23761 | Have I been a faithful guardian? |
23761 | Have we anything new to offer upon the subject? |
23761 | Have we shown ourselves so unwilling to be reconciled that force must be called in to win back our love? |
23761 | How could he condemn these? |
23761 | How could there be peace unless Savonarola bowed his head to the rule of the aristocrats? |
23761 | How does it happen that this common stock is worked up in such different ways? |
23761 | How would the intimation have been received that Warren and his associates should have waited a better time? |
23761 | I say, gentlemen, what means this martial array, if its purpose be not to force us to submission? |
23761 | If he should revoke these books, what would it be but to add force to tyranny, and to open, not merely the windows, but the doors to so great impiety? |
23761 | If the Pope can release souls from Purgatory, why does he not empty the place for love and charity? |
23761 | If the visible universe is so stupendous, what shall we think of the unseen force and vitality in whose arms all its splendors rest? |
23761 | In amazement the girl gasped,"What?" |
23761 | Is David? |
23761 | Is Hampden dead? |
23761 | Is Washington dead? |
23761 | Is it that insidious smile with which our petition has been lately received? |
23761 | Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? |
23761 | Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? |
23761 | Is n''t a man who prides himself on not belonging to the"ignorant- vulgar"apt to be atrociously ignorant and outrageously vulgar? |
23761 | Is the assertion of such freedom before the age? |
23761 | Is the clergy"marvelously out of place"where free speech is battled for-- liberty of speech on national sins? |
23761 | Is there sex in spirit? |
23761 | Is this the part of wise men, engaged in a great and arduous struggle for liberty? |
23761 | It is, in fact, simply this: Has the civil magistrate a right to put down a riot? |
23761 | Money? |
23761 | Must he go back? |
23761 | Others asked by what right shall men who do not labor demand a portion of the crop from those who plant, hoe and harvest? |
23761 | Patrick Henry knew them; and is not this an education-- to know Life? |
23761 | Phillips was not supremely great-- if he were, how could we comprehend him? |
23761 | Shall we gather strength by irresolution and inaction? |
23761 | Shall we resort to entreaty and humble supplication? |
23761 | Shall we talk of matter as the great reality of the world, the prominent substance? |
23761 | Shall we try argument? |
23761 | Since the Pope is the richest man in Christendom, why indeed does he not build Saint Peter''s out of his own pocket? |
23761 | So much before the age as to leave one no right to make it because it displeases the community? |
23761 | So why should we expect the orator to be the impeccable man of perfect parts? |
23761 | There are no charges against the Pilgrim-- why should there be? |
23761 | To Greenfield? |
23761 | Was Hampden imprudent when he drew the sword and threw away the scabbard? |
23761 | What did He create them for? |
23761 | What is it that gentlemen wish? |
23761 | What is it that gentlemen wish? |
23761 | What kind of a man was Wendell Phillips? |
23761 | What terms shall we find which have not been already exhausted? |
23761 | What traits are inherited and what acquired-- who shall say? |
23761 | What would they have? |
23761 | What would they have? |
23761 | When we turn to the vegetable kingdom, is not the revelation still more wonderful? |
23761 | When would his trial occur? |
23761 | Where did this drygoods- clerk get his education? |
23761 | Who dares now talk about the"hopelessly lost"? |
23761 | Who ever expressed in this way so well? |
23761 | Who invents this libel on his country? |
23761 | Whose fault was it, then, that they were heathen? |
23761 | Why stand we here idle? |
23761 | Why stand we here idle? |
23761 | Why? |
23761 | Will he make the shore, or shall he go down to defeat before these thousands of spectators? |
23761 | Will it be the next week, or the next year? |
23761 | Will it be when we are totally disarmed, and when a British guard shall be stationed in every house? |
23761 | Will the gentleman venture that argument before lawyers? |
23761 | Worcester was satisfied with Starr King as he was, but what would Springfield say if they called a man who had no theological training? |
23761 | said the statesman,"have n''t you any place to go?" |
19325 | ''Bob White, you is a li''l ol''fool,''sez Wolf, sezee,''how kin I tell you w''at ter do w''en you ain''tol''me w''at''tis you wants?'' 19325 ''W''at has you done to him, den?'' |
19325 | ''W''at you done wid him?'' 19325 ''What you follur for livin?'' |
19325 | ''What you kum arter? 19325 ''Who''s your farder?'' |
19325 | And did he die? |
19325 | And is it contagious? |
19325 | And what did he die of? |
19325 | And what, my dear brethren, what do you imagine and conjecture our holy penman meant by''walking?'' 19325 And you mistook me for Presidio?" |
19325 | But perhaps the duplicate got through? |
19325 | But what disorder is it? 19325 Could we not celebrate my fame in some place of refreshment-- the St. Dunstan, for instance?" |
19325 | Den Mis''Tarr''pin she say,''Is you a chieft, er is you a ol''ooman? 19325 Did I? |
19325 | Did n''t you think he had been dead a hundred years? |
19325 | Did she tell you he was dead? |
19325 | Did you think Kilpatrick got it? |
19325 | Did you try the Methodist? |
19325 | Do they? |
19325 | Episcopal? |
19325 | For me? |
19325 | Going it? 19325 Good boy,"I said,"and what church did you attend?" |
19325 | Has any one seen Gladys and Gwendolen? 19325 Have you ever studied his writing?" |
19325 | How are you, old chap? 19325 How can you treat it like that?" |
19325 | How did it work? |
19325 | How did what work? |
19325 | How is it while she drives the cow She''s hanging out her window wide, And loiters, as you said just now, With forty babies by her side? |
19325 | How long has her husband been dead? |
19325 | How,she reflected,"is one to be revenged like a lady upon an Englishwoman?" |
19325 | I was taken with a chill and headache about noon and--"Grip? 19325 If I had not been the last tenant to leave the house before that, would you have thought so? |
19325 | If you could? 19325 Is n''t Presidio a gentleman?" |
19325 | Look- a- yer, ooman,said''Phrony,"who tellin''dis, me er you? |
19325 | May be you rode with the Agnostics? |
19325 | My dear, did you know that Mrs. Hilary is_ not_ a widow? |
19325 | My note, dear? |
19325 | Narrow gauge, eh? |
19325 | Oh, he did, eh? 19325 Oh, tell me of your precious wife, For she was very dear, I know, It must have been a blissful life You led with her you treasure so?" |
19325 | Oh, were you? 19325 Philosophic, did I say? |
19325 | Presbyterian? |
19325 | Richards,said Sisson at last,"what became of that last order of ours for water- lined, pure linen government calendered paper of_ sureté_? |
19325 | Some Union Mission chapel? |
19325 | Some connection of our Mrs. Pendleton? 19325 Sommers? |
19325 | The pious brother says he only wants our souls-- then what makes him peddle about Thomsonian physic? 19325 Universalist?" |
19325 | Well, Tommy, what''s up with you? |
19325 | Well, what does your story prove? |
19325 | What are''cunjerers,''Aunt''Phrony? |
19325 | What did he die of? 19325 What disease? |
19325 | What disorder? |
19325 | What do you make out of it? |
19325 | What do you mean? |
19325 | What is it that they call you? |
19325 | What is it that they_ call_ me? 19325 What is it, Chloe?" |
19325 | What is it, mother? |
19325 | What is your game just now, Jack, if it is n''t impertinent? 19325 What was the bit of wire?" |
19325 | What''s your line now? 19325 What, my Willie?" |
19325 | Who are you, that come to disturb a lone woman at this hour of the night? |
19325 | Who''s your caller, honey? |
19325 | Why did n''t she tell me? |
19325 | Why, Presidio is-- do you mind sitting down at one of these tables? 19325 Why,"said one of the gazers to her companion, indicating the latter,"I''d a good deal rather pay the difference for this one, would n''t you?" |
19325 | Will you do it? |
19325 | You do n''t mean to say-- why, my dear Mrs. Howard-- is it_ possible_ you do n''t know? 19325 You wo n''t report this at the station?" |
19325 | ''Caze why? |
19325 | ''Twould be a venture strictly new, No shaking up of dusty bones; How does the scheme appeal to you? |
19325 | ''Yes, sir,''I says;''which one?'' |
19325 | ''_"Den he say, sezee,''Mistah Tarr''pin, please, suh, ter lemme keep dese yer? |
19325 | *****"Is that all?" |
19325 | --(I have elsewhere stated that the_ unlearned_ preachers out there(?) |
19325 | 6 as free as preaching? |
19325 | Ai n''t you affeerd of that''ar grate ugly ole jiunt up thar, lilly Davy?'' |
19325 | An''now he turn out ter be no- kyount trash, an''w''at I gwine do? |
19325 | And do you think I looked to see what had tripped him? |
19325 | And does anybody think He is such a tyrant as to make spotless, innocent babies just to damn them? |
19325 | And is it any sin for a horse to be kept fat that does so much work? |
19325 | And is it not time, fellow citizens, that we pause to consider what is to be the future of the American? |
19325 | And must I die in a ditch, after all? |
19325 | And what will be the result in the home- life of the oyster? |
19325 | Bowser?" |
19325 | But are we improving the oyster now? |
19325 | But only for a moment? |
19325 | But the other man was the same looking as the real, so how was I to know?" |
19325 | But what''s worth making a noise about in the dark mundane of our terrestrial sphere, if religion ai n''t? |
19325 | Can I be of any service to you to- day?" |
19325 | Can I forget How Kate and I, in sunny weather, Sat in the shade the elm- tree made And rolled the fragrant weed together? |
19325 | Carrington?" |
19325 | Could it be,--"Julia, what did we do with that stuff of Sarah''s that she marked_ secret service_?" |
19325 | Dey ashk:"Vhere ish der Breitmann?" |
19325 | Did I expect them to walk down to the bridge themselves with great parcels to throw into the river, as I had done by Julia''s? |
19325 | Did anybody ever hear of Peter and Poll a- goin''to them new- fangled places and gitten skins to preach by? |
19325 | Did you see Mr. Thorpe and Mr. Culver as you passed through San Francisco?" |
19325 | Did you see him jammed back in the corner of the car? |
19325 | Do n''t you know my voice? |
19325 | Do n''t you know what it was? |
19325 | Do you know what she''s doing now?" |
19325 | Do you never do that-- in England?" |
19325 | Do you understand? |
19325 | Friends, do n''t all folks when they come to meeting put on their best clothes? |
19325 | Got a match? |
19325 | Has she eloped with Billie Barlow at last?" |
19325 | He say,''Y''all know dat by''ud an''wattles er mine? |
19325 | He''s the kind that never carries a bundle, so I says to him,''Shall I ring for a messenger to carry your package?'' |
19325 | Hilary?" |
19325 | Hilary?" |
19325 | His fiat stands Against the uplifted hands Of thousands who protest And buy the books That they like best; But what of that? |
19325 | How could a woman help wanting it when she found that the salesman had made an error of two dollars? |
19325 | How did you happen to know that I knew them?" |
19325 | How did you know whose coat he preferred?" |
19325 | How do you classify yourself?" |
19325 | How do you work it, anyhow?" |
19325 | How we glorify our Edison, who made the world to go By the bizzy- whizzy magic of the little dynamo? |
19325 | How you come on dis day? |
19325 | I began to feel that I was running ashore; I tried one more lead:"May be you went with the Baptists?" |
19325 | I cried,"Or else you do but jest with me; How is it that your wife has died And yet can here and living be? |
19325 | If Mr. Hopkins had just left, and that man had come in and asked for''My coat,''would n''t you have got Mr. Hopkins''coat?" |
19325 | In vain did his friends endeavor to reason, and then to laugh him out of his strange whims; for when did ever jest or reason cure a sick imagination? |
19325 | Is n''t that all?" |
19325 | Is this a healthy fat which we are putting on him, or is it bloat? |
19325 | Need I say that I then and there bought that chair? |
19325 | Need I say that I then thought he had come for my chair? |
19325 | No? |
19325 | Now do n''t deceive me,--don''t, will you? |
19325 | Now do n''t every man, woman and child in the Purchase know that Sprightly and his preachers have hardly any home, and that they live on horseback? |
19325 | Now, what''s wrong?" |
19325 | Of course, you know the lieutenant''s signature?" |
19325 | Reader, is it any wonder Calvinism is on the decline? |
19325 | Real estate, mortgages, lending money to the poor? |
19325 | River Road, eh? |
19325 | Second attack? |
19325 | See? |
19325 | See? |
19325 | She never actually mentioned the details of his death-- but then, how could she-- poor thing?" |
19325 | She threw me a kiss, But why did she throw it? |
19325 | So I says, hoping it was some kind of a jolly,''Did you lose the one you just wore out, sir?'' |
19325 | So when a friend turns full on me His verbal hose, may I not flee? |
19325 | Step round that fence corner, and take a peep, dear friends, at a horse hung on the stake; what''s he like? |
19325 | Still that odious word? |
19325 | THE LOST INVENTOR[4] BY WALLACE IRWIN Patriotic fellow- citizens, and did you ever note How we honor Mr. Fulton, who devised the choo- choo boat? |
19325 | The money most folks spend in land these men spend for a good horse; and do n''t they_ need_ a good horse to stand mud and swim floods? |
19325 | Think ye he meant a physical walking, and a moving, and a going backward and forward thus? |
19325 | To be sure, she did n''t really need two parrots, but had she not saved five dollars on this one? |
19325 | W''at ken we- all do? |
19325 | Well, Sprightly and his preachers preach near about every day; and ought n''t they always to look decent? |
19325 | What could Lafarge have given to the President? |
19325 | What disease has carried off my friend here so suddenly?" |
19325 | What heart of woman could resist a bargain like this? |
19325 | What in thunder were they at there? |
19325 | What is money for except to spend? |
19325 | What makes you think, as I suppose You do, I''d ever want another man Like you? |
19325 | What night? |
19325 | What police did you see?" |
19325 | What quality was it in Mrs. Hilary that invariably brought both discussion and pleasantry to a standstill? |
19325 | What was to be done? |
19325 | What''s he live on? |
19325 | What-- what are the symptoms?" |
19325 | When Mrs. Bowser asked him how he felt he replied:"How do I feel? |
19325 | When she had satisfied herself on these points, she asked:"How were you taken?" |
19325 | Where did you say he''s gone?" |
19325 | Where do you suppose you are?" |
19325 | Where is your restaurant?" |
19325 | Where will this all lead at last, I ask as a careful scientist? |
19325 | Who''d be melancholy now? |
19325 | Who''s the Engineer unseen? |
19325 | Who''s the man behind the throttle? |
19325 | Why, did n''t you know that was the reason she spent last year in Colorado?" |
19325 | Whyn''t you go atter dat man an''gin him a lambastin''an''git back w''at b''long to you?'' |
19325 | Will nobody give me a drop of cold water?" |
19325 | Wo n''t you try another? |
19325 | Wo n''t you, Willie?" |
19325 | You may remember that room I had in the old Adams and Harper Block? |
19325 | You read my sign on the outer wall? |
19325 | You s''pose I''se talkin''''bout de li''l ol''no- kyount tarr''pins dey has dese days? |
19325 | You wo n''t print anything about this?" |
19325 | You''re not going to smoke again? |
19325 | and what''s more onsentaneous and homogeneous to man''s sublimated moral nature, than religion? |
19325 | and would n''t it be wrong if preachers came in old torn coats and dirty shirts? |
19325 | have you come at last? |
19325 | haw!--t''ink I''m gwyin to fite puttee lilly baby? |
19325 | how can you think your babes might n''t get religion and die and be burned for ever and ever? |
19325 | tell me, ai n''t philosophy what''s according to the consistency of nature''s regular laws? |
19325 | who''s that?" |
19325 | will you move?" |
21615 | And do you account as nothing, sir, the liberty of addressing me thus? |
21615 | Are these then my judges? |
21615 | B.--Pray, Sir, is the''Turkish Spy''a genuine book? 21615 Can I see this Petronius? |
21615 | Do n''t you perceive,said Madame Tencin,"that they are_ nonsense verses_?" |
21615 | Do you ask why Leo did not take the sacrament on his death- bed?--How could he? 21615 Do you hear, madman?" |
21615 | Heretofore money was given to poets that they might sing: how much will you give me, Paul, to be silent? |
21615 | Is it, in heaven, a crime to love too well? |
21615 | Some Roman senators examined the Jews in this manner:--If God hath no delight in the worship of idols, why did he not destroy them? 21615 The earl, when he kissed his hand, the king hung about his neck, slabbering his cheeks, saying--''For God''s sake, when shall I see thee again? |
21615 | Thou dear_ Will Shoestring_, how shall I draw thee? 21615 Why should he speak of what he did not understand?" |
21615 | [ 19] Who will pursue important labours when they read these anecdotes? 21615 ''For God''s sake let me,''said the king:--''Shall I, shall I?'' 21615 ''s grounds? 21615 A furious foe, unconscious, proves a friend; On MILTON''S VERSE does BENTLEY comment? 21615 A later catholic theologist, the famous Tillemont, condemns_ all the illustrious pagans_ to the_ eternal torments of Hell_? 21615 Am I considered in nowise resembling him? 21615 And for what was this unhappy Jesuit condemned? 21615 And from whence did the Arabian fabulists borrow it? 21615 And if angels know things more clearly in a morning? 21615 And if she escaped, of what use was it? 21615 And when I asked him if it would be the religion of Jesus Christ, or that of Mahomet? 21615 And when the midwife said,Madam, cry out, that will give you ease,"she answered in_ good Spanish_,"How dare you give me such advice? |
21615 | And you really trouble yourself about this? |
21615 | Another is sarcastic-- Ut canerent data multa olim sunt Vatibus à ¦ ra: Ut taceam, quantum tu mihi, Paule, dabis? |
21615 | Are there persons who value_ books_ by the length of their titles, as formerly the ability of a physician was judged by the dimensions of his wig? |
21615 | Are they deficient in figures? |
21615 | Are we not to class among_ literary follies_ the strange researches which writers, even of the present day, have made in_ Antediluvian_ times? |
21615 | But how has it happened that this_ vicar_ should be so notorious, and one in much higher rank, acting the same part, should have escaped notice? |
21615 | But what has produced this general and expanding taste for literary research in the world, and especially in England? |
21615 | But where did the Greeks find it? |
21615 | Dacier, a poetical pedant after all, was asked who was the greater poet, Homer or Virgil? |
21615 | Did he appear in the morning, noon, or evening? |
21615 | Did he seem to be young or old? |
21615 | Did not your eminence perceive that not only they knew not their parts, but that they were all_ drunk_?" |
21615 | Did the wise and grave senate dread those inconveniences which attend its indiscriminate use? |
21615 | Do I resemble Symmachus? |
21615 | Does it conceal it? |
21615 | Does it discover the genius of the writer? |
21615 | Does the English Turkish Spy differ from the French one? |
21615 | Even Aquinas could gravely debate, Whether Christ was not an hermaphrodite? |
21615 | From a soil so arid what can be expected but insipid fruits? |
21615 | Had she a thorough knowledge of the Book of Sentences, and all it contains? |
21615 | Had she perished, what would have become of the epitaph? |
21615 | He acquaints us with the following circumstances of the immorality of that age:"Who has not got a mistress besides his wife? |
21615 | He inquires if it were true that they had at Bologna_ an entire Petronius_? |
21615 | He says,"To read the pamphlets of a Perizonius and a Kuster on the à � s grave of the ancients, who would not renounce all commerce with antiquity? |
21615 | He thus describes himself in one of his letters; and who could be in better humour? |
21615 | How is it possible, that with such a name he could be right concerning the à � s grave? |
21615 | How long from Art''s reflected hues Shalt thou a mimic charm receive? |
21615 | How many angels can dance on the point of a very fine needle, without jostling one another? |
21615 | How, said Alexander, did we not separate_ yesterday_ from each other? |
21615 | If genius has too often complained of its patrons, has it not also often over- valued their protection? |
21615 | If the followers of Hippocrates formed the majority, was it not very unorthodox in the Gnidians to prefer taking physic their own way? |
21615 | In God''s name, said Gadiffer, what means your majesty? |
21615 | In the first scene of the following act, when he was asked"Why did you not keep your children with you? |
21615 | In what dress was he? |
21615 | In youth he was luxurious; In manhood he was cruel; In old age he was avaricious: What could be hoped from him? |
21615 | Is another full of figures? |
21615 | Is it any where said that we must believe your old prophets( with whom your memory seems overburdened) to be more perfect than our gods? |
21615 | Is it obscure? |
21615 | Is my style too perspicuous? |
21615 | Is this true? |
21615 | Jackson of Exeter, in reply to a question of Dryden,"What passion can not music raise or quell?" |
21615 | Laboured? |
21615 | Must we suppose that men of letters are exempt from the human passions? |
21615 | N''es- tu pas Barrabas, Busiris, Phalaris, Ganelon, Le Felon? |
21615 | Negligent? |
21615 | Nous nous aimons un peu, c''est notre foible à tous; Le prix que nous valons que le sçait mieux que nous? |
21615 | Now listen to me: Is it possible that a virgin can bring forth a child without ceasing to be a virgin? |
21615 | One asked the other,"Why do you want two cushions, when I have only one?" |
21615 | Or is it too grave? |
21615 | Others again debated-- Whether the angel Gabriel appeared to the Virgin Mary in the shape of a serpent, of a dove, of a man, or of a woman? |
21615 | Our eyes only behold manna: are you desirous of knowing the reason? |
21615 | Pere Bohours seriously asks if a German_ can be a_ BEL ESPRIT? |
21615 | Pere Bouhours observes, that the Spanish poets display an extravagant imagination, which is by no means destitute of_ esprit_--shall we say_ wit_? |
21615 | Self- love prevails too much in every state; Who, like ourselves, our secret worth can rate? |
21615 | Shall one letter be found not sufficiently serious? |
21615 | She then asked why M. Menage was not there? |
21615 | She then inquired aside of the chancellor whether the academicians were to sit or stand before her? |
21615 | She, dissembling, asked him if he had the gout? |
21615 | Sire( said Floridas), it is true; but one thing surprises me:--how is it that our wounds have healed in one night? |
21615 | So men are valued; their labours vilified by fellowes of no worth themselves, as things of nought: Who could not have done as much? |
21615 | So that all this, opposed to the gravity, the sobriety, the majesty of Virgil, what is it but tinsel compared with gold?" |
21615 | The old countess of Mar rushed into the room, and taking the king in her arms, asked how he dared to lay his hands on the Lord''s anointed? |
21615 | Then said I to them, shall we have part of you in the other world when the Messiah shall come? |
21615 | Then they sent to the queens, to ask if the king came into their apartments? |
21615 | Then, said the king, some of us are enchanted; Floridas, didst thou not think we separated_ yesterday_? |
21615 | There are five novels in prose of Lopes de Vega; the first without A, the second without E, the third without I,& c. Who will attempt to verify them? |
21615 | They asked the chamberlain, if the king frequently saw him? |
21615 | Thou dear outside, will you be_ combing your wig_, playing with your_ box_, or picking your teeth?" |
21615 | Was his garment white or of two colours? |
21615 | Was his linen clean or foul? |
21615 | Was she acquainted with the mechanic and liberal arts? |
21615 | Was this a mere stroke of humour, or designed to insinuate that the freedom of criticism could only be allowed to his lacquey? |
21615 | Well, said the king, have ye news of the king of England? |
21615 | What are we to understand? |
21615 | What could Racine do? |
21615 | What greater plague can hell itself devise, Than to be willing thus to tantalise? |
21615 | What is more agreeable to the curiosity of the mind and the eye than the portraits of great characters? |
21615 | What murder, or what war, has ever been occasioned for a virgin? |
21615 | What spot on earth could you find, which, like this, can so interest your vanity and gratify your taste?" |
21615 | What therefore must we think of an unhappy marriage, since a happy one is exposed to such evils? |
21615 | What was the colour of the Virgin Mary''s hair? |
21615 | What was the consequence? |
21615 | What were the intentions of Pletho? |
21615 | When a poem was shown to him which had been highly commended, he sarcastically asked if it would"lower the price of bread?" |
21615 | When he was introduced to Pelisson, who wished to be serviceable to him, the minister said,"In what can he be employed? |
21615 | Where is TRUTH? |
21615 | Whether the pious at the resurrection will rise with their bowels? |
21615 | Whether there are excrements in Paradise? |
21615 | Who can read his history of Chidiock Titchbourne unmoved? |
21615 | Who can refrain from laughter, when one of these commentators even points his attacks at the very name of his adversary? |
21615 | Who does not regret the loss of the Anticato of CÃ ¦ sar? |
21615 | Who is gratified by"the mad Cornarus,"or"the flayed Fox?" |
21615 | Who is not charmed with that fine expression of her poetical sensibility? |
21615 | Why d----e what would you be at? |
21615 | Why did Plato so severely condemn the great bard, and imitate him? |
21615 | Why do you buy so many books? |
21615 | Why rage, then? |
21615 | Will my letters be condemned for their length? |
21615 | Will some of them be criticised for their brevity? |
21615 | Will you not change these foolish sentiments? |
21615 | Will you not convert yourself? |
21615 | Would not a savage, who had never listened to a musical instrument, feel certain emotions at listening to one for the first time? |
21615 | Would you pervert us? |
21615 | _ Quid vides festucam in_ OCULO_ fratris tui, et trabem in_ OCULO_ tuo non vides_? |
21615 | _ Religion_ rendered cheerful the abrupt night of futurity; and what can_ philosophy_ do more, or rather, can philosophy do as much? |
21615 | and when she was told that he did not belong to the Academy, she asked why he did not? |
21615 | at the same time, he generally finishes a period with--"Do you hear, you dog?" |
21615 | or can refuse to sympathise with his account of the painful difficulties of the English Monarchs with their loyal subjects of the old faith? |
21615 | returned Arnauld,"have we not all Eternity to rest in?" |
21615 | sarcastically returns,"What passion_ can_ music raise or quell?" |
21615 | thy death defend? |
21615 | who inquires if angels pass from one extreme to another without going through the_ middle_? |
21615 | who of those who believed in you have I ever treated so cruelly? |
18908 | And then? 18908 And then?" |
18908 | And what do you know? |
18908 | Are you ready? |
18908 | Dick? |
18908 | Did I go and see my_ protà © gà © s_ again? 18908 Do you only know one story?" |
18908 | Hoo, hoo, why do n''t you lie still there? |
18908 | I? |
18908 | Ready,said Dick;"what''s the time?" |
18908 | Tomorrer''s Chrismiss,--ain''t it? |
18908 | Well, who can know? 18908 Whar''s the boys?" |
18908 | Whar''s the mare? |
18908 | What am I to do here? 18908 What are they about?" |
18908 | What does the holy man do then? |
18908 | What is coming,--what, what? |
18908 | What means that star,the Shepherds said,"That brightens through the rocky glen?" |
18908 | What''s going to be done? |
18908 | What''s the matter, Granny? |
18908 | What''s the meaning of this? |
18908 | Where are they all going? |
18908 | Where do you come from? |
18908 | Who''s Klumpey- Dumpey? |
18908 | Why not? 18908 ( Who has exhausted that subject, we should like to know?) 18908 ***** A CHRISTMAS CAROL JAMES RUSSELL LOWELLWhat means this glory round our feet,"The Magi mused,"more bright than morn?" |
18908 | ***** CHRISTMAS SONG LYDIA A.C. WARD Why do bells for Christmas ring? |
18908 | ***** CHRISTMAS WASHINGTON IRVING But is old, old, good old Christmas gone? |
18908 | ***** MINSTRELS AND MAIDS WILLIAM MORRIS Outlanders, whence come ye last? |
18908 | About Christmas Eve? |
18908 | About Christmas- boxes? |
18908 | About Hogmany? |
18908 | About Miss Smith? |
18908 | About New- Year''s Day? |
18908 | About Twelfth- cake? |
18908 | About aldermen? |
18908 | About all being in the right? |
18908 | About all being in the wrong? |
18908 | About beef, for instance? |
18908 | About blind- man''s- buff? |
18908 | About brawn? |
18908 | About cards? |
18908 | About carols? |
18908 | About characters? |
18908 | About charity? |
18908 | About chilblains? |
18908 | About eating too much? |
18908 | About elder- wine? |
18908 | About faith, hope, and endeavor? |
18908 | About forfeits? |
18908 | About gifts? |
18908 | About going- a- gooding? |
18908 | About goose- pie? |
18908 | About hackins? |
18908 | About he- can- do- little- that- can''t- do- this? |
18908 | About hobby- horse? |
18908 | About holly? |
18908 | About hoppings? |
18908 | About hot cockles? |
18908 | About hunt- the- slipper? |
18908 | About ivy? |
18908 | About king and queen? |
18908 | About loaf- stealing? |
18908 | About mince- pie? |
18908 | About mistletoe? |
18908 | About mumming? |
18908 | About pantomimes? |
18908 | About plum- porridge? |
18908 | About plum- pudding? |
18908 | About puss- in- the- corner? |
18908 | About rosemary? |
18908 | About saluting the apple- trees? |
18908 | About school- boys? |
18908 | About shoeing the wild- mare? |
18908 | About snap- dragon? |
18908 | About the bell- man? |
18908 | About the block on it? |
18908 | About the doctor? |
18908 | About the fire? |
18908 | About the greatest plum- pudding for the greatest number? |
18908 | About the waits? |
18908 | About their mothers? |
18908 | About thread- the- needle? |
18908 | About turkeys? |
18908 | About wad- shooting? |
18908 | About wakes? |
18908 | About wassail? |
18908 | About yule- doughs? |
18908 | About"feed- the- dove"? |
18908 | About_ Julklaps_? |
18908 | All babyhood he holdeth, All motherhood enfoldeth-- Yet who hath seen his face? |
18908 | And if you keep it for a day, why not always? |
18908 | And now, as she turns round, what a pleasant face she shows us, does she not? |
18908 | And then? |
18908 | Are these palms of peace from heaven That these lovely spirits bring? |
18908 | Are they Christmas fairies stealing Rows of little socks to fill? |
18908 | Are they angels floating hither With their message of good- will? |
18908 | Are you sleeping, are you waking? |
18908 | Art going home with me to- night?" |
18908 | Be here any maids? |
18908 | But it''s mighty cur''o''s about Chrismiss,--ain''t it? |
18908 | But when did that happen? |
18908 | But who shall bring_ their_ Christmas Who wrestle still with life? |
18908 | Cradled between a delightful memory and a blissful anticipation, who does not envy them? |
18908 | Declare to us, bright star, if we shall seek Him in the morning''s blushing cheek, Or search the beds of spices through, To find him out? |
18908 | Did you ever get thoroughly waked up in the night by a sudden fright? |
18908 | Did you ever see fairies dancing on the lawn? |
18908 | Did you not meet them?" |
18908 | Do n''t you know any about bacon and tallow candles-- a store- room story?" |
18908 | Do n''t you think so, you old Fir Tree?" |
18908 | Do you know why? |
18908 | Does my son know what this day means?" |
18908 | Drain we the cup.-- Friend, art afraid? |
18908 | Four black eyes Grow big with surprise; And then grow bigger When a tiny figure, Jaunty and airy,( Is it a fairy?) |
18908 | Gems of the mountain and pearls of the ocean, Myrrh from the forest, or gold from the mine? |
18908 | Good people, are you waking? |
18908 | Had he taken the wrong road, or was this Rattlesnake Creek? |
18908 | Has another used you ill? |
18908 | Has any man a quarrel? |
18908 | Have we not all known Harlequin, who rules the roast, and has the pretty Columbine to himself? |
18908 | Have you been there? |
18908 | Heard you never of the story, How they cross''d the desert wild, Journey''d on by plain and mountain, Till they found the Holy Child? |
18908 | How does she feel now?" |
18908 | How often have I told you, you must n''t manifest such an interest in those Brinkers? |
18908 | How they open''d all their treasure, Kneeling to that Infant King, Gave the gold and fragrant incense, Gave the myrrh in offering? |
18908 | I ORIGIN IS THERE A SANTA CLAUS? |
18908 | I wonder if trees will come out of the forest to look at me? |
18908 | In my distress Thou cam''st to me: What thanks shall I return to Thee? |
18908 | In the spring, when the swallows and the Stork came, the Tree asked them,"Do you know where they were taken? |
18908 | In"Christmas Holly:"I sing the holly, and who can breathe Aught of that that is not good? |
18908 | Is he awake yet?" |
18908 | Is it all real? |
18908 | Is it any wonder that little Roger there is so fond of her? |
18908 | Is it really come again, With its memories and greetings, With its joy and with its pain? |
18908 | Know ye not that lowly Baby Was the bright and morning star, He who came to light the Gentiles, And the darken''d isles afar? |
18908 | Making but dull cheer, Shepherds though ye be? |
18908 | Nothing but the hair on his good, gray, old head and beard left? |
18908 | Now do you know what he does with these things? |
18908 | Nowell,& c. And a little CHILD On her arm had she;''Wot ye who this is?'' |
18908 | Nowell,& c. Quoth I''Fellows mine, Why this guise sit ye? |
18908 | Nowell,& c.''How name ye this Lord, Shepherds?'' |
18908 | Of all the gifts of Christmas, are you fain to win the best? |
18908 | Oh, the Shepherds in Judea!-- Do you think the Shepherds know How the whole round earth is brightened In the ruddy Christmas glow? |
18908 | Only the Fir Tree was quite silent, and thought,"Shall I not be in it? |
18908 | Please tell me the truth; is there a Santa Claus? |
18908 | Poets speak of living rocks, but what is their life to that of houses? |
18908 | Pray whither sailed those ships all three On Christmas day in the morning? |
18908 | Say, shall we yield Him, in costly devotion, Odors of Edom and offerings divine? |
18908 | Shall I grow fast here, and stand adorned in summer and winter?" |
18908 | Shall it enjoy life, they being dead? |
18908 | She jest made that up, did n''t she, jest to aggrewate me and you? |
18908 | Stone- blind all, and stone- deaf, and with hearts of stone; whereas who ever saw a house without eyes-- that is, windows? |
18908 | The circus and the show are brimful of fun and laughter, are they? |
18908 | The door closed but imperfectly, and the following dialogue was distinctly audible:--"Now, sonny, whar does she ache worst?" |
18908 | The fact is, I''ve nothing to do but to hate holidays.--But will you not dine with me?" |
18908 | The pantomime is crowded with merry hearts, is it? |
18908 | The shops look merry, do they, with their bright toys and their green branches? |
18908 | Then Johnny:--"Hevin''a good time out yar, dad?" |
18908 | Then Santa Claus asks:"How about the Brinkers, my dear?" |
18908 | There must be something grander, something greater still to come; but what? |
18908 | They have no wives, and mortify the flesh, and--""What is their aim in this?" |
18908 | This crowns his feast with wine and wit,-- Who brought him to that mirth and state? |
18908 | This day shall Christian lips be mute, And Christian hearts be cold? |
18908 | Thou comest to bid farewell to thy brothers and father?" |
18908 | To see this babe all innocence; A martyr born in our defence: Can man forget the story? |
18908 | Was it exhaustion from a loss of blood, or what? |
18908 | We know him and we love him, No man to us need prove him-- Yet who hath seen his face? |
18908 | What are you starin''at, Old Man?" |
18908 | What can I give Him, Poor as I am? |
18908 | What destiny awaited them? |
18908 | What happens then?" |
18908 | What is this? |
18908 | What is to happen?" |
18908 | What kind of thing is this sea, and how does it look?" |
18908 | What sweet spell are these elves weaving, As like larks they chirp and sing? |
18908 | What then doth make the element so bright? |
18908 | What was to happen now? |
18908 | What will they do to us?" |
18908 | When may that be done? |
18908 | Where now the merry boys and girls that thrust their fingers in thy blaze? |
18908 | Where were they going? |
18908 | Whither are they taken?" |
18908 | Who bade the mud from Dives''s wheel To spurn the rags of Lazarus? |
18908 | Who could tell? |
18908 | Who dines at this club on Christmas but lonely bachelors? |
18908 | Who ever saw a rock with eyes-- that is, with windows? |
18908 | Who knows the inscrutable design? |
18908 | Why do little children sing? |
18908 | Why do they call it Chrismiss?" |
18908 | Why do they keep all their branches? |
18908 | Why not? |
18908 | Why should your mother, Charles, not mine, Be weeping at her darling''s grave? |
18908 | Will the sparrows fly against the panes? |
18908 | Will you hear the story of Ivede- Avede, or of Klumpey- Dumpey, who fell down stairs, and still was raised up to honor and married the Princess?" |
18908 | Wot''s Chrismiss, anyway? |
18908 | Wot''s it all about?" |
18908 | Wot''s the boys doin''out thar?" |
18908 | Would''st be afeard, little''un, to run up with them?" |
18908 | Yes, then something even better will come, something far more charming, or else why should they adorn me so? |
18908 | _ The snow in the street and the wind on the door._ Through what green seas and great have ye past? |
18908 | do they suppose that every thing has been said that_ can_ be said about any one Christmas thing? |
18908 | he added, with a forced laugh;"do you think I''m drunk?" |
18908 | look not so dismayed, All of my heart, dear love, thou hast Jealous, beloved? |
18908 | lovely voices of the sky Which hymned the Saviour''s birth, Are ye not singing still on high, Ye that sang,"Peace on earth"? |
18908 | shall I have nothing to do in it?" |
18465 | ''Right out in the open air?'' 18465 A-- Sef-- Seffy, shall I set up for you tell you git home?" |
18465 | And ai n''t got nossing to trade? |
18465 | And my butterfly necktie with--"Wiss the di''mond on? |
18465 | And-- and-- and-- Sef-- Seffy, what you goin''to_ do_? |
18465 | Anypotty know ter Miss Scutter haus? |
18465 | Chloe,said mamma,"were not those pantaloons you were shaking to- day quite shrunk and worn out?" |
18465 | Chokes yer, this dust? 18465 Come, ma,"said he;"how much longer ye goin''to pester me in this way?" |
18465 | Do n''t you have some place here on purpose for things to be washed? |
18465 | Do you use your mistress''s best saucers for that? |
18465 | Do? |
18465 | Er-- Sally-- where you going to to- night? |
18465 | For,said he,"since it is My House and I am to Live in It, why should I ask the Advice of my Neighbors as to its Construction?" |
18465 | He do n''t seem to notice-- nor keer--''bout gals-- do he? |
18465 | Her grandfather you speak of? |
18465 | Hev yoo got wun? |
18465 | How is this hoss goin''to hear anything that I say ef you keep up such a tarnal cacklin''? |
18465 | I hev devoted myself to the task uv bindin up the wounds uv my beloved country--"Did you stop anybody very much from inflictin them sed wounds? |
18465 | I wonder what for kind of anchel he''d make, anyhow? 18465 Just step up,"said her mistress,"and bring them down; but stay-- what did you say was the price of these candlesticks, sir?" |
18465 | Ken I walk behind your load A spell in this road? |
18465 | Now whar''s the directions, Madeline? |
18465 | Now, pa,said she;"what tribe was it in sacred writ that wore bunnits?" |
18465 | Safe? |
18465 | Say-- ain''t you got no feelings, you idjiot? |
18465 | Stop to drink? 18465 That is a very pretty girl,"I said on that occasion to a Jersey- man;"who is she?" |
18465 | Vot you vantsh mit your schnapps und lager? 18465 W- w- what''s the matter, mother?" |
18465 | Wat prizns wuz yoo incarcerated in? |
18465 | Well-- may I set up with you? |
18465 | What did yer do with all yer tin? 18465 What did yer do? |
18465 | What do_ you_ think? |
18465 | What does ladies know''bout work, I want to know? 18465 What is this drawer for, Dinah?" |
18465 | What wud ye do if ye found it? |
18465 | What''s this, Dinah? 18465 What''s this?" |
18465 | What, this trash? |
18465 | Where do you keep your nutmegs, Dinah? |
18465 | Where is Wood, who used to drive this stage? |
18465 | Who said anything about marrying? |
18465 | Who''s the purchaser? 18465 Why do n''t you mix your biscuits on the pastry- table, there?" |
18465 | Why,responded our friend with more of sadness than of satire in his tone,"why are you so exasperated? |
18465 | Why-- what I''m a- going to do, hah? 18465 Wife,"said he, beating aside the externals of man that hung about his dressing- room,"where is my old drab coat?" |
18465 | Will you please, suh,say de rich man,"ax him bring a drink ter me, Wid a li''l''ice ter cool it? |
18465 | Yit a minute,shouted the old fellow, pulling out his bull''s- eye watch again,"what''s bid? |
18465 | ''An''how about Arthur Doheny?'' |
18465 | ''D''ye think ye''re votin''f''r th''best?'' |
18465 | ''Did ye vote?'' |
18465 | ''How''s Clarence Doolittle?'' |
18465 | ''I wondher who voted thim fourteen?'' |
18465 | ''Was he?'' |
18465 | ''What does it show?'' |
18465 | ''Where''s the sixth precin''t?'' |
18465 | ''Which wan iv th''distinguished bunko steerers got ye''er invalu''ble suffrage?'' |
18465 | ''Who''ll we put up?'' |
18465 | ( Old Gentleman_ is dragged into corner and silenced._) YOUNG WOMAN(_ singing_)--"Why do I sing? |
18465 | ( Perhaps you, too, have?) |
18465 | (_ Drinks from bottle._) Now, where are my bronchial troches? |
18465 | (_ Guests grow restless._) Hostess-- Couldn''t you do a trick while we are waiting-- one with the egg- beater and turnip? |
18465 | (_ Guests moan softly and demand of one another_, Why does she sing?) |
18465 | (_ Guests near by groan._) VOICE(_ overheard_)--Madame Cully? |
18465 | (_ To guests_)--Perhaps, some of you gentlemen would n''t mind lending us your overcoats to cover the clothes- horse? |
18465 | (_ To women guests._) How d''ye do? |
18465 | A bird in the hand is worth seferal in another feller''s-- not so?" |
18465 | Ai n''t it, Seffy? |
18465 | Am I a turnip? |
18465 | An''what do you reckon? |
18465 | And I says to a man sittin''next to me, says I,"What sort of fool playin''is that?" |
18465 | And if we fell among anthropophagi, would not our love of approbation make us long to be as succulent as young pigs? |
18465 | And nefer say a word or do a sing to help the occurrences along? |
18465 | And then:"But what''s feelings got to do with cow- pasture?" |
18465 | And what, think you, is the influence of this extravagant expense and senseless show upon these same young men and women? |
18465 | And who are these of our secondly, these"old families?" |
18465 | And ye''ll pay the potheen? |
18465 | Are these the processes by which a noble race is made and perpetuated? |
18465 | Are you all ready? |
18465 | Are you quite shoor-- quite shoor? |
18465 | At me or you, Seffy?" |
18465 | Birds of a feather flock wiss one another? |
18465 | But for why-- say, for why?" |
18465 | But what_ yit_?" |
18465 | But why had Mrs. Potiphar given this ball? |
18465 | Ca n''t hardly talk? |
18465 | De place is onfamiliar, en I wonder whar''I is?" |
18465 | Den de rich man say:"Whar''Laz''rus dat wuz beggin''at my gate?" |
18465 | Do n''t you think I could stand just a little more rouge? |
18465 | Do you not see, our pompous friend, that you are only pointing your own unimportance? |
18465 | Do you understand?" |
18465 | Do you, Lishe?" |
18465 | ELOCUTIONIST-- I was all right, was n''t I, mama? |
18465 | En den he raise a racket, en he holler out:"What dis? |
18465 | FASCINATION BY JOHN B. TABB Among your many playmates here, How is it that you all prefer Your little friend, my dear? |
18465 | From whom is its character of unparalleled enterprise, heroism, and success derived? |
18465 | HOST(_ from above, just as front door opens, admitting_ Baron von Gosheimer_ and two women guests_)--Where the devil are my shirts? |
18465 | HOSTESS-- Couldn''t you make up one? |
18465 | Had he not just done the bravest thing of his small life? |
18465 | Hah? |
18465 | Hah? |
18465 | Has either of you a poker? |
18465 | He asks me questions sooch as dese: Who baints mine nose so red? |
18465 | He runs, und schumps, und schmashes dings In all barts off der house: But vot off dot? |
18465 | How can we be, if we have our eyes open? |
18465 | How gan I all dose dings eggsblain To dot schmall Yawcob Strauss? |
18465 | How looks this craven despondency, before the stern virtues of the ages we call dark? |
18465 | How would they silence you, Barney machree? |
18465 | How''s the proferb? |
18465 | Huh?" |
18465 | I attempted to kindle a fire in the stove, but it sizzled a little while, spitefully, as much as to say,"What, Sunday morning? |
18465 | I never see a chap so bruised and battered up before As that there villain was when he was picked up from the floor!-- The show? |
18465 | I''ll call the men- folks ef you do n''t clear;"and at once she shouted, in a tip- top voice,"Ike, you Ike, where air you?" |
18465 | I''ll travel no farther, I''m dyin''for-- wather; Come on, if ye like-- Can ye loan me a quarther? |
18465 | If such are the elements, can we be long in arriving at the present state, and necessary future condition of parties? |
18465 | If we lived among people who adored squinting, should we not all take to it, and cherish it as the apple of our eye? |
18465 | If your father was Governor of the State, what right have you to use that fact only to fatten your self- conceit? |
18465 | If_ Vanity Fair_ be a satire, what novel of society is not? |
18465 | Is it amusement? |
18465 | Is it right to deprive them of their daily bread,--I mean their daily baby? |
18465 | Is it then essential to do this thing biennially? |
18465 | Is the spirit of that story less true of New York than of London? |
18465 | Is this account of the matter, or_ Vanity Fair_, the satire? |
18465 | Is this the assembled flower of manhood and womanhood, called"best society,"and to see which is so envied a privilege? |
18465 | JOKER-- So low you ca n''t hear it? |
18465 | MASCULINE VOICE FROM ABOVE-- Sarah, where the devil have you put my shirts? |
18465 | Mama, you did n''t forget the lemon juice and sugar? |
18465 | Mr. Hinman looked gently surprised and asked:"Why not, Robert?" |
18465 | Next mornin''what d''you think we heard? |
18465 | No? |
18465 | Not the way you went to Denver? |
18465 | Now, what did you say you would require-- an egg- beater and a turnip, was n''t it? |
18465 | OMNIPRESENT JOKER(_ greeting acquaintance_)--Hello, old man!--going to sing to- night? |
18465 | Oh, why do I sing?" |
18465 | On the strict Q.T., Why do my Trilbys get so ossified? |
18465 | One by one the pupils dropped out of the race with despairing faces, but always at the closing peremptory:"Answer?" |
18465 | Or, now, was it his brother-- Baltzer Iron- Cabbage? |
18465 | Potiphar''s?" |
18465 | Potiphar''s?" |
18465 | Say, I wonder if it_ is_ horse- anchels?" |
18465 | Say-- what''ll you give for him, hah? |
18465 | Shall we really see the"best society of the city,"the picked flower of its genius, character and beauty? |
18465 | Shall we, truly? |
18465 | Take care, good care; for whether you say it by your lips or by your life, that withering response awaits you--"then what are_ you_?" |
18465 | The Bible says, Swear not at all, and I s''pose you know the commandments about swearin''?'' |
18465 | The teacher''s eyes grew round and big as he inquired:"Who says there will not?" |
18465 | Ton''t you versteh? |
18465 | Und oop dere rose a meer maid, Vot had n''t got nodings on, Und she say,"Oh, Ritter Hugo, Vhere you goes mit yourself alone?" |
18465 | VOICE(_ overheard_)--The one in the white- lace gown and all those diamonds? |
18465 | Veal is tender, but can it be favorably compared with beef? |
18465 | WOMAN GUEST(_ to neighbor_)--I never saw Mrs. Smythe looking quite so hideous and atrociously vulgar before, did you? |
18465 | Was I a mutineer? |
18465 | Was n''t it more''n a year, boys? |
18465 | Whar''n hell''s yer corn? |
18465 | What are the prospects of any society of which that tale is the true history? |
18465 | What athlete has turned more somersaults than some of these representative men? |
18465 | What d''ye mean by overhauling me on the road, and askin''me to git into yer d-- d old traveling lunatic asylum?" |
18465 | What did I see? |
18465 | What did n''t yer do? |
18465 | What do you charge?" |
18465 | What girl dares wear curls, when Martelle prescribes puffs or bandeaux? |
18465 | What glory to escape from the jaws of death, if the jaws repudiate us? |
18465 | What lion has roared more gently than a few of these sucking doves? |
18465 | What makes the"best society"of men and women? |
18465 | What specimen of Young America dares have his trousers loose or wear straps to them? |
18465 | What tribe was it in sacred writ that wore bunnits?" |
18465 | What you sink?" |
18465 | What youth ventures to say sharp things, of slavery, for instance, at a polite dinner- table? |
18465 | What''s bid?" |
18465 | What''s he been doin''again ye?" |
18465 | What''s the name, please?" |
18465 | What-- water? |
18465 | When George the Fourth outraged humanity in his treatment of Queen Caroline, who was the first scoundrel in Europe? |
18465 | When I gaze upon German and French peasant- women, I ask Michelet which is right, he or Nature? |
18465 | When Johnson, Burke, Goldsmith, Garrick, Reynolds, and their friends, met at supper in Goldsmith''s rooms, where was the"best society"in England? |
18465 | When all is new to them, What will you do to them? |
18465 | When''d mas''r ever get his dinner, if I was to spend all my time a- washin''and a- puttin''up dishes? |
18465 | Where were their heads, and their hearts, and their arms? |
18465 | Who are enamored of a puerile imitation of foreign splendors? |
18465 | Who are its characteristic children, the pith, the sinew, the bone, of its prosperity? |
18465 | Who are, essentially, Americans? |
18465 | Who compose it? |
18465 | Who dares say precisely what he thinks upon a great topic? |
18465 | Who diligently devote their time to nothing, foolishly and wrongly supposing that a young English nobleman has nothing to do? |
18465 | Who ever heard of a journalist getting a bargain? |
18465 | Who found, and direct, and continue its manifold institutions of mercy and education? |
18465 | Who has been fooling you?" |
18465 | Who have given it its place in the respect and the fear of the world? |
18465 | Who make this country? |
18465 | Who shall decree? |
18465 | Who squander, with profuse recklessness, the hard- earned fortunes of their sires? |
18465 | Who strenuously endeavor to graft the questionable points of Parisian society upon our own? |
18465 | Who vas it cuts dot schmoodth blace oudt Vrom der hair ubon mine he d? |
18465 | Who was it carrid th''pall? |
18465 | Who was it judged th''cake walk? |
18465 | Who was it sthud up at th''christening? |
18465 | Who, annually, recruit its energies, confirm its progress, and secure its triumph? |
18465 | Whom shall we meet if we go to this ball? |
18465 | Whose ca- ards did th''grievin''widow, th''blushin''bridegroom, or th''happy father find in th''hack? |
18465 | Whose habits and principles would ruin this country as rapidly as it has been made? |
18465 | Why am I minus when it''s up to me To brace my Paris Pansy for a glide? |
18465 | Why did we come? |
18465 | Why harrow up the public bosom, or lasserate the public mind? |
18465 | Why-- say-- Seffy, what you set up_ for_?" |
18465 | Will you be true to them? |
18465 | Will you read the list over? |
18465 | Wonder where Jimmy is gone to?" |
18465 | YES? |
18465 | Ya- as, you, What-- two? |
18465 | Yere he goes to the highest bidder-- for richer, for poorer, for better, for worser, up and down, in and out, swing your partners-- what''s bid? |
18465 | Yis, yis; that''s Lovell, ai n''t it, teacher?" |
18465 | You do n''t wrap up meat in your mistress''s best table- cloth?" |
18465 | _ Played well?_ You bet he did; but do n''t interrupt me. |
18465 | ai n''t ye most through with this, ma?" |
18465 | can ye see in the dark?" |
18465 | king of gods and men, what are_ you_? |
18465 | says the hoosier,''real genewine, good salt?'' |
18465 | that I say-- Will ye heed what I told ye? |
18465 | what are you stopping for? |
28051 | A fine day, is n''t it? |
28051 | ALL Yes, Doctor, what is it? |
28051 | Ai n''t I jest told ye we ai n''t got no riders? |
28051 | Are there any further remarks? |
28051 | Be ye hurt? |
28051 | Call him over here-- will you, Rutledge? |
28051 | Can we make it? |
28051 | Can we swing Delaware, Mr. McKeen? |
28051 | Could you do that? |
28051 | Do I hear a second to Dr. Franklin''s motion? |
28051 | FRANKLIN Do you think you can swing the South Carolina delegation for independence? |
28051 | FRANKLIN Eh? |
28051 | FRANKLIN Please-- may I speak to you? |
28051 | FRANKLIN What about getting another favoring delegate here by tomorrow? |
28051 | FRANKLIN What chance is there for Delaware to join us? |
28051 | HANCOCK Those favoring? |
28051 | HANCOCK You have heard the motion-- are there any remarks? |
28051 | Has New York been heard from? |
28051 | Has Rodney come? |
28051 | Has Rodney come? |
28051 | Have you gone crazy, Caesar? |
28051 | How do you do, Doctor? |
28051 | How do you do, Dr. Franklin? |
28051 | How is it with New Hampshire? |
28051 | How will Pennsylvania vote, Doctor? |
28051 | How ye feelin''? |
28051 | How ye feelin''? |
28051 | Is he skittish of the water? |
28051 | Kinda late fer ye to be out, ai n''t et? |
28051 | MCKEEN How is it with Pennsylvania? |
28051 | MCKEEN Why ca n''t you go? |
28051 | MCKEEN[_ off_] Yes? |
28051 | Mrs. Rodney is hovering over him with a protecting anxiety-- PRUDENCE You''re sure you feel strong enough to sit up, Caesar? |
28051 | PRUDENCE July first-- why? |
28051 | PRUDENCE What''s it about? |
28051 | PRUDENCE What''s the Lee Resolution? |
28051 | PRUDENCE Yes, what''s wanted? |
28051 | PRUDENCE You mean to say they''re even considering such a thing? |
28051 | PRUDENCE You''re sure you''re not in any pain? |
28051 | RODNEY A letter-- where from? |
28051 | RODNEY Ca n''t he carry you any farther? |
28051 | RODNEY Can you fix it? |
28051 | RODNEY How? |
28051 | RODNEY I know, but-- what date''s today? |
28051 | RODNEY Is that as far as we''ve got? |
28051 | RODNEY They have n''t voted yet? |
28051 | RODNEY What for? |
28051 | RODNEY Where''s my riding coat? |
28051 | RODNEY Why not? |
28051 | RODNEY Why? |
28051 | RODNEY[_ coming in_] What''s wrong now? |
28051 | RODNEY[_ giving in_] But-- but what will you do-- Uriah? |
28051 | RUTLEDGE Come over here a moment-- will you, please? |
28051 | RUTLEDGE[_ coming in_] Of course, Doctor-- what is it? |
28051 | Shall we go in, gentlemen? |
28051 | TOM Philadelphia? |
28051 | TOM[_ off_] Hey-- what''s goin''on out there? |
28051 | Thet brook''s kinda doin''business, ai n''t et? |
28051 | Those favoring? |
28051 | URIAH Be ye Caesar Rodney? |
28051 | URIAH But how kin we? |
28051 | URIAH Dover, Delaware, and back? |
28051 | URIAH Eh? |
28051 | URIAH Eh? |
28051 | URIAH Gittin''wore out? |
28051 | URIAH How''d he throw ye? |
28051 | URIAH Is et somethin''to do with Congress, sir? |
28051 | URIAH Kin I see him, ma''m? |
28051 | URIAH Let me hev thet stirrup-- RODNEY You all ready? |
28051 | URIAH Mite wet? |
28051 | URIAH What''s the matter? |
28051 | URIAH Why, pshaw, Mr. McKeen, I give ye my word, did n''t I? |
28051 | URIAH Yer last hoss? |
28051 | VOICE Yes, certainly, Doctor-- why? |
28051 | What do ye want? |
28051 | What do you want, Dr. Franklin? |
28051 | What happened? |
28051 | What news this morning? |
28051 | What the trouble? |
28051 | What ye talkin''about? |
28051 | What''s happened now, Uriah? |
28051 | What''s happened? |
28051 | What''s the matter? |
28051 | What''s this-- what''s this? |
28051 | What? |
28051 | What? |
28051 | When do you expect one back? |
28051 | Who''s yer man? |
28051 | Why are you dismounting? |
28051 | Will you join me? |
28051 | You all right, Mr. Rodney? |
28051 | You ready? |
28051 | [_ calling_] Where are ye, Mr. Rodney? |
28051 | [_ door opens_] TOM Who is et? |
28051 | [_ door opens_] URIAH[_ off_] Does Caesar Rodney dwell here? |
28051 | [_ etc._] FRANKLIN Oh, Mr. Rutledge-- RUTLEDGE[_ off_] Yes, Dr. Franklin? |
28051 | [_ murmurs and comments_] HANCOCK Does Dr. Franklin accept the amendment? |
28051 | [_ sound of horses''hoofs and thunder_] RODNEY Is that thunder? |
28051 | [_ sound of mounting horses_] Ready? |
28051 | [_ sound of tearing paper_] PRUDENCE Now, Caesar, do you think you ought to read that? |
29953 | And this as you will see implies such vital questions as: Are we editors free to say what we believe? |
29953 | And what will the public do then, poor thing? |
29953 | But the real question is: who"moulds"us? |
29953 | Do we believe what we say? |
29953 | Do we fool all the people some of the time, some of the people all the time, or only ourselves? |
29953 | Do you live in Spotless Town? |
29953 | Do you use any of the 57 varieties? |
29953 | Have you a little fairy in your home? |
29953 | How many papers still publish the advertisement of Mrs. Laudanum''s soothing syrup for babies? |
29953 | How many"Sunny Jims,"for instance, are there in this audience? |
29953 | In short, is journalism a profession or a business? |
29953 | In those days the universal question was,"What does old Greeley have to say?" |
29953 | Is advertising or circulation-- profits or popularity-- our secret solicitude? |
29953 | Or do we follow faithfully the stern daughter of the voice of God? |
29953 | What does it mean when not a single Denver paper publishes a line about three nefarious telephone bills before the Colorado Legislature? |
13784 | ''Can Winter beat Swift?'' 13784 ''Cap,''says th''prisident,''what ye got to say to this? |
13784 | ''Here,''says I,''mong colonel, what d''ye want with me?'' 13784 ''Let''s change th''subject,''says Duggan,''What show has Dorsey got in th''Twinty- ninth? |
13784 | ''My answer to that,''says th''witness,''is decidedly, Who?'' 13784 ''Well, sir,''says Bertillon,''what d''ye want?'' |
13784 | ''What d''ye want?'' 13784 ''What did thim write?'' |
13784 | ''What''s that?'' 13784 Afther a while Doolan woke up, an''says he,''Where''s me frind?'' |
13784 | Ah- ha,he said,"that''s th''way you keep Lent, is it? |
13784 | An''what''d ye do with Aggy-- what- d''ye- call- him? |
13784 | An''who th''divvle''s he? |
13784 | An''why shud they hang thim, Hinnissy? 13784 An''will we stay in? |
13784 | And for why? |
13784 | And what for? |
13784 | And what''ll pay for it? |
13784 | And what''s got into you? |
13784 | And where do th''nickels come fr''m? |
13784 | Anny more cyclone news? |
13784 | Are you thinking of leaving us? |
13784 | But what about th''opera? |
13784 | But what''s he been doin''of late? |
13784 | Carey or Clancy? |
13784 | D''ye know things is goin''to th''dogs in this town, Jawn, avick? 13784 D''ye mind it,--th''pome by Joyce? |
13784 | Did he die game? |
13784 | Did n''t Father Kelly do anything about it? |
13784 | Did n''t ye write an''sign it? |
13784 | Did the ghost ever come back? |
13784 | Did they hang him? |
13784 | Did ye ask him about th''Dhryfuss case? |
13784 | Does n''t it open? |
13784 | Fahrenheit? |
13784 | Gin''ral Merceer--''May I ask this polluted witness wan question?'' 13784 Give it to who?" |
13784 | How much? |
13784 | How was it he wanted to do it? |
13784 | How''s that? |
13784 | I wint home with him aftherwards; an''what d''ye think he said? 13784 In th''play?" |
13784 | Is he dead? |
13784 | Is that all that''s going on? |
13784 | Jawn,said Mr. Dooley to Mr. McKenna,"what did th''Orangeys do to- day?" |
13784 | Jawn,said Mr. Dooley,"did n''t we give it to thim?" |
13784 | Jawn,said Mr. Dooley,"did ye iver hear th''puzzle whin a woman''s not a woman?" |
13784 | Jawn,said he, as Mr. McKenna walked over and looked on curiously,"d''ye know a good man that I cud thrust to remodel th''shop?" |
13784 | Malachy or Matt? 13784 Me?" |
13784 | Now where''s Hinnery? 13784 Patrick''s Day? |
13784 | Patrick''s Day? |
13784 | Taaffe,he said musingly,--"Taaffe-- where th''divvle? |
13784 | The police? |
13784 | Was it much, I dinnaw? |
13784 | Well, I wondher will Mike come back? |
13784 | Well, sir, we ilicted Duggan; an''what come iv it? 13784 What Hogan?" |
13784 | What ar- re ye goin''to do Patrick''s Day? |
13784 | What are you talking about? |
13784 | What did he say? |
13784 | What did he say? |
13784 | What did you give the hobo? |
13784 | What has Molly Donahue been doin''? |
13784 | What have you been doin''? |
13784 | What of that? |
13784 | What shall I do? |
13784 | What''s that all got to do with freeing Ireland? |
13784 | What''s the matter with Hogan? |
13784 | What''s the matter? |
13784 | What''s this you have here, at all? |
13784 | Where''s that? |
13784 | Which Dorgan? |
13784 | Which d''ye think makes th''best fun''ral turnout, th''A- ho- aitches or th''Saint Vincent de Pauls, Jawn? |
13784 | Whin is a woman not a woman? 13784 Whin there''s battles to be won, who do they sind for? |
13784 | Whin ye come up, did ye see Dorgan? |
13784 | Who? |
13784 | Will he lose his job? 13784 Ye mind Maloney, th''la- ad with th''game eye? |
13784 | You have n''t been trying to skate? |
13784 | ''A- re ye,''he says,''men, or a- re ye slaves?'' |
13784 | ''Ah- ho,''says he,''I know it,''he says;''but,''he says,''what th''divvle do I care?'' |
13784 | ''Am I?'' |
13784 | ''An ax done it,''says ye? |
13784 | ''An''what are ye invistin''it in?'' |
13784 | ''An''what''s he makin''th''roar about?'' |
13784 | ''An''where can I get thim?'' |
13784 | ''And what may that be?'' |
13784 | ''Ar- re these th''holy bonds iv mathrimony?'' |
13784 | ''Ar- re ye men or ar- re ye slaves?'' |
13784 | ''Ar- re ye, faith?'' |
13784 | ''Ar- ren''t ye tired iv ye''er long journey?'' |
13784 | ''Be th''way,''he says,''how''re ye goin''to vote on that ordhnance?'' |
13784 | ''Billy who?'' |
13784 | ''But did anny wan iver hear iv thim doin''anny good whin th''votes was bein''cast?'' |
13784 | ''But did n''t ye go out to decorate th''graves?'' |
13784 | ''But how''m I goin''to cross?'' |
13784 | ''But what can ye expect? |
13784 | ''But what''s th''good iv swearin''off, if ye do n''t break it?'' |
13784 | ''But will he carry Illinye?'' |
13784 | ''But will he make a good fight?'' |
13784 | ''Ca n''t I make ye up a nice supper?'' |
13784 | ''Cap,''he says,''is they anny hay in th''camp?'' |
13784 | ''Child, where is ye''er dhress?'' |
13784 | ''Cudden''t ye die waltzin''?'' |
13784 | ''D''ye know that ivry thread in thim seams means a tear an''sigh?'' |
13784 | ''D''ye know that ivry time ye put on thim pants ye take a pair off some down- throdden workman?'' |
13784 | ''D''ye know"Down be th''Tan- yard Side"?'' |
13784 | ''D''ye mane to say,''says Cassidy, th''plumber,''that ye wo n''t do annything f''r my son?'' |
13784 | ''D''ye mean to call me that?'' |
13784 | ''D''ye mind what I said thin?'' |
13784 | ''D''ye recognize th''pris''ner?'' |
13784 | ''Did anny man iver shoot at ye with annything but a siltzer bottle? |
13784 | ''Did n''t ye ask to be called here?'' |
13784 | ''Did n''t ye promise to invist two dollars ivry month?'' |
13784 | ''Did ye inlist in th''army, brave man?'' |
13784 | ''Did ye iver hear iv Ree- saca,''r Vicksburg,''r Lookout Mountain?'' |
13784 | ''Did ye iver see an eight- inch shell pinithrate a bale iv hay?'' |
13784 | ''Do n''t ye know that it ai n''t our Bill that''s been nommynated?'' |
13784 | ''Do ye like paper?'' |
13784 | ''Do ye take this check,''says th''clargyman,''to have an''to hold, until some wan parts ye fr''m it?'' |
13784 | ''Do you know, sir,''he says,''that thim pants riprisints th''oppression iv women an''childher?'' |
13784 | ''Do?'' |
13784 | ''Do?'' |
13784 | ''Do?'' |
13784 | ''F''r who?'' |
13784 | ''F''r why?'' |
13784 | ''Gin''ral,''says Cap Brice,''how can I thank ye f''r th''honor?'' |
13784 | ''Had I better swallow some insect powdher?'' |
13784 | ''Has Finerty gone in?'' |
13784 | ''Have ye anny British around here? |
13784 | ''Have ye seen th''divvle?'' |
13784 | ''How th''divvle can they perjure thimsilves if they ai n''t sworn? |
13784 | ''How''s all th''folks?'' |
13784 | ''In Lent?'' |
13784 | ''Is he a nice man?'' |
13784 | ''Is that enough f''r ye?'' |
13784 | ''Is that so?'' |
13784 | ''Is ye''er name Hill?'' |
13784 | ''Is ye''er name Sullivan?'' |
13784 | ''Misther Dugan, how old a- are ye?'' |
13784 | ''Monica,''says Dorsey( he had pretty names for all his goats),''Monica, are ye hungry,''he says,''ye poor dear?'' |
13784 | ''News?'' |
13784 | ''No,''he says;''but did ye see they''re puttin''up a monnymint over th''rebils out here be Oakwoods?'' |
13784 | ''Now,''says he,''what d''ye think iv a gazabo that do n''t want a monniment put over some wan? |
13784 | ''On th''dead?'' |
13784 | ''Roscommon?'' |
13784 | ''Tis,''Will ye have a new spring dhress, me dear? |
13784 | ''Tom,''says Mack, in faltherin''accints,''where have ye been? |
13784 | ''Uncle Mike,''says I to him,''what''s war like, annyhow?'' |
13784 | ''Was his answers satisfacthry?'' |
13784 | ''Was it th''Robin shell or th''day befure?'' |
13784 | ''Was ye at th''cake walk?'' |
13784 | ''Was ye dhrafted in?'' |
13784 | ''Well,''says I,''what''s th''news?'' |
13784 | ''What Wagner''s that?'' |
13784 | ''What a- are we comin''to?'' |
13784 | ''What ails ye, man alive?'' |
13784 | ''What ails ye?'' |
13784 | ''What ails ye?'' |
13784 | ''What ar- re ye doin''here, ye little farryer iv pants?'' |
13784 | ''What ar- re ye doin''there?'' |
13784 | ''What ar- re ye talkin''about?'' |
13784 | ''What are ye''er views on th''issue iv eatin''custard pie with a sponge? |
13784 | ''What d''ye mane be comin''back, whin th''landlord ai n''t heerd fr''m ye f''r a year?'' |
13784 | ''What d''ye mane?'' |
13784 | ''What d''ye mane?'' |
13784 | ''What d''ye mean?'' |
13784 | ''What for?'' |
13784 | ''What good does it do to have rayqueem masses f''r th''raypose iv th''like iv you,''he says,''that does n''t know his place?'' |
13784 | ''What is it to be Prisident?'' |
13784 | ''What rig''mint?'' |
13784 | ''What sort iv bug?'' |
13784 | ''What''ll it be, la- ads?'' |
13784 | ''What''ll we do with thim? |
13784 | ''What''ll we do?'' |
13784 | ''What''s his name?'' |
13784 | ''What''s th''hurry?'' |
13784 | ''What''s th''matter with th''pants?'' |
13784 | ''What''s that? |
13784 | ''What''s that?'' |
13784 | ''What''s that?'' |
13784 | ''What''s that?'' |
13784 | ''What''s that?'' |
13784 | ''What''s that?'' |
13784 | ''What''s that?'' |
13784 | ''What''s thim?'' |
13784 | ''What''s this?'' |
13784 | ''What''s ye''er name?'' |
13784 | ''Where''d ye wurruk last?'' |
13784 | ''Who ar- re ye, disturbin''me quite?'' |
13784 | ''Who ar- re ye?'' |
13784 | ''Who cares f''r th''Civic Featheration?'' |
13784 | ''Who stole me hat?'' |
13784 | ''Who?'' |
13784 | ''Whose fun''ral ar- re ye goin''to at this hour?'' |
13784 | ''Whose thrick is that?'' |
13784 | ''Why do n''t ye go in, an''smash th''Castiles?'' |
13784 | ''Why do n''t ye put him out?'' |
13784 | ''Why, pap- pah,''says Molly,''what d''ye mean?'' |
13784 | ''Will O''Brien win?'' |
13784 | ''Will he carry Illinye?'' |
13784 | ''Will he make a good fight?'' |
13784 | ''Will he?'' |
13784 | ''Will ye do it?'' |
13784 | ''Will ye have wan or two hip pockets?'' |
13784 | ''Would ye like to help desthroy a Dutchman,''he says,''an''perform a sarvice f''r ye''er counthry?'' |
13784 | ''Wud ye rob th''church?'' |
13784 | ''Wud ye take it?'' |
13784 | ''Wudden''t ye like to take a bath in th''shark pond before ye go?'' |
13784 | ''Yes,''says she, in a thremble, knottin''her apron in her hands an''standin''in front iv her own little wans,''what can I do f''r ye?'' |
13784 | *****"Arrah, what ar- re ye talkin''about?" |
13784 | Afther boilin''f''r five days like a-- How are ye, Dempsey? |
13784 | All they want is a chanst to go out to th''cimitry; an'', faith, who does n''t enjoy that? |
13784 | An'', whin th''time come f''r th''thrain to lave, th''girls was up to th''lines; an''''twas,''Mike, love, ye''ll come back alive, wo n''t ye?'' |
13784 | An''Buck got his eye, did he? |
13784 | An''says I,''Gintlemen,''says I,''ca n''t I do something f''r Ireland, too?'' |
13784 | An''what chance has a man got that wants to make th''wurruld brighter an''happier be rollin''car- wheels but to miss mass an''be at th''shops?" |
13784 | An''what''s changed thim? |
13784 | An''who ar- re ye, annyhow?'' |
13784 | An''why an''where an''how much?'' |
13784 | An''why not? |
13784 | As natural as life? |
13784 | Brother Teigue, dost hear in th''degree?'' |
13784 | But did ye iver notice th''scar on his nose? |
13784 | But how did he do it? |
13784 | But what cud ye ixpict? |
13784 | But what do I care? |
13784 | But what was th''use? |
13784 | But why dhrag in matthers iv no importance? |
13784 | Cud annything be clearer? |
13784 | D''ye know Molly Donahue?" |
13784 | D''ye mind Dochney that was wanst aldherman here? |
13784 | D''ye mind th''calls I made on ye, with th''stamps undher me arms, whin I wurruked in th''post- office? |
13784 | D''ye mind, Jawn, that th''r- rale estate business includes near ivrything fr''m vagrancy to manslaughter? |
13784 | D''ye mind? |
13784 | D''ye raymimber th''Carey kid? |
13784 | D''ye think he will? |
13784 | Did n''t ye have a beer bottle or an ice- pick? |
13784 | Did ye iver have it? |
13784 | Did ye iver have to wipe ye''er most intimate frinds off ye''er clothes, whin ye wint home at night? |
13784 | Did ye iver see a man that ye''d slept with th''night before cough, an''go out with his hands ahead iv his face? |
13784 | Did ye iver see an American or an Irishman an arnychist? |
13784 | Did ye iver see th''wan that wudden''t? |
13784 | Did ye niver hear it? |
13784 | Did ye write th''letter?'' |
13784 | Dinnis or Mike? |
13784 | Do n''t I know it? |
13784 | Do ye believe in side- combs? |
13784 | Do ye hear iv a manhole cover bein''blown up? |
13784 | Donaldson? |
13784 | Dooley, that,''an''''What''ll ye have, boys?'' |
13784 | Dooley,''he roars to me,''ai n''t ye goin''to do annything?'' |
13784 | Duggan listened; an''says he,''What''s the man sayin''?'' |
13784 | Folks all well? |
13784 | Had Mr. Dooley? |
13784 | Have ye e''er a Sassenach concealed about ye''er clothes?'' |
13784 | Have ye e''er a forgery about ye''er clothes, mon gin''ral?'' |
13784 | Have ye that tired feelin''? |
13784 | He come in here Thursdah night to take his dhrink in quite; an''says I,''Did ye march to- day?'' |
13784 | He lost his balance, an''fell fr''m th''scaffoldin''he was wurrukin''on; an''th''last wurruds he said was,''Did I get him or did n''t I?'' |
13784 | He turned in an alarm; but th''fire departmint was all down on Mitchigan Avnoo, puttin''out th''lake, an''"--"Putting out what?" |
13784 | He wudden''t want to? |
13784 | Hivins on earth, do n''t ye know him?" |
13784 | Honoria Casey was with him as he passed away, an''she says,''How d''ye feel?'' |
13784 | How can anny wan be annything else? |
13784 | How cud ye, ye that was born away fr''m home? |
13784 | How d''ye do, Mrs. Murphy? |
13784 | How d''ye suppose she was dhressed? |
13784 | How was himsilf? |
13784 | How''s that?'' |
13784 | How''s thricks in th''Ninth? |
13784 | I will ask that gintleman who jest wint out the dure, Does it pay to keep up appearances?'' |
13784 | If a batted ball goes out iv th''line afther strikin''th''player''s hands, is it fair or who? |
13784 | If a man has eight dollars an''spends twelve iv it, what will th''poor man do? |
13784 | If called upon to veto a bill f''r all mimbers iv th''Supreme Coort to wear hoop- skirts, wud ye veto it or wudden''t ye? |
13784 | If it had been hot elsewhere, what had it been in Archey Road? |
13784 | If not, why not? |
13784 | If so, why? |
13784 | If they let this thing go on, be hivins, why do they stop th''hootchy- kootchy?" |
13784 | Is it council to Athlone or what, I dinnaw?" |
13784 | Is that th''wan on th''lake front? |
13784 | Is the snow- ploughs out, I dinnaw?" |
13784 | Is there an accident in a grain illyvator? |
13784 | It was years ago, durin''th''time iv Napolyeon, befure th''big fire? |
13784 | Little Julia Dorgan called out,''Who stole Molly''s dhress?'' |
13784 | Look at there table, will ye? |
13784 | Me a Dimmycrat? |
13784 | Me uncle Mike was along with thim, an''he looked Cleveland over; an''says he:''Ye''ll do th''best ye can f''r us,''he says,''will ye?'' |
13784 | No reachin''f''r annything, but''Mah, will ye kindly pass th''Ph''lippeens?'' |
13784 | Now what is Mack doin''? |
13784 | Sarsfield or William Hogan? |
13784 | Says I,''Why?'' |
13784 | Says she,''Where''s me hoosband?'' |
13784 | Th''kids are thrivin'', I dinnaw? |
13784 | Thin says he:''D''ye raymimber me meetin''ye down- town a week ago on Dorney''s place, loot?'' |
13784 | Thin to th''ghost:''Have ye paid th''rint here, ye big ape?'' |
13784 | Thin what am I to do?'' |
13784 | Thin who cud''ve written it? |
13784 | Was I to stay in office, an''have me hat smashed in ivry time I wint out to walk? |
13784 | Was it a rivolution? |
13784 | Was n''t it a lovely night? |
13784 | We are ol''frinds, Dinnis, now, ai n''t we? |
13784 | What a- are we comin''to?'' |
13784 | What cud the brave men do? |
13784 | What does he do? |
13784 | What does th''prisoner think this is?'' |
13784 | What is your opinion iv a hereafther? |
13784 | What was I sayin''? |
13784 | What was I to do? |
13784 | What was it about, I dinnaw?" |
13784 | What''s that ye say? |
13784 | What''s the raysult, Hinnissy? |
13784 | What, says he, was we goin''to do about it? |
13784 | What, you again, Peekhart? |
13784 | Where did you get that hat? |
13784 | Where in all, where in all? |
13784 | Where is this here pole? |
13784 | Where was he durin''th''war?'' |
13784 | Where''d Joe spind th''night? |
13784 | Where''d they be, where''d they be? |
13784 | Where''d ye say th''la- ad come fr''m? |
13784 | Where''s th''bould Fenian? |
13784 | Where''s th''moonlighter? |
13784 | Where''s th''pikeman? |
13784 | Whin Cousin George was pastin''th''former hated Castiles, who was it stood on th''shore shootin''his bow- an- arrow into th''sky but Aggynaldoo? |
13784 | Whin a man says,''What''s that?'' |
13784 | Whin is a woman not a woman? |
13784 | Whin th''King iv Siam wants a plisint evenin'', who does he sind f''r but a lively Kerry man that can sing a song or play a good hand at spile- five? |
13784 | Whin there''s books to be wrote, who writes thim but Char- les Lever or Oliver Goldsmith or Willum Carleton? |
13784 | Whin there''s speeches to be made, who makes thim but Edmund Burke or Macchew P. Brady? |
13784 | Who are th''frinds iv th''Irish? |
13784 | Who are they, annyhow, but foreigners, an''what right have they to be holdin''torchlight procissions in this land iv th''free an''home iv th''brave? |
13784 | Who is she? |
13784 | Who protecks th''poor wurrukin''man so that he''ll have to go on wurrukin''? |
13784 | Who was it that saved the Union, Jawn? |
13784 | Who was it? |
13784 | Why shud they? |
13784 | Will th''good days ever come again? |
13784 | Ye did not? |
13784 | Ye do n''t tell me? |
13784 | Ye do n''t? |
13784 | Ye niver see a storm on th''ocean? |
13784 | Ye said jus''now, Why do I believe th''Cap''s guilty? |
13784 | Ye''d sa- ay off hand,''Why do n''t they do as much for their own counthry?'' |
13784 | Ye''re goin''over, thin? |
13784 | says Big Bill:''is that thrue? |
13784 | says I:''is th''man goin''to add canniballing to his other crimes?'' |
13784 | what''s that?'' |
19324 | ''Dar, marsa,''says I,''do n''t ye see? 19324 ''His intellect must sort of tell on him, do n''t it?'' |
19324 | ''How does she look?'' 19324 ''Is we got a goose?'' |
19324 | ''Oh, it''s you, is it?'' 19324 ''Well,''says I,''ai n''t cymbals brass?'' |
19324 | ''What hit him?'' 19324 ''What''ll you take for dinner, miss?'' |
19324 | ''What''ll you take for dinner, sah?'' 19324 ''What''s the trouble?'' |
19324 | ''Where do I put him?'' 19324 ''Why ai n''t it fair?'' |
19324 | ''You mean ter say, Chad, dat de gooses on my plantation on''y got one leg?'' 19324 ''_ Is we got a goose?_ Did n''t you help pick it?'' |
19324 | ''_ Is we got a goose?_ Did n''t you help pick it?'' 19324 A what?" |
19324 | Ah, and who was she? |
19324 | An appendicitis case-- an outbreak of measles? 19324 And did he thrash you?" |
19324 | And is mine one? |
19324 | And the Doctor? 19324 And the model fell on to something valuable? |
19324 | And they did not hang the colonel? |
19324 | And was he? |
19324 | And why, pray? |
19324 | And you reason from this that Sullivan''s Lost Chord is a cure for Cholera morbus, eh? |
19324 | And, of course, you''ll send the official invitation from Mrs. Matthewman besides? |
19324 | And_ you''ll_ come? |
19324 | Are n''t you well, Dan? |
19324 | Are you sure she meant_ them_? 19324 Because there are no more drugs must the physician walk?" |
19324 | But did n''t you ever hear from him again? 19324 But how sure are you that Eleanor would marry him if I did manage to find him and bring him back?" |
19324 | But she did n''t say she would n''t marry you, did she? |
19324 | But_ do_ you? |
19324 | Ca n''t you persuade her? |
19324 | Death? |
19324 | Did yer ever saw three balls hangin''over my do''? |
19324 | Did you see the Taylors? |
19324 | Do you mean to say that you know Eleanor Van Coort? |
19324 | Do you mean to say you''re going to give it all up? |
19324 | Does n''t yo''know my name hain''t Oppenheimer? |
19324 | Ezra, are you happy? |
19324 | Ezra? |
19324 | For Saturday? |
19324 | For example? |
19324 | Freddy? |
19324 | Got what? |
19324 | Great Scott, and who''s Bertha? |
19324 | Has n''t she-- as far as a woman can-- hasn''t she called you back to her? 19324 He begins there and ends there, does he, then?" |
19324 | How do you feel, my dear? |
19324 | How does that wood burn? |
19324 | I have the ring in my pocket--"But touch wood, wo n''t you? |
19324 | I''m too big, too, now, ai n''t I? |
19324 | If he misunderstood it-- I mean if he thought it really came from Eleanor-- there could n''t be any fuss about it afterward, could there? |
19324 | Is there any truth in this story,said he,"that you have had some trouble with Stevens, and discharged him?" |
19324 | Is there no chance of anything turning up? |
19324 | Is yo''satisfied? |
19324 | It is n''t possible-- that she''s refused you? |
19324 | Just Harry Jones, then, New York City? |
19324 | King George''s table? 19324 Marsa John? |
19324 | May I not ask the meaning of so peculiar a request? |
19324 | May n''t I even say I love you? |
19324 | Might I inquire who_ you_ are? |
19324 | Mo''coffee, Major? |
19324 | Must I? |
19324 | Never your mamma or your papa? |
19324 | Next minute I yerd old marsa a- hollerin'':''Mammy Jane, ai n''t we got a goose?'' |
19324 | Nor anything at all? |
19324 | Nor died? |
19324 | Of what, Willy? |
19324 | Oh, Eleanor, ca n''t you do anything? |
19324 | Oh, is n''t it exciting? |
19324 | On whad? |
19324 | Sad, beautiful, irrevocable memories-- try tea for breakfast-- do you read Browning? 19324 Say, Jo''nivan,"--her voice sank to a whisper that curdled his blood--"were you ever spanked?" |
19324 | She did n''t ask you to_ change_ your name, did she? |
19324 | She stinted herself to get me through col--"Then why did you ever come here? |
19324 | Still rambling, eh? |
19324 | Suppose I just signed the telegram Van Coort? |
19324 | Suppose some fellow should get into a lodge,asked Amidon,"who had never been initiated?" |
19324 | Surely you wo n''t let Harry ruin his life from a mistaken sense of his duty to you? |
19324 | Surely your mother loves you? |
19324 | Than what? |
19324 | That does n''t seem much, does it? |
19324 | Then why in Heaven''s name did n''t she( it was on the tip of my tongue to say"jump at him")"take him?" |
19324 | Then you do n''t even know if he has married since? |
19324 | They''re not going to lower him with those cords, are they? |
19324 | Watson? 19324 We ca n''t be expected to play on the bench the best man in Pennsylvania in that part, can we?" |
19324 | Well, what about your mother? |
19324 | Well, what do you think? |
19324 | Well, what''s the matter with Cartersville? |
19324 | Were any of you ever in Langtry, Ohio? 19324 Were you ever in Colorado, Doctor?" |
19324 | Whad yer goin''ter do? |
19324 | Whad yo''doin''dat for? |
19324 | Whad yo''mean? |
19324 | Whar''s de c''lateral? |
19324 | Whar''s de fo''cents? |
19324 | What did you do, son? |
19324 | What is the lesson inculcated in this Degree? |
19324 | What is the password of this Degree? |
19324 | What on earth do you suppose she invited you for, then? |
19324 | What people? 19324 What was his first name?" |
19324 | What was? |
19324 | What''s the good of asking what she wo n''t do? |
19324 | What''s the matter, Johnny? |
19324 | What''s the matter, Jones? |
19324 | What''s the price of wood? |
19324 | What, have you raised on_ your_ wood, too? 19324 Where are you going?" |
19324 | Why did n''t she take him then? |
19324 | Why, husband? |
19324 | Why, who else? |
19324 | Would n''t it have been wiser to--? |
19324 | Would you consider two weeks--? |
19324 | Yes, unfortunately--"Why unfortun--? |
19324 | Yes--"What''s the matter with getting some forget- me- nots and mailing them to Jones in an envelope? |
19324 | You do n''t expect me to do it, do you? |
19324 | You said three hundred and four dollars and seventy- five cents, I believe? |
19324 | _ Dat_ ring? |
19324 | ''Baked ham?'' |
19324 | ''Nice breast o''goose, or slice o''ham?'' |
19324 | ''What''s that la- ad doin''?'' |
19324 | ''Will iver they get up?'' |
19324 | ''s are to be taught the_ materia musica_ in addition to the_ materia medica_?" |
19324 | ( I always like to see a cash business, do n''t you?) |
19324 | A BULLY BOAT AND A BRAG CAPTAIN_ A Story of Steamboat Life on the Mississippi_ BY SOL SMITH Does any one remember the_ Caravan_? |
19324 | A fellow owes something to his family, does n''t he? |
19324 | After a decent interval of thumping and grandfathers, and what I had for breakfast, I managed to get in my question:"Ever in Colorado, Doctor?" |
19324 | All pallid was my beaded brow, The reeling night was late, My startled mother cried in fear,"My child, what have you ate?" |
19324 | And China Bloom at best is sorry food? |
19324 | And Rowland''s Kalydor, if laid on thick, Poisons the thirsty wretch that bores for blood? |
19324 | And do n''t she look just lovely in that picture? |
19324 | And the Doctor''s gig and all the appurtenances of his profession-- what becomes of them?" |
19324 | And who would not throw off dull care And be like unto her, When happiness brings, as her share, One hundred dollars per----? |
19324 | And yet-- and yet-- do you know what she actually said to me? |
19324 | Are we_ never_ to get to a cheaper country? |
19324 | As they say in post- office forms?--what was his place of origin?" |
19324 | Beautiful story, is n''t it? |
19324 | Came in from the vestry, did he? |
19324 | Can it be a cabbage? |
19324 | Chad, you wu''thless nigger, ai n''t you tuk dat goose out yit?'' |
19324 | Colorado? |
19324 | Did Eleanor-- I mean, did Miss Van Coort-- express--?" |
19324 | Did n''t she send you the locket? |
19324 | Did n''t she--?" |
19324 | Did you learn anything of Louis XV whilst in France? |
19324 | Did you see Colonel Haywood and his daughters, love?" |
19324 | Do n''t the buzzards ooze around up thare jest like they''ve allus done? |
19324 | Do you mean that you''d do nothing to bring two such noble hearts together?" |
19324 | Does the medder- lark complane, as he swims high and dry Through the waves of the wind and the blue of the sky? |
19324 | Does the quail set up and whissel in a disappinted way, Er hang his head in silunce, and sorrow all the day? |
19324 | Eighteen ninety- two Eighth Avenue, is n''t it?" |
19324 | Eleanor''s gone off a good deal lately, do n''t you think so? |
19324 | Fine countenance, has n''t he? |
19324 | Four dollars cost me it that day, Four dollars earned by sweat of brow, Where was the cord of hick''ry now? |
19324 | H''mn; which table, second or third?" |
19324 | HER VALENTINE BY RICHARD HOVEY What, send her a valentine? |
19324 | Handsome picture, ai n''t it? |
19324 | Have_ you_ ever had belladonna squirted in_ your_ eye? |
19324 | He laughed loud as anybody; an''den dat night he says to me as I was puttin''some wood on de fire:"''Chad, where did dat leg go?'' |
19324 | He looks like a man to do that, do n''t he? |
19324 | How could he look up and face his victorious foe? |
19324 | How d''ye sell your wood_ this_ time?" |
19324 | How did I get two of''em? |
19324 | How do I know I have the strength, the determination, the hardihood to undergo the agonies of another?" |
19324 | How is the name of the town pronounced? |
19324 | How much is it?" |
19324 | How the devil was I to_ begin_? |
19324 | I asked him, as a starter, whether he had ever been in Colorado? |
19324 | I do n''t see why being an old maid is always supposed to be so funny, do you? |
19324 | I heard the bell and the pilot''s hail,"What''s_ your_ price for wood?" |
19324 | I just ca n''t seem to realize that Eleanor Jamison is married at last, can you? |
19324 | I mean, was that the end of it all?" |
19324 | I saw a light just ahead on the right-- shall we hail?" |
19324 | If I were ever tempted by such a thing-- which God forbid-- wouldn''t I prefer to spread bacilli on buttered toast?" |
19324 | Is it worth while? |
19324 | Is n''t that gorgeous? |
19324 | Is that a swan that rides upon the water? |
19324 | Is the chipmuck''s health a- failin''?--Does he walk, er does he run? |
19324 | Is there any such fool as the man that breaks his heart twice for the impossible?" |
19324 | Is they anything the matter with the rooster''s lungs er voice? |
19324 | Lemme have your name, wo n''t you?" |
19324 | My pride-- my woman''s pride--""Oh, how can you let such trifles stand between you? |
19324 | Nothing in it? |
19324 | Now, how does that strike you? |
19324 | Now, is n''t that splendid? |
19324 | Ort a mortul be complanin''when dumb animals rejoice? |
19324 | Perhaps you''ve heard sumfin''about him? |
19324 | Pity, was n''t it?" |
19324 | Pompadour? |
19324 | Smart, was n''t it? |
19324 | Some one else? |
19324 | Surprising what some of these men have gone through, ai n''t it? |
19324 | THE OWL- CRITIC BY JAMES T. FIELDS"Who stuffed that white owl?" |
19324 | Talking about me, did you say? |
19324 | That was nice news, was n''t it? |
19324 | That, I think is-- is-- that-- a-- a-- yes, to be sure, Washington; you recollect him, of course? |
19324 | The other pilot''s voice was again heard on deck:"How much_ have_ you?" |
19324 | Then he was going on Saturday? |
19324 | They were here, then, were they?" |
19324 | Think what would happen to me if it came to Doctor Saltworthy''s ears? |
19324 | Thou''rt welcome to the town; but why come here To bleed a brother poet, gaunt like thee? |
19324 | Was he not seraphically whizzing through space, obeying the diamond telegram of love? |
19324 | Was n''t it foolish? |
19324 | Was there ever anything so unfortunate? |
19324 | Watson wants to see me?" |
19324 | We do n''t want no better signs o''gas th''n th''t, do we, Squire?" |
19324 | Well, I hope?" |
19324 | Well, suh, what was there left for a high- toned Southern gentleman to do? |
19324 | What are your literary habits?" |
19324 | What do you mean by the music cure?" |
19324 | What is the will of the conclave?" |
19324 | What more do you expect her to do? |
19324 | What''s your instrument?'' |
19324 | What, who, was her murderer? |
19324 | When Mr. Watson came back in the evening, he met his wife with a cheery smile as he said,"Well, my dear, how have you enjoyed yourself to- day? |
19324 | Where did you say he lived?" |
19324 | Where do_ I_ come in? |
19324 | Where the first Four Hundred of the town moved at the music''s call? |
19324 | Where''s the ruin?" |
19324 | Who have we next? |
19324 | Who was the Dauphin? |
19324 | Why had we not thought of the artistic regeneration of our sordid life before? |
19324 | Will you make it just straight ritual, or throw in some of those specialities of yours?" |
19324 | Wo n''t you run your horse down to the train and hold that book- agent till I come? |
19324 | You had n''t noticed it? |
19324 | _ When did they sleep?_ Wood taken in, the_ Caravan_ again took her place in the middle of the stream, paddling on as usual. |
19324 | do I hear thy slender voice complain? |
19324 | replied the Captain--(captains did swear a little in those days);"what''s the odd_ quarter_ for, I should like to know? |
19324 | rouge makes thee sick? |
19324 | snorts Cap., rearing up;''I thought you wrote that you played brass?'' |
19324 | what is this that rises to my touch, So like a cushion? |
11527 | ''Lord have mercy upon me, madam,''cried I,''what have you done?'' 11527 ''Pray, madam,''whipping between her and the street- door,''be pleased to let me know whither you are going?'' |
11527 | ''Who has a right to control me?'' 11527 ''Your_ own_ wife, Sir Hargrave?'' |
11527 | ''_ Allied to perdition_, madam?'' 11527 A name for me? |
11527 | And Effie-- and Effie, dear father? |
11527 | And Mr. Bertram''s child,said the stranger,"what is all this to him?" |
11527 | And do you say nothing of the attractions of wealth? 11527 And is there no hope for her?" |
11527 | And permission from whom? 11527 And pray, now, who is that I am to be turning into Lady O''Prism?" |
11527 | And pray, sir, who is your love? |
11527 | And renounce Marionetta? |
11527 | And wha''may your master be, friend? |
11527 | And why not? |
11527 | And wi''that man-- that fearfu''man? |
11527 | And yet, where should I live or die but at the feet of my benefactor? |
11527 | And you tauld him,said Effie,"that ye wadna hear o''coming between me and death, and me no aughteen year auld yet?" |
11527 | Are we? |
11527 | Are you come to triumph over the innocence you have destroyed? 11527 Are you indebted to somebody? |
11527 | Ay, carry him to Flushing,said the captain,"or to America, or-- to Jericho?" |
11527 | Ay, or pitch him overboard? |
11527 | But can the king gie her mercy? |
11527 | But how will you bestow your_ time_, when you will have no visits to receive or pay? 11527 But who was the assassin?" |
11527 | But,said Pantagruel,"when will you be out of debt?" |
11527 | Can it be? |
11527 | Can not I do anything to help you? |
11527 | Can you inform me, father,I asked,"to whom these two cottages belonged?" |
11527 | Can you leave us? |
11527 | Captain Mironoff? 11527 Celinda,"said Mr. Toobad,"what does this mean? |
11527 | Clotilda, do you know my beloved master Dahore? |
11527 | Consider, was not all this intimacy of ours of your own making? 11527 Consuelo?" |
11527 | Could they na? |
11527 | D''ye ken where they hae putten my bairn? 11527 Did I not hear a halloo?" |
11527 | Did you not say that if our parents could be brought to consent to our union, you would no longer oppose my suit? |
11527 | Do I, too, distress you? |
11527 | Do n''t you hear? 11527 Do you act the part of a mother,"he cried,"you who separate brother and sister? |
11527 | Do you know that young person? |
11527 | Do you love me? |
11527 | Does Clotilda know? |
11527 | Doth not a father know his own child? 11527 For heaven''s sake, Scythrop,"said she,"what is the matter?" |
11527 | Good Father Jerome, how came I hither? |
11527 | Have I done you any harm? |
11527 | Have I not a fortune in my own right, sir? |
11527 | Have you confessed yourself, brother,said the Templar,"that you peril your life so frankly?" |
11527 | Have you undertaken the impossible task to make me rich? 11527 He does not live, does he?" |
11527 | He is dead, I suppose? |
11527 | How came my daughter here? |
11527 | How do you know this to be his skull? |
11527 | How is it with you, Master Bridgenorth? |
11527 | How now-- how is this? |
11527 | How, sir? 11527 I am certain,"said Mr. Escot,"that a wild man can travel an immense distance without fatigue; but what is the advantage of locomotion? |
11527 | Indeed? |
11527 | Is all over? |
11527 | Is it not written''Thou shalt be zealous even to slaying?'' 11527 Is it so?" |
11527 | Is it thus with external fidelity and love? |
11527 | Is it thus,said he,"I am to be answered? |
11527 | Is the carriage ready, sir? |
11527 | Is this from Susanna, as well as you? |
11527 | Julian must lose his playfellow now, I suppose? |
11527 | Lady Helen,he cried,"has God sent you hither to be His harbinger of consolation?" |
11527 | Mr. Brown, I believe? |
11527 | Must we yield life,she said,"without a struggle? |
11527 | My good friend, will you allow me to take away this skull with me? |
11527 | My ward, Rowena,said Cedric--"you do not intend to desert her?" |
11527 | Nay, who would venture to attack such a fortress as this? |
11527 | Not Mr. Bertram of Ellangowan, I hope? |
11527 | O Effie,said her elder sister,"how could you conceal your situation from me? |
11527 | Of the boy? |
11527 | Ot is oo? 11527 Perhaps on business with some of the commercial people of Fairport?" |
11527 | Permission? 11527 Pray who is this Mr. Lovel, whom our old uncle has at once placed so high in his good graces?" |
11527 | Pray, sir, are you the master of that vessel? |
11527 | Reasonable? |
11527 | Rich? |
11527 | Say what you like o''me, only promise, for I doubt your proud heart, that you winna''harm yourself? 11527 Scythrop-- Scythrop, if one of them should come to you, what then? |
11527 | Skull? |
11527 | Stand up, damsel, what wouldst thou have with us? |
11527 | Stay with us, my daughter? |
11527 | Suppose,said I,"he should resolve to ensnare a poor young creature and ruin her, would you assist him in such wickedness? |
11527 | The point of Warroch? |
11527 | To whom, besides the sworn champions of the Holy Sepulchre, whose badge I wear, can the palm be assigned among the champions of the Cross? |
11527 | Us? |
11527 | Virtues? |
11527 | Wallace will behold these charms,she cried to herself,"and then, where am I?" |
11527 | Was Mr. Lovel''s excursion solely for pleasure? |
11527 | Was it him, indeed? 11527 Was it him?" |
11527 | Well, perverse Pamela, ungrateful creature, you do well, do n''t you, to give me all this trouble and vexation? |
11527 | Well, well, my friend,replied Pantagruel, when the man had come to an end,"can you speak French?" |
11527 | Were there, then, none in the English army,said the Lady Rowena,"whose names are worthy to be mentioned with the Knights of the Temple?" |
11527 | Wha''tauld ye that, Jeannie? |
11527 | What are ye doing wi''my bairn? 11527 What choice can there be? |
11527 | What could I say? 11527 What do you want, and what is your name?" |
11527 | What have you done? |
11527 | What have you done? |
11527 | What is that? |
11527 | What is that? |
11527 | What may this mean? |
11527 | What means this saucy intrusion? |
11527 | What needs I tell ye onything about''t? |
11527 | What right has the villain to assail me or stop my passage? 11527 What signifies coming to greet ower me,"said poor Effie,"when you have killed me? |
11527 | What signifies keeping the poor lassie in a swither? 11527 What takes you here?" |
11527 | What, Varney-- Sir Richard Varney-- the servant of Lord Leicester? 11527 What, already? |
11527 | What, him we read of in the papers? |
11527 | What, madam, can be your objection? 11527 What, not in that safe there?" |
11527 | What-- in the cave? 11527 When am I to start, sir? |
11527 | Where are your commissions, your uniforms, if you be British officers? |
11527 | Where is that coward? 11527 Who are you, my friend?" |
11527 | Who fished you out of the water? |
11527 | Who has been telling her I have ever had a thought of any girl but her? |
11527 | Who has done this? |
11527 | Who would have thought,he said,"that the man who guided you to a lodging on that night of the snowstorm was the great tzar himself? |
11527 | Why is this? 11527 Why must you go to Petersburg?" |
11527 | Why should I fear you? |
11527 | Why, minion,answered the queen,"didst not thou thyself say that the Earl of Leicester was privy to thy whole history?" |
11527 | Why, señor, do you call me by that name? |
11527 | Why, then, she die in attempting her escape, and what could you or I help it? 11527 Will you not abhor me for this act of madness?" |
11527 | Will you satisfy this anxious company,said she sneeringly,"how it happened that you should be alone with the regent? |
11527 | Will you take your Bible oath you do n''t want them to raise the devil with? |
11527 | Would you have me haunted by his ghost for taking his blessed bones out of consecrated ground? 11527 Wouldst thou love the dead?" |
11527 | Yes, we do,said I, in very great astonishment;"but we will not sail with the devil; and who ever saw a negro Scotchman before?" |
11527 | You are going to be married? |
11527 | You came with your parents? |
11527 | You do not belong to this place? |
11527 | You have no opinion of my morals? 11527 You, too-- are you also going to forsake us?" |
11527 | Your dwelling, Amy? |
11527 | Your father has immense influence over Prince January,said Flamin,"could you beg him to get me some court position at Flachsenfingen? |
11527 | ''Oh, madam,''said she,''what have you done?'' |
11527 | ''Pray in what light?'' |
11527 | A prison, guarded by the most sordid of men, but not a greater wretch than his employer?" |
11527 | After a long pause:"And he wanted you to say something to you folks that wad save my young life?" |
11527 | Ah, why must a deep, cold cloud steal through this pure and lofty heaven? |
11527 | Alive, saidst thou? |
11527 | And can you think that your sudden appearance at his castle, at such a juncture, and in such a presence, will be acceptable to him?" |
11527 | And do you not think that to rob a person of her virtue is worse than cutting her throat?" |
11527 | And does the valorous knight aspire to the hand of the young lady whom he redeemed from peril? |
11527 | And how can I best reassure the alarms of a timid and loving woman? |
11527 | And if you know that, why ask me?" |
11527 | And in truth, is it you also?" |
11527 | And is it not natural for a man to love a pretty woman?" |
11527 | And where was Clement? |
11527 | And who is de piccaniny hofficer? |
11527 | Are not the two sexes made for each other? |
11527 | Are you, madam, Lady Pollexfen?'' |
11527 | Art thou Liana?" |
11527 | As to the young lady, I say nothing of her, yet how shall I forbear? |
11527 | At length Glossin said:"So, captain, this is you? |
11527 | At the same instant Varney called in at the window,"Is the bird caught? |
11527 | Bertram?" |
11527 | But I know you well enough, my man; and you can scarcely have forgotten Lieutenant Splinter of the Torch, one would think?" |
11527 | But could contentment ever be granted to me if I had the consciousness of having pitilessly abandoned those who gave me birth? |
11527 | But his right hand? |
11527 | But in India?" |
11527 | But suppose, Crawley, while I am working, this George Fielding were to come home with money in both pockets?" |
11527 | But thinkest thou that marriage will satisfy for a guilt like thine? |
11527 | But we do not part in anger?" |
11527 | But what could she do, poor thing? |
11527 | But when I opened the business to Paul, I was astonished when he replied,"Why would you have me quit my family for a visionary project of fortune? |
11527 | But whither can you go to be more happy than where you are? |
11527 | But who will deign to take an interest in the history, however affecting, of a few obscure individuals?" |
11527 | But why so cruelly drive me away? |
11527 | But, gentlemen, were there not three persons in the hut?" |
11527 | But, hark ye, what am I, Dirk Hatteraick, to be the better for this?" |
11527 | Can I deliver up their closing days to shame, regrets, and tears? |
11527 | Can you believe it? |
11527 | Could I bear to see my old love in the possession of another? |
11527 | Did not St. Thomas of England die for the goods of the church? |
11527 | Did you fear that the parting would kill me? |
11527 | Didna I see Gentle Geordie trying to get other folk out of the Tolbooth forbye Jock Porteous? |
11527 | FROM MADAME D''ORBE TO SAINT PREUX Why did you not come to see us, instead of merely listening to our voices? |
11527 | Faith, hope, and charity will be quite banished from such a world; and what would happen to our bodies? |
11527 | Had ye but spoke ae word----""What gude wad that hae dune?" |
11527 | Have I succeeded?" |
11527 | Have you caught a cold, gammer? |
11527 | He commanded one of the forts in the Orenburg district?" |
11527 | He reined in his steed and spoke uneasily:"Why, Peter-- Margaret-- what mummery is this?" |
11527 | He said,"I presume, Alfred, you are not so far gone as to insist on propagating insanity by a marriage with Captain Dodd''s daughter now?" |
11527 | He was angry, and said,"Who, little fool, would have you otherwise? |
11527 | How can I describe to you the peace and felicity that reign in this household? |
11527 | How can I do right by wronging them? |
11527 | How can I evince my gratitude?" |
11527 | How can I serve you?" |
11527 | How can you doubt it?" |
11527 | How could I avoid looking like a fool, and answering in confusion? |
11527 | How is the wounded stranger?" |
11527 | How will our mothers bear this separation? |
11527 | I absolutely jumped off the deck with astonishment-- who could have spoken it? |
11527 | I repeat, am I now at liberty to dispose of myself as I please?'' |
11527 | I went to hide the letter in my bosom, and he, seeing me tremble, said smiling,"To whom have you been writing, Pamela?" |
11527 | I would have flung from him, yet where could I go? |
11527 | If Flamin is the son of the prince, where is the son of Chaplain Eymann whom I took to London to be educated with him? |
11527 | If I died in the same cause should I not be a saint likewise? |
11527 | If it is my pleasure to live in seclusion, who shall gainsay me?" |
11527 | If we wish to engage in trade, can not we do so by carrying our superfluities to the city, without any necessity for my rambling to India? |
11527 | Is he going to be married? |
11527 | Is his health so much deranged?" |
11527 | Is oo a man?" |
11527 | Is the deed done?" |
11527 | Is there no path, however dreadful, by which we could climb the crag?" |
11527 | It is not in this room, then?" |
11527 | It is some injustice or wrong you complain of? |
11527 | Kneeling down, he exclaimed,"Apparition, comest thou from God? |
11527 | Knows she whom she refuses?" |
11527 | Look down into the vault-- what seest thou?" |
11527 | Lovelace?'' |
11527 | May I ask our noble friends to withdraw, and leave this delicate investigation to my own family?" |
11527 | May your Grace then be pleased to command my unfortunate wife to be delivered into the custody of my friends?" |
11527 | Meanwhile Margaret said to Madame de la Tour,"Why should we not marry our children? |
11527 | Might he not be proclaimed king of Scotland? |
11527 | Mr. Cranium, after a profound reverie, said,"Do you think Mr. Escot would give me that skull?" |
11527 | No card- tables to employ your winter evenings?" |
11527 | No parties of pleasure to join in? |
11527 | O woman, had I deserved this at your hand? |
11527 | Of course, the case was hopeless then; but in a few years, when I should have passed my examinations and taken my degrees-- who knows? |
11527 | One day M. de Wolmar drew Julie and myself aside, and where do you think he took us? |
11527 | Permission to visit your father on his sick- bed, perhaps on his death- bed?" |
11527 | Reeves?" |
11527 | Shall I give you, from my cousins, an account of the conversation before I went down? |
11527 | Shall I rob her of that? |
11527 | Shall I send for a dressmaker I know who will lend you her yellow gown with flounces? |
11527 | Should I now marry my Pamela, how will my girl relish all this? |
11527 | Sir, I have pledged my honour to the contract, and now, sir, what is to be done?" |
11527 | TO JULIE Oh, how am I to realise the torrent of delights that pours into my heart? |
11527 | Tell me, for I_ will_ know, whose wife, or whose paramour, art thou? |
11527 | The horseman replied in Bohemian, and Consuelo, seeing his face, called out:"Is it the Baron Frederick of Rudolstadt?" |
11527 | The tzarina grants him life, but does that make it easier for me to bear? |
11527 | The young lady was terrified, and, taking his hand in hers, said in her tenderest tone:"What would you have, Scythrop?" |
11527 | Then came the question how was it I had left Orenburg, and gone straight to the rebel camp? |
11527 | Then, addressing the lady:''Will you, madam, put yourself into my protection?'' |
11527 | Then:"You are Dirk Hatteraick, are you not?" |
11527 | Thirst, for who would have drunk without thirst in the time of innocence? |
11527 | Was ever the like heard? |
11527 | Was not this the finger of Heaven-- of that Heaven he had insulted, cursed, and defied? |
11527 | Was she drowning herself from very modesty? |
11527 | Was that your choice?" |
11527 | What amends can such a one as thou make to a person of spirit or common sense for the evils thou hast made me suffer?'' |
11527 | What amends hast_ thou_ to propose? |
11527 | What are you to him, or he to you?" |
11527 | What can an old schoolmaster do quite by himself? |
11527 | What can be misbestowed by a man on his person who values it more than his mind? |
11527 | What can she do but rave and exclaim? |
11527 | What could I answer? |
11527 | What could his pride desire better for you than the establishment which will one day be mine?" |
11527 | What has become of the art of calling down from heaven, thunder and celestial fire, once invented by the wise Prometheus? |
11527 | What if any accident should befall my family during my absence, more especially Virginia, who even now is suffering? |
11527 | What is it that brings such gloomy thoughts into your mind?" |
11527 | What is to be done?" |
11527 | What is your name?" |
11527 | What schooner is that?" |
11527 | What shall I do? |
11527 | What tidings do you bring us, Evandale?" |
11527 | What was he to do? |
11527 | What will become of me? |
11527 | What will become of me? |
11527 | What would his Julia think? |
11527 | What would you have better? |
11527 | What would you have me do?" |
11527 | What would you have?" |
11527 | What, my dear parents, will you say to this letter? |
11527 | What? |
11527 | Where am I to go to?" |
11527 | Where have you dropped from, gentlemen? |
11527 | Where is Alice?" |
11527 | Where is de old Torch? |
11527 | Where is that wretched boy? |
11527 | Where is your buff coat and broadsword, man? |
11527 | Where shall I hide myself? |
11527 | Which was first, thirst or drinking? |
11527 | Who do you think it is? |
11527 | Who would believe a lunatic? |
11527 | Why do you not bring up your prisoner? |
11527 | Why hold you aloof from your own good deed? |
11527 | Why should you? |
11527 | Why, then, would you banish me from you? |
11527 | Will not these be cutting things to my fair one?" |
11527 | Will you aid me in trying to convince him of his error, and thus perfecting Julie''s happiness? |
11527 | Will you cease from all correspondence with her, and renounce all claim to her? |
11527 | Will you find no words to ask of me the great boon which you seek? |
11527 | Will you go? |
11527 | Will you have Miss Toobad?" |
11527 | With that the squire flew over to Mr. Chromatic, and, with a hearty slap on the shoulder, asked him"How he should like him for a son- in- law?" |
11527 | Would I not be driven to despair? |
11527 | Would the Princess Idoine, Liana''s likeness, appear before Albano as a vision and give him peace? |
11527 | Would the gentle knight who rescued her be in Wallace''s train? |
11527 | Ye''ll come back and see me, I reckon, before----""And are we to part in this way,"said Jeannie,"and you in sic deadly peril? |
11527 | You are the author of a treatise called''Philosophical Gas?''" |
11527 | You dared not to mention the subject to your own father-- how should you venture to mention it to mine?" |
11527 | You have come on business?" |
11527 | You see him? |
11527 | You will prepare medicines and oils and ointments from the roots and resin? |
11527 | _ II.--The Separation_ TO JULIE Why was I not allowed to see you before leaving? |
11527 | cried he,"on your allegiance to King Edward, answer me-- where is Sir William Wallace, the murderer of my nephew?" |
11527 | de black cook''s- mate and all? |
11527 | is a prison your dwelling? |
11527 | said Squire Headlong.."What is that to the purpose?" |
11527 | said the lady;"or wherefore have you intruded yourself into my dwelling, uninvited, sir, and unwished for?" |
11527 | she cried, springing up;"you are Bernard Mauprat, you? |
11527 | that romantic story is true, then? |
11527 | what is the meaning of this?" |
11527 | whither?" |
11527 | you would not do that?" |
18776 | A lawyer? 18776 Ai n''t to home: may I ride?" |
18776 | Ai n''t you forgetting something? 18776 And hain''t yer Ma Ducklow been home, nuther?" |
18776 | And the-- the thing tied up in a brown wrapper? |
18776 | And what do that''mount to? 18776 And where did you win beef so young, stranger?" |
18776 | Are you a agent? |
18776 | Are you awake, seh? |
18776 | Are you busy? |
18776 | Boy,I said,"have you begun to realize your soul?" |
18776 | But did you-- did you stop at my house? 18776 But if I see others dancing may I not join them?" |
18776 | Dangerous? |
18776 | Did I? 18776 Did his new foreman get it?" |
18776 | Did n''t I tell you to stand by the old mare? |
18776 | Did that peddler stop here? |
18776 | Do I care? |
18776 | Do you haunt folks day and night; foller''em up ladders, through trap- doors, down sullers, and under barns? |
18776 | Do you suppose the Judge knows? |
18776 | Do you? 18776 Do you?" |
18776 | Eight- thirty? |
18776 | Fickle as the windsis our death- seal upon a man; but should we like our winds unfickle? |
18776 | Going driving? |
18776 | Got anything in your boot- leg to- day, Pa Ducklow? |
18776 | Has he announced his text? 18776 Has what?" |
18776 | Have you been watching for me and expecting me? |
18776 | He said, Mrs. Lathrop, he said,''Miss Clegg, why do n''t you go down to the bank and cut your coupons?'' |
18776 | How am I ever to get up? |
18776 | How can you? 18776 How do you like the looks on it, Samantha?" |
18776 | How goes it, Uncle Archy? |
18776 | How goes it, stranger? |
18776 | How is there goin''to be a change? |
18776 | How many shots left? |
18776 | How much is your machine? |
18776 | How''s the old woman? |
18776 | I said I''d eat paper, and I''ve done it; have n''t I, gentlemen? |
18776 | I thought so,said the Senator;"but what do you think it was?" |
18776 | In the cook? |
18776 | Is he? |
18776 | Is n''t it grand? |
18776 | Is yours as good? |
18776 | Judge Henry? |
18776 | Judge,said his wife, coming to the door,"how can you keep them standing in the dust with your talking?" |
18776 | Know him? 18776 Mrs. Lathrop, you know as I took them bonds straight after father died an''locked''em up an''I ai n''t never unlocked''em since?" |
18776 | Mrs. Sparrowgrass,said I,"wo n''t you stay here with the children until I go to the nearest farm- house?" |
18776 | Now have n''t I as much right to light on Earth as on any other bit of cosmic dust? |
18776 | Oh, do you realize that? |
18776 | Playful, ai n''t he,''squire? |
18776 | Reckon I do n''t know what I''m about? |
18776 | Robbed? 18776 Say, ai n''t you got some message to send back?" |
18776 | Second best, only? 18776 Something kind of cool began to trickle down my legs into my boots--""Blood, eh? |
18776 | That all? |
18776 | That villain haint been a tryin''to get one of them organs off onto you, has he? |
18776 | The Higher Life? |
18776 | Then are we to hear one every evening? |
18776 | Then how am I to brighten others''lives? |
18776 | Then why do n''t you get out of the sun? |
18776 | Then why do n''t you put a string to her? |
18776 | Then you skelp''d( scalped) him immediately? |
18776 | Was it you who willed me to come out into the country? |
18776 | Well, Mrs. Lathrop, what do you think? 18776 Well, how do you like the Only Planet? |
18776 | Well, if you_ ought_, why_ do n''t_ you? |
18776 | Well, what on Earth brings you here? 18776 Well, what_ is_ it, then?" |
18776 | Well,said he,"you know his horse?" |
18776 | Were you surprised to see me flying through the air? |
18776 | What are you going to do then? |
18776 | What do you say? 18776 What have you been doin''? |
18776 | What is the price? |
18776 | What is the trouble with''em? |
18776 | What sort of a machine is this here? |
18776 | What troubles you, my little man? |
18776 | What was the matter with him? |
18776 | What was you pullin''up the carpet for? |
18776 | What''s the matter? 18776 What? |
18776 | What? 18776 What?" |
18776 | What_ mout_ your name be? |
18776 | When I got to the church, what do you think was the first thing as I see, Mrs. Lathrop? 18776 Where am I?" |
18776 | Where are you going, Bob? |
18776 | Where should we git one? |
18776 | Where''s Lark Spivey''s bullet? |
18776 | While I was on another planet? |
18776 | While we were millions and millions of miles apart? 18776 Who said you was goin''to get up at all?" |
18776 | Who_ can_ that be? 18776 Whose hos was it?" |
18776 | Why ai n''t she to home? 18776 Why do n''t ye go''long?" |
18776 | Why do n''t you run down other fellers''machines, and beset us to buy yourn? |
18776 | Why, what has got into Ducklow''s old mare? 18776 Why?" |
18776 | Ye sure? |
18776 | You mean Gov''ment bonds? 18776 *****Do you often have these visitations?" |
18776 | --"Ain''t there?" |
18776 | --"Who told y''u?" |
18776 | ----?" |
18776 | --I told you last week about the picnic, did I not? |
18776 | Ai nt he a funny old Raggedy Man? |
18776 | And Trampas? |
18776 | And his wife,--was she not at that very moment, if not serving up a lie upon the subject, at least paring the truth very thin indeed? |
18776 | And the Virginian? |
18776 | And they appealed to me, several speaking at once, like a concerted piece at the opera:"Say, do you believe babies go to hell?" |
18776 | And what in Heaven''s name is the good of all this ceaseless talk? |
18776 | And what is constancy, that it commands such usurious interest? |
18776 | Anything else about me you''d like to have?" |
18776 | Archibald had been a justice of the peace in his day( and where is the man of his age in Georgia who has not? |
18776 | But can nature be crushed forever? |
18776 | But do n''t you find him intelligent?" |
18776 | But do you know I offered to put my horse agin''his to trot? |
18776 | But what did she want to do? |
18776 | But what''s the use,"he added,"of me tellin''you the p''ints of a good hos? |
18776 | But, dear me, is n''t it tedious? |
18776 | Come down to paint another planet red?" |
18776 | Could I not, by the sense of coming ill through all my quivering frame, presage your advent as exactly as the barometer heralds the approaching storm? |
18776 | Did I not ruin my nerves, and seriously injure my temper, by the overpowering pressure I laid upon them to keep them quiet when you were by? |
18776 | Did n''t ye hear''em? |
18776 | Do you know that you feel a little superior to every man who makes you laugh, whether by making faces or verses? |
18776 | Do you know, too, that the majority of men look upon all who challenge their attention,--for a while, at least,--as beggars, and nuisances? |
18776 | Do you remember_ The White Slave_, Jim? |
18776 | Do you see this?" |
18776 | Do you work him an injury? |
18776 | Does any person want a horse at a low price? |
18776 | Ducklow got some? |
18776 | Ducklow?" |
18776 | Ducklow?" |
18776 | En de Pa''tridge ax, Ai n''t yo''peas ripe? |
18776 | Fickleness? |
18776 | Had he not just given his neighbors to understand that he had no such property? |
18776 | Have you seen our Thaddeus?" |
18776 | He looked so horrified that it skairt me, and says I in almost tremblin''tones:"What is the matter with''em?" |
18776 | He''s kip it up long tam lak dat, but not hard tellin''now, W''at''s all de noise upon de house-- who''s kick heem up de row? |
18776 | How long you gwine stand thar talking''fore you shoot?" |
18776 | How? |
18776 | I asked,"and do you really know?" |
18776 | I have robbed you?" |
18776 | I love Orion light myself, for none other suits my aura quite so well, and I was glad to find they had not taken up the Vega fad.--The light here? |
18776 | I pulled trigger, and--""And killed_ him_?" |
18776 | I reckon you hardly ever was at a shooting- match, stranger, from the cut of your coat?" |
18776 | I thought of the remark made by the man, and turning again to Mrs. Sparrowgrass, said,"Playful, is n''t he?" |
18776 | I was rejoiced when one of the company inquired,"Where is it?" |
18776 | I would n''t miss that for an asteroid!--Oh, did I really promise that? |
18776 | If I came down and offered you my fare And more beside, could you refuse me there? |
18776 | If you do n''t, why are you sitting there in the deepening twilight? |
18776 | If you wanted him, could n''t you send for him? |
18776 | Is it possible, Billy, a man who shoots as well as you do, never practiced shooting with the double wabble? |
18776 | Is that fickleness? |
18776 | Is your name_ Lyman_ Hall?" |
18776 | Lathrop?" |
18776 | Looking everywhere, I caught sight of-- who do you suppose? |
18776 | Oh, ladies all, wo n''t you marry me? |
18776 | Please tell me, who taught her to play with it? |
18776 | Put all your faded fancies in the bow, And all the rest before you in the stern, And row them out with panic on your brow? |
18776 | Say yes, and wound his self- love forever? |
18776 | Say,"said he, before I was half indignant enough at the man who had sold me such an animal,"say, ai n''t your name Sparrowgrass?" |
18776 | Says he,"You are thinkin''of buyin''a sewin''machine, haint you?" |
18776 | Shall so righteous an instrument be employed by the prince of heretics to so unrighteous an end?" |
18776 | So here was a stage, and here were the actors, but where was the audience? |
18776 | Suppose that I had never come to Earth?" |
18776 | Taddy, you notty boy, what did you leave the house for? |
18776 | That''s all I have to tell, and quite enough, I''m sure you''ll think.--What? |
18776 | The Astorian? |
18776 | The foreman''s house had been prepared for two of us, and did we mind? |
18776 | Then I thought to myself,"How was it?" |
18776 | This your hat? |
18776 | To what purpose are you wearied, exhausted, dragged out and out to the very extreme of tenuity? |
18776 | Was he convert or critic? |
18776 | Was it his sermon, we wondered, that he was thinking over? |
18776 | We all grinned, which the"member"noticing, observed,--"I hope, gentlemen, no man here will presume to think I''m exaggerating?" |
18776 | What are you going to do about it? |
18776 | What availed it me, that you were an honest and excellent man? |
18776 | What can you do? |
18776 | What else can you do? |
18776 | What is it?" |
18776 | What right have I to suppose, that, because you are not using your eyes, you are not using your brain? |
18776 | What should he do with the bonds? |
18776 | What''s that? |
18776 | What''s that? |
18776 | What?" |
18776 | What_ do_ you think? |
18776 | When Moll and I helped Wildair up, No longer trim and jolly--"Feelst not, Sir Dick,"says saucy Moll,"A Pious Melancholy?" |
18776 | Where am I, gentlemen?" |
18776 | Where is the good of keeping the peel and pulp- cells till they get old, dry, and mouldy? |
18776 | Where ye goin'', Thaddeus?" |
18776 | Which of them was it?" |
18776 | Who are you?" |
18776 | Who shall describe him, or worthily paint what he is to you? |
18776 | Who?" |
18776 | Why did n''t I give the money to Reuben? |
18776 | Why do n''t you go out into the drawing- room, where are music and lights, and gay people? |
18776 | Why do n''t you take the whole lot?" |
18776 | Why should you be submerged in his whirlpool? |
18776 | Why will they be so ineffably stupid as not to see that there is that which speech profanes? |
18776 | Why will they haul everything out into the open day? |
18776 | Why will they make the Holy of Holies common and unclean? |
18776 | Why,_ why_, WHY will people inundate their unfortunate victims with such"weak, washy, everlasting floods?" |
18776 | Why_ did n''t_ I think on''t? |
18776 | Will he drown any more easily because you are drowning with him? |
18776 | Will you marry me?" |
18776 | Wo n''t ye buy me some to- day?" |
18776 | Would a perpetual northeaster lay us open to perpetual gratitude? |
18776 | Would you remember each of them in turn? |
18776 | Ye did n''t lose it under the carpet, did ye? |
18776 | Yes, I have seen a lot of human beings already, and would you believe it? |
18776 | You would not have me discriminate, would you, when our object is to bring whatever happiness we can to those less fortunate than ourselves? |
18776 | _ Vox faucibus hæsit._ And Taddy? |
18776 | and how do you like the Only Street?" |
18776 | and how do you like the Only Town? |
18776 | and you never married again?" |
18776 | he called out, savagely,"What do you want?--The Earth?" |
18776 | he cried, jumping about in a manner human people think eccentric,"are you astral or actualized?" |
18776 | he exclaimed;"did you call a sheep a peaceful animal? |
18776 | jus''about dey''re half way t''roo wit all dat love beez- nesse Emmeline say,"Dominique, w''at for you''re scare lak all de res''? |
18776 | nothing to say? |
18776 | or is a soft south gale to be orisoned and vespered forevermore? |
18776 | said Billy, with a look that baffles all description,"an''t you_ driv_ the cross?" |
18776 | said Mealy,"what do that''mount to? |
18776 | said one: then lowering his voice to a confidential but distinctly audible tone,"What you offering for?" |
18776 | what do you use such a gun as this for?" |
18776 | what is it, that we make such an ado about it? |
18776 | will no wan come for me?" |
17893 | ''How in the world did you get up here?'' 17893 ''Now who are_ you_, pray?'' |
17893 | ''That explains, then,''I gasped----''Explains what?'' |
17893 | ''Then what you told me about a woman having been murdered, and all that, was not the true story of the haunting?'' 17893 ''They-- who?'' |
17893 | ''What is it? 17893 ''Who are you then? |
17893 | ''Who are you?'' 17893 A penwiper? |
17893 | A silver crucifix and chain for the neck; monsieur would perhaps be good enough to accept it? |
17893 | Age? |
17893 | Agnes,said I,"will you put back your hood and tell me what it all means?" |
17893 | Ah, but what makes birds and animals happy? |
17893 | All night? |
17893 | An''did old Bloody Bones done tol''you dey ain''no ghosts? |
17893 | And Kitty? |
17893 | And after six months? |
17893 | And is the house among the reeds still secure? |
17893 | And is the missus quite well, and are the neighbors flourishing? 17893 And that was why the ghost no longer opposed the match?" |
17893 | And what happened afterward? |
17893 | And when did you get in? |
17893 | And where, may I ask? |
17893 | And why did the ghost go away? |
17893 | Another victim on the smoking altar of vegetarianism? |
17893 | Are you without pity then? |
17893 | But do you hear me well? |
17893 | But he kept his title? |
17893 | But what? |
17893 | But will you do what I advise you? 17893 Ca n''t you see him? |
17893 | Ca n''t you see? |
17893 | Can a dog see with his nose? 17893 Can not you guess then when the final revelation will be? |
17893 | Catch cold? |
17893 | Den whut_ am_ yo''skeered ob? |
17893 | Did he say anything? |
17893 | Did he succeed in driving the ghosts away? |
17893 | Did he succeed? |
17893 | Did n''t I ever tell you about them? |
17893 | Did the ghost leave Scotland for America as soon as the old baron died? |
17893 | Did you hear? |
17893 | Did you notice anything peculiar about that vehicle? |
17893 | Do I strike you as such? |
17893 | Do I understand you to intimate that both ghosts were there together? |
17893 | Do you mean to say you slept out- of- doors last night in that deluge? |
17893 | Do you tell me now,she cried, at once passionately and mildly,"what am I to do?" |
17893 | Do you think that I have come from my parents''home merely to return again without help? 17893 Does he love me?" |
17893 | Doing what? 17893 Doing? |
17893 | Done well? 17893 Everything?" |
17893 | For God''s sake, what has happened? |
17893 | Given it up? |
17893 | Has Mr. Darcy come yet? |
17893 | Has it gone, child? |
17893 | Has that been your occupation then? |
17893 | Has what gone? 17893 Have I not told you everything?" |
17893 | Have you never had a curiosity yourself to pass a night in that house? |
17893 | How can I tell you? |
17893 | How could a ghost, or even two ghosts, keep a girl from marrying the man she loved? |
17893 | How did he come over,queried Dear Jones--"in the steerage, or as a cabin passenger?" |
17893 | How did he know they were swearing? 17893 How did that happen-- your presence, I mean?" |
17893 | How is it possible you did not hear? 17893 How long is it since the house acquired this sinister character?" |
17893 | How much do you ask for it? |
17893 | How should I know you,he continued, apologetically,"for I am a stranger in this place?" |
17893 | I hope she was n''t a daughter of that loud and vulgar old Mrs. Sutton whom I met at Saratoga, one summer, four or five years ago? |
17893 | I say, Pansay, what the deuce was the matter with you this evening on the Elysium road? |
17893 | I shall have the honor of accompanying monsieur to his hotel? |
17893 | I wonder where he is now? 17893 I!--what?" |
17893 | If you have done insulting me, sir,said Harker, as soon as he and the officer were left alone with the dead man,"I suppose I am at liberty to go?" |
17893 | Is he happy? 17893 It seems curious, does n''t it?" |
17893 | Mad? |
17893 | Make? 17893 May I say one thing more?" |
17893 | Mr. Harker,said the coroner, gravely and tranquilly,"from what asylum did you last escape?" |
17893 | Must one have everything? |
17893 | Nothing happened? |
17893 | Now how could it be the ghost of a witch, since the witches were all burned at the stake? 17893 Oh, Hugh, Hugh, have you come back?" |
17893 | Or impress our senses with the belief in such effects-- we never having been_ en rapport_ with the person acting on us? 17893 Perhaps he kept his countenance veiled?" |
17893 | Perhaps,he said,"perhaps, after all, monsieur has not the time?" |
17893 | Really haunted?--and by what? 17893 Slept well?" |
17893 | So, besides being the owner of a haunted house in Salem, he was also a haunted man in Scotland? |
17893 | Spooks? |
17893 | Tell me now, what shall I do? |
17893 | The rival ghosts? |
17893 | Then how came it that the father and son were lost in the yacht off the Hebrides? |
17893 | Then what about Christianity? |
17893 | To see Pan meant death, did it not? |
17893 | Trespass? 17893 Veile,"he said, approaching nearer her,"what do you wish of me?" |
17893 | Victim? |
17893 | Was it the guardian- angel ghost warning him off the match? |
17893 | Was that you, sir? |
17893 | Well, what does that matter? |
17893 | Well? |
17893 | Were you, perhaps, forced to be married? |
17893 | What asylum did this yer last witness escape from? |
17893 | What can you have done,inquired the rabbi, with a tender look,"that can not be discussed at any other time than just now? |
17893 | What did he do? |
17893 | What did he do? |
17893 | What did the ghost look like? |
17893 | What did you see? |
17893 | What do you mean by''such an attitude towards Nature''? |
17893 | What does that matter? |
17893 | What exactly does it mean? |
17893 | What has all this got to do with your ghost? |
17893 | What have you done to yourself? |
17893 | What is he?--in any business? |
17893 | What is your name? |
17893 | What made you stop back there? |
17893 | What more shall I tell you, rabbi? |
17893 | What then do you expect the final revelation will do for you? |
17893 | What was he like? |
17893 | What was it, Uncle Larry? |
17893 | What was it? |
17893 | What was the merry jest? |
17893 | What''s the matter? |
17893 | What''yo''pick up dat nomsense? |
17893 | What? 17893 What?" |
17893 | What?--what? |
17893 | Where did they get the banjo? |
17893 | Where does he live? |
17893 | Who are you? |
17893 | Who is my husband? |
17893 | Who is there? |
17893 | Who was she? |
17893 | Who were they? |
17893 | Who? 17893 Whom? |
17893 | Whut for you try to take my head? |
17893 | Whut yo''want to say unto me? |
17893 | Why ai n''t yo''want to go? |
17893 | Why was that? |
17893 | Why, Jack,she cried,"what_ have_ you been doing? |
17893 | Why, then, did you shriek so, Selde,called out one of the guests to her,"if nothing happened?" |
17893 | Why, what in the world_ should_ happen? |
17893 | Will you have strength to do it? |
17893 | Will you swear? |
17893 | Wo n''t you go home? |
17893 | Would not!--and why? |
17893 | Yes, that is my name,he said laughing,"what is the matter?" |
17893 | You are not at all frightened? |
17893 | You do n''t mean to say that they knew any just cause or impediment why they should not forever after hold their peace? |
17893 | You do n''t mean to tell me that the ghost which haunted the house was a woman? |
17893 | You knew the deceased, Hugh Morgan? |
17893 | You were with him when he died? |
17893 | ''Did-- did Carey send you to meet me?'' |
17893 | ''If you''re not Carey, the man I arranged with, who are you?'' |
17893 | ''What in the world are you talking about?'' |
17893 | ''Wo n''t you step out into the middle of the room and try to love me a little?'' |
17893 | ''You are not going to fill up a deer with quail- shot, are you?'' |
17893 | A large spider? |
17893 | A rat? |
17893 | After a pause, he added, in a still gentler tone:"What is your name, then, my child?" |
17893 | An''if de cap''n ghost an''de gin''ral ghost an''de king ghost an''all de ghostes in de whole worl''don''know ef dar am ghostes, who does?" |
17893 | An''who know''but whut a great, big ghost bump right into him''ca''se it ca n''t see him? |
17893 | An''whut dem six ghostes do but stand round an''confabulate? |
17893 | And have we, then, made her?" |
17893 | And how much have you learned? |
17893 | And, if we did, should we not then succeed only in abolishing the old- fashioned ghost story and creating a new, scientific ghost story? |
17893 | Are you ill?" |
17893 | As I was turning away, a beer- boy, collecting pewter pots at the neighboring areas, said to me,"Do you want any one at that house, sir?" |
17893 | At last the question was asked,"Is this book for sale?" |
17893 | But enough; do you comprehend my theory?" |
17893 | But was it worth while to spend six years of greatly- occupied life in order to look twenty? |
17893 | But who ever thought for a moment why the young woman''s hand burned, why her breath was so hot when one came near to her lips? |
17893 | But, says Mrs. Bargrave, how came you to take a journey alone? |
17893 | Can we, with a few generations of modernism behind us, throw it off with all our science? |
17893 | Could he hear them?" |
17893 | Could it be possible, I wondered, that I was in this life to woo a second time the woman I had killed by my own neglect and cruelty? |
17893 | Deeper and further back, is the supreme mystery of life-- after death-- what? |
17893 | Did n''t it?" |
17893 | Did you really hear nothing?" |
17893 | Do n''t you see it?" |
17893 | Do odors impress some cerebral center with images of the thing that emitted them? |
17893 | Do you never paint now?" |
17893 | Do you read? |
17893 | Do you study? |
17893 | Do you think if I take you with me, I may rely on your presence of mind, whatever may happen?" |
17893 | Do your parents or your husband know anything about it?" |
17893 | Does the sight of Pan mean that, do you think? |
17893 | Fiamne dives? |
17893 | Had this been done in the dark?--must it not have been by a hand human as mine?--must there not have been a human agency all the while in that room? |
17893 | Half a pipe more, did you say? |
17893 | Have I seen it before? |
17893 | Have you been doing that?" |
17893 | Have you come here then to confess this sin? |
17893 | Have you seen the book? |
17893 | Have you? |
17893 | Her harried, uneasy look caused Mrs. Wilton to ask compassionately:"Are you much worried by the police?" |
17893 | How goes it all?" |
17893 | How much did Mrs. Wessington give her men? |
17893 | How you know dey ai n''t no ghosts?" |
17893 | How, then, had the THING, whatever it was, which had so scared him, obtained ingress except through my own chamber? |
17893 | How? |
17893 | Howdy, li''l''Mose?" |
17893 | I asked Mrs. Bargrave several times, if she was sure she felt the gown? |
17893 | I asked her, if she heard a sound when she clapped her hand upon her knee? |
17893 | I could not have continued pretending to love her when I did n''t; could I? |
17893 | I shall want at least two hours more here, and it must be cold for you, is n''t it?" |
17893 | I strove to speak-- my voice utterly failed me; I could only think to myself,"is this fear? |
17893 | I wonder what that crucifix is that the young woman insisted on giving me? |
17893 | I wonder who has them now?" |
17893 | In God''s name, I ask, what was there to happen?" |
17893 | Interrogatum est: Inveniamne? |
17893 | Is he the owner of the house?" |
17893 | Is it of the same nature as the fascination which we feel for the mystery of the detective story? |
17893 | Is it really an insane woman before him? |
17893 | Is it that nature, take it altogether, suffers horribly, suffers to a hideous inconceivable extent? |
17893 | Is that what you call to be advised?" |
17893 | Is the house on fire?" |
17893 | Is there not a streak of superstition in us all? |
17893 | It was asked: Shall I find it? |
17893 | Jack dear: what does it all mean? |
17893 | Leave monsieur alone in the church? |
17893 | Look at me; have I not done something to myself to begin with?" |
17893 | May I see it? |
17893 | Money? |
17893 | Moriarne in lecto meo? |
17893 | Mr. Veal says, he asked his sister on her death- bed, whether she had a mind to dispose of anything? |
17893 | No ghost stories? |
17893 | No, what is it that makes puppies play with their own tails, that sends cats on their prowling ecstatic errands at night?". |
17893 | Now, madam, wo n''t you take pity on me?'' |
17893 | Oh, ask him does he love me?" |
17893 | On another occasion he said:"Isaiah was a very sensible man; does n''t he say something about night monsters living in the ruins of Babylon? |
17893 | Perhaps you were married here?" |
17893 | Queer notion, was n''t it? |
17893 | Says Mrs. Bargrave, How came you to order matters so strangely? |
17893 | Scientific? |
17893 | Shall I be shown all the suffering?" |
17893 | Shall I become rich? |
17893 | Shall I die in my bed? |
17893 | Shall I live an object of envy? |
17893 | Shall I return to my old lost allegiance in the next world, or shall I meet Agnes loathing her and bound to her side through all eternity? |
17893 | Shall we two hover over the scene of our lives till the end of time? |
17893 | She merely said:"So you have come at last, my daughter?" |
17893 | She would often draw her hands across her own eyes, and say, Mrs. Bargrave, do not you think I am mightily impaired by my fits? |
17893 | Should I, then, do anything to please my husband? |
17893 | Should he speak with her as with an ordinary sinner? |
17893 | Should the"widow''s mite"go to Professor West''s heirs or to the purchaser of the collection? |
17893 | So he say''to li''l''black Mose:"''Tain''likely you met up wid a monstrous big ha''nt whut live''down de lane whut he name Bloody Bones?" |
17893 | So li''l''black Mose he turn''he white head, an''he look''roun''an''peer''roun'', an''he say'':"Whut you all skeered fo''?" |
17893 | Tell me, tell me, what am I to do?" |
17893 | That unexpected kind of a lift is like kicking at nothing-- it''s hurtful, do n''t you know?" |
17893 | There was an hearty friendship among them; but where is it now to be found? |
17893 | Therefore he called out, after a moment''s pause,"What do you wish so late at night?" |
17893 | This fascination of the ghost story-- have I made it clear? |
17893 | Three slow, loud, distinct knocks were now heard at the bed- head; my servant called out,"Is that you, sir?" |
17893 | Vivamne invidendus? |
17893 | Was it broken through_ D.T._ or epileptic fits? |
17893 | Was it not enough that the woman was dead and done with, without her black and white servitors re- appearing to spoil the day''s happiness? |
17893 | Was she not ugly?" |
17893 | What are you doing?" |
17893 | What can he now do, when he knows what has been lost to him?" |
17893 | What could he do? |
17893 | What could it all mean? |
17893 | What did he do? |
17893 | What did mademoiselle want for it? |
17893 | What did you think of me? |
17893 | What on earth can I do with the house?" |
17893 | What the devil is it?'' |
17893 | What was the matter? |
17893 | What were their hours? |
17893 | What''s that?" |
17893 | What? |
17893 | What_ has_ happened? |
17893 | Where did they go? |
17893 | Where did you learn hypnotism?" |
17893 | Where was the likelihood that a place so near Toulouse would not have been ransacked long ago by collectors? |
17893 | Where?" |
17893 | Who are you?'' |
17893 | Who does not feel a suppressed start at the creaking of furniture in the dark of night? |
17893 | Who has not felt a shiver of goose flesh, controlled only by an effort of will? |
17893 | Who shall say that he is able to fling off lightly the inheritance of countless ages of superstition? |
17893 | Who should have noticed so strange a thing? |
17893 | Who talks of trespass? |
17893 | Who, in the dark, has not had the feeling of some_ thing_ behind him-- and, in spite of his conscious reasoning, turned to look? |
17893 | Whut is dat Ah got to remimber?" |
17893 | Whut we gwine do fo''to_ re_ward him fo''politeness?" |
17893 | Whut yo''skeered ob whin dey ai n''t no ghosts?" |
17893 | Why ca n''t I be left alone-- left alone and happy?" |
17893 | Why could n''t Agnes have left me alone? |
17893 | Why did she go in there? |
17893 | Why did you not speak when you could have spoken? |
17893 | Why do n''t they leave me alone? |
17893 | Why do n''t they leave us alone? |
17893 | Why should you trouble me?" |
17893 | Why, what is the commonest crime one sees? |
17893 | Will you let me advise you, Veile?" |
17893 | Will you not oppose it? |
17893 | Will you not say just one word?" |
17893 | Will you undergo this penance?" |
17893 | Would you take away our supernatural fiction by your paltry scientific explanation? |
17893 | Yet-- do I go into the darkness outside otherwise than alert? |
17893 | You are certainly willing to hear me speak? |
17893 | You never heard of anybody who was burned having a ghost, did you?" |
17893 | You roll in it, I suppose, and, O Darcy, how much happiness have you had all these years? |
17893 | You were with me, do you remember? |
17893 | cried Kitty;"what made you call out so foolishly, Jack? |
17893 | for what object?" |
17893 | ghosts?" |
17893 | said I, rather disappointed;"have you not seen nor heard anything remarkable?" |
17893 | shall I not now speak?" |
17893 | they cried to each other,"what is the matter down there? |
17893 | who?" |
17893 | whom?" |
17893 | whut you know''bout ghosts, anner ways?" |
17893 | you believe it is all an imposture? |
30373 | [ original has single quote]Why not? |
28511 | ALLYN A sailor and another-- TREAT Andros? |
28511 | ALLYN Have you the charter? |
28511 | ALLYN I think that will be best, do n''t you, Captain? |
28511 | ALLYN Where? |
28511 | ALLYN Yes? |
28511 | ALLYN[_ calling_] Hello there, what do you want? |
28511 | ALLYN[_ low_] What shall I tell him? |
28511 | ANDROS Do you see this oak tree? |
28511 | ANDROS Do you still insist on this ridiculous show of force? |
28511 | ANDROS Had it? |
28511 | ANDROS How so? |
28511 | ANDROS Is this rebellion? |
28511 | ANDROS Then where is it? |
28511 | ANDROS This-- this show of force? |
28511 | ANDROS What now? |
28511 | ANDROS What? |
28511 | ANDROS Where is it? |
28511 | ANDROS Where is the charter? |
28511 | ANDROS Where is your Governor? |
28511 | ANDROS Who lives here? |
28511 | ANDROS Will you call the Assembly to order? |
28511 | ANDROS You were a member of the Charter Committee, were you not? |
28511 | ANDROS[_ coming in, storming angrily_] What is the meaning of this, sir? |
28511 | Are you Master Willys? |
28511 | Are you Robert Treat? |
28511 | BLIGH Are any of those named here? |
28511 | BLIGH In whose possession is it? |
28511 | BLIGH Indeed-- and who comprises the committee? |
28511 | BLIGH What? |
28511 | BLIGH Why not, pray-- is it not properly signed and sealed? |
28511 | BLIGH Your name, sir? |
28511 | BLIGH[_ coming in_] What is the meaning of this, sir? |
28511 | But what authority have you, sir, to break into the Assembly of the General Court of Connecticut? |
28511 | Can we deliver up the government under an order which is obviously forged? |
28511 | Captain Wadsworth, will you usher us to our places? |
28511 | Do we need all the candles here? |
28511 | Do you hear me? |
28511 | Governor Treat-- I now call you that for the last time-- will you show me to my place? |
28511 | Has not every Englishman a right to defend his case before a court of law? |
28511 | Have you got an extra flint? |
28511 | Have you something to say? |
28511 | How can I hold it against an order to relinquish it? |
28511 | How will you explain that to the King? |
28511 | If I am ordered to give it up, what can I do? |
28511 | If you do n''t tell me where that charter is-- WILLYS What then, sir? |
28511 | Is there a second to the nomination for the Charter Committee? |
28511 | Is there anyone there? |
28511 | Lieutenant Allyn, how many ships did you see? |
28511 | Now are you satisfied? |
28511 | Now, where did I put my flint? |
28511 | One of the Charter Committee, eh? |
28511 | Quick, what''s happened? |
28511 | SEXTON This end by the window? |
28511 | TREAT Are you certain they are the ships of Governor Andros? |
28511 | TREAT Can you see who it is, Lieutenant? |
28511 | TREAT Have I the honor of greeting Governor Andros? |
28511 | TREAT Hm-- does this not seem to be a forgery, Captain Wadsworth? |
28511 | TREAT I beg your pardon? |
28511 | TREAT Indeed, and who are you, if we may be permitted to know? |
28511 | TREAT Last February? |
28511 | TREAT Opposed? |
28511 | TREAT What is the will of the Assembly? |
28511 | TREAT What? |
28511 | TREAT Will you first sign the receipt for the charter, so that the committee may be protected? |
28511 | TREAT You, sir? |
28511 | Treat, will you sit at my left? |
28511 | VOICE Is the Governor of Connecticut Colony in the fort? |
28511 | WADSWORTH Are you satisfied with this, Governor? |
28511 | WADSWORTH May I be allowed to see it? |
28511 | WADSWORTH Oh, yes, and have you an order for it there? |
28511 | WADSWORTH Then what can we do, sir? |
28511 | WADSWORTH When may we expect the order? |
28511 | WADSWORTH You know the oak in front of his house? |
28511 | WADSWORTH Your Excellency-- TREAT Yes, Captain Wadsworth? |
28511 | WILLYS I am informed that the charter-- ANDROS Yes? |
28511 | WILLYS Your pardon, sir, but how should I know? |
28511 | Well, Captain? |
28511 | What are you talking about? |
28511 | What are you trying to do? |
28511 | What foolishness is this? |
28511 | What is the meaning of it, I say? |
28511 | What is the meaning of this? |
28511 | Who is in it? |
28511 | Who was the complainant? |
28511 | Why was I locked out? |
28511 | Will someone propose the committee? |
28511 | Will you go down to meet him? |
28511 | Will you tell me or will you be hanged by your thumbs from that stout limb up there until you are ready to tell me where the charter is? |
28511 | You are trying to put me in the wrong? |
28511 | You understand? |
28511 | [_ etc._] TREAT But how can we save it? |
28511 | [_ sound of starting to climb the tree_] Have the men found anything in the house, Colonel? |
10541 | ''T is friendship, is it, to tell you not to fetch the wood? |
10541 | (_ He turns to the Man._) But how didst thou get him here? |
10541 | (_ He turns to the Miller._) Pray, honest friend, is that beast your own? |
10541 | (_ He winks aside at Second Wag._) You have heard of this, dear friend? |
10541 | (_ Ingà © is silent._) Have you been to the Elf Hill? |
10541 | (_ Isabel stops._) Who is the wonderful spinner? |
10541 | (_ Karen thrusts out her foot._) What is this? |
10541 | (_ The Aide goes._) Well, Pierre, do you think we should be in fear of this enemy? |
10541 | (_ The Alligator comes out of the net._) Well, how dost thou feel now? |
10541 | (_ The Executioner comes out from hut._) Well, do you know me? |
10541 | (_ The Merchant stops._) Canst thou tell us what dreadful thing hath befallen this city? |
10541 | (_ The Wags stop._) Canst thou not tell us who we are? |
10541 | (_ To Eliza._) Why were you all alone in a cave, and why were you spinning coats? |
10541 | (_ Turning to Ali Cogia._) Ali Cogia, have you brought the jar? |
10541 | A fowl? |
10541 | A good disposition? |
10541 | A loaf? |
10541 | A magic coat? |
10541 | About me? |
10541 | About to die? |
10541 | Ah, then you have kittens at home? |
10541 | Ah, there is something more, then? |
10541 | Ah, your Majesty believes with me? |
10541 | Ali Cogia, is this jar the same you left with the Merchant? |
10541 | Ali Cogia, what charge have you to make against this Merchant? |
10541 | All- out? |
10541 | Alone? |
10541 | Am I not right? |
10541 | Am I not right? |
10541 | And I saw by the light of my beard that you forgot to sing the hymns; eh, Karen? |
10541 | And did I not take it up? |
10541 | And have I not done my share? |
10541 | And now thou wilt not? |
10541 | And that you forgot to say your prayers; eh, Karen? |
10541 | And then at your new red ones? |
10541 | And then, if you are truly a duck, why are you not with your family? |
10541 | And to lay eggs? |
10541 | And what shall I do there, good woman? |
10541 | And what was that? |
10541 | And when will that be? |
10541 | And who am I? |
10541 | And why from his cloak? |
10541 | And why not strike off your head, pray? |
10541 | And why not, Miss? |
10541 | And you are willing to fall off with your ships into space, sir? |
10541 | Another? |
10541 | Are they of polished leather? |
10541 | Are you Olive Merchants? |
10541 | Are you here, good woman? |
10541 | Are you ill? |
10541 | Are you willing, men, to have the deed done now? |
10541 | Are you willing? |
10541 | Are you with me, men? |
10541 | Because you will not let her spin? |
10541 | But how couldst thou remain within the net? |
10541 | But how did the King find out the truth? |
10541 | But how did you know they had but just passed through still water and over rocks? |
10541 | But how will the Emperor make a choice? |
10541 | But how? |
10541 | But who is this maiden? |
10541 | But will it call the others? |
10541 | Can it be? |
10541 | Can you lay eggs? |
10541 | Can you purr? |
10541 | Can you set up your back? |
10541 | Columbus? |
10541 | Did I not see the hatchet first? |
10541 | Did he ever tell me there was gold in the jar? |
10541 | Did he not quack but just a moment ago? |
10541 | Did she not cry out? |
10541 | Did we not have two baskets of gourds with us? |
10541 | Did we not tie gourds around our ankles? |
10541 | Did you ever see anything so cruel? |
10541 | Did you ever see such geese? |
10541 | Did you know that? |
10541 | Did you say land, sir? |
10541 | Did you see him? |
10541 | Did you trace this man and dog by their footprints? |
10541 | Do I want a dancing guide? |
10541 | Do n''t you see I ca n''t? |
10541 | Do you expect to get a good price for our donkey, father? |
10541 | Do you hear me, Guardsmen? |
10541 | Do you hear me, Guardsmen? |
10541 | Do you hear me, Ingà ©? |
10541 | Do you hear me, Karen? |
10541 | Do you hear me, Karen? |
10541 | Do you hear me, Karen? |
10541 | Do you hear that, daughter? |
10541 | Do you know when the Captain expects them? |
10541 | Do you know where they are? |
10541 | Do you know, stranger bird, that, with these crumbs, you have brought us in all one loaf? |
10541 | Do you not know that, sir? |
10541 | Do you not know yourselves? |
10541 | Do you promise? |
10541 | Do you see that, Citizens? |
10541 | Do you see the stinging nettles which I hold in my hand? |
10541 | Do you see those great blue bluffs to the south? |
10541 | Do you think I could give a better sentence? |
10541 | Do you think he''ll listen to your silly talk? |
10541 | Do you think she should have her Sunday dinner? |
10541 | Do you think the musicians should follow them? |
10541 | Do you think we could capture this man? |
10541 | Do you think, sir, she can not_ caw_ as well as the rest of us? |
10541 | Do you think, sir, that an elephant carries this flat world on his back and walks about with it? |
10541 | Do you truly think I''m wise? |
10541 | Do you want to see me, sir? |
10541 | Do you wish to buy her? |
10541 | Do? |
10541 | Does that last one there belong to you? |
10541 | Does your dog go to battle with you? |
10541 | Dost thou hear? |
10541 | Dost thou indeed think thou art some other person? |
10541 | Dost thou not know us? |
10541 | Dost thou think we can not? |
10541 | Eh? |
10541 | Eh? |
10541 | Eh? |
10541 | Eh? |
10541 | Eh? |
10541 | Eh? |
10541 | Eh? |
10541 | Eh? |
10541 | Forget their own faces? |
10541 | Forget who they are? |
10541 | General, could you not tell us the Emperor''s plans? |
10541 | Half- out? |
10541 | Hast thou not always noticed something unusual about me? |
10541 | Hast thou not felt it when in my company? |
10541 | Have I not done my share of the work? |
10541 | Have I not done my share? |
10541 | Have I not done my share? |
10541 | Have I not told thee of my hunger? |
10541 | Have any yet come from the village? |
10541 | Have the lads returned? |
10541 | Have they beaten you, my child? |
10541 | Have you maps and charts to prove your plans? |
10541 | He had a dog? |
10541 | Heard you that cry? |
10541 | Hidden away, I suppose? |
10541 | How came you by it? |
10541 | How can that be? |
10541 | How can you ride while your own child walks in the dust? |
10541 | How could there be land beyond? |
10541 | How could you tell that? |
10541 | How did you know that? |
10541 | How did you learn that? |
10541 | How do you dare, then, to say the world is round? |
10541 | How do you know that? |
10541 | How do you know that? |
10541 | How do you know that? |
10541 | How dost thou repay a favor, Brother Rabbit? |
10541 | How dost thou repay the one who doth thee a favor? |
10541 | How dost thou repay the one who doth thee a favor? |
10541 | How now? |
10541 | How to break the spell? |
10541 | How, then, could the world move on? |
10541 | How? |
10541 | Hymns? |
10541 | I am certain he does not ride? |
10541 | I am sure he can not dance? |
10541 | I''ve heard you did lay your plans before King John of Portugal? |
10541 | If I were myself, would not the gourd still be around my ankle? |
10541 | In a cave? |
10541 | Is it common in your family? |
10541 | Is it not a pretty sight? |
10541 | Is it quite tight? |
10541 | Is she coming? |
10541 | Is that not true, Karen? |
10541 | Is that the way to repay a favor-- by doing a wrong? |
10541 | Is this a gourd or is it not a gourd? |
10541 | Is this true, Isabel? |
10541 | Is this true, Isabel? |
10541 | Is this true, Isabel? |
10541 | Me? |
10541 | Merchant, do you confess this jar to be the same? |
10541 | Merchant, what have you to say to this charge? |
10541 | Mother, how could you tell the Queen I love to spin? |
10541 | Move on? |
10541 | Mutiny? |
10541 | No help? |
10541 | Nothing more? |
10541 | Now how am I to get thee to the river? |
10541 | Now what did you name your eldest child? |
10541 | Now what did you name your second child? |
10541 | Now, how many do you think? |
10541 | Of course you told the King? |
10541 | Oh, do they, truly? |
10541 | Oh, do you truly think so? |
10541 | Once again I ask you,--Are you a witch? |
10541 | Once more,--Will you not give them up? |
10541 | Or friendship? |
10541 | Or love? |
10541 | Our ships bound for the Indies? |
10541 | Out of the town gate? |
10541 | Perhaps they flee from some monster just come out of the sea? |
10541 | Prove it? |
10541 | Red shoes for church? |
10541 | Red shoes-- to church? |
10541 | Red shoes? |
10541 | Remain as I am? |
10541 | Round, say you? |
10541 | Round? |
10541 | Sail on? |
10541 | Sausage, dear, would you break up our pretty home? |
10541 | Say you not so, my Clerks? |
10541 | Say you not so, my Clerks? |
10541 | See without looking? |
10541 | Shall I not bring them back? |
10541 | Shall we drive away the one who finds food where we find none? |
10541 | So I thought, but she said,"Lend? |
10541 | So our enemy picked berries, did he? |
10541 | So you think there''s land to be discovered, do you? |
10541 | So you think what I did was right? |
10541 | Suppose we ask the first animal that comes to drink? |
10541 | The King permits it? |
10541 | The cyclone? |
10541 | The loaf from my head? |
10541 | The merchants and the sailors-- did the Turks spare them? |
10541 | The one you saw on the pond yesterday? |
10541 | The text? |
10541 | Then he went with you to- day, of course? |
10541 | Then who art thou? |
10541 | Then why have you come back? |
10541 | Then you know that my father married again? |
10541 | There now-- are they not charming? |
10541 | There, little Sparrow, say you now there is no kindness? |
10541 | They did, eh? |
10541 | Think you I''d let the truth be known? |
10541 | Think you to finish before the Queen comes? |
10541 | Think you''ll need more wood for the dinner, Sausage? |
10541 | This is your first visit to a city, I take it? |
10541 | Thou hast not? |
10541 | Thou hast wallowed among my flowers by accident, hast thou? |
10541 | Thou wilt not believe it, eh? |
10541 | Throw down the loaf? |
10541 | To let them kill you? |
10541 | To save me? |
10541 | To the graveyard? |
10541 | To your wife? |
10541 | Top- off? |
10541 | WHAT SHALL I DO?" |
10541 | WHAT SHALL I DO?"] |
10541 | Was not that the way of it, Captain? |
10541 | Well, have you finished? |
10541 | Well, my lad, what did you see in the forest? |
10541 | Well, my lad, what did you see in the forest? |
10541 | Well, my lad, what did you see in the forest? |
10541 | Well-- well? |
10541 | Well? |
10541 | Well? |
10541 | Well? |
10541 | What are you doing? |
10541 | What are you making, child? |
10541 | What color do you wish, madam? |
10541 | What did you name him? |
10541 | What do I? |
10541 | What do I? |
10541 | What do they wish? |
10541 | What do we care for Wild Swans? |
10541 | What do you mean? |
10541 | What do you mean? |
10541 | What do you mean? |
10541 | What do you mean? |
10541 | What do you mean? |
10541 | What do you mean? |
10541 | What do you mean? |
10541 | What do you want, Old Soldier? |
10541 | What does that matter, if it pleases me? |
10541 | What dost thou mean? |
10541 | What dreadful thing go they to see? |
10541 | What else nice say they? |
10541 | What has happened? |
10541 | What has so changed him? |
10541 | What hath happened? |
10541 | What have I ever told you? |
10541 | What have you in that sack, friend? |
10541 | What have you named him? |
10541 | What hymns did they sing, Karen? |
10541 | What is that you are saying? |
10541 | What is the little girl doing in this lonely place? |
10541 | What is this? |
10541 | What is this? |
10541 | What is this? |
10541 | What is this? |
10541 | What is this? |
10541 | What kind do you wish, madam? |
10541 | What news do you bring? |
10541 | What prisoner? |
10541 | What proof have you of that? |
10541 | What say they? |
10541 | What says the merchant? |
10541 | What shall I do? |
10541 | What shall I do? |
10541 | What shall I say, sir? |
10541 | What shall we do, sir? |
10541 | What shall we do? |
10541 | What shall we do? |
10541 | What shall we do? |
10541 | What shall we do? |
10541 | What shall we exchange him for? |
10541 | What troubles thee? |
10541 | What was the text? |
10541 | What were they crying? |
10541 | What were you calling? |
10541 | What will he think of your honor if he finds the jar has been opened? |
10541 | What will you give me for the sackful? |
10541 | What''s all this noise? |
10541 | What''s the trouble? |
10541 | What''s this, Jester? |
10541 | What? |
10541 | Where am I to go? |
10541 | Where have you been? |
10541 | Where shall I go? |
10541 | Where''s Sausage? |
10541 | Whither do they go, these vast multitudes? |
10541 | Who are you? |
10541 | Who calls? |
10541 | Who chooses to be the Merchant? |
10541 | Who is this thou art about to dine upon? |
10541 | Who saw his maps? |
10541 | Who was sent? |
10541 | Who''s away? |
10541 | Who''s crazy? |
10541 | Why and wherefore? |
10541 | Why did they all treat him so, father? |
10541 | Why did you bring her with you? |
10541 | Why dost thou ask? |
10541 | Why dost thou look at me so? |
10541 | Why is your beard so red, Old Soldier? |
10541 | Why is your foot so flat? |
10541 | Why is your lip so long? |
10541 | Why is your thumb so broad? |
10541 | Why not creep upon him now? |
10541 | Why should he not fall into the seas to- night? |
10541 | Why these crowds so early, sir? |
10541 | Why were you late? |
10541 | Why? |
10541 | Wild swans? |
10541 | Will you be saved by magic? |
10541 | Will you come for the water, Sausage? |
10541 | Will you give up your red shoes? |
10541 | Will you learn to purr? |
10541 | Will you please let me in? |
10541 | Will you please move? |
10541 | Will you remove this spell from me? |
10541 | Will you take my cow in exchange? |
10541 | Will you turn back? |
10541 | Wilt cross this muddy road? |
10541 | Wilt thou be good enough to walk thyself out? |
10541 | Wo n''t you give me your advice? |
10541 | Would you get yourself into trouble? |
10541 | Would you sail again with this man as your leader, Captain? |
10541 | Would you spoil everything, Zeyn? |
10541 | Yes; do you know them? |
10541 | You are sure the boys did n''t see you? |
10541 | You can not? |
10541 | You did not spin the flax? |
10541 | You have come to see the Emperor? |
10541 | You know what happens to strangers in our city, of course? |
10541 | You made the return trip by boat up the creek? |
10541 | You rested by the way, did n''t you? |
10541 | You sailed with them, I believe? |
10541 | You saw my thoughts? |
10541 | You saw nothing but trees? |
10541 | You saw that? |
10541 | You think it would be an easy matter, then, to follow and capture him? |
10541 | You think of your shoes, and your aunt lies ill? |
10541 | You thought the jar contained olives all this time? |
10541 | Your proof of this, my lad? |
10541 | Your queen? |
10541 | _ I_ help thee? |
10541 | carry thee? |
10541 | why not? |
11659 | A fortnight? |
11659 | Ah, Corinne,he cried,"does then my country affect your heart? |
11659 | Always loved you as a son-- haven''t I, Molly? |
11659 | Am I, as warden, legally and distinctly entitled to the proceeds of the property after the due maintenance of the twelve bedesmen? |
11659 | And condemn myself to live far away from her whom I love? |
11659 | And did the man whom you pursued travel in the same fashion? |
11659 | And do you like him? |
11659 | And is it possible that you did not shed tears? |
11659 | And thou alive to tell it? |
11659 | And what frolic hath he found to cause all this disturbance? 11659 And what noise was that which I heard?" |
11659 | And would you like to know the reason for this reticence? |
11659 | And you resolve to become the bride, then, of the Count of Campo- basso, the unworthy favourite of Charles? |
11659 | And you saw him then, cousin? |
11659 | And you will not be angry? |
11659 | Art thou sure that this Scottish man is a tall man and true? |
11659 | Art thou that holy hermit? |
11659 | Aunt, aunt, what is this? |
11659 | Bear malice? 11659 Because I do n''t like the fine young gentleman; and so what is there to be glad of in it? |
11659 | Before I come on board your vessel,said he,"will you have the kindness to inform me whither you are bound?" |
11659 | But dost thou not neglect thine own safety in setting me free? |
11659 | But how comes he here? |
11659 | But is he noble? |
11659 | But suppose she loves him? |
11659 | But what are we to do with him? 11659 But what has happened, then, in the last fortnight?" |
11659 | But what mean these shouts and distant music in the camp? |
11659 | But whom do I see here? |
11659 | But you love me, Lisa? 11659 But, Irina, you love me, dear?" |
11659 | Can it be that you love me? |
11659 | Captain Costizan, will you take something to drink? |
11659 | Crawford,said Louis,"I trust it is one of my faithful Scots who has won this prize?" |
11659 | Devil,I exclaimed,"do you dare approach me? |
11659 | Did I not desire that Dame Perette should bring what I wanted? 11659 Did anyone send you, sir?" |
11659 | Did you notice how shy and nervous he is? |
11659 | Do n''t you see the young gentleman''s black clothes? 11659 Do you bandy words with me, you ungrateful man?" |
11659 | Do you remember,she cried, with energy,"who the poor boy is, and what your house owes to its family? |
11659 | For what? 11659 For whom do you take us, fair son?" |
11659 | Forgiveness... for what? |
11659 | From that woman? |
11659 | Gracious powers, what do you mean, sir? 11659 Guess I did, did n''t I?" |
11659 | Hark, what trumpets are there? |
11659 | Has there been any shivering? |
11659 | Has this youth been brought into my castle to insult me? |
11659 | Have I really nothing better to do,he thought,"at the age of thirty- five, than to put my soul into a woman''s keeping again? |
11659 | Have you no appetite? 11659 Have you tasted it?" |
11659 | He is nice; why should I not like him? |
11659 | How could you think of making such a creature as that dean of Barchester? |
11659 | How now, Jacqueline? |
11659 | How''s this? 11659 I say Sol, is that ar man going to tote them bar''ls over to- night?" |
11659 | Is he going to stay with us? |
11659 | Is he of gentle blood? 11659 Is he? |
11659 | Is it possible? 11659 Is it you?" |
11659 | Is this she? |
11659 | Is your business with me or the Princess? |
11659 | It frightens me; what we are doing? |
11659 | Let me speak as a friend to friends,said the Prince, collecting himself;"what can I do, Madame, to arrest your hasty resolution?" |
11659 | May I see your sick squire, fair sir? |
11659 | Me? |
11659 | My dearest lord,said Hippolita, clasping him in her arms,"what is it you see?" |
11659 | My little lady, have you forgotten La Goualeuse? |
11659 | My lord, is Mr. Slope to leave this room, or am I? |
11659 | My lord,said Theodore,"is it insolence to surrender myself thus to your highness''s pleasure? |
11659 | No doubt right in everything your ladyship does, but in what particularly? |
11659 | No, Lady Isabella,cried he,"I have once already delivered thee from his tyranny--""Art thou the generous unknown whom I met in the vault?" |
11659 | No? |
11659 | Not name-- not think of her? |
11659 | Now,said he, doubling his great heavy fist,"d''ye see this fist? |
11659 | Oh, my father,he sighed,"had you known Corinne, what would you have thought of her?" |
11659 | Oh, my love, oh, my love,he whispered,"can I ever forget this day?" |
11659 | Oh, you do? 11659 On what occasion?" |
11659 | Quimbo,said Legree to another,"ye minded what I tell''d ye?" |
11659 | Regular starve out, hey? 11659 Shall each man,"cried he,"find a wife for his bosom, and each beast have his mate, and I be alone? |
11659 | Sold him? |
11659 | Surely,I articulated,"Miss Vernon can not suppose me capable of betraying anyone, much less you?" |
11659 | Tatyana,Litvinov cried,"Tatyana, you have forgiven me? |
11659 | Tatyana,she said,"you are crying?" |
11659 | Tell me, please,he began;"Marya Dmitrievna has just been talking to me about this-- what''s his name?--Panshin? |
11659 | Ten years ago? 11659 That unkempt creature?" |
11659 | The lady Isabella--"What of her? |
11659 | Then, if she is like that, why did you marry her? |
11659 | There,said he stopping to rest,"now will ye tell me ye ca n''t do it?" |
11659 | This is it,said Levin, taking the chalk and writing the letters w, y, s, i, i, i, w, i, i, t, o, a? |
11659 | Traitor, how camest thou here? |
11659 | Well, and is that good? |
11659 | Well, old man,said Aunt Chloe,"why do n''t you go too? |
11659 | Well, shall we see you again soon? |
11659 | Well? |
11659 | What a day, eh? 11659 What can they be doing, brother?" |
11659 | What do you want? 11659 What does this mean?" |
11659 | What for, pray? |
11659 | What had you done to be punished? |
11659 | What has happened? |
11659 | What has he done that mas''r should sell him? |
11659 | What is it? |
11659 | What is it? |
11659 | What is mamma doing? 11659 What is there to weep over now? |
11659 | What is this Mr. Bazaroff-- your friend? |
11659 | What is this? 11659 What is thy errand to me?" |
11659 | What makes you think he has no heart? |
11659 | What may this mean? 11659 What sort of a cut? |
11659 | What the deuce brings you here? |
11659 | What, is not that Alfonso? 11659 What, then, do you find amiss with the match?" |
11659 | When did you get that paper? |
11659 | Where are you going? |
11659 | Where is your lovely Italy? |
11659 | Where? |
11659 | Who can tell,she said to Oswald,"if, when I have opened my heart to you, you will remain the same? |
11659 | Who is he? |
11659 | Why are you going? |
11659 | Why did I marry her? 11659 Why do you bring young boys here, old man?" |
11659 | Why do you fear? 11659 Why do you go to church?" |
11659 | Why should you not stay now? |
11659 | Why thank God? |
11659 | Why, what''s this? |
11659 | Why? 11659 Why?" |
11659 | Why? |
11659 | Will you answer me, sir? |
11659 | Wo n''t you let me feel your pulse? |
11659 | Would you like me to tell you, uncle? |
11659 | Would you like to know what is passing within me? |
11659 | Yes, what of it? |
11659 | You are right,said Lavretsky after a pause;"what good is my freedom to me?" |
11659 | You are willing, then, to take me for better, for worse, in presence of heaven and these witnesses? |
11659 | You here? |
11659 | You know me? 11659 You will forgive me-- I ought not to dare to speak of it to you... but how could you... why did you separate from her?" |
11659 | Your daughter, your Highness? |
11659 | Your son is still living? 11659 _ What_ say''st thou?" |
11659 | *****"Suppose the old lady does n''t come round, eh, Becky?" |
11659 | --"Has he a son with him, then?" |
11659 | Ai n''t it, sir? |
11659 | And wha the deevil''s this?" |
11659 | And who is needed?" |
11659 | And your head?" |
11659 | Are you aware how small his means were, and of the straitened circumstances of his widow? |
11659 | Are you not my lady''s heir? |
11659 | Are you to be happy, while I grovel in the intensity of my wretchedness? |
11659 | At the very first glimpse of me the boy jumped up from the table, ran to me with his hands out, and, blushing, said,"Do n''t you know me?" |
11659 | Before I had time to reply, Don Rodrigo said eagerly,"Pray, captain, what is the young gentleman''s name?" |
11659 | Before he left, Rudolph said to Mrs. George,"Marie will at least find a corner in your heart?" |
11659 | But how obtain the consent of one who was no more? |
11659 | But shall justice halt? |
11659 | But to this piece of learned heathenness-- say''st thou the Scot met him in the desert?" |
11659 | But you-- what does your duty consist in?" |
11659 | Can it be that love, sacred, devoted love, is not all- powerful? |
11659 | Can not you at least pity me for loving you thus?" |
11659 | Can you give it me?" |
11659 | Could a better career be open to your nephew Fabrice?" |
11659 | Could he be the murderer of my brother? |
11659 | Could it be that he did not want to go? |
11659 | Could nothing be done to induce the company to withdraw them?" |
11659 | Could she, the brilliant poetess, be expected to possess the English domestic virtues which his father valued above all things in a wife? |
11659 | Could you go with me there, and be the partner of my life?" |
11659 | Did not Ann tell you? |
11659 | Do you know, sir, Mrs. Osborne''s condition? |
11659 | Does the Nautilus still exist? |
11659 | Don Rodrigo embraced him affectionately, saying,"Are you my Charlotte''s brother? |
11659 | Dost thou not see him?" |
11659 | Eliza''s look of dismay struck her and she said,"Maybe you''re wanting to get over? |
11659 | Excuse my impertinence, but you do n''t love me and you never will love me, I suppose?" |
11659 | Fair? |
11659 | Frail? |
11659 | Ha, messires,"he added, turning to the nobles present,"this at least is, I think, in conformity with the rules of chivalry?" |
11659 | Had her love ceased when his presence was removed? |
11659 | Had not all her dreams been realised? |
11659 | Had she any other ambition in life? |
11659 | Harding?" |
11659 | Have I deserved them?" |
11659 | Have n''t you a boy or gal you could thrown in with Tom?" |
11659 | He painted a prodigious battle- piece of Assaye, and will it be believed that the Royal Academicians rejected this masterpiece? |
11659 | He was dressed in deep mourning and called out,"Gumbo, you idiot, why do n''t you fetch the baggage out of the cabin? |
11659 | He will do battle on the morrow?" |
11659 | Her Majesty asked me"whether I should be content to live at Court?" |
11659 | Her heart was broken, and could it be healed by pills and powders? |
11659 | How can I delineate the wretch whom with such infinite pains and care I had endeavoured to form? |
11659 | How can I help trembling beneath such doubt?" |
11659 | How could she tell him that she herself must presently leave-- for marriage or a convent? |
11659 | How long was his son going to stay? |
11659 | I became acquainted with the science of anatomy, and often asked myself, Whence did the principle of life proceed? |
11659 | I do n''t want to defend her; but what God has joined, how can you put asunder? |
11659 | I suppose you will write to each other, children? |
11659 | I would n''t die; why should I? |
11659 | Is Captain Nemo still alive? |
11659 | Is he her lover?" |
11659 | Is it possible that it will prove my condemnation? |
11659 | Is it true that he is going to make his son an artist? |
11659 | Is my solemn promise nothing?" |
11659 | Is she all right?" |
11659 | Is there aught else in which I may do thee pleasure?" |
11659 | It was by thy artifice the Knight of the Leopard visited my camp in disguise? |
11659 | Lavretsky started:"You can not be making up your mind to marry Panshin?" |
11659 | Litvinov was no longer ashamed, he was afraid; he had been vanquished, vanquished suddenly... and what had become of his honesty? |
11659 | Manfred then touched and examined the fatal casque, and inquired whether any man knew from whence it could have come? |
11659 | Mr. Owen, Mr. Owen, how''s a''wi''you man?" |
11659 | My rage was without bounds, but he easily eluded me and said:"Have I not suffered enough, that you seek to increase my misery? |
11659 | No, really, it was droll how all that was be? |
11659 | Now, come, Arkady, is n''t he rather ridiculous?" |
11659 | Now, we think thou might''st find in that camp some cavalier, who, for the love of truth, will do battle with this same traitor of Montserrat?" |
11659 | Now, what if you get the gal off for a day or so? |
11659 | Of what use is your freedom to you? |
11659 | Oh, George, is n''t she a noble creature?" |
11659 | Oh, canst thou forgive the blindness of my rage?" |
11659 | On what conditions was this hopeful peace to be contracted?" |
11659 | Only a week ago he was whispering in Castlewood shrubberies, and was he now ashamed of the nonsense he had talked there? |
11659 | Or rather shall all my private respects give place to that holy name? |
11659 | Or will you forgive the child for poor George''s sake?" |
11659 | Oswald, what importance do you attach to this confession? |
11659 | Palladius, standing upon himself, and misdoubting some craft,"What,"said the Captain,"hath Palladius forgotten the voice of Diaphantus?" |
11659 | Presently Strap arrived, whom my father at once took by the hand, saying,"Is this the honest man who befriended you so much in your distress? |
11659 | Pride has come down, has she?" |
11659 | Quiverful?" |
11659 | Quiverful?" |
11659 | Quiverful?" |
11659 | Richard, awaking on the instant, exclaimed:"Speak, Sir Scot, thou comest to tell me of a vigilant watch?" |
11659 | Rosey''s illness? |
11659 | Saw you my royal consort at Engaddi?" |
11659 | Shall I not hate them who abhor me? |
11659 | She asked if he was come to butcher his brother, to insult his father''s corpse, and triumph in her affliction? |
11659 | So ye pretend it''s wrong to flog the girl?" |
11659 | Stir not from it three spears''lengths, and defend it with thy body against injury or insult-- Dost thou undertake the charge?" |
11659 | That I should lose my learned Hakim and find him again in my royal brother? |
11659 | The letters were the initials of the words,"When you said''It is impossible,''was it impossible then, or always?" |
11659 | The past was the past, was it not? |
11659 | The thing was done, but how was he to face his judge? |
11659 | The zinc- worker, having lit his cigarette, placed his elbows on the table, and said,"Then it''s to be''No,''is it?" |
11659 | Then, turning to the coach, he asked,"Have you a looking- glass?" |
11659 | This?" |
11659 | Though, indeed, who knows? |
11659 | Was it not his duty to protect her? |
11659 | Was it remorse escaping thus from the conscience of this mysterious being? |
11659 | Was it to this, then, that the Nautilus had been driven, by accident or design, with such headlong speed? |
11659 | Was that awful night in the Maelstrom his last, or is he still pursuing a terrible vengeance? |
11659 | Was the wish one that could be set aside? |
11659 | Whar''s the gude thousand pounds Scots than I lent ye, man, and when am I to see it again?" |
11659 | What are we doing?" |
11659 | What better answer can there be to Osborne''s attacks on you, than that his son claims to enter your family and marry your daughter?" |
11659 | What business had he to be walking with anybody but Lady Maria Esmond on the Pantiles, Tunbridge Wells? |
11659 | What can be done?" |
11659 | What can we do for a living? |
11659 | What can we do?" |
11659 | What can you do? |
11659 | What did he there? |
11659 | What did they amount to? |
11659 | What do you mean? |
11659 | What have you done with her son?" |
11659 | What horrid words were these which greeted the ear of Mrs. Proudie? |
11659 | What if his fell aunt''s purpose is answered, and if his late love is killed by her communications? |
11659 | What more did Corinne need to convince her of his love for Lucy? |
11659 | What shall I say for her? |
11659 | What sort of man is he?" |
11659 | What then? |
11659 | What use was he, that drunkard? |
11659 | What was she to make of it? |
11659 | What was the use of spending money? |
11659 | What would his court be without the Duchess? |
11659 | What would his father have said of this woman? |
11659 | What''ll you take?" |
11659 | What, he asked himself, again and again, was his duty? |
11659 | Where was the harm if her good man amused himself a little while? |
11659 | Where would divine justice be after that?" |
11659 | Whither was it flying? |
11659 | Who could it be? |
11659 | Who is the youth that I found in the vault? |
11659 | Who would send anyone thither when our queen was in the convent of Engaddi?" |
11659 | Who-- who shall separate us from the love of Christ?" |
11659 | Why did he stay behind, unless he was in love with either of the young ladies? |
11659 | Why should Theo and I have been so happy, and thou so lonely? |
11659 | Why then inflict such pangs on me? |
11659 | Will you allow me to sit down by you? |
11659 | Will you do that?" |
11659 | Will you find excuses in these sophisms for inflicting a mortal wound on me? |
11659 | Will you leave my father to die in peace in his quiet home?" |
11659 | Will you take him?'' |
11659 | Will you visit the parent''s offence upon the child''s head? |
11659 | Will you wait to be toted down river, where they kill niggers with hard work and starving? |
11659 | With blue eyes? |
11659 | Would he not spare her for their little daughter''s sake? |
11659 | Would my father have had it otherwise had he known you?" |
11659 | Would you hold me out as a prize to the best sword- player?" |
11659 | You are wrong in thinking-- but do n''t you like Vladimir Nikolaitch?" |
11659 | You did that to comfort yourself... comfort me, too; send a messenger to Madame Odintsov; she''s a lady with an estate... Do you know?" |
11659 | _ II_"I wonder what''s all that noise and running backwards and forwards for above stairs?" |
11659 | afterwards?... |
11659 | and were we to be parted? |
11659 | anybody sick? |
11659 | are you asleep, Rory?" |
11659 | born devil that ye are-- can this be you?" |
11659 | can Manfred''s blood feel holy pity?" |
11659 | cried Don Rodrigo, starting up--"and his mother''s?" |
11659 | cried Sarah,"the notary?" |
11659 | depend on me? |
11659 | hast thou found thy speech?" |
11659 | have I found thee again?" |
11659 | he at last asked, timidly;"does it ache?" |
11659 | he cried,"has my absence pained you?" |
11659 | he cried,"thou dreadful spectre, what art thou?" |
11659 | he exclaimed,"what do ye exact of me?" |
11659 | how can it be thy son?" |
11659 | how''s this? |
11659 | said Richard, starting up,"by whom dispatched, and for what? |
11659 | said the king,"what was she to do with this matter?" |
11659 | said the stranger,"what can I do to assist you?" |
11659 | she said to herself softly,"is he not the exact resemblance of Alfonso''s picture?" |
11659 | throw it up altogether?" |
11659 | to a ragged fellow, who was officious in his attentions,"How have things been goin''on?" |
11659 | what''s that?" |
11659 | where is it?" |
11659 | which of us is happy in this world? |
26320 | And where are your Venetian embroideries? |
26320 | Do you mean that the incidents are untrue? |
26320 | I have since wondered, could he have evoked the goddess then? 26320 Shall I bring her in here?" |
26320 | What is there to do in Paris in August but to enjoy oneself? |
26320 | What style of room? |
26320 | What would the Master say? |
26320 | When will you look up the little_ Polonaise_? |
26320 | Why do n''t you come along? |
26320 | Would he approve of such a proceeding? 26320 Your daughter, I take it, is a modern girl?" |
26320 | _ Et ta soeur?_he demanded as he disappeared down the staircase. |
26320 | _ Peut- être que la petite Polonaise vous suffira à tous les deux?_"_ Jamais de la vie!_I shouted,"_ Flûte, Mercure, allez! |
26320 | _ Qu''est- ce que monsieur a mangé?_Sometimes it is very difficult to remember, but it is necessary. |
26320 | All very well for the day, no doubt, but could Cuzzoni sing Isolde? |
26320 | And if they are to be thus collected may we not hope for one or two new essays with, say, for subjects, Flaubert and Huysmans? |
26320 | And the Signora, Pietro''s mother? |
26320 | And the_ monde_; who goes there? |
26320 | And what modern parts would be allotted to the Julian Eltinges of the Eighteenth Century? |
26320 | Are long compositions better than short ones? |
26320 | Are short compositions better than long ones? |
26320 | Are there no answers to these conundrums and the thousand others that might be asked by a person with a slight attack of curiosity?... |
26320 | Bernard Shaw says,"Who ever failed or could fail as Rosalind?" |
26320 | But where might Pietro''s father be? |
26320 | But, some one will argue, with the passing of_ bel canto_ what will become of the operas of Mozart, Bellini, Rossini, and Donizetti? |
26320 | By this time we were determined to dance; but where? |
26320 | Can any of our young misses hum_ Di Tanti Palpiti_? |
26320 | Can we judge music by academic standards? |
26320 | Could Faustina sing Mélisande? |
26320 | Did not the great Carmencita herself visit America twenty or more years ago? |
26320 | Did saucy Marie Jansen awaken your admiration? |
26320 | Dites, plutôt, pourquoi la vie?_"In"A Transaction in Hearts"[15] the Reverend Christopher Gonfallon falls in love with his wife''s sister, Claire. |
26320 | Do you know how to go there? |
26320 | Does she overdo the use of_ portamento_,_ messa di voce_, and such devices? |
26320 | Et pour monsieur, votre ami?_""_ Je ne desire rien_,"I replied. |
26320 | Has any one read the Joseph Jefferson acting version of_ Rip Van Winkle_? |
26320 | Has she ever been careless before the public? |
26320 | Has she taste in ornament? |
26320 | Have you missed the Gibbons carving? |
26320 | Have you seen Bernard Bégué standing before his cook stove preparing food for his patrons? |
26320 | He says that he dictated certain passages in the book....""What is it, then? |
26320 | Heinrich Conried( or was it Maurice Grau?) |
26320 | Her imitators( and has any other interpretative artist ever had so many?) |
26320 | How could it be otherwise? |
26320 | How is her shake? |
26320 | How many times did you go to see Marie Tempest in_ The Fencing Master_, or Alice Nielsen in_ The Serenade_? |
26320 | I gasped,''what is she doing? |
26320 | I walked to the window, drew aside the red curtains, and looked out into the fountain- splashed court below....*****"What is the difference?" |
26320 | If that were true, why is not some one else performing this drama today to large audiences? |
26320 | In the case of Henry Irving, who was the creator, the actor or the authors of_ The Bells_ and_ Faust_( not, in this instance, Goethe)? |
26320 | In the case of Sarah Bernhardt, who was the creator, the actress or Sardou? |
26320 | Is Christine Nilsson still alive? |
26320 | Is Langdon Mitchell''s version of"Vanity Fair"sufficiently a work of art to exist without the co- operation of Mrs. Fiske? |
26320 | Is Mozart''s_ G minor Symphony_ more important( because it is more complicated) than the same composer''s,_ Batti, Batti_? |
26320 | Is a string quartet better than a piece for the piano? |
26320 | Is an opera better than a song? |
26320 | Is he therefor to be regarded as the peer of Gluck? |
26320 | Is it Thursday, Saturday, and Sunday that the Moulin de la Galette is open? |
26320 | Is simple music supermusic? |
26320 | Is there a cooking theme in_ Siegfried_ to describe Mime''s brewing? |
26320 | Is what is new better than what is old? |
26320 | Is what is old better than what is new? |
26320 | It is a bore to wait in a room with red curtains and a picture of_ Amour et Psyche_ on the walls.... What have you been doing?" |
26320 | Madge Lessing in_ Jack and the Beanstalk_, Edna May in_ The Belle of New York_, Phyllis Rankin in_ The Rounders_, or Gertrude Quinlan in_ King Dodo_? |
26320 | May we not herein find some small explanation for his apparent neglect? |
26320 | Melba? |
26320 | Never was there a more popular composer, and yet aside from the violin concerto what work of his has maintained its place in the concert repertory? |
26320 | Nor can we trust the public with its favourite Piccinnis and Puccinis.... What then is the test of supermusic? |
26320 | Not long ago I heard a man speak of the cadet operas in Boston( did a man named Barnet write them?) |
26320 | One more, I must mention, her answer to Guido''s insistent,"_ Cet homme t''a- t- il prise_?"... |
26320 | Or have you seen Giacomo( and have not Meyerbeer and Puccini been bearers of this name?) |
26320 | Or is harmonization the important factor? |
26320 | Or is supermusic always grand, sad, noble, or emotional? |
26320 | Perhaps with you it was not Della Fox.... Who then? |
26320 | Schoenberg is new; is he therefor to be considered better than Beethoven? |
26320 | Should we not allot similar approval to the actor or actress who makes a fine effect in one part or in one kind of part? |
26320 | Should we regard, for example,''Imperial Purple''less a work of creative art than''The Rise of Silas Lapham''?" |
26320 | Should we say that there is no art of painting because the Germans have no great painters? |
26320 | Should we thank the behemoth for this miracle? |
26320 | Still the music critics with strange persistence continue to adjudge a singer by the old formulæ and standards: has she an equalized scale? |
26320 | Stravinsky is new; is he therefor to be considered worse than Liszt? |
26320 | That stinging, cynical attack on the courts of Justice(?) |
26320 | The book is dedicated to John S. Rutherford and bears as a motto on its title page this quotation from Rabusson:"_ Pourquoi la mort? |
26320 | Theresa Vaughn in_ 1492_, May Yohe in_ The Lady Slavey_, Hilda Hollins in_ The Magic Kiss_, or Nancy McIntosh in_ His Excellency_? |
26320 | They assembled by hundreds, and even thousands, in the great Theatre of San Carlo to do-- what? |
26320 | Was Saltus ballyhooing for this institution? |
26320 | Was Virginia Earle in_ The Circus Girl_ the idol of your youth or was it Mabel Barrison in_ The Babes in Toyland_? |
26320 | Was it because of the greatness of the play? |
26320 | Was it the Rue Jessaint? |
26320 | Was pert Lulu Glaser the object of your secret but persistent attention? |
26320 | Was the author laughing at the Eighteen Nineties? |
26320 | We learn from some sources that music stands or falls by its melody but what is good melody? |
26320 | What do you whistle in your bathtub when you are in a reminiscent mood? |
26320 | What else could you expect? |
26320 | What has become of_ Semiramide_,_ La Cenerentola_, and the others? |
26320 | What is the difference? |
26320 | What is the essential difference between an air by Mozart and an air by Jerome Kern? |
26320 | What is the test of supermusic? |
26320 | What makes a melody commonplace or cheap? |
26320 | What makes a melody distinguished? |
26320 | What more is there to say? |
26320 | What would we think of an actor who could make no effect save in the tragedies of Corneille? |
26320 | What, after all, constitutes training? |
26320 | When Duse electrified her audiences in such plays as_ The Second Mrs. Tanqueray_ and_ Fedora_, were the dramatists responsible for the effect? |
26320 | Which of our playwrights are taken seriously by the pundits? |
26320 | Who will sing them? |
26320 | Who wrote it? |
26320 | Why could not some similar plan of appreciation be followed in the houses of our very rich? |
26320 | Why do some melodies ring in our ears generation after generation while others enjoy but a brief popularity? |
26320 | Why is Chopin''s_ G minor nocturne_ better music than Thécla Badarzewska''s_ La Prière d''une Vierge_? |
26320 | Why is Musetta''s waltz more popular than Gretel''s? |
26320 | Why is a music drama by Richard Wagner preferable to a music drama by Horatio W. Parker? |
26320 | Why is this book not dedicated to author of"The Turn of the Screw"rather than to"E. A. S."? |
26320 | Why should he listen to his_ gigolette_? |
26320 | Why should the Hottentots be able to make so many delightful noises that we are incapable of producing? |
26320 | Why should the gamut of expression on our opera stage be so much more limited than it is in our music halls? |
26320 | Will any composer arise with the courage to write an opera which_ can not_ be sung? |
26320 | Will the young man at the back of the hall please page Avery Hopwood and Philip Moeller?... |
26320 | Will you rise up to deny that is singing?" |
26320 | Would_ monsieur_ care to visit a_ bal musette_? |
26320 | _ Sweet Marie_ is certainly a melody; why is it not as good a melody as_ The Old Folks at Home_? |
26320 | and"Who goes there?" |
26320 | de Thèbes done better? |
26320 | or Does the stage director make the actor? |
16126 | A metamorphosis more strange Than all his books can vapour;"To what( quoth squire)"shall Ovid change?" |
16126 | And who_ is_ George the Third? |
16126 | Are we not then allow''d to be polite? |
16126 | Do n''t you know Charles Gally? |
16126 | Harry,said a young sprig of nobility,"have you heard that Charles is in the King''s Bench?" |
16126 | I found him close with Swift--"Indeed? |
16126 | Indeed,says I,"never worse: But pray, Mary, can you tell what I''ve done with my purse?" |
16126 | Lawk, madam,says Mary,"how d''ye do?" |
16126 | Not know Charles Gally? |
16126 | O, but,said I,"what if, after all, the chaplain wo n''t come to?" |
16126 | Well, he wo n''t find kings to jostle Him on his way; but does he wear his head? 16126 What do you think, sir, of that head in a corner, done in the manner of Grisoni? |
16126 | What have you been doing with yourself all this time? 16126 Woot I what thou art?" |
16126 | Ye ladies too draw forth your pen, I pray where can the hurt lie? 16126 ''Tis Ruffio: Trow''st thou where he dined to- day? 16126 ( 1330?-1400?) 16126 ( 1460- 1520?) 16126 ( Have you not read the_ Rights of Man_, by Tom Paine?) 16126 ( what is that?) 16126 A favourite''s porter with his master vie, Be bribed as often, and as often lie? 16126 A virgin is a vertuous kind of creature, But doth not coin command Virginitie? 16126 Amid many essential differences, is there not here a striking likeness to the work of the Roman Juvenal? 16126 And how, then, was the Devil drest? 16126 And mark''d you not, how many a glance Across the table, shot by chance From fair Eliza''s graceful form, Assail''d and took my heart by storm? 16126 And mark''d you not, with earnest zeal, I ask''d her, if she''d have some veal? 16126 And there''s the Czar, and there''s the Turk-- The Pope-- An India- merchant by Cut short the speech with this reply: All at a stand? 16126 And we d and bury and make Christen- souls? 16126 And what is your opinion of Lord Palmerston? 16126 And where did you get that coat, if it be a coat? |
16126 | Are Cethegus and Catiline turned so tame, that there will be no opportunity to cry about the streets,"A Dangerous Plot"? |
16126 | Are not your Frenchmen neat? |
16126 | Are these expedients for renown? |
16126 | Are these thy views? |
16126 | Are they sunk in the abyss of things? |
16126 | Are you not sensible how much the meanness of the cause gives an air of ridicule to the serious difficulties into which you have been betrayed? |
16126 | Are you resolved to leave it off? |
16126 | As God hath not hated me, why should I? |
16126 | At a dinner so various, at such a repast, Who''d not be a glutton, and stick to the last? |
16126 | Bring action for assault and battery, Or friend beguile with lies and flattery? |
16126 | But did not Chance at length her error mend? |
16126 | But do you collect nothing from your own reflection, which raises so many in my breast? |
16126 | But shall a printer, weary of his life, Learn, from their books, to hang himself and wife? |
16126 | But what art thou, That but by reflex canst show What his deity can do, As the false Egyptian spell Aped the true Hebrew miracle? |
16126 | But what more need be said of an introductory character to these selections that are now placed before the reader? |
16126 | But when I look, and cast mine eyes below, What monster meets mine eyes in human show? |
16126 | But whence for praise can such an ardour rise, When those, who bring that incense, we despise? |
16126 | But where''s the proctor who will ask his son? |
16126 | But why insult the poor, affront the great? |
16126 | But why prolong the list? |
16126 | But will not Britain hear the last appeal, Sign her foes''doom, or guard her fav''rites''zeal? |
16126 | But''faith your very friends will soon be sore: Patriots there are, who wish you''d jest no more-- And where''s the glory? |
16126 | By the way, did you ever see anything like Lady Godiva Trotter''s dress last night? |
16126 | By what authority shall it be decided? |
16126 | Can these also be wholly annihilated, and so of a sudden, as I pretend? |
16126 | Can you conceive that the people of this country will long submit to be governed by so flexible a House of Commons? |
16126 | Can you murder the Catholics? |
16126 | Can you neglect them? |
16126 | Canst thou not find, among thy numerous race Of kindred, one to tell thee that thy plays Are laught at by the pit, box, galleries, nay, stage? |
16126 | Come, tell it, and burn ye,-- He was, could he help it? |
16126 | Could not you have trusted me to pick it up? |
16126 | Did no subverted empire mark his end? |
16126 | Did rival monarchs give the fatal wound? |
16126 | Did some rich man tyrannically use you? |
16126 | Did you listen to it? |
16126 | Do n''t you hear how Lord Strutt has bespoke his liveries at Lewis Baboon''s shop? |
16126 | Do you believe in the story of the little boy and the sausages? |
16126 | Do you fear for your tithes, or your doctrines, or your person, or the English Constitution? |
16126 | Do you hate sin? |
16126 | Do you hate the world, mademoiselle? |
16126 | Do you mean that a Catholic general would march his army into the House of Commons, and purge it of Mr. Perceval and Dr. Duigenan? |
16126 | Do you mean that these thirty members would bring in a bill to take away the tithes from the Protestant, and to pay them to the Catholic clergy? |
16126 | Do you? |
16126 | Does envy seize thee? |
16126 | Doubt you whether This she felt as, looking at me, mine and her souls rushed together? |
16126 | Fain would I know what diet thou dost keep, If thou dost always, or dost never sleep? |
16126 | Fine felt hats, or spectacles to read? |
16126 | For how many unlearned prelates have we now at this day? |
16126 | For to whom can I dedicate this poem, with so much justice, as to you? |
16126 | For what ambitious fools are more to blame, Than those who thunder in the critic''s name? |
16126 | For, why did Wolsey, near the steeps of fate, On weak foundations raise th''enormous weight? |
16126 | Full ten years slandered, did he once reply? |
16126 | Has life no joys for me? |
16126 | Have they not to and of you, dear friend? |
16126 | Have you brought yourself to a proper frame of mind, young lady? |
16126 | Have you devoured that young Polonius? |
16126 | Have you swallowed that little minced infant? |
16126 | He saith, Sir, I love your judgment; whom do you prefer For the best linguist? |
16126 | Here lies David Garrick, describe him who can? |
16126 | How didst thou describe their intrepid march up Holborn Hill? |
16126 | How didst thou move our terror and our pity with thy passionate scenes between Jack Catch and the heroes of the Old Bailey? |
16126 | How do I lament thy downfall? |
16126 | How have I sinn''d, that thy wrath''s furious rod, This fellow, chooseth me? |
16126 | How is the government disturbed by these many- headed Churches? |
16126 | How vain are mortal man''s endeavours? |
16126 | How will the noble arts of John Overton''s[170] painting and sculpture now languish? |
16126 | I lead the deuce of clubs.... What? |
16126 | I would say, in plain language, do you hate the flesh and the devil? |
16126 | If any ask you,"Who''s the man, so near His prince, that writes in verse, and has his ear?" |
16126 | If men dislike them, do they censure me? |
16126 | If you please, will you play me those lovely variations of"In a cottage near a wood"? |
16126 | In what, mademoiselle? |
16126 | In your opinion, mademoiselle, are there no other sins than malice? |
16126 | Is Lucifer come back with all this clatter?" |
16126 | Is it for Bond, or Peter( paltry things), To pay their debts, or keep their faith, like kings? |
16126 | Is it that in the stony hearts of mankind these pretty flowers ca n''t find a place to grow? |
16126 | Is it thy own, or hast it from Snow- hill, Assisted by some ballad- making quill? |
16126 | Is not Dr. Letsom at the head of the Quaker Church? |
16126 | Is not Mr. Wilberforce at the head of the Church of Clapham? |
16126 | Is not the General Assembly at the head of the Church of Scotland? |
16126 | Is not the historic parallel between the two pairs of writers still further verified? |
16126 | Is not then M. de Fénélon thought a very pious and learned person? |
16126 | Is the average greater in Ireland than in Scotland, or_ vice versâ_--among women than among men? |
16126 | Is the same amount of lies told about every man, and do we pretty much all tell the same amount of lies? |
16126 | Is their very essence destroyed? |
16126 | Is this a contention worthy of a king? |
16126 | Is this a lie I am telling now? |
16126 | Is''t come to this? |
16126 | It is a charming air( you know it in French, I suppose? |
16126 | Let the two Curlls of town and court, abuse His father, mother, body, soul, and muse Yet why? |
16126 | Marie Angélique, we have but one: the past are not ours, and who can promise us the future? |
16126 | Must dull suspense corrupt the stagnant mind? |
16126 | Must helpless man, in ignorance sedate, Roll darkling down the torrent of his fate? |
16126 | Must no dislike alarm, no wishes rise, No cries invoke the mercies of the skies? |
16126 | Nay, Sir, can you spare me a crown? |
16126 | Nay, but of men? |
16126 | Not know Charles Gally? |
16126 | Now, in the name of wonder, how could you manage that? |
16126 | Now, what was Tomkin''s motive for the utterance and dissemination of these lies? |
16126 | Of all The fools who flock''d to swell or see the show, Who cared about the corpse? |
16126 | Oft you have ask''d me, Granville, why Of late I heave the frequent sigh? |
16126 | Or Japhet pocket, like his grace, a will? |
16126 | Or hostile millions press him to the ground? |
16126 | Or how is it consistent with your zeal for the public welfare, to promote sedition? |
16126 | Or liv''st thou now, with safer pride content, The wisest justice on the banks of Trent? |
16126 | Or roguish lawyer made you lose your little All in a lawsuit? |
16126 | Or smoking forth, a hundred hawkers''load, On wings of winds came flying all abroad? |
16126 | Or the attorney? |
16126 | Or was''t ambition that this damnéd fact Should tell the world you know the sins you act? |
16126 | Or what assurance will they give you that, when they have trampled upon their equals, they will submit to a superior? |
16126 | Or wherefore his characters thus without fault? |
16126 | Or who would reign o''er vale and hill, If woman''s heart were rebel still?" |
16126 | Or why should a man who starves in the midst of plenty be trusted with himself more than he who fancies he is an emperor in the midst of poverty? |
16126 | Or will you refer it to the judges? |
16126 | People_ will_ go on chattering, although we hold our tongues; and, after all, my good soul, what will their scandal matter a hundred years hence? |
16126 | People_ will_ go on talking about their neighbours, and wo n''t have their mouths stopped by cards, or ever so much microscopes and aquariums? |
16126 | Perhaps he confided in men as they go, And so was too foolishly honest? |
16126 | Perhaps you may ask if the man was a miser? |
16126 | Saw''st thou ever Siquis patcht on Pauls Church door To seek some vacant vicarage before? |
16126 | Say, where has our poet this malady caught? |
16126 | See Sir Robert!--hum-- And never laugh-- for all my life to come? |
16126 | See Tityrus, with merriment possest, Is burst with laughter, ere he hears the jest: What need he stay? |
16126 | See''st thou how side[163] it hangs beneath his hip? |
16126 | Shall Ward draw contracts with a statesman''s skill? |
16126 | Shall the Lords be called upon to determine the rights and privileges of the Commons? |
16126 | Smile, Lady, smile!--for who would win A loveless throne through guilt and sin? |
16126 | So nothing in his maw? |
16126 | So you know, what could I say to her any more? |
16126 | So, as the devil would have it, before I was aware, out I blunder''d,"Parson,"said I,"can you cast a nativity when a body''s plunder''d?" |
16126 | Soft were my numbers; who could take offence, While pure description held the place of sense? |
16126 | Speak thou, whose thoughts at humble peace repine, Shall Wolsey''s wealth, with Wolsey''s end, be thine? |
16126 | Suppose we praise the High Church? |
16126 | Tell me, knife- grinder, how you came to grind knives? |
16126 | That is hard: how can I do it? |
16126 | The Broad Church? |
16126 | The Taverner took me by the sleeve;"Sir,"saith he,"will you our wine assay?" |
16126 | Then what was his failing? |
16126 | Then why subject him to the test of oaths? |
16126 | They obey the Pope as the spiritual head of their Church; but are you really so foolish as to be imposed upon by mere names? |
16126 | Thou art my blood, where Jonson has no part: What share have we in Nature or in Art? |
16126 | Thou damn''d antipodes to common- sense, Thou foil to Flecknoe, pr''ythee tell from whence Does all this mighty stock of dulness spring? |
16126 | Thou servile fool, why could''st thou not repair To buy a benefice at Steeple- Fair? |
16126 | To Germany, and highnesses serene, Who owe us millions-- don''t we owe the queen? |
16126 | To Germany, what owe we not besides? |
16126 | To drown? |
16126 | To fit my sullenness, He to another key his style doth dress, And asks, What news? |
16126 | To fix me thus meant nothing? |
16126 | To what do you refer, mademoiselle? |
16126 | To which he will answer-- for I am well informed of his designs-- by asking your Highness where they are, and what is become of them? |
16126 | Too courteous, perhaps, or obligingly flat? |
16126 | Was it the squire for killing of his game? |
16126 | Was it the squire? |
16126 | Waving a goodly wing, which glow''d, as glows An earthly peacock''s tail, with heavenly dyes; To which the Saint replied,"Well, what''s the matter? |
16126 | Were they drowned by purges or martyred by pipes? |
16126 | What Third?_""The King of England,"said The angel. |
16126 | What are the averages of lying? |
16126 | What are your dangers which threaten the Establishment? |
16126 | What but their wish indulg''d in courts to shine, And pow''r too great to keep, or to resign? |
16126 | What care has_ she_ for line and hook? |
16126 | What do you think of Lord Derby as a politician? |
16126 | What gave great Villiers to th''assassin''s knife, And fix''d disease on Harley''s closing life? |
16126 | What is that? |
16126 | What man who has been before the public at all has not heard similar wonderful anecdotes regarding himself and his own history? |
16126 | What matters it the seven- thousandth part of a farthing who is the spiritual head of any Church? |
16126 | What murder''d Wentworth, and what exil''d Hyde, By kings protected, and to kings ally''d? |
16126 | What needed he fetch that from farthest Spain, His grandame could have lent with lesser pain? |
16126 | What numbers are there, which at once pursue, Praise, and the glory to contemn it, too? |
16126 | What part then remains but to leave it to the people to determine for themselves? |
16126 | What shall I say in return of so invidious an objection? |
16126 | What shall the cheeks of fame Stretch''d with the breath of learned Loudon''s name, Be flogg''d again? |
16126 | What think''st thou, just friend? |
16126 | What upon earth has kept him out of Parliament, or excluded him from all the offices whence he is excluded, but his respect for oaths? |
16126 | What was it that dropped on the floor as you were speaking? |
16126 | What would you have more of a man? |
16126 | What, but a revolting fiction, Seems the actual result Of the Census''s inquiries, Made upon the 15th ult.? |
16126 | What? |
16126 | What? |
16126 | What? |
16126 | What? |
16126 | When did his muse from Fletcher scenes purloin, As thou whole Eth''ridge dost transfuse to thine? |
16126 | When we were got in, he welcomed me to his house with great ceremony, and turning to the old woman, asked where was her lady? |
16126 | Where did his wit on learning fix a brand, And rail at arts he did not understand? |
16126 | Where have I just read of a game played at a country house? |
16126 | Where made he love in Prince Nicander''s vein, Or swept the dust in Psyche''s humble strain? |
16126 | Where sold he bargains, whip- stitch, kiss my arse, Promis''d a play, and dwindled to a farce? |
16126 | Where then shall Hope and Fear their objects find? |
16126 | Where was Magna Veritas, and how did she prevail then? |
16126 | Who breaks a butterfly upon a wheel? |
16126 | Who does not hate the devil? |
16126 | Who has annihilated them? |
16126 | Who has mislaid them? |
16126 | Who made you judges in Israel? |
16126 | Who though my name stood rubric on the walls, Or plaistered posts, with claps, in capitals? |
16126 | Who wants a churchman that can service say, Read fast and fair his monthly homily? |
16126 | Who would not weep, if Atticus[200] were he? |
16126 | Why am I asked what next shall see the light? |
16126 | Why bows my mind, by care oppress''d, By day no peace, by night no rest? |
16126 | Why but to sink beneath misfortune''s blow, With louder ruin to the gulfs below? |
16126 | Why civil feuds disturb the nation more Than all our bloody wars have done before? |
16126 | Why should I be the first? |
16126 | Why should I go upon farther particulars, which might fill a volume with the just eulogies of my contemporary brethren? |
16126 | Why so? |
16126 | Why, moping, melancholy, low, From supper, commons, wine, I go? |
16126 | Will peace bring such plenty that no gentleman will have occasion to go upon the highway, or break into a house? |
16126 | Will there be never a dying speech of a traitor? |
16126 | Will your Majesty interfere in a question in which you have, properly, no immediate concern? |
16126 | With all the Lakers, in and out of place? |
16126 | With what firmness will you bear the mention of your own? |
16126 | Would he oblige me? |
16126 | Would not you rather be a duchess than a waiting- maid or a nun, if the King gave you your choice? |
16126 | Ye see your state wi''theirs compar''d, An''shudder at the niffer[220], But cast a moment''s fair regard, What mak''s the mighty differ? |
16126 | You have something to answer for, then? |
16126 | Your living, so neat and compact-- Pray, do n''t let the news give you pain? |
16126 | [ 212] Virtue, I grant you, is an empty boast; But shall the dignity of vice be lost? |
16126 | [ 67] how shal the world be served? |
16126 | _ O mea culpa, mea maxima culpa!_ But though the preacher trips, shall not the doctrine be good? |
16126 | _ he_ obey The intellectual eunuch Castlereagh? |
16126 | and can I choose but smile, When every coxcomb knows me by my style? |
16126 | and dare I thus blaspheme? |
16126 | betray thee To th''huffing braggart, puft nobility? |
16126 | can Sporus feel? |
16126 | can it be? |
16126 | do you hate titles and dignities and yourself? |
16126 | does anyone hate me? |
16126 | equall''d not this pride All yet that ever Hell or Heaven defied? |
16126 | for who can guess? |
16126 | have I found_ you_ out? |
16126 | how do lies begin? |
16126 | if satire knows its time and place, You still may lash the greatest-- in disgrace: For merit will by turns forsake them all; Would you know when? |
16126 | in all thy journey vanity Such as swells the bladder of our court? |
16126 | is that you, Pop?" |
16126 | more agreeable to the true spirit of simplicity? |
16126 | my----, what say you? |
16126 | or Covetous parson for his tithes distraining? |
16126 | or in what way is the power of the Crown augmented by this almost nominal dignity? |
16126 | or parson of the parish? |
16126 | or( to be grave) Have I no friend to serve, no soul to save? |
16126 | or, that the theological writers would become all of a sudden more acute or more learned, if the present civil incapacities were removed? |
16126 | replied the apostle;"_ What George? |
16126 | said I,"what shall I do? |
16126 | say, How first to Albion found thy Waltz her way? |
16126 | shall Gibber''s son, without rebuke, Swear like a lord, or Rich out- whore a duke? |
16126 | shulde he studie, and make himselven wood[65] Upon a book in cloistre alway to pore, Or swinken[66] with his hondès, and laboùre, As Austin bit? |
16126 | te dirai- je, maman?_) and was a favourite with poor Marie Antoinette. |
16126 | that thing of silk, Sporus, that mere white curd of ass''s milk? |
16126 | that''s an hit indeed,"Vincenna cries;"But who in heat of blood was ever wise? |
16126 | turn ages o''er, When wanted Britain bright examples more? |
16126 | was I born for nothing but to write? |
16126 | we all must feel-- Why now, this moment, do n''t I see you steal? |
16126 | what are ye at? |
16126 | what more my verse can crown Than Compton''s smile, and your obliging frown? |
16126 | whither are you going? |
16126 | why did he write poetry That hereto was so civil; And sell his soul for vanity, To rhyming and the devil? |
16126 | why not? |
16126 | you see great changes? |
16126 | you would really have them die for you? |
19323 | ''And I''m so absent- minded, sir, I put my clothes to bed And hang myself upon a chair; Is not that odd?'' 19323 And another thing: you''ve got to look me right dead in the eye, daddy; will you?" |
19323 | And did n''t he ever come back? |
19323 | And is mine one? |
19323 | And the backs all jist''as like as kin be? |
19323 | And what kind of a story-- illustrated story-- will it be for the papers? |
19323 | And when do our young people expect to be married? |
19323 | And you not to see but the back of the top one, when you go to''cut,''as you call it? |
19323 | Are you going to eat your supper? |
19323 | Aunt''Phrony,said Janey,"could n''t you tell us some more about the old hare while we sit here and get rested?" |
19323 | Before we move along,he resumed, after he had loaded himself with his merchandise,"perhaps you''d like to listen to a story?" |
19323 | But how could they think an owl was a man? |
19323 | But they do n''t need umbrellas in the Crypt, do they? |
19323 | But what do they do? 19323 But whatever one_ does_ call them,"Dickey persisted,"they still make you warm to carry them all about, do n''t they?" |
19323 | But where? |
19323 | But, Aunt Matilda, how do you know? |
19323 | But, aunty, did n''t it ever seem that way to you, sometimes? |
19323 | Carriage, ma''am? |
19323 | Certainly, ma''am, but where will you go to? 19323 Did I play base- ball?" |
19323 | Did n''t I tell you so, Ben? |
19323 | Did you ring? |
19323 | Do it, daddy? 19323 Do n''t you see daddy''s right down upon us, with an armful of hickories? |
19323 | Do they always keep a house closed up this way that has a piano in it? |
19323 | F''r why sh''u''d he be whaled? |
19323 | Father,said Rollo,"did you ever play base- ball when you were a young man?" |
19323 | For what? |
19323 | Had they? |
19323 | Has this person_ kissed_ you, or attempted to do so? |
19323 | Have you figured_ that_ out? |
19323 | How did you come here? |
19323 | How did you manage to reach it? |
19323 | How do I know what I think? 19323 How do I know?" |
19323 | How does that wood burn? |
19323 | I asked him,''Sir, what is your name?'' 19323 I asked you where you wanted to go?" |
19323 | I believe, then,announced Aunt Sarah, after due deliberation,"that you may now kiss our niece; may he not, Sisters Ann and Matilda?" |
19323 | I think I may safely say, may I not, Sisters Ann and Matilda, that this quite alters the case? |
19323 | If you''ve succeeded, why should we From constant toil be never free? 19323 In which direction were you going when I met you?" |
19323 | Indeed, and how ought a lecturer to look? |
19323 | Is it? |
19323 | Is n''t he a droll person? |
19323 | Is that a base- ball bat? |
19323 | Is that a log over there? |
19323 | Is that a sad mood? |
19323 | Is that thrue, Danny? |
19323 | It''s very warm work, sir,ventured Dickey, at last,"carrying all that stuff-- isn''t it?" |
19323 | It''s your business to protect the public, ai n''t it? |
19323 | Me to mix''em fust? |
19323 | Me? |
19323 | Now what have I done? |
19323 | Now, wha''d''ye think o''that? |
19323 | Now, what do you think of that? |
19323 | Oh stately man and old beside, Why dost gymnastics do? 19323 Oh, please, mamma,"they begged,"let Aunt''Phrony take us nutting? |
19323 | Please,he ventured at last,"wo n''t you show me now how you mend it?" |
19323 | Simon, how_ did_ you do it? |
19323 | So that''s a split infinitive, is it? |
19323 | Stuff? |
19323 | Sure? |
19323 | Then, if I_ split_ it, what else_ could_ it be but a split infinitive, I''d like to know? |
19323 | Think what? |
19323 | Two maids,they said,"could quickly flit From home to home, so why permit Expense that brings no benefit?" |
19323 | Very well, daddy; and ef the thing works up instid o''down, I s''pose we''ll say you give_ me_ Bunch, eh? |
19323 | Was that your''ol''Hyar'',''Aunt''Phrony; your ol''Hyar''you tell us all about? |
19323 | Well, ai n''t we the public? |
19323 | Well, madam,said Mr. Gummage,"what do you wish your daughter to learn? |
19323 | What am I to do? |
19323 | What are_ you_ doing? |
19323 | What d''ye think iv it? |
19323 | What did he do? |
19323 | What do you mend, sir? |
19323 | What is athletic? |
19323 | What saith the Scriptur''? 19323 What was it doin''down thar, Simon, my sonny?" |
19323 | What you doin''? |
19323 | What''d you butt in for, then? |
19323 | What''s in ye? 19323 What''s that?" |
19323 | What''s the charge? |
19323 | What''s the matter over there? |
19323 | What''s the matter, Danny? |
19323 | What''s the price of wood? |
19323 | What''s the row? |
19323 | What''s trumps? |
19323 | What, have you raised on_ your_ wood, too? 19323 Whatever did you do then?" |
19323 | Where do you go? |
19323 | Where do you go? |
19323 | Where''s Bud? |
19323 | Where''s the union? |
19323 | Where? |
19323 | Who said there was? |
19323 | Why do you have to run? |
19323 | Why should I keep out? |
19323 | Why so, Simon? |
19323 | Why, Aunt Mattie, what''s the matter? |
19323 | Why, Aunt''Phrony,said Ned,"he must have found a wife at last, for how about Mis''Molly Hyar''?" |
19323 | Why-- what--? 19323 Why? |
19323 | Will you stand it, daddy? |
19323 | You never seed nothin''like that in_ Augusty_, did ye, daddy? |
19323 | You''d jist as well not, daddy; I tell you I''m gwine to follow playin''cards for a livin'', and what''s the use o''bangin''a feller about it? 19323 You_ will_ stay, wo n''t you?" |
19323 | _ Bet_, did you says? |
19323 | _ Bob Smith_ says, does he? 19323 _ Now_ what has Castor got?" |
19323 | (''Way down yonner) Is you on dem sinful apples feedin''? |
19323 | ); But what on earth would poets do Without it? |
19323 | --Why is he so called? |
19323 | A BULLY BOAT AND A BRAG CAPTAIN_ A Story of Steamboat Life on the Mississippi_ BY SOL SMITH Does any one remember the_ Caravan_? |
19323 | Ai n''t I supposed to skip? |
19323 | Ai n''t you gwine to lemme hab''em?" |
19323 | All pallid was my beaded brow, The reeling night was late, My startled mother cried in fear,"My child, what have you ate?" |
19323 | Am I right?" |
19323 | And China Bloom at best is sorry food? |
19323 | And Rowland''s Kalydor, if laid on thick, Poisons the thirsty wretch that bores for blood? |
19323 | And do n''t you know that them that plays cards always loses their money, and--""Who wins it all, then, daddy?" |
19323 | And who would not throw off dull care And be like unto her, When happiness brings, as her share, One hundred dollars per----? |
19323 | And who''s_ Bob Smith_? |
19323 | Are we_ never_ to get to a cheaper country? |
19323 | Are you getting a chill? |
19323 | At that rate how long would it take to patch them all together?" |
19323 | Atter dat she useter go out ter de woods ev''y night ter see de young man, an''she alluz sing out ter him,''Whar is you, whar is you?'' |
19323 | BY JOHN PHILIP SOUSA"Have I told you the name of a lady? |
19323 | Be Misther McEwen:''Whose bones?'' |
19323 | Be Misther Vincent:''Will ye go to th''divvle?'' |
19323 | Ben, did you ever? |
19323 | By the by, have you seen the Flighty- wight?" |
19323 | Can she do all these in one quarter?" |
19323 | Can you guess it-- the name of the lady? |
19323 | Did I ring? |
19323 | Did his wife look as though she ought to be kilt? |
19323 | Did n''t the union tie up a plant once when you was discharged? |
19323 | Did ye ever hear the like of that? |
19323 | Do it? |
19323 | Do n''t that satisfy you? |
19323 | Do n''t you know that all card- players and chicken- fighters and horse- racers go to hell? |
19323 | Do you know the piece, Mr. Gummage? |
19323 | Do you think I could help coming?" |
19323 | Do you think I have visited the''Capitol''twice, and do n''t know how to treat fashionable society? |
19323 | Does a man ever endure such torture? |
19323 | Ef you wanter stay, whyn''t you sesso, stidder blowin''yo''se''f black in de face? |
19323 | Fun? |
19323 | Good game? |
19323 | HAVE YOU SEEN THE LADY? |
19323 | Had he joined the church before he started? |
19323 | Has she any turn for drawing?" |
19323 | Have I sung of the hair of a dove? |
19323 | Have I sung of the hair of a lady? |
19323 | Have I talked of the eyes of a lady? |
19323 | Have I talked of the eyes that are bright? |
19323 | Have I told you the name of a dear? |
19323 | Have you a vacancy?" |
19323 | Her mammy say,''You is, is you? |
19323 | How can you throw straight when you look at everything in the world except at the bat you are trying to hit? |
19323 | How could I, an interloper, say"no"to the rightful proprietor of that room? |
19323 | How d''ye sell your wood_ this_ time?" |
19323 | How to find her at that hour of the night? |
19323 | How? |
19323 | I heard the bell and the pilot''s hail,"What''s''_ your_ price for wood?" |
19323 | I isn''? |
19323 | I saw a light just ahead on the right-- shall we hail?" |
19323 | I suppose in the course of a fortnight Marianne will have learned drawing enough to enable her to do the pattern?" |
19323 | I wunner w''at mek him set wid his face turnt f''um de fire an''blinkin''his eyes all de time? |
19323 | Is it any ways similyar to the rule of three, Simon?" |
19323 | Is n''t it time we wint to supper?'' |
19323 | Is such example dignified To set before your crew?" |
19323 | Is you done fool ev''yb''dy all dese''ears an''den let yo''se''f git fooled by a passel er gals? |
19323 | It passed so close to Mr. Holliday''s face that he dropped the bat and his grammar in his nervousness and shouted:"Whata you throw nat? |
19323 | Katherine looked a little dazed and her voice trembled a bit as she said:"Would n''t you like to look at the flat?" |
19323 | MR. DOOLEY ON EXPERT TESTIMONY BY FINLEY PETER DUNNE"Annything new?" |
19323 | May I do so?" |
19323 | Mistah Hyar'', huccome you ain''darnse?'' |
19323 | Mistar Hyar'', you done ma''y off ev''yb''dy else an''stay single yo''se''f? |
19323 | Nen a grea''-big girl come through Where''s a gate, an''telled me who Am I? |
19323 | Now look here, Uncle Joe, there is no occasion to be foolish about a little--""Foolish? |
19323 | Oh, sinner, is you in de Gyardin uv Eden? |
19323 | Ol''Adam he say,"W''at dat you eatin''?" |
19323 | Presently she opened them to ask,"Is I uver tol''you''bout de time Mistah Hyar''try ter git him a wife? |
19323 | Question be th''coort:''Different?'' |
19323 | See? |
19323 | Should I go in search of the housekeeper? |
19323 | Should I scream? |
19323 | Should he get out a search warrant or a writ of replevin? |
19323 | So putting his mouth to the old gentleman''s ear, he shouted,"Where-- do-- you-- want-- to-- go?" |
19323 | So what''s the use of beatin''me about it?" |
19323 | Th''on''y question, thin, is Did or did not Alphonse Lootgert stick Mrs. L. into a vat, an''rayjooce her to a quick lunch? |
19323 | The other pilot''s voice was again heard on deck:"How much_ have_ you?" |
19323 | Then addressing his father, he asked,"War''n''t it, daddy?" |
19323 | There was a twinkle in Landon''s eyes as he said:"Are you quite ready for dinner, dear?" |
19323 | Thou''rt welcome to the town; but why come here To bleed a brother poet, gaunt like thee? |
19323 | W''at cur''ous sort er wood is dish yer dat ac''lak dis?'' |
19323 | W''at de use uv all dis scurryin''? |
19323 | Was n''t I discouragin''them? |
19323 | Was n''t I enforcin''them? |
19323 | Was n''t I organizin''? |
19323 | Was she wishing for the fleshpots of upper Fifth Avenue, or was it just physical weariness that would pass with the night? |
19323 | Was the trail of the serpent over them all? |
19323 | Was there a hotel? |
19323 | Was there more than one hotel? |
19323 | We presume that you can offer documentary evidence as to your own worth, sir?" |
19323 | Well, who de man?'' |
19323 | Whar you gwine? |
19323 | What are ye laughin''about?" |
19323 | What in the round creation of the yearth have you and that nigger been a- doin''?" |
19323 | What makes bettin''? |
19323 | What mattered it to Simon? |
19323 | What more could a humorist desire? |
19323 | What next? |
19323 | What right had they to condemn a sweet and affectionate creature such as she to a starved and morbid spinsterhood? |
19323 | What saith the Scriptur'', Simon? |
19323 | What shade do you say? |
19323 | What th''coort ought to''ve done was to call him up, an''say:''Lootgert, where''s ye''er good woman?'' |
19323 | What''s eatin''you, dad?" |
19323 | Where did Adnah, during my brief absence, get her sudden curiosity about the despicable sex?" |
19323 | Why do n''t he teach himself the same, an''stop others from doin''what he talks?" |
19323 | Why should not he do as his father and his father''s friends did? |
19323 | Why was it worse for one boy to do this than it was for some hundreds or thousands of men? |
19323 | Why,_ why_ was she such a confiding and altogether artless and bewitching little fool? |
19323 | Whyn''t you stay wid we- all?'' |
19323 | Wonder if I''m''predestinated,''as old Jed''diah says, to git the feller to it? |
19323 | Would he? |
19323 | Would you like me to show you how it''s done?" |
19323 | You do n''t call that kid a riot, do you?" |
19323 | You have n''t heard of such ingratitude before, I fancy?" |
19323 | _ Now_ what should he say? |
19323 | _ When did they sleep?_ Wood taken in, the_ Caravan_ again took her place in the middle of the stream, paddling on as usual. |
19323 | _ Why?_"the Fantasm fairly shouted. |
19323 | do I hear thy slender voice complain? |
19323 | do_ you_?) |
19323 | exclaimed his father,"why do you not follow my instructions more carefully? |
19323 | figures, flowers, or landscape?" |
19323 | he said at last,"you ai n''t got the nerve to charge this kid with assaulting you, have you?" |
19323 | repeated his father,"did I play ball? |
19323 | replied the Captain--(captains did swear a little in those days);"what''s the odd_ quarter_ for, I should like to know? |
19323 | rouge makes thee sick? |
19323 | said she,"is_ I_ uver tol''you''bout Mis''Molly Hyar''? |
19323 | the Itinerant Tinker exclaimed;"did n''t you just this minute see me split it?" |
19323 | what do boys have daddies for anyhow? |
11765 | ''Fat''s all the stushie?'' 11765 And what then, Harry? |
11765 | And what thousand dollars wi''that be, my mannie? |
11765 | And why not? |
11765 | And will ye no''? |
11765 | And ye ha''the care and the feedin''and the clothin''o''all that brood? |
11765 | Are ye as good a fisherman as ye are a gowfer? |
11765 | Are ye no Harry Lauder? 11765 Are ye no better the noo, Mac?" |
11765 | Are ye no? |
11765 | Better? |
11765 | Better? |
11765 | Blow me,''Ennery, d''ye twig what''e meant? 11765 But we''ll a''be better off if we win----""Better off?" |
11765 | But-- but-- your cousin Henry-- who worked here in Liverpool-- who always stayed with you at the hotel when you were here? |
11765 | But-- dinna ye love me any more''? |
11765 | Can ye no gie me a free pass for the show, man Harry? |
11765 | Could we no send him to the university? |
11765 | D''ye no remember? 11765 Eh, Mac?" |
11765 | Eh, my, lassie,I said,"can I help ye, then? |
11765 | Eh, then,I said,"would we no be doing well to be moving hameward? |
11765 | Gaw bli''me, Alf--''oo''s this toff? 11765 Get me a job? |
11765 | Gie up the wean? |
11765 | Granny-- is there no a piece for us? 11765 Hamper? |
11765 | Has onything come ower you? |
11765 | Here, ma chiel,I asked him,"can ye not put me in the road for the Strand?" |
11765 | Hi, Alf, wot''jer fink o''that Scotch bloke? |
11765 | How big was mine, Mac? |
11765 | How big was yours? |
11765 | How many children have you? |
11765 | How much did you give away yesterday, just to be talking? 11765 How was the way o''that, Kirsty Lamont?" |
11765 | I know-- isn''t it ridiculous? 11765 I say, Harry-- do you know those persons?" |
11765 | I suppose you''ve let sae many of your friends have money lately that you''re a bit pinched for cash? 11765 Is it no cruel hard''?" |
11765 | Is there ony settlement yet, Jamie? |
11765 | Jimmy--Jimmy was the famous novelist my friend--"tell me how you write one of your best sellers? |
11765 | Know it? |
11765 | Man, Harry,he went on,"can ye no see the ithers? |
11765 | Man, Harry,said he,"d''ye smell what I smell?" |
11765 | No time? 11765 Oh, aye, Jamie, man, yell no haw been to the toon the day?" |
11765 | Oh, aye,I said,"they liked them fine, did n''t they? |
11765 | Oh, aye-- but what''ll mak''up to''us for what we''ll lose? 11765 Ready?" |
11765 | So it was that siller gave you your start, Andy, man? |
11765 | So there''s Harry Lauder coming, is there? 11765 So you''re here looking for a shop, hey?" |
11765 | Tak''him away for gude and a'', Jamie? |
11765 | That''s what he means? 11765 The wean my Annie near died to gie me? |
11765 | Thirty- one pounds? 11765 Wad ye like a little Scotch?" |
11765 | Wasna he a whopper, Harry? |
11765 | Weel, Jamie, an''hoo are the patients the day? 11765 Weel, Jamie, man, and ho''s the wife and the wean the day?" |
11765 | What do ye say tae a game, Mac? |
11765 | What sort of a fish was that, ye muckle ass? |
11765 | What thocht ye o''Harry Lauder? |
11765 | What''s chances of finding a shop here? |
11765 | What''s the fine for poaching, Harry? |
11765 | What''s yon? |
11765 | What''s your line? |
11765 | What-- teach a man blinded in his country''s service a trade that he can work at without his sight? 11765 Who sent ye, laddie?" |
11765 | Who''s that? |
11765 | Why should I really_ act_ for these people? |
11765 | Why tempt fortune when you''re doin''so well here? |
11765 | Why will you be risking all you''ve won, Harry? |
11765 | Would a pistol bullet hurt a ghost? 11765 Wull it be sae hard for them, Harry?" |
11765 | You think I''ll do? |
11765 | You think there''s nae a chance for me here, then? |
11765 | ''Is it any wonder I''ve sae little o''my manly beauty left? |
11765 | Am I a criminal because o''that? |
11765 | And are we no going to mak''use of the lesson it has taught us? |
11765 | And didna our young men gie that up at the first word? |
11765 | And do they think I''d be doing that if I were close the way they''re thinkin''I am? |
11765 | And do you see what I mean now? |
11765 | And ha''we no fields enow for our cattle to graze in, and canna we raise corn to feed them witha''? |
11765 | And has it not been just that you''ve had too many affairs of your ain to handle? |
11765 | And he''s likely, is he no, to listen to the first man who comes along and tells him he has a way to cure a''that? |
11765 | And he''s the funniest wee man in the halls, is he? |
11765 | And is there no a lesson for all of us in that? |
11765 | And sae, do you ken hoo it was the German officers reasoned? |
11765 | And should I no be finding oot, if there''s like that threatening to my business, where the richt lies? |
11765 | And suppose, just suppose, noo, doctrine like that was consistently applied? |
11765 | And what I''m wanting to know is how are we going to do business that way, and live together, and keep cities and countries going? |
11765 | And what''s come tae them? |
11765 | And when it comes tae a strike need ane side or the other act like the Hun? |
11765 | And where is he when the pinch comes-- to himself or to a friend? |
11765 | And yet, I''m wondering the noo if those labor leaders in Australia have reckoned on one or twa things I think of? |
11765 | And yet-- wadna many o''them be lost if things were changed so greatly and sae suddenly as those who talk like the Bolsheviki wad be havin''them? |
11765 | And, Harry, wad ye guess what he weighed?" |
11765 | And, d''ye ken, he was pleased as Punch? |
11765 | And, if he has, hoo does he treat them? |
11765 | And, noo, I''ll be asking you-- why should they come tae me? |
11765 | And, wad ye believe it, it was Jamie hung on and on when all the ithers had gie''n up the chase and left the field to Andy? |
11765 | Anither artist was ill, and they just wired wad I come? |
11765 | Are all the children at home?" |
11765 | Are there no problems left? |
11765 | Are they so free wi''their siller? |
11765 | Are those that are left doing a''that they should to mak''up that loss? |
11765 | Are we to mak''everything ower new? |
11765 | Are ye thinkin'', maybe, that I''d a faither to send me to college and gie me masters to teach me to sing my songs, and to play the piano? |
11765 | Aye? |
11765 | Because I''m before the public-- because they think they know I ha''the siller? |
11765 | But all at once another Jew came up to me, slapped me on the back, and cried oot:"Ach, Mr. Lauder, and how you vas to- day? |
11765 | But did it mak''a wee bit of difference tae those laddies that I had nought to say to them? |
11765 | But do you ken hoo, in a basket of apples, ane rotten one wi''corrupt the rest? |
11765 | But do you ken what they were meaning early i''the war in Britain? |
11765 | But doesna it a''come to the same answer i''the end-- that it wall tak''more than even this war to change human nature? |
11765 | But doesna the closed fist mean more than that when you come to think on''t? |
11765 | But he canna conduct it by his lane, can he? |
11765 | But how should he understand, that''s never had bairn o''his own to twine its fingers around one o''his? |
11765 | But how should it have remained the same? |
11765 | But how was it he had the chance to sway the puir ignorant bodies in Russia? |
11765 | But if I did it for him why would I not be doing it for Tom and Dick and Harry, too? |
11765 | But if ye do he''s like to reckon that he paid you to do so, and so why should he applaud ye as weel? |
11765 | But is he to be just a hulk, needing some one always to care for him? |
11765 | But is it charity to do as some would do in sich a case as this? |
11765 | But is it no a sair sicht, the hoose they leave behind them when they gae awa''? |
11765 | But now, suppose there''d been a Bolshevik organization of the company? |
11765 | But now, why should we be thinking that, when the war''s over, women will be wanting tae go on just as they did while it was on? |
11765 | But of what use is internationalism unless all the nations of the world are of the same mind? |
11765 | But suppose you stop and think, and you come tae see that some of your troubles lie at your ain door? |
11765 | But tell me, man-- would a ghost be making a noise like this?" |
11765 | But the noo? |
11765 | But wall he? |
11765 | But wall your conscience let you do sae? |
11765 | But what audience ha''I e''er seen that didna hae its sprinklin''o''gude Scots? |
11765 | But what matter''s that, between friends? |
11765 | But what should I or any other man gie money to an able bodied laddie that can e''en work for what he needs, the same as you and me? |
11765 | But what''s a wee thing like that between friends and allies? |
11765 | But who''s kennin''they''ll no come back anither day? |
11765 | But why will they be content wi''what I bring them o''the glen and the dell? |
11765 | But wull he care what they''re thinkin''o''him, and saying, maybe, behind his back? |
11765 | But, after a'', why should I envy any other man his work? |
11765 | But, lu''mme, eyen''t he funny?" |
11765 | But, man canna ye do better? |
11765 | Can I say it''s no my business? |
11765 | Can he? |
11765 | Can we no accomplish miracles still, e''en though the desperate need for them has passed? |
11765 | Can ye blame a man for that? |
11765 | Can ye no lend me the loan o''five bob till Setterday?" |
11765 | Can ye no think of a hundred cases like that? |
11765 | Can you no see sicca man? |
11765 | Canna men think twice before they bring such grief and trouble into the world? |
11765 | Canna they learn to get together and talk things over before the trouble, instead of afterward? |
11765 | Conceited, is that? |
11765 | Could ye blame me for being vexed? |
11765 | D''ye ken hoo many pleas for siller I get each and every day o''ma life? |
11765 | D''ye ken what the state is these new fangled folk are aye talkin''of? |
11765 | D''ye ken what? |
11765 | D''ye mind the song? |
11765 | D''ye mind the wee lassie that was sae still till she began to know ye-- the weest one of them a''? |
11765 | Did I no gie them money, too? |
11765 | Did I tell you how I was warned against crossing the ocean? |
11765 | Did he so?" |
11765 | Did those folk see the way the Boy Scouts did, I wonder? |
11765 | Do they nae think I''ve friends and relatives o''my ain that ha''the first call upon me? |
11765 | Do they no see I''m crackin''a joke against masel''? |
11765 | Do they think any Scot wad care for the cost of a stamp? |
11765 | Do ye ken a man that''ll e''er be able tae love his hame sae well if it were a city he was born in, and reared in? |
11765 | Do ye ken what I was paid? |
11765 | Do ye ken what that meant to me in yon days? |
11765 | Do ye ken why I hae set doon this tale for you to read? |
11765 | Do ye mind the game the wee yins play, of noughts and crosses? |
11765 | Do you ken how I made my start? |
11765 | Do you ken what it is we''ve a''got to think of the noo? |
11765 | Do you know why? |
11765 | Do you mind a song I used to sing called"I Love a Lassie?" |
11765 | Do you think they''re just written richt off? |
11765 | Doctor, is it sense you''re talking?" |
11765 | Foolishness? |
11765 | Gie''en my wife and my bairn should dee, what good would it be to me to ha''won this strike?" |
11765 | Ha''we no learned in all these twa thousand years the meaning o''the parable o''the wise virgin and her lamp? |
11765 | Ha''ye ne''er seen a lad who spent a''his time a coortin''the wee lassies? |
11765 | Ha''ye no heard that phrase? |
11765 | Had America come in tae late? |
11765 | Had Mac been overmodest, before, when he had said he was no great angler? |
11765 | Had ever man a greater chance than that sailor lad? |
11765 | Had he na been here in Kirrie last nicht de ye think I''d ever ha''left the rent box by its lane wi''a man like our Jock in the hoose?" |
11765 | Had her faither stood by her-- but, who kens, who kens? |
11765 | Had we all practiced thrift before the war, wad we no hae been in a better state tae meet the crisis when it came upon us? |
11765 | Has any man the richt to use me despitefully because I''ve hit upon a thing tae do that ithers do no do, whether or no they can? |
11765 | Has he a wife? |
11765 | Has he bairns o''his ain? |
11765 | Has it no been proved, ever since the beginning of the world, that when love comes in nothing else matters? |
11765 | Have we not had too many servants? |
11765 | Have you not thought, whiles, it was strange you''d not noticed all these terrible things they talk to you aboot? |
11765 | Have you that much with you?" |
11765 | He was punished, tae, before ever Macduff killed him-- wasna he a victim of insomnia, and is there anything worse for a man tae suffer frae than that? |
11765 | He''d make a graven image laugh, would he? |
11765 | He''ye no heard that tale before? |
11765 | Heard ye ever the like o''such foolishness? |
11765 | Here''s a verse that will show you what a silly song it was:"Twig auld Tooralladdie, Do n''t he look immense? |
11765 | Hoo are ye, Annie-- better old girl?" |
11765 | Hoo came it they were here wi''the auld folks? |
11765 | Hoo comes it folk can lose their self- respect sae? |
11765 | Hoo do you think I get the songs I sing? |
11765 | How am I to mak''my trips frae one toon the the next? |
11765 | How do they ken I''m in the toon at a''? |
11765 | How many men are there, handicapped as, no doubt, he was, who find those to put faith in them? |
11765 | How many men have that? |
11765 | How often maun one or the other be beaten flat and crushed? |
11765 | How should I ha''done so? |
11765 | How was it that those who kenned a better way were not at work long agane? |
11765 | How''ll we be getting on without our legs or our arms or if we should be blind?" |
11765 | I couldna help wonderin''about the bairns; where was their mither? |
11765 | I tault him hoo it came that I kenned aboot his dochter''s affairs, and begged him would he no reconsider and gie her shelter? |
11765 | I tried, ye ken? |
11765 | I was first or last on every bill, and ye ken what it means to an artist to open or close a bill? |
11765 | I''m a loon on that subject, ye''ll be thinkin'', maybe, but can I no mak''ye see, if ye''re a city yin, hoo it is I feel? |
11765 | I''m not sayin''all''s richt and perfect in this world--and, between you and me, would it be muckle fun to live in it if it were? |
11765 | I''ve heard them, after he''s oot the door, turn to ane anither, and say:"Did ye ever see a man sae mean as Wully?" |
11765 | Is it because o''Providence that they''re left sae? |
11765 | Is it but five years agane? |
11765 | Is it no always sae that i''the end a strike is settled, wi''both sides giving in something to the other? |
11765 | Is it no always the way? |
11765 | Is it no better to do as my Fund does? |
11765 | Is it no hard to mak''a wrong thing richt when it''s a''his fault? |
11765 | Is it no plain? |
11765 | Is it no to be o''use any mair to be lookin''to the future? |
11765 | Is it no? |
11765 | Is it that folk wi''children find it harder to live? |
11765 | Is it the hand o''God? |
11765 | Is no humanity a greater thing than any class? |
11765 | Is that no a grand feeling? |
11765 | Is there any richt i''the world that''s as precious as that tae life and liberty and love? |
11765 | Is there need of marble columns and rare woods? |
11765 | Is there no good in the institutions that have served the world up to now? |
11765 | It was God''s will? |
11765 | It''s about your cousin-- if you can tell me where I can find him----""My cousin, lassie?" |
11765 | It''s just this-- canna we get alang without making threats, one to the other? |
11765 | Man, you''d no expect to sleep in your ain hoose the same nicht there''d been a fire to put out? |
11765 | Must we act amang ourselves as the Hun acted in the wide world? |
11765 | Noo, there''s something we knew before, did we no? |
11765 | Noo, what''s Jock to do? |
11765 | Noo, ye''ll not droon, an'', as ye''re so wet already, why do n''t ye wade ower and get the oar while ye''re there?" |
11765 | Noo-- what are the things we ha''tae do? |
11765 | Nor seen the licht in his wife''s een as she laid them on her wean?" |
11765 | Not in your lifetime or mine, I mean, but any time at a''? |
11765 | Now do you see I was right from the start when I said you ought to sing them?" |
11765 | Now, heard you ever sae hopeless a saying as that? |
11765 | Now, wull we be changing all the things all our centuries ha''taught us to be good and useful? |
11765 | Of coorse ye let him have it-- and told him not to think of it as a loan, syne he was in such trouble?" |
11765 | Oh, and did I no feel that I was an actor then? |
11765 | Oh, aye-- but it''s easier for you and me to see than for Jock, is it no? |
11765 | One of the prime articles of our creed was Cain''s auld question:"Am I my brother''s keeper?" |
11765 | Or was he----? |
11765 | Radical say that''s all richt, and that what''s all sound and proper when he does it is the same when it''s she does it tae him? |
11765 | Sae are they no foolish folk that were thinking that sae soon as peace came a''would be as it was before yon days in August, 1914? |
11765 | Said one:"Ha''ye heard Harry sing the week?" |
11765 | Shall a man no ha''the richt tae leave his siller to his bairn? |
11765 | Shall we be changing everything in this world? |
11765 | Shall we drop a''that noo that peace has come again? |
11765 | Shall we gie up a''we ha''learned of how men of different minds can pull together for a common end? |
11765 | Shall we ha''to have anither lesson like the one that''s past and done wi'', sometime in the future? |
11765 | Should ithers be fashed wi''me because I''ve made ma bit siller? |
11765 | Shouldna we be ready, truly ready, in Britain, against the coming of anither day o''wrath? |
11765 | So ye''re thinkin''I''d better sing more Scotch the rest o''the week?" |
11765 | Suppose they gae oot on strike? |
11765 | That''ll be the way of it, nae doot?" |
11765 | The doctor wad let us do sae, do ye nae think it?" |
11765 | The protestations that he made rang wi''a familiar sound in his ain ears-- hoo could he mak''them convincing to her? |
11765 | Then why canna we get together i''the beginning, and avoid the bitterness, and the cost of the struggle? |
11765 | There was that friend came to you for the loan of a five- pound note because his bairn was sick? |
11765 | They wanted to know what did I think of America? |
11765 | Verra soft they were playing at the end, ane of my favorite tunes--"Will ye no come back again?" |
11765 | Wad he be painting the veranda before he did those things? |
11765 | Wad it no be selfish for Jamie, for the love he had for his first born, to insist on keeping him when to keep him wad mean his death? |
11765 | Wad she be willing? |
11765 | Wad they, had they the chance, help every stranger that came tae them and asked? |
11765 | Wad ye be late for the breakfast that came nigh to getting us shot?" |
11765 | Wad ye no think he''d have gone to work and sought to pay us back? |
11765 | Wad ye rather see him dead or in my care? |
11765 | Was Ypres to be lost, after four years? |
11765 | Was ever a falswer lee than that? |
11765 | Was it for me, his father, to be selfish when he had been unselfish? |
11765 | Was it no sae it went? |
11765 | Was the Channel to be laid open to the Hun? |
11765 | Wasna that sae? |
11765 | We think we may live our ain lives, and that what we do affects no one but ourselves? |
11765 | We''re a''friends together, are we no? |
11765 | Weel, canna we make the necessity for a better world the mother of new and greater inventions than any we ha''yet seen? |
11765 | Weel, is it no better for that man to clean his ain front yard first? |
11765 | Weel, was it only then, and for the first time, that it was patriotic for a man to be cautious and saving? |
11765 | Weel, what was the result? |
11765 | Well, I''ll be asking you if it''s likely Jenny will act so to her boy, that''s hame frae the wars? |
11765 | Were we not, before the war, in the habit of having servants do many things for us we micht weel have done for ourselves? |
11765 | What British city was it led the way, in proportion to its population, in subscribing to the war loans? |
11765 | What Briton was not, that had a way of knowing how terrible a time was upon us? |
11765 | What beat them, then? |
11765 | What d''ye mean, lass?" |
11765 | What did I do? |
11765 | What do they do with their money? |
11765 | What do you say, Mac?" |
11765 | What hamper?" |
11765 | What held them back till we could match them in numbers and in a''the other things? |
11765 | What should a club be? |
11765 | What was Munro doing for rakin''in the best part o''the siller folk paid to hear us? |
11765 | What''ll we be doing then? |
11765 | What''ll we do?" |
11765 | What''s charity, after a''? |
11765 | What''s easier then than to mak''them come straight? |
11765 | Who was Harry Lauder, after a'', to set his judgment against that o''a man whose business it was to ken all aboot such things? |
11765 | Who was I, Harry Lauder, the untrained miner, to expect folk to pay their gude siller to hear me sing? |
11765 | Who wull say it is? |
11765 | Who''ll be remembering then hoo they felt when he first came home? |
11765 | Why ca n''t you be content?" |
11765 | Why else do they look as they do, and act as they do, when I sing to them o''the same? |
11765 | Why not let me sing you a bit song and see if ye''ll not think sae yersel?" |
11765 | Why should I be payin''twa shillin''the noo?" |
11765 | Why should he no be a gentleman? |
11765 | Why will they no go back or oot, if they''re city born, and see for themselves? |
11765 | Why? |
11765 | Will ye no picture Mac and me, hangin''on to one anither''s hands in the darkness, and feelin''the other tremble, each guilty one o''us? |
11765 | Will ye no seek to be oot sae much o''the year as ye can? |
11765 | Would it no be a sair pity if that were so? |
11765 | Would it no mak''God feel that we were a stupid lot, not worth the saving? |
11765 | Wull he do that, who''s been out there, facin''death, clear eyed, hearing the whistle o''shell o''er his head, seeing his friends dee before his een? |
11765 | Wull he? |
11765 | Wull it sound as if I were boastin''if I talk o''what Scots did i''the war? |
11765 | Wull some matter of economics keep them apart? |
11765 | Wull ye be angry wi''me because of that? |
11765 | Wull ye no be thinking of some laddie who gave up a''the world held that was dear to him, when his country called? |
11765 | Wull ye no lend me the loan o''a twopence?" |
11765 | Wull you let me touch again on a thing I''ve spoken of already? |
11765 | Ye ken ma song,"I love a lassie"? |
11765 | Ye mind how I fool ye, when I''m singin'', by walkin''round and round the stage after a verse? |
11765 | Ye mind what I told ye o''my first game, wi''Mackenzie Murdoch? |
11765 | Ye mind yon days in the spring of 1918? |
11765 | Ye were prood, the day, were ye no? |
11765 | Ye''ll be minding hoo black things looked for a while, when they broke our British line, or bent it back, rather, where the Fifth Army kept the watch? |
11765 | Ye''ll e''en forgie me if I wander so, sometimes, in this book? |
11765 | Ye''ll ken how it is when you''ll be talkin''with a friend? |
11765 | You mind St. Paul-- when be spoke of Faith, Hope, Charity, and said that the greatest of these was Charity? |
11765 | You''re no believing I mean that? |
11765 | You''ve heard the like of that tale before? |
11765 | You''ve seen ma sticks? |
11765 | sae often and sae resolutely as used tae be our wo nt? |
30565 | Have you any advice for me? |
30565 | ( 2) What object had the author in view? |
30565 | ( 3) What is the main thesis of the book? |
30565 | ( 4) Why is it necessary that the hearer should read the book? |
30565 | ( 5) This still leaves unsettled the problem of who shall determine what is of utility to society? |
30565 | A book talk, to be successful, must answer the following questions:( 1) Who wrote the book? |
30565 | Another speaker I know in the west, asks his audience about every ten minutes,"Do you get my point?" |
30565 | G. W. Woodbey, our colored speaker of"what to do and how to do it"fame, never speaks an hour without asking at least thirty times,"Do you understand?" |
30565 | It would be much better to say,"Do I make myself understood?" |
30565 | Suppose only ten people turned out, is not their combined inconvenience ten times as great as that of the speaker? |
18734 | ''How about callin''on the members?'' 18734 A miss is as good as a mile? |
18734 | A what? |
18734 | Ah-- and where? |
18734 | Ai n''t he rather big to speak such broken English? |
18734 | And all those pink satin monkeys bumping their cocoanut shells together in the green moonlight--"Well, after the first act, what? |
18734 | And do I get the check now? |
18734 | And for the third? |
18734 | And how far may that be? |
18734 | Are you afraid of me? 18734 Are you afraid of the Principal?" |
18734 | Are you all well? |
18734 | Are you busy, John? |
18734 | Are you not going to call on them? |
18734 | B- a- n,said his father,"what does that spell?" |
18734 | But did you read it? |
18734 | But do they hurt people, Eph? |
18734 | But your second act? |
18734 | But, Morris, dear, of what? |
18734 | Ca n''t you almost hear that already? |
18734 | Call spirits from the vasty deep,Or weave a lofty, living lay? |
18734 | Cat? |
18734 | Cat? |
18734 | Did n''t you ever hear the saying, A burnt child dreads the fire? |
18734 | Did she like it? |
18734 | Did they accept your offer? |
18734 | Did you ever see a donkey play a lute? |
18734 | Do n''t you reckon it''s bedtime? |
18734 | Do n''t you think, Mr. O''Shea,said he,"that you and I had better leave the management of the little ones to the women? |
18734 | Druggists? |
18734 | Experience, did you say? 18734 Genevieve O- loola''s marriage Was arranged so_ very_ queer-- Have you read''The Bishop''s Carriage''? |
18734 | Genius, yes,Perkins said smiling cheerfully,"else why Perkins the Great? |
18734 | Have n''t you read it? |
18734 | How are you, John? |
18734 | How are you, sir? |
18734 | How can I? |
18734 | How do you like my voice? |
18734 | How do you tell time? |
18734 | How is that for a first act? |
18734 | How prevent it? |
18734 | How''s your cotton in that low strip along the bayou? |
18734 | I do n''t mean the people to act that sort of thing-- but where would you lay your scene? |
18734 | I do not understand you, Mr. Jimmy, give me a specimen--"Sir? |
18734 | I''m with you,said Perkins,"what is your scheme?" |
18734 | If it was as bad as all that why did n''t it put you to sleep? |
18734 | Inasmuch as to how? |
18734 | Indeed it is, Mr. Jimmy-- have you been looking into it? |
18734 | Is it? |
18734 | Is that a joke? 18734 It is hard to shave an egg--?" |
18734 | May I try you on a page? |
18734 | Morris, dear, are n''t you going to say good- by to the gentleman? |
18734 | Morris,began the Associate Superintendent in his most awful tones,"will you tell me why you raised your hand? |
18734 | Morris,said Teacher,"did you stop a reading lesson to tell me that? |
18734 | Not exactly; sompin''like wildcats, ai n''t they? |
18734 | Oh, are_ you_ going up to the Corner, too? |
18734 | Oh, that? |
18734 | On what new principle do you go, sir? |
18734 | P.S.--If it''s not too great a bother And a mental overtax, Would you send your poor old father, C.O.D., a battle- axe?" |
18734 | Perkins,I said,"do n''t you think it is about time we got hold of the novel-- the reading, the words?" |
18734 | See this? |
18734 | Shall I go and call her, madam? |
18734 | Sir? |
18734 | Sleep, mah li''l pigeon, don''yo''heah yo''mammy coo? |
18734 | Sure? |
18734 | That''s what you want to be, is n''t it? |
18734 | That, sir? |
18734 | The best of boys wants you,he suggested, and Teacher perforce asked:"Well, Morris, what is it?" |
18734 | The dickens it is,I exclaimed,"and what has aftermath got to do with this truck? |
18734 | The elm with the hang- bird''s nest? |
18734 | The wolf does something every day that keeps him from church on Sunday--? |
18734 | Then why did you not say so? |
18734 | Thirty- nine, eh? 18734 Was there anything wrong about it?" |
18734 | Well, then what is the matter with you? 18734 Well, what do you think of it?" |
18734 | Well,I said,"what is it-- a bargain sale?" |
18734 | Well,said his father, rather suddenly,"what is it?" |
18734 | Well,says I,"how do they do?" |
18734 | Well,says I,"what do you ax a glass for it?" |
18734 | Well-- what yourself? |
18734 | What can it be? |
18734 | What did you suppose? 18734 What do you mean by that? |
18734 | What do you think we should do first? |
18734 | What does it suggest? |
18734 | What h- happened? |
18734 | What is it? |
18734 | What is it? |
18734 | What''s in it? |
18734 | What''s that, Jim? |
18734 | What, have you failed to trust me? 18734 Where are they now?" |
18734 | Where are you going? |
18734 | Where can you find people like that? |
18734 | Where is Louise? |
18734 | Why not write on your family adventures? |
18734 | Why the delay? |
18734 | Wo n''t you sing something else? |
18734 | Would you please tell me your name? |
18734 | Yes, but Mr. Jimmy, how is a child''s spelling- book to be made any plainer? |
18734 | You do not know what it is? |
18734 | You have no Tower in America? |
18734 | You know how to take care of a horse, do n''t you? |
18734 | You know the old elm down the road? |
18734 | You remember Mr. Booloo? 18734 You want to see my Pa, I s''pose?" |
18734 | You, of course, understand the dead languages? |
18734 | ''But what shall I do, kind sir?'' |
18734 | ''Have n''t we had personality enough? |
18734 | ( What would the Bonnie Charlie say, If he could see that crowd to- day?) |
18734 | A finale? |
18734 | A hand- saw is a good thing, but not to shave with? |
18734 | A new Fool''s every minute born, you say; Yes, but where speeds the Fool of Yesterday? |
18734 | Again Teacher asked:"Well, Morris, what is it, dear?" |
18734 | Ai n''t they there now on your shelf? |
18734 | Ai n''t those official meetin''s of a church the limit? |
18734 | Ai n''t you a mind to take these''ere biscuits again, and give me a glass of cider?" |
18734 | And I met a feller, and says I,--"What place is this?" |
18734 | And I see some biscuit on the shelf, and says I,--"Mister, how much do you ax apiece for them''ere biscuits?" |
18734 | And are they drilled? |
18734 | And as she cried she had said over and over again:"Morris, how could you? |
18734 | And have you contracts with all these-- notions?" |
18734 | And how about the testimony of the Hired Hand? |
18734 | And how could you consult your books, your dictionaries, your encyclopædias? |
18734 | And indeed, does not his definition suit the vexed feelings of some young gentlemen attempting to read Latin without any interlinear translation? |
18734 | And then, with a quick memory of the note and of his anger:"Miss Bailey, who is this young man?" |
18734 | And when, all other torments flown, I think to call one hour mine own, Who takes my leisure by the throat? |
18734 | And, besides, how did the vine know enough to travel in exactly the right direction, three feet, to find what it wanted? |
18734 | Angel ban''a- playin''-- Whut dat music sayin''? |
18734 | Angel hahps a- hummin'', Angel banjos strummin''-- Sleep, mah li''l pigeon, don''yo''heah yo''mammy coo? |
18734 | Angel singers singin'', Angel bells a- ringin'', Sleep, mah li''l pigeon, don''yo''heah yo''mammy coo? |
18734 | Are you afraid of Miss Bailey?" |
18734 | Are you sick? |
18734 | At last says I,--"Mister, have you got any good cider?" |
18734 | At that tender age I writ a Essy for a lit''ry Institoot entitled,"Is Cats to be trusted?" |
18734 | But at last a wonderful diamond ring, An infant Kohinoor, did the thing, And, sighing with love, or something the same,( What''s in a name?) |
18734 | But how many people are up at sunrise? |
18734 | But where did they get their groceries? |
18734 | Ca n''t, eh? |
18734 | Can you recommend it as a thoroughly respectable and intellectual production?" |
18734 | Can you reconcile your present attitude with discipline?" |
18734 | Children, will you march for me?" |
18734 | Could she sacrifice what hair she had to the claims of literature? |
18734 | Did n''t the biscuits that I give you just come to the cider?" |
18734 | Did n''t you never hear of my invention, Wamsley''s Automatic Pastor, Self- feedin''Preacher and Lightning Caller? |
18734 | Do n''t you hear me, you idiot? |
18734 | Do n''t you think it''s just_ too dear_? |
18734 | Do n''t you think you would like to go home to your mother?" |
18734 | Do n''t you, dear?" |
18734 | Do you sing that?" |
18734 | Do you think I do n''t know what the year is? |
18734 | Do you think the little fellow will shake hands with me? |
18734 | Does this proposition strike you? |
18734 | Else why Perkins the Great? |
18734 | Ever hear, Fair words butter no parsnips?" |
18734 | Ever hear, When the sky falls we shall all catch larks? |
18734 | Every trace of interest had left Mr. O''Shea''s voice as he asked:"Can they read?" |
18734 | Glancing from boy to bottle, the"comp''ny mit whiskers"asked:"What''s this for?" |
18734 | Go ahead, why do n''t you? |
18734 | Had the honeymoon suffered eclipse already? |
18734 | Have you ever read''Lady Audley''s Secret''?" |
18734 | He looked down at the big hole in his umbilikus, and sez he,"If I do get well, wo n''t it be a great_ naval_ viktry, Doktor Battey?" |
18734 | He pointed to the red laces of the low shoes and asked,"See this?" |
18734 | He then raised up on his elbow, and sez he,"Doktor, is there one chance in a hundred for me?" |
18734 | He took up the tie and ran his nail along the red stripe that formed the selvedge on the back, and said:"See this?" |
18734 | Help the lame dog over the stile? |
18734 | How can we look at the sun? |
18734 | How could you?" |
18734 | How do they do it? |
18734 | How do you account for that?" |
18734 | How long a run?" |
18734 | How oft hereafter will she seek her prey? |
18734 | How, then, can we depend upon their statements, if not made from their own observation,--I mean, if they never saw the sun? |
18734 | How, then, if we can not look at it, can we find out about it? |
18734 | I can teach sifring, reading, writing, joggerfee, surveying, grammur, spelling, definition, parsin--""Are you a linguist?" |
18734 | I come dasignin''--""To see my Ma? |
18734 | I mean, what does that punctuation mark between t and s stand for? |
18734 | I must have had considerable experience? |
18734 | I shouted:"do you want to knock my brains out?" |
18734 | In the office? |
18734 | Is it a go? |
18734 | Is it possible that you have lost faith in me? |
18734 | It was not until they had come within sight of home that Johnnie ventured to inquire:"Say, Eph, what is a ha''nt?" |
18734 | Jim looked at the Doktor, and then at me, and sez he,"That''s bad, ai n''t it?" |
18734 | Jimmy?" |
18734 | MY SWEETHEART BY SAMUEL MINTURN PECK Her height? |
18734 | Morris''s knees trembled queerly, his breathing grew difficult, and Teacher seemed a very great way off as she asked again:"Well, what is it, dear?" |
18734 | Nine months, is it not?" |
18734 | Nothing venture, nothing have? |
18734 | Now what does that spell? |
18734 | Now, Rollo, how do you spell, B- a- n-- Ban?" |
18734 | Now, Rollo, what is this letter?" |
18734 | Now, what is it?" |
18734 | Oh, how could you, dear? |
18734 | Perhaps she had better give it up? |
18734 | Perkins cried,"what is it?" |
18734 | Perkins& Co.? |
18734 | Poet?" |
18734 | Rapid; for how should anything_ dead_ speak out so as to be understood? |
18734 | Recollect those come- all ye songs we used to sing, going down the river? |
18734 | Remember the time I snatched the sword out of my cane and lunged at a horse trader from Tennessee? |
18734 | Rollo''s father went on with the lesson:"What is this, Rollo?" |
18734 | Schemes? |
18734 | Settling deliberately in the chair of state, he began:"Can the children sing, Miss Bailey?" |
18734 | Simple, ai n''t it? |
18734 | They are cheerful, and why should it not be thusly with us?" |
18734 | Too many cooks spoil the broth?" |
18734 | Try me, sir,--let''s have the furst one furst-- how many are there?" |
18734 | Was one not bound to believe one''s own eyes? |
18734 | Was she ill? |
18734 | What comes after Bancroft? |
18734 | What comes next? |
18734 | What comes next? |
18734 | What could she say that would interest a globe- trotter? |
18734 | What did the grizzly old cuss do, however, but commence darncin and larfin in the most joyous manner? |
18734 | What did you think you were to do-- collect the royalties?" |
18734 | What does that apostrophe mean? |
18734 | What does your wife say about it?" |
18734 | What had happened? |
18734 | What if it had reached down with its long, snaky arms and snatched Walter up-- and run off with him in the dark-- and no telling what? |
18734 | What is ha''nts? |
18734 | What is it anyway?" |
18734 | What is your idea?" |
18734 | What letter is this?" |
18734 | What more do you want? |
18734 | What next?" |
18734 | What?" |
18734 | Whatta you waiting for? |
18734 | When I read this book clear through, all the way to the end of the last volume, may I have another little book to read?" |
18734 | When I was in the legislature, chairman of the Committee on County and County Lines, what did my protest do? |
18734 | When I would slumber in my booth, Who comes with accents loud and smooth, And talks from dawn to midnight late? |
18734 | Where does she dwell? |
18734 | Where is the Major? |
18734 | Where ish de himmelstrablende Stern-- De shtar of de shpirit''s light? |
18734 | Where ish de lofely golden cloud Dat float on de moundain''s prow? |
18734 | Where were you raised? |
18734 | Who bricks would make,_ sans_ straw or clay? |
18734 | Who craves the boon of dreamless sleep? |
18734 | Who gets the benefit? |
18734 | Who is entitled to the profits on the Crimson Cord? |
18734 | Who originated the Crimson Cord? |
18734 | Who pounds mine ear with noisy talk, Whose brazen gall no ire can balk And wearies me of life''s short span? |
18734 | Why Perkins the originator? |
18734 | Why ca n''t we collaborate and get up a libretto for next season? |
18734 | Why not Perkins the Nobody?" |
18734 | Why not stop there, though there were some pages more? |
18734 | Why the Great and Only Perkins of Portland?" |
18734 | Why, sonny, you mean to tell me you do n''t know what ha''nts is?" |
18734 | Why, what the deuce can she be thinking about?" |
18734 | Wonder why you never thought of it yourselves, do n''t you? |
18734 | Yes? |
18734 | You can not drive a windmill with a pair of bellows? |
18734 | You do n''t know? |
18734 | You leave it to me; hear what I said? |
18734 | You will Take it? |
18734 | do you think I am going to pay you for the biscuits and let you keep them, too? |
18734 | how''s that?" |
18734 | says I,"are these the stores where the traders in Huckler''s Row keep?" |
18734 | says I,"do you mean to impose upon me? |
18734 | she said;"why do n''t you get rid of him?" |
19084 | ''Do n''t you know the difference between a bed and a coach, godson?'' 19084 ''Has he corrected it?'' |
19084 | ''Has powder come into fashion, brother?'' 19084 ''I am not looking at the crowd,''said the prodigal in a low voice;''but I see----''"''You see what?'' |
19084 | ''I say,''whispered Melchior, pointing to him,''what did he say the other day about being a parson?'' 19084 ''Is it possible? |
19084 | ''Must families be together?'' 19084 ''What are you doing, getting on to my bed?'' |
19084 | ''What are you doing?'' 19084 ''What are you looking at?'' |
19084 | ''What is that man talking about?'' 19084 ''What''s in copper- plate capitals?'' |
19084 | ''Who are you?'' 19084 ''Who is it?'' |
19084 | ''Would you like to put on my coat?'' 19084 About me?" |
19084 | Am I fortunate enough to be loved by her? |
19084 | Am I the master of all this? |
19084 | And Matheline,--do you love her yet? |
19084 | And can it not be put off? |
19084 | And do they still live in the town? |
19084 | And do you go out in the snow from one house to another at night; and, oh, do n''t you enjoy it? |
19084 | And do you still love this Bihan? |
19084 | And have you found it, father? |
19084 | And is Donna Isabella a very old lady? |
19084 | And must I really squint with that one- eyed creature, and limp with the lame wretch? |
19084 | And pray what''s your business here? |
19084 | And what are you girls, I wonder? |
19084 | And what''s Pax to be? |
19084 | And who lives in the castle on the hill? |
19084 | Are you a Yorkshire woman, Sarah? |
19084 | Are you a guest of''La Fonda''? |
19084 | Are you asleep, Bernadou? |
19084 | But what does she want with that axe? |
19084 | But will mamma let us? |
19084 | But you understand Yorkshire, do n''t you? 19084 Could n''t we make a coffin, and pretend the body was inside?" |
19084 | Do you speak truth? |
19084 | Do you think you could have eaten such a wonderful supper? |
19084 | Do you think, then,he asked,"that you have brought me hither for nothing? |
19084 | Eat? 19084 Eh, what? |
19084 | Eh? |
19084 | Five and two make seven,said the old man, with a grim smile;"what do you do for the eighth?" |
19084 | Has he broken his promise? |
19084 | Have another glass? |
19084 | Have you spoken to your mistress? |
19084 | How did you know it was n''t true? |
19084 | How much will the fool give? |
19084 | I say, baron, you''ve been an uncommon old brute in your time, now, have n''t you? |
19084 | I''ve no doubt of it,thought the Captain; but he only said,"Well, what''s the matter?" |
19084 | Is that the end? |
19084 | Major,said the colonel,"will you please spell those words?" |
19084 | May n''t I go to bed, please? |
19084 | My dear,said Mr. Grapewine, over the dinner- table, about a fortnight before Christmas,--"how many days to Christmas?" |
19084 | My friend, what are they saying? |
19084 | She also has come to see...."But what has she in her hand? |
19084 | She''s so good, is she? |
19084 | Sleep? 19084 That is true; but for how long?" |
19084 | That''s the stuff to make your hair curl, is n''t it? |
19084 | Then are you the mummers who come round at Christmas, and act in people''s kitchens, and people give them money, that mamma used to tell us about? |
19084 | Then it''s not true? |
19084 | There was no longer any doubt that he was safe in his old home; but where were his brothers and sisters? 19084 To- day?" |
19084 | Very well,said the friend, laughing;"but if it is n''t true, may I put you in? |
19084 | We''re Christmas mummers,said Robin, stoutly;"we did n''t know the way to the back door, but----""And do n''t you know better than to come here?" |
19084 | Well, what sort of a story is it to be? |
19084 | What am I going to do with him? |
19084 | What are you doing here? 19084 What are you going to do with him, Peter?" |
19084 | What are you stopping for? |
19084 | What did you tell me so for? |
19084 | What do you mean, sir? 19084 What does he mean by it?" |
19084 | What harm can the wolf do,asked Josserande,"to a well- mounted troop like the cavalry of Gildas the Wise? |
19084 | What is a pity? |
19084 | What is the matter, mamma? |
19084 | What the deuce do you mean by such conduct, eh? 19084 What?" |
19084 | When will it be done? |
19084 | Where has he gone? |
19084 | Where is he? |
19084 | Where is the girl who can wait seven years? |
19084 | Where shall we go first? |
19084 | Where''s his wife? |
19084 | Which is Dora? |
19084 | Who goes there? |
19084 | Who sent you here? |
19084 | Who sleeps on the snow? 19084 Who the Pickwick are you?" |
19084 | Who''s Pill? |
19084 | Who''s Sarah? |
19084 | Who''s there,she said,"at this time of night?" |
19084 | Who? |
19084 | Who? |
19084 | Will that be enough? 19084 Wonderfully like her, is she not, baron?" |
19084 | Would you like it? |
19084 | You ask me, señor, who lives in the castle now? 19084 You do n''t dislike it, do you?" |
19084 | You have firmly decided? |
19084 | You have this great confidence in me, poor woman? |
19084 | You made her very happy, did n''t you? |
19084 | You wish_ what_? |
19084 | You_ wish_ WHAT? |
19084 | ''Did n''t you promise your ma you''d leave off them tricks?'' |
19084 | ''Do n''t you know? |
19084 | ''What can I have been dreaming of?'' |
19084 | ''What fool''s game are you playing?'' |
19084 | ''Where are the girls to- night?'' |
19084 | ''Who goes there?'' |
19084 | A snug bed for the little ones, and a nice white coverlet, eh? |
19084 | About Klootz? |
19084 | And Hilarion asked,--"Who art thou? |
19084 | And Hilarion made answer:"Tarry thou here, and thou shalt see, if I mistake not, him whom thou seekest?" |
19084 | And Hilarion said,--"Who art thou? |
19084 | And I say, do n''t you think we could brush his hair for him in a morning, till he learns to do it himself?'' |
19084 | And Master Robert would n''t be so mean as to tell tales, would he, love?" |
19084 | And was the goblin ever explained? |
19084 | And why? |
19084 | And, besides, can not the holy abbot with a single word put to flight a hundred wolves?" |
19084 | And, moreover, had it not been sent her, who was alone now in the great castle on the hill, as a mysterious gift of Providence? |
19084 | Ar''n''t you blushing, you hard- hearted old monster?" |
19084 | Are you ready?" |
19084 | At last, as we neared La Fonda''s vine- run walls, he said:"Señor, do you think the miracles are all over nowadays?" |
19084 | Both Pol and Matheline often conversed together, and upon what subject do you think? |
19084 | But from behind, Pol Bihan cried out,--"Since when have beggars been allowed to preach sermons? |
19084 | But what are you staring at through the window? |
19084 | But what to do? |
19084 | But whence came those golden ringlets that mingled with Josserande''s black hair, and which shone in the sunlight above his mother''s snowy locks? |
19084 | Ca n''t you see the people are hungry, ye villains? |
19084 | Can I wait seven years?" |
19084 | Can all the riches in the world pay for one of the tears that the ingratitude of a beloved son draws from his mother''s eyes?" |
19084 | Can it be possible that he means to celebrate Christmas himself? |
19084 | Can you believe it? |
19084 | Certainly; such a thing could scarcely be divined; but under what form can not a mother discover her darling child? |
19084 | Dear wife, will you not receive him for love of me and of God, and let him share with little Kala in your care?" |
19084 | Did she already know that the wolf was Sylvestre Ker? |
19084 | Did you not order, yesterday, that Wilhelm and Friedrich, if they did not pay their rent to- morrow, should be turned out to sleep on the snow? |
19084 | Did your mother send you here?" |
19084 | Do n''t you see, madam?" |
19084 | Do n''t you see, my boy, that Adolphus Brown is an only son, and you have nine brothers and sisters? |
19084 | Do n''t you see?" |
19084 | Do you remember the deceased brother, Thaël, who is a saint for having resisted the desire of making gold,--he who had the power to do it?" |
19084 | Does he mean to have a family reunion and drink to the German fatherland? |
19084 | For did not each evening see him by Kala''s side, and had she not, after months of vain coquetting, at last fairly yielded up her heart? |
19084 | For whom? |
19084 | Fritz-- Carl; where are the knaves? |
19084 | Hard words break no bones, they say, but angry men are quick, and a blow is soon struck, eh?" |
19084 | Have you got a headache? |
19084 | He approaches the beds of the wounded and demands, in a low, hideous growl,--"Haf you anyting to sell?" |
19084 | His brother boxed his ears with great promptitude; and went on--"Well, I do n''t care; confess, sir; is n''t it rather a nuisance?" |
19084 | His comrade asks which:"The Host,"or"The Three Kings,"or"St. Joseph Has Told Me"? |
19084 | How dare you have the impertinence to suppose such a thing? |
19084 | How, Mrs. Grapewine, can a Turkish bath tickle a man''s appetite? |
19084 | I called out,--"Who''s there?" |
19084 | I might ha''knowed they were n''t like common mummers, but I was so flustered hearing the bell go so late, and----""Are they ready?" |
19084 | I say, go pretty quick, will you?'' |
19084 | In whom resides the power of God? |
19084 | Is that all you wanted to know? |
19084 | Is that it? |
19084 | It can not be that you would refuse the poor child a home?" |
19084 | Let me see; where was I? |
19084 | May I put you in?" |
19084 | May I sit on the front seat with you, and have half the rug? |
19084 | May Robin put the shovel in the fire for you? |
19084 | No one asked whether he were handsome or genteel, whether he kept good company, or wore a tiger- skin rug, or looked through an opera- glass? |
19084 | Of course, you have guessed he was a goblin? |
19084 | Ought she not to feel it a sacred charge, coming as it did, from the very manger, to her arms? |
19084 | Perhaps it was not the girl''s fault that her heart was no larger than a little bird''s; and yet for this defect was not Matheline cruelly punished? |
19084 | Pol brandished his club, and continued,--"What are we waiting for? |
19084 | Shall I take them to the kitchen sir----""For you and the other idle hussies to gape and grin at? |
19084 | Shall I tell you what I think? |
19084 | Shall I try?" |
19084 | Shall we shut out, in our mirth and jollity, the cry of the hungry poor? |
19084 | She cried,"What, you?" |
19084 | She must have been a happy wife, eh, baron?" |
19084 | Should she yield? |
19084 | Smoke?" |
19084 | So you were listening to my conversation with Matheline?" |
19084 | Sylvestre Ker asked,--"Will you be my groomsman?" |
19084 | Sylvestre Ker exclaimed,"What opportunity? |
19084 | Talking of crust, by the way, what sort of a tap is it you''re drinking?" |
19084 | The brother seemed doubtful; but Melchior waved harder, and( was it fancy?) |
19084 | The weak buy the strong, the unhappy the happy; did you know that, my good woman? |
19084 | Then she continued:"Beautiful bridegroom, how do you know that the propitious moment falls precisely at the hour of Matins? |
19084 | Then what do you say to making these poor people comfortable?" |
19084 | There needs not much eloquence to pray the publican''s prayer, and who shall say but there was gladness in heaven that Christmas morning? |
19084 | They do, sometimes, eh, baron? |
19084 | Turn you out? |
19084 | Was he blind? |
19084 | Was he deaf? |
19084 | Was it because they loved him? |
19084 | Was it not her son''s child, then, as well as this woman''s? |
19084 | Well, well, madam, let us think of it( The bell? |
19084 | What animal do you wish to be,--roaring lion, bellowing ox, bleating sheep, crowing cock? |
19084 | What do you mean by alluding to my-- my toilet in this impertinent manner?" |
19084 | What do you mean, you old conundrum?" |
19084 | What have you to propose?" |
19084 | What is Sylvestre Ker doing now?" |
19084 | What is it? |
19084 | What on earth can the old miser want with all this? |
19084 | What was it to him that Nuremberg, which now heaped honors on the dead, had denied bread to the living? |
19084 | Whence did it come? |
19084 | Where has the wolf gone?" |
19084 | Where is Dame Josserande?" |
19084 | Where is charity most often found? |
19084 | Where is the girl that can wait seven years? |
19084 | Who does n''t believe in fairies after this? |
19084 | Who had brought together all these people, young and old, men and women? |
19084 | Who knows whether he will ever be able to return? |
19084 | Who told you so?" |
19084 | Why do n''t he say, at once,''Please wash yourself before you come; and if you ca n''t afford soap and water, here''s a ticket''? |
19084 | Why does he want so much money? |
19084 | Why not attack him?" |
19084 | Why, my man, how can anything produce biliousness in an empty stomach? |
19084 | With such an example before him, what might not the boy hope to achieve through talent and persevering labor? |
19084 | Would it not be better to use it, after all? |
19084 | Would you believe it? |
19084 | You do n''t mean it, though, do you? |
19084 | You have never heard of Alcala? |
19084 | You know that, too?" |
19084 | You misunderstand me? |
19084 | Young Carl is wild, perhaps, or drinks, or gambles, eh? |
19084 | are we so old? |
19084 | cried Melchior;''was there no one else in all this crowd, that you must take him?'' |
19084 | do n''t they?'' |
19084 | eat? |
19084 | has Time gone so very fast? |
19084 | he cried,"what can this mean?" |
19084 | he is gone, is he? |
19084 | if I''m not decent, why does he ask me? |
19084 | is there among you all not one kind soul to defend the widow''s son in the hour when he bitterly expiates his sin?" |
19084 | me, can the Lord God inflict this cruel martyrdom upon me?" |
19084 | none of these? |
19084 | or had the crowd gone? |
19084 | or had the night come? |
19084 | said the goblin,"death is breathing in their faces even now, you see; it is hardly worth while to lay them to sleep in the snow, is it? |
19084 | said the goblin;"you do n''t mean to say you''re sorry? |
19084 | snow?" |
19084 | twenty florins or so is no great matter, is it? |
19084 | was it to teach such evil folly as this that you left home and us, my brother? |
19084 | what avail stars and ribbons on a breast where the life- blood is trickling slowly from a little wound? |
19084 | what do you mean, confound you? |
19084 | what, my pretty, tears? |
19084 | what?" |
19084 | whispered Hop- o''-my- thumb;''are you cold?'' |
19084 | with such a thing on my mind? |
29145 | Amontillado? 29145 And ez that the kind o''chirpin''these critters keep up?" |
29145 | And the motto? |
29145 | Died? |
29145 | Do I understand you that he''s been bucking agin faro with the money that you raised on hash? 29145 Do you mean to say that you''ve been givin''all the money you made here to this A1 first- class cherubim?" |
29145 | How about the doctors? |
29145 | How long have you had that cough? |
29145 | How? |
29145 | How? |
29145 | Niter? |
29145 | Say? |
29145 | Well? |
29145 | Well? |
29145 | What can she want here? |
29145 | What servants,says Jeremy Taylor,"shall we have to wait upon us in the grave? |
29145 | Whither? |
29145 | Who,says Sir Thomas Browne,"knows the fate of his bones, or how often he is to be buried? |
29145 | You? 29145 A mason? |
29145 | A pipe? |
29145 | And what did she do?" |
29145 | And, after all, why not? |
29145 | Are they not partly right? |
29145 | Are, then, the sculptured urn and storied monument nothing more than symbols of family pride? |
29145 | But is it not getting late? |
29145 | But who else? |
29145 | Can it break down the distinction of virtue and vice? |
29145 | Can it confound the good with the bad? |
29145 | Coleridge, Samuel Taylor; biographical note on, V, 70; articles by-- does fortune favor fools? |
29145 | Did I talk all this off to the schoolmistress? |
29145 | For what are the classics but the noblest recorded thoughts of man? |
29145 | Have his powers been wasted? |
29145 | How could they seem other than vulgar and hateful? |
29145 | How much new thought have we contributed to the common stock? |
29145 | How shall I explain or understand? |
29145 | I OF DOCTORS, LAWYERS, AND MINISTERS[9]"What is your general estimate of doctors, lawyers, and ministers?" |
29145 | If not, how explain the charm with which he dominates in all tongues, even under the disenchantment of translation? |
29145 | If the bell rings, why should we run? |
29145 | If the tone of the uncultivated American has too often the arrogance of the barbarian, is not that of the cultivated as often vulgarly apologetic? |
29145 | Is his life therefore lost? |
29145 | Is it a pretty shell? |
29145 | Is it a satisfactory shell? |
29145 | Is it certain that we shall be ashamed of a bankruptcy of honor, if we can only keep the letter of our bond? |
29145 | Is it not the highest art of a republic to make men of flesh and blood, and not the marble ideals of such? |
29145 | Is that a cemetery coming into view yonder, with its ghostly architecture of obelisks and broken columns and huddled headstones? |
29145 | Isabel, does it take all this to get us plain republicans to Albany in comfort and safety, or are we really a nation of princes in disguise? |
29145 | No? |
29145 | Prue says that brides are always beautiful, and I, who remember Prue herself upon her wedding- day-- how can I deny it? |
29145 | Sez I,"Fair youth, do you know what I''d do with you if you was my sun?" |
29145 | Shall I tell you some things the Professor said the other day?" |
29145 | Suppose what I''d said to you was the frozen truth, and you knowed it, would that have been the square thing to play on you?" |
29145 | The roar of laughter that greeted this frank confession was broken by a quiet voice asking,"And what did you say?" |
29145 | The_ Edinburgh Review_ never would have thought of asking,"Who reads a Russian book?" |
29145 | Was it that they expected too much from the mere miracle of freedom? |
29145 | What company has that lonely lake, I pray? |
29145 | What did I say to the schoolmistress? |
29145 | What had wealth to do there? |
29145 | Who hath the oracle of his ashes, or whither they are to be scattered?" |
29145 | Why should it crowd the dust of the great? |
29145 | Why should we knock under and go with the stream? |
29145 | Will they not be awaiting us at the palazzo, the Lady Fortunato and the rest? |
29145 | Would she not be looking, by the morrow''s night, upon a subjugated England, a reenslaved Holland-- upon the downfall of civil and religious liberty? |
29145 | You do n''t think I should expect any woman to listen to such a sentence as that long one, without giving her a chance to put in a word? |
29145 | You hear me?" |
29145 | You keep school, do n''t you? |
29145 | all that is truly great, and pure, and godlike, with all that is scorned, and sinful, and degraded? |
29145 | and you makin''the hash?" |
29145 | the noble with the base? |
29145 | what friends to visit us? |
28653 | And your father''s name? |
28653 | Better? 28653 Is not this better,"murmured he,"than what we dreamed of in the forest?" |
28653 | Shall we not meet again? |
28653 | Shall we not spend our immortal life together? 28653 That is to say,"we replied,"the blockheads were not born in Concord; but who said they were? |
28653 | Where''s Brom Dutcher? |
28653 | Where''s Van Bummel, the schoolmaster? |
28653 | Who are they? |
28653 | And how looks it now? |
28653 | And is this difference of no importance? |
28653 | And, after all, of what use is this pride of appearance, for which so much is risked, so much is suffered? |
28653 | Another short but busy little fellow pulled him by the arm, and, rising on tiptoe, inquired in his ear"whether he was Federal or Democrat?" |
28653 | Are there engagements, to the performance of which we are held by every tie respectable among men? |
28653 | Are we entitled, by nature and compact, to a free participation in the navigation of the Mississippi? |
28653 | Are we even in a condition to remonstrate with dignity? |
28653 | Are we in a condition to resent or to repel the aggression? |
28653 | Are your wife and children destitute of a bed to lie on, or bread to live on? |
28653 | Art thou too sluggish? |
28653 | Art thou too weak, that wast so powerful? |
28653 | Ask''d her what sum she would give me, if she should dy first? |
28653 | Besides, what were you sent into the world for but to add this observation?" |
28653 | But do not the Abbe de la R---- and the Abbe M---- visit her?" |
28653 | But if you say you can still pass the violations over, then I ask, hath your house been burnt? |
28653 | But now thou wilt?" |
28653 | But what have ye put over the redskin?" |
28653 | But what is your practise after dinner? |
28653 | But where is that favored land? |
28653 | But why will not Congress forward part of the powder made in your province? |
28653 | Can anything be imagined more exquisitely opposed to the true spirit of chivalry? |
28653 | Can no one bear it for me? |
28653 | Canst thou not brush the fly away? |
28653 | Coming back, near Leg''s Corner, Little David Jeffries saw me, and looking upon me very lovingly, ask''d me if I was going to see his Grandmother? |
28653 | Did you embrace it, and how often? |
28653 | Do we owe debts to foreigners, and to our own citizens, contracted in a time of imminent peril, for the preservation of our political existence? |
28653 | Has it yet vanished? |
28653 | Hath your property been destroyed before your face? |
28653 | Have you lost a parent or a child by their hands, and yourself the ruined and wretched survivor? |
28653 | His error does me no injury, and shall I become a Don Quixote, to bring all men by force of argument to one opinion? |
28653 | How shall we ever be able to pay them? |
28653 | In the midst of his bewilderment, the man in the cocked hat demanded who he was, and what was his name? |
28653 | Is a violent and unnatural decrease in the value of land a symptom of national distress? |
28653 | Is commerce of importance to national wealth? |
28653 | Is it a cat watching for a mouse, or the devil for a human soul? |
28653 | Is it not I who, in the character of your physician, have saved you from the palsy, dropsy and apoplexy? |
28653 | Is it not the foundation of a greater or less share of beauty in the two races? |
28653 | Is private credit the friend and patron of industry? |
28653 | Is public credit an indispensable resource in time of public danger? |
28653 | Is respectability in the eyes of foreign powers a safeguard against foreign encroachments? |
28653 | Is there no other sound? |
28653 | Not brush away a fly? |
28653 | Of the condition of the Middle Ages from the single romance of"Ivanhoe"than from the volumes of Hume or Hallam? |
28653 | Or are all the deep- laid schemes of yesterday as stubborn in his heart, and as busy in his brain, as ever?... |
28653 | Rip bethought himself a moment, and inquired,"Where''s Nicholas Vedder?" |
28653 | Rip had but one question more to ask; but he put it with a faltering voice:"Where''s your mother?" |
28653 | Stand any here that question God''s judgment on a sinner? |
28653 | The Leather- Stocking stared at the sound of his own name, and a smile of joy illumined his wrinkled features as he said:"And did ye say it, lad? |
28653 | The orator bustled up to him, and, drawing him partly aside, inquired"on which side he voted?" |
28653 | Then tell me what thou seest?" |
28653 | Thou art not stirred by this last appeal? |
28653 | Welcome home again, old neighbor-- why, where have you been these twenty long years?" |
28653 | What have I done to merit these cruel sufferings? |
28653 | What is the hour? |
28653 | What was to be done? |
28653 | What would you advise us to do?" |
28653 | When I hear another express an opinion which is not mine, I say to myself he has a right to his opinion, as I to mine; why should I question it? |
28653 | Where is our universe? |
28653 | While the mornings are long, and you have leisure to go abroad, what do you do? |
28653 | Who is there to take notice of our flinching?" |
28653 | Will Judge Pyncheon now rise up from his chair? |
28653 | Will he go forth, and receive the early sunbeams on his brow? |
28653 | Will he never stir again? |
28653 | Will not these heavy taxes quite ruin the country? |
28653 | Yet of what avail was the frenzied despair of the unarmed youth? |
28653 | _ Franklin._ But do you charge, among my crimes, that I return in a carriage from Mr. Brillon''s? |
28653 | _ Franklin._ How can you so cruelly sport with my torments? |
28653 | _ Franklin._ Is it possible? |
28653 | _ Franklin._ Not once? |
28653 | _ Franklin._ What, then, would you have me do with my carriage? |
28653 | _ Franklin._ Who is it that accuses me? |
28653 | cried he--"Young Rip Van Winkle once-- old Rip Van Winkle now!--Does nobody know poor Rip Van Winkle?" |
28653 | echoed Edwards,"whither do you go?" |
28653 | echoed Elizabeth, trembling with her feelings;"do you not call these endless forests woods?" |
28653 | exclaimed the youth;"where is it, Natty, that you purpose going?" |
28653 | have you then got the old man''s name cut in the stone by the side of his master''s? |
28653 | my enemy in person? |
28653 | what has startled the nimble little mouse? |
12924 | ;How does it bring to us a renewal of life?" |
12924 | ;How does it make the meaning of things clearer for us? |
12924 | A speck? |
12924 | And I to thee, by Heaven, My light steel life have given; When shall the knot be tied? 12924 And dost thou suffer, my brother?" |
12924 | And how is this, my little chit? |
12924 | And how is this? |
12924 | Art thou a Lombard, my brother? 12924 Art thou a Romagnole?" |
12924 | Art thou from Tuscany, brother? 12924 But canst thou marvel that, freeborn, With heart and soul unquelled, Throne, crown, and sceptre I should scorn, By thy permission held? |
12924 | But what fear''st thou? |
12924 | But what good came of it at last? |
12924 | But what with you Has one to do? |
12924 | Great chiefs, why sink in gloom your eyes? 12924 I might have bowed before, but where Had been thy triumph now? |
12924 | Not always, sir; but what of that? |
12924 | O chuse, O chuse, Lady Marg''ret,he said,"O whether will ye gang or bide?" |
12924 | O wha is this has done this deed, And tauld the king o''me, To send us out, at this time of the year, To sail upon the sea? 12924 O where will I get a gude sailor, To take my helm in hand, Till I get up to the tall top- mast, To see if I can spy land?" |
12924 | What are the bugles blowin''for? |
12924 | What makes that front- rank man fall down? |
12924 | What makes the rear- rank breathe so''ard? |
12924 | What makes you look so white, so white? |
12924 | What''s that so black agin the sun? |
12924 | What''s that that whimpers over''ead? |
12924 | What''s that? |
12924 | Where can her dazzling falchion be? 12924 Where shall that land, that spot of earth be found?" |
12924 | Wherefore curl''st thou my hair? 12924 ( 2) How long an interval elapsed between the writing of the above two poems? 12924 ( 3) What is the story in the poem, and in what manner is it told? 12924 ( 4) How does Tennyson all through the poem make it a parable of human life? 12924 ***** BREATHES THERE THE MAN? 12924 ***** MEN AND BOYS The storm is out; the land is roused; Where is the coward who sits well housed? 12924 ***** WHAT CONSTITUTES A STATE? 12924 ***** WHAT IS THE GERMAN''S FATHERLAND? 12924 ***** WHERE ARE THE MEN? 12924 Ah, what avails the silver horn, And what the slender spear? 12924 All? 12924 Along the battery- line her cry Had fallen among the men, And they started back;--they were there to die; But was life so near them, then? 12924 And have they fixed the where and when, And shall Trelawney die? 12924 And murder sullies in heaven''s sight The sword he draws:-- What can alone ennoble fight? 12924 And must thy lyre, so long divine, Degenerate into hands like mine? 12924 And shall Trelawney die? 12924 And shall Trelawney die? 12924 And shall Trelawney die? 12924 And shall we not proclaim That blood of honest fame Which no tyranny can tame By its chains? 12924 And what man, seeing this, And having human feelings, does not blush, And hang his head, to think himself a man? 12924 And what wealth then shall be left us, when none shall gather gold To buy his friend in the market, and pinch and pine the sold? 12924 And whence be the grapes of the wine- press that ye tread? 12924 And where are they? 12924 And where are ye to- day? 12924 And where are ye, O fearless men? 12924 And where is that band who so vauntingly swore That the havoc of war and the battle''s confusion A home and a country should leave us no more? 12924 And where is the bosom- friend, dearer than all? 12924 And wherefore doth your rout send forth a joyous shout? 12924 And you? 12924 Approach, thou craven, crouching slave; Say, is not this Thermopylae? 12924 Are the gleaming snows and the poppies red All that is left of the brave of yore? 12924 Are there none to fight as Theseus fought, Far in the young world''s misty dawn? 12924 Art thou the son of Tamburlaine, And fear''st to die, or with a curtle- axe To hew thy flesh, and make a gaping wound? 12924 Bavaria, or the Styrian''s land? 12924 Be we men, And suffer such dishonor? 12924 Before thy song( with shifted rhymes To suit my name) did I undo The persian? 12924 Bright jewels of the mine? 12924 Brother, wert thou born of it? 12924 But Jessie said,The slogan''s done; But winna ye hear it noo,_ The Campbells are comin''_? |
12924 | But for whom shall we gather the gain? |
12924 | But in the tent that night awake, I ask, if in the fray I fall, Can I the mystic answer make, When the angelic sentries call? |
12924 | But what are the deeds of to- day, In the days of the years we dwell in, that wear our lives away? |
12924 | But where to find that happiest spot below, Who can direct, when all pretend to know? |
12924 | But who shall break the guards that wait Before the awful face of Fate? |
12924 | But who that fought in the big war Such dread sights have not seen? |
12924 | By their right arms the conquest must be wrought? |
12924 | Ca n''t you see I am dying? |
12924 | Can dungeons, bolts, or bars confine thee? |
12924 | Can sin, can death, your worlds obscure? |
12924 | Clan- Alpine''s best are backward borne-- Where, where was Roderick then? |
12924 | Come-- is not this a griper, That while your hopes are danced away,''Tis you must pay the piper? |
12924 | Dead? |
12924 | Dearest love, do you remember When we last did meet, How you told me that you loved me Kneeling at my feet? |
12924 | Deep drank Lord Marmion of the wave, And, as she stooped his brow to lave,--"Is it the hand of Clare,"he said,"Or injured Constance, bathes my head?" |
12924 | Did a father''s first command Teach thee love or scorn of it? |
12924 | Did an Irish mother''s hand Guide thee in the morn of it? |
12924 | Did the hero''s evil prophecies come true? |
12924 | Did we dare, In our agony of prayer, Ask for more than He has done? |
12924 | Did you mind the loud cry When, as turning to fly, Our men sprang upon them, determined to die? |
12924 | Do our numbers multiply But to perish and to die? |
12924 | Do they thrill the soul of the years no more? |
12924 | Do we dream? |
12924 | Do you love it or slavery best? |
12924 | Does any change in style or trend of thought indicate the lapse of time? |
12924 | Does any falter? |
12924 | Does he ever admit that he judged them harshly? |
12924 | Does it astonish thee that I approved My warrior''s purpose, since a hostile fate Attempted to dethrone, not only me, But all Valhalla''s gods? |
12924 | Does it astonish thee that I should wish Quickly to rid myself of such a foe? |
12924 | Does thy land''s reviving spring, Full of buds and blossoming, Fail to make thy cold heart cling, Breathing lover''s vows for it? |
12924 | Dost think that cunning or that cowardice Could e''er have carved these wrinkles on my brow? |
12924 | Dost thou bring to me What thou didst promise? |
12924 | Ef I turned mad dogs loose, John, On_ your_ front parlor stairs, Would it just meet your views, John, To wait an''sue their heirs? |
12924 | Else why so swell the thoughts at your Aspect above? |
12924 | Fear ye foes who kill for hire? |
12924 | Fitz- Eustace where? |
12924 | Fond impious man, think''st thou yon sanguine cloud, Raised by thy breath, has quenched the orb of day? |
12924 | For whom did he cheer and laugh else, While Noll''s damned troopers shot him? |
12924 | From the cold and frost collect them? |
12924 | From the vale On they come!--and will ye quail? |
12924 | Gone? |
12924 | HAKON.--Asleep? |
12924 | Has earth a clod Its Maker meant not should be trod By man, the image of his God, Erect and free, Unscourged by Superstition''s rod To bow the knee? |
12924 | Has he for you? |
12924 | Has he grown sick of his toils and his tasks? |
12924 | Has he to you in like manner through his poem given a truer conception of the nature and use of poetry? |
12924 | Has our love all died out? |
12924 | Has the curse come at last which the fathers foretold? |
12924 | Has the past no goading sting That can make thee rouse for it? |
12924 | Has the poem for you a music of its own which haunts you like a remembered vision? |
12924 | Hast been successful? |
12924 | Hast thou chosen, O my people, on whose party thou shalt stand, Ere the Doom from its worn sandals shakes the dust against our land? |
12924 | Have its altars grown cold? |
12924 | He counted them at break of day-- And when the sun set, where were they? |
12924 | Heard ye the din of battle bray, Lance to lance, and horse to horse? |
12924 | Hope ye mercy still? |
12924 | How has this poem influenced you? |
12924 | How is the story continued in"Sixty Years After"? |
12924 | How long shall they reproach us, where crowd on crowd they dwell,-- Poor ghosts of the wicked city, the gold- crushed hungry hell? |
12924 | How long the indolence, ere thou dare Achieve thy destiny, seize thy fame; Ere our proud eyes behold thee bear A nation''s franchise, nation''s name? |
12924 | How many hast thou broken? |
12924 | How soon, who knows? |
12924 | How wouldst thou tremble then, my lord, if thou Shouldst see it on his body? |
12924 | I met with Napper Tandy, and he tuk me by the hand, And he said,"How''s poor ould Ireland, and how does she stand?" |
12924 | If so, do you agree with him altogether? |
12924 | If the work be really poetry, its study ought to give a help toward the solution of the first great problems:"What is poetry?" |
12924 | If, amid the din of battle, Nobly you should fall, Far away from those who love you, None to hear you call, Who would whisper words of comfort? |
12924 | Is it Prussia, or the Swabian''s land? |
12924 | Is it Switzerland? |
12924 | Is it a moment''s cool halt that he asks Under the shade of the trees? |
12924 | Is it the Mark where forges blaze? |
12924 | Is it the gurgle of water whose flow Ofttimes has come to him, borne on the breeze, Memory listens to, lapsing so low, Under the shade of the trees? |
12924 | Is it the land which princely hate Tore from the Emperor and the State? |
12924 | Is it the lightning''s quivering glance That on the thicket streams, Or do they flash on spear and lance The sun''s retiring beams? |
12924 | Is it the thunder''s solemn sound That mutters deep and dread, Or echoes from the groaning ground The warrior''s measured tread? |
12924 | Is it where the Master''s cattle graze? |
12924 | Is it where the grape glows on the Rhine? |
12924 | Is the effect of the rhythm optimistic as opposed to the pessimism of the"Triumph of Time,"and why? |
12924 | Is the emotional side of the hero as finely balanced as the intellectual side? |
12924 | Is the sable warrior fled? |
12924 | Is there never a one of ye knows how to pray, Or speak for a man as his life ebbs away? |
12924 | Is this all our destiny below,-- That our bodies, as they rot, May fertilize the spot Where the harvests of the stranger grow? |
12924 | Is this the end? |
12924 | Is''t Yon churchyard''s bowers? |
12924 | Is''t death to fall for Freedom''s right? |
12924 | It''s you thet''s to decide; Ai n''t_ your_ bonds held by Fate, John, Like all the world''s beside? |
12924 | King Charles, and who''ll do him right now? |
12924 | King Charles, and who''s ripe for fight now? |
12924 | King Charles, and who''s ripe for fight now? |
12924 | King Charles, and who''s ripe for fight now? |
12924 | Lies not our father Cold and silent in death? |
12924 | Living on its first and best, Art thou but a thankless guest Or a traitor foe for it, If thou lovest, where''s the test? |
12924 | Mother Earth, are the heroes dead? |
12924 | Mother Earth, are the heroes gone? |
12924 | Must we ask a mother''s blessin''from a strange and distant land? |
12924 | Must we but blush? |
12924 | Must we but weep o''er days more blest? |
12924 | My sword, why clatter so? |
12924 | Never again shall my brothers embrace me? |
12924 | No more shall freedom smile? |
12924 | Now Tories all, what can ye say? |
12924 | Now, look at me Full in the eyes; consider well my brow: Hast thou among the thralls e''er met such looks? |
12924 | Now, my boys, what think ye of a wound? |
12924 | O Erin, must we leave you, driven by a tyrant''s hand? |
12924 | O Paddy dear, an''did you hear the news that''s goin''round? |
12924 | O lonely Himalayan height, Gray pillar of the Indian sky, Where saw''st thou last in clanging fight Our wingèd dogs of Victory? |
12924 | O loved ones lying far away, What word of love can dead lips send? |
12924 | O shade of the mighty, where now are the legions That rushed but to conquer when thou led''st them on? |
12924 | O, wherefore come ye forth, in triumph from the north, With your hands and your feet and your raiment all red? |
12924 | OLAF.--But wilt thou first not look at Olaf''s head? |
12924 | Of two such lessons, why forget The nobler and the manlier one? |
12924 | Oh, why and for what are we waiting, while our brothers droop and die, And on every wind of the heavens a wasted life goes by? |
12924 | Once more, I say,--are ye resolved? |
12924 | Or have the lips of a sister fair Been baptized in their waves of light? |
12924 | Or shall the darkness close around them, ere the sun- blaze breaks at last upon thy story? |
12924 | Or stand they chance with hunting- shirts, Or hardy veteran feet, sir? |
12924 | Or teach as gray- haired Nestor taught? |
12924 | Or that I should retain my right Till wrested by a conqueror''s might? |
12924 | Or where the Danube''s surges roar? |
12924 | Or whips thy noble spirit tame? |
12924 | Or who a friend or foe can meet So generous as an Irishman? |
12924 | Page, squire, or groom, one cup to bring, Of blessèd water from the spring, To slake my dying thirst?" |
12924 | Pomerania''s strand? |
12924 | Say, darkeys, hab you seen de massa, Wid de muffstash on he face, Go long de road some time dis mornin'', Like he gwine leabe de place? |
12924 | Says he,"''Tis a snug little island; Sha''n''t us go visit the island?" |
12924 | Shall Britons languish, and be men no more? |
12924 | Shall I bring these songs together? |
12924 | Shall I now the end unfasten Of this ball of ancient wisdom? |
12924 | Shall I now these boxes open, Boxes filled with wondrous stories? |
12924 | Shall hateful tyrants, mischiefs breeding, With hireling hosts, a ruffian band, Affright and desolate the land, While peace and liberty lie bleeding? |
12924 | Shall it be love or hate, John? |
12924 | Shall mine eyes behold thy glory, O my country? |
12924 | Shall mine eyes behold thy glory? |
12924 | Shall not the self- same mould Bring forth the self- same men? |
12924 | Shall the ear be deaf that only loved thy praises, when all men their tribute bring thee? |
12924 | Shall the mouth be clay that sang thee in thy squalor, when all poets''mouths shall sing thee? |
12924 | Sighs the worn spirit for respite or ease? |
12924 | Sisters and sire, did ye weep for its fall? |
12924 | Small was the band that escaped from the slaughter, Flying for life as the tide''gan to flow; Hast thou no pity, thou dark rolling water? |
12924 | Somebody''s hand hath rested here-- Was it a mother''s, soft and white? |
12924 | Stay in thy chamber near, My love; what wilt thou here? |
12924 | Sword, on my left side gleaming, What means thy bright eye''s beaming? |
12924 | Systematic study such as that suggested above will help in answering the questions,"What charm has this poem for us?" |
12924 | That I deceived a dreamer who despised The mighty gods,--does that astonish thee? |
12924 | That''s all very true: what more could he do? |
12924 | That''s hallowed ground where, mourned and missed, The lips repose our love has kissed;-- But where''s their memory''s mansion? |
12924 | The fight,-- How goes it, say?" |
12924 | The lily calmly braves the storm, And shall the palm- tree fear? |
12924 | The mellow note of bugles? |
12924 | The sturdy trooper straight repeated,"When all the village cheers us on, That you, in tears, apart are seated? |
12924 | Then what is man? |
12924 | There are three words to speak:_ We will it_, and what is the foeman but the dream- strong wakened and weak? |
12924 | There were men with hoary hair Amidst that pilgrim- band: Why had they come to wither there, Away from their childhood''s land? |
12924 | These ancestral lays unravel? |
12924 | These waters blue that round you lave, O servile offspring of the free,-- Pronounce what sea, what shore is this? |
12924 | They are gone; there is none can undo it, nor save our souls from the curse: But many a million cometh, and shall they be better or worse? |
12924 | They fly, or, maddened by despair, Fight but to die,--"Is Wilton there?" |
12924 | They strike at the life of the State: Shall the murder be done? |
12924 | Thou who tread''st its fertile breast, Dost thou feel a glow for it? |
12924 | To incantations dost thou trust, And pompous rites in domes august? |
12924 | To whom used my boy George quaff else, By the old fool''s side that begot him? |
12924 | Turn those tracks toward Past or Future, that make Plymouth rock sublime? |
12924 | Up came the reserves to the mellay infernal, Asking where to go in,--through the clearing or pine? |
12924 | Wait''st thou his sign? |
12924 | Was Locksley Hall an inland or a seashore residence, and why? |
12924 | Was it moonlight so wondrously flashing? |
12924 | Was it well for Amy to marry as she did? |
12924 | Was there a man dismayed? |
12924 | We have a right to ask of each poem three questions:"How does it charm our senses? |
12924 | We have no slaves at home.--Then why abroad? |
12924 | We know thee and we love thee best; For art thou not of British blood? |
12924 | We''ll cross the Tarnar hand to hand, The Exe shall be no stay; We''ll side by side from strand to strand, And who shall bid us nay? |
12924 | Westphalia? |
12924 | Wha can fill a coward''s grave? |
12924 | Wha for Scotland''s king and law Freedom''s sword will strongly draw, Freeman stand, or freeman fa''? |
12924 | Wha sae base as be a slave? |
12924 | Wha will be a traitor knave? |
12924 | What are the thoughts that are stirring his breast? |
12924 | What can he tell who treads thy shore? |
12924 | What cares he? |
12924 | What cares he? |
12924 | What cares he? |
12924 | What cares he? |
12924 | What constitutes a state? |
12924 | What hallows ground where heroes sleep? |
12924 | What health to France, if France be she, Whom martial progress only charms? |
12924 | What is the German''s fatherland? |
12924 | What is the German''s fatherland? |
12924 | What is the German''s fatherland? |
12924 | What is the German''s fatherland? |
12924 | What is the German''s fatherland? |
12924 | What is the German''s fatherland? |
12924 | What is the German''s fatherland? |
12924 | What is the mystical vision he sees? |
12924 | What light is thrown on the character of his love by his outbursts against Amy? |
12924 | What man is there so bold that he should say,"Thus, and thus only, would I have the Sea"? |
12924 | What matter if our feet are torn? |
12924 | What matter if our shoes are worn? |
12924 | What means this restless glow? |
12924 | What of the bow? |
12924 | What of the cord? |
12924 | What of the men? |
12924 | What of the shaft? |
12924 | What profit now that we have bound The whole round world with nets of gold, If hidden in our heart is found The care that groweth never old? |
12924 | What profit that our galleys ride, Pine- forest like, on every main? |
12924 | What sought they thus afar? |
12924 | What suggestions are there regarding the characters of Amy and Edith? |
12924 | What the roll Of drums? |
12924 | What then? |
12924 | What though no monument epitaphed Be built above each grave? |
12924 | What though no sculptured shaft Immortalize each brave? |
12924 | What to him are all our wars?-- What but death- bemocking folly? |
12924 | What to him is friend or foeman, Rise of moon or set of sun, Hand of man or kiss of woman? |
12924 | What''s hallowed ground? |
12924 | What''s hallowed ground? |
12924 | What''s the mercy despots feel? |
12924 | What, Morris, a tear? |
12924 | What, was it a dream? |
12924 | When can their glory fade? |
12924 | When obedience to parental wishes and love are in conflict, which should be followed? |
12924 | When was ever his right hand Over any time or land Stretched as now beneath the sun? |
12924 | When wilt thou take thy bride?" |
12924 | When, doffed his casque, he felt free air, Around''gan Marmion wildly stare:--"Where''s Harry Blount? |
12924 | Where are the brave, the strong, the fleet? |
12924 | Where are the men who went forth in the morning, Hope brightly beaming in every face? |
12924 | Where be your tongues that late mocked at heaven and hell and fate? |
12924 | Where hast thou got it? |
12924 | Where is my cabin door, fast by the wildwood? |
12924 | Where is our English chivalry? |
12924 | Where is the grave of Sir Arthur O''Kellyn? |
12924 | Where is the mother that looked on my childhood? |
12924 | Where sea- gulls skim the Baltic''s brine? |
12924 | Where the sand drifts along the shore? |
12924 | Who found me in wine you drank once? |
12924 | Who gave me the goods that went since? |
12924 | Who guards to- day my stream divine?" |
12924 | Who helped me to gold I spent since? |
12924 | Who made the law thet hurts, John,_ Heads I win-- ditto tails_? |
12924 | Who now shall lead thy scattered children forth, And long- accustomed bondage uncreate? |
12924 | Who raised me the house that sank once? |
12924 | Who would soothe your pain? |
12924 | Whose banner do I see, boys? |
12924 | Whose heart has ne''er within him burned, As home his footsteps he hath turned From wandering on a foreign strand? |
12924 | Whose love do you think was the greatest, Amy''s, or his, or the Squire''s? |
12924 | Why are the lines of this poem so easily carried in the memory? |
12924 | Why called Trochaic Octameter? |
12924 | Why champ your teeth in pain? |
12924 | Why change the titles of your streets? |
12924 | Why did I cross the deep? |
12924 | Why in the scabbard rattle, So wild, so fierce for battle? |
12924 | Why is the later one less popular? |
12924 | Why is this metre peculiarly adapted to the sentiment of"Locksley Hall"? |
12924 | Why rest with babes and slaves? |
12924 | Why talk so dreffle big, John, Of honor when it meant You did n''t care a fig, John, But jest for_ ten per cent_? |
12924 | Why the de''il dinna ye march forward in order? |
12924 | Why, then, and for what are we waiting? |
12924 | Why? |
12924 | Will Gaul or Muscovite redress ye? |
12924 | Will ye give it up to slaves? |
12924 | Will ye look for greener graves? |
12924 | Will ye to your_ homes_ retire? |
12924 | Wilt thou strike a blow for it? |
12924 | World, art thou''ware of a storm? |
12924 | Would it be fair to judge of Amy and her husband by what he says of them in his first anguish? |
12924 | Would they not feel their children tread With clanging chains above their head? |
12924 | Yet are red heels and long- laced skirts, For stumps and briars meet, sir? |
12924 | You have the Pyrrhic dance as yet,-- Where is the Pyrrhic phalanx gone? |
12924 | You have the letters Cadmus gave,-- Think ye he meant them for a slave? |
12924 | You wonder why we''re hot, John? |
12924 | Young Romance raised his dreamy eyes, O''erhung with paly locks of gold,--"Why smite,"he asked in sad surprise,"The fair, the old?" |
12924 | Your stage- plays and your sonnets, your diamonds and your spades? |
12924 | _( Chorus)__ King Charles, and who''ll do him right now? |
12924 | _( Chorus)__ King Charles, and who''ll do him right now? |
12924 | a soldier''s spirit in you all? |
12924 | am I all alone In the dreary night and the drizzling rain? |
12924 | and seest thou, dreaming in pain, Thy mother stand in the piazza, searching the list of the slain?" |
12924 | and silent all? |
12924 | and where art thou, My country? |
12924 | and wouldst thou know Why we should call it Father Land? |
12924 | and"How does it put a deeper meaning into the events it records?" |
12924 | and"What is its revelation to the life of our senses, our hearts, and our souls?" |
12924 | are not your beings pure? |
12924 | can a Roman senate long debate Which of the two to choose, slavery or death? |
12924 | can it be That this is all remains of thee? |
12924 | can man resign thee, Once having felt thy generous flame? |
12924 | cried the caliph;"is it, friend, a secret blow? |
12924 | do ye hear him where he comes? |
12924 | do ye know him as he comes, In thunder of the cannon and roll of the drums, As we go marching on? |
12924 | he cried,"my bleeding country save!-- Is there no hand on high to shield the brave? |
12924 | he gruffly said, A moment pausing to regard her;--"Why weepest thou, my little chit?" |
12924 | how shall I thank thee for all? |
12924 | is this the end? |
12924 | know ye not, Who would be free themselves must strike the blow? |
12924 | long abandoned by pleasure, Why did it dote on a fast- fading treasure? |
12924 | men, and wash not The stain away in blood? |
12924 | must this last? |
12924 | must thou yield For every inch of ground a son? |
12924 | run you not, then, Just where you please and when?" |
12924 | say we,-- White, yaller, black, an''brown, John; Now which is your idee? |
12924 | say, does that star- spangled banner yet wave O''er the land of the free, and the home of the brave? |
12924 | shall ne''er again The smile of thy most holy face, From thine ethereal dwelling- place, Rejoice the wretched, weary race Of discord- breathing men? |
12924 | silent still? |
12924 | the foe Who madly seeks your overthrow, Dread not his rage and power; What though your courage sometimes faints? |
12924 | was it the night- wind that rustled the leaves? |
12924 | was there ever such a knight, in friendship or in war, As our sovereign lord, King Henry, the soldier of Navarre? |
12924 | what means the trampling of horsemen on our rear? |
12924 | what mortal hand Can e''er untie the filial band That knits me to thy rugged strand? |
12924 | what shall men say of thee, Before whose feet the worlds divide? |
12924 | what solemn scenes on Snowdon''s height Descending slow their glittering skirts unroll? |
12924 | what treachery is here? |
12924 | who comes there? |
12924 | who goes there?" |
12924 | why do n''t ye proceed? |
12924 | why left I my hame? |
12924 | why left I the land Where my forefathers sleep? |
12924 | will they scorn Tre, Pol, and Pen? |
12924 | will they scorn Tre, Pol, and Pen? |
12924 | will they scorn Tre, Pol, and Pen? |
12924 | wilt thou never replace me In a mansion of peace, where no perils can chase me? |
12924 | would not grow warm When thoughts like these give cheer? |
30343 | _ Is it not then unjust that Fops should still__ Force one to_ laugh,_ and then take laughing ill?_ II. |
30343 | A. Sykes[? |
30343 | And has not Success justify''d his Method? |
30343 | And shall the_ Gravity_ with which Mankind is thus banter''d out of their common Sense, excuse these Matters from_ Ridicule_? |
30343 | Are these, or such as these the_ clearest Miracles God ever wrought_? |
30343 | But what are these_ clearest Miracles God ever wrought_? |
30343 | Do such Miracles deserve a serious Regard? |
30343 | For what wonder is it if we, who have more Liberty, have less Dexterity in that egregious way of_ Raillery_ and_ Ridicule_?" |
30343 | Or had you a mind to tell us he was no_ Poet_? |
30343 | Or that he was out of the Temptation of changing his Religion for Bread?" |
30343 | What Considerations can make us amends for the Loss of such excellent_ drolling Writings_, which promote Religion as well as Mirth? |
30343 | What a fruitful Harvest would the Legends, Tricks, spiritual Jugglings, Convents, and Nunneries, yield to a good Poet? |
30343 | What think you of this? |
30343 | Whereupon the King turn''d and said to the Bishop of_ Winchester_,_ Well, my Lord, what say you? |
30343 | _ Middleton_ stop''d him, and said, who told you so? |
30343 | would the poor Vintner last,_}"_ If all that drink must_ judge,_ and every Guest_}"_ Be allow''d to have an understanding_ Taste?} |
16415 | A cut- throat, a robber, a highwayman, a true gentleman? |
16415 | Ah, some day you will tell me about this life of yours-- will you not? |
16415 | Alas, is he dead, dame? |
16415 | Am I such a tyrant? |
16415 | And d''ye think, lad, that that thought has na''cursed_ me_, and keepit me from them that loved me? 16415 And had your father any news from Wancote?" |
16415 | And have they always lived together? |
16415 | And have they no clue? |
16415 | And have you brought your niece? |
16415 | And have you_ really_ asked him to dinner? |
16415 | And how has he been supported? |
16415 | And how many people did he eat? |
16415 | And how should she know how to walk? |
16415 | And is he going to stay here? |
16415 | And now you will sing me my''Nobil Amore''? |
16415 | And pray who''s called Goneril? |
16415 | And the other? |
16415 | And the reward? |
16415 | And were there no coach- horses, no carriages? 16415 And what says Mr. Ives? |
16415 | And where was his wife all the time, that she could not prevent it, I should like to know? 16415 And who is he, this Jack?" |
16415 | And why did you not go? |
16415 | And you really mean that I have n''t tired you out yet with all my moods and cross words? 16415 Are my eyes not honest?" |
16415 | Are the peasants very much afraid of you, signore? |
16415 | Are there more of the brood about? |
16415 | Are we to follow the turtle doves? |
16415 | Are you armed? |
16415 | Are you tired, Mistress Betty? |
16415 | Are you_ really_ willing to marry me? |
16415 | As you please,said Bella,"but it does n''t in the least matter-- you know I''ve a scolding in store for you, Teddy?" |
16415 | Betty,cried Mr. Ives with a sob,"why do you show me so dismal a picture? |
16415 | Brigida? 16415 But am I to understand that you deny his identity?" |
16415 | But how manage it, if I may not go myself? |
16415 | But how will you manage? 16415 But is he pleased?" |
16415 | But what are you talking about, sister? |
16415 | But what then? 16415 But what would you have? |
16415 | But why not? 16415 But you women dearly love a little gossip, do n''t you? |
16415 | But, madame, how can one-- after you? |
16415 | Captain Dacres, is that you? |
16415 | Dear Mees Goneril, why is it impossible? |
16415 | Did the reverend gentleman mean Miss Betty''s teaspoons? |
16415 | Did ye never go to school? |
16415 | Did you say through the window? 16415 Do n''t smoke, eh? |
16415 | Do n''t ye know your own friends? 16415 Do you hear the white horse''s hoofs?" |
16415 | Do you mean to say, sir, that you knew it was there? |
16415 | Do you think there''d be any harm in leaving it alone, sister Betty? |
16415 | Do you think,she says at last, very slowly,"that if-- if he were rid of me, he would marry her? |
16415 | Do you want to get rid of me? |
16415 | Does Mr. Ives live here? |
16415 | Done what? |
16415 | Eh, Miss Betty, why should ye chase away good luck with the minister? |
16415 | For whom are those flowers? |
16415 | Happiness? |
16415 | Has John come home? |
16415 | Have you hurt yourself? 16415 Have you known griefs, sorrows?" |
16415 | He has no right to go into it at all with the views he holds; and, pray, whom is he to take in to dinner? |
16415 | His name? |
16415 | How came he here? |
16415 | How could he have got into the house? |
16415 | How do you know that he is much away? |
16415 | How is Miss Prunty? |
16415 | How many good- conduct stripes do you ken me to have lost of your ain knowledge? |
16415 | How often? |
16415 | How tiresome the sun is, let me put up your parasol? |
16415 | I am so glad to see you, Mary? 16415 I did n''t know the precise spot, my dear madam, but----""You did n''t see it, sir, I hope?" |
16415 | I have burnt my finger? |
16415 | I suppose,laughs Virginia,"that women do n''t insist on marrying him by force, do they?" |
16415 | I''ll lay a wager you never got that journal from old Plon- Plon? |
16415 | I? 16415 Interest?" |
16415 | Is he a good padrone? 16415 Is he old, then?" |
16415 | Is he young? |
16415 | Is it not my case, too? 16415 Is it not so?" |
16415 | Is it so? |
16415 | Is it true about the robbery? |
16415 | Is not my Goneril a charming little bà © bà ©? |
16415 | Is not that the name of Wild Jack''s famous white horse? |
16415 | Is that an important thing? |
16415 | Is there a finer man than me in the regiment? |
16415 | Is this the door? |
16415 | It is then true, my Betty? 16415 Jack?" |
16415 | Madame,she pleaded,"may I sing one of Angiolino''s songs?" |
16415 | Mees Goneril,said the signorino at last,"do you know why I brought you out here?" |
16415 | Mind his own business, I should say, rather I That''s what they have to swear to do in the marriage service, have n''t they? |
16415 | My dear child, have I frightened you? 16415 No?" |
16415 | Not a bit of it; we ai n''t going to be stumped for one failure; we''ll go somewhere-- where shall it be, Nina, eh? |
16415 | Now what possible good could it do to you? 16415 Now, good woman, who have you got hiding here?" |
16415 | Of course"But why, then, do n''t they ask you themselves? 16415 Of whom?" |
16415 | Old do you call her? |
16415 | Our sairgent, now,drawled the Scotchman,"wad ye say he was a better man than me?" |
16415 | Shall we say good- night? |
16415 | Shall we usurp their rights? |
16415 | Sir,said Betty slowly,"I imagine that you carry arms?" |
16415 | So it''s she that''s called Goneril? |
16415 | So the cousin did not come? |
16415 | Suppose I suggested that she saw the figures on the lamp of a cab, what then? |
16415 | Taken? |
16415 | That I hear; but what were you doing to make any one so cruel? |
16415 | The husband of Madame Didier? 16415 Then I should have drawn myself up, always with dignity-- thus--''This, gentlemen, is none other than Jean Didier!''--''Who? |
16415 | Then why in Heaven''s name do n''t you do as I bid you? |
16415 | They ride? |
16415 | This poor man bleeds; ah, why do you not go? |
16415 | Tickets, eh? |
16415 | Tomorrow did you say? |
16415 | Vous croyez? |
16415 | Was I grumbling? |
16415 | Was there no warning conveyed in these strange combinations, Dame? |
16415 | Was this then the mystery? |
16415 | Well? |
16415 | Well? |
16415 | Were you very much frightened? |
16415 | Wh-- at do you wish me to do? |
16415 | Wha goes there? |
16415 | What are Mr. Vansittart''s good points? |
16415 | What are you putting up that top- knot of yours at me for? |
16415 | What are you talking about? |
16415 | What can I give you? |
16415 | What can it mean? |
16415 | What do you make out of all she says? |
16415 | What do you mean about Harford? |
16415 | What do you mean? |
16415 | What do you mean? |
16415 | What do you ride? |
16415 | What do you think has happened? |
16415 | What for are ye stan''in''there, ye fule? |
16415 | What for didna ye gang for the whusky? |
16415 | What has happened, Madame Didier? 16415 What is amiss, sister Kitty?" |
16415 | What is he doing? 16415 What is he like? |
16415 | What is his family? 16415 What is it?" |
16415 | What is she talking about? |
16415 | What is that blood? |
16415 | What money have ye, laddie? |
16415 | What shall I do? |
16415 | What then? |
16415 | What''s that? |
16415 | What-- what was the meaning of this flying by night, sir? |
16415 | When shall you be back? |
16415 | Where do you meet him? |
16415 | Where is he? |
16415 | Whisht, laddie,said the sentry;"are ye there after all? |
16415 | Who is it? |
16415 | Who is singing like that? |
16415 | Who knows who may be there? |
16415 | Who knows? |
16415 | Who you are? |
16415 | Who? 16415 Who? |
16415 | Why do they look at me so strangely, father? |
16415 | Why do you ask? |
16415 | Why he''s married; did n''t you know? |
16415 | Why should you leave me? |
16415 | Why, sir? |
16415 | Why? 16415 Why?" |
16415 | Why? |
16415 | Will the wheel hold out, think you? |
16415 | Will you believe me, I wonder? |
16415 | Will you have your fortunes told, my good gentleman? 16415 Will you hear your fortunes? |
16415 | Will you try? |
16415 | Will you vouchsafe me the extreme pleasure of being your escort home? |
16415 | Wo n''t you tell me something about the old ladies with whom you are going to leave me? |
16415 | Worse? 16415 Would she have me, my Bet?" |
16415 | Would you rather not have it? |
16415 | You are not angry with me for coming, are you? |
16415 | You do n''t think so? |
16415 | You think it will do her good? |
16415 | You took the message? |
16415 | Your cousin? |
16415 | ''_ Holà !_--thunder and lightning, who may this be?''" |
16415 | ), one thing, dear father: will you take Mary to church, even though I should not be there, and marry her? |
16415 | --"What rounds?" |
16415 | Aloud he said,"But-- M. Plon-- am I not here now?" |
16415 | Am I not the same Betty I used to be?" |
16415 | And I am to wish you joy?" |
16415 | And Virginia? |
16415 | And have you brought your_ charming_ young relation?" |
16415 | And if you do not like it, Brigida, what''s in a name? |
16415 | And may he stay to dinner, cara signora?" |
16415 | And then she added in a conciliatory tone,"Wo n''t you look at the little fellow, sir? |
16415 | And then the parson''s deep round voice broke the silence, saying,--"Is that you, lad? |
16415 | And what is one at seventeen but an innocent, playful, charming little kitten?" |
16415 | And you have not many relations?" |
16415 | Are not men our natural protectors?" |
16415 | Are you well, my bonnie dear? |
16415 | As Virginia wends her way upstairs to bed, she says to herself with a heavy sigh,"Why should he abuse marriage? |
16415 | As much? |
16415 | At the same moment he is saying to himself:"What sort of woman is this, and what on earth shall I talk to her about? |
16415 | At this moment some men passing to the canteen shouted,"M''Alister?" |
16415 | Aunt Jane always said it would be my ruin, and so it will be-- after this, you see, Rowley will believe anything of me? |
16415 | Betty feared nothing on earth; should she be scared by the odd feeling in her heart that made it beat so fast and loud? |
16415 | Between her sobs the girl jerked out piteously:"PÃ © rine come back?" |
16415 | But seeing that she was too late, and that Jean was already discovered, she rushed into his arms, crying out:"What has happened?" |
16415 | But they are not relations?" |
16415 | But what did that matter, when he had been overheard to swear that luck should not leave Lingborough till Miss Betty owned half the country side? |
16415 | But why that allusion to Lord Harford? |
16415 | But,"his voice mastered by emotion,"how dare I say such words to you? |
16415 | By- the- by, how did you decide about that hat I saw; do you think it will suit you? |
16415 | Captain Dacres? |
16415 | Could the signorino have suddenly gone mad? |
16415 | Could ye read a bit to me, laddie?" |
16415 | Devereux?" |
16415 | Did I ever speer about your past life, and whar ye came from?" |
16415 | Did no one see ye?" |
16415 | Did ye ever see me the worse of liquor?" |
16415 | Did ye rin awa'', laddie?" |
16415 | Did you ever hear of_ me_ skimming around the world in search of adventure?" |
16415 | Did you ever see_ me_ in a balloon, sir? |
16415 | Did you know the stone was out?" |
16415 | Do you carry much money?" |
16415 | Do you feel ill? |
16415 | Do you hear?" |
16415 | Do you think he will? |
16415 | Do you think you will ever learn to make soup?" |
16415 | Do you understand?" |
16415 | Do you wish to lose that peerless daughter of yours? |
16415 | Does he welcome the stranger who takes from him his only child?" |
16415 | Does it hurt?" |
16415 | Does she care for him?" |
16415 | Ever up in a balloon?" |
16415 | Goneril, will you come and walk with me on the terrace?" |
16415 | Gonerilla? |
16415 | Had he not agonised after her? |
16415 | Had she not been warned, ere ever she met him, that he abjured marriage? |
16415 | Has anything gone wrong? |
16415 | Has he parents living, brothers and sisters? |
16415 | Have I changed? |
16415 | Have you brought tickets for the comedy?" |
16415 | Have you forgotten the robbery?" |
16415 | Have you lost your headache?" |
16415 | He did not speak for a minute or two, and then he said:--"Would you like to live here always?" |
16415 | He had made his way into this room through the window, Monsieur-- Monsieur--?" |
16415 | He had never failed, and why should failure be probable now? |
16415 | He took Mr. Ives aside, and said abruptly,"Are you mad, Ives? |
16415 | His heart smote him; and yet-- had he not suffered? |
16415 | How can we sit still or lounge about in our peaceful homes, when we think of you on that day?" |
16415 | How?" |
16415 | I ask you what sort of a life is that for a man of my stamp? |
16415 | I recollect taking her to school in my wooden sledge, and she-- What''s the girl about now? |
16415 | I shall wait up till the clock strikes twelve, but if he does not come( and of course no one can tell how long business may detain him, can they? |
16415 | I suppose it is in your family?" |
16415 | I suppose the chimneys are wide in Spain?" |
16415 | I wonder whether-- shall I run to the place and see?" |
16415 | If he had been taunted with being a vagrant boy before, what would be said now if he presented himself, a true tramp, to the farm- bailiff? |
16415 | If man could supply the place of God and Saviour now, whither should she fly when he was torn from her or grew weary of her? |
16415 | If we could you would provide us with plenty, eh, my child? |
16415 | Is Philip happy? |
16415 | Is Virginia happy? |
16415 | Is any one Happy? |
16415 | Is his fortune assured?" |
16415 | Is it the same for this gentle lady as for my rough self?" |
16415 | Is it they think me so cheeky?" |
16415 | Is that correct?" |
16415 | John Johnstone turned suddenly to her and said:"Do you still keep up your interest in that poor sinner Wild Jack, sweet Bet? |
16415 | Martin, just go out and look-- never mind the door,"and Mrs. Chetwode jumped up and stood so that she could hear the inquiry:"Is Mrs. Dacres here?" |
16415 | My dear Mary, how can you survive such a multitude of ailments?" |
16415 | No symptoms of a lady to dispense the hospitalities of Belton?" |
16415 | No? |
16415 | Nothing more to say?" |
16415 | Oh, Bella, what shall I do? |
16415 | Oh, what will become of me?" |
16415 | Plon?" |
16415 | Plon?" |
16415 | She was glad that she had no children-- could she live to be shamed by them, scorned by them? |
16415 | Stand about the corners of the Streets and ask every_ escarpe_ that passes?" |
16415 | Tell me who did it?" |
16415 | The soup-- PÃ © rine, you unfortunate child, have you touched the soup?" |
16415 | Then he became almost as reckless as to PÃ © rine; what did her seeing him matter when so soon he would be a free man? |
16415 | Then he said,--"Why do n''t ye give it up, M''Alister?" |
16415 | There is n''t a soul in London-- who''s to see? |
16415 | There she sits, and will sit till Marie comes back; I wonder what she thinks would happen to her if she were to look round? |
16415 | Thus far had she got in her meditations, when she felt herself addressed in clear, half- mocking tones--"And how, this evening, is Madamigella Ruth?" |
16415 | To look at him, would any one suppose now that he could be the husband of madame? |
16415 | To please me, father, to please me?" |
16415 | Was it a new idea that flashed into Mary''s mind that caused her to start? |
16415 | Was it so hard to grow old? |
16415 | Was there any hope that the Highlander could keep himself from the whiskey? |
16415 | Well, PÃ © rine, my child, it interests you-- this occupation-- does it not? |
16415 | Wha gets my money? |
16415 | What could a boy like that possibly be to me? |
16415 | What dreams of liberty in the tree tops, with John Broom for a playfellow, passed through his crested head, who shall say? |
16415 | What fills the canteen and the kirkyard? |
16415 | What gars a hand that can grip a broadsword tremble like a woman''s? |
16415 | What harm is there in it?" |
16415 | What has keepit me from being an officer, that had served my country in twa battles when oor quartermaster hadna enlisted? |
16415 | What is it?" |
16415 | What loses me decent folks''respect and, waur than that, my ain? |
16415 | What lost me my stripes? |
16415 | What more likely? |
16415 | What must inevitably be the sufferings of a proud and pure- minded woman, who knows herself to be an object of scorn to her sex? |
16415 | What robs a man of health and wealth and peace? |
16415 | What ruins weans and women, and makes mair homes desolate than war? |
16415 | What sort of confused nonsense is running through her head now? |
16415 | What then?" |
16415 | What was the use of disputing with a man like this? |
16415 | What we want is''yes''or''no''Is it Jean Didier? |
16415 | What''s the meaning of all this? |
16415 | When a candle had been brought in and placed near the bed, the Highlander roused himself and asked,--"Is there a Bible on yon table? |
16415 | When did he ask you to be his wife?" |
16415 | Where?" |
16415 | Where?" |
16415 | Who can it be? |
16415 | Who''s the man?" |
16415 | Why could he not stop-- stop and have dinner with her? |
16415 | Why did I let her waste all these moments? |
16415 | Why did n''t I go myself? |
16415 | Why did n''t I go? |
16415 | Why not send her to Newbury to her aunt? |
16415 | Why-- who''d a thought of seeing you?" |
16415 | Why? |
16415 | Will you allow me to thank you for a very pleasant evening, and to say good night?" |
16415 | Would she regard them as foolish and unpractical, and her respect for Miss Betty''s opinion be lessened thenceforward? |
16415 | Would the grand rounds be challenged at the three roads to- night? |
16415 | Ye never heard me say ought of my father or my mither?" |
16415 | You find me much altered, do you not?" |
16415 | You remember, signorino?" |
16415 | You understand?" |
16415 | You will sing to me to- night, as it will be the last time?" |
16415 | You''ll be more careful another time, wo n''t you? |
16415 | You''re not Rowley, are you?" |
16415 | _ Allons!_ Something difficult, something to take away, shall it be?" |
16415 | and are you well? |
16415 | and the good gentleman your father?" |
16415 | besides, how is she to know? |
16415 | but how can he stretch out his hand? |
16415 | cried Goneril, quite excited;"were they singers too?" |
16415 | do ye hear the pipes?" |
16415 | do you like him?" |
16415 | echoes Virginia bitterly,"what interest can it be to you?" |
16415 | exclaimed Rowley hastily"Do n''t you go""But why?" |
16415 | had his been a bed of roses? |
16415 | he asks,"or will you think me a mean hound who only seeks his own interest?" |
16415 | imploringly,"why will you not care for me who am ready to devote my life to you? |
16415 | le Commissaire_, you behold what a villain, what a desperate villain he looks? |
16415 | my pretty lady?" |
16415 | or has it died away in your gentle breast?" |
16415 | said Madame Didier, puzzled,"7639?" |
16415 | said Nina anxiously"Never mind, one thing is certain-- he did n''t see you""Perhaps it''s the beer-- he seems a little excited, do n''t you think?" |
16415 | seen Wild Jack?" |
16415 | that ran through the streets of Leith, with a creel on her back, as a lassie; and got out of her coach( lined with satin, you mind, sister Kitty?) |
16415 | what can we do? |
16415 | who''s to tell her?" |
16415 | you do n''t suppose it got there of itself, sister?" |
10643 | ''Are you a Christian?'' 10643 ''But as I intend, Atala, to become a Christian, what is there to prevent us marrying?'' |
10643 | ''Then who was your father, my beloved?'' 10643 ''What does it matter,''I exclaimed,''if you do not love me?'' |
10643 | ''What is his name?'' 10643 All alone here, brother?" |
10643 | Am I Graham''s favourite? |
10643 | An Indian lost in the woods? |
10643 | And I have said all these things? |
10643 | And Mr. Verdant Green''s compliments to yer, sir, and will you come up to his rooms and take a glass of wine with him, sir? |
10643 | And how did you manage on the twelfth? |
10643 | And how many hours a day did you do lessons? |
10643 | And now which is which? |
10643 | And now,said the other,"I suppose I may consider myself as the purchaser of this here animal for this young gentleman?" |
10643 | And the people-- what kind are they? |
10643 | And the trade? |
10643 | And what is it, pray? 10643 And what must I do for the Company?" |
10643 | And will Polly be content to live with me? |
10643 | And you dared,continued the verdurer,"to deceive us? |
10643 | And you must have become in some degree attached to it? |
10643 | And you saw that man murdered? |
10643 | And, pray, what is your business here and your name? |
10643 | Are you alone, Miss Fanny? |
10643 | Are you aware, sir, whether or not this gentleman''s wife is still living? |
10643 | Are you certain, Robert, you are not fretting about your frames and your business, and the war? |
10643 | Are you housekeeper, then? |
10643 | Are you in earnest? 10643 Are you not a Roman?" |
10643 | Are you positive you do n''t feel Hollow''s cottage too small for you, and narrow, and dismal? |
10643 | Are you possessed with a devil,he asked,"to talk in that manner to me when you are dying? |
10643 | Are you the person who wishes to make an honest penny by it? |
10643 | Are you up and dressed? |
10643 | Because you are sorry to leave it? |
10643 | But Mrs. James Helstone-- but my father''s wife, whom I do not remember to have seen, she is my mother? |
10643 | But has he power,said Frances,"to move Washington''s stubborn purpose?" |
10643 | But how do you account for it? |
10643 | But when you come to the beginning again? |
10643 | But why are you here? |
10643 | But would you like to travel now if your papa was with you? |
10643 | But, my dear Count,continued Samuel Brohl,"how could I let a man of your heroic worth and romantic character be forgotten by the world? |
10643 | But,said Dunwoodie,"he knew him not as an officer of the royal army?" |
10643 | Ca n''t a man ask a question here without being flogged? |
10643 | Can I do anything? |
10643 | Can I help you, sir? 10643 Can you affirm that you are not bitter at heart because rich and great people forget you?" |
10643 | Can you direct me to Brazenface College, please, sir? |
10643 | Can you endure this? |
10643 | Can you tell me what I ought to think of Samuel Brohl? |
10643 | Captain Wharton, do you go in to- night? |
10643 | Cheshire Puss,she said,"what sort of people live about here?" |
10643 | Conjugally? |
10643 | Dear Sarah, do n''t you know me? |
10643 | Do English gentlemen stare at their own countrywomen in public places like this? |
10643 | Do you feel ill, sir? |
10643 | Do you know what soothsayers I would consult? |
10643 | Do you mean that house with the battlements? |
10643 | Do you mean to say that these notes are not sufficient notes? |
10643 | Do you need her services? |
10643 | Do you not understand, Rohan? |
10643 | Do you recognise what you were born to be? |
10643 | Do you see yonder wicket gate? |
10643 | Do you take me for a dunce? 10643 Do you think I can stay to become nothing to you?" |
10643 | Do you think he suspects me? |
10643 | Do you think that she has really fallen in love with me? |
10643 | Do you think, because I am poor, obscure, plain, and little, I am soulless and heartless? 10643 Do you think, now, if he were to rise again from the grave that you would know him?" |
10643 | Do you want Graham? |
10643 | Does Cain dare to pray? 10643 Does your excellency think I have exposed my life and blasted my character for money? |
10643 | Enderly? 10643 First of all, tell me,"said Belle,"what a verb is?" |
10643 | For whom, sir? |
10643 | Has there been a strange gentleman staying with you during the storm? |
10643 | Hast thee any parents living? |
10643 | Have I ever refused my duty, sir? 10643 Have you any other news, friend?" |
10643 | Have you been at a public school? |
10643 | Have you heard that Major André has been hanged? |
10643 | Have you no blood in your veins? |
10643 | Have you noticed her? |
10643 | He is gone-- how, when, and whither? |
10643 | How am I to tell them? |
10643 | How chanced it that you never mentioned it to me? |
10643 | How did he look? |
10643 | How did you manage to lose yours? |
10643 | How did you pass the pickets in the plains? |
10643 | How is that? |
10643 | How long ago? |
10643 | How should he? |
10643 | How was I found, madam? |
10643 | How? |
10643 | How_ can_ I have done that? |
10643 | I wonder if I shall fall right_ through_ the earth? 10643 If he can not,"shouted Dunwoodie,"who can? |
10643 | Is Mr. Rochester living at Thornfield Hall now? |
10643 | Is Mrs. Dean within? |
10643 | Is it Robert? |
10643 | Is that the road to London? |
10643 | Is that young female your wife, young man? |
10643 | Is the river very deep? |
10643 | Is there any probability of movements below that will make travelling dangerous? |
10643 | Is there any writing? |
10643 | Is there no hope? |
10643 | Is this horse yours? |
10643 | Is this the happiness you told me of? |
10643 | Is what I hear true? 10643 Is your own shadow not enough for you? |
10643 | Jane, do you hear the nightingale singing in the wood? 10643 Jane,"he recommenced, as we slowly strayed down in the direction of the horse- chestnut,"Thornfield is a pleasant place in summer, is it not?" |
10643 | Man of terrible knowledge,I demanded,"tell me for what crime this judgment comes?" |
10643 | Mary,I said,"how are you?" |
10643 | Maud, do n''t you know me? 10643 May I see Madame Beck?" |
10643 | Mistress Dean? 10643 Monsieur, how could I live in the interval?" |
10643 | Mortal enemies? |
10643 | Mrs. Fairfax,I called out,"did you hear that laugh? |
10643 | Must I move on, sir? |
10643 | My wife? |
10643 | Not here,he said hastily,"what good can it do here-- a vulgar scuffle between two gentlemen?" |
10643 | Nothing_ whatever_? |
10643 | Now, which shall I sell,said the Count;"the Larinski ring, or the bracelet which belonged to Samuel Brohl? |
10643 | Oh, Cathy, how can I bear it? |
10643 | One side of_ what_? 10643 Peter Magennis-- what am I sayin''? |
10643 | Polly going? |
10643 | Polly,I interrupted,"should you like to travel?" |
10643 | Sir, I want work; may I earn a penny? |
10643 | Surely, sir,cried the father,"you will keep secret the discovery which your being in my house has enabled you to make?" |
10643 | Tell me,said Miss Garth, in a voice faint with emotion, as the lawyer laid bare the sad story,"why did they go to London?" |
10643 | Thank you,said the ostler;"and now let me ask whether you are up to all the ways of this here place?" |
10643 | The first question I have to ask is-- who and what is that man Macari? |
10643 | The train Mr. Vanstone travelled by? |
10643 | Then the eleventh day must have been a holiday? |
10643 | Then you are going to be married, sir? |
10643 | Then you keep moving round, I suppose? |
10643 | Then you meant nothing, after all? |
10643 | They are going to the Grange, then? |
10643 | To America together? |
10643 | Was it Grace Poole? |
10643 | Was it known how it originated? |
10643 | Well,replied the other,"what more can you say, indeed? |
10643 | Were any other lives lost? |
10643 | Were you waiting for me? |
10643 | What are ye for? 10643 What are you going to flog that man for, sir?" |
10643 | What are you laughing about? |
10643 | What business, sir? |
10643 | What can I do for you? |
10643 | What day of the month is it? |
10643 | What do I mean by the roving line? 10643 What do you ask for him?" |
10643 | What do you ask for him? |
10643 | What do you know about this business? |
10643 | What do you mean by the roving line? |
10643 | What do you mean? |
10643 | What do you think, Antoinette, of an excursion to Silvaplana Lake? |
10643 | What do you want, you rogue? |
10643 | What dog is this? |
10643 | What has she done? |
10643 | What is it you have to tell me? |
10643 | What is it? 10643 What is it?" |
10643 | What is papa to you? 10643 What is the good of talking in that silly way?" |
10643 | What is the matter with you, dear Antoinette? |
10643 | What is the matter? |
10643 | What is the nature of the impediment? |
10643 | What is the offence of poor Birch? |
10643 | What is the source of the sunshine I perceive about you? |
10643 | What is this, Caesar? |
10643 | What is this? 10643 What is thy name, lad?" |
10643 | What neighbours? |
10643 | What of him? 10643 What the devil is the matter?" |
10643 | What trial is it? |
10643 | What was the matter with her? 10643 What will ye buy? |
10643 | What''s too horrible? |
10643 | What,I cried,"you come back?" |
10643 | Where are you going with that heavy burden on your back? |
10643 | Where do you come from? |
10643 | Where do you see the necessity? |
10643 | Where does he live now? |
10643 | Where dost thee come from? |
10643 | Where is he? 10643 Where is your nephew?" |
10643 | Who am I? 10643 Who am I?" |
10643 | Who cares for you? |
10643 | Who do you know at New Orleans? |
10643 | Who goes out now? |
10643 | Who hath believed our report? 10643 Who is that?" |
10643 | Who is this? |
10643 | Who knows? 10643 Who speaks to Uncas?" |
10643 | Whose house is it? |
10643 | Why are we mortal enemies; my dear Princess? |
10643 | Why are you hurrying away in this manner from the City of Destruction, in which you were born? |
10643 | Why did you despise me? 10643 Why have you not on your gown, sir?" |
10643 | Why not? |
10643 | Why not? |
10643 | Why not? |
10643 | Why should I deny the affair to an eye- witness? 10643 Why so?" |
10643 | Why, Phoebe, you''re never going to be such a fool as to take that? |
10643 | Why,said he to Christian and Hopeful,"should you choose to live? |
10643 | Will the white man speak these words at the stake? |
10643 | Will you condescend to try it? |
10643 | Will you ever give me any more of your jaw? |
10643 | Will you have a little more water, sir? 10643 Will you walk a little faster?" |
10643 | With my own lips? |
10643 | With you, uncle? |
10643 | Would it be of any use, now,thought Alice,"to speak to this mouse? |
10643 | Would that be a very great misfortune, father darling? |
10643 | Would you like to see a little of a Lobster Quadrille? |
10643 | Would_ you_ like cats if you were me? |
10643 | Yes, young man, your wife-- your lawful certificated wife? |
10643 | Yorkshire? |
10643 | You are going, then,he cried, taking my hand,"and you give me not the smallest hope of your return?" |
10643 | You did n''t tell''i m about the''oax, sir, did yer? |
10643 | You do n''t mean to tell me that she''d spake to, or make any freedoms whatsomever wid young Condy Dalton? 10643 You do n''t turn sick at the sight of blood?" |
10643 | You know what to beautify is, I suppose? |
10643 | You love me, Caroline? |
10643 | You would,she said,"never let anyone influence you against me, would you, darling?" |
10643 | Your heavy difficulties are lifted? |
10643 | ''What does this matter to me?'' |
10643 | ''Where does he live?'' |
10643 | --arrah, what can that be for? |
10643 | A quick, involuntary turn of the hidden face seemed to ask him"Why?" |
10643 | Alice did not feel encouraged to ask any more questions about it, so she turned to the Mock Turtle, and said,"What else had you to learn?" |
10643 | All Jerusalem in arms, and yet you scorn your time to gain laurels?" |
10643 | An'', thank God, we were all in time to clear the innocent, and punish the guilty; ay, an''reward the good, too, eh, Toddy?" |
10643 | An''is she to die in this miserable way in a Christian land?" |
10643 | An''what''s this on it? |
10643 | And a man named Evangelist came to him, and he said to Evangelist,"Whither must I fly?" |
10643 | And is it not grievous to think on, that the very thing you are forbidden to do, might you but do it would yield you both wisdom and honour?" |
10643 | And so you were waiting for your people when you sat on that stile?" |
10643 | And what ailed the chestnut- tree? |
10643 | And what would you do then? |
10643 | And what, my dear Chamisso, do you think I did then? |
10643 | Are there any rooms to lodge me in, I wonder? |
10643 | As the clergyman''s lips unclosed to ask,"Wilt thou have this woman for thy wedded wife?" |
10643 | Before evening I was downstairs, and seated in a corner, when Graham arrived home, and entered with the question:"How is your patient, mamma?" |
10643 | But I suppose if the landlord of the house vouches for me and my notes you will have no objection to part with the horse to me?" |
10643 | But after the game of croquet, the Queen said to Alice,"Have you seen the Mock Turtle yet?" |
10643 | But at the moment Sally did not hear, and the ragged boy mustered courage to speak for the first time?" |
10643 | But how? |
10643 | But if it was betther, you should just be as welcome to it, an''what more can you say?" |
10643 | But she asked aloud,"What is that?" |
10643 | But what did it matter? |
10643 | But what does it matter? |
10643 | But what had befallen the night? |
10643 | But what should the tale be about? |
10643 | Catherine perused it eagerly, and then asked,"Does Ellen like you?" |
10643 | Come, I beg your pardon; what more can I do? |
10643 | Could I believe she loved me? |
10643 | Could it be one of the places from which he kept watch on the plains below? |
10643 | Did I break through one of your rings that you spread that ice on the causeway?" |
10643 | Did you know that my cousin Louis was tutor in your uncle''s family before the Sympsons came down here?" |
10643 | Did you not hear the mission bell, which we ring every night so that strangers may find their way?'' |
10643 | Do you imagine it is merely because of my poverty? |
10643 | Do you know anything of his history?" |
10643 | Do you know him?" |
10643 | Do you know what I am thinking of? |
10643 | Do you love me? |
10643 | Do you not remember, my dear Count, the tales you used to tell us, when we were living together in a garret in Bucharest? |
10643 | Do you remember your last instructions? |
10643 | Do you sincerely wish me to be your wife?" |
10643 | Do you think he will come this way?" |
10643 | Do you think you could bear to part with your young companion for two or three months? |
10643 | Do you weep at leaving your native land?'' |
10643 | Do you wish that Robert''s brother were more highly placed?" |
10643 | Does n''t the dark, wet day, an''the rain, rain, rain foretell it? |
10643 | Does n''t the rottin''crops, the unhealthy air, an''the green damp foretell it? |
10643 | Does n''t the sky without a sun, the heavy clouds, an''the angry fire of the west foretell it? |
10643 | Edgar?" |
10643 | For what I felt there was no help, and how could I help feeling? |
10643 | Fortunati''s purse?" |
10643 | Had the defenders waited for this signal? |
10643 | Had, or had not, Sir Clement Willoughby any share in causing your inquietude?" |
10643 | Harper?" |
10643 | Harper?" |
10643 | Have a cigar, old chap?" |
10643 | Have you ever known me to hang back, or to be insolent, or not to know my work?" |
10643 | Have you walked from Gimmerton?" |
10643 | He continued:"If I were to go beyond seas for two or three years, should you welcome me on my return?" |
10643 | He inquired kindly for all the family, and was told that Guy and Walter were as tall as himself, while the daughter----"Your daughter?" |
10643 | He looked at the letter, then scrutinised me, and said,"Do you happen to know, my lord, a certain Peter Schlemihl, who lost his shadow?" |
10643 | He stopped, laid his hand upon my arm, and asked,"Of whom hath the prophet spoken? |
10643 | He then called out was that Condy Dalton? |
10643 | He woke with the cry:"Is there a flood? |
10643 | Heathcliff?" |
10643 | Him that_ is to come_, still_ to come?_"Then he left me. |
10643 | How can I now fall wildly and suddenly in love with him? |
10643 | How has he been living? |
10643 | How has he got rich? |
10643 | How is it that you have gone so far out of the way?" |
10643 | How they tracked you through the snow- covered forest by the trail of blood you left behind you? |
10643 | How you fought in the streets of Warsaw against the Cossacks? |
10643 | I knew he lied, but how could I prove that he lied? |
10643 | I might have said,"Where is it?" |
10643 | I protest-- Who are you, sir? |
10643 | I sat, turning hot and cold, in a glittering salon for a quarter of an hour, and then a voice said:"You ayre Engliss?" |
10643 | I thought of the past and asked him quickly,"Did you get Mr. John''s signature?" |
10643 | I wonder who will put on your shoes and stockings for you now, dears?" |
10643 | If seven horses eat twenty- five acres of grass in three days, what will be their condition on the fourth day? |
10643 | In what way were the shades on the banks of the Styx supplied with spirits? |
10643 | Is Caroline mine?" |
10643 | Is it Jane-- Jane Eyre?" |
10643 | Is it no dream? |
10643 | Is it not high time that some man like me sought him out and killed him, and brought peace back once more to this blood- covered earth of ours? |
10643 | Is it not sufficient that while you are at peace, I shall be in the torments of hell?" |
10643 | Is n''t he coming?" |
10643 | Is n''t the Almighty, in His wrath, this moment proclaimin''it through the heavens and the airth? |
10643 | Is n''t the airth a page of prophecy, an''the sky a page of prophecy, where every man may read of famine, pestilence, an''death?" |
10643 | Is she come to Yorkshire?" |
10643 | Is there no one to give me a dhrink? |
10643 | Is this an inn?" |
10643 | Jane, will you marry me? |
10643 | Leave my friends and comforts for such a brain- sick fellow as you? |
10643 | Let me see how long you will be able to stay in Saint Moritz? |
10643 | MR. VILLARS Can anything be more painful to the friendly mind than a necessity of communicating disagreeable intelligence? |
10643 | Maud just glanced at him, then rose, and said somewhat coldly,"Will you be seated?" |
10643 | Mr. Bouncer, will you have the goodness to bring this young gentleman to my rooms?" |
10643 | Mr. Mason unclosed his eyes and murmured:"Is there immediate danger?" |
10643 | Mrs. Bretton drew the little stranger to her when they had entered the drawing- room, kissed her, and asked:"What is my little one''s name?" |
10643 | My first impulse was to rise and fasten the bolt, my next to cry:"Who is there?" |
10643 | No soap? |
10643 | Now, have you understood me?" |
10643 | Now, tell me, sir, did you ever know anything more provoking? |
10643 | Of course you will be able to attend?" |
10643 | Oh, my God, am I going to be ill? |
10643 | Oh, why did I then not descend into the land of the dead? |
10643 | One day after Edgar Linton had been over from the Grange, Cathy came into the kitchen to me and said,"Nelly, will you keep a secret for me? |
10643 | One day, when the watchful nurse could not forbear to weep-- her full heart overflowing-- her patient asked:"Do you think I shall not get better? |
10643 | Or does he find anything wrong with me?" |
10643 | Pardon me, but would you feel inclined to sell it?" |
10643 | Phineas, my son, how am I to get thee home? |
10643 | Rochester?" |
10643 | Saviour of life, how will this end, and what will I do? |
10643 | So she began again,"_ ou est ma chatte?_"which was the first sentence in her French lesson book. |
10643 | So she began,"O Mouse, do you know the way out of this pool? |
10643 | Suddenly he broke off--"But how is that? |
10643 | That is-- that means-- you have adopted me?" |
10643 | The other side of what?" |
10643 | Then he demanded thrice, in tragic tones:"Is that all?" |
10643 | Then, re- entering the room, he walked up to Wharton, and said, with some gravity,"Now, sir, may I beg to examine the quality of that wig? |
10643 | Then, turning round, he asked a townsman:"What do you charge for a pint of Dutch pink?" |
10643 | Then, turning to the father, he proceeded,"Then, sir, I am to understand a Mr. Harper has not been here?" |
10643 | They advanced to me with great familiarity, saying,"How do you do, cousin? |
10643 | They are waiting on the shingle-- will you come and join the dance? |
10643 | They shall ask: Why are barbarians and civilised alike our oppressors? |
10643 | Very soon the Rabbit noticed Alice, and called out to her in an angry tone,"Why, Mary Ann, what_ are_ you doing out here? |
10643 | Victory? |
10643 | Was it for her? |
10643 | Was it not very odd that he should make me such a compliment? |
10643 | Was she in for one of those serious lectures on the subject of marriage which he used to read to her at Paris? |
10643 | Was that you?" |
10643 | Was the handsomest, the strongest, and the most daring lad in their village a coward? |
10643 | We could not, however, find Mrs. Mirvan in the confusion, and Sir Clement said,"You can have no objection to permitting me to see you safe home?" |
10643 | We have been good friends, Jane, have we not?" |
10643 | What are Mr. Moore''s politics?" |
10643 | What cared I, though the very heavens broke above me, and the earth rocked to its foundations? |
10643 | What could have induced you to ask anything like that for this animal? |
10643 | What did I propose to do in his absence? |
10643 | What did the little man mean? |
10643 | What do you say to our scheme? |
10643 | What have you to subsist on?" |
10643 | What is her answer--''Yes,''or''No''?" |
10643 | What is it?" |
10643 | What is it?" |
10643 | What is it?" |
10643 | What is the date of your wedding?" |
10643 | What is this you tell me about a conscription and an emperor? |
10643 | What pledge can I give them of your fidelity?" |
10643 | What right had you to leave me?" |
10643 | What shall I do? |
10643 | What was I to do? |
10643 | What was to become of me? |
10643 | What will ye buy?" |
10643 | Where is Napoleon? |
10643 | Where is my mother?" |
10643 | Where is the obstacle?" |
10643 | Where was I? |
10643 | Where, meantime, was the hapless owner? |
10643 | Where_ can_ I have dropped them, I wonder?" |
10643 | Which of them?" |
10643 | Which shall sing?" |
10643 | While he was speaking, I saw Lord Orville, who advanced instantly towards me, and with an air and voice of surprise, said,"Do I see Miss Anville?" |
10643 | Who are your parents?" |
10643 | Who had brought the flowers? |
10643 | Who is it?" |
10643 | Who speaks?" |
10643 | Who was the man Macari had killed, and what had he to do with Pauline? |
10643 | Who would not lie to be loved by you?" |
10643 | Why could n''t I have passed you by, without you becoming the dream of my whole life? |
10643 | Why did I ever meet you? |
10643 | Why did you betray your own heart? |
10643 | Why do contending faiths join in crushing us alone? |
10643 | Why do men still weep, even when age has blinded their eyes? |
10643 | Why do n''t you follow, Belle?" |
10643 | Why do n''t you marry him, my dear? |
10643 | Why do realms, distant as the ends of the earth, unite in scorn of us?" |
10643 | Why do you stare so?" |
10643 | Why is he staying at Wuthering Heights in the house of the man whom he abhors? |
10643 | Why should I grudge him the money, of which I had an inexhaustible store? |
10643 | Why should you be holden in ignorance and blindness? |
10643 | Will Caroline forget all I have made her suffer; forget my poor ambition; my sordid schemes? |
10643 | Will anything stop him but-- death?" |
10643 | Will she let me prove I can love faithfully? |
10643 | Will you ever be impudent to me again?" |
10643 | Will you ever give me any more of your jaw?" |
10643 | Will you let me get into the saddle, young man?" |
10643 | Will you, wo n''t you, will you, wo n''t you, will you join the dance? |
10643 | Will you, wo n''t you, will you, wo n''t you, wo n''t you join the dance?" |
10643 | Wise, firm, faithless, secret, crafty, passionless, watchful and inscrutable-- withal perfectly decorous-- what more could be desired? |
10643 | Wo n''t you forgive me?" |
10643 | Would it open this one? |
10643 | Would the fall_ never_ come to an end? |
10643 | Yes, she could trust Camille, but how should she begin? |
10643 | You are an engineer, can you find this spring for me?" |
10643 | You do n''t like poor Louis-- why? |
10643 | You see the village on yonder high hill?" |
10643 | You will come to me then, Caroline?" |
10643 | and to whom is the arm of the Lord revealed? |
10643 | cried Belle, bursting into tears,"for what purpose do you ask a poor ignorant girl such a question, unless it be to vex and irritate her? |
10643 | cried Magua, raising his knife,"choose-- the wigwam or the knife of Le Subtil?" |
10643 | cried Sir Clement,"should you be thus uneasy? |
10643 | cried he;"but will you pardon a question essentially important to me? |
10643 | does Caroline Evelyn still live? |
10643 | exclaimed the youth, in astonishment,"did he know your brother?" |
10643 | no; I expected no one; did he give his name?" |
10643 | said he,"poring over the faces of dead men, when you should be foremost among the living? |
10643 | thought Mave,"how will she live-- how can she live here? |
10643 | were all the skilful intrigues which he had spent four years in weaving, to come to nothing? |
10483 | ''Billy Fish,''says I to the Chief of Bashkai,''what''s the difficulty here? 10483 ''Do you remember that Bengali woman I kept at Mogul Serai when I was a plate- layer?'' |
10483 | ''What is it?'' 10483 ''What is up, Fish?'' |
10483 | ''Who''s talking o''_ women_?'' 10483 A glass? |
10483 | A skull, you say!--very well!--how is it fastened to the limb?--what holds it on? |
10483 | Ah, have you been in love? 10483 Alone?" |
10483 | Am_ I_ that man who lay upon the bed? 10483 And do you, then, suppose me such a creature?" |
10483 | And grace? |
10483 | And how did little Tim behave? |
10483 | And how is this to be done? |
10483 | And must the world wait longer yet? |
10483 | And what cause have you, Jupiter, for such a supposition? |
10483 | And why not to- night? |
10483 | And why not? 10483 And why not?" |
10483 | And why? |
10483 | And you really solved it? |
10483 | And you think, then, that your master was really bitten by the beetle, and that the bite made him sick? |
10483 | And you? |
10483 | And your father''s name? |
10483 | Are not those thoughts divine? |
10483 | Are there no prisons? |
10483 | Are you at all in earnest? |
10483 | Are you the Spirit, sir, whose coming was foretold to me? |
10483 | As I was sayin''she''s got a kind o''trouble in her breest, doctor; wull ye tak''a look at it? |
10483 | But do you know what they did to Peachey between two pine- trees? 10483 But how did you proceed?" |
10483 | But how do you know he dreams about gold? |
10483 | But how is it possible to effect this? |
10483 | But what, in the name of all that is mysterious, is your''Massa Will''going to do with scythes and spades? |
10483 | But why? |
10483 | By yourself!--what do you mean? |
10483 | Ca n''t you make it eight? |
10483 | Can you give a traveller a night''s lodging? |
10483 | Can you give me a drink? |
10483 | Can you-- can you sit down? |
10483 | Did you call me? |
10483 | Did you say it was a_ dead_ limb, Jupiter? |
10483 | Do n''t you know me? |
10483 | Do n''t you like me just as well, anyhow? 10483 Do you know the Poulterer''s, in the next street but one, at the corner?" |
10483 | Do you think I have no more generous aspirations than to sin, and sin, and sin, and, at last, sneak into heaven? 10483 Doing what?" |
10483 | Eh? |
10483 | For what price? |
10483 | Have never walked forth with the younger members of my family; meaning( for I am very young) my elder brothers born in these later years? |
10483 | Have you ever tried that trick? |
10483 | Have you got everything you want? |
10483 | Have you not tried it? |
10483 | How I know? 10483 How can that be? |
10483 | How far mus go up, massa? |
10483 | How high up are you? |
10483 | How much fudder is got for go? |
10483 | How''s Rab? |
10483 | How? 10483 I am in the presence of the Ghost of Christmas Yet To Come? |
10483 | I want nothing from you; I ask nothing of you; why can not we be friends? |
10483 | If he wanted to keep''em after he was dead, a wicked old screw, why was n''t he natural in his lifetime? 10483 In any one?" |
10483 | In what way? |
10483 | In what, then? |
10483 | Is it some one you know? |
10483 | Is it true that he was half an hour bare- headed in the sun at midday? |
10483 | Is it? 10483 Is n''t it a dandy, Jim? |
10483 | Is that the chance and hope you mentioned, Jacob? 10483 Is this yer a d----d picnic?" |
10483 | Is your master at home, my dear? |
10483 | Jupiter,cried he, without heeding me in the least,"do you hear me?" |
10483 | Long past? |
10483 | May Rab and me bide? |
10483 | Me? 10483 No, massa, I bring dis here pissel"; and here Jupiter handed me a note which ran thus: MY DEAR----: Why have I not seen you for so long a time? |
10483 | Not charitable? |
10483 | O majestic friend,he murmured, addressing the Great Stone Face,"is not this man worthy to resemble thee?" |
10483 | Ohà ©, priest, whence come you and whither do you go? |
10483 | Say it be lost, say I am plunged again in poverty, shall one part of me, and that the worse, continue until the end to override the better? 10483 Something, I think?" |
10483 | Still your uncle''s cabinet? 10483 Thank you,"said he, simply,"and when will the swine be gone? |
10483 | That being so,he said,"shall I show you the money?" |
10483 | The what? |
10483 | Tickets again? |
10483 | To me? |
10483 | Two or three years ago, did I not see you on the platform of revival meetings, and was not your voice the loudest in the hymn? |
10483 | Very true; but what are they doing here? |
10483 | Well now, Jupiter, do exactly as I tell you-- do you hear? |
10483 | Well, Jup, perhaps you are right; but to what fortunate circumstances am I to attribute the honor of a visit from you to- day? |
10483 | Well, Jup,said I,"what is the matter now?--how is your master?" |
10483 | Well, then, was it this eye or that through which you dropped the beetle? |
10483 | Well, then, what matter? |
10483 | What Idol has displaced you? |
10483 | What are you driving at? |
10483 | What are you? |
10483 | What bairn? |
10483 | What can I do for you? |
10483 | What can this mean? |
10483 | What d''you think o''that? |
10483 | What de matter now, massa? |
10483 | What de matter, massa? |
10483 | What did he do to his father''s widow, then? |
10483 | What did which do? 10483 What did you and Daniel Dravot do when the camels could go no further because of the rough roads that led into Kafiristan?" |
10483 | What do you call this? 10483 What do you mean by coming here at this time of day?" |
10483 | What do you want with me? |
10483 | What do you want? |
10483 | What evidence would you have of my reality beyond that of your senses? |
10483 | What has ever got your precious father, then? |
10483 | What has he done with his money? |
10483 | What in the name of heaven shall I do? |
10483 | What is it? |
10483 | What is our life? 10483 What is the matter?" |
10483 | What is the meaning of all this, Jup? |
10483 | What is your name, my good woman? |
10483 | What prophecy do you mean, dear mother? |
10483 | What then? 10483 What was you pleased to say?" |
10483 | What would have happened,he says,"if she had not lost that necklace? |
10483 | What''s the case? |
10483 | What''s to- day, my fine fellow? |
10483 | What''s to- day? |
10483 | What, the one as big as me? |
10483 | What,said Cassim''s wife, as soon as her sister- in- law had left her,"has Ali Baba gold in such plenty that he measures it? |
10483 | What?--sunrise? |
10483 | When did he die? |
10483 | Where have_ you_ come from? |
10483 | Where is he, my love? |
10483 | Where is the hurry? |
10483 | Where''s Brom Dutcher? |
10483 | Where''s Rab? |
10483 | Where''s Van Bummel, the schoolmaster? |
10483 | Wherefore are you sad? |
10483 | Which side is it? |
10483 | Which way mus go now, Massa Will? |
10483 | Who and what are you? |
10483 | Who are you, my strangely gifted guest? |
10483 | Who are you? |
10483 | Who can do so? 10483 Who_ were_ you, then?" |
10483 | Whose else''s, do you think? 10483 Why did you get married?" |
10483 | Why do you doubt your senses? |
10483 | Why not a glass? |
10483 | Why, bless your heart alive, my dear, how late you are? |
10483 | Why, what was the matter with him? 10483 Why, where''s our Martha?" |
10483 | Why? |
10483 | Will you buy my hair? |
10483 | Would two lunatics make a Contrack like that? |
10483 | Yes,said I,"but do you happen to know if he had anything upon him by any chance when he died?" |
10483 | Yes; you did not notice it, then? 10483 You are not going, too?" |
10483 | You are to use this money on the Stock Exchange, I think? |
10483 | You are? 10483 You ask me why not?" |
10483 | You know me? |
10483 | You mean, to punctuate it? |
10483 | You remember that necklace of diamonds that you lent me to wear to the ministerial ball? |
10483 | You say that you bought a diamond necklace to replace mine? |
10483 | You say your hair is gone? |
10483 | You wish to be anonymous? |
10483 | You''ll want all day to- morrow, I suppose? |
10483 | You''ve been tramping in the sun, and it''s a very warm night, and had n''t you better sleep over the notion? 10483 You''ve cut off your hair?" |
10483 | _ His_ blankets? |
10483 | _ Out to the end!_here fairly screamed Legrand,"do you say you are out to the end of that limb?" |
10483 | _ Very_ sick, Jupiter!--why did n''t you say so at once? 10483 ''Am I a dog or am I not enough of a man for your wenches? 10483 ''D''you suppose I ca n''t die like a gentleman?'' 10483 ''Does he know the word?'' 10483 ''How should a man tell you who knows everything? 10483 ''What is the meaning o''this?'' 10483 ''What''s to be afraid of, lass? 10483 ''What''s wrong with me?'' 10483 ''Who bought your guns? 10483 ) 4$);806*;48+ 8¶60))85;;]8*;:$*8+ 83(88)5*+; 46(;88* 96*? 10483 ***** And what of Rab? 10483 ; 8)*$(:485);5*+2:*$(;4956* 2(5*--4)8¶8*;4069285);)6+ 8)4$$; 1($9;48081;8:8$1;48+ 85;4)485+ 528806* 81($9;48;(88;4($?34;48)4$; 161;:188;$? 10483 Admiration was the universal sentiment, though some objected that the reply toIs it a bear?" |
10483 | And are my vices only to direct my life, and my virtues to lie without effect, like some passive lumber of the mind? |
10483 | And is not this boy- nature? |
10483 | And the king said again unto Esther on the second day at the banquet of wine, What is thy petition, queen Esther? |
10483 | And the king said unto Esther at the banquet of wine, What is thy petition? |
10483 | And the king said unto him, What shall be done unto the man whom the king delighteth to honour? |
10483 | And the king said, What honour and dignity hath been done to Mordecai for this? |
10483 | And the king said, Who is in the court? |
10483 | And then he keeps a syphon all de time--""Keeps a what, Jupiter?" |
10483 | And travelling all the time? |
10483 | And what was the Great Stone Face? |
10483 | And why did you insist on letting fall the bug, instead of a bullet, from the skull?" |
10483 | And yet, in that strip of doubtful brightness, did there not hang wavering a shadow? |
10483 | And you, you did not notice it?" |
10483 | Another short but busy little fellow pulled him by the arm, and, rising on tiptoe, inquired in his ear,"Whether he was Federal or Democrat?" |
10483 | Are these the shadows of the things that Will be, or are they shadows of the things that May be only?" |
10483 | As the embers slowly blackened, the Duchess crept closer to Piney, and broke the silence of many hours:"Piney, can you pray?" |
10483 | At the risk of throwing the creature out of train I interrupted--"How could you write a letter up yonder?" |
10483 | Be helped by you? |
10483 | But can you not look within? |
10483 | But here, within the house, was he alone? |
10483 | But this discovery gives us three new letters,_ o, u_, and_ g_, represented by$,? |
10483 | But we tumbled from one of those damned rope- bridges, you see, and-- you could n''t expect a man to laugh much after that?" |
10483 | But what is the"plain and manifest"moral that the structure of the story is designed to bring out? |
10483 | But where are the_ antennà ¦_ you spoke of?" |
10483 | But you''ll give the man at Marwar Junction my message?" |
10483 | Can you be at Marwar Junction on that time? |
10483 | Can you not read me for a thing that surely must be common as humanity-- the unwilling sinner?" |
10483 | Can you not see within me the clear writing of conscience, never blurred by any willful sophistry, although too often disregarded? |
10483 | Can you not understand that evil is hateful to me? |
10483 | Counting all, I constructed a table, thus: Of the character 8 there are 33;"26 4"19$)"16*"13 5"12 6"11+1"8 0"6 92"5:3"4?" |
10483 | Dear God, man, is that all?" |
10483 | Did he say that I was to give you anything? |
10483 | Did n''t I do that talk neat? |
10483 | Did n''t Mr. Oakhurst remember Piney? |
10483 | Did you mean it? |
10483 | Did you say you were travelling back along this line within any days?" |
10483 | Did you take the number?" |
10483 | Dilber?" |
10483 | Do I say that I follow sins? |
10483 | Do you know that Jupiter is quite right about it?" |
10483 | Do you know whether they''ve sold the prize Turkey that was hanging up there? |
10483 | Do you like to see it? |
10483 | Do you remember that?" |
10483 | Do you want any money or a recommendation down- country? |
10483 | Does any curious and finely- ignorant woman wish to know how Bob''s eye at a glance announced a dog- fight to his brain? |
10483 | Does nobody know poor Rip Van Winkle?" |
10483 | Dravot used to make us laugh in the evenings when all the people was cooking their dinners-- cooking their dinners, and-- what did they do then? |
10483 | Dreadful apparition, why do you trouble me? |
10483 | Eight dollars a week or a million a year-- what is the difference? |
10483 | Even if I have grown so much wiser, what then? |
10483 | For Christmas? |
10483 | For how can I endure to see the evil that shall come unto my people? |
10483 | Had you a thought in your mind? |
10483 | Has anything unpleasant happened since I saw you?" |
10483 | Has n''t he told you what ails him?" |
10483 | Have I ever sought release from our engagement?" |
10483 | Have I not?" |
10483 | Have n''t I put the shadow of my hand over this country? |
10483 | Have you ever heard of any important treasure being unearthed along the coast?" |
10483 | Have you found it?" |
10483 | Have you had many brothers, Spirit?" |
10483 | He asked:"You are sure you still had it when you left the ball?" |
10483 | He put me off, and said rather rudely,"What''s_ your_ business wi''the dowg?" |
10483 | He stood looking from the jars to Morgiana, till he found words to ask:"And what is become of the merchant?" |
10483 | He stuttered:"What''s the matter? |
10483 | Her husband said to her one evening:"What is the matter? |
10483 | Her husband, already half undressed, inquired:"What is the matter?" |
10483 | His teeth and his friends gone, why should he keep the peace, and be civil? |
10483 | How can daughters of men marry Gods or Devils? |
10483 | How could it be otherwise? |
10483 | How did you get to be King?" |
10483 | How is it possible to extort a meaning from all this jargon about''devil''s seats,''''death''s- head,''and''bishop''s hostel''?" |
10483 | How is this? |
10483 | How many limbs have you passed?" |
10483 | How much would it cost, a suitable dress, which you could wear again on future occasions, something very simple?" |
10483 | How so?" |
10483 | I hazard a guess now, that you are in secret a very charitable man?" |
10483 | I pity the poor; who knows their trials better than myself? |
10483 | I wiped my face, took a fresh grip of the piteously mangled hands, and said:"What happened after that?" |
10483 | I''m me without my hair, ai n''t I?" |
10483 | If I was to stop half a crown for it, you''d think yourself mightily ill- used, I''ll be bound?" |
10483 | If she had detected the substitution, what would she have thought? |
10483 | In the midst of his bewilderment, the man in the cocked hat demanded who he was, and what was his name? |
10483 | Is he confined to bed?" |
10483 | Is it any wonder, then, that I prize it? |
10483 | Is not he the very picture of your Old Man of the Mountain?" |
10483 | Is that all? |
10483 | Is that so much that he deserves this praise?" |
10483 | Is this, then, your experience of mankind? |
10483 | It answers the questions_ When? |
10483 | It''ll grow out again-- you wo n''t mind, will you? |
10483 | Legrand?" |
10483 | Let us talk of each other; why should we wear this mask? |
10483 | Marley?" |
10483 | Merciful Heaven, what is this?" |
10483 | Nobody ever stopped him in the street to say, with gladsome looks,"My dear Scrooge, how are you? |
10483 | None but a Jew could have asked,"Who knoweth whether thou art come to the kingdom for such a time as this?" |
10483 | Not the little prize Turkey,--the big one?" |
10483 | Now Haman thought in his heart, To whom would the king delight to do honour more than to myself? |
10483 | Perhaps a couple of blows with a mattock were sufficient, while his coadjutors were busy in the pit; perhaps it required a dozen-- who shall tell?" |
10483 | Rip bethought himself a moment, and inquired,"Where''s Nicholas Vedder?" |
10483 | Rip had but one question more to ask; and he put it with a faltering voice:--"Where''s your mother?" |
10483 | Say that his power lies in words and looks; in things so slight and insignificant that it is impossible to add and count''em up: what then? |
10483 | Scrooge knew he was dead? |
10483 | Shall I help you; I, who know all? |
10483 | Shall I put the chops on, Jim?" |
10483 | Shall I tell you about him? |
10483 | Shall I tell you where to find the money?" |
10483 | She curtsied, looked at James, and said,"When?" |
10483 | She kept asking:"You have nothing else?" |
10483 | She looked at him with irritation, and said, impatiently:"What do you expect me to put on my back if I go?" |
10483 | She taught me the lingo and one or two other things; but what happened? |
10483 | She that used to wait on the table at the Temperance House? |
10483 | Should she speak to her? |
10483 | Surely not?" |
10483 | Tell me what man that was, with the covered face, whom we saw lying dead?" |
10483 | The color? |
10483 | The man is surely mad!--but stay-- how long do you propose to be absent?" |
10483 | The noblest sentiment in the book--"Who knoweth whether thou art come to the kingdom for such a time as this?" |
10483 | The orator bustled up to him, and, drawing him partly aside, inquired"on which side he voted?" |
10483 | The plot is staged so as to answer the question,"Do not the people whom society regards as outcasts have yet some redeeming virtue?" |
10483 | The two upper black spots look like eyes, eh? |
10483 | Then said the king unto her, What wilt thou, queen Esther? |
10483 | Then said the king, Will he force the queen also before me in the house? |
10483 | Then she asked, hesitating, full of anxiety:"Would you lend me that,--only that?" |
10483 | Then the king Ahasuerus answered and said unto Esther the queen, Who is he, and where is he, that durst presume in his heart to do so? |
10483 | Then the king''s servants, which were in the king''s gate, said unto Mordecai, Why transgressest thou the king''s commandment? |
10483 | This part of the story answers the question_ What_? |
10483 | Was the skull nailed to the limb with the face outward, or with the face to the limb?" |
10483 | We shall go to those parts and say to any King we find--''D''you want to vanquish your foes?'' |
10483 | Welcome home again, old neighbor-- Why, where have you been these twenty long years?" |
10483 | Well?" |
10483 | What are we to make of the skeletons found in the hole?" |
10483 | What are you talking about? |
10483 | What could I say? |
10483 | What could he be dreaming of? |
10483 | What did the benign lips seem to say? |
10483 | What do_ you_ say, Topper?" |
10483 | What does he complain of?" |
10483 | What have you got to sell? |
10483 | What have you got to sell?" |
10483 | What make him dream bout de goole so much, if taint cause he bit by de goole- bug? |
10483 | What new crotchet possessed his excitable brain? |
10483 | What say you, my lads?" |
10483 | What say you?" |
10483 | What shall I put you down for?" |
10483 | What shall we do unto the queen Vashti according to law, because she hath not performed the commandment of the king Ahasuerus by the chamberlains? |
10483 | What was to be done? |
10483 | What would have happened if she had not lost that necklace? |
10483 | What would she have said? |
10483 | What"business of the highest importance"could_ he_ possibly have to transact? |
10483 | What''s coming next?"] |
10483 | What''s coming next?'' |
10483 | What''s the consequence? |
10483 | What''s the matter?" |
10483 | When she came nigh the first jar, the robber within said softly:"Is it time?" |
10483 | When will you come to see me?" |
10483 | When you left the Bishop''s Hotel, what then?" |
10483 | Whence has he all this wealth?" |
10483 | Where had Scrooge heard those words? |
10483 | Where''s the girl?'' |
10483 | Where?_ The Plot tells us what happened. |
10483 | Which interpretation goes deeper into the heart of the incident? |
10483 | Which leaves you more in love with love? |
10483 | Who knows, we might become friends?" |
10483 | Who knows, who knows? |
10483 | Who knows, who knows? |
10483 | Who repaired the bridges? |
10483 | Who stopped the last Afghan raid?'' |
10483 | Who suffers by his ill whims? |
10483 | Who will assist me to slipper the King of the Roos with a golden slipper with a silver heel? |
10483 | Who will take the Protected of God to the North to sell charms that are never still to the Amir? |
10483 | Who''d touch a poor mad priest?" |
10483 | Who''s the Grand- Master of the sign cut in the stone?'' |
10483 | Who''s the worse for the loss of a few things like these? |
10483 | Why ca n''t the paper be sparkling? |
10483 | Why did he not go on? |
10483 | Why did n''t you stick on as Gods till things was more settled? |
10483 | Why do spirits walk the earth, and why do they come to me?" |
10483 | Why give it as a reason for not coming now?" |
10483 | Why not? |
10483 | Why show me this, if I am past all hope? |
10483 | Why was that gentle, modest, sweet woman, clean and lovable, condemned by God to bear such a burden? |
10483 | Why, then, pure seeker of the good and true, shouldst thou hope to find me, in yonder image of the divine?" |
10483 | Will you do me the favor to let me pass the night with you?" |
10483 | Will you let me in, Fred?" |
10483 | Will you not speak to me?" |
10483 | Will you take the glass?" |
10483 | Would she have taken her friend for a thief? |
10483 | You do n''t mean that, I am sure?" |
10483 | You travel fast?" |
10483 | You went to- day, then, Robert?" |
10483 | You will, of course, ask''where is the connection?'' |
10483 | ai nt dis here my lef eye for sartain?" |
10483 | and do n''t we all wish a house on fire not to be out before we see it? |
10483 | and human nature too? |
10483 | and is this crime of murder indeed so impious as to dry up the very springs of good?" |
10483 | and it shall be granted thee: and what is thy request? |
10483 | and it shall be granted thee: and what is thy request? |
10483 | and it shall be granted thee: or what is thy request further? |
10483 | and what is thy request? |
10483 | are but so many channels through which the character of Rip finds outlet and expression"?] |
10483 | ay, and then? |
10483 | cried Ernest, clapping his hands above his head,"I do hope that I shall live to see him?" |
10483 | cried Fred,"who''s that?" |
10483 | cried Legrand, apparently much relieved,"what do you mean by telling me such nonsense as that? |
10483 | cried Legrand, highly delighted,"what is it?" |
10483 | cried Markheim:"the devil?" |
10483 | de bug, massa? |
10483 | do you hear me?" |
10483 | do you know your right hand from your left?" |
10483 | exclaimed Ali Baba,"what have you done to ruin me and my family?" |
10483 | now what is thy petition? |
10483 | or how can I endure to see the destruction of my kindred? |
10483 | or is it because you find me with red hands that you presume such baseness? |
10483 | remarked the visitor;"and there, if I mistake not, you have already lost some thousands?" |
10483 | said Legrand,"but it''s so long since I saw you; and how could I foresee that you would pay me a visit this very night of all others? |
10483 | settled to your satisfaction, you will then return home and follow my advice implicitly, as that of your physician?" |
10483 | thought Rip--"what excuse shall I make to Dame Van Winkle?" |
10483 | what I keer for de bug?" |
10483 | what could I do with a dollar and eighty- seven cents?" |
10483 | what did he die of?" |
10483 | what do you mean?" |
10483 | what must do wid it?" |
10483 | what_ is_ dis here pon de tree?" |
11180 | ''And when in its prison,''he continued, leaning forward eagerly,''didst thou face a tempter who offered thee deliverance at a dreadful price?'' 11180 ''But are you?'' |
11180 | ''Thou hast escaped from the clutches of the Inquisition?'' 11180 ''Where am I?'' |
11180 | ''Why fearest thou these?'' 11180 A deaf mute the son of a god?" |
11180 | A lawyer, papa? 11180 A new light on your own account, hey?" |
11180 | A sin? 11180 A_ what_? |
11180 | Ah, have you not perceived that I have been mad? |
11180 | Ah, indeed, why do n''t we? |
11180 | Ah, what are you saying? 11180 And His apostles and disciples, they showed the way, too?" |
11180 | And for what cause? |
11180 | And is that indeed_ all_? |
11180 | And is there not a tribe of infidels called Ingliz? |
11180 | And no one has come from Antioch for this great feast day? |
11180 | And what about the new arrangement? |
11180 | And what business have the flat- caps with the marriage of a king''s sister? 11180 And what is to become of my merchant- ships,"said the king,"if Burgundy take umbrage and close its ports?" |
11180 | And why did he leave us, Eugene? |
11180 | And why should I stir a foot,replied she fiercely,"for the child of a race that has ever treated me and mine as dogs?" |
11180 | And why should it? |
11180 | And your clergyman, appointed by God and the state to be your guide, what of him? 11180 And, pray, who are you?" |
11180 | Are n''t you my wife? 11180 Are yiz all dumb?" |
11180 | Are you going? |
11180 | Are you his descendant? 11180 Are you seeking a master, my boy?" |
11180 | Aristocrat? 11180 Art thou, then, soberly and earnestly in love? |
11180 | Before? |
11180 | But how shall I live when I am there? |
11180 | But if he said so, he did n''t know------"How should he know of things you''ve done out of your own head, and without the advice of a priest? 11180 But supposing he were ill?" |
11180 | But then,replied Gascoigne, delighted at the idea,"how are they to fire?" |
11180 | But what is that to me? 11180 But when do you think of going?" |
11180 | But why did you come into the service? 11180 But why, then,"said Lucia,"did n''t this plan come into Fra Cristoforo''s mind?" |
11180 | But you were not always a soldier of France? 11180 But, father, is it not a sin to turn back and repent of a promise made to the Madonna? |
11180 | Can I help you? |
11180 | Can you spare me half an hour? |
11180 | Cecil, tell me what is to be done? |
11180 | Come,said the marchioness, taking hold of Claire''s hands--"come, why do you always think about that, and torture your mind so?" |
11180 | Did I want owld Jack Dwyer to murther me as soon as the people''s backs was turned? |
11180 | Did n''t I see you give that man a letther for fourpence, and a bigger letther than this? 11180 Did she tell you where they should dine?" |
11180 | Did you know, my lord,he began,"that Lady Ella was breaking her heart because she was to marry me?" |
11180 | Do you bring me food, or do you bring me death? |
11180 | Do you consent, sir, or am I to leave the house? |
11180 | Do you hear? 11180 Do you know how we stand financially? |
11180 | Do you know how we stand,''J''? |
11180 | Do you know that this is an insult to my daughter and to me? |
11180 | Do you know, child, where are the sacrificers and the people? |
11180 | Do you really take me for a man who sells himself? |
11180 | Do you remember the trick you played on Camilla? |
11180 | Do you remember those two letters that Andy stole from the post- office, and that someone burnt? |
11180 | Do you think it did n''t? |
11180 | Do you think that I can betray my sovereign? 11180 Do you think_ I_ can ever doubt you?" |
11180 | Dost wish I should make her my aide- de- camp? |
11180 | Drunk? 11180 Eh, what does this mean? |
11180 | For what did you stipulate but rescue from the Inquisition? 11180 God, is it possible? |
11180 | Had he attempted to poison himself? |
11180 | Had it not been for me,I said,"the money was lost for ever; who, therefore, has a better claim to it than myself?" |
11180 | Had you,said the Spaniard rapidly,"a relative who was, about one hundred and forty years ago, said to be in Spain?" |
11180 | Hard-- now? |
11180 | Has Renzo told you,Fra Cristoforo continued,"whom he has seen here?" |
11180 | Hast any friend whom I could advance? |
11180 | Have I cured the payn in thy head, miss? |
11180 | Have I done wrong? |
11180 | Have I done you any harm? 11180 Have many people been sent from Antioch? |
11180 | Have you dwelt long in this temple; and is this lad your son? |
11180 | Have you ever heard that the Emperor Julian desired to restore the worship of the old gods? |
11180 | Have you heard people speak of La Carmencita? |
11180 | Have you lived stainlessly_ since_? |
11180 | Have you no common knowledge of honour? 11180 He is aware of the misfortune that has overtaken us?" |
11180 | Here, where are you going? |
11180 | Honourable Captain Clare aboard? |
11180 | How am I to find the key? |
11180 | How are they getting on in the servants''hall? |
11180 | How came I here? 11180 How got you this sword?" |
11180 | How much? |
11180 | I have lost the key of this chest,said I,"can you fit it?" |
11180 | I presume,said the earl,"that even if he wanted to call in his money you could arrange elsewhere?" |
11180 | I suppose you will act for him as you did for poor young Edward? |
11180 | I''ve seen the time when thou''d have said,''Is it Minette that was wounded at the Adige and stood in the square at Marengo? 11180 If that be so,"said I,"why does not Sir Massingberd marry?" |
11180 | If we say, sir, that Jesus Christ was God,said Joshua,"surely all that He said and did must be real right? |
11180 | In London? |
11180 | Is it really of gold? |
11180 | Is it? |
11180 | Is my aunt come down into the parlour to breakfast? |
11180 | Is n''t this better than calling in the police? |
11180 | Is that all, Lord Rivers? |
11180 | Jadwin struck you as being a kindly man, a generous man? 11180 Knowst thou not,"said he,"that this French alliance, to which thou hast induced us, displeases sorely our good traders of London?" |
11180 | Lieutenant O''Brien,said I, touching my hat,"have you any further orders?" |
11180 | Married? |
11180 | May I beg to ask,said Jack, who was always remarkably polite in his address,"in what manner I may be of service to you?" |
11180 | Mesty,said Jack,"get my pistols ready for to- morrow morning, and your own too-- do you hear? |
11180 | Monsieur Derblay? |
11180 | My daughter,said the father,"did you recollect, when you made that vow, that you were bound by another promise?" |
11180 | My money, where is it? |
11180 | Oh, so I''m to tell my business, am I? 11180 Oh, what have I done to you? |
11180 | Oh, why is n''t she the daughter of one of the dogs who outlawed me? |
11180 | One at a time? |
11180 | One word? |
11180 | Pardon me,said Kimberley nervously,"have you lost your way?" |
11180 | Really--"You did n''t know it? 11180 Señor,"he said,"I understand your name is"--he gasped--"Melmoth?" |
11180 | Shall I give it hot or cold? |
11180 | Shall I guess the object? 11180 Shall I,"he asked lamely,"make Kimberley happy?" |
11180 | She is a brave girl, and had she been a man----"Whom can he mean? |
11180 | Sir,said the stranger, looking earnestly at him,"is not your name Harley? |
11180 | So you have come to study at the university, sir? |
11180 | So you know what a monkey''s tail is already, do you? |
11180 | So you would have a shot without receiving one? |
11180 | So, my chap, you are come on board to raise a mutiny here with your equality? 11180 Tell me, Clodius,"said the Athenian at last,"hast thou ever been in love?" |
11180 | Tell me, do you love me? |
11180 | The old path''s not good enough for you? |
11180 | The priest of Apollo? |
11180 | The world is all before us where to choose, now, is n''t it? |
11180 | Then why not? |
11180 | Then, my child, you know that the Church has power to absolve you from your vow? |
11180 | Then, sir, if you feel this, why do n''t you and all the clergy live like the apostles, and give what you have to the poor? |
11180 | To whom,she asked, with an effort,"will the property belong in case-- in case my cousin should die before she comes of age?" |
11180 | Well, Bachelin, have the English courts decided? 11180 Well, Joshua, and how are you doing? |
11180 | Well, then, why did you promise to marry him? |
11180 | What are you eating? |
11180 | What can I think of,answered Claire bitterly,"but of my betrothed? |
11180 | What can these people want? |
11180 | What chance had I of being lieutenant, and am I not one? 11180 What consarn is that o''yours?" |
11180 | What d''you mean? |
11180 | What do I see? |
11180 | What do servants, money, and all amount to now? |
11180 | What do ye here, fools? |
11180 | What do you mean, you stupid rascal? |
11180 | What fear you from me-- from one who adores you? 11180 What harm has the poor man done you that you denounce him?" |
11180 | What has all this to do with my bed? |
11180 | What has happened? |
11180 | What if it is? |
11180 | What if we should go in and dine, sir? |
11180 | What is he saying? 11180 What is it?" |
11180 | What is the meaning of this? 11180 What man shall stop me from doing what I will with my own?" |
11180 | What may be your exact situation on board? 11180 What shall I give you?" |
11180 | What shall we do? |
11180 | What sort of fellow is this Kimberley? |
11180 | What would be too dear a price,he meditated,"for this lovely girl''s affections?" |
11180 | What would you have, you young fool? 11180 What''s this news about Gallowbay, Begg? |
11180 | When it related to the Madonna? |
11180 | Where am I? |
11180 | Where are the victims? |
11180 | Where are you? |
11180 | Wherefore I? |
11180 | Who am I, sir? 11180 Who do you want it for?" |
11180 | Who has been putting these bad thoughts into your head? |
11180 | Who to? |
11180 | Who''s that? |
11180 | Whose character, sir? |
11180 | Whose? 11180 Why did n''t you stay?" |
11180 | Why did n''t you tell me you came from the squire? |
11180 | Why these terrors, Antonia? |
11180 | Why, Nydia-- Nydia, art thou ill or in pain? 11180 Why, silly girl, what would you have a man to be?" |
11180 | Why, sir, the poor of our day are the lepers of Christ''s, and who among you Christian priests consorts with them? 11180 Why, where am I?" |
11180 | Why, you do n''t think that I''m going to be fired at for nothing? |
11180 | Why? 11180 Will you be mine, body and soul?" |
11180 | Will you take it-- still? |
11180 | Will you take''em now? 11180 Will you tell me-- yes or no-- is my cousin in the coach?" |
11180 | Wilt thou summon Davus? 11180 With regard to the first mortgage?" |
11180 | Would I do, sir? |
11180 | Would you be very pleased to see half a dozen lancers arrive here? |
11180 | Would you like it hot or cold, sir? |
11180 | Yes, but... what can he do, poor man? 11180 Yes, sir; what?" |
11180 | Yes; but, sir, if we are Christians, why do n''t we live as Christians? |
11180 | You are not well? |
11180 | You engaged in a clandestine correspondence with my sister? |
11180 | You have seen the portrait? |
11180 | You here, marquis? |
11180 | You''ear those words, Mr. Biggs? 11180 You?" |
11180 | Your name, if you please, sir? |
11180 | ''Art thou not, too, Athenian?'' |
11180 | ... O, brother, brother, what ailed thee to refuse the oath? |
11180 | A flood of light poured at once across all the dark passages of my history; and Lucy, too-- dare I think of her? |
11180 | A sin to have recourse to the Church, and to ask her minister to make use of the authority which he has received, through her, from God? |
11180 | Ah, Renzo, why are you here?" |
11180 | Ah, that man who forsook you so cowardly-- that man, do you still happen to love him?" |
11180 | Am I no longer Renzo? |
11180 | And how can I avoid torturing my mind as you say, in trying to divine the reason of his silence?" |
11180 | And what of our innings? |
11180 | And what think you was the amount of their innings? |
11180 | And where are my thousand ducats, you rascals?" |
11180 | And where are you to live?" |
11180 | And whose may they be, think ye?" |
11180 | And why have you not been to church lately?" |
11180 | And why? |
11180 | And yet-- was not the Almighty''s mercy infinite? |
11180 | And you would like us to associate with you as equals-- is that it, Joshua? |
11180 | And you? |
11180 | And, Curtis, what is the use? |
11180 | Ar''n''t I right, sir?" |
11180 | Are the choirs ready?" |
11180 | Are we not sworn?" |
11180 | Are you no longer Lucia?" |
11180 | Are you the repository of that terrible secret which--?" |
11180 | Are you willing to buy it at a sacrifice? |
11180 | At table discourse flowed soe thicke and faste that I might aim in vain to chronicle it, and why should I, dwelling as I doe at the fountayn head? |
11180 | Biggs?" |
11180 | But I fear------""How shall I reassure you? |
11180 | But O''Brien, who often examined the map he had procured from the gendarme, said to me one day,"Peter, can you swim?" |
11180 | But first tell me, do you intend to try your luck with me?" |
11180 | But how can I tell you when I do not know myself? |
11180 | But how could she take any notice of me? |
11180 | But tell me, have you no other motive that hinders you from fulfilling your promise to Renzo?" |
11180 | But what remead? |
11180 | But when I am satisfied, and he who makes all this disturbance is a villain----Once it is done, what do you think the father will say? |
11180 | But where have you been? |
11180 | Ca n''t ye speak wi''common sense for once? |
11180 | Can he avouch the fidelity of his correspondent?" |
11180 | Can you not lead me to the priest of Apollo?" |
11180 | Can you wish me more?" |
11180 | Come on, now, tell me, where are they going to get it?" |
11180 | Dare you do the same?" |
11180 | Did I want to become a priest or a pedant? |
11180 | Did n''t my mother write to you?" |
11180 | Did the man eat your grandmother?" |
11180 | Did you say_ Aram_? |
11180 | Do n''t you think, mother, that our cousin De Bligny''s silence has some connection with the loss of this lawsuit?" |
11180 | Do you hate me, then? |
11180 | Do you know I think I am going to like it, Curtis?" |
11180 | Do you know what this means? |
11180 | Do you really care for me? |
11180 | Do you suppose you can say''no''to that man?" |
11180 | Do you think I''m a fool?" |
11180 | Early in the night his mind wandered, and he says fearfullie,"Mother, why hangs yon hatchet in the air with its sharp edge turned towards us?" |
11180 | Ever heard of Lord Scatterbrain? |
11180 | Everyone began to shout,"Where is the envoy from the Emperor Constantius?" |
11180 | Gentlemen and common men hob- and- nob together, and no distinctions made? |
11180 | Had his enemies been too premature in their hope of his defeat? |
11180 | Has anyone a right to dictate to me as if I were not his equal?" |
11180 | Has he forgotten his love? |
11180 | Has he no authority in his own parish?" |
11180 | Hast thou that feeling which the poets describe-- a feeling which makes us neglect our suppers, forswear the theatre, and write elegies? |
11180 | Hastings, heard you that?" |
11180 | Have you come into a fortune?" |
11180 | He stopped on seeing me, and said anxiously,"Where is he?" |
11180 | He then pointed to me--"Officer?" |
11180 | Hearing the uproar, the sexton, who lived next door, shouted out,"What is it?" |
11180 | How could she for ever repel such a loyal, generous man without showing herself unjust and cruel? |
11180 | How dare you insult an envoy of Constantius? |
11180 | How many more uncles have you?" |
11180 | How shall we contract the charges of Sir Thomas More? |
11180 | I managed with it to free my arms from the ropes that fastened them, but what was to be done next? |
11180 | I rise, to move the lamp, and say,"Do you see it now?" |
11180 | I thought suddenly, was this madness? |
11180 | I trust you''ll allow that?" |
11180 | If He be such as they say, what do you suppose that He can do with me?" |
11180 | If I get in now, and buy a long line of cash wheat, where are all these fellows going to get it to deliver to me? |
11180 | In this country of delight which contains all the good things, all the riches of the world? |
11180 | Is it not Diomed''s daughter? |
11180 | Is it true?" |
11180 | Is the action lost?" |
11180 | Is there, indeed, no hope?" |
11180 | Jadwin?" |
11180 | Jamie Coom, the blacksmith, who I aye jealoused was my rival, came up and asked Jess, with a loud guffaw,"Where is the tailor?" |
11180 | Learning does not clothe men nowadays, eh, corporal?" |
11180 | Lorenzo, have you forgotten Raymond de las Cisternas?" |
11180 | Lucy-- Miss Dashwood, I would say-- how has my career fulfilled the promise that gave it birth? |
11180 | Mardonius, ca n''t you hear something?" |
11180 | Methoughte, if none else would undertake it, why not I? |
11180 | Might it not be supposed that rats had made an entrance? |
11180 | Mr. Easy will first fight Mr. Biggs, will he not?" |
11180 | Need I say why? |
11180 | Now, is there any fair lady that ye love better than another?" |
11180 | One morning in November, at breakfast, Laura said to her husband,"Curtis, dear, when is it all going to end-- your speculating? |
11180 | Patteson, shuddering, yet grinning, cries under his breath,"Managed I not well, mistress? |
11180 | Petersburg?" |
11180 | Richard Neville never lies nor conceals; but I am speaking to a kinsman, am I not? |
11180 | Say what you are, then?" |
11180 | Say, where are they going to get it? |
11180 | See, child?" |
11180 | Simple? |
11180 | So you thought I was in love with you? |
11180 | Suddenly the cloaked man turned and exclaimed,"Is it possible? |
11180 | Suppose there was a God, after all? |
11180 | Then do as you please-- but you will not send away my butler-- he escaped hanging last assizes on an undoubted charge of murder? |
11180 | Then, turning to me, he asked quickly,"Are you wounded?" |
11180 | There can not be a better way than His?" |
11180 | These challengers-- the famous eleven-- how many did they get? |
11180 | This was a thunder- clap to me, but I said briskly,"So ye''re after some session business in this visit, are ye?" |
11180 | Those who could subdue this life to their purposes, must they not be themselves terrible, pitiless, brutal? |
11180 | Thou hearest-- thou wilt not repeat?" |
11180 | Throwing aside his sword, he caught hold of the tribune''s mantle, and shrieked out,"Do you know what you''re doing, rascals? |
11180 | To make me--""Oh, signor, what can a poor girl like me expect, except that you should have mercy upon me? |
11180 | Twice the challenge"_ Qui vive? |
11180 | Was I not born my own master? |
11180 | Was ever anything so downright disagreeable? |
11180 | Was it derision, or anguish, or cruelty, or patience? |
11180 | Was it possible that this peer of the realm could be so coarsely and openly bent on securing him and his money that the whole world should know of it? |
11180 | Was it really to punish me that they confined me in my room? |
11180 | Was it wrong?" |
11180 | Was n''t I more than mad, more than grotesque? |
11180 | Was that the word I heard shouted forth? |
11180 | Were you not as free as myself?" |
11180 | What ails thee, my poor child?" |
11180 | What can I say? |
11180 | What could women ever know of the life of men, after all? |
11180 | What did it matter to me? |
11180 | What do you expect by this word? |
11180 | What do you want from me?... |
11180 | What do you want, good man?" |
11180 | What do you want? |
11180 | What else but the hope of one day seeing my little sister yet, and the vengeance of Heaven upon him who has worked her ruin? |
11180 | What else could keep me here in a place that tortures me with memories of my youth, and of loving faces that have crumbled into dust? |
11180 | What good news can you expect from such as I?" |
11180 | What had Kimberley, he asked himself bitterly, to recommend him but his money? |
11180 | What harm could there be if you asked him to lend you some money for me?" |
11180 | What have you to say?" |
11180 | What hope had he in any case of escaping eternal torment? |
11180 | What hope have you of God''s mercy?" |
11180 | What if our brother King Edward fall back from the treaty?'' |
11180 | What mischief are you working now? |
11180 | What order is it?" |
11180 | What painter can depict the scene of enchantment in which I have placed the divinity of my heart? |
11180 | What ruined you, Monsieur l''Aristocrat?" |
11180 | What was about to happen? |
11180 | What was that dreadful sound? |
11180 | What were you before then?" |
11180 | What would you have me say? |
11180 | What''s to be done?" |
11180 | When can I see this paragon?" |
11180 | When you were at school in the neighbourhood, you remember me at South Hill?" |
11180 | Where am I? |
11180 | Where is Jack? |
11180 | Where is he?" |
11180 | Where is the prioress?" |
11180 | Where is your daughter?" |
11180 | Where shall I go?" |
11180 | Where was I? |
11180 | Where''s the money going to come from, old man? |
11180 | Who had entered my father''s chamber? |
11180 | Who knew? |
11180 | Who knoweth at sunrise what will chance before sunsett? |
11180 | Who ranks the man above his station, or the soul above the man?" |
11180 | Who told you my name?" |
11180 | Who will answer me? |
11180 | Who will make the dark thing clear? |
11180 | Whoever fought after this fashion? |
11180 | Whom hast thou seen? |
11180 | Whom known? |
11180 | Why are you taking away my horse?" |
11180 | Why did you marry me?" |
11180 | Why do you make me suffer the agonies of hell? |
11180 | Why is Mr. Biggs to fire at me? |
11180 | Why is she here?" |
11180 | Why not go to Madrid and try to get some place at the court of King Philip the Third?" |
11180 | Why should I dwell on a career of disaster? |
11180 | Why should I go and study at Salamanca? |
11180 | Would I do nothing for a country- woman? |
11180 | Would I give you advice contrary to the fear of God; if it were against the will of your parents? |
11180 | Would n''t anyone run for his life av he had the opportunity?" |
11180 | Would you make some sacrifice to clear that name, Maud?" |
11180 | Yesterday, father, taking me unawares, asked,"Come, tell me, Meg, why canst not affect Will Roper?" |
11180 | You are Bertie Cecil?" |
11180 | You are my brother''s friend? |
11180 | You are not Stanley Carew, are you? |
11180 | You have news of the Duc de Bligny?" |
11180 | You hear? |
11180 | You know him?" |
11180 | You may well have forgotten my face,''tis a long time since you saw it; but possibly you may remember something of old Edwards? |
11180 | You see this withered rose? |
11180 | You to ride in our carriages, and perhaps marry our daughters?" |
11180 | You''ve recovered, though?" |
11180 | _ I.--Some of the Inhabitants_ Will you walk with me through our village, courteous reader? |
11180 | _ III.--Is Christ''s Way Livable?_ In London a new view of life opened to Joshua. |
11180 | _ Will_ she? |
11180 | can it teach a man how to defend his country? |
11180 | cried poor Andy,"what''ll be the end of it?" |
11180 | de Hautcastel to her maid, after a short silence,"that this pelisse is much too full at the bottom? |
11180 | he cried,"how have you gained entrance?" |
11180 | repeated once, twice, thrice, or was it the cold wind clanging and grinding the naked branches of the spinney? |
11180 | what will become of me? |
30396 | ''Well, and what then?'' 30396 ''What then? |
30396 | And pray, Master,says Pope with a sneer,"what is a_ note of interrogation_?" |
30396 | And what,inquired Smith,"did you say to comfort him?" |
30396 | Can you make me a''March,''to enliven my crew? 30396 Do you remember my Baroness in_ Ask No Questions_?" |
30396 | Doctor,he said, in his precise and quiet manner--"Doctor-- do you not think that they taste a little-- a very little, green?" |
30396 | Is it not better that he should fall by poison, than by the poignard? |
30396 | Is n''t that going a little too far the other way? |
30396 | What shall we do with Prince Mazare? |
30396 | Where is my march? |
30396 | Why am I to quit more than you? |
30396 | Will you do me the honour of accepting a copy of my works? |
30396 | Yes,said he,"and where else will you see_ such horses, and such men_?" |
30396 | _ Sir G. R._--''Why should Honesty fly to some safer retreat, From attorneys and barges, od rot''em? 30396 how a learned man such as he could sit and listen to an itinerant tinker?" |
30396 | ''And did you ever in your life read such stuff?'' |
30396 | ''Do you think,''said the general,''you can run a Frenchman through the body?'' |
30396 | ''What do you come here for, sir?'' |
30396 | ***** WHO WROTE"JUNIUS''S LETTERS"? |
30396 | A gentleman said to her,"Why do you say_ nineteen_? |
30396 | And who, on earth, could have anticipated what the voice said? |
30396 | Can you picture to yourselves the palpitation of our hearts as we approached his mansion? |
30396 | Had the finite measured itself with infinity, instead of surrendering itself up to the influence? |
30396 | Haydn?" |
30396 | In going up to a lesson one day, he was accosted by a boy in the same form:"Porson, what have you got there?" |
30396 | Is it not like poetry, that embellishes every object that we contemplate?" |
30396 | Or, when inspired to humanize mankind, Where doth your soaring soul its subjects find? |
30396 | Sydney Smith compares Mr. Canning in office to a fly in amber:"nobody cares about the fly: the only question is, how the devil did it get there?" |
30396 | Two of them, in particular, were very zealously disputing,--one of them calling out to the other,"Well, Jack, what have you got?" |
30396 | Wherefore not eat snails? |
30396 | Why, my dear fellow, you do n''t mean to say that you have really got the gout? |
30396 | Would you believe it? |
30396 | Yet, many readers of the present generation may ask,"Who was Captain Morris?" |
30396 | and the"What then, sir?" |
30396 | and who should be better able to illustrate the"brown heath and shaggy wood"of Scotia''s scenery, than her own sons?'' |
30396 | come, tell it, and burn ye: He was, could he help it? |
30396 | cried she, shaking her head--''loyal? |
30396 | do n''t you know I never eat beef, nor horse, nor any of those things?''" |
30396 | exclaimed the old lady,"d''ye think I dinna ken my ain groats among other folk''s kail?" |
30396 | why, do n''t you see my gouty shoe?'' |
26197 | Can I get there by candle- light? |
26197 | Can he set a shoe? |
26197 | How do you do, Mistress Pussy? 26197 Little girl, little girl, what gave she you?" |
26197 | May I go with you, my pretty maid? |
26197 | Oh no, kind sir, you will snap our heads off? |
26197 | Old woman, old woman, old woman,quoth I,"O whither, O whither, O whither, so high?" |
26197 | Old woman, old woman, shall I love you dearly? |
26197 | Pray, who do you woo, My a dildin, my a daldin? 26197 Say, will you marry me, my pretty maid?" |
26197 | Shall I go with thee? |
26197 | So, so, Mistress Pussy, Pray how do you do? |
26197 | What age may she be? 26197 What do you want?" |
26197 | What is your father, my pretty maid? |
26197 | What is your fortune, my pretty maid? |
26197 | What work can she do, My boy Willy? 26197 What''s the dog''s name?" |
26197 | What,said she,"shall I do with this little sixpence? |
26197 | Where is your money? |
26197 | Where''s the little boy that looks after the sheep? |
26197 | Who put it there? |
26197 | Will you wake him? |
26197 | 111 Where have you been all the day? |
26197 | 186 Whoop, whoop, and hollow 186 Willy boy, Willy boy, where are you going? |
26197 | 216 Who comes here? |
26197 | 263 What are little boys made of? |
26197 | 265 What is the rhyme for_ poringer_? |
26197 | 268 How many miles is it to Babylon? |
26197 | 272 Who goes round my house this night? |
26197 | 37 What''s the news of the day? |
26197 | And do n''t you remember the babes in the wood?" |
26197 | And do you ken Elsie Marley, honey? |
26197 | And was going to the window, To say,"How do you do?" |
26197 | And what do you think was in them then, On New Year''s Day in the morning? |
26197 | And what do you think was in them then, Was in them then, was in them then? |
26197 | And why may not I love Johnny As well as another body? |
26197 | And why may not I love Johnny, As well as another body? |
26197 | And why may not I love Johnny? |
26197 | And why may not I love Johnny? |
26197 | And why may not Johnny love me? |
26197 | And why may not Johnny love me? |
26197 | Can she bake and can she brew, My boy Willy?" |
26197 | Cou''d ye, cou''d ye? |
26197 | Cou''d you, without you cou''d, cou''d ye? |
26197 | Cou''d you, without you cou''d, cou''d ye? |
26197 | Dame, what ails your ducks to die? |
26197 | Dame, what makes your ducks to die, Ducks to die, ducks to die; Dame, what makes your ducks to die On Christmas Day in the morning? |
26197 | Dame, what makes your ducks to die? |
26197 | Dame, what makes your ducks to die? |
26197 | Dame, what makes your maidens lie, Maidens lie, maidens lie; Dame, what makes your maidens lie On Christmas Day in the morning? |
26197 | Dance o''er my Lady Lee; How shall we build it up again? |
26197 | Dog wo n''t bite pig? |
26197 | Flowers in the basket, basket in the bed, bed in the room,& c.& c.[ Illustration: RELICS][ Illustration: Willy boy, Willy boy, where are you going?] |
26197 | How could there be a blanket without a thread? |
26197 | How could there be a cherry without a stone? |
26197 | How many were there going to St. Ives? |
26197 | How shall he cut it, Without e''er a knife? |
26197 | How shall we build it up again? |
26197 | How will he be married Without e''er a wife? |
26197 | I cou''dn''t, without I cou''d, cou''d I? |
26197 | In comes the little dog:"Pussy, are you there? |
26197 | Ken ye how he requited him? |
26197 | Ken ye how he requited him? |
26197 | Ken ye the rhyme to porringer? |
26197 | Mistress Pussy, how d''ye do?" |
26197 | My boy Willy?" |
26197 | Oh, my little nothing, my pretty little nothing, What will nothing buy for my wife? |
26197 | Or the little god of love turn the spit, spit, spit?" |
26197 | PUSSY- CAT, pussy- cat, where have you been? |
26197 | Petrum,& c. How could there be a Bible no man could read? |
26197 | Petrum,& c. How could there be a goose without a bone? |
26197 | Pray when will that be? |
26197 | Pray, who do you woo, Lily bright and shine a''?" |
26197 | Pussy- cat, pussy- cat, what did you there? |
26197 | Says the little girl to the little boy,"What shall we do?" |
26197 | She wo n''t get up to serve her swine, And do you ken Elsie Marley, honey? |
26197 | The child''s game--"Buck, buck, How many fingers do I hold up?" |
26197 | The little maid replied, Some say a little sighed,"But what shall we have for to eat, eat, eat? |
26197 | The wife who sells the barley, honey? |
26197 | There is another rhyme about him:--"O what''s the rhyme to porringer? |
26197 | There was"Who Killed Cock Robin?" |
26197 | They all ran after the farmer''s wife, Who cut off their tails with the carving- knife; Did you ever see such fools in your life? |
26197 | They kick up their heels, and there they lie; What the pize ails''em now? |
26197 | WHAT are little boys made of, made of; What are little boys made of? |
26197 | WILLY boy, Willy boy, where are you going? |
26197 | What a pize ails''em? |
26197 | What age may she be? |
26197 | What are little girls made of, made of, made of; What are little girls made of? |
26197 | What is his name? |
26197 | What is my dame to do? |
26197 | What the pize ails''em? |
26197 | When will you pay me? |
26197 | Who steals all the sheep at night? |
26197 | Will the love that you''re so rich in Make a fire in the kitchen? |
26197 | Would you know the reason why? |
26197 | [ Illustration: Barber, barber, shave a pig] BARBER, barber, shave a pig; How many hairs will make a wig? |
26197 | [ Illustration: Bow, wow, wow] BOW, wow, wow, Whose dog art thou? |
26197 | [ Illustration: Dame, what makes your ducks to die?] |
26197 | [ Illustration: Decoration] A DILLER, a dollar, A ten o''clock scholar, What makes you come so soon? |
26197 | [ Illustration: Decoration] A LITTLE old man and I fell out;"How shall we bring this matter about?" |
26197 | [ Illustration: Decoration] BAH, bah, black sheep, Have you any wool? |
26197 | [ Illustration: Decoration] BURNIE bee, burnie bee, Tell me when your wedding be? |
26197 | [ Illustration: Decoration] CUCKOO, Cuckoo, What do you do? |
26197 | [ Illustration: Decoration] DID you see my wife, did you see, did you see, Did you see my wife looking for me? |
26197 | [ Illustration: Decoration] HIGH diddle ding, Did you hear the bells ring? |
26197 | [ Illustration: Decoration] HOW many days has my baby to play? |
26197 | [ Illustration: Decoration] I WOULD if I cou''d, If I cou''dn''t, how cou''d I? |
26197 | [ Illustration: Decoration] LITTLE Tom Tucker Sings for his supper; What shall he eat? |
26197 | [ Illustration: Decoration] LITTLE girl, little girl, where have you been? |
26197 | [ Illustration: Decoration] OLD Betty Blue Lost a holiday shoe, What can old Betty do? |
26197 | [ Illustration: Decoration] ONCE I saw a little bird Come hop, hop, hop; So I cried,"Little bird, Will you stop, stop, stop?" |
26197 | [ Illustration: Decoration] PUSSICAT, wussicat, with a white foot, When is your wedding? |
26197 | [ Illustration: Decoration] PUSSY cat sits by the fire; How did she come there? |
26197 | [ Illustration: Decoration] PUSSY sits behind the fire-- How can she be fair? |
26197 | [ Illustration: Decoration] ROBERT BARNES, fellow fine, Can you shoe this horse of mine? |
26197 | [ Illustration: Decoration] RUB a dub dub, Three men in a tub: And who do you think they be? |
26197 | [ Illustration: Decoration] SOME little mice sat in a barn to spin; Pussy came by, and popped her head in;"Shall I come in and cut your threads off?" |
26197 | [ Illustration: Decoration] THE dove says,"Coo, coo, what shall I do? |
26197 | [ Illustration: Decoration] THERE was a lady loved a swine:"Honey,"quoth she,"Pig- hog, wilt thou be mine?" |
26197 | [ Illustration: Decoration] THERE was a little man, And he woo''d a little maid, And he said,"Little maid, will you we d, we d, we d? |
26197 | [ Illustration: Decoration] THERE was an old woman, and what do you think? |
26197 | [ Illustration: Decoration] The north wind doth blow, And we shall have snow, And what will poor Robin do then? |
26197 | [ Illustration: Decoration] WHAT is the rhyme_ for poringer_? |
26197 | [ Illustration: Decoration] WHAT''S the news of the day, Good neighbour, I pray? |
26197 | [ Illustration: Decoration] WHO comes here? |
26197 | [ Illustration: Decoration] WHO goes round my house this night? |
26197 | [ Illustration: Decoration]"IS John Smith within?" |
26197 | [ Illustration: Decoration]"OLD woman, old woman, shall we go a shearing?" |
26197 | [ Illustration: Decoration]"WHERE are you going, my pretty maid?" |
26197 | [ Illustration: Decoration]"WHERE have you been all the day, My boy Willy?" |
26197 | [ Illustration: Goosey, goosey, gander] GOOSEY, goosey, gander, Where shall I wander? |
26197 | [ Illustration: Mistress Mary, quite contrary] MISTRESS MARY, quite contrary, How does your garden grow? |
26197 | [ Illustration: Pussy- cat, pussy- cat, where have you been?] |
26197 | [ Illustration:"What are Little Boys made of?"] |
26197 | are you there?" |
26197 | quoth the Frog,"is that what you mean? |
26197 | shall I?" |
26197 | the old witch winks 264 Hot- cross Buns 105 How many days has my baby to play? |
26197 | what a pize ails''em? |
26197 | what the pize ails''em? |
26197 | wilt thou be mine? |
26197 | wilt thou be mine? |
32092 | ''Is it hers to keep?'' 32092 :"''Did she hurt herself?'' |
32092 | ''Still your uncle''s cabinet? |
32092 | ''What on earth is the matter?'' |
32092 | Is it not true than human life, the material for fiction, has its spiritual actualities as well as its physical facts? |
32092 | Of all the writers of to- day who can put together a story in workmanlike fashion how many have the power of the telling word? |
32092 | The short story is a unit in that it is one story, rather than two or ten, but-- it is not impertinent to ask-- what of it? |
32092 | Well, do n''t you think you could catch her a new one, perhaps?'' |
32092 | What is a plot? |
32092 | What is it? |
32092 | What will he say? |
32092 | What will the persons do? |
32092 | he should be made to say,"Dead?" |
32092 | how many have even a style? |
32092 | if the emphasis is on personality; and what will happen? |
32328 | But where shall the wood be found? 32328 When do I do my literary work? |
32328 | Are you ill?" |
32328 | But how did he travel? |
32328 | For years Mr. Fenn has been trying to solve this problem: Why can one write easily and fairly well one day, and have the next be almost a blank? |
32328 | Has my reader ever driven a pig to market? |
32328 | Jules Janin asks,"Where has M. de Balzac gained his knowledge of woman-- he, the anchorite?" |
32328 | Then I often say to myself:''I wonder how the fellow will get out of the scrape?''" |
32328 | Where shall I go to find my thoughts with the greatest ease and most perfect freedom? |
32328 | Who, after reading a brilliant novel, or some excellent treatise, would not like to know how it was written? |
28327 | ''Whose boat is that?'' 28327 ''Whose launch is that?'' |
28327 | ''Why wo n''t I?'' 28327 A divorce? |
28327 | A speedometer you mean, do n''t you? |
28327 | Are you an actor? |
28327 | Bobbie,she said with a gasp,"what are you doing?" |
28327 | But,she said,"you_ vote_, do n''t you?" |
28327 | Do you work in there? |
28327 | Ever had a vacation? |
28327 | Fired? |
28327 | From who iss it? |
28327 | Hello, Woodie,said Jim;"how are you feeling?" |
28327 | Help? 28327 Here, here,"said Old George;"where are you going?" |
28327 | How about the So- and- so House? |
28327 | How do you know he is n''t? |
28327 | How do you know they are sharks? |
28327 | How do you know? |
28327 | How does it look? |
28327 | How mooch vages do you get dere? |
28327 | How mooch you get ofer dere? |
28327 | How mooch? |
28327 | How much will it cost me to send that message? |
28327 | Is it possible? |
28327 | Look at them? |
28327 | No; is it? |
28327 | No; would it? |
28327 | Oh, say, for the love of Lee Shubert, come and help a feller, will you? |
28327 | Oh,said the Not- Jule- Levy,"then I do n''t play, eh?" |
28327 | Shay,he said thickly;"wha''do you want to hire such bad acters for? |
28327 | Something about''help,''was it not? |
28327 | Then vere? |
28327 | Then what are you doing in my berth? |
28327 | Thirty- eighth Street,said Woodie;"where are you living?" |
28327 | Tree huntret unt fifty tollars? |
28327 | Vere you go next veek, Morris? |
28327 | Waiter, have you any snails today? |
28327 | Well then, you know that if you left a piece of ice out in the sun all the forenoon it would melt, do n''t you? |
28327 | Well, I could n''t stay in there all day, could I? |
28327 | Well, good Lord,I exclaimed,"you do n''t want to sit on juries, do you?" |
28327 | Well, why in thunder should n''t I tell it to him? 28327 Well,"I said,"you know Wyoming is the hottest place in America, do n''t you?" |
28327 | What are they? |
28327 | What are you talking about? |
28327 | What are you talking about? |
28327 | What av it? |
28327 | What did I do what for? |
28327 | What did they do? |
28327 | What did you tell him that story for? |
28327 | What do you charge? |
28327 | What has the rain got to do with it? |
28327 | What is it, me darlin''; what is the matter? 28327 What is the Touraine?" |
28327 | What''s the matter? |
28327 | What''s the reason you wo n''t be here? |
28327 | When will he be here? |
28327 | Where am I supposed to take this powder? |
28327 | Where are ye''s goin'', Dinnie? |
28327 | Where are you going, dear? |
28327 | Where are you living? |
28327 | Where have you been all this time, Ezra? |
28327 | Where is your bass fiddler? |
28327 | Where iss it that you go next veek? |
28327 | Where''s Cressy? |
28327 | Where? |
28327 | Who am I? 28327 Who are you writing to?" |
28327 | Why not? |
28327 | Why wo n''t there be a show? |
28327 | Why, hello, Henry,said one;"what are you doin''down town?" |
28327 | Why, what''s the matter? 28327 Why?" |
28327 | Why? |
28327 | Yes? 28327 You did?" |
28327 | _ My wife?_screamed Lehman. |
28327 | _ You do?_ Then what the devil have you kept me here rehearsing you for three hours for? |
28327 | _ You do?_ Then what the devil have you kept me here rehearsing you for three hours for? |
28327 | ( And by the way, who knows how that town got its name? |
28327 | ***** GOT ANY EXPERIENCED BABIES? |
28327 | ***** Said the Actress to the Landlord,"Want to see''The Billboard,''Mister?" |
28327 | ***** Would n''t Alan Dale feel at home in a"Pan"tages theater? |
28327 | *****"Where have I seen you before?" |
28327 | *****[ Illustration: One Sure(?) |
28327 | *****[ Illustration:"Why?"] |
28327 | 177 CLOSING NUMBER 180 ILLUSTRATIONS_ Mag Haggerty''s Horse_ 60_"Shun Licker"_ 64_ The Widow''s Mite_ 66_ Far from Home and Kindred_ 69_"Why? |
28327 | A big, fat acrobat who was closing the show noticed him and said,"What''s the trouble, Kid?" |
28327 | A big, rough, knockabout comedian stood waiting his own turn to go on, and seeing Hilliard looked worried, said to him,"What''s the matter, Bo?" |
28327 | A couple of days afterwards Mother said to him,"Papa, haf you seen a pair of slippers come by der house for Mama?" |
28327 | A friend meeting him on the ferry said,"You are playing Paterson this week, are n''t you, Bill?" |
28327 | After two or three shows the manager came to me and asked me what that line about the ice meant; was it supposed to be funny? |
28327 | And ca n''t you, from out the many, Tell one, as well as any? |
28327 | And what do you suppose he did? |
28327 | Are you calling that old goat face_ my wife_?" |
28327 | As I understand this thing, what you want is equal rights-- for the sexes; is that correct?" |
28327 | Ca n''t you catch them over here?" |
28327 | Can you see the next picture? |
28327 | DO YOU BELIEVE IN SIGNS? |
28327 | Did you speak?" |
28327 | Do I look as if I would be the husband of anything that looks like_ that_?" |
28327 | Do n''t you suppose she knows?" |
28327 | Do you know anybody here in the bank?" |
28327 | Father nodded his head, sighed deeply, thought a minute, then--"Then vere do you go?" |
28327 | Finally Julius got an opening and said,"Say, what would you think if you and I ever thought the same about something?" |
28327 | Finally he burst out--"Well, how was_ I_?" |
28327 | For instance, somebody asked me if we did n''t"play two houses a night in Portsmouth?" |
28327 | He does n''t look as bad as that all the time, does he?" |
28327 | He had left his cottage and driven twelve miles down to Bob''s house to make a kick; and what do you suppose the kick was?" |
28327 | He pondered over this for a day or two, then he came over to me one afternoon and said,"What do you suppose they call you and I''Cressy''for?" |
28327 | He sniffed again, shifted his weight from one foot to the other and said,"You''re a hell of a feller when you''re home, ai n''t ye?" |
28327 | He stopped, looked up and said,"How do you spell eighty, George?" |
28327 | Help?" |
28327 | Indefinite"_ 78_"Good Morning"_ 90_ It Is n''t the Coat that Makes the Man_ 107_"Vengeance is Mine"_ 117_ One Sure(?) |
28327 | Jim looked at him a moment, then said,"And who are you?" |
28327 | Moran?" |
28327 | Mrs. C."What''s the matter? |
28327 | Now what are you going to do? |
28327 | Of course I could have gone out there in our automobile; but that would be a fine way to visit Blarney Castle, would n''t it? |
28327 | On every window of his store he has painted--"What is home without a piano? |
28327 | One day Eugene Tompkins, the owner of the theater, came along, stopped, thought a minute, then said,"Con, how long have you been here?" |
28327 | SOME HOTEL WHYS Why are porters and bellboys always so much more anxious to help you_ out_ than_ in_? |
28327 | See his gold teeth?" |
28327 | See? |
28327 | She looked at me curiously for a moment, then said,"Do n''t you know what you did?" |
28327 | So she went over to Miss Dayne and said,"Say, do you carry that old man with you or do you get a new one in every town?" |
28327 | The girl watched them a moment pityingly, then said,"Tough work, ai n''t it? |
28327 | The man below saw him and called up to him,"''Hey, there: is that clock right?''" |
28327 | The man looked at him a moment, as if to see if he really meant it; then he asked earnestly,"Hones''ly?" |
28327 | The old fellow pondered on it for a moment, then as he turned away he said, half to himself,"Might? |
28327 | The old lady looked up with a look of interest and said,"Did he say what their name was? |
28327 | The old man studied a moment, then said,"Why did he not tell him to take an Olive Street car?" |
28327 | Then how are you going to live? |
28327 | Was n''t I good?" |
28327 | What are you talking about? |
28327 | What does she do with all this money?" |
28327 | What''s the matter with that story anyway?" |
28327 | When we had reached our rooms that night my wife turned on me and said sharply,"What did you do that for?" |
28327 | Where is your father?" |
28327 | Whose is it?'' |
28327 | Why do I think I know so much about running a hotel? |
28327 | Why do drummers always leave their doors open? |
28327 | Why do hotels feed actors cheaper than they do folks? |
28327 | Why do so many hotel bathrooms have warm cold water and cold hot water? |
28327 | Why do"American"hotels always have French and Italian cooks? |
28327 | Why does a bellboy always try to get two quarts of water into a quart pitcher? |
28327 | Why does a hotel cashier always look at you pityingly? |
28327 | Why does a hotel clerk always try to give you some room different from the one you ask for? |
28327 | Why does my wife always try to get a corner table, and then put me in the chair facing the wall? |
28327 | Why does the elevator boy always go clear to the top floor and back when the man on the second floor rings for him? |
28327 | Why does the fellow in the next room always get up earlier than I do? |
28327 | Why does the landlord''s wife always have theatrical trunks? |
28327 | Why does the night clerk always dress so much better than the day clerks? |
28327 | Why is a mistake in the bill always in the hotel''s favor? |
28327 | Why is it that on the morning you are expecting company you can never find the chambermaid? |
28327 | Why is the news stand girl always so haughty? |
28327 | _ If the paint was gone from the tub, where was it?_ Again she discovered that, although her troubles were all behind her, they were still with her. |
28327 | _ Master_: Without what? |
28327 | asked Miss D."Is that old man that plays on the stage with you as homely as he looks? |
28327 | said Daily, briskly;"what help do you want?" |
28327 | said the clown in amazement;"what for?" |
28327 | what is it?" |
32433 | But suppose the play merit not approval but the reverse; what then? |
32433 | How, once there, shall he show the approval, or at least interest, his presence implies? |
32433 | Is it a counsel of perfection to ask for this? |
32433 | Shall he make the conclusion congruous with the climax, a properly deduced result from the situation therein shown? |
32433 | Shall the playwright carry out the story in a way to make it harmonious with what has gone before, both psychologically and in the logic of events? |
32433 | They have been playing young during the New York whirl, why not be natural now and enjoy life in the decade to which they belong? |
32433 | What are these distinctive features? |
32433 | What does he do, indeed, what can he do? |
32433 | What else can be offered to hold the interest? |
32433 | What will be the effect upon the pair? |
32433 | What will be the fate of the hero? |
32433 | What will she do? |
32433 | Why not dismiss the audience? |
32433 | Will the heroine escape from the impending doom? |
32433 | Will the two be mated before the Finis is written? |
32433 | Will the two be reconciled, and how? |
31304 | But where is the use of telling us all this? |
31304 | ("Io servo vostra moglie, Don Eugenio favorisce la mia; che male c''e?" |
31304 | A no place, nowhere; yet full of details; minute inventories of the splendid furniture of castles( castles where? |
31304 | All his humanities, all his Provençal lore go into these poems-- written for whom? |
31304 | And what are those things? |
31304 | Are not these mediæval poets leagued together in a huge conspiracy to deceive us? |
31304 | But could such love as this exist, could it be genuine? |
31304 | But how achieved? |
31304 | But is it right that we should feel thus? |
31304 | But is it right thus to pardon, redeem, and sanctify; thus to bring the inferior on to the level of the superior? |
31304 | Can there be love between man and wife? |
31304 | Equality? |
31304 | Fools, can you tell what did or did not take place in a poet''s mind? |
31304 | For her? |
31304 | For is he not the very incarnation of chivalry, of beauty, and of love? |
31304 | Has such a thing really existed? |
31304 | In short, is not this"Vita Nuova"a mere false ideal, one of those works of art which, because they are beautiful, get worshipped as holy? |
31304 | Is it Christian, Pagan, Mohammedan? |
31304 | Is this not vitiating our feelings, blunting our desire for the better, our repugnance for the worse? |
31304 | It is, in its very intensity, a vision of love; what if it be a vision merely conceived and never realized? |
31304 | Now, how does Fra Angelico represent this? |
31304 | Roncisvalle, Charlemagne, the paladins, paganism, Christendom-- what of them? |
31304 | Shall we say that it is sentiment? |
31304 | Stone of the Caaba or chalice of the Sacrament? |
31304 | The great question is, How did these men of the Renaissance make their dead people look beautiful? |
31304 | The ideal, perhaps, of only one moment, scarcely of a whole civilization; or rather( how express my feeling?) |
31304 | The songs of the troubadours and minnesingers, what are they to our feelings? |
31304 | Where is Godfrey, or Francis, or Dominick? |
31304 | Where the moral struggles of the Middle Ages? |
31304 | Why so? |
31304 | Why this vagueness, this imperfection in all mediæval representations of life? |
31304 | how reached? |
30765 | Do you ever intend to be a candidate for public office? |
30765 | Have you any comment to make on the letter written by your wife to her mother? |
30765 | Is Mrs. Paltier at home? |
30765 | Is Mrs. Paltier at home? |
30765 | McKee,said Magistrate Sweeney at the hearing,"what on earth made you try to wreck that store?" |
30765 | Oh, is it? |
30765 | Surely you are not serious, are you, Professor? |
30765 | Well? |
30765 | Who is it wants to see her? |
30765 | Who is this, please? |
30765 | (?) |
30765 | = Right.=--"You mean to say-- Just what are you talking about?" |
30765 | ? |
30765 | And how long could it hold the respect or patronage of its readers? |
30765 | And what is fog? |
30765 | And||then I walked down stairs and saw Jerry standing||silent under the gaslight, and I said again,''Jerry,||is Gene dead?'' |
30765 | Did they tell you at the||Oak Street Station that the other policemen called||Gene Happy Sheehan? |
30765 | Do you recognize some of the names? |
30765 | For what would intellect avail us, if we could not withdraw it from action in all the habitual encounters of daily life? |
30765 | Has Mr. Bryan proved||himself so good a prophet in the past that we can||afford to trust him in the future? |
30765 | He did n''t need||to make his confession, you know, but it would have||been better, would n''t it? |
30765 | Hoccome I knowed she promise||dat dance ter Bugabear? |
30765 | How can we expect woman, a member of the weaker race, to work ten hours a day and still retain her health? |
30765 | How consistent would a modern newspaper be? |
30765 | I''se''bleeged ter||''fend mahse''f, ai n''t I, jedge? |
30765 | In other words, what constitutes interest? |
30765 | It''s strange, is n''t it, that I hunted him||up on his beat late yesterday afternoon for the||first time in my life? |
30765 | I||promised you, did n''t I, that I would n''t cry any more||or carry on? |
30765 | Query: Is the proof correct? |
30765 | She come up ter||me an''say,''Mister Frogeye, kin you ball de Jack?'' |
30765 | The Army||and Navy were in town....||||Betting? |
30765 | Thus:_ Q._--Are you a resident of Montana? |
30765 | Thus:|"Shall we continue to listen to a wandering voice as||imbecile as our condition?" |
30765 | Was n''t it||strange that Gene said that? |
30765 | Well, it was five o''clock this morning||when a boy rang the bell here at the house and I||looked out the window and said,''Is Gene dead?'' |
30765 | What makes them so fair? |
30765 | What should the correspondent do in such a case? |
30765 | Why? |
30765 | Why? |
30765 | You would n''t want to answer that question yourself, would you?" |
30765 | _ B._ Do you find the following story meritorious or blameworthy? |
30765 | _ B._ Put the following details in proper sequence for a suicide story: Ira Hancock Committed suicide(?) |
30765 | _ B._ What criticism may be made of the following? |
30765 | _ L._ How strictly is the honor system observed in colleges to- day? |
30765 | |How long can the war last? |
30765 | ||"Another Potlicker row? |
30765 | ||I tells her she do n''t see no chains on me, do she? |
30765 | ||||"Can you clear up the mystery and tell us when the||note will go forward to Berlin?" |
30765 | ||||"God will see that Gene''s happy to- night, wo n''t he,||after Gene said that?" |
30765 | ||||"Have you got a boy they call''Missouri?''" |
30765 | ||||"Was the note to Germany completed?" |
30765 | ||||"What''s this?" |
30765 | ||||"What''s your name, girl?" |
30765 | ||||Yet, do you suppose that President Wilson or any||official was the hero of the day? |
29574 | 27 What do you talke of sleepe? |
29574 | 29 Thus made, what maiest thou not command, In mighty_ Amuraths_ wide Empery? |
29574 | 35 But say I languish, faint, and grow forlorne, Fall sicke, and mourne: nay, pine away for thee, Wouldst then for euer hold me yet in scorne? |
29574 | 37 Dwel''st thou on forme? |
29574 | 38 Why dost thou weep? |
29574 | 39 Wilt thou be mine? |
29574 | 44 Now say mine eies& cheeks are faire, what then? |
29574 | 45 But say great prince, I had a wanton eye, Would you adde_ Syrius_ to the sommer sunne? |
29574 | 6 Who reads or heares the losse of that great town_ Constantinople_ but doth wet his eyes? |
29574 | 66 Maide, why commit you wilfull periurie? |
29574 | 72 Shall I feare this worlds losse enioying heauen, Or thinke of danger when an Angel guards me? |
29574 | 8 Seest thou my sonne( quoth she) and then she fround, Those brattish elues, that dally on the ground? |
29574 | Accuse the Fates, or thee shall I accuse? |
29574 | Alas poore soule;( quoth shee) and did he dye? |
29574 | And art thou so vnwilling then, quoth hee, To doome the sentence which I aske of thee? |
29574 | And counterfeiting speech vnknowne, she said, A daughters name, me thinkes, doth not agree, Ist well with your owne child in loue to be? |
29574 | And must he be a coward dotes on beauty? |
29574 | And pardon my rude specch, for lo you see, I plead for life, and who''s not loath to dye? |
29574 | And shall I then run headlong to the flame? |
29574 | And though( quoth he) thou scorn''d to doe my will, What lets me now my minde for to fulfill? |
29574 | And whither steales thou furious_ Cynaras_? |
29574 | And whurle hote flaming fire where tow doth lie By which combustion all might be vndone? |
29574 | Art thou in loue, or witcht by any wight? |
29574 | Ay me( quoth_ Philos_) what man can despise Such amourous looks, sweet tongues,& most sweet eies? |
29574 | Beauty is blacke, defam''d by wicked men, And yet must euery beauty make men sue? |
29574 | But I will sweare, said he: So_ Iason_ did, Replide faire_ Hiren_, yet who faithlesse more, or more inconstant to his sworne loues bed? |
29574 | But why doe I digresse the path I tread, Cloying your eares with that your eyes doe read? |
29574 | But yet packe hence thou foule incestious loue, What, wilt vpon thy only father dote? |
29574 | C''s[ John Chalkhill''s?] |
29574 | Can greater glory to my life be giuen, Then her maiesticke beauty that rewards me? |
29574 | Can her embraces so my soule remoue? |
29574 | Can_ Vulcan_ forge so foule an arrow now? |
29574 | Come kisse thy father, gentle daughter then,_ A_nd learne to sport thee in a wanton bed; Is this the tricks( she softly said) of men? |
29574 | Daughter( quoth she) why art thou thus alone? |
29574 | Daughter, quoth he, with eyes full fraught with teares, What hast thou done? |
29574 | Did_ Cupid_ then ere shoot so yet before? |
29574 | How bitter is sweet loue, that loues alone, And is not sympathis''d, like to a man? |
29574 | How cam''st thou hither( then amaine he cries) To kil my heart? |
29574 | How great( said she) ô_ Venus_ mayst thou be, How was I rauished this present night, In feeling of your pleasant sports in me? |
29574 | How many margent notes can we vnfold, Mourning for virgins that haue bene too blame? |
29574 | How nobly mightst thereby increase thy fame, How quickly shouldst a son gaine vnto thee? |
29574 | I clipt a man in prime of his delight, What liuely pleasures did I there conceiue? |
29574 | May dreames a future chance to vs portend? |
29574 | Melts not thy hart(_ Gyneura_) at his cares? |
29574 | Mine eyes( quoth he) subornd to murder me? |
29574 | O faire_ Gyneura_, how long wil''t be ere safron- robed_ Hymen_ doe vnite vs? |
29574 | Oh heauens, what new- founde griefes possesse my mind, what rare impassionated fits be these? |
29574 | Oh how vniust art thou? |
29574 | Or be offended with me for the same? |
29574 | Or further: will dame_ Venus_ euermore Such cruelty vnto her seruants show? |
29574 | Or who is glutted with the sight of heauen, Where still the more we looke, the more is seene? |
29574 | Renowned King, but that your constant loue Restraines my tongue& holds my speeches in, A wanton question I would to thee moue? |
29574 | Set white to white, and who commendeth either? |
29574 | Since I must write of thy so sad confusion, shall I say_ Cupid_ with his brand did fire thee? |
29574 | Speake sweetest fayre, but one kinde word to me, How can alas that be offence in thee? |
29574 | The King then cheeres his daughter, in his arme, Why dost thou weep? |
29574 | The King, not deeming who lay by his side, Replies, what hurt deere Lady can it be? |
29574 | The Lady frown''d,& stopt her speaking farther, And said get h[=e]ce, is''t shame to loue our father? |
29574 | The glorious Sunne, when in his glittring pride, Scowring the heauens, in progresse he doth ride, Who runnes to see? |
29574 | The rosie bowers that heate of Sunne did saue, And yeelded to thy sence a pleasant smile? |
29574 | Then shal this lucklesse plot of ground remaine, Th''occasion that my loue I not obtaine? |
29574 | Vnhallowed lust, for loues lies drownd in poison in what blacke ornament shall I attire thee? |
29574 | What haue I gain''d? |
29574 | What is it to be fayre? |
29574 | What meane my dreams? |
29574 | What need she decke her selfe with art( quoth he) Or hide those beauties with her brauerie, Which addeth glory to the meanst attire? |
29574 | What pleasure can a sterne grim face affoord, A swarfie colour or rough shagged haire, Or Rauen blacke? |
29574 | What, are they gone? |
29574 | What, sleepst thou_ Myrha_? |
29574 | Where are those eyes, those glassy eyes of thine, That lent the glorious Sun his chiefest light? |
29574 | Where be the walks that thou wast wo nt to haue The shady groues paued with Camomile? |
29574 | Where is that Angels voyce, that voyce deuine, Whose wel- tun''d t[=o]gue did al the gods delight? |
29574 | Where is the face that did all faces staine, But shrunke within a hard consolid barke? |
29574 | Where litle babes fr[=o] windows were pusht down Yong Ladies blotted with adulteries, Old fathers scourg''d with all base villanies? |
29574 | Who hop''st to finde in this accursed place? |
29574 | Why didst thy Princely Father so beguile? |
29574 | Why dost thou blush? |
29574 | Why hast deceiu''d my aged blosom''d haires? |
29574 | Why seekes a light to open thy owne shame? |
29574 | Why should it not then stand right so with him, Since of one nature we participate? |
29574 | Why should not Gods this loue of mine permit? |
29574 | Why so are yours, yet do I dote on you? |
29574 | Would_ Cynarus_ thou hadst some other name, How fitly mightst thou haue a loue of me? |
29574 | Wouldst thou haue me pittie before they doe? |
29574 | Yet she did know I was her father deere, What meant she then to seeke me in such sort? |
29574 | Your company I most of all affect, Continue but your loue, it shall suffice, These wrangling husbands why should I respect? |
29574 | are not thy bright transparent eyes yet blinde VVith monstrous diluge of o''reflowing teares? |
29574 | doth time thy glory rust? |
29574 | haue they effect at all? |
29574 | my fathers foule disgrace, My owne dishonor, and my friends disdaine; What have I won? |
29574 | or who his sight doth lacke? |
29574 | quoth_ Myrha_, bursting out with cryes, What shall I do that haue so vilely erred? |
29574 | remaines there yet disdaines within thy mind? |
17318 | And from what have these consequences sprung? 17318 Should women vote?" |
17318 | What, then it is said, would you legislate in haste? 17318 A graveyard? 17318 A speech for what purpose? 17318 About themselves? 17318 According to their place? 17318 According to what methods are the foregoing plans arranged? 17318 Age? 17318 Age? 17318 American? 17318 And what, after all, are the virtues ascribed to Charles? 17318 Are any of the words and phrases used likely to be misunderstood? 17318 Are any used in special senses? 17318 Are archaic( old- fashioned), obsolete( discarded), and obsolescent( rapidly disappearing) terms more common in speech or books? 17318 Are fleets and armies necessary to a work of love and reconciliation? 17318 Are repetitions allowable? 17318 Are the characters well marked? 17318 Are the sentences long or short? 17318 Are the sentences varied? 17318 Are you aware that you indulge the same sentiment on a gigantic scale, when you recognize this very point of honor as a proper apology for war? 17318 Are you limited by requirements to a short time as were the Four Minute Speakers? 17318 Are you with the majority? 17318 Are your sources reliable? 17318 As applied to women, what doessuffrage"mean exactly-- the right to vote in all elections, or only in certain ones? |
17318 | Because men naturally great have done great service in the world without advantages, does it follow that lack of advantage is the secret of success? |
17318 | But because Walter Scott was dull at school, is a parent to see with joy that his son is a dunce? |
17318 | But do we need to be informed, in this country, what a constitution is? |
17318 | But suppose the old man is moved to wrath, would his words come slowly? |
17318 | But what did you expect? |
17318 | Can any of it be omitted? |
17318 | Can he merely stop speaking? |
17318 | Can he trust to their recollection of what he has tried to impress upon them? |
17318 | Can it be justified? |
17318 | Can you anticipate the material? |
17318 | Can you cite any accepted laws or theories of past periods which have been overturned? |
17318 | Can you cite some instance? |
17318 | Can you from such a practical consideration determine how long in time your speech will be? |
17318 | Can you justify the reading of the last part only of a book? |
17318 | Can you recall any extracts given in this book in which some form of division is used? |
17318 | Can you reproduce either exactly or in correct substance what you read to yourself without any supporting aids to stimulate your memory? |
17318 | Can you show how foreign words become naturalized? |
17318 | Castle battlements? |
17318 | Color? |
17318 | Consider sentence length in the following: Which words are significant? |
17318 | Could any hearer fail to comprehend? |
17318 | Could anything be more stimulating than to see and hear two different casts interpret a dramatic situation? |
17318 | Could the reverse order ever be used? |
17318 | Courteous? |
17318 | DUCHESS And what answer did you give him, dear child? |
17318 | DUCHESS[_ At center_] Ah, about dear Australia, I suppose? |
17318 | DUCHESS[_ Indignantly_] To Australia? |
17318 | DUCHESS[_ Severely_] Did you say that, Agatha? |
17318 | Dialect? |
17318 | Did he help his cause by his genial appreciation of their sentiments? |
17318 | Did it end as it began? |
17318 | Did it impress the audience? |
17318 | Did it refer to the entire speech or only a portion? |
17318 | Did the point impress the class? |
17318 | Did the speech end where it began? |
17318 | Did you think when, to serve your turn, you called the devil up that it was as easy to lay him as to raise him? |
17318 | Disposition? |
17318 | Do all people accept the same meaning? |
17318 | Do they ever exactly reproduce one another''s meanings? |
17318 | Do they talk about that? |
17318 | Do they_ establish_ a close causal relationship, or do they merely_ assert_ that after a group of thirteen had sat at table some one did die? |
17318 | Do you approve of these in such an instance? |
17318 | Do you fix things in your brain by performing them? |
17318 | Do you mean, begin with the earliest material and follow in chronological order down to the latest? |
17318 | Do you object to any? |
17318 | Do you retain most accurately what you see? |
17318 | Do you want to hear the entire speech? |
17318 | Does his testimony fit in with the circumstances under consideration? |
17318 | Does information become rooted in your memory because you have imparted it to others? |
17318 | Does it bear any relation to concluding a speech with a peroration? |
17318 | Does it begin too far away from the topic? |
17318 | Does it carry with it the right to hold office? |
17318 | Does it lower the tone of the passage too much? |
17318 | Does it remind you-- in tone-- of any other passage already quoted in this book? |
17318 | Does it show clearly its intention? |
17318 | Does it? |
17318 | Does its date explain it? |
17318 | Does the cold make him think of his native Italy or Greece? |
17318 | Does the heat make her long for her home in the country? |
17318 | Does the interest rise enough to make the passage dramatic? |
17318 | Does the interest rise? |
17318 | Does the scene conclude properly? |
17318 | Does their success justify them? |
17318 | Does this one? |
17318 | EDWARD P. CHEYNEY:_ Historical Tests of Democracy_ What is a constitution? |
17318 | Exercise or athletics? |
17318 | Exterior? |
17318 | First or last? |
17318 | First? |
17318 | Flippant? |
17318 | For a league of nations? |
17318 | For a scholarship qualification in athletics? |
17318 | For abolishing railroad grade crossings? |
17318 | For admitting Asiatic laborers to the United States? |
17318 | For advocating the study of the sciences? |
17318 | For child working laws? |
17318 | For education for girls? |
17318 | For equal wages for men and women? |
17318 | For example, how shall the alien learn English? |
17318 | For higher education? |
17318 | For instance, how old is Hamlet in the tragedy? |
17318 | For predicting aerial passenger service? |
17318 | For urging men to become farmers? |
17318 | For what kind of audience is it intended? |
17318 | For what kinds of audiences would this speech be fitting? |
17318 | Foreigner? |
17318 | From a pool, a fountain? |
17318 | From what country? |
17318 | HOPPER You do n''t mind my taking Agatha off to Australia, then, Duchess? |
17318 | Had he heard a false account? |
17318 | Has he made the main topics, the chief aim, stand out prominently enough? |
17318 | Has it any defects of material? |
17318 | Has it any faults of manner? |
17318 | Has it any relation to the underlying idea of the term_ exposition_ as applied to a great exhibition or fair? |
17318 | Has it changed? |
17318 | Has it coherence? |
17318 | Has it unity? |
17318 | Has the last observation any close connection with the preceding portion? |
17318 | Has the matter engaged attention prior to the present? |
17318 | Have we shown ourselves so unwilling to be reconciled that force must be called in to win back our love?" |
17318 | Have you a different kind of mind, the kind which remember best what it tells, what it explains, what it does? |
17318 | Have you been allotted a half hour? |
17318 | Have you ever heard a speaker who gave you the impression that all his words ended in_ tion_? |
17318 | He may feel like saying,"Well, even if what you say is true, what are you going to do about it?" |
17318 | Historically? |
17318 | How can training in public speaking help an applicant for a position? |
17318 | How close to madness did the dramatist expect actors to portray his actions? |
17318 | How could he make clear to them his desire to continue? |
17318 | How could it have been improved? |
17318 | How could this scheme be used for a discussion of the Monroe Doctrine? |
17318 | How do Sabrina and her Nymphs arise? |
17318 | How do books on sports explain the baseball field, the football gridiron, the tennis court, the golf links? |
17318 | How do you arrange the details of your exposition? |
17318 | How is a jury trial conducted? |
17318 | How is concreteness secured? |
17318 | How is sentence variety secured? |
17318 | How large shall taxes be next year? |
17318 | How long will the speech be? |
17318 | How many do you easily use now in your own remarks? |
17318 | How many of the words would you be likely not to use? |
17318 | How many unfamiliar words have you heard or seen recently? |
17318 | How much do you know about any of the following words? |
17318 | How much of what you read do you remember? |
17318 | How shall I invest my money? |
17318 | How shall he make them well- disposed, attentive, willing to be instructed? |
17318 | How shall the stream rise above its fountain? |
17318 | How shall we better the city government? |
17318 | How then do the Brothers get in? |
17318 | How would the last detail impress the change, if you decide to have one? |
17318 | How would you arrange the books in a private library? |
17318 | How would you secure an interview with some person of prominence? |
17318 | If an inventor gives instructions to a pattern- maker for the construction of a model, what plan does he follow? |
17318 | If it is the early part, why should any one read on to the end or stay for the curtain to come down the last time? |
17318 | If presented on an indoors stage what should the setting be? |
17318 | If the President and Senate make peace, may one State, nevertheless, continue the war? |
17318 | If the occasion was momentous, what is the style? |
17318 | If this were acted upon a stage would any additional lines be necessary or desirable? |
17318 | If you have several topics to cover in a single speech where would you put the most important? |
17318 | In Lincoln''s speech do you think he planned the material chronologically? |
17318 | In studying a foreign language how did you fix in your mind the words which permanently stuck there? |
17318 | In what spirit is the introduction treated? |
17318 | Inside the palace of Comus? |
17318 | Interior? |
17318 | Is a Conclusion Necessary? |
17318 | Is any expression too strong? |
17318 | Is contrast a good order to follow in planning? |
17318 | Is he unprejudiced? |
17318 | Is injustice changed into justice by the practice of the ages? |
17318 | Is it a brief? |
17318 | Is it above their heads? |
17318 | Is it adapted to its audience? |
17318 | Is it any wonder that under such physical agonies the mind refuses to respond-- rather, is incapable of any action whatever? |
17318 | Is it beneath their intelligences? |
17318 | Is it easy to tell the exact truth, not as a moral exercise, but merely as a matter of exactness? |
17318 | Is it ever justifiable? |
17318 | Is it first- hand material, or merely hearsay? |
17318 | Is it interesting? |
17318 | Is it introduced clearly? |
17318 | Is it not an idea perfectly familiar, definite, and well settled? |
17318 | Is it that insidious smile with which our petition has been lately received? |
17318 | Is it true? |
17318 | Is it unprejudiced? |
17318 | Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? |
17318 | Is my victim made a righteous prey because I have bowed him to the earth till he can not rise? |
17318 | Is not the expression,_ representative of the people_, here used in two different senses? |
17318 | Is proper emphasis secured? |
17318 | Is the authority reliable? |
17318 | Is the conversation interesting in itself? |
17318 | Is the following a good definition? |
17318 | Is the following clear? |
17318 | Is the following well phrased? |
17318 | Is the index the same as the table of contents? |
17318 | Is the information authoritative? |
17318 | Is the interrogative form of the last sentence better than the declarative? |
17318 | Is the introduction too long? |
17318 | Is the quotation at the end in good taste? |
17318 | Is the story of_ The Vicar of Wakefield_ too good to be true? |
17318 | Is the topic introduced gracefully? |
17318 | Is the"cramming"process of studying a good one? |
17318 | Is there any certainty that they will stand unchanged forever? |
17318 | Is there any difference? |
17318 | Is there any sense in writing such a sentence? |
17318 | Is there any suspense? |
17318 | Is this form of material likely to be more important in preparation or in the finished speech? |
17318 | Is this phrase important? |
17318 | Is this plan in any respect like Sumner''s? |
17318 | Is this the part of wise men, engaged in a great and arduous struggle for liberty? |
17318 | Is true honor promoted where justice is not? |
17318 | Is your explanation easily understood? |
17318 | Is your list complete? |
17318 | It answers such questions as how? |
17318 | It simply leaves the inquiry: What was the understanding those fathers had of the question mentioned? |
17318 | Just what do you mean by that? |
17318 | Just what is meant by such terms as_ temporary, uncertain?_ Under each statement, then, might be added a detailed explanation. |
17318 | Lighting? |
17318 | Manner of speaking? |
17318 | Might he call her back and force her to take a gift? |
17318 | Might she deliver an impressive phrase, then dash away as though startled by her exhibition of sympathetic feeling? |
17318 | Might the stage show an exterior? |
17318 | Now can you or not be prevailed upon to pause and to consider whether this is quite just to us, or even to yourselves? |
17318 | Now that the brief is finished so that it represents exactly the material and development of the final speech, how shall it be used? |
17318 | Now what divides the term from the class in which it belongs? |
17318 | Now, would the knowledge that this copyright would exist in 1841 have been a source of gratification to Johnson? |
17318 | Of what value is public speaking to women? |
17318 | On a church resolution, hidden often in its records, and meant only as a decent cover for servility in daily practice? |
17318 | On a few cold prayers, mere lip- service, and never from the heart? |
17318 | On political parties, with their superficial influence at best, and seeking ordinarily only to use existing prejudices to the best advantage? |
17318 | On what plan do you arrange your directions? |
17318 | Open space in country some distance from castle? |
17318 | Order of importance? |
17318 | R of Rs 59:305- 306 Mr''19.--Should America act as trustee of the Near East? |
17318 | Season of year? |
17318 | Shall it be serious, informative, argumentative, humorous, scoffing, ironic? |
17318 | Shall the thing formed say to him that formed it, Why hast thou made me thus? |
17318 | Shall we, then, trust to mere politics, where even revolution has failed? |
17318 | Should a speaker make gestures? |
17318 | Should it be conviction in the truth or right of the position he takes and the proposition he supports? |
17318 | Should the entire masque be acted out- of- doors? |
17318 | Slangy? |
17318 | Suspicious? |
17318 | Sympathetic? |
17318 | The beginning or the ending? |
17318 | The edge of the woods on the other? |
17318 | The following questions will help in judging and criticizing: Was the conclusion too long? |
17318 | The question is, How would the principle of the absolute and unchecked majority operate, under these circumstances, in this little community? |
17318 | Time order? |
17318 | Too long? |
17318 | Too short? |
17318 | Under what circumstances are such changes made? |
17318 | Under what circumstances do you think the opposite might be used-- from effect to cause? |
17318 | Visitor to town? |
17318 | Was Oliver Cromwell, his bitterest enemies themselves being judges, destitute of private virtues? |
17318 | Was any settlement ever attempted? |
17318 | Was he angry? |
17318 | Was he cool towards her? |
17318 | Was he trying to get his listeners to do anything? |
17318 | Was it because Abraham Lincoln had little schooling that his great heart beat true to God and man, lifting him to free a race and die for his country? |
17318 | Was it because Benjamin Franklin was not college- bred that he drew the lightning from heaven and tore the scepter from the tyrant? |
17318 | Was it recapitulation, summary, peroration? |
17318 | Was it retrospective, anticipatory, or both? |
17318 | Was it so short as to seem abrupt? |
17318 | Was she describing his size, or meaning that he was out of fencing trim? |
17318 | Was the conclusion in bad taste? |
17318 | Weather? |
17318 | Well- bred? |
17318 | Were it not better, Because that I am more than common tall, That I did suit me all points like a man? |
17318 | What about the power plants of the future aircraft? |
17318 | What arrangement is inevitable? |
17318 | What can you find fault with? |
17318 | What could be said against it from the other side? |
17318 | What defects? |
17318 | What did he mean? |
17318 | What did you learn of the topic_ gestures_ in this book from your reference to the table of contents? |
17318 | What did you write? |
17318 | What do you think that object was? |
17318 | What does the change mean? |
17318 | What does the index do for a topic? |
17318 | What effect have they? |
17318 | What effect would such an ending have? |
17318 | What effects have the simple, declarative sentences? |
17318 | What effects upon speeches by women will universal suffrage have? |
17318 | What elements give the idea of the extent of the Colonies''fisheries? |
17318 | What elements may aid the persuasive power of a speech? |
17318 | What excellences has it? |
17318 | What induces you to think thus? |
17318 | What is it that gentlemen wish? |
17318 | What is its equipment? |
17318 | What is its importance? |
17318 | What is its size? |
17318 | What is its style? |
17318 | What is slang? |
17318 | What is the best method of acquiring a foreign language? |
17318 | What is the character of your audience? |
17318 | What is the effect of the questions in the following? |
17318 | What is the point? |
17318 | What is the purpose of your speech? |
17318 | What is your opinion of the style? |
17318 | What kind of automobile shall I buy? |
17318 | What kind of girl? |
17318 | What kind of man? |
17318 | What kind of material is likely to be arranged according to each of your principles? |
17318 | What kind of mind have you? |
17318 | What kind of sentence is it? |
17318 | What kind of speech? |
17318 | What kind of will shall I make? |
17318 | What kind of work shall a woman enter? |
17318 | What kinds of sentences shall a speaker construct as he speaks? |
17318 | What limits, or drawbacks has it? |
17318 | What makes it so? |
17318 | What merits had it? |
17318 | What method of remembering do you find most effective in your own case? |
17318 | What minor phrase? |
17318 | What principle would you use? |
17318 | What quality predominates in the following? |
17318 | What reason should he offer his audience for violating the principle discussed in the chapter on conclusions? |
17318 | What reasons have you for these changes? |
17318 | What reasons have you for your answer? |
17318 | What should be done with the hands? |
17318 | What should be the first requisite of a speaker of argumentation? |
17318 | What should be the only condition for using foreign expressions? |
17318 | What suggestions could you offer for its improvement? |
17318 | What suggestions would you make for rearranging any parts? |
17318 | What then of variety? |
17318 | What things will make conversation realistic? |
17318 | What was its relation to the introduction? |
17318 | What was its relation to the main part of the speech? |
17318 | What was its result? |
17318 | What was its style? |
17318 | What was lacking in their case? |
17318 | What was the purpose of each? |
17318 | What will his vocabulary be? |
17318 | What will his vocabulary be? |
17318 | What would they have? |
17318 | What, I again repeat, is the cause?" |
17318 | When a scientist writes a treatise on the topic of the immortality of man, of what value are his opinions unless his statements are clear? |
17318 | When a speaker has conclusively proven what he has stated in his proposition, is his speech ended? |
17318 | When specifications for a building are furnished to the contractor, what principle of arrangement is followed? |
17318 | When war is declared by a law of Congress, can a single State nullify that law, and remain at peace? |
17318 | When you direct a stranger how to reach a certain building in your town, of what value are your remarks unless they are clear? |
17318 | Where are transitions most clearly needed? |
17318 | Where does the rise begin? |
17318 | Where is it used? |
17318 | Where shall our church organizations or parties get strength to attack their great parent and moulder, the slave power? |
17318 | Which article is best? |
17318 | Which candidate shall we elect? |
17318 | Which college shall a boy attend? |
17318 | Which details do you think least essential? |
17318 | Which division in Sumner''s speech was the most important? |
17318 | Which hypothesis( what does the word mean?) |
17318 | Which is it? |
17318 | Which of Webster''s four parts is the most important? |
17318 | Which principle will you use for your first main division-- indoor and outdoor games, or winter and summer games, or some other? |
17318 | Which should be the most important part of a story or a play? |
17318 | While these examples illustrate, do they not also prove? |
17318 | Who are the persons involved in a regular debate? |
17318 | Who dares fail to try? |
17318 | Who shall live up to the great trust? |
17318 | Why did Lincoln repeat this sentence, practically with no change, twelve times in a single speech? |
17318 | Why did the author use names for the candidates? |
17318 | Why do you choose it? |
17318 | Why has so much so- called authoritative information concerning conditions in Europe been so discounted? |
17318 | Why is a settlement needed? |
17318 | Why is it good? |
17318 | Why is it timely? |
17318 | Why is superstition so prevalent? |
17318 | Why is the proposition worth discussing at this present time? |
17318 | Why not? |
17318 | Why stand we here idle? |
17318 | Why then, when a speaker has said all he has to say, should he not simply stop and sit down? |
17318 | Why was the style of the extract below especially good for the evident purpose and audience? |
17318 | Why? |
17318 | Why? |
17318 | Why? |
17318 | Why? |
17318 | Why? |
17318 | Will her remarks change his short, gruff answers to interested questions about her home? |
17318 | Will his enthusiasm for his native land change her flippancy to interest in far- off romantic countries? |
17318 | Will his statements convince a person likely to be on the opposing side? |
17318 | Will that not indicate quite clearly that he has finished his speech? |
17318 | Will the use of petroleum continue to be one of the triumphs of aviation, or will the time come when substitutes may be successfully utilized? |
17318 | Will they carry away exactly what he wants them to retain? |
17318 | Will you hold your audience longer? |
17318 | With reference to the earlier parts of the speech, how was it delivered? |
17318 | With what kind of material does each deal? |
17318 | Working girl? |
17318 | Would a humorous anecdote of the happy gratitude of a child for a cast- off toy be good to produce emphasis? |
17318 | Would a man discussing drawings for a new house be likely to formulate his explanations on this scheme? |
17318 | Would an arrangement from cause to effect be somewhat like one based on time? |
17318 | Would he speak distinctly or would he almost choke? |
17318 | Would it be wise to dwell upon such horrors only? |
17318 | Would it have induced him to give us one more allegory, one more life of a poet, one more imitation of Juvenal? |
17318 | Would it have once cheered him under a fit of the spleen? |
17318 | Would it have once drawn him out of his bed before noon? |
17318 | Would it have stimulated his exertions? |
17318 | Would such an arrangement make entrances, exits, acting, effective? |
17318 | Would the banks of the river be at the rear? |
17318 | Would the palace be on one side? |
17318 | Would the voting qualifications be the same for women as for men? |
17318 | Would you legislate in times of great excitement concerning matters of such deep concern? |
17318 | Yet if that queen is stricken in her feelings as a mother, might not all the royal dignity melt away, and her Majesty act like any sorrowing woman? |
17318 | Yet what might the facts be? |
17318 | by what method? |
17318 | did Huxley himself support? |
17318 | for what purpose? |
17318 | in what manner? |
17318 | why? |
12759 | Ah, who would fear? |
12759 | And is mine one? |
12759 | Can you love the Lord who died for you, And leave the place Where His glory is all disclosed to view, And tender grace? |
12759 | Did He not hang on the cursèd tree, And bear its shame, And clasp to His heart, for love of me, My guilt and blame? |
12759 | Forgive me my foul murder? |
12759 | Have we not heard the bridegroom is so sweet? 12759 How could I touch the golden harps, When all my praise Would be so wrought with grief- full warps Of their sad days?" |
12759 | How love the loved who are sorrowing, And yet be glad? 12759 I had a brother, and also another Whom I loved well; What if, in anguish, they curse each other In the depths of hell?" |
12759 | Lord, thou hast here thy ninety and nine: Are they not enough for thee? |
12759 | Lord, whence are those blood- drops all the way, That mark out the mountain track? |
12759 | Lord, whence are thy hands so rent and torn? |
12759 | Should I be liker Christ were I To love no more The loved, who in their anguish lie Outside the door? |
12759 | Should I be liker, nearer Him, Forgetting this, Singing all day with the Seraphim, In selfish bliss? |
12759 | Should I be nearer Christ,she said,"By pitying less The sinful living or woful dead In their helplessness?" |
12759 | The Secret, hath it been told you, and what is your message to me? |
12759 | What part or lot have you,he said,"In these dull rites of drowsy- head? |
12759 | What was his creed? |
12759 | What was his creed? |
12759 | What was his creed? |
12759 | What was his creed? |
12759 | What was his creed? |
12759 | When Christ would sup He drained the dregs from out my cup; So how should I be lifted up? |
12759 | Who art thou, Lord? |
12759 | Who art thou? |
12759 | Who would not goWith buoyant steps, to gain that blessed portal, Which opens to the land we long to know? |
12759 | You wish to join our fold,they said:"Do you believe in all that''s read From ritual and written creed, Essential to our human need?" |
12759 | _Have I not worn my strength away With fast and penance sore? |
12759 | _Have I not, Lord, gone day by day Where thy poor children dwell; And carried help, and gold, and food? |
12759 | _Have not I laid before thy shrine My wealth, O Lord?" |
12759 | ( and what is one?) |
12759 | ***** ART THOU WEARY? |
12759 | ***** SAID I NOT SO? |
12759 | ***** WHAT IS PRAYER? |
12759 | ***** WHAT WAS HIS CREED? |
12759 | ***** WHY THUS LONGING? |
12759 | Above the nobler, shall less noble rise? |
12759 | Ah, who shall lead us thither? |
12759 | All the world over, I wonder, in lands that I never have trod, Are the people eternally seeking for the signs and steps of a God? |
12759 | Am I the slave they say, Soggarth aroon? |
12759 | An angel writing in a book of gold: Exceeding peace had made Ben Adhem bold, And to the presence in the room he said,"What writest thou?" |
12759 | And having thee alone, what have I not? |
12759 | And is that all, O watcher on the tower? |
12759 | And is there care in heaven? |
12759 | And is there love In heavenly spirits to these creatures base, That may compassion of their evils move? |
12759 | And lone, Where its first splendors shone, Shall be that pleasant company of stars: How should they know that death Such perfect beauty mars? |
12759 | And shall spirit die? |
12759 | And shall we meet the Master so, Bearing our withered leaves? |
12759 | And thou art sure to- morrow Will be like this, and more Abundant? |
12759 | And thou the keeper of my soul, Who never will deceive me? |
12759 | And what are gods, that man may not become As they, participating godlike food? |
12759 | And what is it all, when all is done? |
12759 | And what is so rare as a day in June? |
12759 | And what shall assuage his dark despair, But the penitent cry of humble prayer? |
12759 | And what''s in prayer but this twofold force, To be forestalled ere we come to fall, Or pardoned being down? |
12759 | And who commanded( and the silence came), Here let the billows stiffen, and have rest? |
12759 | And you, who judge so harshly, Are you sure the stumbling- stone That tripped the feet of others Might not have bruised your own? |
12759 | And, like the pale star shooting down the sky, Look they not ever brightest when they fly The desolate home they blessed? |
12759 | And, lying down at night for a last sleeping, Say in that ear Which hearkens ever:"Lord, within thy keeping How should I fear? |
12759 | Are they dead, and can they never Come again to life forever? |
12759 | Are you sure the sad- faced angel Who writes our errors down Will ascribe to you more honor Than him on whom you frown? |
12759 | Art thou afraid?" |
12759 | Art thou weary, art thou languid, Art thou sore distressed? |
12759 | As theirs is not thy will as free? |
12759 | Asked God,"Who now is at the door?" |
12759 | But ah, how will it be On that strange day of fire and flame, When men shall wither with a mystic fear, And all shall stand before the one true Judge? |
12759 | But how preserved The chain unbroken upward, to the realms Of incorporeal life? |
12759 | But if death Bind us with after- bands, what profits then Our inward freedom? |
12759 | But is there for the night a resting- place? |
12759 | But still they questioned, Who art thou? |
12759 | But when? |
12759 | But who to- day are the poor, And who are the rich? |
12759 | But, O, what form of prayer Can serve my turn? |
12759 | Can it be? |
12759 | Can loving children e''er reprove With murmurs whom they trust and love? |
12759 | Can pardoning Heaven on guilty sickness smile? |
12759 | Can then their hope be vain? |
12759 | Christ did not need their gifts; and yet Did either Mary once regret Her offering? |
12759 | Comes the wished- for hour? |
12759 | Costs it more pain than this, ye call A"great event,"should come to pass, Than that? |
12759 | Dawns the happy hour? |
12759 | Did Salome fret Over the unused aloes? |
12759 | Did she open? |
12759 | Do you not know me? |
12759 | Does the road wind up hill all the way? |
12759 | Dost ask who that may be? |
12759 | Dost thou yet lay up thy store And still make plans for more? |
12759 | Doth she? |
12759 | Finding, following, keeping, struggling, Is He sure to bless? |
12759 | For us alone Was death invented? |
12759 | For who can tell, when sleep thine eyes shall close, That earthly cares and woes To thee may e''er return? |
12759 | For why? |
12759 | Forever rising in sublime increase To"Glory in the highest,--on earth peace"? |
12759 | Frets doubt the maw- crammed beast? |
12759 | Gems of the mountain, and pearls of the ocean, Myrrh from the forest, or gold from the mine? |
12759 | God''s seraphs, do your voices sound As sad in naming sorrow? |
12759 | Good God, for what but for the sake Of thy beloved and only Son, Who did on him our nature take, Were these exceeding favors done? |
12759 | Great gifts I brought to thee; What hast thou brought to me? |
12759 | Has God with equal favors thee Neglected to endow? |
12759 | Has thy day been so bright That in its flight There is no trace of sorrow? |
12759 | Hast thou a charm to stay the morning star In his steep course? |
12759 | Hast thou no pining want, or wish, or care, That calls for holy prayer? |
12759 | Hast thou not read,''Better the eye should see than that desire Should wander''? |
12759 | Hath He marks to lead me to Him, If He be my Guide? |
12759 | Hath even a whisper come Of the secret, Whence and Whither? |
12759 | Have I not bade youth''s joys retire, And vain delights depart?" |
12759 | Have I not gained thy grace, O Lord, And won in heaven my part?" |
12759 | Have I not shunned the path of sin, And chose the better part?" |
12759 | Have I not watched and wept?" |
12759 | He still there? |
12759 | He who bore Life''s heaviest cross is mine forever- more, And I who wait his coming, shall not I On his sure word rely? |
12759 | How dies the serpent? |
12759 | How many smiles?--a score? |
12759 | How sing the songs ye are fain to sing, While I am sad?" |
12759 | I gave my life for thee; What hast thou given for me? |
12759 | I hold all else, named piety, A selfish scheme, a vain pretence; Where centre is not-- can there be Circumference? |
12759 | I left it all for thee; Hast thou left aught for me? |
12759 | I slept and dreamed that life was Beauty: I woke and found that life was Duty: Was then thy dream a shadowy lie? |
12759 | I spent long years for thee; Hast thou spent one for me? |
12759 | I suffered much for thee; What canst thou bear for me? |
12759 | If I ask Him to receive me, Will He say me nay? |
12759 | If I find Him, if I follow, What His guerdon here? |
12759 | If I still hold closely to Him, What hath He at last? |
12759 | If suddenly upon the street My gracious Saviour I should meet, And he should say,"As I love thee, What love hast thou to offer me?" |
12759 | If true unto thyself thou wast, What were the proud one''s scorn to thee? |
12759 | In having all things, and not thee, what have I? |
12759 | In plain then, what forbids he but to know, Forbids us good, forbids us to be wise? |
12759 | In vain thou strugglest to get free; I never will unloose my hold: Art thou the Man that died for me? |
12759 | Is he a prophet? |
12759 | Is his chant sublime, Filled with the glories of the future time? |
12759 | Is it indeed thy peace? |
12759 | Is it possible? |
12759 | Is it to quit the dish Of flesh, yet still To fill The platter high with fish? |
12759 | Is life, then, a dream and delusion, and where shall the dreamer awake? |
12759 | Is silence worship? |
12759 | Is the day breaking? |
12759 | Is the day breaking? |
12759 | Is the world seen like shadows on water, and what if the mirror break? |
12759 | Is there a thing beneath the sun That strives with thee my heart to share? |
12759 | Is there anything better than this, that one man can do for another? |
12759 | Is there diadem, as Monarch, That His brow adorns? |
12759 | Is there naught in the heaven above, whence the hail and the levin are hurled, But the wind that is swept around us by the rush of the rolling world? |
12759 | Is there no happy spot Where mortals may be blest, Where grief may find a balm, And weariness a rest? |
12759 | Is this a fast,--to keep The larder lean, And clean From fat of veals and sheep? |
12759 | Is this the peace of God, this strange sweet calm? |
12759 | Is''t so? |
12759 | Knocking, knocking, ever knocking? |
12759 | Knocking, knocking, ever knocking? |
12759 | Knowest thou what wove yon woodbird''s nest Of leaves, and feathers from her breast? |
12759 | Let me enjoy but thee, what further crave I? |
12759 | Like the aimless, helpless, hopeless did I drivel--Being-- who? |
12759 | Look forth again; it must be near the hour; Dost thou not see the snowy mountain copes, And the green woods beneath them on the slopes? |
12759 | Matter immortal? |
12759 | May one be pardoned and retain the offence? |
12759 | Me, for celestial homes of glory born, Why here, O, why so long, Do ye behold an exile from on high? |
12759 | Must I thus leave thee, Paradise? |
12759 | Nay, in thyself art thou not deified That from such depths thou couldst such summits win? |
12759 | Not having thee, what have my labors got? |
12759 | Not that, amassing flowers, Youth sighed,"Which rose make ours, Which lily leave and then as best recall?" |
12759 | Now, who shall arbitrate? |
12759 | O Paradise, O Paradise, The world is growing old; Who would not be at rest and free Where love is never cold? |
12759 | O Paradise, O Paradise, Who doth not crave for rest, Who would not seek the happy land Where they that loved are blest? |
12759 | O Saviour, I have proved That thou to help and save art really near: How else this quiet rest from grief and fear And all distress? |
12759 | O mother dear, Jerusalem, When shall I come to thee? |
12759 | O sweet and blessèd Country, Shall I ever see thy face? |
12759 | O sweet and blessèd Country, Shall I ever win thy grace? |
12759 | Or how the sacred pine- tree adds To her old leaves new myriads? |
12759 | Or into what new follies run? |
12759 | Or is it envy? |
12759 | Or is there victim than itself more vile? |
12759 | Or is thy saying not to be revealed?" |
12759 | Or ragg''d to go, Or show A downcast look, and sour? |
12759 | Or what''s my mother or my nurse to me? |
12759 | Or whence this secret dread, and inward horror, Of falling into naught? |
12759 | Painting with morn each annual cell? |
12759 | Remember thee, remember thee, if I Safe e''en on Geryon brought thee; now I come More near to God, wilt thou not trust me now? |
12759 | Said God,"Who seeks to enter here?" |
12759 | Said I not so,--that I would sin no more? |
12759 | Saint Peter he turned the keys about, And answered grim:"Can you love the Lord and abide without, Afar from Him?" |
12759 | Say, heavenly muse, shall not thy sacred vein Afford a present to the infant God? |
12759 | Say, shall we yield him, in costly devotion, Odors of Edom, and offerings divine? |
12759 | Shall He, the Searcher of the hidden heart, In His eternal and divine decree Condemn the woman and forgive the man? |
12759 | Shall I ever win the prize itself? |
12759 | Shall I find comfort, travel- sore and weak? |
12759 | Shall I list to the word of the English, who come from the uttermost sea? |
12759 | Shall I meet other wayfarers at night? |
12759 | Shall it expire with life, and be no more? |
12759 | Shall man alone, for whom all else revives, No resurrection know? |
12759 | Shall sex make_ then_ a difference in sin? |
12759 | Shall that be shut to man, which to the beast Is open? |
12759 | Shall these glad things arise, To verify thy word, And bless our wandering eyes? |
12759 | Sings he of an hour When error shall decay, and truth grow strong, And light shall rule supreme and conquer wrong? |
12759 | So runs my dream: but what am I? |
12759 | Some lone and pleasant dell, Some valley in the west, Where, free from toil and pain, The weary soul may rest? |
12759 | Steals my senses, shuts my sight, Drowns my spirits, draws my breath? |
12759 | Still knocking? |
12759 | Still there? |
12759 | Sweet Peace, where dost thou dwell? |
12759 | THE LIGHT OF THE WORLD"Knocking, knocking, ever knocking? |
12759 | Tell me, my secret soul, O, tell me, Hope and Faith, Is there no resting- place From sorrow, sin, and death? |
12759 | Tell me, my soul, can this be death? |
12759 | Tell me, ye wingèd winds, That round my pathway roar, Do ye not know some spot Where mortals weep no more? |
12759 | Tell us, shall it be A bright, calm, glorious daylight for the free? |
12759 | That heart whose fondest throbs to me were given; My name on earth was ever in thy prayer, And wilt thou never utter it in heaven? |
12759 | The Caliph said,"If this be so, I know not, but thy guile I know; For how can I thy words believe, When even God thou didst deceive? |
12759 | The Saviour looks for perfect fruit, We stand before him, humbled, mute; Waiting the words he breathes,--"_ Nothing but leaves_?" |
12759 | The Syrian heard, rose up, and braced His huge limbs to the accustomed toil:"My child, see how the waters boil? |
12759 | The angry Caliph cried,"Who dare Rebuke his king for slighting prayer?" |
12759 | The great, who coldly pass thee by, With proud step and averted eye? |
12759 | The happy children come to us, And look up in our faces: They ask us-- Was it thus, and thus, When we were in their places? |
12759 | The high In station, or in wealth the chief? |
12759 | The saint addressed the child in accents bland:"Fair boy,"quoth he,"I pray what toil is thine? |
12759 | The world is good in its own poor way, There is rest by night and high spirits by day; Yet the world is not happy, as the world might be,-- Why is it? |
12759 | The world is so beautiful one may fear Its borrowed beauty might make it too dear, Yet the world is not happy, as the world might be-- Why is it? |
12759 | The world is wise, for the world is old; Five thousand years their tale have told; Yet the world is not happy, as the world might be,-- Why is it? |
12759 | Then what could this poor heart of mine Dare offer to that heart divine? |
12759 | Then why, O blessed Jesus Christ, Should I not love thee well? |
12759 | Then why, my soul, dost thou complain, Why drooping seek the dark recess? |
12759 | Think you I love not, or that I forget These of my loins? |
12759 | This crowns his feast with wine and wit,-- Who brought him to that mirth and state? |
12759 | This longing after immortality? |
12759 | Thou art thyself thine enemy: The great!--what better they than thou? |
12759 | Thou hast the form And likeness of thy God!--Who more? |
12759 | Thou seest in thine, men, deeds, Clear, moving, full of speech and order; then Why may not all this world be but a dream Of God''s? |
12759 | Thou, heaven''s consummate cup, what needst thou with earth''s wheel? |
12759 | Though thorns be in my path concealed? |
12759 | Thy joys when shall I see-- The King sitting upon His throne, And thy felicity? |
12759 | To man, propose this test-- Thy body at its best, How far can that project thy soul on its lone way? |
12759 | Try what repentance can: what can it not? |
12759 | Two went to pray? |
12759 | Was I, the world arraigned, Were they, my soul disdained, Right? |
12759 | Was not the will kept free? |
12759 | We pine to see it; tell us yet again If the broad daylight breaks upon the plain? |
12759 | We sit together, with the skies, The steadfast skies, above us: We look into each other''s eyes,"And how long will you love us?" |
12759 | Well she noted each mark and each furrow that crossed O''er the tracings of destiny''s line:"WHENCE CAME YE?" |
12759 | Westward across the ocean, and Northward across the snow, Do they all stand gazing, as ever, and what do the wisest know? |
12759 | What am I then? |
12759 | What art thou now? |
12759 | What but perdition will it be to most? |
12759 | What but thy grace can foil the Tempter''s power? |
12759 | What can your knowledge hurt him, or this tree Impart against his will, if all be his? |
12759 | What doth he say, O watcher on the tower? |
12759 | What duty have I left undone? |
12759 | What fear I then? |
12759 | What had I on earth to do With the slothful, with the mawkish, the unmanly? |
12759 | What hast thou been? |
12759 | What have I done that''s worth the doing? |
12759 | What have I learnt, where''er I''ve been, From all I have heard, from all I''ve seen? |
12759 | What have I sought that I should shun? |
12759 | What have they rung from the Silence? |
12759 | What hence infers Lorenzo? |
12759 | What if memories vanish too, And the past be lost to view; Is it all for nought that I Heard and saw and hurried by? |
12759 | What if this cursèd hand Were thicker than itself with brother''s blood, Is there not rain enough in the sweet heavens To wash it white as snow? |
12759 | What is he but a brute Whose flesh hath soul to suit, Whose spirit works lest arms and legs want play? |
12759 | What is this absorbs me quite? |
12759 | What know I more that''s worth the knowing? |
12759 | What lackest thou, world? |
12759 | What needs a conscience calm and bright Within itself, an outward test? |
12759 | What shall I do?--make vows and break them still? |
12759 | What shall I then say, unfriended, By no advocate attended, When the just are scarce defended? |
12759 | What shall we call them? |
12759 | What should I do? |
12759 | What sudden blaze is round him poured, As though all Heaven''s refulgent hoard In one rich glory shone? |
12759 | What then? |
12759 | What though beneath thee man put forth His pomp, his pride, his skill; And arts that made fire, flood, and earth The vassals of his will? |
12759 | What though my shrinking flesh complain And murmur to contend so long? |
12759 | What though no real voice or sound Amid their radiant orbs be found? |
12759 | What though the earlier grooves Which ran the laughing loves Around thy base, no longer pause and press? |
12759 | What though, about thy rim, Scull- things in order grim Grow out, in graver mood, obey the sterner stress? |
12759 | What though, in solemn silence, all Move round the dark terrestrial ball? |
12759 | What was his creed-- What his belief? |
12759 | What wonder if Sir Launfal now Remember the keeping of his vow? |
12759 | What''s the hour? |
12759 | What? |
12759 | When is the time for prayer? |
12759 | When is the time for prayer? |
12759 | When shall I come to thee? |
12759 | When shall my sorrows have an end, Thy joys when shall I see? |
12759 | When shall my sorrows have an end-- Thy joys when shall I see? |
12759 | Whence came I here, and how? |
12759 | Where am I? |
12759 | Where are childhood''s merry hours, Bright with sunshine, crossed with showers? |
12759 | Where have my feet chose out their way? |
12759 | Where is death''s sting, where, grave, thy victory? |
12759 | Where is it now, the glory and the dream? |
12759 | Where shall be satisfied the soul''s immortal, Where we shall drop the wearying and the woe In resting so? |
12759 | Wherefore with that knocking dreary Scare the sleep from one so weary? |
12759 | Whereto serves mercy But to confront the visage of offence? |
12759 | While the boatman listens and ships his oar, To catch the music that comes from the shore? |
12759 | Whither have I been transported? |
12759 | Whither is fled the visionary gleam? |
12759 | Who bade the mud from Dives''wheel To spurn the rags of Lazarus? |
12759 | Who bade the sun Clothe you with rainbows? |
12759 | Who could not sad tribute render Witnessing that mother tender Agonizing with her child? |
12759 | Who fathoms the Eternal Thought? |
12759 | Who filled thy countenance with rosy light? |
12759 | Who gave you your invulnerable life, Your strength, your speed, your fury, and your joy, Unceasing thunder and eternal foam? |
12759 | Who is there? |
12759 | Who is there? |
12759 | Who is thine enemy? |
12759 | Who knows the inscrutable design? |
12759 | Who leads us with a gentle hand Thither, oh, thither, Into the Silent Land? |
12759 | Who like thyself my guide and stay can be? |
12759 | Who made thee parent of perpetual streams? |
12759 | Who made you glorious as the gates of Heaven Beneath the keen full moon? |
12759 | Who now shall rear ye to the sun, or rank Your tribes, and water from the ambrosial fount? |
12759 | Who sank thy sunless pillars deep in earth? |
12759 | Who shall make thy love hot for thee, frozen old world? |
12759 | Who talks of scheme and plan? |
12759 | Who, with living flowers Of loveliest blue, spread garlands at your feet? |
12759 | Why labor at the dull mechanic oar, When the fresh breeze is blowing, And the strong current flowing, Right onward to the Eternal Shore? |
12759 | Why should the vest on him allure, Which I could not on me endure? |
12759 | Why should your mother, Charles, not mine, Be weeping at her darling''s grave? |
12759 | Why shrinks the soul Back on herself, and startles at destruction? |
12759 | Why then was this forbid? |
12759 | Why wilt thou vex me, Coming ever to perplex me? |
12759 | Why"small"? |
12759 | Why, but to awe; Why, but to keep ye low and ignorant, His worshippers? |
12759 | Will not thy own meek heart demand me there? |
12759 | Will she? |
12759 | Will the past then come again, Rest and pleasure, strife and pain, All the heaven and all the hell? |
12759 | Wilt thou not hear his message, Who bears the keys and sword?" |
12759 | Wilt thou not yet to me reveal Thy new, unutterable name? |
12759 | Would I suffer for him that I love? |
12759 | Would not weep, saw he Christ''s mother In such deep distress and wild? |
12759 | Ye see your state wi''theirs compared, And shudder at the niffer; But cast a moment''s fair regard, What makes the mighty differ? |
12759 | Yet what can it when one can not repent? |
12759 | Your movements have their primal bent from heaven; Not all: yet said I all; what then ensues? |
12759 | _ A roof for when the slow dark hours begin._ May not the darkness hide it from my face? |
12759 | _ Of labor you shall find the sum._ Will there be beds for me and all who seek? |
12759 | _ Those who have gone before._ Then must I knock, or call when just in sight? |
12759 | _ Yes, to the very end._ Will the day''s journey take the whole long day? |
12759 | and wherein lies The offence, that man should thus attain to know? |
12759 | and why com''st thou here?" |
12759 | as a drop of water in the sea, All this magnificence in Thee is lost:-- What are ten thousand worlds compared to Thee? |
12759 | be sown in barren ground, Less privileged than grain, on which he feeds? |
12759 | by me adorned With what to sight or smell was sweet, from thee How shall I part, and whither wander down Into a lower world, to this obscure And wild? |
12759 | by the fruit? |
12759 | do not believe Those rigid threats of death: ye shall not die: How should you? |
12759 | does no voice within Answer my cry, and say we are akin?" |
12759 | does the dawning hour Inspire his music? |
12759 | how shall we breathe in other air Less pure, accustomed to immortal fruits? |
12759 | if beyond the spirit''s inmost cavil Aught of that country could we surely know, Who would not go? |
12759 | it gives you life To knowledge; by the threatener? |
12759 | of evil, if what is evil Be real, why not known, since easier shunned? |
12759 | or to us denied This intellectual food, for beasts reserved? |
12759 | or where? |
12759 | or will God incense his ire For such a petty trespass? |
12759 | rather what know to fear Under this ignorance of good and evil, Of God or death, of law or penalty? |
12759 | she cried;"Did thy dear saints do more? |
12759 | she cried;"Have I kept aught of gems or gold, To minister to pride? |
12759 | so marvellously Constructed and conceived? |
12759 | these happy walks and shades, Fit haunt of gods; where I had hope to spend, Quiet, though sad, the respite of that day That must be mortal to us both? |
12759 | those realms of bliss Where death hath no dominion? |
12759 | what rests? |
12759 | when shall all my wand''rings end, And all my steps to- thee- ward tend? |
12759 | where is thy sting? |
12759 | where is thy victory? |
12759 | wherefore persecut''st thou me?" |
12759 | wherefore persecute ye me? |
12759 | who has known it? |
12759 | who has shown it, and which is the faithful guide? |
12759 | why is it? |
12759 | why is it? |
12759 | why is it? |
12759 | why is it? |
12759 | why is it? |
12759 | why is it? |
31967 | And what did you see, my Mary, All up on the Caldon- Low? |
31967 | And what were the words, my Mary, That you did hear them say? |
31967 | Dear Pig, are you willing to sell for one shilling Your ring? |
31967 | The lark lies couched in her grassy nest, And the honey- bee is gone, And all bright things are away to rest; 15 Why watch ye here alone? |
31967 | Where are you going, and what do you wish? |
31967 | 10 But his little daughter whispered, As she took his icy hand,"Is not God upon the ocean, Just the same as on the land?" |
31967 | 10 Who is this, that lights the wigwam? |
31967 | 15"And what did you hear, my Mary, All up on the Caldon Hill?" |
31967 | And"Who''s been bad to- day?" |
31967 | BJÖRNSTJERNE BJÖRNSON NORWAY, 1832- The Tree The Tree''s early leaf buds were bursting their brown;"Shall I take them away?" |
31967 | Can such delights be in the street And open fields, and we not see''t? |
31967 | Consider The lilies that do neither spin nor toil, Yet are most fair: 15 What profits all this care And all this toil? |
31967 | EUGENE FIELD AMERICA, 1850- 1895 The Night Wind[3] Have you ever heard the wind go"Yoooo"? |
31967 | Green leaves a- floating, Castles of the foam, Boats of mine a- boating-- Where will all come home? |
31967 | Is it then_ so_ new That you should carol so madly? |
31967 | Is the pudding done? |
31967 | Little fairy snow- flakes Dancing in the flue; Old Mr. Santa Claus, 10 What is keeping you? |
31967 | MARY HOWITT ENGLAND, 1804- 1888 The Fairies of the Caldon- Low A MIDSUMMER LEGEND"And where have you been, my Mary, And where have you been from me?" |
31967 | Oh let us be married,--too long we have tarried,-- But what shall we do for a ring?" |
31967 | ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON SCOTLAND, 1850- 1894 Where go the Boats? |
31967 | Saw the moon rise from the water, Rippling, rounding from the water, Saw the flecks and shadows on it, Whispered,"What is that, Nokomis?" |
31967 | Saw the rainbow in the heaven, In the eastern sky the rainbow, 10 Whispered,"What is that, Nokomis?" |
31967 | The Tree bore his blossoms, and all the birds sung;"Shall I take them away?" |
31967 | The Tree bore his fruit in the midsummer glow; 5 Said the girl:"May I gather thy berries now?" |
31967 | The Wind he took to his revels once more; On down In town, 15 Like a merry mad clown, He leaped and hallooed with whistle and roar,"What''s that?" |
31967 | When he heard the owls at midnight, Hooting, laughing in the forest,"What is that?" |
31967 | Why do you shiver so, Violet, sweet? |
31967 | With his great eyes lights the wigwam? |
31967 | Wrapped in your hood of green, Violet, why Peep from your earth door, So silent and shy? |
31967 | he cried in terror; 20"What is that,"he said,"Nokomis?" |
31967 | was there ever so merry a note? |
31967 | where should I fly to, Where go sleep in the dark wood or dell? |
26933 | Handy- dandy, which is the Magistrate and which is the Thief? |
26933 | What have I done to thee? |
26933 | What voices are those in the still night air? 26933 What,"said he to Goethe,"is the leading Idea in the Poem?" |
26933 | Why not? |
26933 | A Joy? |
26933 | After all, what do we know? |
26933 | All that has been exaggerated, and, anyway, what does it matter now? |
26933 | All the World''s a Puppet- Show, and if the Big Showman jerks his wires so extravagantly, why should not the Little Showman do the same? |
26933 | And how can one"strike back"unless one converts unconscious machinery into a wanton Providence? |
26933 | And if my Innocents ask-- as they do sometimes-- Innocents are like that!--"Why must we consider the other person?" |
26933 | And in what did he believe, this Lord of Time and Space, this accomplice of Jehovah? |
26933 | And is not Christianity itself one of these facts? |
26933 | And that Explorer-- did we only dream of his Return? |
26933 | And the touches of"infernal colloquialism,"so deliberately fitted in, and making us remember-- many things!--is there anything in the world like them? |
26933 | And what about the ancient antagonist of the Earth? |
26933 | And what are the elements, the qualities, that go to make up this"grand style"? |
26933 | And what is this manner? |
26933 | And what of the lady who, when she was asked whether she had ever loved, answered,"never or always"? |
26933 | And when my moral nature requires a Personal God--_there is room for That also? |
26933 | And who can bear to listen to them? |
26933 | And who can read the verses of Shelley without recalling such? |
26933 | And why can not one go a step with this dreamer of dreams without dragging in the Higher Reality? |
26933 | Are these the sheer precipices of Chaos, against which the Redeemer hangs, or the frozen edges of the grave of all life? |
26933 | Are we not these very wretches whose blind life is so base that they envy every other Fate? |
26933 | Are we not this very tribe of caitiffs who have committed the"Great Refusal?" |
26933 | At what figured symbol points that epicene child? |
26933 | Besides, who am I to"improve"upon Rabelais? |
26933 | But because of these"virtuous"prophets of"action,"are we to give up our Beatific Vision? |
26933 | But what matter where he fled-- he who always followed the"shady side"of the road? |
26933 | But what matter? |
26933 | But what matter? |
26933 | But what of the Greeks? |
26933 | But who can say that? |
26933 | But-- who can tell? |
26933 | By the door of a Legended Tomb, And I said:''What is written, sweet sister, On the door of this legended Tomb?'' |
26933 | Christ? |
26933 | Did he discern-- the sublime Olympian-- what a cunning flute player lurked under the queer mask? |
26933 | Dionysus? |
26933 | Edgar Allen Poe''s philosophy of Life? |
26933 | Exhausted, the wisdom of Goethe? |
26933 | GOETHE As the enigmatic wisdom of Goethe been exhausted-- after these years-- and after the sudden transits across our sky of more flashing meteors? |
26933 | Gath and Askalon in gross triumph-- must this thing be? |
26933 | Grandeur and nobility, beauty and heroism, live still; and while these live, what matter though our bravest and our fairest perish? |
26933 | Has attention been called, for instance, to the sardonic cynicism which underlies his most thrilling effects? |
26933 | Has it been noticed how all material objects dissolve at his touch, and float away, as mists and vapours? |
26933 | Has it been noticed how inhumanly immoral this great poet is? |
26933 | Has it been realized how curiously the interpreters of Shakespeare omit the principal thing? |
26933 | Has it occurred to you, gentle reader, to note how"Protestant"this New Artistic Movement is? |
26933 | Has my reader ever read the little poem called"Tears"? |
26933 | Has that been properly understood? |
26933 | Have I succeeded in making clear what I feel about the Shakespearean attitude? |
26933 | How else could those indescribable pearly shimmerings, those opal tints and rosy shadows, be communicated to our poor language? |
26933 | How shall I express what this is? |
26933 | How should it not be so? |
26933 | I wonder if that curious novel of Goethe''s called the"Elective Affinities"is perused as widely as it deserves? |
26933 | In Lear he puts the very voice of Anarchy into the mouth of the King--"Die for adultery? |
26933 | In the suggestiveness of_ names_--to mention only one thing-- can anyone touch him? |
26933 | Intellectual Fashion? |
26933 | Is any one simple enough to think that whatever Secret Cosmic Power melts into human ecstasy, it waits to be summoned by certain particular syllables? |
26933 | Is it a pity, one asks oneself, or is it a profound advantage, that enjoyment of Rabelais should be so limited? |
26933 | Is it a secret still, then, the magical unity of rhythm, which Walt Whitman has conveyed to the words he uses? |
26933 | Is it any longer concealed from us wherein the"immorality"of this lies? |
26933 | Is it for me now to prove that? |
26933 | Is it not sacrosanct and holy within and without; and yet, at the same time, is it not a huge and palpable absurdity? |
26933 | Is it possible that words, mere words, can work such miracles? |
26933 | Is it possibly_ courage?_ Well, Rabelais is, of all writers, the one best able to give us that courage. |
26933 | Is not Newman right when he says that the heart of man does not naturally"love God?" |
26933 | Is not the body of man the temple of the Holy Ghost? |
26933 | Is she alive? |
26933 | It brings us back once more to"Values"; and whether our"Values"are values of taste or values of devotion what matter? |
26933 | It is realized, I suppose, what the history of his spiritual contest actually was? |
26933 | John Keats was haunted day and night by the simple refrain in Lear,"Canst thou not hear the Sea?" |
26933 | Moral Opinion? |
26933 | Or does anything, in this terrible flowing tide, even_ begin_? |
26933 | Or shall we say he is the only kind of philosopher who_ must_ be taken seriously-- the philosopher who creates the dreams of the young? |
26933 | Or that phrase about the sailors"stemming mightly to the pole"? |
26933 | Or the sudden terror of that guarded Paradisic Gate--"with dreadful faces thronged and fiery arms"? |
26933 | Our conclusion? |
26933 | Society? |
26933 | Such exposures humiliate and disgrace? |
26933 | Such revelations provoke and embarrass? |
26933 | Surely it is wisdom, in us terrestrial mortals, to make what imaginative use we can of_ every phase_ of our earthly condition? |
26933 | Sweet reader, do you know the pain of these"really and truly"questions? |
26933 | The crowd, the verdict of his friends-- what did all that matter? |
26933 | The end of the poem is like the beginning, and who can utter the feelings it excites? |
26933 | The manners and customs of the Upper Classes? |
26933 | The three great royal giants, Graugousier, Gargantua and Pantagruel-- have there ever been such kings? |
26933 | The word"Gala- Night"--has it not the very malice of the truth of things? |
26933 | Tis a Gala- Night Within the lonesome latter years--"Is not that an arresting commencement? |
26933 | WALTER PATER What are the qualities that make this shy and furtive Recluse, this Wanderer in the shadow, the greatest of critics? |
26933 | Was Nietzsche really Greek, compared with-- Goethe, let us say? |
26933 | Was the"Divine Comedy"too clear- cut and trenchant for Walter Pater? |
26933 | What about the Great Deep? |
26933 | What does one expect when one looks through opal- clouded windows? |
26933 | What does she do-- a child of pure lyrical poetry-- a thing out of the old ballads-- in this queer, grave, indecent company? |
26933 | What in this mad world, do we lack, my dear friends? |
26933 | What is the_ use_ of this constant repetition of the obvious truism:"When we are born we cry that we are come to this great stage of fools?" |
26933 | What lights in the court? |
26933 | What matter by what name you call them? |
26933 | What matter if his"division"is not our"division,"his"formula"our"formula"? |
26933 | What matter if, in reality, they have their kingdoms in the heart of man rather than the Empyrean or Tartarus? |
26933 | What matter? |
26933 | What matter? |
26933 | What matter? |
26933 | What steps on the stair?" |
26933 | What stray visitor to Madrid would guess the vastness of the intellectual sensation awaiting him in that quiet, rose- coloured building? |
26933 | What were all these but vain impertinences, interrupting his desperate Pursuit? |
26933 | What? |
26933 | When shall I come to appear before the presence of God?" |
26933 | When"the grand obsession"was not upon him, who, like Keats, can make us feel the cool, sweet, wholesome touch of our great Mother, the Earth? |
26933 | Where is that girl now, I wonder? |
26933 | Where, in such a world as this, does_ that_ begin? |
26933 | Wherefore wilt thou go? |
26933 | Wherein does the difference lie? |
26933 | Who can deny that this formidable vision answers the deepest need of the modern world? |
26933 | Who can endure while the heavens, that are"themselves so old,"bend down with the burden of their secret? |
26933 | Who can forget how that"Simonist"and"Son of Sodom"lifts his hands up out of the deepest Pit, and makes"the fig"at God? |
26933 | Who can forget"the fleecy star that bears Andromeda far off Atlantic seas"? |
26933 | Who can tell? |
26933 | Who knows if the new prominence given by the war to Russian thought may not incredibly hasten such a Vita Nuova? |
26933 | Who knows? |
26933 | Who knows? |
26933 | Who wants to know what Professor So- and- so''s view of Life may be? |
26933 | Who, in cold blood, can receive the sorrows of the"many waters"? |
26933 | Who, like Dostoievsky, has shown the tragic association of passionate love with passionate hate, which is so frequent a human experience? |
26933 | Why did not Aubrey Beardsley stop that beautiful boy on the threshold? |
26933 | Why is it precisely this Borgian type, this Renaissance type, among the world''s various Lust- Darlings that he chooses to select? |
26933 | Why must this monstrous shadow of the Hyperborean Ibsen go on darkening the play- instinct in us, like some ugly, domineering John Knox? |
26933 | Why need we always fuss ourselves about logical_ names_? |
26933 | Why not simply react to one mysterious visitor after another, as they approach us, and caress or hurt us, and go their way? |
26933 | Why not, for an interlude, be Life''s children, instead of her slaves or her masters, and let Her lead us, the great crafty Mother, whither she will?" |
26933 | Why not? |
26933 | Why not? |
26933 | Why not? |
26933 | Why not? |
26933 | Why should we attempt to deceive ourselves? |
26933 | Why should we not forget the whips and scorns for a while, and fleet the time carelessly,"as they did in the golden age?" |
26933 | Why, then, pretend that we know the importance of being"up and doing"? |
26933 | Will she ever blush with anger at being thus gently lifted up, from beneath the kind Somersetshire mists, into an hour''s publicity? |
26933 | Will the Lord of Hosts lift no finger to help his own? |
26933 | Yet who is there, but does not feel_ glad_ that the"Pistoian"uttered what he uttered-- out of his Hell-- to his Maker? |
26933 | You ask me what the Philosophy of Matthew Arnold was? |
26933 | You can not, simply by assuming grave airs about your personal"taste,"or even about the"taste"of your age, give it_ that consecration._ Beauty? |
26933 | _ Is it not worth it?_ Beauty! |
26933 | _ Self- realization?_ Certainly! |
26933 | has there ever been such pain as my pain?" |
26933 | must remain forever the dominant"note"in the Faith of Christendom? |
26933 | than to cry out, as Antony cries out, for the hot kisses of Egypt? |
26933 | than to say,"Her lips suck forth my soul-- see where it flies!"? |
26933 | that proud, reserved face seems to say, as it looks out on us from its dusty title- page;"what have I done to thee, that I should despise thee so?" |
26933 | the Public? |
3154 | And drink the Podhon spring? |
3154 | And what would you say, Fragrantia, if you were to write a tour to the Hebrides? |
3154 | But pray, my lady,said I,"how do you like the concert?" |
3154 | Do you know what this fudge is? |
3154 | Who art thou? 3154 Are they scouring the other streets? 3154 But the age of chivalry is gone, and the glory of Europe is extinguished for ever? |
3154 | Do they not know me? |
3154 | Do they not see me? |
3154 | Do you, Lord Trastillauex? |
3154 | How should I disengage myself? |
3154 | How should I recover it? |
3154 | I now in my turn began to inquire where they were bound? |
3154 | Or did he think a chief possessing such blood in his veins could engage in such a foreign pursuit? |
3154 | Pray, my dear Baron, were you ever at the falls of Niagara?" |
3154 | Recollect, my friends, even why or wherefore should you thus assail your lawful magistrate, or why desert his livery? |
3154 | Shall you, thus armed with bladders vile, attack my title, eminence, and pomp sublime? |
3154 | Well, I allow there are not so many languages spoken in this vile world; but then, have I not been in the moon? |
3154 | What do you say of this, for example? |
3154 | What stronger breast- plate than a heart untainted? |
3154 | What was to be done in this horrible dilemma? |
3154 | Who is it can read the travels of Smellfungus, as Sterne calls him, without admiration? |
3154 | Would he not even hear me utter a word in my defence?" |
3154 | Would he not speak to me? |
3154 | You will naturally inquire what they did for food such a length of time? |
3154 | and what do you think was the only return she could prevail upon him to accept for such eminent services? |
3154 | gentlemen, do you stare? |
3154 | how fetch it down again? |
3154 | no: what fudge?" |
3154 | nobody knows what this fudge can be?" |
3154 | or for what or wherefore serve this German Lord Munchausen, who for all your labour shall alone bestow some fudge and heroic blows in war? |
3154 | or what is become of them? |
3154 | or you, Miss Gristilarkask? |
3154 | replied he,"what in the name of wonder can it be? |
3154 | said he,"and did he turn upon his heel with the most marked contempt? |
3154 | said she, languishingly, while she laid her hand upon my shoulder,"what are these bodiless sounds and vibration to me? |
3154 | what, my sons, shall you assail your father, friend, and chief confessed? |
3154 | why it must, but pray do you, Lady Fashashash, do you know what this fudge is? |
31303 | ''And how dost thou know me?'' 31303 ''And what are these?'' |
31303 | ''Then tell me why,''said the man,''you yourself are weeping with such grief? 31303 ''What dost thou here?'' |
31303 | ''What is that to you?'' 31303 And what attitude, what gesture, can he expect from this stripped and artificially draped model? 31303 But had these Germans of the days of Luther really no thought beyond their own times and their own country? 31303 Could it be otherwise? 31303 Does the art of Italy tell an impossible, universal lie? 31303 Had they not discovered that what had been called right had often been unnatural, and what had been called wrong often natural? 31303 Had they really no knowledge of the antique? 31303 He might as well ask, Why did the commonwealths not turn into a modern monarchy? 31303 If Cæsar Borgia be free to practise his archery upon hares and deer, why should he not practise it upon these prisoners? 31303 If he had for his mistress every woman he might single out from among his captives, why not his sister? 31303 If he have the force to carry out a plan, why should a man stand in his way? 31303 Is he to forget the saints and Christ, and give himself over to Satan and to Antiquity? 31303 Is he to yield or to resist? 31303 Is it a thing so utterly dead as to be fit only for the scalpel and the microscope? 31303 Is the impression received by the Elizabethan playwrights a correct impression? 31303 Is the new century to find the antique still dead and the modern still mediæval? 31303 Is this really a bacchanal? 31303 Scientifically we doubtless lose; but is the past to be treated only scientifically? 31303 Sismondi asks indignantly, Why did the Italians not form a federation as soon as the strangers appeared? 31303 Such are the parents, Faustus and Helena; we know them; but who is this son Euphorion? 31303 Was Italy in the sixteenth century that land of horrors? 31303 Was the relation between them that of tuition, cool and abstract; or of fruitful love; or of deluding and damning example? 31303 What has become of Calypso''s island? 31303 What passes in the mind of that artist? 31303 What surprise, what dawning doubts, what sickening fears, what longings and what remorse are not the fruit of this sight of Antiquity? 31303 What tragic type can this evil Italy of Renaissance give to the world? 31303 What was that strong intellectual food which revived the energies and enriched the blood of the Barbarians of the sixteenth century? 31303 What were those intellectual riches of the Renaissance? 31303 What would have been the art of the Renaissance without the antique? 31303 What would the noble knights and ladies of Ariosto and Spenser think of them? 31303 What would they say, these romantic, dainty creatures, were they to meet Nausicaa with the washed linen piled on her waggon? 31303 Whence do they come? 31303 Where in this Renaissance of Italian literature, so cheerful and light of conscience, is the foul and savage Renaissance of English tragedy? 31303 Who can prevent him? 31303 Who will blame him? 31303 Why? 31303 and can it not give us, and do we not owe it, something more than a mere understanding of why and how? 31303 cried the man;''it is for a stinking hound that you waste the tears of your body? 31303 of the orchards of Alcinous? 31303 or is the art of England the victim of an impossible, universal hallucination? 16786 And was it the innermost heart of the bliss To find out, so, what a wisdom love is? |
16786 | And your age? |
16786 | Are the children at home? |
16786 | Aunt Phillis, you live here all alone? |
16786 | But why do I talk of death,-- That phantom of grisly bone? 16786 Can your lady patch hearts that are breaking, With handfuls of coals and rice, Or by dealing out flannel and sheeting A little below cost price? |
16786 | Dear Lord, how shall we know that they Still walk unseen with us and Thee, Nor sleep, nor wander far away? |
16786 | Did life roll back its records, dear, And show, as they say it does, past things clear? 16786 Has summer come without the rose?" |
16786 | If that my beauty is but small, Among court ladies all despised, Why didst thou rend it from that hall, Where, scornful Earl, it well was prized? 16786 Jesus saith unto her, Woman, why weepest thou? |
16786 | Leicester,she cried,"is this thy love That thou so oft hast sworn to me, To leave me in this lonely grove, Immured in shameful privity? |
16786 | Oh, why art thou silent? 16786 Or was it a greater marvel to feel The perfect calm o''er the agony steal? |
16786 | See now; I will listen with soul, not ear; What was the secret of dying, dear? 16786 Shall I have naught that is fair?" |
16786 | Then, Leicester, why, again I plead,( The injured surely may repine,)-- Why didst thou we d a country maid, When some fair princess might be thine? 16786 WHAT CAN AN OLD MAN DO BUT DIE?" |
16786 | Was it the infinite wonder of all That you ever could let life''s flower fall? 16786 Was the miracle greater to find how deep Beyond all dreams sank downward that sleep? |
16786 | We quarrelled like brutes, and who wonders? 16786 What do you here, my friend?" |
16786 | Who is robbing the corpse? |
16786 | Why playest thou alway? 16786 Work-- work-- work My labor never flags; And what are its wages? |
16786 | Your name,said the judge, as he eyed her With kindly look, yet keen,"Is--?" |
16786 | ''You do n''t know what it is, do you, my dear?'' |
16786 | ***** A fancy, foolish and fond, does it seem? |
16786 | -- What can an old man do but die? |
16786 | -- Yet every grave gives up its dead Ere it is overgrown with grass; Then why should hopeless tears be shed, Or need we cry,"Alas"? |
16786 | ABSENCE"What shall I do with all the days and hours That must be counted ere I see thy face?" |
16786 | ARE THE CHILDREN AT HOME? |
16786 | All in the Downs the fleet was moored, The streamers waving in the wind, When black- eyed Susan came aboard;"O, where shall I my true- love find? |
16786 | Am I lazy or crazy? |
16786 | Am I mad, that I should cherish that which bears but bitter fruit? |
16786 | And for that riches where is my deserving? |
16786 | And how shall I deck my song for the large sweet soul that has gone? |
16786 | And mind ye o''the Saturdays,( The scule then skail''t at noon,) When we ran off to speel the braes,-- The broomy braes o''June? |
16786 | And tender friends go sighing round,"What love can ever cure this wound?" |
16786 | And things are not as Aunt Phillises dream? |
16786 | And up above, if an angel of light Should stop on his errand of love some day To ask,"Who lives in the mansion bright?" |
16786 | And what shall my perfume be for the grave of him I love? |
16786 | And what shall the pictures be that I hang on the walls, To adorn the burial- house of him I love? |
16786 | And what should you do for joy? |
16786 | And what will there be in her face That will tell you sure that she is your own, When you meet in the heavenly place? |
16786 | And when Italy''s made, for what end is it done If we have not a son? |
16786 | And where is found me A limit to these sorrows? |
16786 | And yet what word do I say? |
16786 | Are beauties there as proud as here they be? |
16786 | Are souls straight so happy that, dizzy with heaven, They drop earth''s affections, conceive not of woe? |
16786 | Are there great calms? |
16786 | Are these the goods that thou supply''st Us mortals with? |
16786 | Are these the high''st? |
16786 | As I came up the valley, whom think ye should I see But Robin leaning on the bridge beneath the hazel- tree? |
16786 | Be false or fair above me; Come back with any face, Summer!--do I care what you do? |
16786 | But this we know: Our loved and dead, if they should come this day-- Should come and ask us,"What is life?" |
16786 | But thou thy freedom didst recall, That if thou might elsewhere inthrall; And then how could I but disdain A captive''s captive to remain? |
16786 | But what binds us, friend to friend, But that soul with soul can blend? |
16786 | But what of that? |
16786 | But, while I grow in a straight line, Still upwards bent, as if heav''n were mine own, Thy anger comes, and I decline: What frost to that? |
16786 | Can I but relive in sadness? |
16786 | Can I part her from herself, and love her, as I knew her, kind? |
16786 | Can I think of her as dead, and love her for the love she bore? |
16786 | Can honor''s voice provoke the silent dust, Or flattery soothe the dull, cold ear of death? |
16786 | Can storied urn or animated bust: Back to its mansion call the fleeting breath? |
16786 | Can these bring cordial peace? |
16786 | Comfort? |
16786 | Cromwell, I charge thee, fling away ambition: By that sin fell the angels; how can man, then, The image of his Maker, hope to win by''t? |
16786 | DUKE.--And what''s her history? |
16786 | Day shows us not such comfort anywhere-- Dwells it in Darkness? |
16786 | Do I hear her sing as of old, My bird with the shining head, My own dove with the tender eye? |
16786 | Do the men of England care not, mother,-- The great men and the high,-- For the suffering sons of Erin''s isle, Whether they live or die? |
16786 | Do they above love to be loved, and yet Those lovers scorn whom that love doth possess? |
16786 | Do they call virtue there ungratefulness? |
16786 | Do we sport carelessly, Blindly, upon the verge Of an Apocalypse? |
16786 | Do ye find it there? |
16786 | Do you find it there? |
16786 | Doth it not shine on thee With a great light of love that fills the place? |
16786 | Fair hope is dead, and light Is quenched in night; What sound can break the silence of despair? |
16786 | Fled is that music:--do I wake or sleep? |
16786 | For how do I hold thee but by thy granting? |
16786 | For wherefore should I fast and weep, And sullen moods of mourning keep? |
16786 | Friend Death, how now? |
16786 | Friend of my bosom, thou more than a brother, Why wert not thou born in my father''s dwelling? |
16786 | GUILTY, OR NOT GUILTY? |
16786 | HAS SUMMER COME WITHOUT THE ROSE? |
16786 | Had she a brother? |
16786 | Had she a sister? |
16786 | Has she not eyes that will soon be as bright to me, Lips that will some day be honeyed like hers? |
16786 | Has summer come without the rose, Or left the bird behind? |
16786 | Hath he not always treasures, always friends, The good great man? |
16786 | He''s only a pauper whom nobody owns!_ O, where are the mourners? |
16786 | Hear''st thou the groans that rend his breast? |
16786 | Hear''st thou the groans that rend his breast? |
16786 | Heaven sends misfortunes,--why should we repine? |
16786 | Her fault? |
16786 | Het tears are hailin''ower our cheek, And hailin''ower your chin: Why weep ye sae for worthlessness, For sorrow, and for sin? |
16786 | How can ye chant, ye little birds, And I sae weary, fu''o''care? |
16786 | How canst thou tell how far from thee Fate or caprice may lead his steps ere that to- morrow comes? |
16786 | How could I look to you, mother,-- How could I look to you For bread to give to your starving boy, When you were starving too? |
16786 | How is it with the child? |
16786 | How may I teach my drooping hope to live Until that blessèd time, and thou art here? |
16786 | How shall I charm the interval that lowers Between this time and that sweet time of grace? |
16786 | How should they know or feel They are in darkness? |
16786 | I fondly dream, Had ye been there; for what could that have done? |
16786 | I have but an angry fancy: what is that which I should do? |
16786 | I loved thee once, I''ll love no more, Thine be the grief as is the blame; Thou art not what thou wast before, What reason I should be the same? |
16786 | I marvel, Jeanie Morrison, Gin I hae been to thee As closely twined wi''earliest thochts As ye hae been to me? |
16786 | I stay my haste, I make delays, For what avails this eager pace? |
16786 | I wrong the grave with fears untrue: Shall love be blamed for want of faith? |
16786 | If thou regrett''st thy youth,--why live? |
16786 | Is it a Bosom where tired heads may lie? |
16786 | Is it a Hand to still the pulse''s leap? |
16786 | Is it a Mouth to kiss our weeping dry? |
16786 | Is it a Voice that holds the runes of sleep? |
16786 | Is it too late, then, Evelyn Hope? |
16786 | Is it very fair? |
16786 | Is it very fair? |
16786 | Is it when Spring''s first gale Comes forth to whisper where the violets lie? |
16786 | Is it when roses in our paths grow pale? |
16786 | Is not the past all shadow? |
16786 | Is she not like her whenever she stirs? |
16786 | Is there no baseness we would hide? |
16786 | Is there no help, no comfort-- none? |
16786 | Is this thy body''s end? |
16786 | It was a name Which pleased him, and yet pleased him not,--and why? |
16786 | Just near enough my heart you stood To shadow it,--but was it fair In him, who plucked and bore you off, To leave your shadow lingering there? |
16786 | L. Do we indeed desire the dead Should still be near us at our side? |
16786 | Le Gallienne_:"Song,""What of the Darkness?" |
16786 | Like a spirit unblest, o''er the earth would I roam, While brethren and friends are all hastening home? |
16786 | Loop up her tresses Escaped from the comb,-- Her fair auburn tresses,-- Whilst wonderment guesses Where was her home? |
16786 | Love will not clip him, Maids will not lip him, Maud and Marian pass him by; Youth it is sunny, Age has no honey,-- What can an old man do but die? |
16786 | Lowell_:"Auf Wiedersehen,""First Snow Fall,""Palinode;"_ Harriet W. Preston_:"Fidelity in Doubt;"_ Margaret E. Sangster_:"Are the Children at Home?" |
16786 | Martinmas wind, when wilt thou blaw, And shake the green leaves off the tree? |
16786 | Mated with a squalid savage,--what to me were sun or clime? |
16786 | Must I choose? |
16786 | My eyes were blinded, your words were few: Do you know the truth now, up in heaven, Douglas, Douglas, tender and true? |
16786 | My heart? |
16786 | No gleaning in the wide wheat- plains Where others drive their loaded wains? |
16786 | No inner vileness that we dread? |
16786 | Nor any poor about your lands? |
16786 | Not there!--Where, then, is he? |
16786 | Now, tell me, Are you guilty of this, or no?" |
16786 | O gentle death, when wilt thou come? |
16786 | O how shall I warble myself for the dead one there I loved? |
16786 | O saw ye not fair Ines? |
16786 | O sweet place, desolate in tall Wild grass, have you forgot How her lips loved to kiss me, Now that they kiss me not? |
16786 | O what shall I hang on the chamber walls? |
16786 | O why should the spirit of mortal be proud? |
16786 | O, SAW YE BONNIE LESLIE? |
16786 | O, how or by what means may I contrive To bring the hour that brings thee back more near? |
16786 | O, mind ye how we hung our heads, How cheeks brent red wi''shame, Whene''er the scule- weans, laughin'', said We cleeked thegither hame? |
16786 | O, mind ye, luve, how aft we left The deavin'', dinsome toun, To wander by the green burnside, And hear its waters croon? |
16786 | O, saw ye bonnie Leslie As she gaed o''er the border? |
16786 | O, say gin e''er your heart grows grit Wi''dreamings o''langsyne? |
16786 | O, say what art thou, when no more thou''rt thee? |
16786 | O, whither, whither dost thou fly, Where bend unseen thy trackless course, And in this strange divorce, Ah, tell where I must seek this compound I? |
16786 | O, will she be this, or will she be that? |
16786 | O, would it be this, or would it be that? |
16786 | Oh, hast thou forgotten how soon we must sever? |
16786 | Oh, why art thou silent, thou voice of my heart? |
16786 | On whose last steps I climb, Trembling at that where I had stood before; When will return the glory of your prime? |
16786 | Or undistracted, do you find truth there? |
16786 | Or was there a dearer one Still, and a nearer one Yet, than all other? |
16786 | Or wherefore should I kame my hair? |
16786 | Or why should Memory, veiled with gloom, And like a sorrowing mourner craped, Sit weeping o''er an empty tomb, Whose captives have escaped? |
16786 | Place-- titles-- salary-- a gilded chain-- Or throne of corses which his sword has slain? |
16786 | QUEEN.--If it be, Why seems it so particular with thee? |
16786 | Robin Adair: What made the ball so fine? |
16786 | Robin was there: What, when the play was o''er, What made my heart so sore? |
16786 | See''st thou thy lover lowly laid? |
16786 | See''st thou thy lover lowly laid? |
16786 | Shall I, these mists of memory locked within, Leave and forget life''s purposes sublime? |
16786 | Shall he for whose applause I strove, I had such reverence for his blame, See with clear eye some hidden shame, And I be lessened in his love? |
16786 | Shall love for thee lay on my soul the sin Of casting from me God''s great gift of time? |
16786 | Shall worms, inheritors of this excess, Eat up thy charge? |
16786 | She says,"Stand up and say, Gets not the heaven gray?" |
16786 | Since lips that sang, I love thee, Have said, I love thee not? |
16786 | So many worlds, so much to do, So little done, such things to be, How know I what had need of thee? |
16786 | So shalt thou rest; and what if thou withdraw In silence from the living, and no friend Take note of thy departure? |
16786 | So what was I to do, sir? |
16786 | That sacred hour can I forget,-- Can I forget the hallowed grove, Where by the winding Ayr we met To live one day of parting love? |
16786 | The blue mountains glow in the sun''s golden light; Ah, where is the spell that once hung on my numbers? |
16786 | The dread of vanished shadows.--Are they so? |
16786 | The farmer''s wife turned to the door,-- What was''t upon her cheek? |
16786 | The height of whose enchanting pleasure Is but a flash? |
16786 | The spinner looked at the falling sun:"Is it time to rest? |
16786 | The sun has hid its rays These many days; Will dreary hours never leave the earth? |
16786 | Then glory, my Jeany, maun plead my excuse; Since honor commands me, how can I refuse? |
16786 | Then why art thou silent, Kathleen Mavourneen? |
16786 | Then why art thou silent, thou voice of my heart? |
16786 | Then, even of fellowship, O Moon, tell me, Is constant love deemed there but want of wit? |
16786 | There must be leaves on the woodbine, Is the kingcup crowned in the meadow? |
16786 | They say he''s dying all for love,--but that can never be; They say his heart is breaking, mother,--what is that to me? |
16786 | Though I fly to Istambol, Athens holds my heart and soul: Can I cease to love thee? |
16786 | Though he told me, who will believe it was said? |
16786 | Though his care she must forego? |
16786 | Thyself thou gav''st, thy own worth then not knowing? |
16786 | To dream of love and rest, To know the dream has past, To bear within an aching breast Only a void at last-- What sadder fate could any heart befall? |
16786 | To the vast ocean of empyreal flame, From whence thy essence came, Dost thou thy flight pursue, when freed From matter''s base uncumbering weed? |
16786 | To trust an unknown good, To hope, but all in vain, Over a far- off bliss to brood, Only to find it pain-- What sadder fate could any soul befall? |
16786 | To weep for withered flowers, To count the blessings we have known, Lost with the vanished hours-- What sadder fate could any heart befall? |
16786 | Unto some of them he proffered Gifts most sweet; For our hearts a grave he offered,-- Was this meet? |
16786 | Up spoke our own little Mabel, Saying,"Father, who makes it snow?" |
16786 | WHAT AILS THIS HEART O''MINE? |
16786 | WHAT OF THE DARKNESS? |
16786 | Was it or not what you had dreamed? |
16786 | Was not this love, indeed? |
16786 | We must part now? |
16786 | We pass; the path that each man trod Is dim, or will be dim, with weeds: What fame is left for human deeds In endless age? |
16786 | We were fellow- mortals,--naught beside? |
16786 | Were it not better done, as others use, To sport with Amaryllis in the shade, Or with the tangles of Neaera''s hair? |
16786 | Were there no bonny dames at home, or no true lovers here, That he should cross the seas to win the dearest of the dear? |
16786 | What a dark world-- who knows? |
16786 | What ails this heart o''mine? |
16786 | What ails this watery ee? |
16786 | What are they? |
16786 | What art can a woman be good at? |
16786 | What art is she good at, but hurting her breast With the milk teeth of babes, and a smile at the pain? |
16786 | What babble we of days and days? |
16786 | What boots to me your corn and wine, Your busy toil, your vaunted fame, The senate where your speakers shine? |
16786 | What country has the poor to claim? |
16786 | What do we give to our beloved? |
16786 | What does this mean? |
16786 | What dost thou know? |
16786 | What gars me a''turn pale as death When I take leave o''thee? |
16786 | What has poor Ireland done, mother,-- What has poor Ireland done, That the world looks on, and sees us starve, Perishing one by one? |
16786 | What hast thou seen,-- What visions fair, what glorious life, Where hast thou been? |
16786 | What hope is here for modern rhyme To him who turns a musing eye On songs, and deeds, and lives, that lie Foreshortened in the tract of time? |
16786 | What is for me, Whose days so winterly go on? |
16786 | What is he doing? |
16786 | What is he doing? |
16786 | What is that to him that reaps not harvest of his youthful joys, Though the deep heart of existence beat forever like a boy''s? |
16786 | What is that which I should turn to, lighting upon days like these? |
16786 | What is the issue? |
16786 | What is the use of heapin''on me a pauper''s shame? |
16786 | What is this? |
16786 | What made the assembly shine? |
16786 | What matter if I stand alone? |
16786 | What may it be, that even in heavenly place That busy Archer his sharp arrows tries? |
16786 | What mean dull souls, in this high measure, To haberdash In earth''s base wares, whose greatest treasure Is dross and trash? |
16786 | What of the Darkness? |
16786 | What of the darkness? |
16786 | What recks it them? |
16786 | What self- respect could we keep, Worse housed than your hacks and your pointers, Worse fed than your hogs and your sheep? |
16786 | What shall I do with all the days and hours That must be counted ere I see thy face? |
16786 | What supports me, dost thou ask? |
16786 | What was there rising in her breast, That then she scarce could speak? |
16786 | What well- advisèd ear regards What earth can say? |
16786 | What would we give to our beloved? |
16786 | What wouldst thou have a good great man obtain? |
16786 | What''s this dull town to me? |
16786 | When the fair wicked queen sits no more at her sport Of the fire- balls of death crashing souls out of men? |
16786 | When will I hear de banjo tumming, Down in my good old home? |
16786 | When will I see de bees a- humming All round de comb? |
16786 | Where are the swallows fled? |
16786 | Where hast thou been this year, beloved? |
16786 | Where is comfort? |
16786 | Where is the pleasant smile, the laughter kind, That made sweet music of the winter wind? |
16786 | Where is thy place of blissful rest? |
16786 | Where is thy place of blissful rest? |
16786 | Where were ye, nymphs, when the remorseless deep Closed o''er the head of your loved Lycidas? |
16786 | Who knows that secret deep? |
16786 | Who mourns Or rules with HIM, while days go on? |
16786 | Who shall say that fortune grieves him, While the star of hope she leaves him? |
16786 | Who was her father? |
16786 | Who was her mother? |
16786 | Who would have thought my shrivelled heart Could have recovered greenness? |
16786 | Who would not sing for Lycidas? |
16786 | Who, who would live alway? |
16786 | Why all this tedious pomp of writ? |
16786 | Why didna Jamie dee? |
16786 | Why didst thou win me to thy arms, Then leave to mourn the livelong day? |
16786 | Why do our fond hearts cling To things that die? |
16786 | Why do the radiant seasons bring Sweet thoughts that quickly fly? |
16786 | Why do we live or die? |
16786 | Why doth the violet spring Unseen by human eye? |
16786 | Why must the flowers die? |
16786 | Why should I murmur? |
16786 | Why so large cost, having so short a lease, Dost thou upon thy fading mansion spend? |
16786 | Will you change every flower that grows, Or only change this spot, Where she who said, I love thee, Now says, I love thee not? |
16786 | World, is there one good thing in you, Life, love, or death-- or what? |
16786 | Would it be girl or boy? |
16786 | Would it look like father or mother most? |
16786 | Would this be world enough for thee?" |
16786 | Would you know the tragedy of a careless and supercilious coquetry which plays with the heart as the fisherman plays with the salmon? |
16786 | Ye banks and braes o''bonnie Doon, How can ye bloom sae fresh and fair? |
16786 | Yet canst thou, without thought or feeling be? |
16786 | Yet whilst with sorrow here we live opprest, What life is best? |
16786 | You have been glad when you knew I was gladdened; Dear, are you sad now to hear I am saddened? |
16786 | You think Guido forgot? |
16786 | Youth may be silly, Wisdom is chilly,-- What can an old man do but die? |
16786 | [ 9] My body, eh? |
16786 | _ Dark mother, always gliding near with soft feet, Have none chanted for thee a chant of fullest welcome? |
16786 | ah whither dost thou run? |
16786 | am I blind or lame? |
16786 | and find we silence there? |
16786 | are the children home?" |
16786 | art thou absent, art thou absent still? |
16786 | but tell me what may be Within that precious load, Which thou dost bear with such fine care Along the dusty road? |
16786 | hast thou forgotten this day we must part? |
16786 | have I fallen so low? |
16786 | in division of the records of the mind? |
16786 | is all thy song"Endure and-- die?" |
16786 | must I lose_ that_ too?" |
16786 | my soul''s far better part, Why with untimely sorrows heaves thy heart? |
16786 | or am I blind? |
16786 | then leave them to decay? |
16786 | what are tears? |
16786 | what boots it with incessant care To tend the homely, slighted shepherd''s trade, And strictly meditate the thankless muse? |
16786 | what is it I hear? |
16786 | what need they? |
16786 | what pole is not the zone Where all things burn, When thou dost turn, And the least frown of thine is shown? |
16786 | what, slumbering still? |
16786 | when Gaëta''s taken, what then? |
16786 | when shall it fall, That we may see? |
16786 | when the long night draws nigh Will such deep peace thine inmost being fill? |
16786 | wherefore do we laugh or weep? |
16786 | wherefore should I care? |
16786 | while the twilight is creeping Up luminous peaks, and the pale stars emerge? |
16786 | who hath reft( quoth he) my dearest pledge? |
16786 | whom seekest thou? |
16786 | why art thou silent, Kathleen Mavourneen? |
16786 | why make we such ado? |
16786 | why trod you not the worm, The noxious thing, beneath your heel? |
33190 | Can I define it, you inquire? |
33190 | If I ca n''t thrash my cook when he gets a poor dinner, Pray how shall the scamp ever get his desserts? |
33190 | R. Lanman)[ 1]The Sanskrit word for each of these five things begins with w. WEALTH Can wealth give Happiness? |
33190 | [ Charles E. Markham POETRY Poetry? |
33190 | [ Edward Young EQUITY--? |
33190 | [ Frank L. Stanton THE DEBTOR CHRIST_ Quid Mihi Et Tibi_ What, woman, is my debt to thee, That I should not deny The boon thou dost demand of me? |
33190 | [ Henry W. Allport SYMPATHY What gem hath dropp''d and sparkles o''er his chain? |
33190 | [ Thomas Hood WHICH WAY DID HE GO? |
33190 | [ William Watson THE COOK WELL DONE Why call me a bloodthirsty, gluttonous sinner For pounding my chef when my peace he subverts? |
22922 | And what did you hear, my Mary, All up on the Caldon Hill? |
22922 | And what did you see, my Mary, All up on the Caldon- Low? |
22922 | And what were the words, my Mary, That you did hear them say? |
22922 | Dear Pig, are you willing to sell for one shilling Your ring? |
22922 | Dear robin,said the sad young flower,"Perhaps you''d not mind trying To find a nice white frill for me, Some day when you are flying?" |
22922 | He took thee in his arms, and in pity brought thee home,-- A blessed day for thee!--Then whither would''st thou roam? 22922 I see no cause to repent my choice; You build your nest in the lofty pine, But is your slumber more sweet than mine? |
22922 | It is very cruel, too,Said little Alice Neal;"I wonder if he knew How sad the bird would feel?" |
22922 | Mooly cow, mooly cow, have you not been Regaling all day where the pastures are green? 22922 Mooly cow, mooly cow, where do you go, When all the green pastures are covered with snow? |
22922 | Well, a day is before me now; Yet, what,thought she,"can I do, if I try? |
22922 | What is it thou would''st seek? 22922 What matters it how far we go?" |
22922 | Where are you going, and what do you wish? |
22922 | Where is Winter, with his snowing? 22922 Where is my toadstool?" |
22922 | You_ sang_, sir, you say? 22922 ***** Pray whither sailed those ships all three On Christmas day, on Christmas day? 22922 125 Who Stole the Bird''s Nest? 22922 247 Where Go the Boats? 22922 69 What the Winds Bring, 29 What Would You See? 22922 All babyhood he holdeth, All motherhood enfoldeth-- Yet who hath seen his face? 22922 And how do you get there, Mrs. Dove? 22922 And what is the way there, Baby Miss? 22922 And where can that be, Mr. Jay? 22922 And who can I be, That sweep o''er the land and sail o''er the sea? 22922 And who can I be, That sweep o''er the land and scour o''er the sea? 22922 And who can I be, That sweep o''er the land and scour o''er the sea? 22922 And who can I be, That sweep o''er the land and scour o''er the sea? 22922 And why? 22922 Are they carousing there, All the night through? 22922 Are you not tired with rolling, and never Resting to sleep? 22922 But what can have brought them? 22922 But who is this through the doorway comes? 22922 By permission of Charles Scribner''s Sons.__ The City Child_ Dainty little maiden, whither would you wander? 22922 By_ Hezekiah Butterworth_ 57 Who Stole the Bird''s Nest? 22922 By_ John Keats_ 69 What Does Little Birdie Say? 22922 By_ Robert Herrick_ 246 What Would You See? 22922 By_ William Brighty Rands_ 274 THE POSY RING I A YEAR''S WINDFALLS_ Who comes dancing over the snow, His soft little feet all bare and rosy? 22922 By_ William Wordsworth_ 121 OTHER LITTLE CHILDREN Where Go the Boats? 22922 Can she be darning there, Ere the light fails, Small ragged stockings-- Tiny torn tails? 22922 Can you tell where? 22922 Copyright, 1889, by Charles Scribner''s Sons.__ What May Happen to a Thimble_ Come about the meadow, Hunt here and there, Where''s mother''s thimble? 22922 Dainty little maiden, whither would you wander? 22922 Did a finch fly with it Into the hedge, Or a reed- warbler Down in the sedge? 22922 Did spiders snatch at it Wanting to look At the bright pebbles Which lie in the brook? 22922 Did you dip your wings in azure dye, When April began to paint the sky, That was pale with the winter''s stay? 22922 Did you steal a bit of the lake for your crest, And fasten blue violets into your vest? 22922 Do n''t you see the wool that grows On my back to make your clothes? 22922 Dost thou know who made thee? 22922 From the glowing sky Summer shines above us; Spring was such a little dear, But will Summer love us? 22922 Green leaves a- floating, Castles of the foam, Boats of mine a- boating-- Where will all come home? 22922 Has a mouse carried it Down to her hole-- Home full of twilight, Shady, small soul? 22922 Have beetles crept with it Where oak roots hide? 22922 Have the ants cover''d it With straw and sand? 22922 Heard you never of the story, How they cross''d the desert wild, Journey''d on by plain and mountain, Till they found the Holy Child? 22922 How they open''d all their treasure, Kneeling to that Infant King, Gave the gold and fragrant incense, Gave the myrrh in offering? 22922 I have let the long bars down,--why do n''t you pass through? |
22922 | I kiss''d you oft and gave you white peas; Why not live sweetly, as in the green trees? |
22922 | III Up comes her little gray coaxing cat With her little pink nose, and she mews,"What''s that?" |
22922 | If nature to her tongue could measured numbers bring, Thus, thought I, to her lamb that little maid might sing:--"What ails thee, young one? |
22922 | If you did not love me so? |
22922 | Is anybody else awake To see the winter morning break, While thick and fast''tis snowing? |
22922 | Is it not well with thee? |
22922 | Is nothing afraid of the boy lying there? |
22922 | Is the pudding done? |
22922 | Is there such another, pray, Wonder- making month as May? |
22922 | Know ye not that lowly Baby Was the bright and morning star, He who came to light the Gentiles, And the darken''d isles afar? |
22922 | Lady Moon, Lady Moon, where are you roving? |
22922 | Lady Moon, Lady Moon, whom are you loving? |
22922 | Lady Moon, Lady Moon, whom are you loving? |
22922 | Little bird, little bird, how long will you roam? |
22922 | Little bird, little bird, whither do you flee? |
22922 | Little bird, little bird, whither will you go? |
22922 | Little fairy snow- flakes Dancing in the flue; Old Mr. Santa Claus, What is keeping you? |
22922 | Little lamb, who made thee? |
22922 | Mooly cow, mooly cow, why do n''t you come? |
22922 | Neat little kennel, So cosy and dark, Has one crept into it, Trying to bark? |
22922 | Need I ever know a fear? |
22922 | Not a crumb to be found On the snow- covered ground; Not a flower could he see, Not a leaf on a tree:"Oh, what will become,"says the cricket,"of me?" |
22922 | Now what do you think? |
22922 | Now what do you think? |
22922 | Now what do you think? |
22922 | O let us be married,--too long we have tarried,-- But what shall we do for a ring?" |
22922 | O, what shall I do?" |
22922 | Oh, where''s Polly? |
22922 | Oh, where''s Polly?" |
22922 | Oh, where''s Polly?" |
22922 | Or were you hatched from a bluebell bright,''Neath the warm, gold breast of a sunbeam light, By the river one blue spring day? |
22922 | Poor creature, can it be That''tis thy mother''s heart which is working so in thee? |
22922 | Pray whither sailed those ships all three On Christmas day in the morning? |
22922 | Pray, who can I be? |
22922 | Safe little diving- bell, Shutting so close? |
22922 | Said young Dandelion On his hedge- side,"Who''ll me rely on? |
22922 | Shall I win? |
22922 | Softly taps the Spring, and cheerly,"Darlings, are you here?" |
22922 | The Tree bore his blossoms, and all the birds sung:"Shall I take them away?" |
22922 | The Tree bore his fruit in the mid- summer glow: Said the girl,"May I gather thy berries now?" |
22922 | The garden of moons is it far away? |
22922 | The little bird on the boughs Of the sombre snow- laden pine Thinks:"Where shall I build me my house, And how shall I make it fine? |
22922 | The orchard of suns, my little Garaine, Will you take us there some day?" |
22922 | Then, with black at the border, jacket And this-- and this-- she will not lack it; Skirts? |
22922 | There have they settled it Down on its side? |
22922 | There will he try it on, For a new hat-- Nobody watching But one water- rat? |
22922 | They are waiting on the shingle-- will you come and join the dance? |
22922 | They made him a court, and they crowned him a king; Ah, who could have thought of so lovely a thing? |
22922 | This is the way we dress the Doll; If you had not seen, could you guess the Doll? |
22922 | Thy limbs, are they not strong? |
22922 | Thy plot of grass is soft, and green as grass can be; Rest, little young one, rest; what is''t that aileth thee? |
22922 | To his snug dressing- room, By the clear pool? |
22922 | VI"You want some breakfast too?" |
22922 | VII Waiting without stood sparrow and crow, Cooling their feet in the melting snow:"Wo n''t you come in, good folk?" |
22922 | We know him and we love him, No man to us need prove him-- Yet who hath seen his face? |
22922 | What are the blessings of the sight? |
22922 | What can nestlings do In the nightly dew? |
22922 | What does little baby say, In her bed at peep of day? |
22922 | What instinct has taught them to cherish him so? |
22922 | What is wanting to thy heart? |
22922 | What realms are those to which you fly? |
22922 | What remedy remains, Since, teach you all I can, I see you, after all my pains, So much resemble Man? |
22922 | What shall I call thee? |
22922 | What will you give me, Sleepy One, and call My wages, if I settle you all right? |
22922 | What would you do if I took you there To my little nest in the tree? |
22922 | What would you get in the top of the tree For all your crying and grief? |
22922 | Where do you come from, Baby Miss? |
22922 | Where do you come from, Mrs. Dove? |
22922 | Where learn you all your minstrelsy? |
22922 | Which is the Wind that brings the flowers? |
22922 | Which is the Wind that brings the heat? |
22922 | Which is the Wind that brings the rain? |
22922 | Whither from this pretty home, the home where mother dwells? |
22922 | Whither from this pretty house, this city- house of ours? |
22922 | Who calls to me, So far at sea? |
22922 | Who stole a nest away From the plum- tree, to- day?" |
22922 | Who stole a nest away From the plum- tree, to- day?" |
22922 | Who stole a nest away From the plum- tree, to- day?" |
22922 | Who stole four eggs I laid, And the nice nest I made?" |
22922 | Who stole four eggs I laid, And the nice nest I made?" |
22922 | Who stole four eggs I laid, And the nice nest I made?" |
22922 | Who stole four eggs I laid, And the nice nest I made?" |
22922 | Who stole that pretty nest From little yellow- breast?" |
22922 | Who stole that pretty nest From little yellow- breast?" |
22922 | Who''ll be my bride?" |
22922 | Why bleat so after me? |
22922 | Why do little children sing? |
22922 | Why look so pale and so sad, as forever Wishing to weep? |
22922 | Why pull so at thy cord? |
22922 | Will you listen to me? |
22922 | Will you listen to me? |
22922 | Will you listen to me? |
22922 | Will you listen to me? |
22922 | Will you, wo n''t you, will you, wo n''t you, will you join the dance? |
22922 | Will you, wo n''t you, will you, wo n''t you, will you join the dance? |
22922 | Will you, wo n''t you, will you, wo n''t you, wo n''t you join the dance? |
22922 | Will you, wo n''t you, will you, wo n''t you, wo n''t you join the dance?" |
22922 | Would all nature aid if he wanted its care? |
22922 | You make more noise in the world than I, But whose is the sweeter minstrelsy?" |
22922 | You talk of wondrous things you see; You say the sun shines bright; I feel him warm, but how can he Make either day or night? |
22922 | _ A Birthday Gift_***** What can I give him, Poor as I am? |
22922 | _ A Chill_ What can lambkins do All the keen night through? |
22922 | _ A Lobster Quadrille_"Will you walk a little faster?" |
22922 | _ Answer to a Child''s Question_ Do you ask what the birds say? |
22922 | _ Christmas Song_ Why do bells for Christmas ring? |
22922 | _ Lady Moon_ Lady Moon, Lady Moon, where are you roving? |
22922 | _ Little Garaine_"Where do the stars grow, little Garaine? |
22922 | _ Snowdrops_ Little ladies, white and green, With your spears about you, Will you tell us where you''ve been Since we lived without you? |
22922 | _ Song_ I had a dove and the sweet dove died; And I have thought it died of grieving: O, what could it grieve for? |
22922 | _ Spring and Summer_ Spring is growing up, Is not it a pity? |
22922 | _ Strange Lands_ Where do you come from, Mr. Jay? |
22922 | _ The Blind Boy_ O, say, what is that thing called Light, Which I must ne''er enjoy? |
22922 | _ The Blue Jay_ O Blue Jay up in the maple- tree, Shaking your throat with such bursts of glee, How did you happen to be so blue? |
22922 | _ The Fairies of the Caldon- Low_"And where have you been, my Mary, And where have you been from me?" |
22922 | _ The Fairies''Shopping_ Where do you think the Fairies go To buy their blankets ere the snow? |
22922 | _ The Lamb_ Little lamb, who made thee? |
22922 | _ The Tree_ The Tree''s early leaf- buds were bursting their brown;"Shall I take them away?" |
22922 | _ What Does Little Birdie Say?_ What does little birdie say, In her nest at peep of day? |
22922 | _ What Does Little Birdie Say?_ What does little birdie say, In her nest at peep of day? |
22922 | _ What Would You See?_ What would you see if I took you up To my little nest in the air? |
22922 | _ What Would You See?_ What would you see if I took you up To my little nest in the air? |
22922 | _ What the Winds Bring_ Which is the Wind that brings the cold? |
22922 | _ Who Stole the Bird''s Nest?_"To- whit! |
22922 | _ Young Dandelion_ Young Dandelion On a hedge- side, Said young Dandelion,"Who''ll be my bride? |
22922 | but how can they know? |
22922 | cried the crow;"I should like to know What thief took away A bird''s nest, to- day?" |
22922 | have you done something wrong in heaven, That God has hidden your face? |
22922 | in Winter, dead and dark, Where can poor Robin go? |
22922 | little brown brother, Are you awake in the dark? |
22922 | little brown brother, What kind of flower will you be? |
22922 | say, do you hear? |
22922 | was there ever so merry a note? |
22922 | well both for bed and board? |
22922 | what? |
22922 | where should I fly to, Where go sleep in the dark wood or dell? |
22922 | why pull so at thy chain? |
22922 | why? |
22922 | would you not live with me? |
22922 | you''re a sun- flower? |
26146 | All right,said Gustave,"but who is to go ahead of the show?" |
26146 | Am I? |
26146 | And how long,faltered Frohman, thinking of his play--"how long would it take to learn them?" |
26146 | And how''s your own play getting along? |
26146 | And the play does n''t matter? |
26146 | And then? |
26146 | And with whom? |
26146 | Are there any of those country fairs around here, where they have side shows and you can throw balls at things? |
26146 | Are there no men in your audiences? |
26146 | Are there rules of painting, sculpture, music? 26146 But ca n''t you give me Monday or Tuesday night?" |
26146 | But how about my mustache? |
26146 | But is a playwright,I asked,"more highly reputed than a theatrical manager?" |
26146 | But what do the critics say? |
26146 | But who will write you your Terror and Pity? |
26146 | But why did you permit yourself to lose so much money on a play that seemed bound to fail? |
26146 | By the way, Smith,called out Frohman,"how much do you want me to pay you for taking him off my hands?" |
26146 | Ca n''t we do it? |
26146 | Did you forget all about the supper? |
26146 | Did you see that man outside? |
26146 | Do you spell high- ball with a hyphen? |
26146 | Do you think there is any danger? |
26146 | Do you think you can get me a job as programmer with your show? |
26146 | Do you want a contract? |
26146 | Have they a daughter named Barbara? |
26146 | Have you got the whole week? |
26146 | How about her costume? |
26146 | How did it go? |
26146 | How go the rules? |
26146 | How is it going? |
26146 | How would you like to go under my management? |
26146 | How''s that? |
26146 | How''s that? |
26146 | How''s that? |
26146 | How''s the house, Tommy? |
26146 | How? |
26146 | Is he the bailiff? |
26146 | Is it as easy as that? |
26146 | Is n''t it enough to be a theatrical manager? |
26146 | May I wait for him? |
26146 | Miss Who? |
26146 | Now what would you like to do this evening? |
26146 | Rules? |
26146 | Shall I take it home and read it? |
26146 | Then you hold,said I,"that even in a French farce the events should be reasonable?" |
26146 | Then,said the manager,"what else could you do? |
26146 | This is terrible, is n''t it? 26146 To what do you attribute such a state of affairs?" |
26146 | WHY FEAR DEATH? |
26146 | Was it interesting? |
26146 | Well, then, I may have him? |
26146 | Well,said Frohman,"you sent matter to all the papers, did n''t you?" |
26146 | What are they talking about? |
26146 | What are you doing here, Charley? |
26146 | What are you doing here? |
26146 | What are you laughing at? |
26146 | What do you consider the biggest thing that you have done? |
26146 | What do you mean by leading actor? |
26146 | What do you think? |
26146 | What have you to do? |
26146 | What is it? |
26146 | What is that? |
26146 | What is the name of the book? |
26146 | What is wrong with it? |
26146 | What salary do you want? |
26146 | What would a literary man like to do in Paris? |
26146 | What would you like to do? |
26146 | What''s his name? |
26146 | What''s that? |
26146 | What''s the matter with the torrent? |
26146 | What''s the matter, Lionel? |
26146 | What''s the matter? |
26146 | What''s up? |
26146 | What, you here again? |
26146 | When do you want to go? |
26146 | Where are you going? |
26146 | Where did you get your cockney dialect? |
26146 | Where do they come from? |
26146 | Where do you want to go? |
26146 | Where to, Governor? |
26146 | Where? |
26146 | Which part? |
26146 | Who are you? |
26146 | Who is it? |
26146 | Who is that man? |
26146 | Who is that? |
26146 | Who''s Shakespeare? 26146 Who''s that?" |
26146 | Whom do you consider the greatest American dramatist? |
26146 | Why all this fuss? |
26146 | Why ca n''t Ongley pretend to be a crank and appear to be making an attempt on Miss Marlowe''s life? |
26146 | Why ca n''t you make it into a long play? |
26146 | Why did you do this play? |
26146 | Why do n''t you do it under my management? |
26146 | Why do n''t you stop in down- stairs and see''Rosemary''? |
26146 | Why not give a magnificent pageant? |
26146 | Why not have a real negro play Uncle Tom? |
26146 | Why not make him stage- manager? |
26146 | Why split and separate a good acting combination? |
26146 | Why? |
26146 | Why? |
26146 | Why? |
26146 | Why? |
26146 | Will she be able to do it? |
26146 | Will you take charge of the company? |
26146 | Wo n''t I play with Uncle John? |
26146 | Would you like to play in''Alice''? |
26146 | Would you like to play with me? |
26146 | You do n''t expect,I said,"to pick up another''Two Orphans,''a second''Ticket of Leave Man''?" |
26146 | You know I have an agreement to deliver you the manuscript of a play? |
26146 | You mean the candelabrum? |
26146 | You mean to say that you want me to change Mr. Thomas''s lines? |
26146 | ''What are you going to give us next season, Frohman?'' |
26146 | ''Who in thunder is Sardou?'' |
26146 | ( Turning to Miss Pringle),"England, why should I stay in England? |
26146 | After all, what is melodrama? |
26146 | After an interval of a few moments a dulcet voice came through the door, saying,"Wo n''t you see me?" |
26146 | Approaching the treasurer at the box- office, he said:"Will you please let me have a hundred dollars on account of the show?" |
26146 | At lunch that day Frohman remarked to the agent:"Why did you send me that note about the papers?" |
26146 | At the end of this meeting Lestocq said in jest,"What do I get out of this?" |
26146 | But you''ve got London by the neck, have n''t you?" |
26146 | Charles borrowed a quantity of it and also from the"Whose Baby Are You?" |
26146 | Collier, who had been playing bridge until dawn, showed up at the appointed time, whereupon Frohman said:"How did you do it?" |
26146 | Did n''t Augustin Daly make splendid adaptations of German farces? |
26146 | Did n''t Lester Wallack write''Rosedale''and''The Veteran''? |
26146 | Do n''t you think it is a pretty good life''s work?" |
26146 | Do n''t you think we had better warn him?" |
26146 | Do we walk?" |
26146 | Does he want me?" |
26146 | Does n''t Belasco turn out first- class dramas? |
26146 | Each public asks,''What have you got?'' |
26146 | Every now and then he would chirp up with the question:"How do I get out of town?" |
26146 | F.?" |
26146 | F.?" |
26146 | Fine part.--First act--_you_ know-- romantic-- light through the window... nice deep tones of your voice, you see?... |
26146 | Frohman jumped up from his chair, saying, eagerly,"What''s the verdict?" |
26146 | Frohman looked up with a start and said:"Is that so? |
26146 | Frohman now got Ditrichstein to adapt"Are You a Mason?" |
26146 | Frohman thought a moment and said:"Can you be at my office to- morrow morning at eight o''clock? |
26146 | Frohman thought a moment, and suddenly flashed out:"Why not rewrite''The Taming of the Shrew''with a new background?" |
26146 | Frohman turned to Dillingham and said:"What in the name of Heaven is that? |
26146 | Frohman, who was just walking through the side door on his way to William Faversham''s dressing- room, turned to the star and said:"Who is calling? |
26146 | Frohman,_ you''_ve got London by the neck, have n''t you?" |
26146 | Frohman?" |
26146 | Frohman?" |
26146 | He had five different plays going at the same time--"Sherlock Holmes,""Are You a Mason?" |
26146 | He had hardly repeated the first three words--"Why fear death?" |
26146 | He kept on saying,"Will it never come?" |
26146 | He nagged at his brother:"Gus, when do we start for Chicago? |
26146 | He slapped Collier on the back and, turning to his companion, said:"Was n''t that a bully scene that Willie put into the play?" |
26146 | Heimley_, do n''t you?" |
26146 | His first greeting to Gustave was:"Well, when do we start again?" |
26146 | How about my fee?" |
26146 | How would you like to go on?" |
26146 | If he saw an impressive bit of scenery he would say,"Would n''t that make a fine background?" |
26146 | In London they say,''How long will the play run even though it is a failure?''" |
26146 | Instead, Frohman whispered:"Charley, I wonder if they have any more of that famous apple- pie over at Hueblein''s?" |
26146 | May I?" |
26146 | More than one actor, on entering the shop, asked the question:"Where is Charley? |
26146 | Much to her surprise Frohman said:"Well, Ethel, what can I do for you?" |
26146 | Often in discussing a business arrangement with his representatives he would say:"Did I say that?" |
26146 | On going into the adjoining dressing- room the great actor said to her:"Would n''t you like to stay in England?" |
26146 | On this same occasion he was asked,"What seat in the theater do you consider the best to view a drama or a musical comedy from?" |
26146 | Once he was asked the question:"If you had your life to live over again would you be a theatrical manager?" |
26146 | Once he was asked this question:"What is the difference between metropolitan and out- of- town audiences?" |
26146 | One day in 1909 he said to Frohman:"Why do n''t you establish a Repertory Theater?" |
26146 | One day, a year later, Frohman remarked to Potter in Paris,"What do you say to paying Ouida a visit in Florence?" |
26146 | One night, just before Gustave started out, the lad said to him:"Gus, how can I make money like you?" |
26146 | Quick as a flash Chambers said to him:"Why do you keep His Grace waiting?" |
26146 | She became indignant, called him to the footlights, and said:"I want you to know that I am an artist?" |
26146 | Shoving the money at him, Frohman said,"How far will this take us?" |
26146 | Some years afterward a well- known English playwright asked Stephen Gatti:"What is your contract with Frohman?" |
26146 | Sometimes he would say,"Try it my way first,"or"Do you like that?" |
26146 | Summoning a waiter, he asked:"What''s all that noise about?" |
26146 | The most extraordinary plays succeed, and many that deserve a better fate fail; so how are we to know until after we test a play before the public? |
26146 | Then he said to Germon:"You''re a member of the well- known Germon family, are n''t you? |
26146 | Then he said, eagerly:"When shall we do it; whom do you want for star?" |
26146 | Then why not I? |
26146 | Then why not go to a young country where all is life and gaiety and sunshine and joy and youth-- the land of promise, the land for me?" |
26146 | Then, as always, she asked herself the question:"What will this character mean to the people who see it?" |
26146 | Then, with all the terror of destruction about him, Frohman said to his associates, with the serene smile still on his face:"Why fear death? |
26146 | They came to his mind as he stood on that fateful deck and said:_ Why fear death? |
26146 | This was discussed for a little while, when Sir Charles said,"What do you say, Frohman?" |
26146 | To Arthur he said:"What do you think about my taking the Wallack successes out on the road? |
26146 | What comes next on the American stage? |
26146 | What do you say?" |
26146 | What does this result in? |
26146 | When Charles saw them he said,"How much do you want?" |
26146 | When Haverly replied that he had not, Gustave immediately spoke up:"Why do n''t you hire my brother Charley? |
26146 | When Lestocq told Frohman these terms over the telephone, all he said was this:"Did you tell her not to slam the door?" |
26146 | When do artists eat?" |
26146 | When he was able to talk Thomas said to him:"Why in Heaven''s name did n''t you use the elevator?" |
26146 | When he was told he said:"I want to see it, but do I have to look at anything else in the gallery?" |
26146 | When he went to see Frohman to hear about the third, this is the way the manager expressed it to him:"New play-- see?... |
26146 | When the curtain went down his new star said to him:"How did it go?" |
26146 | When the play went into rehearsal, Frohman, who sat in front, spoke to Miller from time to time, asking,"Where is that line you spoke in my office?" |
26146 | When the terms had been agreed upon, Frohman said to Crane:"Are you sure this is perfectly satisfactory to you?" |
26146 | Where can you find a more human theme than that?" |
26146 | Who shall we have in the cast?" |
26146 | Why do n''t you give him a chance?" |
26146 | Why do n''t you go as my understudy and tell the doctor what is the matter with you? |
26146 | Why throw away your money on it? |
26146 | Will you help me put her out in a piece?" |
26146 | Will you let me have her, and in that way do another great wrong by doing me a favor? |
26146 | Will you speak to your father about it?" |
26146 | Would you like to adapt a French farce for me?_ Dillingham accepted this commission and thus met Frohman. |
26146 | XIX"WHY FEAR DEATH?" |
26146 | or"Does this give you a better feeling?" |
26146 | was the query? |
26146 | you know?'' |
20907 | And how, Socrates,she said with a smile,"can Love be acknowledged to be a great god by those who say that he is not a god at all?" |
20907 | And is that which is not wise ignorant? 20907 And is this wish and this desire common to all? |
20907 | And not only the possession, but the everlasting possession of the good? |
20907 | And what does he gain who possesses the good? |
20907 | And what harm can this confinement do you? |
20907 | And what is the nature of this spiritual power? |
20907 | And what is this? |
20907 | And who are they? |
20907 | And who,I said,"was his father, and who his mother?" |
20907 | And you admitted that Love, because he was in want, desires those good and fair things of which he is in want? |
20907 | And you mean by the happy those who are the possessors of things good or fair? |
20907 | But how can he be a god who has no share in the good or the fair? |
20907 | But in what way would you have us bury you? |
20907 | But what,he says,"has this to do with my being a slave?" |
20907 | But who then, Diotima,I said,"are the lovers of wisdom, if they are neither the wise nor the foolish?" |
20907 | But why of birth? |
20907 | By Heracles,he said,"what is this? |
20907 | By all means; but who makes the third partner in our revels? |
20907 | By those who know or by those who do n''t know? |
20907 | For how,he says,"am I a slave? |
20907 | For just consider, if you transgress and err in this sort of way, what good will you do either to yourself or to your friends? 20907 For what harm did it do me? |
20907 | How can that be? |
20907 | How so? 20907 How? |
20907 | Hush,she cried;"is that to be deemed foul which is not fair?" |
20907 | Is he mortal? |
20907 | Of the ancient deeds handed down by tradition and which no eye of any one who hears us ever saw, why should we speak? 20907 Or against those of us who regulate the system of nurture and education of children in which you were trained? |
20907 | Right opinion,she replied,"which, as you know, being incapable of giving a reason, is not knowledge( for how could knowledge be devoid of reason? |
20907 | Still,she said,"the answer suggests a further question, which is this, What is given by the possession of beauty?" |
20907 | The debt shall be paid,said Crito;"is there anything else?" |
20907 | Then if this be the nature of love, can you tell me further,she said,"what is the manner of the pursuit? |
20907 | Then love,she said,"may be described generally as the love of the everlasting possession of the good?" |
20907 | Then,she said,"let me put the word''good''in the place of the beautiful, and repeat the question, What does he who loves the good desire?" |
20907 | To which may be added that they love the possession of the good? |
20907 | Well; but such a one paid me the utmost regard for so long a time, and did he not love me? |
20907 | What do you mean, Diotima,I said;"is love then evil and foul?" |
20907 | What is he then, Diotima? |
20907 | What say you? 20907 What then is Love?" |
20907 | What then? |
20907 | What then? |
20907 | Why, what has that to do with being slave or free? |
20907 | Will you have a very drunken man as a companion of your revels? 20907 --or rather let us put the question more clearly, and ask, When a man loves the beautiful, what does he love? |
20907 | Again, how much will caged birds suffer in trying to escape? |
20907 | All their fine talk of friendship, with Virtue and The Good, have vanished and flown, who knows whither? |
20907 | Already a far heavier sentence had been passed and was hanging over a man''s head; before that feeling, why should he not take a little pleasure? |
20907 | And Cato himself also smiling a little, said unto them that sat by him: What a laughing and mocking Consul have we, my lords? |
20907 | And are you not a flute- player? |
20907 | And are you not changeable too in love? |
20907 | And because we think right to destroy you, do you think that you have any right to destroy us in return, and your country as far as in you lies? |
20907 | And by what is he overcome? |
20907 | And does not ignorance consist in having a false opinion and being deceived about important matters? |
20907 | And first of all answer this very question: Are we right in saying that you agreed to be governed according to us in deed, and not in word only? |
20907 | And how do you know but that when you cease to be a necessary utensil, he may throw you away, like a broken stool? |
20907 | And how many did Eriphyle live with Amphiaraus, and was the mother of children not a few? |
20907 | And if the Athenians, too, die as soon as you have caught them, of what use are your warlike preparations?" |
20907 | And on another occasion she said to me:"What is the reason, Socrates, of this love, and the attendant desire? |
20907 | And shall that be the premise of our argument? |
20907 | And should your empire supplant ours, may not you lose the good- will which you owe to the fear of us? |
20907 | And this, as possessing measure, must undeniably also be an art and science? |
20907 | And what in the world could there be more holy than these ties? |
20907 | And what says he afterward? |
20907 | And what think you? |
20907 | And when you speak of being overcome, what do you mean, he will say, but that you choose the greater evil in exchange for the lesser good? |
20907 | And who that had sense and reason would wish to be one of those lions? |
20907 | And who would live in sorrow, fear, envy, pity, with disappointed desires and unavailing aversions? |
20907 | And will you, O professor of true virtue, say that you are justified in this? |
20907 | And yet when a kingdom, like a bit of meat, was thrown betwixt them, see what they say--_ Polynices._ Where wilt thou stand before the towers? |
20907 | Are not all actions the tendency of which is to make life painless and pleasant honorable and useful? |
20907 | Are not the qualities which produced such a result worth striving for? |
20907 | Are you going by an act of yours to overturn us-- the laws and the whole state, as far as in you lies? |
20907 | At my first peep into your realm, how could I but admire yourself and all these your disciples? |
20907 | But even were they ever so free, what is that to you? |
20907 | But how, he will reply, can the good be unworthy of the evil, or the evil of the good? |
20907 | But if we be sent for said Cassius: how then? |
20907 | But if you seek it where it is not, what wonder if you never find it? |
20907 | But is not this unjust? |
20907 | But some one will ask, Why? |
20907 | But some one will say,''Of the beautiful in what, Socrates and Diotima?'' |
20907 | But what elation? |
20907 | But what of Socrates, Diogenes, and such wise men? |
20907 | But when it comes to national lies, when one finds whole cities bouncing collectively like one man, how is one to keep one''s countenance? |
20907 | But who can compel me but the master of all, CÃ ¦ sar?" |
20907 | But, dear sirs, do not condemn me unheard; give me trial first...._ Plato._ Pythagoras,[123] Socrates, what do you think? |
20907 | By what? |
20907 | Can I not get possession of them?" |
20907 | Can you explain it? |
20907 | Cassius being bold, and taking hold of this word: Why, quoth he, what Roman is he alive that will suffer thee to die for the liberty? |
20907 | Could he that had found you such have the heart to abuse these benefactors to whom his little fame was due? |
20907 | CÃ ¦ sar feeling himself hurt, took him straight by the hand he held his dagger in, and cried out in Latin: O traitor, Casca, what doest thou? |
20907 | Did justice ever deter any one from taking by force whatever he could? |
20907 | Did not they kiss and fondle each other? |
20907 | Do I not desert the principles which were acknowledged by us to be just? |
20907 | Do men ever devote their attention, then, to[ what they think] evils? |
20907 | Do the laws speak truly, or do they not? |
20907 | Do we then find any of the wicked exempt from these evils? |
20907 | Do you not distinguish the semblances of things? |
20907 | Do you not often see little dogs caressing and playing with each other, so that you would say nothing could be more friendly? |
20907 | Do you not provide such food and clothing and habitation as are suitable to you? |
20907 | Do you not see that there is a mean between wisdom and ignorance?" |
20907 | Do you think that there is?" |
20907 | Does oil mix with water? |
20907 | Doth not your father? |
20907 | For in what are you deficient? |
20907 | For what if they were of a generous, you of a mean spirit; they brave, and you a coward; they sober, and you dissolute? |
20907 | For what is it that every man seeks? |
20907 | For where else can friendship be met, but joined with fidelity and modesty, and the intercommunication of virtue alone? |
20907 | For who has not an idea of evil, that it is hurtful; that it is to be avoided; that it is by all means to be prudently guarded against? |
20907 | Full of astonishment at what he had heard Croesus demanded sharply,"And wherefore dost thou deem Tellus happiest?" |
20907 | Gray, the poet, in one of his letters, inquired,"Is it, or is it not, the finest thing you ever read in your life?" |
20907 | Have not you the use of your senses? |
20907 | Have you never been in love with any one, either of a servile or liberal condition? |
20907 | Have you never borne to be reviled and shut out- of- doors? |
20907 | Have you never flattered your fair slave? |
20907 | Have you never gone out by night where you did not desire? |
20907 | Have you never kissed her feet? |
20907 | Have you never spent more than you chose? |
20907 | Have you not sometimes uttered your words with sighs and groans? |
20907 | How came you to be considered safe? |
20907 | How can you tell, foolish man, if that regard be any other than he pays to his shoes, or his horse, when he cleans them? |
20907 | How shall we answer that, Crito? |
20907 | How think you the man has spoken? |
20907 | I am curious therefore to inquire of thee, whom of all the men that thou hast seen thou deemest the most happy?" |
20907 | I said,"O thou strange woman, thou sayest well, and now, assuming Love to be such as you say, what is the use of him?" |
20907 | I will also tell, if you please-- and indeed I am bound to tell-- of his courage in battle; for who but he saved my life? |
20907 | III OF LIARS AND LYING[125]_ Tychiades._ Philocles, what is it that makes most men so fond of a lie? |
20907 | If they grow their beards and call themselves philosophers and look solemn, do these things make them like you? |
20907 | In leaving the prison against the will of the Athenians, do I wrong any? |
20907 | In the first place, did we not bring you into existence? |
20907 | Is he happy? |
20907 | Is he not like a Silenus in this? |
20907 | Is he raised above desire or fear? |
20907 | Is he secure? |
20907 | Is it from this that you confess yourself unwise? |
20907 | Is it no part of slavery to act against your will, under compulsion, and lamenting? |
20907 | Is not the real explanation that they are out of proportion to each other, either as greater and smaller, or more and fewer? |
20907 | Is that true or not?" |
20907 | Is that, he will ask, because the good was worthy or not worthy of conquering the evil? |
20907 | Is there a trace in their lives of kindred and affinity? |
20907 | It makes me quite angry: what satisfaction can there be to men of their good qualities in deceiving themselves and their neighbors? |
20907 | May I or not?" |
20907 | Must we not agree? |
20907 | Nay, does he not live the more slavishly the more he lives at ease? |
20907 | Now supposing that happiness consisted in making and taking large things, what would be the saving principle of human life? |
20907 | Now what good can they get out of it? |
20907 | Now, what shall we do with him? |
20907 | One of the soldiers seeing her, angrily said unto her: Is that well done Charmion? |
20907 | Or do you decline and dissent from this? |
20907 | Or does he who loves him with a changeable affection bear him genuine good- will? |
20907 | Or even to things indifferent? |
20907 | Or he who now vilifies, then admires him? |
20907 | Or shall I crown Agathon, as was my intention in coming, and go my way? |
20907 | Or who would not have such children as Lycurgus[64] left behind to be the saviors, not only of Lacedà ¦ mon, but of Hellas, as one may say? |
20907 | Ought we not most readily to strain every nerve? |
20907 | Say whether you have any objection to urge against those of us who regulate marriage?" |
20907 | See you how fond he is of the fair? |
20907 | Since, then, neither they who are called kings nor the friends of kings live as they like, who, then, after all, is free?... |
20907 | Socrates alone retained his calmness:"What is this strange outcry?" |
20907 | Some keep tame lions, and feed them and even lead them about; and who will say that any such lion is free? |
20907 | Suppose I ask, why is this? |
20907 | Suppose I say that? |
20907 | Tell us what complaint you have to make against us which justifies you in attempting to destroy us and the state? |
20907 | That venerably bearded sexagenarian, with his philosophic leanings? |
20907 | The world will acknowledge that, will they not? |
20907 | Then, my friends, I said, what do you say to this? |
20907 | Think you it is because he is desirous to pay his fee[ of manumission] to the officer? |
20907 | True, he said; how could they see anything but the shadows if they were never allowed to move their heads? |
20907 | Was it to move out of its place for the folly of your child? |
20907 | Well, and our verdict? |
20907 | Well, and when did you use to sup the more pleasantly-- formerly, or now? |
20907 | Well, then; can he who is deceived in another be his friend, think you? |
20907 | Were not Eteocles and Polynices born of the same mother and of the same father? |
20907 | Were not the laws, which have the charge of this, right in commanding your father to train you in music and gymnastic?" |
20907 | Were they not brought up, and did they not live and eat and sleep, together? |
20907 | Were you never commanded anything by your mistress that you did not choose? |
20907 | What answer shall we make to this, Crito? |
20907 | What are they doing who show all this eagerness and heat which is called love? |
20907 | What do you mean? |
20907 | What do you say? |
20907 | What else is this than slavery? |
20907 | What was this bauble? |
20907 | What will be our answer, Crito, to these and the like words? |
20907 | What, Epicurus, Aristippus, tired already? |
20907 | What, knowest thou not that thou art Brutus? |
20907 | What, then, is this evil-- thus hurtful and to be avoided? |
20907 | When I heard this, I was astonished and said,"Is this really true, O thou wise Diotima?" |
20907 | When he becomes the friend of CÃ ¦ sar, then does he cease to be restrained; to be compelled? |
20907 | When there are a number of horses together, too, how, if they are thus led, can they be prevented from annoying one another? |
20907 | Who would be willing to sacrifice himself to the law of honor when he knew not whether he would ever live to be held in honor? |
20907 | Who would live deceived, erring, unjust, dissolute, discontented, dejected? |
20907 | Who, then, would wish to lead a wrong course of life? |
20907 | Whom can we better credit than this very man who has been his friend? |
20907 | Whom shall we ask? |
20907 | Why do you boast your military expeditions? |
20907 | Why is it? |
20907 | Why seek to cure evil by evil? |
20907 | Why should it be consigned to print? |
20907 | Why then do you confess that you want wisdom? |
20907 | Why, did we appoint you tutor of the cook, man? |
20907 | Why, tell me, all of you, what have such creatures to do with you? |
20907 | Why, then, do you still call yourself free? |
20907 | Why, what could I find to say? |
20907 | Why, what harm has the stone done? |
20907 | Will he not fancy that the shadows which he formerly saw are truer than the objects which are now shown to him? |
20907 | Will he not swiftly pound man and mask together into nothingness with his club, for womanizing and disgracing him? |
20907 | Will you drink with me or not?" |
20907 | Will you laugh at me because I am drunk? |
20907 | Will you then flee from well- ordered cities and virtuous men? |
20907 | Would not he?" |
20907 | Would not mankind generally acknowledge that the art which accomplishes this is the art of measurement? |
20907 | Would not this be in contradiction to the admission which has been already made, that he thinks the things which he fears to be evil? |
20907 | Would the art of measuring be the saving principle or would the power of appearance? |
20907 | Would you not admit, my friends, that this is true? |
20907 | You deprive me of all this, and then ask what harm I suffer?" |
20907 | You would not say this? |
20907 | _ Crito_: I think that you are right, Socrates; how then shall we proceed? |
20907 | _ Crito_: I will do my best...._ Socrates_: Again, Crito, may we do evil? |
20907 | _ Eteocles._ Why askest thou this of me? |
20907 | _ Lucian._ How or when was I ever insolent to you? |
20907 | _ Philocles._ What, Eucrates, of all credible witnesses? |
20907 | _ Philocles._ Why, have you ever known any one with such a strong natural turn for lying? |
20907 | _ Philosophy._ What say you, gentlemen? |
20907 | _ Socrates._ What say you, Empedocles? |
20907 | _ Socrates_: And what of doing evil in return for evil, which is the morality of the many; is that just or not? |
20907 | _ Socrates_: But if this is true, what is the application? |
20907 | _ Socrates_: For doing evil to another is the same as injuring him? |
20907 | _ Socrates_:"And was that our agreement with you?" |
20907 | and do all men always desire their own good, or only some men?--what think you?" |
20907 | and is existence worth having on these terms?... |
20907 | he said; ought we to give them an inferior life, when they might have a superior one? |
20907 | is my happiness then so utterly set at naught by thee that thou dost not even put me on a level with private men?" |
20907 | or rather do I not wrong those whom I ought least to wrong? |
20907 | the law would say;"or were you to abide by the sentence of the state?" |
20907 | what is there in your lives that lends itself to such treatment? |
33109 | Are you well- off in worldly goods? |
33109 | Have you any enemies? |
33109 | Have you any special trouble of mind? |
33109 | A cordial greeting ensued, and then one of them asked the other:"How old are you now?" |
33109 | APPENDIX WHAT IS RIGHTEOUSNESS? |
33109 | Are they who know and they who know not equal? |
33109 | If miracles were wrought in bygone years, Why not to- day, why not to- day, O seers? |
33109 | If we are hastening to death, why all this impatience with the ills of life? |
33109 | Is the reward of kindness anything but kindness? |
33109 | Oh, when will Fate come forth with his decree, That I might clasp the cool clay, and be free? |
33109 | One only resource I have-- to stand and knock; And if unheard at Thy mercy- gate, to whom shall I go? |
33109 | The fool is an enemy to himself-- how can he then be a friend to others? |
33109 | This Leprous Age most needs a healing hand, Oh, why not heed his cries, and dry his tears?" |
33109 | What can a tirewoman do with an ugly face? |
33109 | Whom shall I call, what Name shall I invoke, If Thy needy servant shall in vain Thy bounty seek? |
3378 | As yet the unequal modern conditions were undreamed of( who indeed could have dreamed of them forty or fifty years ago?) |
3378 | But what shall I say of Zola himself, and my admiration of his epic greatness? |
3378 | But who could know anything of the tragical history that was so soon to follow that winter of 1859- 60? |
3378 | In fact, it was one of the literary passions of the time I speak of, and it shared my devotion for the novels of Tourguenief and( shall I own it?) |
3378 | The tenderness I still feel for him is not a reasoned love, I must own; but, as I am always asking, when was love ever reasoned? |
3378 | Why does the young man''s fancy, when it lightly turns to thoughts of love, turn this way and not that? |
29022 | ''_ Osses?_ d''ye say. 29022 ''_ Osses?_"cried the coachman, turning round upon Mr. Pickwick, with sharp suspicion in his eye. |
29022 | And do you always take your cycles with you when you go for a walk? |
29022 | Are y- you k- keen on r- riding home? |
29022 | Ave a tow up, miss? |
29022 | But vot sort of a vheel do you call that thing in front of you, and vot''s its pertikler objeck? 29022 Did you see the number?" |
29022 | Er-- and have you driven much? |
29022 | Have you such a thing as a pump? |
29022 | How dare you call yourself a chauffeur? |
29022 | I''m all right,answered the other;"what makes you think I''ve been ill?" |
29022 | Is it easy to pull? |
29022 | Round,said he,"how are you?" |
29022 | Votever shall I do vith it, Sammy? |
29022 | Well, what''s the matter? 29022 What do you mean, boy?" |
29022 | What luck? 29022 What''s an autocrat, Mabel?" |
29022 | When are they-- eh-- going to-- ahem-- put the horses to? |
29022 | Where am I?--Oh, in hospital-- oh, really?--Seems nice clean sort of place.--How long----? 29022 Who should attack us when''tis common talk that you pawned your diamonds a month ago? |
29022 | Why ask me to come? |
29022 | Why do n''t you go where you''re looking? |
29022 | Why the dickens do n''t you look where you''re going? |
29022 | Would you mind openin''the gate, miss? 29022 You did n''t see the number, but could you swear to the man?" |
29022 | ( in the_ rôle_ of a labourer behind a hedge on the Brighton road):"''Oo are you a- gettin''at? |
29022 | *** Illustration: TO DO IT_ First Villager._"What''s up, Bill?" |
29022 | ***** Are there motor- cars in the celestial regions? |
29022 | ***** CYCLING CONUNDRUM.--_Q._ What article of the cyclist girl''s attire do a couple of careless barbers recall to mind? |
29022 | ***** IN EAST DORSETSHIRE.--_Cyclist( to Native)._ How many miles am I from Wimborne? |
29022 | ***** Illustration: ADDING INSULT TO INJURY_ Cyclist_(_ to Foxhunter, thrown out_),"Oi say, Squoire,''ave you seen the''ounds?" |
29022 | ***** Illustration: AN ACCOMMODATING PARTY.--_Lady Driver._"Can you show us the way to Great Missenden, please?" |
29022 | ***** Illustration: BREAKING IT GENTLY.--_ Passer- by._"Is that your pork down there on the road, guv''nor?" |
29022 | ***** Illustration: EXCLUSIVE.--_ Fair Driver._"Will you stand by the pony for a few minutes, my good man?" |
29022 | ***** Illustration: IN DORSETSHIRE_ Fair Cyclist._"Is this the way to Wareham, please?" |
29022 | ***** Illustration: QUITE A LITTLE HOLIDAY_ Cottager._"What''s wrong, Biker? |
29022 | ***** Illustration: QUITE RESPECTFUL_ Fair Cyclist._"Is that the incumbent of this parish?" |
29022 | ***** Illustration: SORROWS OF A"CHAUFFEUR"_ Ancient Dame._"What d''ye say? |
29022 | ***** Illustration: SOUR GRAPES_ First Scorcher._"Call_ that_ exercise?" |
29022 | ***** Illustration: THE FREEMASONRY OF THE WHEEL.--"Rippin''wevver fer hus ciciklin''chaps, ai n''t it?" |
29022 | ***** Illustration: THE? |
29022 | ***** Illustration: WHATS IN A NAME? |
29022 | ***** Illustration:"Did you get his number?" |
29022 | ***** Illustration:"Have you ever tried riding without the handles? |
29022 | ***** Illustration:"Oh, did you see a gentleman on a bicycle as you came up?" |
29022 | ***** Illustration:"Would n''t yer like ter''ave one o''them things, Liza Ann?" |
29022 | ***** Illustration:_ Cyclist._"Why ca n''t you look where you''re going?" |
29022 | ***** Illustration:_ Friend._"Going about thirty, are we? |
29022 | ***** Illustration:_ Motor Fiend._"Why do n''t you get out of the way?" |
29022 | ***** MOTOR QUESTIONS What rushes through the crowded street With whirring noise and throbbing beat, Exhaling odours far from sweet? |
29022 | ***** OVERHEARD AT A MOTOR MEETING.--_ Inquirer._"I wonder what they call those large, long cars?" |
29022 | ***** SHOULD MOTORISTS WEAR MASKS? |
29022 | ***** THE PERFECT AUTOMOBILIST[_ With acknowledgments to the Editor of"The Car"_] Who is the happy road- deer? |
29022 | *****"Motor cycle for sale, 2- 3/4 h.-p., equal to 3- 1/4 h.-p."_--Provincial Paper._ Discount of 1/2 h.-p. for cash? |
29022 | *****_ He._"Do you belong to the Psychical Society?" |
29022 | *****_ Q._ Why is the lady bikist of an amorous disposition? |
29022 | --_ Obliging Motorist._"Shall I stop the engine?" |
29022 | Ah-- by the way, do you know anyone who wants to buy a motor----? |
29022 | Aix in sight? |
29022 | And what about me, gentlemen? |
29022 | And what----? |
29022 | But do n''t you run some risk of being pulled up for exceeding the legal pace?" |
29022 | But why abuse the canon first? |
29022 | Ca n''t I look where I''m going? |
29022 | Confound him, ca n''t he be more careful? |
29022 | D''yer want any help?" |
29022 | Did n''t yer see the notice- board at the gate, sayin''''No thoroughfare''?" |
29022 | Do n''t you see my horse is running away?" |
29022 | Do you see any mote in my eye? |
29022 | Eh? |
29022 | Exceeding the legal limit? |
29022 | Have I any right of way? |
29022 | Have you had a fever?" |
29022 | Have you had a spill?" |
29022 | Have you?" |
29022 | Help? |
29022 | How can I strike the Harrow road?" |
29022 | How would a steam roller suit her? |
29022 | I said to him, what have_ you_ got to do with the''record''?" |
29022 | If people_ will_ use their gullets as garages, what can they expect? |
29022 | Is there none innocent? |
29022 | Killed anything?" |
29022 | Mr. JEM SMITH, cabdriver, in the course of an interview, said:"Masks? |
29022 | My dear fellow, what is the matter with you? |
29022 | Now what, may I ask, do_ you_ use? |
29022 | Nowadays, bicycles being"always with us,"why not for"Turnpike Roads"substitute"Turn- bike roads"? |
29022 | OF THE DAY.--Should there be a speed( and dust) limit? |
29022 | Oh, been here about six weeks-- have I, really? |
29022 | Oh, who are you a- gettin''at?" |
29022 | Oh,_ both_ arms, you say?--and left leg? |
29022 | P.S.--What do you charge for rebuilding a cycle? |
29022 | P.S.--Would such an arrangement make us"carriages"in the eye of the law? |
29022 | Pickwick?" |
29022 | Run over an old woman? |
29022 | Silly fellow, does he think I can stop at this pace? |
29022 | Suppose we should be attacked?" |
29022 | The scufflers In soft, silent shoes, turn Red Injins? |
29022 | These''ints about lassos and butterfly nets? |
29022 | They call he a''shuvver,''do they? |
29022 | This way, conducts she straight to Hele?" |
29022 | To my soft consolation scant heed did he pay, But with taps was continually juggling, And his words,"Will you keep your dress further away?" |
29022 | Want a machine, sir? |
29022 | We can not all resemble_ Caliban_, but why should not the motorist aspire in that direction? |
29022 | What d''ye mean? |
29022 | What do they know of Sussex who only Burwash know?" |
29022 | What is it?" |
29022 | What is to be done? |
29022 | What kind?" |
29022 | What on earth has happened to you all?" |
29022 | What right has he here? |
29022 | What''s that he says? |
29022 | What''s that? |
29022 | What''s that? |
29022 | What''s wrong? |
29022 | What_ are_ they there for?" |
29022 | Where could you have a more salient and striking example of pushfulness and determination to"get there"over all obstacles? |
29022 | Who as the car goes whizzing past At such law- breaking stands aghast,( For forty miles an hour_ is_ fast)? |
29022 | Who flies before the oily gust Wafted his way through whirling dust, And hopes the beastly thing will bust? |
29022 | Who hears the case with bland surprise, And over human frailty sighs, The while he reads between the lies? |
29022 | Who is he That every motorist should want to be? |
29022 | Who thinks that it is scarcely fair To have to pay for road repair While sudden death lies lurking there? |
29022 | Whose wheels o''er greasy asphalte skim, Exacting toll of life and limb,( What is a corpse or so to_ him_)? |
29022 | Why, what on earth are you doing?" |
29022 | Winkle''s_ dialogue with_ Sam Weller_ when he attempted skating? |
29022 | Wonder if wiser to start full speed or begin gently? |
29022 | Wot are these fine capers perposed by the papers? |
29022 | _ Conductor._"''Arrer road? |
29022 | _ Cyclist( angrily)._ Then what do you know? |
29022 | _ Cyclist._ Am I near Blandford? |
29022 | _ Do_ we look as if we would do such a thing?" |
29022 | _ Motorist._"Do n''t you think you''d better warn the other chap?" |
29022 | _ The Good Man._"Pony, mum? |
29022 | _ The Owner._"L- let''s l- leave it a- and_ walk_, s- shall we?" |
29022 | _ Victim._"_ What!_ Are you coming back?" |
29022 | _ Well- informed Friend._"Those? |
29022 | _''Ow about my paint?_"***** Illustration: NOTE TO THE SUPERSTITIOUS It is considered lucky for a black cat to cross your path. |
29022 | a top of a coach instead o''under it?" |
29022 | exclaimed Round,"you do n''t mean to say I''ve been putting on more flesh? |
29022 | what was that?" |
30776 | ''An''how many times might you''ave been at Aukland?'' 30776 ''Did I talk? |
30776 | , ends with a question which neither the reader nor the author is able to answer; and Bayard Taylor''s fascinating short- story,Who Was She? |
30776 | The Master caught me by the shoulder, held me at arm''s length, and still addressing his brother:''Do you know what this means?'' 30776 ''Do you wish my father to interfere for you again?'' 30776 ''Is n''t that a motor car?'' |
30776 | A fever- stricken private says to Bobby Wick,"Beg y''pardon, sir, disturbin''of you now, but would you min''''oldin''my''and, sir?" |
30776 | And didst thou not kiss me and bid me fetch thee thirty shillings? |
30776 | But the question now demands to be considered,--_how_ may this co- ordination be effected? |
30776 | Canst thou deny it? |
30776 | Consider the following bits of talk:--"''You''re not a gun- sharp? |
30776 | Did not goodwife Keech, the butcher''s wife, come in then and call me gossip Quickly? |
30776 | Does not the real distinction lie rather in the novelist''s attitude of mind toward his materials, whatever those materials may be? |
30776 | Frank R. Stockton''s famous tale,"The Lady or the Tiger? |
30776 | Has the rise of realism made romance impossible? |
30776 | How far is a novelist justified in taking his characters so closely from actual life that they are recognizable by his readers? |
30776 | How is it that David Balfour, an untutored boy, is capable of writing the rhythmic prose of Robert Louis Stevenson, master of style? |
30776 | How many of''em can you remember in your own mind, settin''aside the first-- an''per''aps the last--_and one more_?'' |
30776 | How much dialect may a novelist venture to employ? |
30776 | How, then, am I mad? |
30776 | I thank you, but I do n''t use any tobacco you''d be likely to carry... Bull Durham? |
30776 | In other words, should this first half of the story be a description or a conversation? |
30776 | In their endeavor to exhibit certain truths of human life, do not the realists work inductively and the romantics deductively? |
30776 | Is it necessary to add that the speaker is an American gun- inventor who has fought upon the Boer side and has been captured by the British? |
30776 | Is it really possible to write a veracious novel about any other than the novelist''s native land? |
30776 | Is the historical novel really a loftier type of fiction than the novel of contemporary life? |
30776 | Is the novel- with- a- purpose legitimate? |
30776 | Is the scientific spirit going to be helpful or harmful to the writer of fiction? |
30776 | Is the short- story a definite form, differing from the novel in purpose as well as in length? |
30776 | Is there a valid distinction between romance and romanticism? |
30776 | J''ever read that paper? |
30776 | Now is not the thesis tenable that it is in just this way that realism differs from romance? |
30776 | Should Ligeia be depicted directly by her husband, or indirectly, through her own speech? |
30776 | Sons of the same mother, would you turn against the life she gave you?'' |
30776 | Stevenson insisted on this focus of attention in a passage of a personal letter addressed to Mr. Sidney Colvin:--"Make another end to it? |
30776 | Stockton, Frank R., 150;_ The Lady or the Tiger?_, 150, 179. |
30776 | Taylor, Bayard, 150;_ Who Was She?_, 150. |
30776 | The place was found, the time-- midnight-- decided upon: but the question remained,--_how_ should Ligeia be resurrected? |
30776 | This is the first sentence:--"But if it be a girl?" |
30776 | Thus:--"''An''now?'' |
30776 | What are the advantages and disadvantages of local color? |
30776 | What is incident but the illustration of character?... |
30776 | What is the best way to tell a story,--in the third person, as in the epic,--in the first person, as in an autobiography,--or in letters? |
30776 | What is the use, then, of Professor Perry''s definition of realism, since it remains open to so many exceptions? |
30776 | What occasioned the weariness with which he went to bed? |
30776 | What''s the sense of talking Akron with no pants?''" |
30776 | Which is of most importance, character or incident or atmosphere? |
30776 | Who can declare what is the single moral contained in the"Oedipus"of Sophocles, the"Hamlet"of Shakspere, the"Tartufe"of Molière? |
30776 | Who could disbelieve the author of"The Scarlet Letter"? |
30776 | Who knoweth the mysteries of the will, with its vigor? |
30776 | Why is it that dramatized novels often fail in the theater? |
30776 | Why is it that, in the sequel to"Kidnapped,"David Balfour should write out all the intimate details of his love for Catriona? |
30776 | With this material in his hand he was able to proceed; the story all lay in the question, What shall I make them do? |
30776 | Would not another dead body do as well? |
30776 | _ Lady or the Tiger?, The_, 150, 179. |
30776 | _ Who Was She?_, 150. |
30577 | ''And your father''s name?'' 30577 ''And your father''s name?'' |
30577 | A letter? |
30577 | Am I not a Judge? |
30577 | And I will kill him,screamed the Pasha,"where is he?" |
30577 | Bah,answered the peasant,"what''s the good of that? |
30577 | Did he say nothing at all,asked the Pasha,"before he left?" |
30577 | Flown? |
30577 | Have you been able to obtain what you desired? |
30577 | Here? 30577 How can I save you?" |
30577 | How can a roasted goose fly away? 30577 How, easy?" |
30577 | Is it well done? |
30577 | Oh Hodja, why will you not teach me the language of birds? 30577 Oh husband,"replied his wife,"and do you not understand what that black bag containing the twelve grains of wheat means?" |
30577 | Oh,said the spokesman of the judges,"it is his wise answers that act as magic upon you? |
30577 | See if what has gone? |
30577 | What is the secret knowledge? |
30577 | What shall I do? 30577 What was this case?" |
30577 | Where is he? 30577 Who is there?" |
30577 | Why are you not the Chief Astrologer to the Sultan? |
30577 | Why,said his wife,"do n''t you understand what the basin of water thrown out of the door means?" |
30577 | Am I thy grandfather''s grandchild that thou shouldst laugh in my beard?" |
30577 | And laying his right hand on the turban and his left hand on the sword, he said:"Is this the right, or is this the right?" |
30577 | At Mohammed''s gate a man knocked, and on being opened, the keeper asked:"''What is your name?'' |
30577 | At last they arrive, and to the horror of the Dervish, what does he see? |
30577 | But tell me, who advised you to make this request?" |
30577 | Calling the Jew into his house, he said:"Friend, what wilt thou do with the money if I pay thee?" |
30577 | Directly he appeared in the doorway, he was greeted with:"What do you want, you black dog?" |
30577 | From this he took, what? |
30577 | Great was his consternation, but what could he do? |
30577 | Had this son, the late returned person, any right to all the worldly possessions of the father, or, in fact, even any right to an equal share?" |
30577 | Has your soul been so strangled that you prefer its being dashed out of your body, to its remaining the prescribed time in bondage?" |
30577 | Hast thou already forgotten the advice I gave thee, and the lie which I told thee, hast thou considered as true? |
30577 | How can I judge as yet?" |
30577 | How much did the document cost you and what did you sell it for?" |
30577 | It happened that a Jew one day came to the Janissary and said to him:"Do you want to make a fortune? |
30577 | It happened that a Turk heard this prayer, and said to him:"Why so miserable, father? |
30577 | Now you say that in the jar you had put some money together with the olives; perhaps you did, but is not that the jar you gave me? |
30577 | On entering the house, his wife greeted him with:"Well, was it not as I told you?" |
30577 | Several times the father asked:"My son, what do you see in the fire?" |
30577 | Shall I give you the necklace to restore to the Pasha without explanation, when he comes to- morrow for the answer?" |
30577 | Shall I not be avenged for all the misery my father and my father''s fathers have suffered? |
30577 | Shall I punish them and allow thee to go unhurt? |
30577 | Shall I send him to you or bring him myself?" |
30577 | Sighing deeply, the Dervish said in a loud voice,"Why have I come into this world? |
30577 | So persecuted was he with the thought that when his wife said to him, from the door,"Have you brought home any bread?" |
30577 | The Dervish closed his eyes, opened them, Were these things so? |
30577 | The converted Jew then said:"At least, you can tell us, to pass the time, where you have been in your sleep?" |
30577 | The door opened, and who should he behold but the lady in question? |
30577 | Thereupon the apprentice called in a loud voice to those who were about to execute him:"What will you of this man? |
30577 | To do this was his Kismet, his decreed fate, and he was content-- and why not? |
30577 | True, they could be distributed amongst the poor, but then, might not he, on his return, require the money for even a more meritorious purpose? |
30577 | What am I to do? |
30577 | What can I do? |
30577 | What could the Jew do but take what the Imam was willing to give him? |
30577 | What great wrong had his ancestors done, that the wrath of the Almighty had thus fallen on him, when his earthly course was well- nigh run? |
30577 | What happened next?" |
30577 | What shall I do with you? |
30577 | What sin had he committed? |
30577 | What was he to do with these? |
30577 | What was he to do? |
30577 | What was the good of this body of men? |
30577 | When one of the forty was called away from his labors here, perhaps to continue them in higher spheres, or to receive his reward, who knows? |
30577 | Why not, in the place of my eye, remove that of the hunter who uses but one eye in exercising his profession, and to whom two eyes are superfluous?" |
30577 | Why was anybody born? |
30577 | Why were my forefathers born? |
30577 | Why? |
30577 | Yet why heard he no sound? |
30577 | You will say, what good did this body of men do? |
30577 | he would reply,"No, I have not gone; I will go to- morrow;"thinking she had asked him,"Have you gone to Egypt?" |
30577 | said the Pasha;"to whom would you write a letter?" |
30577 | to this house?" |
30092 | A face you would recognize again? |
30092 | A good woman? |
30092 | And how is it that you know so much about him? |
30092 | And how long did you take getting downstairs? |
30092 | And it provoked laughter again, did it? |
30092 | And the effect? |
30092 | And the nature of this-- er-- invasion? |
30092 | And the presence of this-- this--? |
30092 | And what was it he_ did_ that you thought strange? |
30092 | And when I am in the gutter? |
30092 | And why not? 30092 And why?" |
30092 | And you think,asked Pender hastily,"that it is all primarily due to the_ Cannabis_? |
30092 | And your experiment with the house? |
30092 | And, meanwhile, did the presence of this person leave you? |
30092 | Any impression who it could have been? |
30092 | As utterly alien to your own mind and personality? |
30092 | Can you show me this writing? |
30092 | Did n''t I tell you so? |
30092 | Do I know? |
30092 | Do you call yourself a white man, and then throw your life away for a measly, rascally cat? |
30092 | Eh? 30092 Fear gone, too?" |
30092 | First,said Jim,"Monty asked kind o''careless like,''What may be your opinion of that there Big Simpson?'' |
30092 | Has he tried any one at all--? |
30092 | Have you turned coward all of a sudden, or are you thinking of scaring the Injuns by giving them a sight of your countenance? |
30092 | He still writes, then? 30092 Humour restored?" |
30092 | I know Mrs. Pender well-- I knew her before she married him--"And is she a cause, perhaps? |
30092 | I may first have to make one or two experiments--"On me? |
30092 | I pray to Heaven you will not undertake this experiment alone, will you? |
30092 | I think not; though how can I say? 30092 In the asylum?" |
30092 | My dear,I asked him,"have you the capital necessary to pay damages to old Puff?" |
30092 | Not directed by a living being, a conscious will, you mean? |
30092 | Obliterated,she went on, after a moment to weigh the word,"merely obliterated by something else--""By some_ one_ else?" |
30092 | Physical fear? |
30092 | Poor country,I said to him,"and why does it send beasts so denuded of capital to the foreign embassies?" |
30092 | Putting what? |
30092 | Ruby,I said,"what have you been doing?" |
30092 | Shut up my cat that has been used to running around in the open air? |
30092 | Smoke, you mysterious beastie, what in the world are you about? |
30092 | Terror, was it? |
30092 | The best quality-- or--? |
30092 | What has she? |
30092 | What hast thou done? 30092 What matters it, animal, by whom thy crime was prompted? |
30092 | What new indecency is this? |
30092 | What''s the matter with you? |
30092 | What''s the matter with you? |
30092 | When will some one serenade me? |
30092 | Why insist on rash personal relations with your friend? |
30092 | Would your majesty,began the doctor, turning to the Queen,"object to a cat that did not look like a cat?" |
30092 | Would your majesty,said the doctor again, turning to the King,"object to a cat that did not look like a cat?" |
30092 | Yes? |
30092 | You destroyed that, too? |
30092 | You others,she added,"I ask you, is it just? |
30092 | You will take a companion with good nerves, and reliable in case of disaster, wo n''t you? |
30092 | You_ saw_ nothing-- no one-- all this time? |
30092 | --"But what does that say to you? |
30092 | A PSYCHICAL INVASION I"And what is it makes you think I could be of use in this particular case?" |
30092 | And her eyes, of a blue like the heaven, were they not wise and calm? |
30092 | And was the boy to be the whole afternoon in delivering a cheese, he demanded of her? |
30092 | Besides which, I feel sure from all I have heard, that you are really a soul- doctor, are you not, more than a healer merely of the body?" |
30092 | By and by Monty says,''What''s that you''re saying about Red- haired Dick? |
30092 | Could n''t you ever cure him of it?" |
30092 | Did he not bow to me in Hyde Park and try to talk with me familiarly as if we were well acquainted? |
30092 | Did_ They_ stand also in the hall? |
30092 | Have we not a perpetual inclination, in the teeth of our best judgment, to violate that which is_ Law_, merely because we understand it to be such? |
30092 | Have you ever seen the Earth behave itself indecently? |
30092 | He writes humorous stories-- quite a genre of his own: Pender-- you must have heard the name-- Felix Pender? |
30092 | I can see no possible objection, but--""But what?" |
30092 | I provide all that is necessary; and, for the rest, how do I know what is in that saucer?" |
30092 | If so--""You pity the poor brutes?" |
30092 | If you do n''t want me here why do n''t you take me and shoot me? |
30092 | If you mean we ought to heave him into the creek, why do n''t you say so?" |
30092 | Is it not enough to have robbed me of my friends, that you must steal my child as well? |
30092 | Is it that thou desertest me for strangers, who may destroy thee? |
30092 | Is that understood between us?" |
30092 | It is''Doctor,''is it not?" |
30092 | It was like a douche of icy water, and in the middle of this storm of laughter--""Yes; what?" |
30092 | My husband''s case is so peculiar that-- well, you know, I am quite sure any_ ordinary_ doctor would say at once the asylum--""Is n''t he in, then?" |
30092 | Name of a name, hast thou no heart? |
30092 | Now, do you begin to see what I am driving at a little?" |
30092 | Sagacity? |
30092 | The force has not gone?" |
30092 | The list of strange creatures might be extended indefinitely, even fishes included; but who has ever heard of a tame pet rat? |
30092 | There is nothing radically amiss with myself-- nothing incurable, or--?" |
30092 | Was the whole house crowded from floor to ceiling? |
30092 | Was, then, even the staircase occupied? |
30092 | What do you say, gentlemen?" |
30092 | What harm have I ever done to any man in the camp? |
30092 | Who ever heard of a heroic or self- denying cat? |
30092 | Who ever heard of a man that was a man who cared whether a cat got burned to death or not?" |
30092 | Who has not, a hundred times, found himself committing a vile or a silly action for no other reason than because he knows he should_ not_? |
30092 | Who will you bring, then?" |
30092 | Would it rub against his leg, too? |
30092 | Would the Indians overlook his cabin, or in case they found it, would they offer violence to Tom? |
30092 | You have n''t heard Mrs. Warburton- Kinneir''s cat- story?" |
30092 | You hear me?" |
30092 | You think he''d steal mice from a blind cat, and then lay it on the dog? |
30092 | _ What_ animal, I wondered dreamily, could he have meant? |
30092 | and was not that reason enough? |
30092 | he called again,"Smokie, you black mystery, what is it excites you so?" |
30092 | my husband was screaming,"where has the brute got to?" |
30092 | said Puck,"she talks to you then?" |
30426 | And what did the little doggie do, My little wee croodlen doo? |
30426 | And what did you do wi''the bones o''t, My bonny wee croodlen doo? |
30426 | Bread so white, and milk so sweet, Will it please you sit and eat? |
30426 | Dicky bird, dicky bird, where are you going? |
30426 | Good day, Miss Cat, so brisk and gay, How is it that alone you stay? 30426 Good morning, Mistress Pussy- cat, Pray tell me how you do,""Quite well, I thank you,"Puss replied,"And, Doggy, how are you?" |
30426 | Has it done much damage? |
30426 | How did she die? |
30426 | It must have flown above the guard, It came so quick, and hit so hard; And, would you think it? 30426 Let us go to the wood,"says this pig;"What to do there?" |
30426 | No, no, you shall not dine with us; How dare you interrupt us thus? |
30426 | Now, do n''t you think you''ll blush to own, When you become a woman grown, Without one good excuse to plead, That you have never learned to read? |
30426 | Oh, where did she catch the fishie, My bonny wee croodlen doo? |
30426 | Only burnt a few fellows,says Billy Bellows,"Is that all?" |
30426 | Peter what is it makes you for to quake? |
30426 | Tell me then, O dove, I pray, Where are the little ones to- day? |
30426 | Then bring me all your books again, Nay, Mary, why do you complain? 30426 What did she give you?" |
30426 | What did you say for it? |
30426 | What got ye at your grandmother''s, My little wee croodlen doo? |
30426 | What is she doing, Miss Cat? 30426 What muns do theer?" |
30426 | What to do there? |
30426 | What way will ye get her hame? |
30426 | What way will ye get her in? |
30426 | Which finger did it bite? |
30426 | Which would you rather? |
30426 | Who''ll gu to th''wood? |
30426 | Why did you let it go? |
30426 | 1600 What bird so sings, yet does so wail? |
30426 | A peacock picked a peck of pepper; Did he pick a peck of pepper? |
30426 | And what is it you cook to day?" |
30426 | CORNWALL"Whose little pigs are these, these, these, And whose little pigs are these?" |
30426 | Cocky- bendy''s lying sick, Guess ye what''ll mend him? |
30426 | DERBY"Pussy- cat, Pussy- cat, where have you been?" |
30426 | Dance a baby, diddy; What can a mammy do wid''e? |
30426 | Did you ever see the Devil, With his little spade and shovel, Digging''taties by the dozen With his tail cocked up? |
30426 | Dost thou know who made thee? |
30426 | How can there be a bird without a bone? |
30426 | How can there be a book that none can read? |
30426 | How can there be a cherry without a stone? |
30426 | How can there be a web without a thread? |
30426 | How many little ones have you to love?" |
30426 | I grieved to see it swell;""What will you do to make it well?" |
30426 | Is she sleeping, or waking, or what is she at?" |
30426 | Is that all? |
30426 | Laugh, my baby, beauty; What will time do to''e? |
30426 | Little John Jig Jag, Rode on a penny nag, And went to Wigan to woo; When he came to a beck He fell and broke his neck, Johnny, how dost thou now? |
30426 | Little lamb, who made thee? |
30426 | Little lamb, who made thee? |
30426 | O mother, O mother, do you think it is true? |
30426 | O yes, O yes, and what shall I do? |
30426 | O, can ye sew cushions, Can ye sew sheets, Can ye sing Ba- loo- loo, When the bairnie greets? |
30426 | Oats and beans and barley grow, Oats and beans and barley grow; Do you, or I, or any one know, How oats and beans and barley grow? |
30426 | Oh, would n''t you like to be me-- now I''m five? |
30426 | PUSSY_ Child_"Wherefore wash you, Pussy, say, Every half- hour through the day?" |
30426 | Riggity jig, riggity jig, Who''ll go to market to ride in a gig? |
30426 | Smile, my baby, bonny; What will time bring on''e? |
30426 | THE HUNTING OF THE WREN"Will ye go to the wood?" |
30426 | THE WEE CROODLEN DOO"Where hae ye been a''the day, My little wee croodlen doo?" |
30426 | This is my birthday, do you know? |
30426 | Twenty kisses in a clout, Lassie will ye send''em? |
30426 | Wash your face, Take your place, Where''s your grace? |
30426 | What can I sing? |
30426 | What shall I say? |
30426 | What way does he go? |
30426 | What way does the wind come? |
30426 | What''s in the cupboard? |
30426 | When Adam dolve, and Eve span, Who was then the gentleman? |
30426 | When the oven was opened, Mary opened her eyes, For, what do you think? |
30426 | Who comes? |
30426 | Who comes? |
30426 | [ B] With your white whiskers, too, Do you think to insult me is good?" |
30426 | _ Pussy_"Why? |
30426 | are you there?" |
30426 | quo''Foslin''ene;"What to do there?" |
30426 | quo''Foslin''ene;"What way will ye get her hame?" |
30426 | quo''Foslin''ene;"What way will ye get her in?" |
30426 | quo''Foslin''ene;"Will ye go to the wood?" |
30426 | quo''Fozie Mozie;"What to do there?" |
30426 | quo''Fozie Mozie;"What way will ye get her hame?" |
30426 | quo''Fozie Mozie;"What way will ye get her in?" |
30426 | quo''Fozie Mozie;"Will ye go to the wood?" |
30426 | quo''Johnnie Rednosie;"What to do there?" |
30426 | quo''Johnnie Rednosie;"What way will ye get her hame?" |
30426 | quo''Johnnie Rednosie;"What way will ye get her in?" |
30426 | quo''Johnnie Rednosie;"Will ye go to the wood?" |
30426 | says Johnny alone,"What muns do theer, lads, every one?" |
30426 | says Johnny alone,"Who''ll gu to th''wood, lads, every one?" |
30426 | says Richard to Robbin,"What muns do theer?" |
30426 | says Richard to Robbin,"Who''ll gu to th''wood?" |
30426 | says Robbin a Bobbin,"What muns do theer?" |
30426 | says Robin a Bobbin,"Who''ll gu to th''wood?" |
30426 | says that pig;"To look for my mother,"says this pig;"What to do with her?" |
30426 | says the Crier,"Where? |
30426 | where is now that boasted valour flown, That in the tented field so late was shown? |
30426 | where?" |
30183 | ''An''how many times might you''ave been at Aukland?'' 30183 ''Did I talk? |
30183 | , ends with a question which neither the reader nor the author is able to answer; and Bayard Taylor''s fascinating short- story,Who Was She? |
30183 | The Master caught me by the shoulder, held me at arm''s length, and still addressing his brother:''Do you know what this means?'' 30183 ''Do you wish my father to interfere for you again?'' 30183 ''Is n''t that a motor car?'' |
30183 | And didst thou not kiss me and bid me fetch thee thirty shillings? |
30183 | At what point in the exposition of a plot is the major knot most usually found? |
30183 | But the question now demands to be considered,--_how_ may this coördination be effected? |
30183 | Can the foregoing question be answered without qualification? |
30183 | Canst thou deny it? |
30183 | Consider the following bits of talk:--"''You''re not a gun- sharp? |
30183 | Did not goodwife Keech, the butcher''s wife, come in then and call me gossip Quickly? |
30183 | Does not the real distinction lie rather in the novelist''s attitude of mind toward his materials, whatever those materials may be? |
30183 | Frank R. Stockton''s famous tale,"The Lady or the Tiger? |
30183 | Has the rise of realism made romance impossible? |
30183 | How far is a novelist justified in taking his characters so closely from actual life that they are recognizable by his readers? |
30183 | How is it that David Balfour, an untutored boy, is capable of writing the rhythmic prose of Robert Louis Stevenson, master of style? |
30183 | How many of''em can you remember in your own mind, settin''aside the first-- an''per''aps the last--_and one more_?'' |
30183 | How may unity be best attained in narrative? |
30183 | How much dialect may a novelist venture to employ? |
30183 | How, then, am I mad? |
30183 | I thank you, but I do n''t use any tobacco you''d be likely to carry.... Bull Durham? |
30183 | If not, why not? |
30183 | In other words, should this first half of the story be a description or a conversation? |
30183 | In their endeavor to exhibit certain truths of human life, do not the realists work inductively and the romantics deductively? |
30183 | In what way is a well- imagined work of fiction more true to life than a newspaper report of actual occurrences? |
30183 | In what ways is the impression of a narrative dependent on the point of view selected by the author? |
30183 | Is it necessary to add that the speaker is an American gun- inventor who has fought upon the Boer side and has been captured by the British? |
30183 | Is it really possible to write a veracious novel about any other than the novelist''s native land? |
30183 | Is life itself narrative in pattern? |
30183 | Is realism possible in the short- story? |
30183 | Is the historical novel really a loftier type of fiction than the novel of contemporary life? |
30183 | Is the novel- with- a- purpose legitimate? |
30183 | Is the scientific spirit going to be helpful or harmful to the writer of fiction? |
30183 | Is the short- story a definite form, differing from the novel in purpose as well as in length? |
30183 | Is there a valid distinction between romance and romanticism? |
30183 | J''ever read that paper? |
30183 | Must a story always follow the order of chronology? |
30183 | Now is not the thesis tenable that it is in just this way that realism differs from romance? |
30183 | Should Ligeia be depicted directly by her husband, or indirectly, through her own speech? |
30183 | Sons of the same mother, would you turn against the life she gave you?'' |
30183 | Stevenson insisted on this focus of attention in a passage of a personal letter addressed to Sir Sidney Colvin:--"Make another end to it? |
30183 | Stockton, Frank R., 154;_ The Lady or the Tiger?_, 154, 183. |
30183 | Taylor, Bayard, 154;_ Who Was She?_, 154. |
30183 | The place was found, the time-- midnight-- decided upon: but the question remained,--_how_ should Ligeia be resurrected? |
30183 | This is the first sentence:--"But if it be a girl?" |
30183 | Thus:--"''An''now?'' |
30183 | Upon what evidence have you based your answer to the foregoing question? |
30183 | What are the advantages and disadvantages of local color? |
30183 | What are the advantages and disadvantages of the epic mood? |
30183 | What are the advantages and disadvantages of the realistic method? |
30183 | What are the advantages and disadvantages of the romantic method? |
30183 | What are the advantages and disadvantages of the short- story as compared with the novel? |
30183 | What are the essential phases of a plot? |
30183 | What are the main points to be considered in constructing a short- story? |
30183 | What are the modern uses of the element of setting? |
30183 | What are the three component elements of every event? |
30183 | What are the two steps in any art? |
30183 | What combination of traits makes a character worth knowing? |
30183 | What did Ruskin mean by"the pathetic fallacy"? |
30183 | What is a narrative? |
30183 | What is incident but the illustration of character?... |
30183 | What is meant by style in literature? |
30183 | What is the best way to tell a story-- in the third person, as in the epic-- in the first person, as in an autobiography-- or in letters? |
30183 | What is the logical reason for this usual position? |
30183 | What is the logical relation( 1) between fact and truth,( 2) between fact and fiction, and( 3) between truth and fiction? |
30183 | What is the use, then, of Professor Perry''s definition of realism, since it remains open to so many exceptions? |
30183 | What occasioned the weariness with which he went to bed? |
30183 | What reasons account for the importance of the principle of emphasis in art? |
30183 | What sort of novel can be dramatized successfully? |
30183 | What''s the sense of talking Akron with no pants?'' |
30183 | Which is of most importance, character or incident or atmosphere? |
30183 | Which method is more natural to your own mind? |
30183 | Who can declare what is the single moral contained in the"OEdipus"of Sophocles, the"Hamlet"of Shakespeare, the"Tartufe"of Molière? |
30183 | Who could disbelieve the author of"The Scarlet Letter"? |
30183 | Who knoweth the mysteries of the will, with its vigor? |
30183 | Why is it that dramatized novels often fail in the theatre? |
30183 | Why is it that, in the sequel to"Kidnapped,"David Balfour should write out all the intimate details of his love for Catriona? |
30183 | With this material in his hand he was able to proceed; the story all lay in the question, What shall I make them do? |
30183 | Would not another dead body do as well? |
30183 | _ Lady or the Tiger? |
30183 | _ Who Was She?_, 154. |
17378 | ''But how about them there tails?'' 17378 ''I''ve been to France and back three times-- Who knows best, dad or me, Whether a ship''s seaworthy or not? |
17378 | ''Where''s Dolly?'' 17378 Always a hindrance, are we? |
17378 | And George came up and heard them talking about it--"Heard who talking about it? |
17378 | And did I not,said Allan,"did I not Forbid you, Dora?" |
17378 | And did she stand With her anchor clutching hold of the sand For a month, and never stir? |
17378 | And did the little lawless lad, That has made you sick and made you sad, Sail with the_ Grey Swan''s_ crew? |
17378 | And have I not suffered? 17378 And he has never written line, Nor sent you word, nor made you sign, To say he was alive?" |
17378 | And tell me, I charge you, ye clan of my spouse, Why fold ye your mantles? 17378 And the next thing, please?" |
17378 | And what, sir, am I to understand by this? |
17378 | And who art thou that pacest here? |
17378 | Are ye out of your mind, my nurse, my nurse,Said Lady Clare,"that ye speak so wild?" |
17378 | Are you_ certain_, Henry, that you looked in the shower- bath? 17378 Art weary?" |
17378 | But Dick and Dolly? |
17378 | But Dolly? |
17378 | But can''st thou see,Earl Gerald said,"My faithful Gallowglasses standing? |
17378 | But his father came home and saw it the first thing, and--"Saw the hatchet? |
17378 | But what if you make a mistake? |
17378 | But what is this face shining in at the door, With its old smile of peace, and its flow of fair hair? 17378 But, my good mother, do you know, All this was twenty years ago? |
17378 | Careful? 17378 Daughter,"the aged wizard said,"For what cause hath thy Gerald parted? |
17378 | Did Mr. Barker take it kindly? |
17378 | Did he agree? |
17378 | Did he live? |
17378 | Did he live? |
17378 | Did he live? |
17378 | George did? |
17378 | George who? |
17378 | George''s apple tree? |
17378 | Gloves, handkerchiefs, collars, shirts, neckties--? |
17378 | Have I forgotten? |
17378 | Have you forgotten, General,the battered soldier cried,"The days of eighteen hundred twelve, when I was at your side? |
17378 | He said--"His father said? |
17378 | Hold-- if''twas wrong, the wrong is mine; Besides, he may be in the brine; And could he write from the grave? 17378 I had n''t sot a minit wen sez she to me,''Sammy, do n''t yer know me agane? |
17378 | Is it the same mask-- or are there several dressed alike? |
17378 | Is that he picking up the fallen fan? 17378 Is the Editor in?" |
17378 | It was I who cut down your apple tree; I did--"His father did? |
17378 | James, do you expect me to provide supper and breakfast of this description for the horrid thing? |
17378 | James, how high are you? |
17378 | Jud, they say you have heard Rubinstein play when you were in New York? |
17378 | Lord,he thought,"in Heaven that reignest, Who am I that thus Thou deignest To reveal Thyself to me? |
17378 | Mr. Brown, you do n''t want to buy a first- rate wooden leg, do you? 17378 My home? |
17378 | Naow, what do you want? |
17378 | Nay now, what faith? |
17378 | Ned drives about in buggies, Tom sometimes takes a''bus; Ah, cruel fate, why made you My children differ thus? 17378 No, no, no; said he''d rather lose a thousand apple trees than--""Said he''d rather George would?" |
17378 | O Lord,I thought,"what shall I do?" |
17378 | O sailor, tell me, tell me true, Is my little lad-- my Elihu-- A- sailing in your ship? |
17378 | O, whither sail you, SIR JOHN FRANKLIN? |
17378 | O, whither sail you, SIR JOHN FRANKLIN? |
17378 | Of course,he says, abruptly,"there is s''m''other fellow?" |
17378 | Oh, George would rather have his father lie? |
17378 | Only a hindrance are we? 17378 Played well, did he?" |
17378 | Poor old puss, then, was it ill? 17378 Pray what do they do at the Springs?" |
17378 | Said he cut his father? |
17378 | Said he''d rather have a thousand apple trees? |
17378 | Say, which is Melachlin''s fair daughter? 17378 She balances? |
17378 | Sir John, where are the English fields, And where are the English trees, And where are the little English flowers That open in the breeze? |
17378 | So George came up and heard them talking about it, and he--"What did he cut it down for? |
17378 | So George came up, and he said,''Father, I can not tell a lie, I--"Who could n''t tell a lie? |
17378 | So she''s here, your unknown Dulcinea-- the lady you met on the train, And you really believe she would know you if you were to meet her again? |
17378 | Some people,he goes on,"will say that you bungled it, others that I behaved abominably, but-- but we know better, eh?" |
17378 | The Sarpint was a- havin''of his dinner, and so She perposed as how we should fly-- But, sez I to meself,''What, take_ you_ back? 17378 The other day?--the_ Swan?_"His heart began in his throat to rise. |
17378 | Then you told her your love? |
17378 | This the Editor''s room, sir? |
17378 | Wal-- no-- I come dasignin''--"To see my Ma? 17378 We have n''t a farthing in the place,"she said innocently,"What else will you take for it?" |
17378 | Well, one day, George''s father--"George who? |
17378 | What apple tree? |
17378 | What apple tree? |
17378 | What can Uncle Martin have to write about? |
17378 | What comfort has thou? |
17378 | What do you think they saw when they looked into the grave? 17378 What happens when signals are wrong or switches misplaced?" |
17378 | What hope can scale this icy wall, High o''er the main flag- staff? 17378 What is this? |
17378 | What is''t,says he,"your Majesty Would wish of me to- day?" |
17378 | What little lad, do you say? 17378 What on earth is the matter?" |
17378 | What senseless style is this? |
17378 | What were they talking about? |
17378 | What were we thinking of then? |
17378 | What, my love? |
17378 | What, sit by the side of a woman as fair as the sun in the sky, And look somewhere else lest the dazzle flash back from your own to her eye? 17378 Where is your home?" |
17378 | Wherever did you get this? |
17378 | Which was it? |
17378 | Who gave him the little hatchet? |
17378 | Who stuffed that white owl? |
17378 | Whose little hatchet? |
17378 | Why, his own, the one his father gave him--"Gave who? |
17378 | Will you be kind enough, my friend, to allay the curiosity of your friends? |
17378 | Will you give it For this little fiddle? |
17378 | Yes, must be careful with his hatchet--"What hatchet? |
17378 | Yes, told him he must be careful with the hatchet--"Who must be careful? |
17378 | You think I''m going to ask you to marry me? |
17378 | You want to see my Pa, I s''pose? |
17378 | Your charge against Mr. Barker, the artist here,said the magistrate,"is assault and battery, I believe?" |
17378 | Your little lad? 17378 _ Henry_, did you hear_ that_?" |
17378 | ''And what article may I have the pleasure to serve you with?'' |
17378 | ''And what may I have the pleasure of showing you?'' |
17378 | ''Ave you ever seen the"lightnin''"thunder through New Cross? |
17378 | ''E wore a bloomin''yachtin''cap, but Lor!--what_ did_''e know, Excep''that if you turn a screw the thing would stop or go? |
17378 | ''Where''s Doll?'' |
17378 | ''Will you do me the favour to step this way?'' |
17378 | ( Are those torn clothes his best?) |
17378 | ( But stop-- first let me kiss away that tear) Thou tiny image of myself? |
17378 | -- What land in the world could produce such a show Of heroes, who face both siroccos and snow, Rush madly to danger, and never lie low? |
17378 | A centipede, a mere ridicklous insect, has half a bushel of legs, and why ca n''t a man, the grandest creature on earth, own three? |
17378 | A hireling? |
17378 | A serpent in the bath, a gust Of venomed breezes through the door, Have power to give us back to dust-- Has all your grasping empire more? |
17378 | Ai n''t ye heard how Lord''Ollington died, sir, On that day when"Midlothian Maid"Broke down when just winning the"Stewards''"? |
17378 | Alas, the gallant ship and crew, Can_ nothing_ help them more?" |
17378 | All is at sea behind the scenes, Why do they fear and funk? |
17378 | Along the battery- line her cry Had fallen among the men: And they started, for they were there to die: Was life so near them then? |
17378 | An''is it meself, with five good characters from respectable places, woud be herdin''wid the haythens? |
17378 | An''why do the crowds gather fast in the street? |
17378 | And Barker said,''Oh, would n''t you?'' |
17378 | And I says to the man settin''next to me, s''I,''What sort of fool- playin''is that?'' |
17378 | And Mr. King, with a"What''s_ your_ game?" |
17378 | And as she stood, her little hand Went to her curly head; In grave salute,"And who are you?" |
17378 | And everybody said they did n''t know anything about it, and--""Anything about what?" |
17378 | And he said,''Who has cut down my favourite apple tree?''" |
17378 | And his father told him--""Told who?" |
17378 | And his father--""Whose father?" |
17378 | And is it?--is it?--is it you? |
17378 | And master? |
17378 | And shall our proud Rose wither? |
17378 | And the cross as folk can tell, That this is the very spot, sir, Where her sweet young ladyship fell? |
17378 | And there, and there again?" |
17378 | And what if I try your ideal With something, if not quite so fair, at least more_ en règle_ and real? |
17378 | And what shall_ I_ say if a wretch should propose? |
17378 | And where does he tarry, the lord of the field? |
17378 | And who is the one among you but is living and hale to- day, Because he was tied to a woman''s side in the old home far away? |
17378 | And who on earth stands sponsor for The idiotic fashion?" |
17378 | Are not the rocks their funeral piles? |
17378 | Are you come, blessed ghost, from the far heavenly shore? |
17378 | At last he came to a splendid apple tree, his father''s favourite apple tree, and cut it down--""Who cut it down?" |
17378 | But I''m going on anyhow,--ain''t I? |
17378 | But vot off dot? |
17378 | But were those heroes living, And strong for battle still, Would Mehrab Khan or Roostrum Have climbed, like these, the Hill?" |
17378 | But what planet is this?" |
17378 | But whither passed the virgin saint? |
17378 | But you fix yourself with this artificial extremity, and then what do you care for dogs? |
17378 | Coming home late in the day, As Susie was kneeling to pray, Little blue eyes and white night- gown, Saying,"Our Father, who art,-- Art what?" |
17378 | Compulsion? |
17378 | Conscription? |
17378 | Could we possibly have all been sitting in the relative positions to one another which these chairs assume? |
17378 | D''ye see the fencing around it? |
17378 | Dearer still, because her father Said to him, with distant pride,"Darest thou, a simple captain, Seek my daughter for thy bride?" |
17378 | Deep distress and hesitation Mingled with his adoration; Should he go or should he stay? |
17378 | Delaunay? |
17378 | Did I lave for that? |
17378 | Did ye not hear it? |
17378 | Do you see that big mountain? |
17378 | Do you think because you see me tripping through some foolish, insipid_ rôle_ that I am capable of nothing better? |
17378 | Does aught on Clemgaum''s Hill now move? |
17378 | Dolly, wilt go to sea?'' |
17378 | Each of''em doing his country''s work( and what have you got to spare?) |
17378 | Each of''em doing his country''s work( and who''s to look after the girl?) |
17378 | Each of''em doing his country''s work( and who''s to look after the room?) |
17378 | Each of''em doing his country''s work( and who''s to look after their things?) |
17378 | Feather- bed soldiers? |
17378 | Feather- bed soldiers? |
17378 | Four hundred, did I say? |
17378 | Had I not to act in suffering and despair to- night? |
17378 | Had he streams of fair hair?" |
17378 | Have n''t heard of it, eh? |
17378 | Have they fired the Signal gun? |
17378 | Have we no lord of England''s fate, Though coming from a cottage gate? |
17378 | Have you forgotten Johnson, who fought at Lundy''s Lane? |
17378 | He asks me questions sooch as dese: Who baints mine nose so red? |
17378 | He said with trembling lip;"What little lad-- what ship?" |
17378 | He worshipped her like an idol; He loved her, folks said too well; And God sent the end as a judgment,-- But how that may be who can tell? |
17378 | How can I describe the spending of that evening? |
17378 | How can I get sufficient power out of the English language to let you know what a nuisance that bird was to us? |
17378 | How could I tell how he carried on at those gay and festive scenes in which I was not included? |
17378 | How could my sisters be happy? |
17378 | How found they him, this hero of all time? |
17378 | I cried in fright,"Oh, is there_ no_ retreat?" |
17378 | I do n''t wonder, my dear, you are properly crimson and dumb?" |
17378 | I saw him rise and cling Unto the gunwale of the boat-- Floating keel up-- and sing Out loud,''Where''s Doll?'' |
17378 | I sez--''On shore_ them_ will niver doo;''She sez,''Yer silly, why, karn''t yer see, They''re only fixed on wi''a screw?'' |
17378 | I should''ave backed her afore, sir; But waited for master to speak As to what he intended a- doing, I thought''twas a"plant"--d''ye see? |
17378 | I thought and thought, what shall I do if I''m alone all night? |
17378 | I thought;"What new sartorial passion? |
17378 | I''ll stake my existence that there''s a---- Ugh, what''s that?" |
17378 | I''ll take it off and wrap it up in paper for you; shall I?" |
17378 | If a million of''em come at you, what''s the odds? |
17378 | If the men_ were_ so wicked-- I''ll ask my papa How he dared to propose to my darling mamma? |
17378 | If ye do not feel the chain, When it works a brother''s pain, Are ye not base slaves indeed,-- Slaves unworthy to be freed? |
17378 | In the Ruins of the Valley do the birds of carnage stir? |
17378 | In there came old Alice the nurse, Said,"Who was this that went from thee?" |
17378 | Instead of"Come, where is this young----?" |
17378 | Is it a go?" |
17378 | Is it ate wid him? |
17378 | Is it howld on, ye say? |
17378 | Is the spot marked with no colossal bust? |
17378 | Is there no man with broader reach To fill a thorny throne of care, And bravely act and bravely teach Because in all he has a share? |
17378 | Is true Freedom but to break Fetters for our own dear sake, And, with leathern hearts forget That we owe mankind a debt? |
17378 | It''urt''is pride most cruel, but what was''e to do? |
17378 | Just fit to see to the children and manage the home affairs, With only a head for butter and bread, a soul for tables and chairs? |
17378 | Just then Jingle sighted a flea that had lighted Right on-- well, where_ do_ you suppose? |
17378 | Longer rest? |
17378 | Look round the globe and tell me can ye find more blazon''d names, Among its cities and its streams, than London and the Thames? |
17378 | My little lad-- my Elihu? |
17378 | No helper who will do and dare, And stand a bulwark in the breach? |
17378 | Nor column trophied for triumphal show? |
17378 | Not that at all? |
17378 | Now, if I had your peculiarities, do you know what I''d do? |
17378 | O what a greatness she makes ours? |
17378 | O, heard ye yon pibroch sound sad on the gale, Where a band cometh slowly with weeping and wail? |
17378 | Oftentimes The neighbours asked him why he worked so hard With only two to care for? |
17378 | Once more he cried,"The judgment, Good friends, is wise and true, But though the red be given, Have we not more to do? |
17378 | One day George Washington''s father gave him a little hatchet for a--""Gave who a little hatchet?" |
17378 | One day his father--""Whose father?" |
17378 | Or, it you hate to go to the expense of amputation, why not get your pantaloons altered, and mount this beautiful work of art just as you stand? |
17378 | Out spoke the Frank archbishop then, a priest devout and sage,"When peace and plenty wait thy word, what need of war and rage? |
17378 | Rapid to stay? |
17378 | Rapid-- Eh, what? |
17378 | Road, what''s the matter? |
17378 | Said he of the relieving force, As through the town he sped,"Art thou in Baden- Powell''s Horse?" |
17378 | Saw you my son, with his sword in his hand? |
17378 | Say ye, oh gallant Hillmen, For these, whose life has fled, Which is the fitting colour, The green one, or the red?" |
17378 | Sent he, by you, any dear word to me?" |
17378 | She ca n''t make out what''s a happenin'', Flies on-- maddened, scared with fright-- And wins-- by how far? |
17378 | She gazed upon the burnished brace Of partridges he showed with pride; Angelic grief was in her face;"How_ could_ you do it, dear?" |
17378 | She lisped out,"Who is me? |
17378 | She was wild:"My God!--my Father!--is it true? |
17378 | Should he leave the poor to wait Hungry at the convent gate Till the Vision passed away? |
17378 | Should he slight his heavenly guest, Slight this visitant celestial, For a crowd of ragged, bestial Beggars at the convent gate? |
17378 | So far my text-- but the story? |
17378 | Soon conquering pà ¦ ans Shall cover the cannonade''s rattle; Then, home bells, Will you think of me sometimes, then? |
17378 | Such was the mountain leader''s speech; Say ye, who tell the bloody tale, When havoc smote the howling breach, Then did the noble savage quail? |
17378 | The Arab horse will not shrink back, Though death confront him in his track, The Arab horse will not shrink back, And shall his rider''s arm be slack? |
17378 | The King? |
17378 | The fourth saw him free; For Death''s strong hand had loosed the martyr''s bonds; Where his freed spirit soars, who dares to doubt? |
17378 | The mornin''was bright, an''the mists rose on high, An''the lark whistled merrily in the clear sky;-- But why are the men standin''idle so late? |
17378 | The mother started and shivered, But trouble and want were near; She lifted her baby gently;"You''ll be very careful, dear?" |
17378 | The other day? |
17378 | The seas and shores their grave? |
17378 | Then I looked up at Nye, And he gazed upon me; And he rose with a sigh, And said,"Can this be? |
17378 | Then said King Charles,"Where thousands fail, what king can stand alone? |
17378 | Then up spake a Scottish maiden, With her ear unto the ground:"Dinna ye hear it?--dinna ye hear it? |
17378 | Then when the farmer pass''d into the field He spied her, and he left his men at work, And came and said:"Where were you yesterday? |
17378 | They kept at arm''s length those detestable men; What an era of virtue she lived in!--but stay-- Were the men all such rogues in Aunt Tabitha''s day? |
17378 | They say that dangers cloud her way, that despots lour and threat; What matters that? |
17378 | Thinks he no more of Shannon''s side, Where love so long had made his dwelling?" |
17378 | This you are bound to do; For by my deadly grasp on that poor hound, How many of you have I saved from death Such as I now await? |
17378 | To kiss the little mouth stooped down A score of grimy men, Until the sergeant''s husky voice Said"''Tention, squad?" |
17378 | Und vhere der plaze goes vrom der lamp Vene''er der glim I douse? |
17378 | Was I dreaming? |
17378 | Was Mrs. B. out of her mind with terror that at such an hour as that she should indulge in a paroxysm of mirth? |
17378 | Was he like the rest of them? |
17378 | Was there a man dismay''d? |
17378 | Was there no fair- hair''d soldier who humbled the foe?" |
17378 | Waves the green plume on Milo''s head, For me, at Tenachelle commanding?" |
17378 | We looked at each other for a moment in silence, and then my wife said,"James, what is a stork?" |
17378 | We said:"And he was told--""George told him?" |
17378 | Well, what did he, this hero, face to face with grim death? |
17378 | Well,_ that_ wo n''t matter much for one night, will it, dear? |
17378 | What am I to do, Henry? |
17378 | What are you doing here?" |
17378 | What come they to talk of? |
17378 | What could it be? |
17378 | What did you hear, and what did you see? |
17378 | What do you see?" |
17378 | What doth the Poor Man''s Son inherit? |
17378 | What doth the Poor Man''s Son inherit? |
17378 | What doth the Poor Man''s Son inherit? |
17378 | What fair renown, what honour, what repute Can come to you from starving this poor brute? |
17378 | What form do they carry aloft on his shield? |
17378 | What have I done to make him chide me so?" |
17378 | What if he broke, who would not tamely bend? |
17378 | What if they starve, or on red pillows lie Beneath a burning sun? |
17378 | What is it like, a cavalry charge in the dead of night? |
17378 | What is it that can stop our course, Free riders of the Arab horse? |
17378 | What is the News to- day, Boys? |
17378 | What of the Esquimaux? |
17378 | What the deuce ails you? |
17378 | What the profit of the stronger? |
17378 | What then? |
17378 | What think you of the whaler now? |
17378 | What to do? |
17378 | What''s in a name? |
17378 | When can their glory fade? |
17378 | Whence, then, could it come-- the thought-- By what evil spirit brought? |
17378 | Where are the herds of oxen that have disappeared, and the hampers of Burgundy? |
17378 | Where are the landmarks on the way, Set up alone by him who leads? |
17378 | Where in the world, I should like to know, When a war broke out and the country called, was an English soldier sorry to go? |
17378 | Where is the master mind that reads The far- off issues of the day, And with a willing nation pleads That loves to own a master sway? |
17378 | Where sleep your mighty dead? |
17378 | Where would you be to- morrow if half of the lie were true? |
17378 | Which of''em kin leave his leg downstairs in the entry on the hat- rack, and go to bed with only one cold foot? |
17378 | Which of''em kin unscrew his knee- pan, and look at the gum thingamajigs in his calf? |
17378 | Which of''em''s got a leg like that? |
17378 | Which the better for the weary-- Longer travel? |
17378 | Who am I, that from the centre Of Thy glory Thou shouldst enter This poor cell my guest to be?" |
17378 | Who is this at their sides that stands? |
17378 | Who knows but that great Allah May grudge such matchless men, With none so decked in heaven, To the fiends''flaming den?" |
17378 | Who vas it cuts dot schmoodth blace oudt Vrom der hair ubon mine he d? |
17378 | Who would guess If ever more should meet those mutual eyes, Since upon night so sweet such awful morn could rise? |
17378 | Who would not fight for England? |
17378 | Who would not fight for England? |
17378 | Who would not fling a life I''the ring, to meet a Tyrant''s gage, And glory in the strife? |
17378 | Who would not fling a life I''the ring, to meet a tyrant''s gage, And glory in the strife? |
17378 | Whose child is that? |
17378 | Whose could it be? |
17378 | Why come you drest like a village maid, That are the flower of the earth?" |
17378 | Why make of Tom a_ dullard_, And Ned a_ genius_?'' |
17378 | Why should_ they_ reck whose task is done? |
17378 | Why, do n''t you know I''m little Jane, The pride of Battery B? |
17378 | Why, the horses might neigh contempt at him; what is he like, I wonder? |
17378 | Why, then, dear maid, do you Forsake your gayest hue And dress in viewless khaki spick and span? |
17378 | Will you be kind enough, my friend, to tell this crowd what you see?" |
17378 | Will you be so kind as to step into this department?'' |
17378 | Will, can you recall The time we were lost on the Bright Down? |
17378 | With foreheads unruffled the conquerors come-- But why have they muffled the lance and the drum? |
17378 | With pure heart newly stamped from Nature''s mint( Where_ did_ he learn that squint?) |
17378 | Would he wake to the touch of powder? |
17378 | Would the Vision come again? |
17378 | Would the Vision there remain? |
17378 | You did n''t think that of old; With never a han''to help a man, and only a tongue to scold? |
17378 | You know Bill? |
17378 | You see that''orse''s tail, sir? |
17378 | You think she escaped the engine by lyin''flat on the ground? |
17378 | You''re mad as the sea; you rave-- What have I to forgive?" |
17378 | Your Elihu?" |
17378 | _ No?_ He''s engineer, Been on the road all his life-- I''ll never forget the mornin''He married his chuck of a wife. |
17378 | _ On time?_ Well, yes, I guess so-- Left the last station all right; She''ll come round the curve a- flyin''; Bill Mason comes up to- night. |
17378 | _( FROM"BLACK AND WHITE?" |
17378 | a long, long cruise;''Twas wicked thus your love to abuse; But if the lad still live, And come back home, think you you can Forgive him?" |
17378 | are ye fit to be Mothers of the brave and free? |
17378 | asked the elder; while the younger looked up with a smile:"I sat by her side half an hour-- what else was I doing the while? |
17378 | can a brave man wish to take His brother''s life, for lands''and castle''s sake? |
17378 | cried he;"why wait until the morn? |
17378 | did n''t you vow To marry me any weather, If I came back with limbs enow To keep my soul together? |
17378 | dinna ye hear The slogan far awa-- The McGregor''s? |
17378 | exclaimed the Dauphin in amazement;"then what is it I have heard and seen? |
17378 | father,"the pale maiden cried,"Hath he forgotten quite his Ellen? |
17378 | for such an hour with thee, Who would not die to- morrow? |
17378 | for such an hour with thee, Who would not die to- morrow? |
17378 | for such an hour with thee, Who would not die to- morrow? |
17378 | for such an hour with thee, Who would not die to- morrow? |
17378 | for such an hour with thee, Who would not die to- morrow? |
17378 | for such an hour with thee, Who would not die to- morrow? |
17378 | for such an hour with thee, Who would not die to- morrow? |
17378 | for such an hour with thee, Who would not die to- morrow? |
17378 | for such an hour with thee, Who would not die to- morrow? |
17378 | heard ye not the noise of guns? |
17378 | how could presents pretty as these A delicate lady fail to please? |
17378 | king- making Victory?... |
17378 | me? |
17378 | must she fall, the noble- hearted; And must this morning prove their last, By kinsmen and by friends deserted? |
17378 | see ye not, my merry men, The broad and open sea? |
17378 | should I have the courage not to answer if it should be Jack? |
17378 | sure as God''s my life; One of his chosen crew I''ve been, Have n''t I, old good wife? |
17378 | the clicking of a revolver? |
17378 | the man is going mad; The best boy ever mother had; Be sure, he sailed with the crew-- What would you have him do?" |
17378 | think you, good Sir John Franklin, We''ll ever see the land? |
17378 | were you at war in the red Eastern land? |
17378 | what come they to see? |
17378 | what is this, thou young Sir John, That runs so fast from thine armour down?" |
17378 | what would you have?" |
17378 | when shall I see my old mother, And pray at her trembling knee?" |
17378 | when shall I see my orphan child? |
17378 | who knows? |
17378 | who shall dare to breathe one slighting word, Their plumage dazzles not-- yet say can sweeter strains be heard? |
17378 | whose boast it is that ye Come of fathers brave and free, If there breathe on earth a slave, Are ye truly free and brave? |
17378 | why cloud ye your brows?" |
17378 | why did I break thy chain, And urge thee, from thy prison, here, To make the mossy turf thy bier?" |
17378 | wot_ will_ they ask me next? |
22537 | ''Well,''says I,''d''ye raymimber th''fightin''tenth precint? 22537 A dollar iv what? |
22537 | A dollar iv what? |
22537 | A dollar of what? |
22537 | An''what''s this game iv goluf like, I dinnaw? |
22537 | And was he really innocent? |
22537 | Annything new? |
22537 | Ar- re ye goin''to cillybrate th''queen''s jubilee? |
22537 | But George Dooley, he gives th''wink to his frinds, an''says he,''What''s that man yellin''on th''shore about?'' 22537 But what do they do? |
22537 | But who are they, annyhow? |
22537 | Cousin George? |
22537 | Dewey ai n''t a sthrateejan? |
22537 | Did n''t he cure anny men? |
22537 | Did n''t ye see him? |
22537 | Did ye see what me frind Alger wrote to Chansy Depoo? 22537 Do n''t they lay eggs? |
22537 | Do n''t they lay eggs? |
22537 | Do ye, honest? |
22537 | Does Fitz believe in di- plomacy? 22537 Go''round on crutches?" |
22537 | Has th''ar- rmy started f''r Cuba yet? |
22537 | How am I? |
22537 | How ar- re they goin''to stop him? 22537 How can wan dollar be worth on''y half as much as another dollar, if they''re both dollars an''th''man that made thim is at la- arge?" |
22537 | How do I know what I think? 22537 How do I know?" |
22537 | How shud he know, is it? |
22537 | How shud he know? |
22537 | How shudden''t he know? 22537 How''s that?" |
22537 | I wondher,said Mr. Hennessy,"if thim Hadley- Markhams that''s goin''to give th''ball is anny kin iv th''aldherman?" |
22537 | Lord save us, but where was that? |
22537 | Prisints? |
22537 | Thin what is it like? |
22537 | Thin why do n''t he write something? |
22537 | Think what? |
22537 | To where? |
22537 | Wan ar- rmy, says ye? 22537 Well, in the name of the saints, what''s all this?" |
22537 | Well, whin ye dhrive up to th''tea grounds--"Th''what?" |
22537 | What ar- re ye talkin''about? |
22537 | What d''ye think about it? |
22537 | What d''ye think iv it? |
22537 | What did he say? |
22537 | What do you think ought to be done with th''fruits iv victhry? |
22537 | What does he do, thin? |
22537 | What for? |
22537 | What have they been doin''? |
22537 | What ta- alk have ye? |
22537 | What wud ye do if ye found it? |
22537 | What''ll we do with him? 22537 What''s he charged with?" |
22537 | What''s th''la- ad been doin''? |
22537 | What''s that f''r? |
22537 | What''s that? |
22537 | Where did ye hear all this? |
22537 | Where was that? |
22537 | Where ye been? |
22537 | Where? |
22537 | Who ar- re these Flora an''Fauna? 22537 Who''s that?" |
22537 | Why are n''t you out attending the reunion of the Dooley family? |
22537 | Why do n''t he tur- rn in an''fight? |
22537 | Will ye? |
22537 | Write? 22537 Write?" |
22537 | Ye''re a good deal iv a spoort, Jawnny: did ye iver thry it? |
22537 | You know Dorsey, iv coorse, th''cross- eyed May- o man that come to this counthry about wan day in advance iv a warrant f''r sheep- stealin''? 22537 ''An''did n''t What''s- his- name on th''field iv Marathon overcome an''desthroy th''ravagin''armies iv Persia?'' 22537 ''An''how about Arthur Doheny?'' 22537 ''An''if th''attack was be night?'' 22537 ''An''that''s th''new woman, is it?'' 22537 ''An''where,''he says,''was our candydate?'' 22537 ''An''ye have no har- rd feelin''about th''way th''bridges has been give out?'' 22537 ''Ar- re ye a good goluf player?'' 22537 ''Ar- re ye a mimber iv anny clubs?'' 22537 ''At who?'' 22537 ''But what do I get out iv it?'' 22537 ''But where does Germany come in?'' 22537 ''But why d''ye take th''risk?'' 22537 ''But, glory be, who iver thought th''Irish''d live to see th''day whin they''d be freed be th''Dutch? 22537 ''D''ye think ye''re votin''f''r th''best?'' 22537 ''Did ye see th''captain?'' 22537 ''Did ye vote?'' 22537 ''Do n''t ye believe in prayer?'' 22537 ''Do ye f''rgive th''way we done ye in th''beer rites?'' 22537 ''Faith, they are all iv that,''says I,''Will iver they get up?'' 22537 ''Gintlemen,''says he,''what can I do f''r ye?'' 22537 ''Gintlemin,''she says,''what is it ye want iv me?'' 22537 ''Have n''t I been lib''ral with me people?'' 22537 ''Have n''t I give freely to ye''er churches? 22537 ''Have ye a ticket to th''church to see me marrid?'' 22537 ''Have ye anny plans f''r Sampson''s fleet?'' 22537 ''Have ye th''Key to Heaven there?'' 22537 ''Have ye th''Lives iv th''Saints, or the Christyan Dooty, or th''Story iv Saint Rose iv Lima?'' 22537 ''How can I get there befure th''gospil, whin I do n''t know what time it is?'' 22537 ''How goes th''war?'' 22537 ''How''s Clarence Doolittle?'' 22537 ''I wondher who voted thim fourteen?'' 22537 ''Is it not so, Rastus?'' 22537 ''Is th''riferee again thim?'' 22537 ''Is that so?'' 22537 ''Now,''he says,''th''question is what shall we do with th''fruits iv victhry?'' 22537 ''Pat, what d''ye know about this case?'' 22537 ''Sir,''says Gin''ral Garshy,''d''ye take me f''r a dhray?'' 22537 ''Suppose th''sociable lasted all night?'' 22537 ''Suppose ye was confronted be a Spanish ar- rmy in th''afthernoon, how wud ye dhress?'' 22537 ''Tell me, was Corbett much hurted?'' 22537 ''Th''head iv what fam''ly?'' 22537 ''Thin how much d''ye want?'' 22537 ''Tis''Honoria, did Lor- rd What''s- his- name marry th''fair Aminta?'' 22537 ''Was he?'' 22537 ''Was it all right?'' 22537 ''We''ve the comityman, have n''t we?'' 22537 ''Well, boys,''says he,''how goes th''battle?'' 22537 ''Well, thin,''says he,''how ar- re we to account f''r this disgrace?'' 22537 ''Well,''says Ganderbilk,''how much d''ye want?'' 22537 ''Well,''says I,''are ye sure ye can get over th''whalin''ye got whin th''Sarsfield Fife an''Dhrum Corpse met th''Frederick Willum Picnic Band?'' 22537 ''Well,''says O''Brien,''how does it suit ye?'' 22537 ''What ails thim?'' 22537 ''What ails ye, man alive?'' 22537 ''What ar- re ye doin''here?'' 22537 ''What ar- re ye doin''here?'' 22537 ''What ar- re ye goin''to do with thim young wans? 22537 ''What d''ye mean be the new woman?'' 22537 ''What does it show?'' 22537 ''What have ye to say f''r ye''ersilf?'' 22537 ''What shall we do to stop th''ac- cursed thraffic? 22537 ''What talk have ye?'' 22537 ''What was th''matther?'' 22537 ''What''s that la- ad doin''?'' 22537 ''Where ar- re ye goin'', Petey?'' 22537 ''Where d''ye get ye''er pants?'' 22537 ''Where did he get th''hat?'' 22537 ''Where is it?'' 22537 ''Where''d ye larn that?'' 22537 ''Where''s th''Spanish fleet?'' 22537 ''Where''s the sixth precin''t?'' 22537 ''Which Dooley was it that hamsthrung th''cows?'' 22537 ''Which wan iv th''distinguished bunko steerers got ye''er invalu''ble suffrage?'' 22537 ''Whin th''battle r- raged,''he says,''an''th''bullets fr''m th''haughty Spanyards''raypeatin''Mouser r- rifles,''he says,''where was Cassidy?'' 22537 ''Who''ll go up?'' 22537 ''Who''ll we put up?'' 22537 ''Who''s relligion?'' 22537 ''Who''s this?'' 22537 ''Why do n''t ye luk at ye''er watch?'' 22537 ''Why,''says I,''carry into th''new year th''hathreds iv th''old?'' 22537 ''Why?'' 22537 Am I right? |
22537 | An''does it say pap- pah an''mam- mah, I dinnaw?" |
22537 | An''wan day, whin he''s takin''th''air, p''raps, along comes an Eyetalyan, an''says he,''Ar- re ye a king?'' |
22537 | An''what shud I do with the Ph''lippeens? |
22537 | An''who does Cleveland invy? |
22537 | An''why shudden''t he be with thim two names? |
22537 | An''ye ma- arched afther Willum J. O''Brien, did n''t ye? |
22537 | Ar- re ye much hur- rted? |
22537 | Ar- re ye niver to escape th''vigilance iv th''polis, thim cold- eyed sleuths that seem to read th''very thoughts iv ye''er pathriot sons?" |
22537 | As th''fellow says,''Can th''leopard change his spots,''or ca n''t he? |
22537 | Be Misther McEwen:''Whose bones?'' |
22537 | Be Misther Vincent:''Will ye go to th''divvle?'' |
22537 | But did Willum J. O''Brien march? |
22537 | But did he take me jaw? |
22537 | But how th''divvle can I do it? |
22537 | But what''s that to us? |
22537 | But ye come right back at him with an''upper cut:''Do ye live on th''Lake Shore dhrive?'' |
22537 | But, after his friend had gone, Mr. Dooley leaned over confidentially, and whispered to Mr. McKenna,"But who are Flora an''Fauna, Jawn?" |
22537 | D''ye raymimber th''sign th''mob carrid in th''procession las''year? |
22537 | D''ye think this here game iv goluf is a spellin''match? |
22537 | Did anny wan iver see a fireman with his coat on or a polisman with his off? |
22537 | Did he give me a watch? |
22537 | Did his wife look as though she ought to be kilt? |
22537 | Did me father iver ask thim in to share th''stirabout? |
22537 | Did n''t Leonidas, with hardly as manny men as there are Raypublicans in this precint, hold th''pass again a savage horde?'' |
22537 | Did th''goold Dimmycrats have a p''rade?" |
22537 | Did ye iver hear th''like iv that, Jawn? |
22537 | Did ye iver know a man be th''name iv Ahearn? |
22537 | Did ye iver read histhry, Jawn? |
22537 | Did ye iver see a pitcher iv him? |
22537 | Did ye see annywan th''other day that was n''t askin''to know how th''fight come out? |
22537 | Did ye see the pitcher iv that lady? |
22537 | Did ye think I''d follow a Kerry man with all th''ward lukkin''on?'' |
22537 | Did ye? |
22537 | Do n''t they lay eggs?" |
22537 | Father Kelly sniffed th''air whin he come in; an''says he,''Terence, what''s th''matther with ye''er catch basin?'' |
22537 | Have n''t I put up soup- houses an''disthributed blankets whin th''weather was cold? |
22537 | Have ye anny yellow fever in th''house? |
22537 | He had fifteen childher; an'', whin th''las''come, he says,''Dooley, d''ye happen to know anny saints?'' |
22537 | Him an''me had a shell iv beer together at th''German''s; an''says I,''What d''ye think iv th''heroes?'' |
22537 | How ar- re they goin''to stop him? |
22537 | How can I take thim in, an''how on earth am I goin''to cover th''nakedness iv thim savages with me wan shoot iv clothes? |
22537 | How manny miles to Dublin? |
22537 | How''s things goin''with ye, ol''pal? |
22537 | If yer son Packy was to ask ye where th''Ph''lippeens is, cud ye give him anny good idea whether they was in Rooshia or jus''west iv th''thracks?" |
22537 | Is n''t he a sojer in th''ar- rmy? |
22537 | Is n''t it time we wint to supper?'' |
22537 | Is th''balloon corpse r- ready? |
22537 | Is there somethin''in th''air or is it in oursilves that makes th''childher nowadays turn out to curse th''lives iv thim that give thim life? |
22537 | Is there, dear?'' |
22537 | Is this a fire''r a dam livin''pitcher? |
22537 | It is? |
22537 | It''s a pretty sintimint, Hinnissy; but how ar- re we goin''to do it? |
22537 | Man alive, do n''t ye know what a dollar is? |
22537 | Manetime where''s Cap Dhry- fuss? |
22537 | ON WAR PREPARATIONS"Well,"Mr. Hennessy asked,"how goes th''war?" |
22537 | Oh, Ireland, is this to be thy fate forever? |
22537 | Oh, what shud I do with thim? |
22537 | On th''bridge iv the New York? |
22537 | Prisidint iv th''United States, says ye? |
22537 | Question be th''coort:''Different?'' |
22537 | Suppose ye was standin''at th''corner iv State Sthreet an''Archey R- road, wud ye know what car to take to get to th''Ph''lippeens? |
22537 | Th''on''y question, thin, is, Did or did not Alphonse Lootgert stick Mrs. L. into a vat, an''rayjooce her to a quick lunch? |
22537 | Th''war is still goin''on; an''ivry night, whin I''m countin''up the cash, I''m askin''mesilf will I annex Cubia or lave it to the Cubians? |
22537 | That''s th''way iv th''caddychism I learned whin I was a la- ad behind a hedge; but now''tis: Who made ye? |
22537 | Thin he turned, an''says he:''Be th''way, how did that there foul an''outhrajous affray in Carson City come out?'' |
22537 | Thin what do I say?" |
22537 | Thin ye ordher a carredge"--"Order what?" |
22537 | Thin ye''er man that ye''re goin''aginst comes up, an''he asks ye,''Do you know Potther Pammer?'' |
22537 | To which Mr. Schwartzmeister invariably retorted:"Py chapers, Tooley, where you haf been all der time, py chapers?" |
22537 | What do you think about it?" |
22537 | What happens?" |
22537 | What have ye had to do with all these things?" |
22537 | What is it th''good book says about a woman scorned? |
22537 | What is th''ambition iv all iv us, Hinnissy? |
22537 | What is their principles? |
22537 | What med ye think iv thim?" |
22537 | What th''coort ought to''ve done was to call him up, an''say:''Lootgert, where''s ye''er good woman?'' |
22537 | What th''hell an''damnation are ye standin''aroun''with that pipe f''r? |
22537 | What was it at all, at all? |
22537 | What''ll ye have to drink, Jawn?" |
22537 | What''s he been doin''again ye?" |
22537 | What''s th''news?" |
22537 | Where''s Richard Harding Davis? |
22537 | Where''s th''Gussie? |
22537 | Whin we thry to get him to wurruk, he''ll say:''Why shud I? |
22537 | Who knows but that Mack''s cat was th''rale victhor at Sandago?" |
22537 | Who made ye? |
22537 | Who was it carrid th''pall? |
22537 | Who was it judged th''cake walk? |
22537 | Who was it sthud up at th''christening? |
22537 | Who''ll tell what makes wan man a thief an''another man a saint? |
22537 | Who''s been doin''things to ye?" |
22537 | Whose ca- ards did th''grievin''widow, th''blushin''bridegroom, or th''happy father find in th''hack? |
22537 | Why did he make ye? |
22537 | Why did they make ye? |
22537 | Why shud he write? |
22537 | Will I take Porther Ricky or put it by? |
22537 | Wo n''t ye come home with me?'' |
22537 | Ye did not? |
22537 | Ye heerd iv typhoid an''yellow fever in th''threnches; but did ye hear annything iv spavin or th''foot- an''-mouth disease? |
22537 | Ye know what he done to me, tellin''people I was caught in me cellar poorin''wather into a bar''l? |
22537 | he says,''what am I sayin''?'' |
22537 | says I to young Hogan,''How goes the war between th''ac- cursed infidel an''th''dog iv a Christian?'' |
12369 | About Mehetabel? |
12369 | Ah, mon Dieu,''tis provoking--(she talks a little English).--"Why, what is the matter, Pauline: what is provoking?" |
12369 | And I was n''t frozen to death in the tower? |
12369 | And he is dead? |
12369 | And he is n''t conceited, is he? |
12369 | And he never asked her? |
12369 | And if he wishes to be paid, notwithstanding? |
12369 | And so you are never going to speak to me again? |
12369 | And the Empress? |
12369 | And the King of Rome? |
12369 | And what business had you there? 12369 And what doth the pander of the Sybarite within the dusty halls of learning?" |
12369 | And what, in the devil''s name, brings Cosmo Ruggieri hither? |
12369 | And when was this, Ellen? 12369 And who are you?" |
12369 | And who may be this Phoenix-- this Gargantua of intellect-- who is to vanquish us all, as Panurge did Thaumast, the Englishman? |
12369 | And who then? |
12369 | And you are not going to stay and talk to me? |
12369 | Away with Elizabeth of England,cried a scholar of Cluny:"what doth her representative here? |
12369 | But I did n''t bring him up on a lightning- rod, did I? 12369 But tell me, then, where I am?" |
12369 | But the monk? |
12369 | But what do you want here, at the Corners? 12369 But, Hilary, suppose he were to find me lying down here behind you, hiding?" |
12369 | But,said he, summoning up his recollections,"they did not shoot me, then?" |
12369 | Dear heart,he said once,"What is''t ails thee?" |
12369 | Do n''t I find it a little slow up here at the Corners? 12369 Do you mean you are glad I was disgraced before the whole school?" |
12369 | Do you think he sees me? |
12369 | Does he see you? |
12369 | Else, wherefore our rejoinder to his cartels? |
12369 | For what purpose? |
12369 | Had n''t you better lie down, too? |
12369 | Have you forgotten it? |
12369 | How could you fool me, Hilary? 12369 How dare you say so, when he''s got both his eyes? |
12369 | How is the Emperor? |
12369 | How much will pay them off, and restore your credit? |
12369 | How? 12369 I say, what do you want, down there?" |
12369 | In debt, Amy: what do you mean? |
12369 | Is Mr. Clay to be in court to- day? |
12369 | Is he coming this way? |
12369 | Is it not so? |
12369 | Is it permitted for a matron to arm a youthful knight? 12369 Is it time to get up now?" |
12369 | Is n''t this a hotel? |
12369 | Is not Crichton victorious? |
12369 | Is that all? |
12369 | Is that all? |
12369 | Is this permitted, lady? |
12369 | May I inquire_ why_ he did n''t marry Mehetabel? |
12369 | Now, then? |
12369 | Now? |
12369 | Oh-- something to lean on-- a help-- where? 12369 Sha n''t I?" |
12369 | Silas? 12369 Since Robert told his story to your uncle, or before?" |
12369 | The Prince Imperial? 12369 The Saviour?" |
12369 | The altar- piece? 12369 The lady you were engaged to?" |
12369 | Then answer me, Ellen, this moment, and distinctly: for what purpose were you seeking Mrs. Langford''s cottage by that forbidden path, and when? |
12369 | Then you will not answer? 12369 This is mere mockery, Ellen: how dare I believe even this poor evidence of repentance, with the recollection of your past conduct? |
12369 | Used them-- and for what? |
12369 | Well, Mr. Jaffrey, how''s Andy this evening? |
12369 | Well,methinks I hear Betsey and Lucy say,"what is cousin''s dress?" |
12369 | What business has he here with his suite, on occasions like to the present? |
12369 | What do I care,said he,"if a couple of hundred babblers of deputies put one king in place of another? |
12369 | What do you call this chicken- coop of a town? |
12369 | What do you think of having Andy enter West Point, when he''s old enough? |
12369 | What do you want heah, Aun''Charlotte? |
12369 | What does she say? |
12369 | What doth the jealous- pated slayer of his wife and unborn child within the reach of free- spoken voices, and mayhap of well- directed blades? 12369 What doth the wrinkled old dealer in the black art hope to learn from us? |
12369 | What is going on there? |
12369 | What is more cheerful, now, in the fall of the year, than an open wood- fire? 12369 What is that?" |
12369 | What news of the cholera did the stage coach bring this mohning? |
12369 | What shall I do? |
12369 | What the devil are your sub- prefects to me? 12369 What title hath the Abbé de Brantôme to a seat among us?" |
12369 | What to us is a president of Parliament, or a governor of the city? |
12369 | What''s the matter? |
12369 | What, run away? |
12369 | When can I see you again-- soon? |
12369 | Who''s going to keep me? |
12369 | Who? 12369 Why did you tell me that you were poor? |
12369 | Why has my uniform been taken off? 12369 Why, do n''t you love walking?" |
12369 | Why, where am I? |
12369 | Why? |
12369 | Will you be there? |
12369 | Will you come? |
12369 | Will you confess, Ellen, if I stay? 12369 Will you let me?" |
12369 | Will you? |
12369 | Would you own his body if he_ should_ die? |
12369 | You are sure there are no more? |
12369 | You are the servant? |
12369 | You''re a civil engineer, are you? |
12369 | ***** But say, dost thou not adore and prize The illustrious and rich black pudding? |
12369 | --"And the other children, where are they?" |
12369 | --''And girls, are you contented to be in service?'' |
12369 | ... ACT V-- SCENE II AEGISTHUS-- CLYTEMNESTRA_ Aegis._--Hast thou performed the deed? |
12369 | ... Cassandra chosen as my rival? |
12369 | ... Flagitious woman, dost thou grasp the sword? |
12369 | ... My wife?.. |
12369 | ... Orestes? |
12369 | ... Wilt thou Murder my son? |
12369 | ... but how? |
12369 | ... my mother? |
12369 | AMY''S VALLEY OF HUMILIATION From''Little Women''"That boy is a perfect Cyclops, is n''t he?" |
12369 | AN ERECHITE''S LAMENT How long, O my Lady, shall the strong enemy hold thy sanctuary? |
12369 | AN INVITATION Why wait we for the torches''lights? |
12369 | And Freedom''s hand protect the impartial bard? |
12369 | And for the sake of this love have I no right to even a thought of yours? |
12369 | And is it true?... |
12369 | And public Justice sanctify the award? |
12369 | And shall I let him live Who cares not for my love? |
12369 | And shall we not run into dissensions among ourselves? |
12369 | And she? |
12369 | And what should we expect to find on those first shores? |
12369 | And where is found me A limit to these sorrows? |
12369 | And where is the degree of vice or immorality which shall deprive the citizen of the right to supplicate for a boon, or to pray for mercy? |
12369 | And will not many men have many minds? |
12369 | And yet what word do I say? |
12369 | Anu looked at him and mourned:-- And now, Adapa, wherefore Has thou not eaten or drunken? |
12369 | Anu opened his mouth and spake, Said to the gods his children:-- Who will conquer Zu? |
12369 | Are limes the fashion now? |
12369 | Are n''t they pretty?" |
12369 | Are not these, O_ Mirzah_, Habitations worth contending for? |
12369 | Are they his fellow- hunters, or his associates in old athletic sports? |
12369 | Are you all done? |
12369 | Are you all done?" |
12369 | Are you hid?" |
12369 | As I was walking with him last Night, he asked me how I liked the good Man whom I have just now mentioned? |
12369 | Atrides knows it all? |
12369 | But pray, says he, you that are a Critick, is this Play according to your Dramatick Rules, as you call them? |
12369 | But should you not rather send into exile this common pest of the Greeks? |
12369 | But the question is, Do their changes tend to follow any regular and definite order? |
12369 | But what do I behold? |
12369 | But what is that to us? |
12369 | But what more was she to do or say now? |
12369 | But who approaches? |
12369 | But who is this lady? |
12369 | But who revealed our love? |
12369 | By what hand? |
12369 | CASSANDRA Hither, whither, Phoebus? |
12369 | CHORUS Well, what of Phoebus, maiden? |
12369 | COWARDS/* In the deep circle of Siddim hast thou seen, Under the shining skies of Palestine, The sinister glitter of the Lake of Asphalt? |
12369 | Can any government be free which is not administered by general stated laws? |
12369 | Can loving children e''er reprove With murmurs, whom they trust and love? |
12369 | Can we suppose that characteristics like these have been communicated from one animal to another? |
12369 | Children of my country, what tempest has thrown you upon this inhospitable shore?" |
12369 | Come, come along: what is the matter with you?" |
12369 | DISPUTATION BETWEEN PEPIN, THE MOST NOBLE AND ROYAL YOUTH, AND ALBINUS THE SCHOLASTIC_ Pepin_--What is writing? |
12369 | Did ever any kingdom or State regain its liberty, when once it was invaded, without bloodshed? |
12369 | Did he foresee his own fate? |
12369 | Did you ever, my dear Betsey, see a person in real life such as your imagination formed of Sir Charles Grandison? |
12369 | Didst thou commit the murder? |
12369 | Do n''t you know? |
12369 | Do n''t you like limes?" |
12369 | Do not you prefer the conversation of the world to the chirping of birds, and the splendor of a court to the rude aspect of an uncultivated desert? |
12369 | Do you hear those little chirps and twitters coming out of that piece of apple- wood? |
12369 | Do you suppose, little sister, that I want to keep all fifteen at home like so many cabbages in a single bed?" |
12369 | Does Life appear miserable, that gives thee Opportunities of earning such a Reward? |
12369 | Does it say, that, before presenting a petition, you shall look into it and see whether it comes from the virtuous, and the great, and the mighty? |
12369 | Don''I see''em settin''''roun''dese taverns f''om mohnin''till night?" |
12369 | Eleven year old, was n''t he? |
12369 | For one needs must rear The heedless infant like an animal,( How can it else be?) |
12369 | Fougas threw the mirror to the ground, and cried out:--"What is that you are telling me? |
12369 | France is still the queen of the world, is she not?" |
12369 | God vainly knocked at my heart''s door until the children fell ill. Oh, what would become of me if these flowers were gathered? |
12369 | Has n''t your father any valuables? |
12369 | Has n''t your mother any jewelry that you can get hold of? |
12369 | Hath he cast his own horoscope? |
12369 | Have these ladies any messages to give me for him?" |
12369 | He cast a wistful look toward the apples in the chimney:"My old wife, little sister?" |
12369 | Help me, thy nest is as broad as the earth, Thy snare is like the heavens, Who can escape out of thy net? |
12369 | Her heart beat wildly; she longed unspeakably-- but for what? |
12369 | How can I, being on intimate terms, as it were, with thousands and thousands of people? |
12369 | How can you be generous in deeds if you are so avaricious in words? |
12369 | How could I think that she stood in need of help on whom Heaven had showered its best gifts? |
12369 | How is it that I appear to see two? |
12369 | How many leagues is it to Dantzic?" |
12369 | How much am I offahed foh ole King Sol''mon?" |
12369 | How much, then, am I offahed foh the vagrant? |
12369 | How much, then, is bid foh''i m?" |
12369 | How much, then, to staht''i m? |
12369 | How shall we be governed so as to retain our liberties? |
12369 | I look in at a door.... A_ patio!_ How shall I describe a_ patio?_ It is not a court, nor a garden, nor a room; but it is all three things combined. |
12369 | I protest, I think I never saw a more graceful, comely person; but how comes it about, I beseech you, that you should live so much better than I? |
12369 | I sting cheerily In my bright days, But now all wearily Chaunt I my lays; Sorrowing tearfully, Saddest of men, Can I sing cheerfully, As I could then? |
12369 | I was constrained To bring the news myself, that now my life Is irrecoverably forfeited To the king''s vengeance..._ Cly._--What is this I hear? |
12369 | I yearned for them so much that I grew ill-- don''t you think it was so, mon père? |
12369 | I''ve been sick, then?" |
12369 | II What strain was his in that Crimean war? |
12369 | INVITATION How long wilt stand outside and cower? |
12369 | If I''m silent--? |
12369 | If a form of government is to be established here, what one will be assumed? |
12369 | If we separate from Britain, what code of laws will be established? |
12369 | If you wanted to see her, why did you not go the usual way? |
12369 | In France?" |
12369 | In future, if you will have me called, I will take my meals at the usual_ table d''hôte._""At the what?" |
12369 | In the mean time, who am I, sure enough?" |
12369 | In the salt sea can ye find, When ye list to start an hunt, With your hounds, the hart or hind? |
12369 | In what does this disputation concern them? |
12369 | Is Death to be feared, that will convey thee to so happy an Existence? |
12369 | Is my ignorance to suggest knowledge to the learned Abélard? |
12369 | Is never Youth austere? |
12369 | Is there any othah bid? |
12369 | Is there any reason to believe that the modification runs from any one color toward any other? |
12369 | Is there no maiden to do such inspiring office?" |
12369 | It is true, your resolutions, as a body, have hitherto had the force of laws; but will they continue to have? |
12369 | Lachmu and Lachamu heard and were afraid, The Igigi all lamented sore: What change has come about that she thus hates us? |
12369 | Men of every name, what do they know? |
12369 | Not_ ten_ dollahs? |
12369 | Now that I''ve known you a year, how much better off am I for it, I should like to ask? |
12369 | Now why has this kind of galium yellow flowers, while its near kinsman yonder has them snowy white? |
12369 | O Adapa, wherefore lookest thou thus, For whom wearest thou apparel of mourning? |
12369 | O Latium, oft by faithless sons betrayed!--''Twas then-- What frenzy on thy reason stole? |
12369 | O restless Fancy, whither wouldst thou fare? |
12369 | O woman, What dost thou here, dissolved in useless tears? |
12369 | ON A SERMON AGAINST GLORY COME then, tell me, sage divine, Is it an offense to own That our bosoms e''er incline Toward immortal Glory''s throne? |
12369 | Of what use was it all? |
12369 | Once more, will you speak? |
12369 | Or did an unknown helper at this moment scatter the fear in her heart? |
12369 | Or will you not seize upon him as a thief, and avenge yourself upon him whose mouthings have enabled him to bear full sail through our commonwealth? |
12369 | Or, take as an example the web- footed family: Do not all the geese and the innumerable host of ducks quack? |
12369 | Owing to an unpremeditatedly funny collocation of title and author, the lettering read as follows:--"Who am I? |
12369 | Pray, how do you like the situation of it?" |
12369 | SCENE IV CLYTEMNESTRA-- AESGISTHUS_ Cly._--What have I done? |
12369 | Seeks he a spouse for her among our schools? |
12369 | Sewell? |
12369 | Shall I be thy assassin?... |
12369 | Shall I let thee, Who only dost deserve my love, be dragged To cruel death? |
12369 | Shall not each Muse a wreath of shame bestow? |
12369 | Shall tempest, blight, or chill Turn all felicity to scathe and scorn? |
12369 | Shall wave on wave of flow''rs, full tide of corn, O''erflow the world, then fruited Autumn fill Hedgerow and garth? |
12369 | Shall we regard her passport? |
12369 | She then demanded:--"How long have they been in your possession?" |
12369 | She was dying;--would he forgive her? |
12369 | She, however, said,"Mrs. Adams, have you got into your house? |
12369 | Should your People in Tragedy always talk to be understood? |
12369 | Since when?" |
12369 | So says the legend, and who would not believe it? |
12369 | Suppose I did likewise?" |
12369 | TENNYSON( 1890) I Shakespeare and Milton-- what third blazoned name Shall lips of after ages link to these? |
12369 | THE STATE What constitutes a State? |
12369 | THE WINTER PEAR Is always Age severe? |
12369 | The Dog answered very bluntly,"Why, you may live as well, if you will do the same for it that I do."--"Indeed? |
12369 | The eagle opened his mouth and spake to Etana:-- Wherefore art thou come? |
12369 | The following may serve as specimens:--"What is that which becomes pregnant without conceiving, fat without eating?" |
12369 | The gods Tammuz and Iszida will see thee and ask:-- Why lookest thou thus, Adapa, For whom wearest thou garments of mourning? |
12369 | The man so great, so honored, so beloved? |
12369 | The winged impetuous spirit, the white flame That was her soul once, whither has it flown? |
12369 | Then Adar opened his mouth and spake, Spake to the warlike Bel:-- Who but Ea knew it? |
12369 | This Curio, hated and despised by all? |
12369 | This is the law even of despotism; and what does your law say? |
12369 | This patient slave by tinsel chains allured? |
12369 | This wretched suitor for a boon abjured? |
12369 | To Anu his father''s command Ramman answered and spake:-- My father, who shall come to the inaccessible mound? |
12369 | To his messenger Ila- Abrat Anu then spake thus:-- Why for seven days long Blows the Southwind no more on the earth? |
12369 | To tell this in our own country would be considered as extravagance; but would they send a person here in a public character to be a public jest? |
12369 | Voltaire taught him to scoff and disbelieve, to demand"à quoi bon?" |
12369 | Was it because of the tears she had shed? |
12369 | Was it not so, my hidalgo?" |
12369 | Well, then, is n''t there any family silver in your house? |
12369 | What accidents have brought you so far from our native soil? |
12369 | What can be done with it? |
12369 | What can be done? |
12369 | What do you want me to do?" |
12369 | What fearful and mysterious difficulties have you been led into to call for either? |
12369 | What have I done?... |
12369 | What impious counsel? |
12369 | What is the Reason, said I, that the Tide I see rises out of a thick Mist at one End, and again loses itself in a thick Mist at the other? |
12369 | What is this big raw- boned animal next you?" |
12369 | What philosopher, what king, could rival your fame? |
12369 | What promise for the season newly born? |
12369 | What sayst thou, Capéte?" |
12369 | What shall we offer him? |
12369 | What spells unsinewed thy determined soul?-- Is this the man in Freedom''s cause approved? |
12369 | What then must they mean to me? |
12369 | What tho''nor real Voice nor Sound Amid their radiant Orbs be found? |
12369 | What though, in solemn Silence, all Move round the dark terrestrial Ball? |
12369 | What to us is the bearer of a cup and ball? |
12369 | What village, city, kingdom, was not on fire to see you? |
12369 | What were the notes you found?" |
12369 | What would you do with them in the mountains?" |
12369 | What''s your business? |
12369 | When Socrates, rebuked with this secret quip:"And art thou so arrogant( sayeth he) and so hautie in heart for that which is no parcell of the world?" |
12369 | When a man has made a competency, what does he want more? |
12369 | When he came, Anu at him looked, saying, O Adapa, Why hast thou broken the Southwind''s wing? |
12369 | When he was gone, Amy, who had been pensive all the evening, said suddenly, as if busy over some new idea:--"Is Laurie an accomplished boy?" |
12369 | When the atlas was placed before him, he at once cried out with profound disdain,"That France?" |
12369 | When you appeared in public, who did not run to behold you? |
12369 | Whence didst thou learn it? |
12369 | Where am I? |
12369 | Where am I?... |
12369 | Where are the words I spake to thee? |
12369 | Where could a Christian find a more peaceful grave than in the society of holy women, consecrated by God? |
12369 | Where did you find them?" |
12369 | Where is he now?" |
12369 | Where is such a law to be found? |
12369 | Where is the heart- felt worth and weight of soul, Which labor could not stop, nor fear control? |
12369 | Where the calm triumphs of an honest cause? |
12369 | Where the delightful taste of just applause? |
12369 | Where the known dignity, the stamp of awe, Which, half abashed, the proud and venal saw? |
12369 | Where was she to turn? |
12369 | Where will this billow hurl me? |
12369 | Where, in the land of free- men, was the right of petition ever placed on the exclusive basis of morality and virtue? |
12369 | Where? |
12369 | Which is the greater, Mozart or Beethoven? |
12369 | Who are these two gods who from the earth have vanished? |
12369 | Who are these two gods who from the earth have vanished? |
12369 | Who are you, anyway?" |
12369 | Who fell himself to work his country''s fall? |
12369 | Who is like unto Zu among the gods thy sons? |
12369 | Who mixed the infernal potion of Charles the Ninth? |
12369 | Who shall frame these laws? |
12369 | Who taught the American thrush to sing like his European relative? |
12369 | Who to the monarch breathe thy name but she? |
12369 | Who will give them force and energy? |
12369 | Who with better right? |
12369 | Why did ye lyingly Think such a thing, Seeing how flyingly Wealth may take wing? |
12369 | Why did your songs to me, World- loving men, Say joy belongs to me Ever as then? |
12369 | Why is Carolina so much better furnished than any other State, and at so reasonable prices? |
12369 | Why is this? |
12369 | Why, O keeper, takest thou away the earrings of my ears? |
12369 | Why, O keeper, takest thou away the great crown of my head? |
12369 | Why, then, not put it out of the power of the vicious and the lawless to use us with cruelty and indignity with impunity? |
12369 | Will gold and silver remedy this evil? |
12369 | Will it be left to our Assemblies to choose one? |
12369 | Will ye seek within the wood Red gold on the green trees tall? |
12369 | Will you do this, Ellen?" |
12369 | Would he have preserved this esteem among men of worth, if they had regarded him as a dangerous writer? |
12369 | Would ye on some hill- top set, When ye list to catch a trout, Or a carp, your fishing- net? |
12369 | You did not put a lamp there? |
12369 | _ Aegis._--Hast thou not Thy mind o''erwhelmed with horror? |
12369 | _ Aegis._--Thou withdraw thyself From him? |
12369 | _ Aegis._--To speak of thee, Who but Electra to her father dare? |
12369 | _ Aegis_.--But the king lives surrounded by his friends: What sword would find a passage to his heart? |
12369 | _ Aegis_.--How canst thou Of me demand it? |
12369 | _ Aegis_.--How? |
12369 | _ Aegis_.--Shouldst thou repent? |
12369 | _ Aegis_.--Was not thine the counsel? |
12369 | _ Aegis_.--Wouldst have the courage? |
12369 | _ Cly._--But... the courage... strength? |
12369 | _ Cly._--Must I then with this trembling hand of mine Plunge... in my husband''s heart... the sword? |
12369 | _ Cly._--Thou here? |
12369 | _ Cly._--What other step remains for me to take? |
12369 | _ Cly._--What then may it be? |
12369 | _ Cly_.--Aegisthus..._ Aegis._--What do I behold? |
12369 | _ Cly_.--And ought I This to believe?... |
12369 | _ Cly_.--But certain? |
12369 | _ Cly_.--Horror? |
12369 | _ Cly_.--How Canst thou hide it from me? |
12369 | _ Cly_.--What do I hear? |
12369 | _ Cly_.--What said''st thou? |
12369 | _ Cly_.--What sword? |
12369 | _ Cly_.--What wicked fury from Avernus''shore, Aegisthus, guides thy steps? |
12369 | _ Clytemnestra_--If there be need of death, we both will die!-- But is there nothing left to try ere this? |
12369 | _ Pepin_--What are rivers? |
12369 | _ Pepin_--What are the heavens? |
12369 | _ Pepin_--What are the stars? |
12369 | _ Pepin_--What generates language? |
12369 | _ Pepin_--What is autumn? |
12369 | _ Pepin_--What is cold? |
12369 | _ Pepin_--What is day? |
12369 | _ Pepin_--What is death? |
12369 | _ Pepin_--What is fire? |
12369 | _ Pepin_--What is fog? |
12369 | _ Pepin_--What is frost? |
12369 | _ Pepin_--What is language? |
12369 | _ Pepin_--What is life? |
12369 | _ Pepin_--What is light? |
12369 | _ Pepin_--What is man like? |
12369 | _ Pepin_--What is man? |
12369 | _ Pepin_--What is rain? |
12369 | _ Pepin_--What is snow? |
12369 | _ Pepin_--What is spring? |
12369 | _ Pepin_--What is summer? |
12369 | _ Pepin_--What is the air? |
12369 | _ Pepin_--What is the earth? |
12369 | _ Pepin_--What is the moon? |
12369 | _ Pepin_--What is the sea? |
12369 | _ Pepin_--What is the sun? |
12369 | _ Pepin_--What is the tongue? |
12369 | _ Pepin_--What is water? |
12369 | _ Pepin_--What is wind? |
12369 | _ Pepin_--What is winter? |
12369 | cried Fougas, escaping from the hands of M. Nibor so as to seize Léon by the collar,"was it you, you rascal, that hurt my ear?" |
12369 | cried Père Antoine starting,"and is it a palm?" |
12369 | for her wild free forest out there, where she ran around quick as a deer? |
12369 | has Andy sawed off the legs of the old spinet?" |
12369 | hear me... Agamemnon to our love... And to thy life? |
12369 | hear me... Perhaps Atrides Has not resolved..._ Aegis._--What boots this hesitation?... |
12369 | in Winter, dead and dark, Where can poor Robin go? |
12369 | no...._ Aegis._--Dost thou desire Me, or Atrides, dead? |
12369 | or for what? |
12369 | said Mr. Sewell, sharply,"what are you whispering about?" |
12369 | said he:"am I bleeding?" |
12369 | says one of them,"brother, do you make hanging of a sheep?" |
12369 | what fine talking is this?" |
12369 | what have I promised thee? |
12369 | what is that?" |
12369 | what wouldst thou do? |
12369 | where? |
12369 | where?" |
35094 | For, what are Epithets, but Adjectives that denote and express the Qualities of the Substantives to which they are join''d? |
35094 | Hilas, O Hilas,_ why sit we mute? |
35094 | In the Preface, the French phrase"consiste qu''en vn[ typo for un?] |
35094 | Or of 7; as, Phillis,_ why should we delay Pleasures shorter than the Day? |
35094 | T. Hanmer''s(?) |
35094 | What Synonymes, but Words of a like Signification? |
35094 | _ No, to what purpose should I speak? |
35094 | let no Man know The Price of Beauty fall''n so low: What dangers oughtst thou not to dread When Love that''s blind, is by blind Fortune led?_ Cowl. |
35094 | what wilt thou do? |
15143 | ''Will you?'' 15143 ''_ Parbleu!_ Do you intend to question me, by chance?'' |
15143 | A what? |
15143 | And do n''t you remember that I asked you to let me load it for you the day when Yves went off, swearing to kill you and his father? |
15143 | And if by any chance the little fellow should come first,--there''s been a lot of them this summer-- of course you''ll introduce me? |
15143 | And now you will not go? |
15143 | And now,said Saunders when he returned with the things,"what are we going to do?" |
15143 | And the Black Priest? |
15143 | And the thirty- ninth skull? |
15143 | And what do you propose? |
15143 | And where''s_ he_? |
15143 | And you are going to ride-- where, Dick? |
15143 | And you are going to trail him? |
15143 | And you opened the desk? |
15143 | And you think it was the animal that''s been frightening the maids? |
15143 | Any wood left? |
15143 | Are n''t we allowed in there? |
15143 | Are you coming? |
15143 | Are you going to put that crest on the-- the-- whatever it is? |
15143 | Are you not mortified, you idiot dog? |
15143 | Are you sleepy, dear? |
15143 | Art thou a Christian? |
15143 | Because''They''ve found another victim''? |
15143 | Bore me? 15143 Brightonboro?" |
15143 | But the hand could n''t write? |
15143 | But what in the world is he doing at nightfall on this flooded river? |
15143 | But what is-- whose is the missing skull? |
15143 | But_ who_ are aware? |
15143 | Buy the relics? |
15143 | Can you hold it all right? |
15143 | Cold? |
15143 | Come, come, Le Bihan,I said impatiently,"translate it, wo n''t you? |
15143 | Consultation? |
15143 | Could n''t I open the window just a little? |
15143 | Could n''t it? 15143 D- d- dancing?" |
15143 | D- don''t you-- you know the old prophecy? |
15143 | Dear Theresa,Allan said, slowly,"if you and I should go away somewhere, could we not evade all this ghostliness? |
15143 | Dearest? |
15143 | Death you mean? |
15143 | Dick, whatever is the matter? |
15143 | Did Henry have many words with him? |
15143 | Did I say it was a dream? 15143 Did I scare you?" |
15143 | Did he say hard things? |
15143 | Did you ever hear of any other Black Priest? |
15143 | Did you hear anything last night? |
15143 | Did you speak, Lys? |
15143 | Did you-- ever hear anything? |
15143 | Do n''t you know how to dance, Ray? |
15143 | Do n''t you see how it shakes my whole frame with its struggles? 15143 Do n''t you think he might spare a week to flirt with the prettiest girl in Finistere?" |
15143 | Do you believe it was really written in his own blood? |
15143 | Do you fear the curse? |
15143 | Do you remember that time he killed the cat because she had scratched him? |
15143 | Do you suppose the Purple- Emperor drank himself crazy because he was descended from Marie Trevec? |
15143 | Do you think it will fit? |
15143 | Do you wish to know what it is? |
15143 | Do you, Lys? |
15143 | Does it come near our house? |
15143 | Does the light hurt your eyes, and is that the reason why you did n''t want the lamp? |
15143 | Even in thought? |
15143 | Every night? |
15143 | Everything? |
15143 | Fit? |
15143 | Further search for what-- for the thirty- ninth skull? |
15143 | Good- by? |
15143 | Has Jean Marie been here? |
15143 | Has Mr. Saunders got back yet? |
15143 | Have we been married four years? 15143 Have you got any of that old wine in the house, Caroline? |
15143 | Have you never watched those little whirlwinds in the street that twist and twirl everything into a circle? 15143 He looked mad?" |
15143 | His head? 15143 How are we to get it out of there?" |
15143 | How are you getting there? |
15143 | How can you be so beautiful? |
15143 | How can you leave your patients now? |
15143 | How come seaweed there? |
15143 | How come your eyes so heavy? |
15143 | How come your hair so thick? |
15143 | How come your lips so red? |
15143 | How do I_ know_? |
15143 | How do you know? |
15143 | How goes the world, Saunders? 15143 How long are you going to be away?" |
15143 | How many skulls are there altogether? |
15143 | How many? |
15143 | How much did the Englishman offer Tregunc? |
15143 | How much do you earn every year, Jean Marie? |
15143 | How near? |
15143 | How should I know? |
15143 | However in the world did you come to stay out when such a storm threatened? |
15143 | I ask you again, how should I know? |
15143 | I did n''t hear him say anything, but----"But what? |
15143 | I have? |
15143 | I know you said that he had terrible pains in his stomach, and had spasms, but what do you think made him have them? |
15143 | I mean-- do you think-- did you think it really was an otter? |
15143 | I suppose you know what it means? |
15143 | I''ll take my oath on it, and so would Saunders here; would n''t you, old chap? |
15143 | I-- I suppose you occupy the kennel? |
15143 | I? 15143 I_ have_?" |
15143 | If it is a messenger of death to this house,I said,"why should we fear, Lys?" |
15143 | If you came through the store- room, why did n''t you wake me up? 15143 In the dark?" |
15143 | In what, then-- Jeanne- la- Flamme? |
15143 | Including the purple emperor there in the case? 15143 Is it anyone I know?" |
15143 | Is it my uncle who is writing? |
15143 | Is my head heavy on your knees? |
15143 | Is that the date? |
15143 | Is that what you dreamed? |
15143 | Is the fire laid? 15143 It comes from the willow bushes somehow----""But now the wind has dropped,"I objected"The willows can hardly make a noise by themselves, can they?" |
15143 | It is settled, then,said he,"that madame, your wife, gives the Purple Emperor''s entire Collection to the city of Paris?" |
15143 | It was like the beginning of a sort of inner suffocation? |
15143 | It''s understood,Tam cunningly arranged,"that when he or she arrives you''ll sort of make them feel at home while I wait for the boy?" |
15143 | Jean Marie Tregunc, who found the bones, was standing there where Max Fortin stands, and do you know what he answered? 15143 Johnson,"said he,"is that it? |
15143 | Johnson,said he,"what do you mean? |
15143 | Like it better outside? |
15143 | Listen, Le Bihan: do you mean to tell me that you saw that skull roll uphill yesterday? |
15143 | Me, sir? 15143 My clever Bannalec maid,"said I,"what is good for a stirrup- cup at the Groix Inn?" |
15143 | My crest? 15143 No; did you, Dick?" |
15143 | Nor heard anything? |
15143 | Now I bore you, do n''t I? |
15143 | Poor little dead things''said Lys in a whisper;"it seems a pity-- doesn''t it, Dick? |
15143 | Right hand or left, or both? |
15143 | Schist? |
15143 | See here, who are you? |
15143 | See the paper it''s written on? 15143 Shall I read about the Sieur de Trevec who rode to Saladin''s tent alone to seek for medicine for St. Louise? |
15143 | Shall we gallop back, Lys? |
15143 | She continued:''Will you? |
15143 | She thought that? 15143 Sir?" |
15143 | So thou dost not wish to tell us what thou hast seen yonder? |
15143 | Sorgue? 15143 Sweetheart,"I said,"where is Yvonne? |
15143 | Tell me, how are they getting along? |
15143 | That he would stay here as long as he lived and afterward, too, if he was a mind to, and he would like to see Henry get him out; and then----"What? |
15143 | The collections? |
15143 | The crest, dear? 15143 The dogs that do n''t have any people-- the nobodies''dogs?" |
15143 | The missing skull? |
15143 | Their old dog Bully? |
15143 | Then if it''s not my uncle, what is it? |
15143 | Then why are all you fellows hanging around here? 15143 Then you believe, as I do, that it was she?" |
15143 | Then you heard it too? |
15143 | Thou dost not wish to say? |
15143 | Thou dost not wish to tell us,--wondered the man,"is it so terrible yonder?" |
15143 | To send them to Paris? 15143 W- h- a- t-- what''s that?" |
15143 | Was there any talk of an-- examination? |
15143 | We''re friends already; are n''t we, Eustace Borlsover? |
15143 | Well, what are we to do? |
15143 | Were you awake all last night? |
15143 | What about a landing net? |
15143 | What animal? |
15143 | What are you going to do? |
15143 | What are you waiting for? |
15143 | What did Edward say? |
15143 | What did Henry say? |
15143 | What did it look like? |
15143 | What did you call it? |
15143 | What did you do then? |
15143 | What do you consider to be the greatest element of terror? |
15143 | What do you make of it? |
15143 | What do you make of that? |
15143 | What do you mean-- lost her? |
15143 | What do you mean? |
15143 | What do you mean? |
15143 | What do you really think ailed Edward? |
15143 | What do you say to some wine? |
15143 | What else, in the name of Heaven, what else? |
15143 | What have I done? |
15143 | What have you put that lamp over there for? |
15143 | What in the world are you talking about? 15143 What in the world''s this?" |
15143 | What is it that it''s holding? |
15143 | What is it? |
15143 | What is it? |
15143 | What is that? |
15143 | What is the time? |
15143 | What makes your cheeks so red, Marianne? |
15143 | What of it? |
15143 | What on earth possessed you to do such a thing? |
15143 | What trail? |
15143 | What was it? |
15143 | What was it? |
15143 | What was its color? |
15143 | What''s all the row? |
15143 | What''s all this about Mrs. Merrit wanting to leave? |
15143 | What''s the matter with the servants, Morton? |
15143 | What''s the matter, Ray? |
15143 | What''s the matter, Ray? |
15143 | What''s the matter? 15143 What''s up with you, Eustace? |
15143 | What? 15143 What?" |
15143 | What? |
15143 | What? |
15143 | What? |
15143 | What_ is_ that? |
15143 | When shall I see you? |
15143 | When? |
15143 | Where are you going? |
15143 | Where are you going? |
15143 | Where are you? |
15143 | Where can she be? |
15143 | Where did they find it? |
15143 | Where has she gone? |
15143 | Where is he going at such a time, and what did he mean by his signs and shouting? 15143 Where is that list, Durand?" |
15143 | Where is the Brigadier Durand? |
15143 | Where shall I see you? |
15143 | Where shall you not? |
15143 | Where''d you come from? |
15143 | Where''s the boat? |
15143 | Wherefore this wonderful butterfly, Aurelius? |
15143 | Who are you who hide a masked face in a priest''s robe? |
15143 | Who are you, anyway? |
15143 | Who are you? |
15143 | Who has the list? |
15143 | Who is it from? |
15143 | Who is, then? |
15143 | Who knows? |
15143 | Who knows? |
15143 | Who said''death''? |
15143 | Who''ll let us? 15143 Who''s there?" |
15143 | Why did I do it? 15143 Why did n''t you set it in the hall, and have done with it? |
15143 | Why do n''t you put the lamp on this table, as she says? |
15143 | Why do n''t you turn around and look? |
15143 | Why do n''t you wish to find his skull? |
15143 | Why do you act so, Rebecca? |
15143 | Why do you tell_ me_? |
15143 | Why does it come after me? 15143 Why not the dark?" |
15143 | Why? 15143 Why?" |
15143 | Why? |
15143 | Will eleven o''clock to- night be suitable for our last appointment? |
15143 | Will you be very still, then? |
15143 | Without accepting anything for it? |
15143 | Wo n''t stand much nonsense now, will it? |
15143 | Yes, but what? |
15143 | You bounding cur,said I,"now what on earth started you off across the moor? |
15143 | You did n''t know I had one, did you? |
15143 | You did not think of an examination? |
15143 | You do n''t believe all this? |
15143 | You do n''t mean to say they keep a boy? |
15143 | You do n''t suppose that we would wish to sell that specimen, do you? |
15143 | You do n''t want us to believe that it''s true, Mr. Borlsover? 15143 You have never before seen this book?" |
15143 | You heard what he said to- day-- about Kingdom Come? 15143 You know_ what_, you_ crazy, murdering fool_?" |
15143 | You may begin at once,I said, smiling,"if the salary suits you?" |
15143 | You mean-- the Black Priest? |
15143 | You say there is a list? |
15143 | You''re pretty near the earth yet, are n''t you? |
15143 | You-- you fired? |
15143 | Your God? 15143 _ Now_ do you hear anything?" |
15143 | _ Who?_"Her,said I. |
15143 | _ Why?_It gave me a turn, sir. |
15143 | _ Why?_said I. |
15143 | All- wise, Hast thou seen all there is to see with thy two eyes? |
15143 | Among lilies and closed buds At dusk, Whom do you seek, Little gray messenger, Robed in the awful panoply Of painted Death? |
15143 | An hour thus elapsed, when( could it be possible?) |
15143 | And again I sunk into visions of Ligeia-- and again( what marvel that I shudder while I write? |
15143 | And then she said, softly:"Have you thought what a lonely, awesome thing it must be to be so newly dead? |
15143 | And what in the name of all that''s holy is that?" |
15143 | And who is your God? |
15143 | And who was Jacques Sorgue? |
15143 | And will you come with me?" |
15143 | And would n''t he have a basin of hot bread and milk last thing at night? |
15143 | And you did not see her?" |
15143 | And you, Le Bihan? |
15143 | Any objection?" |
15143 | Are we not part and parcel in Thee? |
15143 | Are you coming, Max Fortin? |
15143 | Augustus sat, and questioning Lazarus with his eye as much as with words, started the conversation:"Why didst thou not greet me as thou enteredst?" |
15143 | But art thou a bridegroom?" |
15143 | But had the wind moved them, or had they moved of themselves? |
15143 | But how to do it? |
15143 | But look here,"he added as a new thought struck him,"do they wait for us?" |
15143 | But the paddle, the canoe, the lessening food----""Have n''t I explained all that once?" |
15143 | But there is only one trail, and yet-- and yet, how could all that blood come from only one person? |
15143 | But who art thou now?" |
15143 | But who art thou?" |
15143 | But who would shoulder the responsibility? |
15143 | But why dost thou wear such ugly and queer garments? |
15143 | But why shall I minutely detail the unspeakable horrors of that night? |
15143 | But your English Doctor Thompson asserts that he has----""Well, it''s human blood, anyway-- isn''t it?" |
15143 | But, dear, how about that soldier named Trevec who was killed in the old fort on the cliff yonder?" |
15143 | By Jove, though, was it all hallucination? |
15143 | Ca n''t he see at all?" |
15143 | Can there be too many windows open? |
15143 | Could it be the birds that were singing in French in this strange orchard? |
15143 | Could it, indeed, be Rowena_ at all_--the fair- haired, the blue- eyed Lady Rowena Trevanion of Tremaine? |
15143 | Could it, indeed, be the_ living_ Rowena who confronted me? |
15143 | Curious to see a cormorant in a forest, is n''t it?" |
15143 | D''ye see them? |
15143 | D''you think he wished to warn us about something?" |
15143 | Did not my reason argue in the old futile way from the little standard of the known? |
15143 | Did she believe in me?" |
15143 | Did you see, Fortin?" |
15143 | Did you see? |
15143 | Do you care to read it? |
15143 | Do you know the writing, sir?" |
15143 | Do you know what year of our Lord it is, Le Bihan?" |
15143 | Do you think Lys wants tan- colored hairs all over her lounge?" |
15143 | Do you think they are in danger, dear?" |
15143 | Do you?" |
15143 | Dost thou feed on darkness, Lazarus? |
15143 | Dost thou hear the battle- cry, the challenge men throw into the face of the future?" |
15143 | Dost thou know all there is to know, and so, Omniscient, Darest thou still to say thy brother lies? |
15143 | Ere the thought formed itself in his mind, his lips uttered with a smile:"Why dost thou not tell us what happened yonder?" |
15143 | For Heaven''s sake, Le Bihan, what is this stuff you are talking in the year of grace 1896?" |
15143 | From that day I have borne a mark, a stamp of fear,--do you understand? |
15143 | Grossmith?" |
15143 | Happy? |
15143 | Has she promised to spend Christmas with us?" |
15143 | Having satisfied our curiosity, and bound every one in the house to secrecy, it became a question what was to be done with our Enigma? |
15143 | He expected to find her, then, there in my room? |
15143 | He knocked softly at it"Are you there, Theresa?" |
15143 | He read it once or twice, turned it over, looked at me with suspicion, and asked:"''Well, what do you want?'' |
15143 | He said:"''So-- you are going in-- in his room?'' |
15143 | He spat upon the ground, and said:''Pig of an Englishman, do you take me for a desecrator of graves?''" |
15143 | He was near now, very near,--but why did Theresa, sitting there in the room that had never belonged to her, appropriate for herself his coming? |
15143 | He will be glad, wo n''t he? |
15143 | How could I make it plain to Allan and Theresa that I wished to bring them together, to heal the wounds that I had made? |
15143 | How did these exotic books come to be there alone in a deserted New England farm- house? |
15143 | How had the change come about? |
15143 | How should I know any more than you?" |
15143 | How, indeed, could it be otherwise, since it told us so much of its secret life? |
15143 | I but indistinctly recall the fact itself-- what wonder that I have utterly forgotten the circumstances which originated or attended it? |
15143 | I cried,"where did that puddle of blood come from?" |
15143 | I give life to the cold marble, I melt sonorous bronze in fire, in bright hot fire.... Why didst thou touch me with thy hand?" |
15143 | I sneered,"does the Mayor of St. Gildas and St. Julien believe in the loup- garou?" |
15143 | I suppose Fortin told you?" |
15143 | I''m for moving on early to- morrow-- eh? |
15143 | If you will wait five minutes, I will go in to see whether----''"I interrupted angrily:"''See here, are you joking? |
15143 | Is it because of something that I have been-- have done?" |
15143 | Is it your uncle''s hand?" |
15143 | Is there anything stronger than love?" |
15143 | Is there anything thou canst frighten me with?" |
15143 | Is there no parallel, though, for such a phenomenon? |
15143 | It''s funny what their just forgetting to close their door did to me, is n''t it? |
15143 | Just before we left my father said,"Mr. Borlsover, may my son here shake hands with you? |
15143 | Lonely? |
15143 | Lord, sir-- was it just that I''d never had eyes to see? |
15143 | Lys de Trevec? |
15143 | Lys, you do n''t really think there is anything supernatural in this affair?" |
15143 | May I go up, Marianne?" |
15143 | May I smoke a pipe?" |
15143 | No? |
15143 | Now suppose I should tell you that he always refused to include in his collection a Death''s Messenger?" |
15143 | O Dick, you are a splendid shot, are you not?" |
15143 | O Divine Father!--shall these things be undeviatingly so?--shall this conqueror be not once conquered? |
15143 | Or are there women who bloom? |
15143 | Or shall I read about-- what is it? |
15143 | Presently she spoke:"What did you say your crest is, Dick?" |
15143 | Prince, is that you?" |
15143 | Rosser?" |
15143 | Run''s the exact word in this case, is n''t it? |
15143 | Shall I tell it to you? |
15143 | She said it? |
15143 | Since when has Jean Marie Tregunc lost his head?" |
15143 | So there should be a de before Trevec? |
15143 | Suppose for one moment, Theresa should not only feel, but_ see_ me-- would she dare to tell him then? |
15143 | Suppose we order another bottle of wine?..." |
15143 | Tell me what you make of those hollows in the ground all about us, those sand- funnels?" |
15143 | The Middle Toe of the Right Foot BY AMBROSE BIERCE From_ Can Such Things Be?_ by Ambrose Bierce. |
15143 | The accumulated dust of centuries, eh?" |
15143 | The bandage lay heavily about the mouth-- but then might it not be the mouth of the breathing Lady of Tremaine? |
15143 | The elements?" |
15143 | The slave began to weep and cried out:"My master, what has befallen thee, master?" |
15143 | The solitude of that Danube camping- place, can I ever forget it? |
15143 | The spray blown from the river by the wind and gathering in big drops? |
15143 | Then she laughed"And,"I persisted,"are you perfectly sure that you-- er-- we shall need it?" |
15143 | Theresa felt it, too,--but how? |
15143 | They moved, and I heard them speaking:"Poor boy, you love me so, and you want to kiss me-- don''t you?" |
15143 | They''re not valuable, I hope? |
15143 | To what train of circumstances would it owe its existence? |
15143 | Was it a playful charge on the part of my Ligeia? |
15143 | Was it merely subjective? |
15143 | Was it the body of the wind? |
15143 | Was she content, always? |
15143 | Was that a dream?" |
15143 | Was this the pattering rain, the dripping of the leaves? |
15143 | Well?" |
15143 | What Was It? |
15143 | What are you going to do with them?" |
15143 | What are you staring at, Le Bihan?" |
15143 | What are you waiting for?" |
15143 | What can we do? |
15143 | What did you shoot?" |
15143 | What do you mean talking so? |
15143 | What do you mean, Allan?" |
15143 | What do you mean? |
15143 | What had they done on earth to merit this? |
15143 | What is God? |
15143 | What is anything on a night like this?" |
15143 | What is it, Caroline?" |
15143 | What is it? |
15143 | What is it? |
15143 | What is it?" |
15143 | What is that dreadful shadow?" |
15143 | What might it be? |
15143 | What of it?" |
15143 | What the devil is all this fuss about, anyway?" |
15143 | What time did your clock strike, Allan?" |
15143 | What was it-- that something more profound than the well of Democritus-- which lay far within the pupils of my beloved? |
15143 | What was that? |
15143 | What was that?" |
15143 | What were the roads like?" |
15143 | What''s the game?" |
15143 | What''s this? |
15143 | What_ was_ it? |
15143 | When did you know them?" |
15143 | When people still talked to him, he was once asked:"Poor Lazarus, does it please thee to sit thus and to stare at the sun?" |
15143 | Where was the iron in her, I moaned within my stricken spirit, where the steadfastness? |
15143 | Who can doubt that a bodiless hand leaping around on its errands of evil has a menace that a complete six- foot frame could not duplicate? |
15143 | Who could possibly feel cold when wearing them?" |
15143 | Who knoweth the mysteries of the will, with its vigor? |
15143 | Who knoweth the mystery of the will, with its vigor? |
15143 | Who would undertake the execution of this horrible semblance of a human being? |
15143 | Who-- who knoweth the mysteries of the will with its vigor? |
15143 | Who?" |
15143 | Whom do you seek Among lilies and closed buds At dusk? |
15143 | Whose dog_ were_ you?" |
15143 | Why are you dawdling?" |
15143 | Why do n''t you set the lamp on the study table in the middle of the room, then we can both see?" |
15143 | Why in the world need he draw attention to it? |
15143 | Why not give it chloroform? |
15143 | Why not run up to town? |
15143 | Why the mischief should the people here call it death''s messenger?" |
15143 | Why then didst thou not fetch baskets?" |
15143 | Why these dress togs?" |
15143 | Why, what''s happened?" |
15143 | Why,_ why_ should I doubt it? |
15143 | Why?" |
15143 | Will you come upstairs with me? |
15143 | Will you come?" |
15143 | Will you join us? |
15143 | Will you take care of my garden for me? |
15143 | Without a ghostly sentinel to prick them with sharp fears and recollections, who could believe that they would keep to it? |
15143 | You are going to the edge of the Kerselec forest?" |
15143 | You are not superstitious, my dear?" |
15143 | You did not see her, standing there, under the lilacs, with no smile on her face?" |
15143 | You will, of course, send this scroll to Paris, Le Bihan?" |
15143 | You-- you hear?" |
15143 | asked Saunders;"black?" |
15143 | exclaimed the bull- terrier, adding inconsequently,"What''s your name?" |
15143 | muttered King--"what ought we to do?" |
15143 | or was it a test of my strength of affection, that I should institute no inquiries upon this point? |
15143 | or was it rather a caprice of my own-- a wildly romantic offering on the shrine of the most passionate devotion? |
15143 | said Eustace;"what in the world was the old boy driving at? |
15143 | said I,"have you come to arrest me again? |
15143 | said I,"what do you do for your salary except play dominoes with Max Portin at the Groix Inn?" |
15143 | said I;"and perhaps, Monsieur the mayor, your faith in giants is unimpaired?" |
15143 | said I;"then these are the bones of English soldiers?" |
15143 | the other soldier bellowed, taking aim,"what are ye gassing about?" |
15143 | what has happened?" |
15143 | what the-- what the devil''s the matter with you, anyway? |
15143 | what''s that you''re kicking?" |
15667 | ''Going to leave?'' 15667 ''What for?'' |
15667 | ''With what hand did you do it?'' 15667 A beggar woman whined at the window:"''Could ye give me a trifle for a cup of coffee, lady?'' |
15667 | A purty good- sized one, is it, Bud? |
15667 | A wish? |
15667 | After thinking it over for twelve months,said Kitchener,"you still wish to marry?" |
15667 | Ai n''t what nice? |
15667 | All the people in the bank? |
15667 | An elopement, eh? 15667 And did you actually go to Rome?" |
15667 | And how did it turn out? |
15667 | And how old is your little boy, madam, please? |
15667 | And now does n''t he threaten to split your head with an ax? |
15667 | And what is the name of your country? |
15667 | And what made you think he was intoxicated? |
15667 | And what,he asked, having spent a whole afternoon changing the goldfishes''water,"shall I do now, sir?" |
15667 | And where did you hide it? |
15667 | And which is the foreman? |
15667 | And who, monsieur,he queried in a tender tone,"shall I have the misery of announcing?" |
15667 | And you lost the cat all right? |
15667 | And you want to get married again, with your wife only two months dead? |
15667 | And you would rather talk to a gentleman? |
15667 | And,queried a cynical member of the group,"shall we mention the name of the trust?" |
15667 | Anything going on here to- night? |
15667 | Are you going away? |
15667 | At ony rate ye''ll be a frien''o''the corp? |
15667 | Bigger than General Grant? |
15667 | Bigger than God? |
15667 | Bigger than President Wilson? |
15667 | Bill,said the younger brother, breaking a painful silence,"why ca n''t you leave things that you do n''t understand to me? |
15667 | But I''m not one, am I? |
15667 | But did they not belong to some bird? |
15667 | But do n''t you think he was a little weak around the lamp- posts? |
15667 | But how do you know one is an officer at this distance? |
15667 | But it is broken? |
15667 | But suppose,suggested the thirsty passenger,"that the train should go on without me?" |
15667 | But when do you do your literary work? |
15667 | But you do n''t expect to get it, do you? |
15667 | But, Mollie,she demanded,"do n''t you trust him?" |
15667 | But, Mr. Reynolds, suppose there should be no waiters and cab drivers at the conference? |
15667 | But, Sandy, man,objected the host,"ye''re not goin''yet, with the evenin''just started?" |
15667 | By the way,said the chief life- saver,"can you swim?" |
15667 | Caddy,he said, addressing the silent youth who stood alongside,"that was awful, was n''t it?" |
15667 | Columbus did n''t do such a wonderful thing, after all, when he found this country, did he, now, sir? 15667 Could n''t you go back and come from somewhere else?" |
15667 | Could you be President? |
15667 | Could you not have settled your differences by a peaceful discussion of the matter, calling in the assistance of unprejudiced opinion, if need be? |
15667 | Did I not tell you not to leave your post? |
15667 | Did he run? |
15667 | Did he take them back? |
15667 | Did n''t we say that after your wedding tour you would make your home at the Old Manse? |
15667 | Did you ever see a worse player than I am? |
15667 | Dis heyah registrashum fo''de draf''am a whole lot like''lection votin'', ai n''t it? |
15667 | Do I know what? |
15667 | Do n''t you enjoy your meals? |
15667 | Do n''t you know I''m a''painless dentist''? |
15667 | Do they ever take you when you cry like that? |
15667 | Do you know Archie Sloan''s neck? |
15667 | Do you like Omar Khayyam? |
15667 | Do you like it? |
15667 | Do you mean it? |
15667 | Do you really believe,he asked her,"that there is no salvation outside of the Roman Catholic Church?" |
15667 | Do you think so? 15667 Do you think that I am going to let any foreigner lick me?" |
15667 | Do you want oysters, Louise? |
15667 | Do you wish me to read it first, sir? |
15667 | Enjoy my meals? |
15667 | Even if I am a liar I guess I''ve got a right to be sensitive about it, ai n''t I? |
15667 | Fadder,he asked,"is marriage a failure?" |
15667 | Father,asked Prince Edward, placing his finger on the Colonel''s picture,"Mr. Roosevelt is a very clever man, is n''t he?" |
15667 | Gifted? |
15667 | Go South, eh? 15667 Has any one seen my b- b- blanket?" |
15667 | Has any one seen my t- t- trousers? |
15667 | Has he had his hair cut? |
15667 | Has n''t he choked you into insensibility? |
15667 | Has n''t he dragged you the length of the room by your hair? |
15667 | Have n''t I a perfect right? |
15667 | Have you ever tried gargling it with salt and water? |
15667 | Have you had any nourishment? |
15667 | He cain''t-- yo''says he cain''t work? |
15667 | Hi, there, who are you? |
15667 | Hold- all? |
15667 | How about Macaulay, the greatest essayist in England, and Homer, the prince of ancient poets, with seven birthplaces? 15667 How about the cavalry?" |
15667 | How can that be,continued the storekeeper,"when it was cured only last week?" |
15667 | How could you expect me to have any respect for a man who could not succeed in preventing me from doing the things I did? |
15667 | How dare you, sir, abuse our hospitality? |
15667 | How did you know what was the matter with me? |
15667 | How do you manage to get it all in? |
15667 | How goes it? |
15667 | How is it,she snapped,"that you''re so unlucky at the races, and yet you always win at cards?" |
15667 | How many are there? |
15667 | How much do I owe you? |
15667 | How much does it cost now? |
15667 | How much money do you want? |
15667 | How''s yours? |
15667 | I presume you carry a memento of some kind in that locket you wear? |
15667 | I suppose you have such a thing? |
15667 | I suppose,said Mr. Root,"you speak French?" |
15667 | If my learned friend, counsel for the defence, and myself were to bang our heads together, would he get concussion of the brain? |
15667 | If you should see an armed party approaching, what would you do? |
15667 | Is he going to stay? |
15667 | Is n''t he gifted in any way? |
15667 | Is that true? |
15667 | Is the young lady your sister? |
15667 | Is this a good one? |
15667 | Is your husband in? |
15667 | It did n''t hurt as much as you expected it would, did it? |
15667 | It''s only half- past eight now, and John never did show up till about three A.M.WHY NOT? |
15667 | John,said Dickson,"you enjoyed it?" |
15667 | John,she said to the manservant,"can you find out without asking the cook whether the tinned salmon was all eaten last night? |
15667 | Joseph, where are you? |
15667 | Just so, Winterbottom, just so,said the treasurer, and he cleared his throat and added:"Both treated well, I hope?" |
15667 | Kind sir,he suddenly exclaimed,"will you not give me a loaf of bread for my wife and little ones?" |
15667 | Married? 15667 Mary,"he said to the Irish waitress at the hotel where he was stopping,"you''ve been in this country how long?" |
15667 | Mommer,he panted,"do you know Archie Sloan''s neck?" |
15667 | My dear sir, what more do you want? |
15667 | Naw, sah, naw, sah, you ai n''t one; but s''pose somebody''d call you de kind o''rascal you_ is_, what''d you do? |
15667 | Nay, nay, Andy,answered the good spouse;"I couldna''marry anither man, fer whit wull I daw wi''twa husbands in heaven?" |
15667 | No, I''m no''a brither o''the corp."Weel, ye''ll be his cousin? |
15667 | No, what was it? |
15667 | Not a fast liver, or anything of that sort? |
15667 | Not a word had passed between us for more than a week, and that night when we rolled up in our blankets he suddenly asked:''Hear that cow beller?'' |
15667 | Not at all"Possibly you did? |
15667 | Nothing else? |
15667 | Now, then,continued the teacher when Jimmy had returned to his place,"can you find a better form for that sentence?" |
15667 | Oh, Mr. Dunne,she twittered,"how did you enjoy the madame''s dancing?" |
15667 | Oh, she broke it? |
15667 | Please, ma''am,Edgar piped out,"do you want us to draw a hen or a rooster?" |
15667 | Pleathe, thir,lisped the latest graduate from the infant class,"where ith the flea?" |
15667 | Razor? |
15667 | Really? |
15667 | Remember the laughing hyena? |
15667 | Run? |
15667 | Say, conductor,he whispered, hoarsely,"did that man I was talking to get off at the last station?" |
15667 | Sick, eh? |
15667 | Stranger in the town, sir? |
15667 | Tell me, Number One,he said,"how many men are there in that trench- digging party over there?" |
15667 | The camel, eh? 15667 The old gentleman was very dear to you?" |
15667 | Then how do you know his funeral is going to take place on Friday? |
15667 | Then would you mind telling me who it was? |
15667 | Then, mother,said the boy,"why ca n''t I keep that ten cents a week you gimme for the Sunday- school collection? |
15667 | This very mornin'',said he,"she asked me:''Lysander, do you know how many pancakes you have et this mornin''?'' |
15667 | Tompkins,he whispered,"is it trembling you are for your dirty skin?" |
15667 | Toothbrush? |
15667 | Twelve o''clock, eh? |
15667 | Was it you I kissed in the conservatory last night? |
15667 | Water''s all on the outside-- can''t none get in nohow? |
15667 | We did n''t do a thing to you Germans, did we? 15667 Well, Aunt Mary, how did you spend this afternoon?" |
15667 | Well, Mose, what branch of the service would you like to be placed in? |
15667 | Well, Rena? |
15667 | Well, are n''t you? |
15667 | Well, did Cousin Nick have anything to do with it? |
15667 | Well, did n''t he do you any good? |
15667 | Well, do n''t you know? 15667 Well, now,"said Ian Hay,"is n''t that provoking? |
15667 | Well, then, what is going to become of me? |
15667 | Well, what impressed you most? |
15667 | Well, why not? |
15667 | Well, you are one, are n''t you? |
15667 | Well, you do n''t seem to be dead; what are you doing around here? |
15667 | Well,countered Mr. Wu,"why do you wear your foolish moustache?" |
15667 | Well,said the dentist,"how can I tell when he''s unconscious?" |
15667 | What are you beating up that Hun for? |
15667 | What are you doing with all that paper, Henry? |
15667 | What are you making such a noise for? |
15667 | What collateral have you to offer? |
15667 | What did you have? |
15667 | What did you like the most? |
15667 | What do you mean by making a silly blunder like that? |
15667 | What do you mean? |
15667 | What do you pay him? |
15667 | What do you say? |
15667 | What for? |
15667 | What have you done? |
15667 | What have you got to say to that? |
15667 | What in the world are you doing out there? |
15667 | What inducements do you offer? |
15667 | What is it called? |
15667 | What is it, Edgar? |
15667 | What is it, madam? |
15667 | What is it? |
15667 | What is it? |
15667 | What is the matter with you? |
15667 | What is the meaning of this? |
15667 | What is your business? |
15667 | What seems to be the trouble? |
15667 | What shall we say of the former senator? |
15667 | What size? |
15667 | What the deuce are you driving at? |
15667 | What the dickens have you been doing to those sheep? |
15667 | What was the epitaph? |
15667 | What will Ah have ter do in de calvary? |
15667 | What would you have been to- day if you could write? |
15667 | What would you suggest? |
15667 | What''ll Oi be sayin'', doctor? |
15667 | What''s all this? |
15667 | What''s the matter up here? |
15667 | What''s the matter with the cavalry, Mose? |
15667 | What''s the matter with you boys, anyway? 15667 What''s the matter, little man?" |
15667 | What''s the matter? 15667 What''s the matter?" |
15667 | What''s the matter? |
15667 | What''s the matter? |
15667 | What''s yer bill o''fare? |
15667 | What, on the sofy? |
15667 | What? |
15667 | When did you do it? |
15667 | When did your uncle die? |
15667 | When the Queen of Sheba came and laid jewels and fine raiment before Solomon, what did he say? |
15667 | When''s the bloomin''war goin''to end? |
15667 | Where are you going, my dear? |
15667 | Where did you find the prisoner? |
15667 | Where did your watch come from? |
15667 | Where''s Hodge''s windmill? |
15667 | Where''s my umbrella? |
15667 | Where''s the boss? |
15667 | Who have we here? |
15667 | Who is that man? |
15667 | Who is the President of the United States? |
15667 | Who is the Vice- President? |
15667 | Who we fight? |
15667 | Who''s comin''? |
15667 | Who? |
15667 | Whose funeral is it? |
15667 | Why bad? |
15667 | Why did n''t he bite me with his tail? |
15667 | Why did you run when you had this permit? |
15667 | Why do n''t you hurl a brick at him? |
15667 | Why have you stopped, Murphy? |
15667 | Why in the qualified blazes do n''t you salute? |
15667 | Why not? |
15667 | Why not? |
15667 | Why not? |
15667 | Why on earth do n''t you set a trap, Betsey? |
15667 | Why return it? 15667 Why, Brudder Jones, do n''t yo''want yo''sins washed away?" |
15667 | Why, Dora,cried the stage manager,"where in the world are all your decorations? |
15667 | Why, where are you going? |
15667 | Why? |
15667 | Why? |
15667 | Why? |
15667 | William,said he,"of what are you thinking?" |
15667 | Willie,asked mother,"is that horrid boy making faces at you?" |
15667 | Would n''t it be interesting,said a romantic young lady,"if we could bring him to life?" |
15667 | Would you mind,asked the agent,"giving me a little testimonial to that effect?" |
15667 | Ye ken auld John Clemmens? 15667 Yes, sir,"said the recruit, in a voice of cool desperation,"and do you know that this is an anthill?" |
15667 | Yes, sir; did you lose anything? |
15667 | Yes, that is very true; but what has that to do with it? |
15667 | Yes,replied the friend;"the kind we feed to our horses?" |
15667 | Yes? |
15667 | Yessir? |
15667 | Yessiranythingelsesir? |
15667 | YessirthankyousirshallIsayyouareoutifanyonecallssir? |
15667 | Yo''has? 15667 You claim to be acquainted with the various symptoms attending concussion of the brain?" |
15667 | You do n''t dissipate, do you? |
15667 | You do n''t own the shop, do you? |
15667 | You do not doubt that a trained swimmer could do that, do you? |
15667 | You have n''t anything like that in America, have you? |
15667 | You have? 15667 You''re not going to get off at the next station, are you?" |
15667 | You''re troubled with your throat, you say? |
15667 | Your prospects in life? 15667 ''Then you are a medical man?'' 15667 107 What He Might Have Been 129 When theS"Fell Out 18 Where Ignorance Is Bliss 17 Where Vermont Scored 123 Who Could Tell? |
15667 | 130, 132, 133 Why Should He Know? |
15667 | 174 Envy? |
15667 | 31 Why Not? |
15667 | 36 Why Be Polite Anyway? |
15667 | A DEEP- LAID PLAN"Would you mind letting me off fifteen minutes early after this, sir?" |
15667 | A LONG STORY"May I ask the cause of all this excitement?" |
15667 | A dapper little undersized colored brother stepped briskly up and inquired,"What kind of a lookin''lady_ is_ yoh wife?" |
15667 | A dramatic pause, then:"Now, gentlemen of the jury, do you honestly think that if the defendant had a quart of whiskey he would sell it?" |
15667 | A little boy''s mother in the congregation whispered to her son,"Is n''t it wonderful? |
15667 | AN ANGLOMANIAC"What are you studying now?" |
15667 | AN EXPERT"So,"said the old general,"you think you would make a good valet for an old wreck like me, do you? |
15667 | Abner, ai n''t that nice?" |
15667 | After some months of life in New York, a friend met him and said,"Henry, what are you doing?" |
15667 | After the farmer had driven on, the mother asked:"Why did n''t you take the cherries when he told you to?" |
15667 | After the old gentleman left the two sons came in and said:"Senator, are you fond of livestock?" |
15667 | After the usual preliminaries the judge inquired:"Why did you hit this man?" |
15667 | And may I ask who is that little man, with the dreadfully sad countenance, walking by the old lady''s side?" |
15667 | And one of them said breathlessly:"What have you been doing?" |
15667 | And that''s Cousin James, and that''s a friend of ours, and that-- oh, now, who do you think that is?" |
15667 | And where do you go?" |
15667 | Are ye sure yez printed''This side up with care''on it?" |
15667 | Are you aware, sir, what is the matter with this great country?" |
15667 | Are you suffering from indigestion, Johnny?" |
15667 | Art thou weary, art thou languid?'' |
15667 | As the conversation proceeded the New Yorker said:"I suppose you have always lived around here?" |
15667 | At a house where I was calling one cold day the fat and pompous butler entered the drawing- room and said:"''Did you ring, madam?'' |
15667 | At the end of the lesson the usual test questions were put, among them:"Can any girl tell me the three foods required to keep the body in health?" |
15667 | Avay voo ever studied palmistry? |
15667 | BRIGGS: You believe that, now, do n''t you? |
15667 | BUSINESS IS BUSINESS"May I see you privately?" |
15667 | Bokoo moon to- night, nace paw? |
15667 | Born? |
15667 | Business? |
15667 | But did n''t you have, even in a dim way, some idea of what you were doing?" |
15667 | But where''s the bad ones for the pigs?" |
15667 | But wo n''t my vitriol spray, my oil projector, or my gas cylinder do as well?" |
15667 | But, Jedge, s''pose somebody''d call you a damn black rascal, would n''t you hit''em?" |
15667 | But, look here, do you promise to give my nose-- er-- ideal beauty?" |
15667 | But, my dear, is n''t it worthwhile to learn something, even by making such a mistake?" |
15667 | By the way, which do you prefer, Dickens or Thackeray?" |
15667 | CAN THIS BE TRUE? |
15667 | CONSIDERING FATHER Does the American woman always consider her lesser half? |
15667 | Ca n''t I do something? |
15667 | Ca n''t you ask him to change his pew?" |
15667 | Can you support her in the style to which she has been accustomed?" |
15667 | Did n''t I give it to him?" |
15667 | Did the girl''s father follow you?" |
15667 | Do n''t you know they ai n''t in season?" |
15667 | Do n''t you like them?" |
15667 | Do tell me, did you receive all these wounds in real action?" |
15667 | Do you know how to swear, my boy?" |
15667 | Donney mwa oon kiss? |
15667 | Durinb the tim e been in myy possessio n$ i thre month it had more th an paid paid for itse*f in thee saVing off tim e anD laborr? |
15667 | EDITOR: Did you meet the office boy with the waste- paper basket as you came upstairs? |
15667 | Eh, old chap?" |
15667 | Finally, one day he called and said:"How iss my wife?" |
15667 | GRIGGS: Is it that late? |
15667 | HAD HIS RIGHTS"Why did you strike this man?" |
15667 | HOW COULD HE KNOW? |
15667 | Hae ye lost the ring?" |
15667 | Hafter hall''s said an''done,''ow could''e''elp it?" |
15667 | Has anybody else any civic pride here that you could name?" |
15667 | Have n''t you been to the doctor?" |
15667 | Have we really lost or gained? |
15667 | Have you carried out any of my ideas? |
15667 | Have you got the engineer''s plans for the new bridge?" |
15667 | Have you lost them?" |
15667 | Have you, sir, considered the possibilities?" |
15667 | He began thus:"Mr. Smith, you remember that laughin''hyena in cage nine?" |
15667 | He said he''d try to meet the deputation''s wishes and the following Sunday he announced as his text,''Adam, Where Art Thou?'' |
15667 | He strolled over and said to Lieutenant de Tessan:"''Heavens, man, why did n''t you tell her that you bit him to death?''" |
15667 | He went out and met a friend, and the friend said:"Well, how is your wife?" |
15667 | His hostess said, concernedly, when dessert was reached,"You refuse a second helping of pie? |
15667 | How do you feel about it? |
15667 | How do you make that out?" |
15667 | How is it?" |
15667 | How was that?" |
15667 | Hurrying to the side of the conductor, he eagerly inquired:"Do you think that I will have time to get a soda before the train starts?" |
15667 | I asked him why?" |
15667 | I have no civic pride myself, but do you mind, sir, telling me the object of your visit to this lovely little burg?" |
15667 | I said,''Let''s get married,''And she said,''Why, who''d have us?''" |
15667 | IS THIS TACT? |
15667 | Is Uncle George really responsible for this scrap?" |
15667 | Kesker say votr name? |
15667 | LIFE''S ETERNAL QUERY Did it ever occur to you that a man''s life is full of cussedness? |
15667 | MAKING IT FIT"Did you hear about the defacement of Mr. Skinner''s tombstone?" |
15667 | MISTAKEN IDENTITY? |
15667 | May I inquire what your occupation in life is?" |
15667 | May know Wordsworth''s famous lines, eh? |
15667 | Most of us lead busy lives and, after all, is it of any real importance to be familiar with the world''s greatest writers? |
15667 | Mr. Schwab,''the New Yorker said,''are, like the rest of us, I suppose, hoping for better things?'' |
15667 | Noticing that Uncle Mose never mentioned his approaching marriage, the planter said:"Mose, you know I am going to marry Miss Currier?" |
15667 | Now, has any girl or boy a question before we take up the study of the lesson? |
15667 | Now, smarten yourself up, and remember what I have told you; and, by the way, what trade did you follow before you enlisted? |
15667 | On paying his usual morning call he was met by the butler, to whom he said:"Well, John, I hope the laird''s temperature is not any higher to- day?" |
15667 | One small girl, who had evidently had experience in such matters, promptly replied:"''Ow much d''yer want for the lot?" |
15667 | Pat grabbed him by the arm, and leaning over, whispered:"Oi say, we gave them Irish Hell, did n''t we?" |
15667 | Perhaps you have read something of Thomas Love Peacock?" |
15667 | Presently, when the doctor made his rounds, he said:"Well, Nathan, how do you feel?" |
15667 | Rather good, eh? |
15667 | Read something you would n''t understand anyway? |
15667 | SPECIALLY ENDOWED"Some un sick at yo''house, Mis''Carter?" |
15667 | She looked at him reminiscently:"About what time was it?" |
15667 | She turned about, and what do you suppose she saw standing there, gazing at her and showing all its sharp, white teeth?" |
15667 | So you want to marry my daughter, eh?" |
15667 | Suppose you saw a battleship coming across the parade- ground, what would you do?" |
15667 | Sydney, thoughtfully displaying his garments to their full advantage, edged close to his mother and whispered,"Can I call pa Bill now?" |
15667 | That it is oftentimes easily solved, however, is revealed by the following simple experience as related by H.M. Perley in_ Life_: How did we do it? |
15667 | The dialogue went like this:"Ye''ll be a brither o''the corp?" |
15667 | The first three lines of the blank ran as follows: Name? |
15667 | The host''s son was at the table, and one of the New York clergymen said to him:"My lad, what did you think of your father''s sermon?" |
15667 | The magistrate inquired:"What d''ye mean, sir? |
15667 | The man seized him by the arm and said between pants:"Have you a permit to fish on this estate?" |
15667 | The mother, quite anxious, exclaimed,"Where can Aunt Mary be?" |
15667 | The next morning, when the guest was ready to check out, the clerk asked:"Did you have a good night''s rest?" |
15667 | The officer, seeing this, exclaimed angrily:"And who is that blooming galoot over there holding up both legs?" |
15667 | The other said to him:"My good man, why is it that the gnats do not trouble me?" |
15667 | The soldier fixed a humorous eye on her and said,"Miss, can you get me a nice novel? |
15667 | Then he barked:"Housewife?" |
15667 | Then the young woman drew herself coldly erect, fixed him with an icy stare, and asked again:"Er-- and can you recommend the Belva?" |
15667 | Then what did you have your eyes closed for?" |
15667 | Tiptoeing up the aisle, he whispered:"What''s the matter, Jock? |
15667 | Took place in the church, I suppose, with bridesmaids, flowers, cake, and the brass band?" |
15667 | Turning to Mr. Gloom, the old man said:"Well, how about you? |
15667 | Turning to Mr. Sunshine, he said:"Look here; why has n''t he done you any good?" |
15667 | Vooley voo take a walk? |
15667 | WHAT DID SOLOMON SAY? |
15667 | WHO COULD TELL? |
15667 | WHY BE POLITE ANYWAY? |
15667 | WHY NOT? |
15667 | WHY NOT? |
15667 | WHY SHOULD HE KNOW? |
15667 | Was n''t that a compliment?" |
15667 | Well, Susie?" |
15667 | Well, what was so remarkable about the camel?" |
15667 | Were you not the colored man who told me you had lost your wife and six children by the sinking of the_ Titanic_?" |
15667 | What am I to do with it?" |
15667 | What deed of heroism did you do at the front?" |
15667 | What did she die of?" |
15667 | What do you call it? |
15667 | What do you think of him?" |
15667 | What do you want to get off for?" |
15667 | What have you been doing during the year?" |
15667 | What shall we do on that evening?" |
15667 | What would you do if it died-- you would n''t see it again?" |
15667 | What''s he done got de matter of''i m?" |
15667 | When you die-- how should you like to be buried here with my name on the stone over you?" |
15667 | Where are you going? |
15667 | Where are you going? |
15667 | Where are_ you_ going?" |
15667 | Where do you come from?" |
15667 | Where yo''had yo''sins washed away?" |
15667 | Where''s your lawyer?" |
15667 | Who, should you say, has the most civic pride in town?" |
15667 | Why did you not defend yourself with the butt of your rifle?" |
15667 | Why do n''t you leave him?" |
15667 | Why do n''t you move a little so that this tired woman may have a seat?" |
15667 | Why do n''t you want a lawyer?" |
15667 | Why do you wear the foolish thing, anyhow?" |
15667 | Why has n''t this chap done you any good?" |
15667 | Why is your artificial eye not in its place?" |
15667 | Why should n''t they be paid? |
15667 | Why?" |
15667 | Will the lady have the hassock broiled or fried?" |
15667 | Will you put in your own family?" |
15667 | Will you take yer eggs fried, same as this''ere gentleman?" |
15667 | You read him regularly, I presume?" |
15667 | You were in the trenches, you say?" |
15667 | You''ve heard of Jane Austen, I presume?" |
15667 | he shouted, angrily,"do you know you are giving our position away to the enemy?" |
15667 | wo n''t you- all tell Marse Bob please not to go out no moh till I kin git his clo''es round to him?''" |
30411 | At what pack will you that we does play? |
30411 | Can you do me a coat? |
30411 | That doctor came in coach or on foot? |
30411 | What you make? |
30411 | You hear the bird''s gurgling? |
30411 | Are you altered? |
30411 | Are you hunter? |
30411 | Are you too learned now? |
30411 | At what o''clock dine him? |
30411 | At what pack will you that we does play? |
30411 | At what purpose have say so? |
30411 | At which does you write? |
30411 | Because that? |
30411 | Bring you my coat? |
30411 | But why, you and another book seller, you does not to imprint some good wooks? |
30411 | Can I to get up my self? |
30411 | Do know it why? |
30411 | Do n''t he tell you that it must to speak french? |
30411 | Do n''t we does pass for a***? |
30411 | Do n''t you are ashamed to give me a jade as like? |
30411 | Do n''t you are ashamed to give me a jade as like? |
30411 | Do n''t you live me her proof againts? |
30411 | Do n''t you will not more? |
30411 | Do nt you are awaken yet? |
30411 | Do speak french alwais? |
30411 | Do you know already the principal grammars rules? |
30411 | Do you know they to? |
30411 | Do you know they? |
30411 | Gentilman, will you have some beans? |
30411 | Have her succeded? |
30411 | Have you already arrested a coach? |
30411 | Have you forgeted me? |
30411 | Have you found the Buff on who I had call for? |
30411 | Have you pain to the heart? |
30411 | Have you say that? |
30411 | Have you seen already the new tragedy? |
30411 | Have you understand that he says? |
30411 | Have you understand they? |
30411 | Have you understanded? |
30411 | Have you wexed my shoes? |
30411 | How do you can it to deny? |
30411 | How do you like its? |
30411 | How is called your master? |
30411 | How is it, you are in bed yet? |
30411 | How is the day of month? |
30411 | How long there is it what you learn it? |
30411 | How much do you sell it the ell? |
30411 | How much wants the ells for coat, waist coat, and breeches? |
30411 | How you think her? |
30411 | I believe to you that When do you bring me my coat? |
30411 | I think that is a bad tooth; please you to examine my mouth? |
30411 | I want not a pendulum? |
30411 | I you do not eat? |
30411 | Is it a fluxion, or have you a bad tooth? |
30411 | Is not that? |
30411 | It come in one''s? |
30411 | It do n''t are finished? |
30411 | Let him have know? |
30411 | Let me have another thing to do? |
30411 | Never I have feeld a such heat Till say- us? |
30411 | Never have you not done wreck? |
30411 | One''s can to believe you? |
30411 | Sir, what will you to? |
30411 | So that they wo n''t waited even the upshot? |
30411 | Some one which ran do meet him, and surprised of that light:"Simple that you are, told him, what serve you this light? |
30411 | Some pears, and apples, what wilt you? |
30411 | Tell me, it can one to know? |
30411 | The artichoks grow its? |
30411 | The blind not finding more her money, was suspect that might be the robed, but one work for take again it? |
30411 | The field has by me a thousand charms"; after this, to the question"Are you hunter? |
30411 | The meal do n''t is valuable better than the furfur?" |
30411 | The poet was answered him in the same tune:--"And you, sir, what name have you choice? |
30411 | The sleeves have not them great deal wideness? |
30411 | Then he kicks for that I look? |
30411 | Then what is told of him? |
30411 | There is it also hospitals here? |
30411 | There is it some danger on the highway? |
30411 | There is some game on they cantons? |
30411 | They speak not that may have some robbers on the woods? |
30411 | Till at what o''clock its had play one? |
30411 | Were is it? |
30411 | What I may to eat? |
30411 | What are then the edifices the worthest to have seen? |
30411 | What cloth will you do to? |
30411 | What coat dress you to day? |
30411 | What game? |
30411 | What have us expended? |
30411 | What is it who want you? |
30411 | What is the trump? |
30411 | What news tell me? |
30411 | What o''clock is it? |
30411 | What o''clock you think is it? |
30411 | What will you to double the coat? |
30411 | What you say of the comedy? |
30411 | Where are their stockings, their shoes, her shirt and her petlicot? |
30411 | Which have wounden him? |
30411 | Which hightness want you its? |
30411 | Who have prevailed upon? |
30411 | Why you no helps me to? |
30411 | Will some mutton? |
30411 | Will you a bon? |
30411 | Will you fat or slight? |
30411 | Will you go to the hunting in one day this week?" |
30411 | Will you than I bring the ham? |
30411 | Will you this? |
30411 | Witch prefer you? |
30411 | You have a bad tooth; will you pull out this tooth? |
30411 | You hear the bird''s gurgling? |
30411 | Your pistols are its loads? |
30411 | _ End First Part''s_*** Familiar Dialogues_ For to wish the good morning._ How does your father do? |
30411 | _ For make a visit in the morning._ Is your master at home? |
30411 | _ For the comedy._ Were you go to the theatre yesterday? |
30411 | _ For to ask some news._ It is true what is told of master M***? |
30411 | _ For to speak french._ How is the french? |
30411 | _ For to travel._ Where you go so? |
30411 | _ For to visit a sick._ How have you passed the night? |
30411 | _ The books and of the reading._ Do you like the reading good deal too many which seem me? |
30411 | _ The french language._ Do you study? |
30411 | _ The gaming._ Do you like the gaming? |
30411 | _ The hunting._ There is it some game in this wood? |
30411 | _ The walk._ Will you and take a walk with me? |
30411 | _ With a bookseller._ What is there in new''s litterature? |
30411 | _ With a gardener._ Shall I eat some plums soon? |
30411 | _ With a hair dresser._ Your razors, are them well? |
30411 | _ With the tailor._ Can you do me a coat? |
30411 | and then to the question"What will you to double(_ doubler_) the coat?" |
30411 | he enquires, but quickly drivels down to"What cloth will you do to?" |
30411 | repply the countryman, the mutton will find in that part? |
30411 | what you have done after the supper? |
30411 | will you go to the hunting in one day this week? |
30411 | will you its are fine or broad? |
18405 | ''Ave you know zem, ze Incas? |
18405 | A red- headed, ambitious little runt? 18405 Ah,"he said, with a strange quickening of interest,"you''ave been to Lima; you like''eem?" |
18405 | Ah,he said,"You''ave been wizzin?" |
18405 | Air yew ready? |
18405 | Alone? |
18405 | An''whatt ilse? 18405 And did none of ye see it before?" |
18405 | And maybe, since you were so keen on havin''a look at her, you''ve brought wreckin''tools with you in case they might come in handy? |
18405 | And the ladies,--where are they? |
18405 | And what honest man would deal with us? |
18405 | And where are we going, when the mast''s up? |
18405 | And who asked you to give them a good word, as you call it? |
18405 | Are there any English on board of her? |
18405 | Are there any drains in the''tween- deck to let water out, in case it gets into that deck from above-- a sea, for instance? |
18405 | Are you asleep there leadsman? |
18405 | Are you ready there with the lead? |
18405 | Art thou never glutted with Spanish blood, thou old wolf? |
18405 | Before Condà ©? |
18405 | Beg pardon,said Mr. Treenail,"pray, is this Mr.------''s house?" |
18405 | Begging your pardon, captain, would it not be wiser to keep our course, and show the blackguard we do n''t fear him? |
18405 | Blow, jolly breeze,cried one,"and lay the Don over all thou canst.--What the murrain is gone, aloft there?" |
18405 | Boston,answered the doctor, irrelevantly,"will you climb up and bring down an oar from the boat? |
18405 | Boys,said Ginnell,"ai n''t there no way out with them dollars? |
18405 | But another question is, what became of that acid? |
18405 | But on deck--? |
18405 | But we''re likely to be blown away, are n''t we? |
18405 | But what do you see aloft? |
18405 | But what of it? |
18405 | But where''d he get that Snider? |
18405 | Can we get home with a leak in our bottom? |
18405 | Cherries? 18405 Commander,"he said,"are we to land the marines?" |
18405 | D''ye hear anything there? 18405 D''ye remember the Frenchman,"I asked,"the man who was always asking about the Incas?" |
18405 | D''ye see him? |
18405 | D''ye see him? |
18405 | D''you think I''d have bothered about the job only for the dollars? 18405 Do I understanad--?" |
18405 | Do n''t you mind William Prust, that Captain Hawkins left behind in the Honduras, years and years agone? 18405 Do n''t you think our day''s work has been long enough yet, captain?" |
18405 | Do you mean the younger? |
18405 | Do you see two hillocks, inland? |
18405 | Do you think he will do? |
18405 | Does she fall off? |
18405 | Dot is all recht, no? |
18405 | Eh? |
18405 | For a commander? |
18405 | From the top of the grand staircase? |
18405 | General,resumed Count Boisberthelot,"considering what this man has done, do you not think that his superiors have a duty to perform?" |
18405 | Gentlemen,said Wilder, with a peculiar and perhaps an ironical emphasis on the word,"what would ye have? |
18405 | Gold? 18405 Gold?" |
18405 | Goot bizness, eh? |
18405 | Had n''t she better get out of our way? |
18405 | Have you the_ Moniteur_ in your stateroom, commander? |
18405 | He was killed, I suppose? |
18405 | Heads? |
18405 | Here, you, Wi- wi, what name that? |
18405 | Hold!--Does the ship mind her helm at all? |
18405 | How can that be? 18405 How heading when last seen?" |
18405 | How long did they have you in Moro Castle, Doc? |
18405 | How many ships have been lost by this in fair weather, and not a man saved to tell how the craft was fooled away? |
18405 | How you vass, Cabtin Burke? |
18405 | How, then? |
18405 | How-- how many blacks have you on the plantation? |
18405 | Hundert days to Falmouth, eh? |
18405 | I always objected to keeping those guns on the premises? |
18405 | I rather think we can,said Fullalove,"eh, colonel?" |
18405 | I say, friend Bungo, how shall we manage? 18405 I say, master, do n''t you smell gunpowder?" |
18405 | I see that plain enough; but, shall it be said that another did the duty of Edward Earing? 18405 I slipped the barrel back once, did n''t I?" |
18405 | I thought so much; and my two boys? |
18405 | In a tempest? |
18405 | Is my poor girl safe, sir? |
18405 | Is n''t it interesting,she remarked,"to hear them making the soundings?" |
18405 | Is n''t it strange,said Boston, as he tasted the contents of the can,"that this stuff should keep so long?" |
18405 | Is n''t she right in our track, Boston? |
18405 | Is the boat- gun on the forecastle loaded? |
18405 | Is the river up again? |
18405 | Make more sail, sir, and run into the body of the fleet, or I shall fire into you: why do n''t you, sir, keep in the wake of the commodore? |
18405 | Mr. Brown, will you please go and put the irons on him? |
18405 | Mr. Cringle,said he,"you have an uncle in Cork, I believe?" |
18405 | Must we fire upon the slaves? |
18405 | No hands? |
18405 | Now lads, I mean to fight this ship while a plank of her( stamping on the deck) swims beneath my foot and-- WHAT DO YOU SAY? |
18405 | Now then, my brave lads, what''s the matter here, that you are all sitting on your tails like monkeys? |
18405 | Now, what d''ye call''em? |
18405 | Old man, where is Pat Doolan? |
18405 | Omen? 18405 On the_ Saint Esprit_?" |
18405 | Pat Doolan, my man, open the door, will ye? |
18405 | Ready, Doc? |
18405 | Ready? |
18405 | Second time, what? |
18405 | Shall I cut? |
18405 | Shall I cut? |
18405 | Shall I tell the steward to serve out grog to the men who went with me? |
18405 | She''s got steam up-- a full head; sec the escape- jet? 18405 Shots? |
18405 | Sir? |
18405 | Sir? |
18405 | So you know of the dollars? |
18405 | Still there? |
18405 | Sure, what do you take me for? |
18405 | Sure, where d''you think I''d be findin''the money to buy wrecks with? 18405 Tempest? |
18405 | That''s the man,I said;"have you heard anything of him?" |
18405 | The ginger- headed feller? |
18405 | Then, commander, I take it affairs are not going so very badly? |
18405 | There''s a hooker called the_ Yan- Shan_ piled on the rocks down the coast and we''re going to leave our cards on her-- savvy? |
18405 | This present crew of yours? |
18405 | Up with the helm; what are you about, quartermaster? |
18405 | Vat dis is, eh? 18405 Vat you tinks, yenthelmen? |
18405 | Vat''bout dot bett now, Cabtin? |
18405 | Vat''bout dot bett you make mit me, Cabtin? |
18405 | Was he really hidden in the bottom of the hold? |
18405 | Was it? 18405 Well, sir; see the false ports, and the white eyebrows?" |
18405 | Well, then, where did the beggar get that Snider? |
18405 | Well? |
18405 | What are they giving now in Paris? |
18405 | What are we to do now, Amyas, in the devil''s name? |
18405 | What breaks in me? 18405 What can he do? |
18405 | What d''ye see? |
18405 | What do you see aloft? |
18405 | What do you want of pistols, Boston? |
18405 | What does dysentery really stand for? |
18405 | What game, sir? 18405 What have we now?" |
18405 | What have you to say? |
18405 | What is he after now? |
18405 | What is zem? |
18405 | What meant you by hauling your wind just now, sir? |
18405 | What now? |
18405 | What smell of brimstone is that, steward? |
18405 | What soulless thing is this that laughs before a wreck? 18405 What tragedy docs this tell of?" |
18405 | What vessel is that astern of us? |
18405 | What you call''eem-- zat light? 18405 What you zink?" |
18405 | What''s a Hohono horror? |
18405 | What''s that to you? |
18405 | What''s the matter now? |
18405 | What''s the matter now? |
18405 | What''s the matter, d''you say? |
18405 | Whatt now, b''ye? 18405 When we_ do_? |
18405 | Where are the rest of the crew? |
18405 | Where is my wife, Salvation Yeo? |
18405 | Where the deuce do you get so much dust at sea? |
18405 | Where''s the lazarette in this kind of a ship? |
18405 | Where,said one of the seamen,--"where do you go to, my lad?" |
18405 | Which way? |
18405 | Who are you saking here, an''please ye? |
18405 | Who be you, in the name of the Lord? |
18405 | Who indeed? |
18405 | Who lets men drown? |
18405 | Who run the smack down? |
18405 | Who starves honest men? |
18405 | Who was it? |
18405 | Why do n''t you heave to, sir? |
18405 | Why sing ye not out for him, if ye see him? |
18405 | Why, boy, why? |
18405 | Will you have the goodness to say if he be at home? |
18405 | Will you not send for the gunner, sir? |
18405 | Wo n''t you pass further aft, sir? |
18405 | Would you mind pointing it in some other direction? |
18405 | You do n''t mean to say you bought the wreck? |
18405 | You do n''t want us to go in to La Guayra again, sir? 18405 You know zees coas''?" |
18405 | You know zees coast long? |
18405 | You mean relentless? |
18405 | You see that man at the wheel, Mr. Arkwright? 18405 You t''ink you fly de flack on de_ Hilda_ nex''_ Sonndag_, Cabtin? |
18405 | You t''ink you get a chanst now,_ hein_? 18405 You''ave seen gold?" |
18405 | Zat light, what you call''eem? |
18405 | A gun? |
18405 | Ah leaf you starfe, no?" |
18405 | All ready the boats there? |
18405 | Am I cut off from the last fond pride of meanest shipwrecked captains? |
18405 | And Boisberthelot added thoughtfully,--"What do you think of the Chevalier de Dieuzie, La Vieuville?" |
18405 | And how long will this voyage take? |
18405 | And if I have ventured rashly, sinfully, if you will, the lives of any of you in my own private quarrel, am I not punished? |
18405 | And now, then, my masters, shall we inshore again and burn La Guayra?" |
18405 | And what about the_ Rickmers_? |
18405 | And what did he get for it?" |
18405 | And what help is there? |
18405 | Any glory in that? |
18405 | Are tanks at sea filled to the top?" |
18405 | As I hauled in, I again tasted the umbrella, and another question came to me:"What''ave you do? |
18405 | At this hour who would pass now? |
18405 | Ay, he has got it himself, and would open our eyes to what is coming? |
18405 | Belay all that-- down with the helm, now-- don''t you see she has stern way yet? |
18405 | Believe ye, men, in the things called omens? |
18405 | Boisberthelot said to Vieuville:--"Do you believe in God, chevalier?" |
18405 | But aye, old mast, we both grow old together; sound in our hulls, though, are we not my ship? |
18405 | But if Ah dond''t get de crew of de poor lettle_ Hilda_ to work mein sheep, Ah dond''t t''ink ve comes home so quick as hundert days, no?''" |
18405 | But their astonishment may be imagined when, on coming alongside, they were hailed in good English with,"Wo nt you heave us a rope now?" |
18405 | But what availed these rags? |
18405 | But what? |
18405 | But where? |
18405 | By the way, when will he be king?" |
18405 | Can we face a gale of wind in that state, or can we not?" |
18405 | Cold, cold-- I shiver!--How now? |
18405 | Could we? |
18405 | D''ye feel brave men, brave?" |
18405 | D''ye see him? |
18405 | D''ye see him?" |
18405 | De bett vass--''who is de first on shore come,''_ Heim_? |
18405 | Dead? |
18405 | Did we sail round the world for nothing?" |
18405 | Do n''t you see how she drags us over? |
18405 | Do you fancy that I have nothing to lose? |
18405 | Do you see the vessel that is driving down upon us so fast?" |
18405 | Dot vill gif you t''ree days''start, no?" |
18405 | Drew, there, are your men ready?" |
18405 | Eh, Takia?" |
18405 | Eh,_ Pelicans_?" |
18405 | Eh? |
18405 | Every morning when he came on deck the first question to the mate would be:"Any ships in sight, mister?" |
18405 | Gone?--gone? |
18405 | Goot, no?" |
18405 | Great God, where is the ship?" |
18405 | Gun? |
18405 | Have I not lost----?" |
18405 | Have you ever studied organic chemistry?" |
18405 | He came soon after on deck and hailed the lookout:"Which way is she standing?" |
18405 | He hailed the mizzen top:"Can you two hinder them from firing that gun?" |
18405 | He held his tongue as long as he could: but at last his surprise and dissatisfaction burst out of him,"Wo n''t that bring him out on us?" |
18405 | His inspection was long and minute, and, while the glass was at his eye, Sharpe asked him half in a whisper, could he make out anything? |
18405 | His lip curled, in high professional pride, and he muttered with scorn,--"Does he imagine that we sleep? |
18405 | How can it be overcome? |
18405 | How can it be subdued? |
18405 | How can one arrest an object in its course, whose onslaught must be avoided? |
18405 | How can one guard against these terrible gyrations? |
18405 | How could he be short- handed when everybody knows that Daly''s boardin''-house is chock- full of fightin''Dutchmen? |
18405 | How could them be writin''? |
18405 | How fetter this monstrous mechanism of shipwreck? |
18405 | How foresee its coming and goings, its recoils, its halts, its shocks? |
18405 | How is one to cope with the caprices of an inclined plane? |
18405 | How many years ago was it that he had passed this river''s mouth? |
18405 | How many? |
18405 | How should he face his mother? |
18405 | How thick are they?" |
18405 | How''ll the carpet do?" |
18405 | How''s he to complain? |
18405 | How''s her head now?" |
18405 | How''s her head, quartermaster?" |
18405 | How, got the start? |
18405 | I cried to the men,"do you hear her? |
18405 | I divided it, with its entrails, into eighteen portions and by a well- known method at sea, of"Who shall have this?" |
18405 | I said to the girl,"How long have you been in this dreadful position?" |
18405 | I who have adventured in this voyage all I am worth, and more; who, if I fall, must return to beggary and scorn? |
18405 | In answer to the question"Who are you?" |
18405 | In the dog- watches he would come forward, with his eternal questions:"What is wizzin? |
18405 | In ze contry?" |
18405 | Into the Spaniards''mouths?" |
18405 | Is that customary in iron ships?" |
18405 | Is this the end of all my bursting prayers? |
18405 | Is''t night?" |
18405 | It is all right, no? |
18405 | It will very naturally be asked, What could be the reason for such a revolt? |
18405 | Jacobs?" |
18405 | Keep her full, and let her go through the water; do you hear, quartermaster?" |
18405 | Kennedy?" |
18405 | Like a gun?" |
18405 | Like dis, eh?" |
18405 | Macca- ackavow then got up and said,"You will not sleep on shore, then, Mattie?" |
18405 | Michael turned--"And what should I come back for, then, to go home where no one knoweth me? |
18405 | No troubles I hope?" |
18405 | No? |
18405 | Now what I want to know is where''d he get the Snider? |
18405 | Now, where''s the sail- locker? |
18405 | O God, how should he find his brother? |
18405 | Oh, de_ Hedwig Rickmers_ is a goot sheep, no? |
18405 | Old Schenke? |
18405 | Peter, you''re not fond of flatfish, are you, my boy? |
18405 | Really?" |
18405 | S''pose we howk them ashore?" |
18405 | See the doors forward, there? |
18405 | Shall we be dragged by him to the bottom of the sea? |
18405 | Shall we be towed by him to the infernal world? |
18405 | She said that this delay was but natural: was it not the same event every year? |
18405 | Silas Staveley, smite me that boy over the head, the young monkey; why is he not down at the powder- room door?" |
18405 | So the rum was produced forthwith, and as I lighted a pipe and filled a glass of swizzle, I struck in,"Messmates, I hope you have all shipped?" |
18405 | Some men would have put into the Falklands and landed----""Und spoil a goot bassage, eh? |
18405 | Somebody was coming? |
18405 | Strangest problems of life seem clearing; but clouds sweep between-- Is my journey''s end coming? |
18405 | Supposin''you find it, how are you to cart this stuff ashore and bank it? |
18405 | The Spaniards, seeing him wait for them, gave a shout of joy-- was the Englishman mad? |
18405 | The skin is calked with oakum, is it not?" |
18405 | The_ Hedwig Rickmers_? |
18405 | Then came the never- ceasing,"''Ave you know of ze Incas?" |
18405 | Then the conversation was resumed:--"By the way, has the report of Dampierre''s death been confirmed?" |
18405 | Then, not believing that she understood me, I cried out,"Are you English?" |
18405 | There was a step on the deck behind me, and again came the voice,"Ze man, ze man zere what''ave he do? |
18405 | Treenail?" |
18405 | Treenail?" |
18405 | Tventig dollars to feefty-- dot you goes home quicker as me, no?" |
18405 | Vat it is, Cabtin? |
18405 | Ve goes to Falmouth-- you_ und_ me,_ hein_? |
18405 | Was it right to be frightened already? |
18405 | Was she coming to his aid? |
18405 | Was she sheering off? |
18405 | Was there even a single reason to be so? |
18405 | We felt easy about the_ Rhondda_( for had we not, time and again, shown them our stern on the long pull from Green St. to the outer anchorage? |
18405 | We may thank Heaven and the captain, I can tell you that, my lads; but now, where''s the chart, Robinson? |
18405 | Well, what are you bothering about?" |
18405 | What can he be after? |
18405 | What chance had we boys in our clinker- built against the thews and sinews of trained whalemen? |
18405 | What d''ye see?" |
18405 | What did all this matter to her? |
18405 | What do you make it, Gaud?" |
18405 | What does he conjecture we have been about, since the middle watch was set?" |
18405 | What fitter craft could haunt that Stygian flood? |
18405 | What happens under such conditions?" |
18405 | What have they been doing all these fifty years?" |
18405 | What is to be done with this complication? |
18405 | What make you all this boder for-- come you to help us to wake poor ould Kate there, and bring you the whisky wid you?" |
18405 | What price the_ Hilda_ now for the Merchants''Cup?" |
18405 | What to her was the speech the man was making? |
18405 | What was the good of getting up or going to bed now? |
18405 | What was this? |
18405 | What will we eat?" |
18405 | What''ll we do for canvas? |
18405 | What''s that he said? |
18405 | What''s the use of general cargo to the like of me? |
18405 | What''s this?--green? |
18405 | Whatt now?" |
18405 | When would the time come when she need wait no longer? |
18405 | Where could she be? |
18405 | Where has she been all this time? |
18405 | Where in the devil are you steering to?" |
18405 | Where is it now?" |
18405 | Where is the second hearse? |
18405 | Where''ll we be then? |
18405 | Where''s your profits to come from on this job?" |
18405 | Which cable was ranged last night-- the best bower?" |
18405 | Which one was it? |
18405 | Who can tell if they were saved?" |
18405 | Who ever helped Stubb, or kept Stubb awake, but Stubb''s own unwinking eye? |
18405 | Who knew but what there might be English among those sun- browned, half- naked masses of panting wretches? |
18405 | Who knows how her head is?" |
18405 | Why did this day, this hour, this very moment, seem to her more painful than the preceding? |
18405 | Why make a long story of what took but five minutes to do? |
18405 | Why''ave you do zat?" |
18405 | Why''ave''e go like so?" |
18405 | Why, what are you doing here, eh?" |
18405 | Will I have eyes at the bottom of the sea, supposing I descend those endless stairs? |
18405 | Will ye not save my ship?" |
18405 | Will you come along, Brown?" |
18405 | Would they never hear? |
18405 | Writin''? |
18405 | Ye are not other men, but my arms and my legs; and so obey me.--Where''s the whale? |
18405 | Yo''doan''want no tea, eh?" |
18405 | You beat''m mit de_ Hilda_,_ nichtwahr_?" |
18405 | You beat''m mit dot putty leetle barque? |
18405 | You do n''t mean to swamp us in a shove through that surf, do you?" |
18405 | You noticed that dark stain there between the steps and the door?" |
18405 | You t''ink you beat de_ Hedwig Rickmers_ too, Cabtin? |
18405 | You t''nk you got so fast a sheep as mein, eh? |
18405 | You''ave know ze land, ze peoples?" |
18405 | Zay say zere is no gold? |
18405 | Ze light zere?" |
18405 | all my life- long fidelities? |
18405 | ejaculated Gaud quickly,"why should I not be disturbed particularly, Fantec?" |
18405 | gone down again?" |
18405 | he asked;"you like''eem?" |
18405 | he exclaimed between his teeth:"what do you mean by interfering with me? |
18405 | he should still go before me, my pilot; and yet to be seen again? |
18405 | he soars away with it!--Where''s the old man now? |
18405 | how valiantly I seek to drive out of others''hearts what''s clinched so fast in mine!--The Parsee-- the Parsee!--gone, gone? |
18405 | must ye then perish, and without me? |
18405 | mutinous scoundrels?" |
18405 | muttered Bayliss, uneasily;"how can you see that?" |
18405 | my line? |
18405 | whence and whither bound, my hearty?" |
18405 | where was this_ LÃ © opoldine_ now? |
18405 | which way?" |
18405 | who ever conquered it? |
28094 | A curse upon thee,cries the King,"who comest unbid to me; But what from traitor''s blood should spring, save traitors like to thee? |
28094 | And how much will you take for your maxims? |
28094 | And so,said the king,"if they are of no use to me I lose my money?" |
28094 | And what is it we are to believe of his resurrection? |
28094 | And what race are you of? |
28094 | And what remedy is there for this? |
28094 | And why eight pennies? |
28094 | But how,replied his friend,"is this to be brought about?" |
28094 | Did I not tell you,returned he,"that wild beasts had devoured them?" |
28094 | Do you,answered Orlando,"believe that God made Adam?" |
28094 | Dost thou know me? |
28094 | For what reason do you this? |
28094 | Good even, good fellow,said Faustus to the clown,"what shall I give thee to let me eat my bellyful of hay?" |
28094 | Hast thou,quoth Mephistophiles,"sworn thyself an enemy to God and to all creatures? |
28094 | How can I rejoice? |
28094 | How darest_ thou_,replied he,"molest the earth? |
28094 | How do you see now? |
28094 | I am the Emperor Jovinian,rejoined he;"canst thou have forgotten me? |
28094 | I sleep not,quoth Rodrigo;"but tell me who art thou, For, in the midst of darkness, much light is on thy brow?" |
28094 | Is there,he impiously asked,"is there any other god than me?" |
28094 | Madam,said the vexed soldier,"what have you done?" |
28094 | My dear brother,said the king,"what is the cause of your sorrow? |
28094 | My dear friend,exclaimed the operator,"how do things appear to you?" |
28094 | My dear friend,said he,"what do you perceive?" |
28094 | My friend,said the emperor,"what merchandise have you to dispose of?" |
28094 | Now, what is it, Lady Alda,( you may hear the words they say,)"Bringeth sorrow to thy pillow, and chaseth sleep away?" |
28094 | O heaven,said he to himself,"seest thou this deed? |
28094 | Show me the cause why? |
28094 | THE LION[4] that hath bathed his paws in seas of Libyan gore, Shall he not battle for the laws and liberties of yore? 28094 This is most true,"quoth Faustus;"but tell me, Mephistophiles, would thou be in my case as I am now?" |
28094 | What art thou? |
28094 | What is the second truth? |
28094 | What modern poet,says he,"would have dared to imagine that_ trait_, at once so natural and touching?" |
28094 | What news be these, Alarcos, that you your word did plight, To be a husband to my child, and love her day and night? 28094 Who are you?" |
28094 | Who art thou? |
28094 | Who is there? |
28094 | Who is this sinner,quoth the Pope,"that at my foot doth kneel?" |
28094 | Why was I born? |
28094 | Why would you waken the poor child? 28094 Why, thou most audacious scoundrel,"said the knight,"darest thou call thyself the emperor? |
28094 | Why,quoth the spirit,"mayst not thou instead of the emperor embrace these fair ladies? |
28094 | Woe is me,he cried,"for what strange doom am I reserved?" |
28094 | Wouldst thou, O Lord, that I tell what has befallen me to my wife and children, that they also may believe? |
28094 | -- V."Ask Count Alarcos, if of yore his word he did not plight To be my husband evermore, and love me day and night? |
28094 | --"Enough,"said Ferracute,"I clearly perceive all this; but how could he ascend into heaven?" |
28094 | --"I grant it,"replied the Giant;"he might be born of a virgin; but if he was the Son of God, how could he die, for God never dies?" |
28094 | --"What law do you follow?" |
28094 | --"Who is this Christ in whom you profess to believe?" |
28094 | --The Giant, hearing this, was greatly astonished, and exclaimed to Orlando,"Why do you talk so idly? |
28094 | A fair angel, that could not tarry two days in this place? |
28094 | After they had arrived, and delivered the emperors pleasure, the statue exclaimed:"Friends, look up; what see ye written upon my forehead?" |
28094 | And here it may be asked, why God permitted those to perish who in no wise had defiled themselves with women? |
28094 | And so, crossing the hermit''s path, he said to him,"Whither bound, my friend?" |
28094 | And thus, Faustus, hast thou heard my last sentence, and I pray thee, how dost thou like it? |
28094 | And when he was burnt, Fulgentius came to them and said,"Good sirs, have you done my lord''s commandment?" |
28094 | And when this was done, the emperor called unto him his steward, and said,"How may I rid this varlet from the world, that thus hath defamed me?" |
28094 | And when was it made?" |
28094 | And who rules them?" |
28094 | And why man was made after the image of God?" |
28094 | And within three days after he called his servant unto him, saying,"Art thou resolved? |
28094 | And, considering all these circumstances, how can_ I_ rejoice? |
28094 | Are not these Christians then types for us? |
28094 | Are not these fair ladies greatly to be pitied that thus consume their youth at the pleasure of one only man?" |
28094 | Are there not a thousand plays that pass with great success and applause, though they have many greater absurdities, and nonsense in abundance? |
28094 | Asia, Europe, and Africa, I had a sight of; and being so high, quoth I to my spirit,''Tell me how these kingdoms lie, and what they are called?'' |
28094 | At which Charles replied,"Who art thou, Lord?" |
28094 | Beginnest thou now to turn into a poor man''s house, where thou hast no power, and wert not able to keep thine own two days?" |
28094 | Bernard,"quoth Alphonso,"what means this warlike guise? |
28094 | But Lucifer perceiving his thought, spake to him,"My Faustus, how likest thou this crew of mine?" |
28094 | But the empress became very sorrowful, and said:"Oh, my lord, what am I to think? |
28094 | But the porter, beholding a naked man, exclaimed in the greatest amaze,"Friend, who are you, and why come you here in such a guise?" |
28094 | But what think ye of my breath? |
28094 | Caitiffs, do ye fear? |
28094 | Can you not yourself come down from a mountain, and return thither? |
28094 | Did not the sun yesterday rise in the east and set in the west, and yet rise again in the east to- day? |
28094 | Do you not know they would have procured the pardon of my sins from God? |
28094 | Does not the bird in the air ascend and descend? |
28094 | Does not the wheel of the mill descend low, and return to its height again? |
28094 | Dost thou see how even irrational things have rendered him good for the service he performed? |
28094 | Faustus said,"I would gladly know of thee if thou wert a man in manner and form as I am, what wouldst thou do to please both God and man?" |
28094 | Full of admiration, he exclaimed,"Tell me where you procured this beautiful stone?" |
28094 | Have I not known thee more than thirty years, and borne thee many children? |
28094 | Have I not therefore cause for wretchedness?" |
28094 | He received him like the first, and said,"Do you believe me mad, that I should expose myself to such peril? |
28094 | Here Faustus said,"But how came lord and master Lucifer to have so great a fall from heaven?" |
28094 | Here are the greatest delicacies, the most enrapturing harmony; why do you not rejoice?" |
28094 | Hereat the spirit answered nothing, but Lucifer himself said,"Ho, ho, ho, Faustus, how likest thou the creation of the world?" |
28094 | How can I behold thee dead, and not die myself? |
28094 | How can this fellow have acquired so intimate a knowledge of what has passed between us?" |
28094 | How have we dealt by thee?" |
28094 | How likest thou this, my Faustus? |
28094 | How likest thou thy wedding? |
28094 | How many are there? |
28094 | How shall we think to look for grace, if this poor child we slay, When ranged before Christ Jesu''s face at the great judgment day?" |
28094 | How? |
28094 | If thus injustice triumph, why do I remain here? |
28094 | If you to- day feared me, who am mortal, how much more ought I to dread my Creator and my Redeemer, our Lord Jesus Christ? |
28094 | Immediately Focus was apprehended, and conducted to the emperor, who said,"Friend, what do I hear of thee? |
28094 | In the agony of his heart, he said:"What shall I do? |
28094 | In the middle of the night he heard a voice saying,"O duke, that liest here, what askest thou that I can do for thee?" |
28094 | In what place stands it? |
28094 | It appeared as if an angel came and addressed me in the following manner:''My friend, would you see what is become of your companions?'' |
28094 | It is a joyful city, it is a gallant day,''Tis the Campeador''s wedding, and who will bide away? |
28094 | Much moved at the recital, the emperor sent for the seneschal, and said,"What is this I hear of thee?" |
28094 | Much surprised at this, he called together his philosophers, and said,"My masters, how is this? |
28094 | My father is dead, and my mother is old, and may not travel; how should I then bring them with me? |
28094 | My house is large and broad, and made of stones and mortar, how should I bring then with me my house? |
28094 | No treason was in Sancho''s blood, no stain in mine doth lie-- Below the throne what knight will own the coward calumny? |
28094 | Now when the second son heard this, he came to him, saying,"My brother, by what law or title occupy you this tree?" |
28094 | Observing that he was an old man, the emperor said,"Have you not a wife?" |
28094 | Or is it that the day is come-- one of the hateful three, When they, with trumpet, fife, and drum, make heathen game of me?" |
28094 | Quoth Faustus,"I will know of thee if I might see hell, and take a view thereof?" |
28094 | Quoth Faustus,"Why came you not in another manner of shape?" |
28094 | Quoth he to Lucifer,"And how cometh it that so many filthy forms are in the world?" |
28094 | She answered:"My lord, how can you ask such a question? |
28094 | The Duke of Anhalt notwithstanding could not withhold to ask Faustus with what reason there were such young fruits to be had at that time of the year? |
28094 | The King leans from his chamber, from the balcony on high--"What means this furious clamour my palace- porch so nigh?" |
28094 | The devil said,"What wouldst thou have, Faustus? |
28094 | The gate was opened; and the porter, struck with the strange appearance he exhibited, replied,"In the name of all that is marvellous, what are you?" |
28094 | The innocent suffers for the guilty: why permittest thou such things? |
28094 | The judge, hearing this, said to the bystanders,"He says true?" |
28094 | The other, turning to the nobles who sat or stood at the table, continued:"Tell me, on your allegiance, which of us two is your lord and master?" |
28094 | The owner of the mansion, hearing the noise, and well knowing the reason, though he pretended ignorance, asked"What was the matter?" |
28094 | The pretended emperor made no reply, but addressing the real one, said:"Friend, how darest thou to call thyself emperor? |
28094 | The wife then said,"My lord, what has become of our children?" |
28094 | Then said Fulgentius,"For Christ''s love, tell me that commandment?" |
28094 | Then said the emperor,"What clothing had the knight on?" |
28094 | Then said the king,"I pray thee tell me by what place thou purposest to ride?" |
28094 | Then said the king,"What sayest thou? |
28094 | Then said the king:"Why speakest thou so? |
28094 | This much troubled him; and the devil, ever on the alert, met him in the likeness of a man, and said,"My son, what has made you so sorrowful?" |
28094 | Thought he,"How shall I now do? |
28094 | Thy time, Faustus, weareth away; then why wilt thou not take thy pleasure of the world? |
28094 | To this said Faustus:"Then thou didst also beguile me?" |
28094 | Upon this cross an image of Jesus Christ was suspended; and the stag thus addressed the hunter:"Why dost thou persecute me, Placidus? |
28094 | Upon what occasion hath heaven repaid me with this reward, by sufferance, to suffer me to perish? |
28094 | What dost thou merit? |
28094 | What evil had the poor man done that he should be drowned?" |
28094 | What further? |
28094 | What further? |
28094 | What further? |
28094 | What further? |
28094 | What have I done? |
28094 | What helpeth my wailing?" |
28094 | What helpeth the emperor, king, prince, duke, earl, baron, lord, knight, esquire, or gentleman, to cry for mercy being there? |
28094 | What mean I then to complain, where no help is? |
28094 | What mind art thou in now?" |
28094 | What more need I add? |
28094 | What more shall we say? |
28094 | What seizeth upon thy limbs, other than robbing of my life? |
28094 | What substance is it of? |
28094 | What they are called? |
28094 | What wonder, then, that God should after three days revive his Son? |
28094 | When he saw these he would needs know of his spirit what waters they were, and from whence they came? |
28094 | When the eldest son was letten blood, the king said unto them all three,"My dear friends, where is your father buried?" |
28094 | Wherefore was I created a man? |
28094 | Who are you? |
28094 | Why hast thou broken my law?" |
28094 | Why hast thou left me sorrowful and alone? |
28094 | Why then did you take possession of it?" |
28094 | You should have gone to Palestina, and Bethlehem in Judea; how came you hither? |
28094 | _ Archbishop Turpin''s Vision, and the King''s Lamentation for Orlando._ What more shall we say? |
28094 | _ Master._"My child, have you stolen your verses, or made them?" |
28094 | and what do you want?" |
28094 | for there is no help for me, no shield, no defence, no comfort; where is my help? |
28094 | friend Faustus, what have you done to conceal this matter so long from us? |
28094 | he said, when he had come within a little space,"How shall I brook the cheerful look of my kind lady''s face? |
28094 | his face before, There stood a man, all clothed in vesture shining white: Thus said the vision,"Sleepest thou, or wakest thou, Sir Knight?" |
28094 | how happy wert thou if, as an unreasonable beast, thou mightest die with a soul? |
28094 | is it that some Pagan gay doth Marlotes''daughter we d, And that they bear my scorned fair in triumph to his bed? |
28094 | is the Count of Saldaña indeed coming?'' |
28094 | must this be so? |
28094 | said the knight,"and what is your name?" |
28094 | the captive cries,"what means this din so loud? |
28094 | what barbarian cry is this? |
28094 | what can deliver me out of the fearful tormenting flame, the which I see prepared for me? |
28094 | what dost thou to me?" |
28094 | what foul music is this? |
28094 | what will be my destiny? |
28094 | whither is pity and mercy fled? |
28094 | who shall call thee master? |
28094 | wouldst thou verily have a spirit? |
28094 | you droop your head Tell, Count Alarcos, tell your wife, what makes your eyes so red?" |
35452 | And who are you? |
35452 | HUMAN NATURE? |
35452 | I''ve heard it said that he Was found in France By strangest chance-- But what is that to me? |
35452 | THE SHADOW- HARP[ Illustration] This is the harp of which nobody sings-- Where is the keyboard and where are the strings? |
12758 | A month? 12758 After all, if I go, will you follow?" |
12758 | Ah, Master Christian,said he, squeezing my hand,"what happy circumstance brings you here? |
12758 | Ah, is that you, Toubac? |
12758 | Alas,said he,"I have long lain on these dry and prickly herbs, I am now on the bed of roses; but what shall be the serpent?" |
12758 | And now? |
12758 | And the only answer you made him was a joke? |
12758 | And very likely you sometimes went there when you knew that he was not at home? |
12758 | And you have found nothing which could give you a clew as to his purpose? |
12758 | And you? |
12758 | Are we in time, do you think? |
12758 | Are you going to Malaga? |
12758 | Arrested her? |
12758 | Art thou subject to this cruel disorder? |
12758 | At four o''clock-- it was very warm, was n''t it? |
12758 | At what time? |
12758 | Blanca? |
12758 | But Don Nicasio says--"He, too? 12758 But I ask thee whether he is lively or phlegmatic, cautious or imprudent?" |
12758 | But from whom? 12758 But how did you come in, sir?" |
12758 | But how is it possible,said the good man,"that the giver can be more wretched than the receiver?" |
12758 | But the justice of the peace? 12758 But the queen,"said Zadig;"for heaven''s sake, knowest thou nothing of the queen''s fate?" |
12758 | But what is it? |
12758 | But why, dear lady? |
12758 | But why,said Zadig,"is it necessary that there should be crimes and misfortunes, and that these misfortunes should fall on the good?" |
12758 | But, Commodore,said I,"why not bathe? |
12758 | But, as a matter of fact, what could he have been doing in the cistern? 12758 By the way,"I asked,"where was Gabriela when she was arrested?" |
12758 | Can any harm come to me from it? 12758 Can you save him?" |
12758 | Can you show it me? |
12758 | Come, come, what sort of talk? 12758 Consider well what you are saying; must this really be?" |
12758 | Cousin,I resumed,"how far may it be from here to the ruins of Geierstein?" |
12758 | Did Orcan take thy wife from thee? |
12758 | Did he work for the King of Prussia? |
12758 | Did you like the Alhambra? |
12758 | Die? |
12758 | Dilemma? |
12758 | Do you believe it? |
12758 | Do you believe it? |
12758 | Do you feel well? |
12758 | Do you imagine you can make me believe such a thing? |
12758 | Do you know what you are thinking, child? |
12758 | Do you mean then that we shall not meet again? |
12758 | Do you not know that everything here on earth must obey me, that it is in my power to do everything? 12758 Do you promise?" |
12758 | Do you recognize the nail which deprived your husband of life? |
12758 | Do you remember that Doctor Parent sent you to sleep? |
12758 | Do you remember that diamond necklace which you lent me to wear at the ministerial ball? |
12758 | Do you see him? |
12758 | Do you wish to go further? 12758 Done,"he cried;"but how is the bargain to be made?" |
12758 | Father,said Zadig,"what is the meaning of all this? |
12758 | From--? |
12758 | Happily, I said my prayers at night,said the peasant;"without that, where would I be?" |
12758 | Has nobody been down here since the little man? |
12758 | Has that not already happened? 12758 Hast thou any witnesses?" |
12758 | Have you not yet been delivered from purgatory by our prayers, and all the Masses for your soul, which we have said for you? |
12758 | Have you nothing to tell me? |
12758 | Have you really a lover? |
12758 | He has written to you? |
12758 | He is going, is he? |
12758 | Hold your tongue, chatterbox,said her husband, in a low voice;"do you want to kill madame?" |
12758 | How did he die? |
12758 | How if I were to propose a piece of business that would bring you in as much money as you require? |
12758 | How so? |
12758 | How-- the third? |
12758 | How? 12758 I could not say to him,''Go ahead and do it,''could I? |
12758 | I distrust myself,said he,"but may I presume to ask the favor of thee to clear up one doubt that still remains in my mind? |
12758 | I know of something that will set you straight in a moment,answered Castanier;"but first you would have to--""Do what?" |
12758 | I see him--"And the spider-- is it big? |
12758 | I? 12758 In what place,"said Zadig,"didst thou lend the five hundred ounces to this infidel?" |
12758 | In what, pray, beautiful Azora? 12758 Is my traveling companion deaf, dumb, or asleep?" |
12758 | Is n''t the night damp? |
12758 | Is that a certain sign? |
12758 | Is there any truth in it? |
12758 | It is the Book of Destinies,said the hermit;"wouldst thou choose to look into it?" |
12758 | Little chump,he said, his eyes sparkling,"what makes you look at it? |
12758 | Madame, will you be so good as to tell your husband that the bill of exchange on Watschildine, which was behind time, has just been presented? 12758 Master Christian,"said he,"how in the devil do you pass your time? |
12758 | May I take the liberty of asking thee,said Zadig,"how long thou hast followed this noble profession?" |
12758 | Never? 12758 Nothing at all? |
12758 | Now, sir,cried he,"where would you like to go?" |
12758 | Oh, goodness, yes,said Aquilina;"is it not the best way of keeping them safe? |
12758 | Oh, very well; and are you not laughing too? 12758 Oh, you think she does? |
12758 | On purpose, your honor? 12758 Piquoizeau,"said the cashier, walking into the porter''s room,"what made you let anybody come up after four o''clock?" |
12758 | Separate? 12758 Shall I have time to repent?" |
12758 | Shall I make off with the money that I must pay on the registration of that conveyance? 12758 Sir Thomas Hawerburch?" |
12758 | Sir? |
12758 | So that is what you do with your love letters, is it? |
12758 | So you do not know that the Minister decided this morning to put down your Society? |
12758 | So you do not love me well enough to marry me? |
12758 | So your husband runs into debt? |
12758 | So, he had told you before, had he? 12758 Strange,"said Zadig,"may I presume to ask thee what it is that women only are permitted to touch?" |
12758 | Suppose that the devil were to make a bid for your soul, would you not give it to him now in exchange for the power of God? 12758 Tell me now, old man; is n''t it the creaking of the wheels that sings in your ears?" |
12758 | Tell me,I asked the judge one day,"do you think you will ever capture this woman?" |
12758 | That is to say, you admit that you assassinated your husband? |
12758 | Then how did you know it? |
12758 | Then was it you who betrayed him? |
12758 | Then what''s to be done? |
12758 | Then, dost thou know what I did? 12758 They call this the_ Owl''s Ear_?" |
12758 | To me? |
12758 | Ungrateful? |
12758 | Upon what does happiness depend? |
12758 | Very often? 12758 Very well then, why do you go?" |
12758 | Very well, what is it? |
12758 | Was I to boast to him of what I had done? 12758 Well, well, what is the matter now?" |
12758 | Well,cried Zadig,"did not I say that the stone would bear witness? |
12758 | What aileth thee,said he,"my dear spouse? |
12758 | What ails you? |
12758 | What art thou doing? |
12758 | What can I do? |
12758 | What can one do to raise ten thousand francs? |
12758 | What do you mean? 12758 What do you say, sir?" |
12758 | What do you want of me? |
12758 | What form did it have? |
12758 | What have I done to you? |
12758 | What in the devil are you thinking about? |
12758 | What is all this about? |
12758 | What is he doing? |
12758 | What is his attitude in this portrait? |
12758 | What is it, cousin? |
12758 | What is the character of thy debtor? |
12758 | What is your name? |
12758 | What made people build the giant cathedrals I have seen in every country? |
12758 | What must he do besides? |
12758 | What next? 12758 What next? |
12758 | What on earth has happened to you? |
12758 | What passed between you and that diabolical- looking man in those few minutes? |
12758 | What remarkable occurrence could have brought you hither in such haste and at this hour of the morning? |
12758 | What sort of talk? 12758 What sort of talk?" |
12758 | What way did he take? 12758 What, you?" |
12758 | What,said he,"did the king lose his senses? |
12758 | What? 12758 What?" |
12758 | When, pray? 12758 When?" |
12758 | Where is he? |
12758 | Where is the music? |
12758 | Where is your mother''s grave? |
12758 | Who art thou? |
12758 | Who brought this? |
12758 | Who could it be but Blanca, my love, my life? |
12758 | Who is it, Brigitte? |
12758 | Who is strong enough to resist me? |
12758 | Who saw me there? 12758 Who sent him?" |
12758 | Who told thee so, barbarian? |
12758 | Who, I? |
12758 | Whose photograph is it? |
12758 | Why did I come but to share in your crime? |
12758 | Why did you buy provisions? |
12758 | Why did you say,''That was the way it was bound to end''? |
12758 | Why do you ask me? |
12758 | Why do you not save him? |
12758 | Why not? |
12758 | Why were you so much concerned about it? 12758 Why,"said Zadig to the fisherman,"dost thou sink under thy misfortunes?" |
12758 | Why,said some of them,"prohibit the eating of a griffin, if there is no such an animal in nature?" |
12758 | Why? |
12758 | Why? |
12758 | Will you answer all my questions? |
12758 | Without closing your eyes? |
12758 | Would you like to take my place? |
12758 | Yes, what''s to be done? |
12758 | You are talking as if it were a real love letter, Naqui--"Well, am I not handsome enough to receive them? |
12758 | You are very solemn, dear boy; what can be the matter? 12758 You come from Granada?" |
12758 | You have seen him, then? 12758 You love me?" |
12758 | You ran forward? 12758 You say that you bought a necklace of diamonds to replace mine?" |
12758 | You swear it? |
12758 | You wish to marry me? |
12758 | Young man,said the first eunuch,"hast thou seen the queen''s dog?" |
12758 | Your comrades must be a good way behind? |
12758 | _ Fiat?..._said a clerk. |
12758 | _ Mille diables!_thought he, as he threaded his way along the Boulevard de Gand,"have n''t I taken proper precautions? |
12758 | ***** What is the matter with me? |
12758 | --Was not that just what you were thinking?" |
12758 | ... and in India? |
12758 | 1, and, whoever it might be, why did he or she not reply to my courteous salutation? |
12758 | A devil had left unmistakable traces of its passage there; could it have been Ashtaroth? |
12758 | Am I doing wrong in loving you?" |
12758 | Am I going mad? |
12758 | Am I not your last hope of escape?" |
12758 | Amid the horrible confusion of the rabbi''s thoughts, the idea darted through his brain:"Can I be already dead that they did not see me?" |
12758 | And what idea he kept brooding over, after that, who knows? |
12758 | And which of us two will have been the more generous?" |
12758 | And you have no other information concerning the unknown?" |
12758 | And you, did n''t you notice it?" |
12758 | Apropos, Master Christian, where is our landscape of''Saint Odille''?" |
12758 | Are you a Christian if you deny the power of the All- powerful?" |
12758 | Are you sure that he commissioned you to ask me for them?" |
12758 | As soon as I have got in I double lock, and bolt it: I am frightened-- of what? |
12758 | At my age? |
12758 | But by what means? |
12758 | But is it I? |
12758 | But it would see me mix it with the water; and then, would our poisons have any effect on its impalpable body? |
12758 | But sometimes, when I heard him freeing his mind--""Then he used to free his mind to you?" |
12758 | But was it a hallucination? |
12758 | But what was it? |
12758 | But who is he, this invisible being that rules me? |
12758 | Can I be of service to you?" |
12758 | Can it be possible?" |
12758 | Christian Weber approached the negress, and making a rapid pass over her forehead:"Are you there?" |
12758 | Christian, so you''ve found no trace of the imbecile who hanged himself?" |
12758 | Closed? |
12758 | Could Gabriela and Blanca be one and the same? |
12758 | Could she do it? |
12758 | Could she, by some strange intuition, suspect anything? |
12758 | Dead? |
12758 | Did she not tempt the scaffold by the very fact of going thither to take a prominent place? |
12758 | Did you take his number?" |
12758 | Do I need tongs to drag the words out of your mouth?" |
12758 | Do not dogs occasionally bite and strangle their masters? |
12758 | Do you call God_ something_?" |
12758 | Do you hear nothing, Brigitte? |
12758 | Do you know what joy there is in heaven over a sinner that repents? |
12758 | Do you suspect the innkeeper, the most honest man in the world, and belonging to one of the oldest families in Nuremberg?" |
12758 | Do you take me for a fool, telling me that you are going away? |
12758 | Do you want anything that I can give you, dear? |
12758 | Does she say so? |
12758 | Even if I were positive that Gabriela and Blanca were the same person, what could my unfortunate friend do? |
12758 | Father,"she added, turning to the priest who stood beside her,"may I speak a few words to this generous friend?" |
12758 | Fear of what? |
12758 | Feign a sudden illness? |
12758 | Flee the country? |
12758 | For a moment, I thought of magnetism, but who could magnetize that man with those pale, cold, bright eyes? |
12758 | For my part, I have too many other things in my head--""Come, come-- what had he been talking about, when he told you before?" |
12758 | From Gabriela Zahara?" |
12758 | Had I read the conceptions of an idiot-- or the inspirations of a genius which had been realized? |
12758 | Had not he, perhaps, kept a glass hidden in his hand, which he showed to the young woman in her sleep, at the same time as he did the card? |
12758 | Has anyone as yet been able to state correctly the terms of the proportion sum wherein the cashier figures as the unknown_ x_? |
12758 | Has he failed me? |
12758 | Has he turned against me? |
12758 | Has not your husband disinherited his lost son, and made the Church his heir, in his place?" |
12758 | Has she had recourse to cunning alone, or has she obtained the intervention of invisible powers?" |
12758 | Have not you yourself been twenty- two years old and madly in love?'' |
12758 | Have you a mind to learn your destiny? |
12758 | He asked him what book it was that he had been reading? |
12758 | He asked:"You''re sure you had it on when you left the ball?" |
12758 | He came back every day, in the afternoon, after his lunch... thou rememberest, is it not so? |
12758 | He came up to me, looked me straight in the face, and answered:''Have n''t I told you that, sooner or later, I should do something crazy? |
12758 | He put a visiting card into her hands, and said to her:"This is a looking- glass; what do you see in it?" |
12758 | He replied:"Do we see the hundred thousandth part of what exists? |
12758 | He stuttered:"What''s the matter? |
12758 | He was just going out, and he listened to me with a smile, and said:"Do you believe now?" |
12758 | Her husband said to her one evening:"What is the matter? |
12758 | Her husband, already half undressed, demanded:"What is the matter with you?" |
12758 | His body? |
12758 | How are you?" |
12758 | How can I say? |
12758 | How can that be? |
12758 | How could I kill it, as I could not get hold of it? |
12758 | How could this Fledermausse, this base, sordid creature, have derived so profound a law of human nature? |
12758 | How did he happen to tell you before?" |
12758 | How did it happen that the mortal wounds on the dead man''s body were made with a razor?" |
12758 | How is it that I have not seen them?" |
12758 | How is it then that since the beginning of the world they have never manifested themselves in such a manner precisely as they do to me? |
12758 | How long will it take you to arrange your business matters and secure from the government another leave of absence to return to Sevilla?" |
12758 | How much would it cost, a suitable dress, which you could use on other occasions, something very simple?" |
12758 | How should it then be surprising that he can not perceive a fresh body which is traversed by the light? |
12758 | How so?" |
12758 | How would it, then, have fared with the poor, simple peasant, if he had been surprised unawares? |
12758 | I continued:"Do you remember what took place at your house last night?" |
12758 | I could have asked for an extension, pretending illness, but the question was, should I do it? |
12758 | I have a couple of passports and two different disguises; is not that enough to throw the cleverest detective off the scent? |
12758 | I rather think so; are you ill?" |
12758 | I want five hundred thousand francs before I strike--""Who talks of stinting you?" |
12758 | I was continually asking myself this question:"What can I do? |
12758 | I was twelve years old, only twelve years old; thou rememberest well, is it not so? |
12758 | I will tell you what it is, youngster; why should I kill you? |
12758 | I? |
12758 | I? |
12758 | If from among this race of dupes there should escape some five or six men of genius who climb the highest heights, is it not miraculous? |
12758 | If he was not dead?... |
12758 | If she had detected the substitution, what would she have thought, what would she have said? |
12758 | If thou knewest how I have had fear of this moment all my life...."Suzanne stammered through her tears:"Forgive thee what, Little One? |
12758 | Indeed, if there is a phenomenon well attested by experience, is it not the spiritual phenomenon commonly called"the faith of the peasant"? |
12758 | Instead of being delighted, as her husband hoped, she threw the invitation on the table with disdain, murmuring:"What do you want me to do with that?" |
12758 | Is it I? |
12758 | Is it a cold shiver which, passing over my skin, has upset my nerves and given me low spirits? |
12758 | Is it an architectural freak, or did some reasonable cause determine such an odd construction? |
12758 | Is it not possible that one of the imperceptible keys of the cerebral finger- board has been paralyzed in me? |
12758 | Is it not there that I should go to traffic in souls?" |
12758 | Is it possible?" |
12758 | Is not the following story again still more appalling and not less marvelous? |
12758 | Is that love?" |
12758 | Is the world coming to an end? |
12758 | Is there a God? |
12758 | Is there anything more respectable than ancient abuses?" |
12758 | It could surely only be I? |
12758 | It is a matter of business like anything else, is n''t it? |
12758 | It is done;... it is done... but is he dead? |
12758 | It would be the height of folly to believe in the supernatural on the_ île de la Grenouillière_[1]... but on the top of Mont Saint- Michel? |
12758 | Loisel for a thief? |
12758 | May I ask if that wound of the heart which you told me about when I met you in the stagecoach has healed?" |
12758 | My cousin, who is also very incredulous, smiled, and Dr. Parent said to her:"Would you like me to try and send you to sleep, Madame?" |
12758 | Naqui''s heart softened toward him at the sight of his trouble; she tried to soothe him, but what could she do when she did not know what ailed him? |
12758 | Nobody has come out either except the gentlemen--""Are you quite sure?" |
12758 | Now I remember the words of the monk at Mont Saint- Michel:"Can we see the hundred- thousandth part of what exists? |
12758 | Now, were these two deaths the two crimes mentioned in his letter? |
12758 | Now, when does the marriage take place? |
12758 | On the eve, perchance, of salvation-- you wished to leave us?" |
12758 | On what did he live?" |
12758 | Once I asked her:"Do you feel ill?" |
12758 | Passion? |
12758 | Poison? |
12758 | Premature destruction? |
12758 | Really, you are as dull as ditch- water this evening--""What must I do?" |
12758 | Shall I take her or leave her?" |
12758 | Sharp women''s voices answered us, then a man''s voice, a choking voice, asked,''Who goes there?'' |
12758 | She asked for nothing; but when she was called upon to make a choice, when Castanier asked her,"Which do you like?" |
12758 | She kept asking:"Have n''t you any more?" |
12758 | She looked at him with an irritated eye, and she said, impatiently:"And what do you want me to put on my back?" |
12758 | Since it is your misfortune to have it so, what difference does it make whether he is the one, or somebody else?'' |
12758 | So you would not follow me?" |
12758 | Somebody had drunk the water, but who? |
12758 | Something must have happened to you, something unfortunate, I fear?" |
12758 | Suddenly the judge bent down, and picking up a skull, exclaimed in astonishment:"Look here, my friend, what is this? |
12758 | Suppose that no one strays, after all, into that carefully constructed labyrinth? |
12758 | Suppose that the ant- lion dies of hunger and thirst in her pit? |
12758 | Suppose that the devil and the police should let me go on as I please, so as to nab me in the nick of time? |
12758 | That day Toubac made me a visit, and, as his great nose appeared on a level with the floor, he exclaimed:"Master Christian, have you nothing to sell?" |
12758 | The Arabian merchants must necessarily have slaves; and why not me as well as another, since, as well as another, I am a man? |
12758 | The doctor, turning to me, who no longer felt the shock, asked:"Is it true, Frantz, that the commodore went in bathing?" |
12758 | The judge fell back in his chair and then asked me by a look:"What is she going to say?" |
12758 | The judge now seemed to awaken from his stupor and asked in a harsh voice:"What is your name?" |
12758 | The judge trembled when he heard these words, but, dominating his emotion, he asked courageously:"The name of that man, madame? |
12758 | The reason of this reticence? |
12758 | The tears were falling from his eyes when--"Are you a relation of the dead?" |
12758 | The two swans died three days after... Dost thou remember? |
12758 | The wise man says: Perhaps? |
12758 | Then Gabriela asked me:"Where is he?" |
12758 | Then he resumed:"You see him?" |
12758 | Then she asked, hesitating, filled with anguish:"Can you lend me that, only that?" |
12758 | Then?... |
12758 | There was certainly no getting out of that-- out of that-- Perhaps your honor can help me to the right word?" |
12758 | They called it magnetism, hypnotism, suggestion... what do I know? |
12758 | This unknowable being, this rover of a supernatural race? |
12758 | Thou rememberest how he would say that? |
12758 | Thou rememberest, is it not so? |
12758 | Thou rememberest, is it not so? |
12758 | Thou rememberest, surely, how they spoiled me? |
12758 | Threaten her? |
12758 | To see me? |
12758 | Up till the present time I have been frightened of nothing-- I open my cupboards, and look under my bed; I listen-- I listen-- to what? |
12758 | Was it a man? |
12758 | Was it a woman? |
12758 | Was not his body, which was transparent, indestructible by such means as would kill ours? |
12758 | Was she going to speak to her? |
12758 | Was she married? |
12758 | Was she not keeping watch over the wealth of her son at the risk of her life? |
12758 | Was she really a widow? |
12758 | Was she trusting to her innocence or to the weakness of the judge? |
12758 | Was she turning the course of the rivulet?" |
12758 | Was this the glorious climax of my travels that the Chaldean, Diophanes, had so confidently predicted for me? |
12758 | Well, one morning-- or was it in the evening? |
12758 | Well?" |
12758 | What am I to say? |
12758 | What are we to do this evening? |
12758 | What are you having that man write, your honor?" |
12758 | What can they do more than we can? |
12758 | What could I do? |
12758 | What could he have come to the_ Owl''s Ear_ for?" |
12758 | What could this influence be? |
12758 | What could this mean? |
12758 | What did this manikin signify? |
12758 | What do they see which we do not know? |
12758 | What do those who are thinkers in those distant worlds know more than we do? |
12758 | What do you think of it, Philip?" |
12758 | What for? |
12758 | What forms, what living beings, what animals are there yonder? |
12758 | What had become of his predecessor? |
12758 | What had he been talking about? |
12758 | What is it that can thus have discomposed thee?" |
12758 | What is the matter with me? |
12758 | What is the reason? |
12758 | What procures me the pleasure of seeing you?" |
12758 | What shall I do?" |
12758 | What should I do? |
12758 | What should I say to persuade you? |
12758 | What sort of devotion has rewarded mine? |
12758 | What was this man doing in such deep darkness? |
12758 | What would have happened if she had not lost that necklace? |
12758 | What''s the matter?" |
12758 | When I went back home yesterday, I noticed his singular paleness, and I asked him:"What is the matter with you, Jean?" |
12758 | When do you wish the room, Master Christian?" |
12758 | When the court was going to break up, the judge said to Zadig,"Well, friend, is not thy stone come yet?" |
12758 | Whence do these mysterious influences come, which change our happiness into discouragement, and our self- confidence into diffidence? |
12758 | Whence this wonderful change, dear friend? |
12758 | Where are you trying to lead me, with your questions? |
12758 | Where now are the long hours of anguish, hunger, contempt, which overwhelmed us before? |
12758 | Where will you find the man who shall live with wealth, like a cat with a caged mouse? |
12758 | Which of you shut the door? |
12758 | Who can tell the number of its victims?" |
12758 | Who can tell? |
12758 | Who could it be? |
12758 | Who dares say such a thing? |
12758 | Who inhabits those worlds? |
12758 | Who is the culprit? |
12758 | Who is thinking of those things now? |
12758 | Who knows? |
12758 | Who knows? |
12758 | Who pays attention to them? |
12758 | Who saw us, your honor?" |
12758 | Who was my companion? |
12758 | Who will save me? |
12758 | Who will understand my horrible agony? |
12758 | Who would remember a little thing like that? |
12758 | Who? |
12758 | Why deny that which is self- evident? |
12758 | Why did this old woman live in this great deserted house? |
12758 | Why do n''t you laugh? |
12758 | Why had this woman gotten on the stage at the first stop instead of at Granada? |
12758 | Why in the devil do n''t you come in? |
12758 | Why may not it be as ancient as the stars? |
12758 | Why not one more? |
12758 | Why not other elements besides fire, air, earth and water? |
12758 | Why not, also, other trees with immense, splendid flowers, perfuming whole regions? |
12758 | Why not? |
12758 | Why not? |
12758 | Why not? |
12758 | Why should there not be one more, when once that period is accomplished which separates the successive apparitions from all the different species? |
12758 | Why should we be the last? |
12758 | Why take her? |
12758 | Why this transparent, unrecognizable body, this body belonging to a spirit, if it also had to fear ills, infirmities and premature destruction? |
12758 | Why was she alone? |
12758 | Why was she so sad? |
12758 | Why will you not save him?" |
12758 | Why? |
12758 | Why? |
12758 | Why? |
12758 | Why? |
12758 | Why? |
12758 | Why?" |
12758 | Will you keep your heart for me too?" |
12758 | With a graceful bow she turned away to speak to an acquaintance, and I asked a friend of mine who was passing:"Can you tell me who that woman is?" |
12758 | Would I be her heaven and she my hell? |
12758 | Would it not have been better to have corrected this youth, and made him virtuous, than to have drowned him?" |
12758 | Would you talk like that if you were really going away from your Naqui? |
12758 | You hardly believe in anything perhaps? |
12758 | You have always refused to give me a box at the Italiens because you could not abide music, and are you turning music- mad at this time of day? |
12758 | You see this turtle before us? |
12758 | You will be here on the fifteenth of May?" |
12758 | You would hear my voice in the depths of the caves that lie under the Seine; you might hide in the Catacombs, but would you not see me there? |
12758 | You''ve seen it yourself?" |
12758 | Zadig, transported, said,"What, knowest thou nothing of the queen''s fate?" |
12758 | _ August 10th._ Nothing; what will happen to- morrow? |
12758 | _ July 5th._ Have I lost my reason? |
12758 | and for what purpose, pray, dost thou seek for a basilisk?" |
12758 | and is he killed? |
12758 | are they laughing?" |
12758 | continued he,"thou employest me to comfort this man; whom wilt thou employ to give me consolation?" |
12758 | cried Aquilina;"and have you never given it a serious thought, dear? |
12758 | cried Zadig;"and though thou hadst read this event in thy Book of Destinies, art thou permitted to drown a youth who never did thee any harm?" |
12758 | cried the fisherman,"art thou then so unhappy, thou who bestowest favors?" |
12758 | dear child, do you not see that I am joking?" |
12758 | he was a shoemaker, was he?" |
12758 | how had she found the means to use this law to the profit or indulgence of her sanguinary instincts? |
12758 | is that man to sleep in Monsieur Auguste''s bed, and wear Monsieur Auguste''s slippers, and eat the pasty that I made for Monsieur Auguste? |
12758 | perhaps?... |
12758 | said Aquilina;"must he die, my lover? |
12758 | said Petrus, seeing that he was silent,"what has happened?" |
12758 | said Zadig to himself,"are there men as wretched as I?" |
12758 | said Zadig,"and what is become of Queen Astarte?" |
12758 | said the doctor,"how?" |
12758 | said the judge sternly, his eyes seeming to dart flames,"approach and tell me whether you recognize this head?" |
12758 | so you are really going, are you?" |
12758 | then?... |
12758 | to think? |
12758 | well?... |
12758 | what can I do?" |
12758 | what is become of thee?" |
12758 | where is he?" |
12758 | who knows? |
12758 | why, how can I leave the lover who writes me such sweet little notes?" |
12758 | why? |
12758 | why? |
12758 | you are laughing, of course?" |
21964 | ''We will suppose,''said the miser,''that his symptoms are such and such; now, doctor, what would_ you_ have directed him to take?'' 21964 A glass? |
21964 | A likely stripling-- not ill- born-- and of her own choosing, too? 21964 A skull, you say!--very well!--how is it fastened to the limb?--what holds it on?" |
21964 | About my door? |
21964 | After all that you have heard? |
21964 | Ah, have you been in love? 21964 Alas, can I do nothing to help you?" |
21964 | Alone? |
21964 | And do you, then, suppose me such a creature? |
21964 | And grace? |
21964 | And how is this to be done? |
21964 | And how many people may you have told about it? |
21964 | And now, Dupin, what would you advise me to do? |
21964 | And pray how came you here? |
21964 | And the paper on the walls? |
21964 | And what cause have you, Jupiter, for such a supposition? |
21964 | And what is the difficulty now? |
21964 | And what is this? |
21964 | And what, after all,_ is_ the matter on hand? |
21964 | And what, sir,she demanded,"may be the meaning of all this?" |
21964 | And why not to- night? |
21964 | And why not? |
21964 | And you did dream of it? |
21964 | And you really solved it? |
21964 | And you think, then, that your master was really bitten by the beetle, and that the bite made him sick? |
21964 | And you? |
21964 | And your father''s name? |
21964 | Are you badly, badly hurted? |
21964 | Are you fond of vis big girl, Coppy? |
21964 | Are you going to carry us away? |
21964 | Aylmer, are you in earnest? |
21964 | But could not the cavity be detected by sounding? |
21964 | But how did you proceed? |
21964 | But how do you know he dreams about gold? |
21964 | But is this really the poet? |
21964 | But what is the meaning of it all? |
21964 | But what purpose had you,I asked,"in replacing the letter by a_ fac- simile_? |
21964 | But what, in the name of all that is mysterious, is your''Massa Will''going to do with scythes and spades? |
21964 | But who were the three that preceded him? |
21964 | But why do we speak of dying? 21964 By yourself? |
21964 | Danger? 21964 Did you call me?" |
21964 | Did you say it was a_ dead_ limb, Jupiter? |
21964 | Dighton,demanded the General,"what means this foolery? |
21964 | Do you fancy,he went on,"that when I had made my little contrivance for the door I had stopped short with that? |
21964 | Do you mean I am a prisoner? |
21964 | Do you remember, my dear Aylmer,said she, with a feeble attempt at a smile,"have you any recollection of a dream last night about this odious hand?" |
21964 | Do you think I have no more generous aspirations than to sin, and sin, and sin, and, at last, sneak into heaven? 21964 Doing what?" |
21964 | Fonder van you are of Bell or ve Butcha-- or me? |
21964 | For what price? |
21964 | Georgiana,said he,"has it never occurred to you that the mark on your cheek might be removed?" |
21964 | Good gracious, child, what are_ you_ doing here? |
21964 | Has the day begun already? |
21964 | Have you not tried it? |
21964 | Have you ridden all the way from cantonments, little man? 21964 Hey, Willie Winkie, Are you coming then? |
21964 | Hey, Willie Winkie, Ca n''t you keep him still? 21964 How I know? |
21964 | How far mus go up, massa? |
21964 | How high up are you? |
21964 | How is this known? |
21964 | How much fudder is got for go? |
21964 | How much was the reward offered, did you say? |
21964 | How? 21964 How? |
21964 | How? 21964 In any one?" |
21964 | In the devil''s name what is this? |
21964 | In what way? |
21964 | Is it with this lotion that you intend to bathe my cheek? |
21964 | Is this yer a d----d picnic? |
21964 | It''s like ve sputter- brush? |
21964 | Its susceptibility of being produced? |
21964 | Jupiter,cried he, without heeding me in the least,"do you hear me?" |
21964 | Jupiter,said he, when we reached its foot,"come here; was the skull nailed to the limb with the face outward, or with the face to the limb?" |
21964 | May I lead you thither, madam? |
21964 | No, massa, I bring dis here pissel;and here Jupiter handed me a note which ran thus:--"MY DEAR---- Why have I not seen you for so long a time? |
21964 | No? 21964 Not charitable?" |
21964 | Nothing more in the assassination way, I hope? |
21964 | Poor? 21964 Put our feet into the trap?" |
21964 | Say it be lost, say I am plunged again in poverty, shall one part of me, and that the worse, continue until the end to override the better? 21964 She is in a better frame of spirit?" |
21964 | So far as his labors extended? |
21964 | Still your uncle''s cabinet? 21964 That being so,"he said,"shall I show you the money?" |
21964 | The what? |
21964 | Then why did you take me from my mother''s side? 21964 To me?" |
21964 | Two or three years ago, did I not see you on the platform of revival meetings, and was not your voice the loudest in the hymn? |
21964 | Very true; but what are they doing here? |
21964 | Well, Jup, perhaps you are right; but to what fortunate circumstance am I to attribute the honor of a visit from you to- day? |
21964 | Well, Jup,said I,"what is the matter now?--how is your master?" |
21964 | Well, now, Jupiter, do exactly as I tell you-- do you hear? |
21964 | Well, then, was it this eye or that through which you dropped the beetle? |
21964 | Well, then, what matter? |
21964 | What are you driving at? |
21964 | What are you? |
21964 | What de matter now, massa? |
21964 | What de matter, massa? |
21964 | What have I said? |
21964 | What in the name of heaven shall I do? |
21964 | What is the meaning of all this, Jup? |
21964 | What is the use of this talk? 21964 What is your name, my good woman?" |
21964 | What mischief have you been getting into now? |
21964 | What new jest has your Excellency in hand? |
21964 | What will happen? |
21964 | What worthies are these? |
21964 | What, de bug, massa? 21964 What-- sunrise?" |
21964 | Where am I? 21964 Where are you going?" |
21964 | Where is the hurry? |
21964 | Where''s Brom Dutcher? |
21964 | Where''s Van Bummel, the schoolmaster? |
21964 | Which way mus go now, Massa Will? |
21964 | Who are you? |
21964 | Who can do so? 21964 Why did you hesitate to tell me this?" |
21964 | Why do you come hither? 21964 Why do you keep such a terrific drug?" |
21964 | Why had that young man a stain of blood upon his ruff? |
21964 | Why not a glass? |
21964 | Why so? |
21964 | Why,[ puff, puff] you might[ puff, puff] employ counsel in the matter, eh? 21964 Will not your Excellency order out the guard?" |
21964 | Would you throw the blight of that fatal birthmark over my labors? 21964 Would your Excellency inquire further into the mystery of the pageant?" |
21964 | You are not going, too? |
21964 | You are to use this money on the Stock Exchange, I think? |
21964 | You ask me why not? |
21964 | You explored the floors beneath the carpets? |
21964 | You have, of course, an accurate description of the letter? |
21964 | You include the_ grounds_ about the houses? |
21964 | You know me? |
21964 | You looked among D----''s papers, of course, and into the books of the library? |
21964 | You looked into the cellars? |
21964 | You mean, to punctuate it? |
21964 | _ Out to the end!_here fairly screamed Legrand,"do you say you are out to the end of that limb?" |
21964 | _ Very_ sick, Jupiter!--why did n''t you say so at once? 21964 ) 4#);806*;48+ 8¶60))85;;]8*;:#*8+ 83(88)5*+;46(;88* 96*? 21964 ; 8)*#(;485);5*+2:*#(;4956* 2(5*-4)8¶8*;4069285);)6+ 8)4##;1(#9;48081;8:8#1; 48+ 85;4)485+ 528806* 81(#9;48;(88;4(#?34;48)4#;161;:188;#? 21964 Again; have you ever noticed which of the street signs over the shop doors are the most attractive of attention? |
21964 | Ai n''t you ashamed ob yourself, nigger? |
21964 | And are my vices only to direct my life, and my virtues to lie without effect, like some passive lumber of the mind? |
21964 | And den he keep a syphon all de time"--"Keeps a what, Jupiter?" |
21964 | And if the old gentleman was sane, what, in God''s name, had he to look for? |
21964 | And then addressing Denis,"Monsieur de Beaulieu,"he asked,"may I present you to my niece? |
21964 | And why did you insist upon letting fall the bug, instead of a bullet, from the skull?" |
21964 | And yet, in that strip of doubtful brightness, did there not hang wavering a shadow? |
21964 | Another short but busy little fellow pulled him by the arm, and, rising on tiptoe, inquired in his ear,"Whether he was Federal or Democrat?" |
21964 | As the embers slowly blackened, the Duchess crept closer to Piney, and broke the silence of many hours:"Piney, can you pray?" |
21964 | At length I said:--"Well, but G----, what of the purloined letter? |
21964 | Be helped by you? |
21964 | But can you not look within? |
21964 | But here, within the house, was he alone? |
21964 | But this discovery gives us three new letters,_ o, u, g_, represented by#? |
21964 | But where are the_ antennæ_ you spoke of?" |
21964 | Can not you remove this little, little mark, which I cover with the tips of two small fingers? |
21964 | Can you not read me for a thing that surely must be common as humanity-- the unwilling sinner?" |
21964 | Can you not see within me the clear writing of conscience, never blurred by any wilful sophistry although too often disregarded? |
21964 | Can you not understand that evil is hateful to me? |
21964 | Counting all, I constructed a table thus:-- Of the character 8 there are 33;"26 4"19#)"16*"13 5"12 6"11("10+1"8 0"6 92"5:3"4?" |
21964 | Dear God, man, is that all?" |
21964 | Did n''t Mr. Oakhurst remember Piney? |
21964 | Did you mean it? |
21964 | Do I say that I follow sins? |
21964 | Do you know that Jupiter is quite right about it?" |
21964 | Do you like to see it? |
21964 | Do you remember the story they tell of Abernethy?" |
21964 | Do you_ mind_ being called Coppy? |
21964 | For Christmas? |
21964 | For example, an arrant simpleton is his opponent, and, holding up his closed hand asks,''Are they even or odd?'' |
21964 | For-- Pray, do you think me beautiful?" |
21964 | Had you a thought in your mind? |
21964 | Has anything unpleasant happened since I saw you?" |
21964 | Has n''t he told you what ails him?" |
21964 | Have I ever seen you-- have you ever seen me-- before this accursed hour?" |
21964 | Have you ever heard of any important treasure being unearthed along the coast?" |
21964 | Have you found it?" |
21964 | Have you no trust in your husband?" |
21964 | He buried his freckled nose in a tea- cup and, with eyes staring roundly over the rim, asked:"I say, Coppy, is it pwoper to kiss big girls?" |
21964 | Honestly now, Doctor, have you not stirred up the sober brains of some of your countrymen to enact a scene in our masquerade?" |
21964 | How came it to shut so easily and so effectually after him? |
21964 | How could he have foreseen that the flying sparks would have lighted the Colonel''s little hayrick and consumed a week''s store for the horses? |
21964 | How is it possible to extort a meaning from all this jargon about''devil''s seats,''''death''s- heads,''and''bishop''s hotels''?" |
21964 | How many limbs have you passed?" |
21964 | I hazard a guess now, that you are in secret a very charitable man?" |
21964 | I looked for much confusion; for how could I tell whether he was willing to take me for his wife on these sharp terms? |
21964 | I pity the poor; who knows their trials better than myself? |
21964 | I presume you have at last made up your mind that there is no such thing as overreaching the minister?" |
21964 | If it is n''t pwoper, how was you kissing Major Allardyce''s big girl last morning, by ve canal?" |
21964 | If the Goblins ran off with her as they did with Curdie''s Princess? |
21964 | In the midst of his bewilderment, the man in the cocked hat demanded who he was, and what was his name? |
21964 | Is Messire de Malétroit at hand?" |
21964 | Is he confined to bed?" |
21964 | Is it any wonder, then, that I prize it? |
21964 | Is that all? |
21964 | Is this beyond your power, for the sake of your own peace, and to save your poor wife from madness?" |
21964 | Is this, then, your experience of mankind? |
21964 | It looked like a snare, and yet who could suppose a snare in such a quiet by- street and in a house of so prosperous and even noble an exterior? |
21964 | Legrand?" |
21964 | Let us talk of each other; why should we wear this mask? |
21964 | Look here, Jupiter, do you hear me?" |
21964 | Monsieur de Beaulieu, how can I look you in the face?" |
21964 | Now what is narration and what does it imply? |
21964 | Now, this mode of reasoning in the schoolboy, whom his fellows term''lucky,''what, in its last analysis, is it?" |
21964 | Perhaps a couple of blows with a mattock were sufficient, while his coadjutors were busy in the pit; perhaps it required a dozen-- who shall tell?" |
21964 | Rip bethought himself a moment, and inquired,"Where''s Nicholas Vedder?" |
21964 | Rip had but one question more to ask; but he put it with a faltering voice:"Where''s your mother?" |
21964 | STOCKTON: The Lady or the Tiger? |
21964 | Shall I help you-- I, who know all? |
21964 | Shall I tell you where to find the money?" |
21964 | She that used to wait on the table at the Temperance House? |
21964 | Tapping at the window, Crying at the lock,"Are the weans in their bed, For it''s now ten o''clock?" |
21964 | The orator bustled up to him, and, drawing him partly aside, inquired"on which side he voted?" |
21964 | The two upper black spots look like eyes, eh? |
21964 | Welcome home, again, old neighbor--- Why, where have you been these twenty long years?" |
21964 | What absurd or tragical adventure had befallen him? |
21964 | What ailed the door? |
21964 | What are we to make of the skeletons found in the hole?" |
21964 | What are you doing?" |
21964 | What could be more natural than to mount the staircase, lift the curtain, and confront his difficulty at once? |
21964 | What could he be dreaming of? |
21964 | What countenance was he to assume? |
21964 | What does he complain of?" |
21964 | What for?" |
21964 | What make him dream bout de goole so much, if taint cause he bit by de goole- bug? |
21964 | What new crotchet possessed his excitable brain? |
21964 | What shall I do?" |
21964 | What was to be done? |
21964 | What would Coppy say if anything happened to her? |
21964 | What"business of the highest importance"could_ he_ possibly have to transact? |
21964 | What, for example, in this case of D----, has been done to vary the principle of action? |
21964 | When you left the Bishop''s Hotel, what then?" |
21964 | Who do you want to kiss?" |
21964 | Who knows, we might become friends?" |
21964 | Who will take my message to the Colonel Sahib?" |
21964 | Why was it open? |
21964 | Why, then, should Coppy be guilty of the unmanly weakness of kissing-- vehemently kissing-- a"big girl,"Miss Allardyce to wit? |
21964 | Why, what more would the jade have?" |
21964 | Will you take the glass?" |
21964 | Would it not have been better, at the first visit, to have seized it openly, and departed?" |
21964 | You did not take to pieces all the chairs?" |
21964 | You might do a little more, I think, eh?" |
21964 | You will not disfigure your last hours by want of politeness to a lady?" |
21964 | You will, of course, ask,''where is the connection?'' |
21964 | ai nt dis here my lef eye for sartin?" |
21964 | and is this crime of murder indeed so impious as to dry up the very springs of good?" |
21964 | aye, and then? |
21964 | but stay, how long do you propose to be absent?" |
21964 | cried Legrand, apparently much relieved;"what do you mean by telling me such nonsense as that? |
21964 | cried Legrand, highly delighted,"what is it?" |
21964 | cried Markheim:"the devil?" |
21964 | cried he--"Young Rip Van Winkle once-- old Rip Van Winkle now!--Does nobody know poor Rip Van Winkle?" |
21964 | did you put anything particular in it?" |
21964 | do you know your right hand from your left?" |
21964 | in what way?" |
21964 | muttered Sir William Howe to a gentleman beside him;"a procession of the regicide judges of King Charles the martyr?" |
21964 | or is it because you find me with red hands that you presume such baseness? |
21964 | remarked the visitor;"and there, if I mistake not, you have already lost some thousands?" |
21964 | said Legrand;"but it''s so long since I saw you, and how could I foresee that you would pay me a visit this very night of all others? |
21964 | settled to your satisfaction, you will then return home and follow my advice implicitly, as that of your physician?" |
21964 | what I keer for de bug?" |
21964 | what do you mean?" |
21964 | what do you mean?" |
21964 | what mus do with it?" |
21964 | what shall we say to my uncle when he returns?" |
21964 | what_ is_ dis here pon de tree?" |
21964 | who ever heard of such an idea?" |
12788 | ''From whence do you come?'' 12788 ''Well-- from what country?'' |
12788 | And I replied,''What can I do with an empty house, And a host who is himself thus utterly destitute? 12788 And did Kay get the Princess?" |
12788 | And how came you, madame,quoth I,"to this deep knowledge of pleasure? |
12788 | And the mother? 12788 And was it the innermost heart of the bliss To find out so, what a wisdom love is? |
12788 | Are you sensible of any change? |
12788 | But Kay-- little Kay,asked Gerda,"when did he come? |
12788 | But how are we to manage it? 12788 But what is become of it?" |
12788 | But will you give me that splendid golden sword? 12788 Ca n''t you do something for him, sir?" |
12788 | Ca n''t you do something for him? |
12788 | Can I depend on that? |
12788 | Can you lay eggs? |
12788 | D''ye think this is all the world? |
12788 | Did life roll back its record dear, And show, as they say it does, past things clear? 12788 Do you not hear me? |
12788 | Do you remember this? |
12788 | Do you see? 12788 Does he live with a princess?" |
12788 | Dost thou think I will do so? |
12788 | Dost thou think then that I will have thee in the kitchen, if such be the case? |
12788 | Father,answered Aucassin,"what are you saying now? |
12788 | Hast thou not had enough of wrestling, O conquered one? |
12788 | Have you a pass? |
12788 | How canst thou, ere thou hear, discern If I speak folly? 12788 How have matters gone with you in town?" |
12788 | How long? |
12788 | How was he drowned? 12788 I am going out in the world to see if I can get employment,"answered the youth.--"Wilt thou serve us?" |
12788 | I have got a hundred dollars in my chest at home; will you venture the like sum? |
12788 | I? |
12788 | In Paradise what have I to win? 12788 Is it possible?" |
12788 | Is my son to stay like that on the stones, and I not stay there too?--like that, on the stones, my own son? |
12788 | Is that so, mother? |
12788 | Is this,he said,"That happy earth they brought me forth to see? |
12788 | It is n''t very far from daybreak,said I;"and besides, what can robbers take from a traveler in utter poverty? |
12788 | O Jesu,said Sir Launcelot,"what may this meane?" |
12788 | Or was it a greater marvel to feel The perfect calm o''er the agony steal? 12788 Perhaps you do not know that my papa and my mamma were morocco slippers, and that I have a cork inside me?" |
12788 | Say you so? |
12788 | See, now; I will listen with soul, not ear: What was the secret of dying, dear? 12788 Shall I sing once more before the Emperor?" |
12788 | Shall we lay a wager? |
12788 | Should you like,said he,"to hear of one or two, yes, or a great many of her performances? |
12788 | The Nightingale? 12788 Was it the infinite wonder of all That you ever could let life''s flower fall? |
12788 | Was the miracle greater to find how deep Beyond all dreams sank downward that sleep? 12788 Well, how goes it?" |
12788 | Well, sister,said the worthy Panthea,"shall we hack him to pieces at once, like the Bacchanals, or tie his limbs and mutilate him?" |
12788 | What are we to say, sister,[ said one to the other] of the monstrous lies of that silly creature? 12788 What are you thinking of?" |
12788 | What did he go in for, if he did not know how to swim--? |
12788 | What do you say now? 12788 What is the function of criticism at the present time?" |
12788 | What kind of a woman is this innkeeper, so powerful and dreadful? |
12788 | What should I have done with a sheep? 12788 What should we have done with a pig? |
12788 | What sort of a one are you? |
12788 | What was the merchant''s name? |
12788 | What''s that? |
12788 | What''s this? |
12788 | What, wilt thou pray, and get thee grace, And all grace shall to me be grudged? 12788 What,"said I,"will become of me, when this man is found in the morning with his throat cut? |
12788 | What-- do you really think so? |
12788 | Whence in the name of Heaven didst thou come? |
12788 | Where am I going now? |
12788 | Whither art thou going? |
12788 | Who knows if life and death be truly one? |
12788 | Why do you wish to put a pain in your heart? |
12788 | Why does the color vary on your skin? 12788 Why,"asked Giorgio,"do you not place him in the shade, in one of the houses, on a bed?" |
12788 | Why? |
12788 | Why? |
12788 | Will you fly about at liberty? |
12788 | ''Mother,''she cried,''what will the little dogs think when they see me in all these fine clothes?''" |
12788 | ***** All these have sorrow, and keep still, Whilst other men make cheer, and sing, Wilt thou have pity on all these? |
12788 | *****"What say my Father and my Mother dear? |
12788 | --"Well, then, for Christ,"thou answerest,"who can care? |
12788 | 448- 380?) |
12788 | 448- 390? |
12788 | A young lad, a stranger in the district, the son of a mariner, repeated contemptuously,"Yes, what did he go in for? |
12788 | After salutation and duty done, with some other talk, I asked her why she would leese[ lose] such pastime in the park? |
12788 | After some time the horse again said,"Look back: can you see anything now?" |
12788 | Ah, where are the mighty now? |
12788 | And besides these there_ shall be_ two_ other_ gardens:( Which, therefore, of your LORD''S benefits will ye ungratefully deny?) |
12788 | And he fell to reciting: How many by my labors, that evermore endure, All goods of life enjoy and in cooly shade recline? |
12788 | And his airs and his tunes, and his songs and lampoons, Were recited and sung by the old and the young: At our feasts and carousals, what poet but he? |
12788 | And how, said the Emeer, can we contrive to enter it, and divert ourselves with a view of its wonders? |
12788 | And in the lower part of the tablet were inscribed these verses:-- Where are the Kings and the peoplers of the earth? |
12788 | And news of how the kingdoms change, The pointed hands, and wondering At doers of a desperate thing? |
12788 | And pray, then, why do you marry us, If we''re all the plagues you say? |
12788 | And she sang on:--"Why have I sent you forth from my house? |
12788 | And the Cat said,"Can you curve your back, and purr, and give out sparks?" |
12788 | And the irate woman:--"Who was it sent him? |
12788 | And the sheykh said, Are there in this place any of the''Efreets confined in bottles of brass from the time of Suleymán, on whom be peace? |
12788 | And truly while I speak, O King, I hear the bearers on the stair; Wilt thou they straightway bring him in? |
12788 | And what is it I hope for? |
12788 | And where is that which they collected and hoarded? |
12788 | And why do you take such care of us, And keep us so safe at home, And are never easy a moment If ever we chance to roam? |
12788 | And why should I then pant for treasures? |
12788 | And why? |
12788 | And yet, if she is really ignorant of her husband''s appearance, she must no doubt have married a god, and who knows what will happen? |
12788 | Are you not come into a warm room, and have you not folks about you from whom you can learn something? |
12788 | Asked the Caliph,"Dost thou remember what he said?" |
12788 | Aucassin, my love, my knight, Am I not thy heart''s delight? |
12788 | Bavaria, or the Styrian''s land? |
12788 | Beauteous flowers why do we spread, Upon the monuments of the dead? |
12788 | But about the woodwork? |
12788 | But among friends( for only friends are here), Why should we blame the Spartans for all this? |
12788 | But didst thou find The seed?" |
12788 | But for him who dreadeth the tribunal of his LORD_ are prepared_ two gardens:( Which, therefore, of your LORD''S benefits will ye ungratefully deny?) |
12788 | But is a calm like this, in truth, The crowning end of life and youth, And when this boon rewards the dead, Are all debts paid, has all been said? |
12788 | But might not other forces, combined with the attraction of gravitation, produce gradually increasing perturbations such as Newton and Euler feared? |
12788 | But most the women gathering in the doors Asked,"Who is this that brings the sacrifice So graceful and peace- giving as he goes? |
12788 | But since the longed- for day is nigh, And scarce a god could stay us now, Why do ye hang your heads and sigh, And still go slower and more slow? |
12788 | But since we ne''er can charm away The mandate of that awful day, Why do we vainly weep at fate, And sigh for life''s uncertain date? |
12788 | But the King spake:--"What fool is this, that hurts our ears With folly? |
12788 | But what is thy name, boy? |
12788 | But what saw he in the clear water? |
12788 | But where was it to be found? |
12788 | But where was it? |
12788 | But why should I stand surety for his contracts? |
12788 | Can he be Sâkra or the Devaraj?" |
12788 | Child of the ocean, is your promise sure?" |
12788 | Cowley''s Translation, THE SWALLOW Foolish prater, what dost thou So early at my window do, With thy tuneless serenade? |
12788 | Did I not tell thee that lying is shameful?" |
12788 | Do n''t you know the roads are infested by robbers? |
12788 | Do n''t_ you_ know, you fool, that a naked man ca n''t be stripped by ten athletes?" |
12788 | Do they expect any other than the punishment awarded against the_ unbelievers_ of former times? |
12788 | Do you think she wants to swim, and let the water close above her head?" |
12788 | Do you think so?" |
12788 | Do you tremble, you who were so bold?" |
12788 | Dost thou grant this?" |
12788 | Dost thou not see that GOD sendeth down rain from heaven, and that we thereby produce fruits of various colors? |
12788 | Drive ye the flocks adown under high noon, Since''tis at evening that men fold their sheep?" |
12788 | Fill up the bowl then, fill it high, Fill all the glasses there; for why Should every creature drink but I? |
12788 | Flowers have withered thus before,-- And, my poor heart, what wouldst thou more? |
12788 | For am not I but one of the Ghazîyah? |
12788 | For what availed it, all the noise And outcry of the former men?-- Say, have their sons achieved more joys, Say, is life lighter now than then? |
12788 | Fragile and small, and set in quiet places, My worth should I forget? |
12788 | From sin, which Heaven records not, why forbear? |
12788 | Graciously smiling, now she whispers low:--"The runes are dark, would you their meaning know? |
12788 | HOW CAN THE ABSOLUTE BE A CAUSE? |
12788 | Hast thou ever before seen battle and wars?_[ His next adventure brought him to the notice of the chief of the tribe,--King Zoheir. |
12788 | Hath Yudhisthira vanquished self, to melt With one poor passion at the door of bliss? |
12788 | He asked them next( Wishing to see them more perplexed) Which of the two contending powers Was chiefly abused by this bard of ours? |
12788 | He demanded Which of the rival States commanded The Grecian seas? |
12788 | Hereupon Gudbrand opened the door:--"Have I won your hundred dollars?" |
12788 | How Should she o''er- sound the storm their wings have raised? |
12788 | How can I pay you?" |
12788 | How could he think of wishing to have such loveliness as they had? |
12788 | How could it be? |
12788 | How did the villains come to spare you, a witness of the murder? |
12788 | How didst thou pass the night, O hero, after we went away and left thee? |
12788 | How is it with my lord? |
12788 | How long is that to last? |
12788 | How then will the insane act? |
12788 | I Are they of Umm Aufà''s tents-- these black lines that speak no word in the stony plain of al- Mutathellam and al- Darraj? |
12788 | I am as good as half engaged to a swallow: every time I leap up into the air he sticks his head out of the nest and says,''Will you? |
12788 | I buy''em of him? |
12788 | I know not-- by Heaven I swear, and here is the word I say!-- this pang, is it love- sickness, or wrought by a spell from thee? |
12788 | I said to her, when she fled in amaze and breathless before the array of battle,"Why dost thou tremble? |
12788 | I said,"Is it''Abdallâh, the man whom you say is slain?" |
12788 | I stood as a camel stands with fear in her heart, and seeks the stuffed skin with eager mouth, and thinks-- is her youngling slain? |
12788 | If I tell the truth, who will believe a word of the story? |
12788 | If impersonality is a good, why am I not consistent in the pursuit of it? |
12788 | If one asked her,"Are you not related to John Bull?" |
12788 | Inheritors of thy distress, Have restless hearts one throb the less? |
12788 | Is a man''s throat to be cut before your eyes, and you keep silence? |
12788 | Is happiness anything more than a conventional fiction? |
12788 | Is it Prussia, or the Swabian''s land? |
12788 | Is it Switzerland? |
12788 | Is it anything more than the temper in which he worked, and the spirit which he evoked in the reader? |
12788 | Is it the Mark where forges blaze? |
12788 | Is it the land which princely hate Tore from the Emperor and the State? |
12788 | Is it where the Master''s cattle graze? |
12788 | Is it where the grape glows on the Rhine? |
12788 | Is not universal leveling down the law of nature?... |
12788 | Is there aught good in life? |
12788 | Is there no life, but these alone? |
12788 | Is there such a bird in my empire, and in my garden to boot? |
12788 | It is inevitable that he should chose one of the three, but which? |
12788 | Knowest thou not that the cup of death will be filled for thee, and that in a short time thou wilt drink it? |
12788 | Look round: can you see anything?" |
12788 | Madman or slave, must man be one? |
12788 | May I then make bold to crave a boon of thy highness?" |
12788 | Moreover, he gifted Jarir with the ornaments of his sword; and Jarir went forth to the other poets, who asked him,"What is behind thee?" |
12788 | Must I say it to you? |
12788 | Nay, but our children in our midst, what else but our hearts are they, walking on the ground? |
12788 | No friend hast thou like kindly snow; Sleep is well for thee, For whom no second spring will blow; Then why, poor heart, still beating so? |
12788 | Noble wines why do we pour? |
12788 | Now must I call thy grief not wise, Is he thy friend, or of thy blood, To find such favor in thine eyes? |
12788 | Now, was it its blaze, or the lamps of a hermit that dwells alone, and pours o''er the twisted wicks the oil from his slender cruse? |
12788 | O men, remember the favor of GOD towards you: is there any creator, besides GOD, who provideth food for you from heaven and earth? |
12788 | Oh, wo n''t you take me to the palace?" |
12788 | Or had they any share in_ the creation of_ the heavens? |
12788 | Or shall we say that to suffer subsists according to something common? |
12788 | Or where the Danube''s surges roar? |
12788 | Pace) 1226- 1274 On the Value of Our Concepts of the Deity(''Summa Theologica'') How Can the Absolute Be a Cause? |
12788 | Poetry of this factitious kind may beguile one at twenty, but what can one make of it at fifty? |
12788 | Pomerania''s strand? |
12788 | Quoth Omar,"And who praised him?" |
12788 | Quoth Omar,"What have I to do with the poets?" |
12788 | Quoth Omar,"Who[ of the poets] is at the door?" |
12788 | Reaching the spot, somewhat out of breath, he inquired:--"What has happened?" |
12788 | Said Cædmon,"What shall I sing?" |
12788 | Said I,"O Rais, what mean these words, seeing that I have told thee my case?" |
12788 | Say, what think ye of your deities which ye invoke besides GOD? |
12788 | Shall I never be at peace with myself? |
12788 | Shall we not be lovers? |
12788 | She said:--"The Nightingale? |
12788 | She''s the grandest of all here; she''s of Spanish blood-- that''s why she''s so fat; and do you see? |
12788 | So how canst thou pretend that thou art the owner of the goods?" |
12788 | So let me go again, will you?" |
12788 | So she turned to him laughing, and said,"What wouldst thou? |
12788 | So the sheykh''Abd- Es- Samad said, May not the keys of the city be with this sheykh? |
12788 | So what hast thou to boast of? |
12788 | Spake then as follows, his past thus reviewing, Years full of slaughter and struggle and strife:--"Wither, alas, have my horses been carried? |
12788 | Stay''st thou for this, who didst not stay for them,-- Draupadí, Bhima?" |
12788 | THE HOLY GRAIL From Malory''s''Morte d''Arthur''"Faire knight,"said the King,"what is your name? |
12788 | THE KING O Vizier, I may bury him? |
12788 | THE SONG OF THE FIELD- MARSHAL What''s the blast from the trumpets? |
12788 | That thousands counted every groan, And Europe made his woe her own? |
12788 | The Emeer said to him, How long a period doth it require? |
12788 | The Emperor jumped at once out of bed, and had his own doctor called; but what could he do? |
12788 | The cloud of mortal destiny, Others will front it fearlessly-- But who, like him, will put it by? |
12788 | The day done, at eve glad comes he home to his eyes''delight: he needs not to ask of her,"Say, where didst thou pass the day?" |
12788 | The most famous of these,''What is the German''s Fatherland?'' |
12788 | The mother continued:--"O my son, who was it sent you; who was it sent you here, to drown?" |
12788 | The mother gazed upon the little shirt, all soiled and torn, over which her tears fell rapidly, and said,"Must I put that shirt on him?" |
12788 | The officer begins:--"''Who are you?'' |
12788 | The porter, who was lying on the ground behind the door, only grunted,"Why do you want to begin a journey at this time of night? |
12788 | Then he took it into his forge, intending to temper it, for, thought he, what harm could that possibly do? |
12788 | Then must it not follow That we are to you all as the manifest godhead that speaks in prophetic Apollo? |
12788 | Then pray who is to understand you? |
12788 | Then she said to him,"O Muslim, it is lawful among you to kill Christians: what sayest thou to my killing thee?" |
12788 | Then the Emeer Moosà said, Knowest thou if any one of the Kings have trodden this land before us? |
12788 | Therein_ shall be_ agreeable and beauteous_ damsels_: Which, therefore, of your LORD''S benefits will ye ungratefully deny? |
12788 | They out- talked thee, hissed thee, tore thee? |
12788 | They were long in bringing the goods ashore, so I asked the master,"Is there aught left in thy ship?" |
12788 | This hound hath ate with me, Followed me, loved me: must I leave him now?" |
12788 | This troop, by whom my master''s blood was shed, Medoro, ought not I to sacrifice? |
12788 | Though he told me, who will believe it was said? |
12788 | To- day is ours, what do we fear? |
12788 | WARREN]''TIS OF AUCASSIN AND NICOLETTE Who would list to the good lay, Gladness of the captive gray? |
12788 | WHAT IS THE GERMAN''S FATHERLAND? |
12788 | Was he among the number?" |
12788 | Was it sunlight? |
12788 | We go so nicely together? |
12788 | Well, and what did they each directly lead up to in science? |
12788 | Well, with weather such as this, let us hear, Trygæus tell us What should you and I be doing? |
12788 | Westphalia? |
12788 | What are the elements it has been found necessary to confront with each other in order to arrive at results expressed with such extreme precision? |
12788 | What countless paths wind down, from divers points, To yonder city gates!--Oh, wilt not thou, My star, appear to me on one of them? |
12788 | What crime have you been guilty of? |
12788 | What did it lead up to in English literature? |
12788 | What distance is there between us and it? |
12788 | What gave him vogue, then, and what still keeps his more literary work alive? |
12788 | What helps it now that Byron bore, With haughty scorn which mocked the smart, Through Europe to the Ætolian shore The pageant of his bleeding heart? |
12788 | What is his caste? |
12788 | What is life for us, when the uplands and valleys are ours no more? |
12788 | What is the German''s fatherland? |
12788 | What is the German''s fatherland? |
12788 | What is the German''s fatherland? |
12788 | What is the German''s fatherland? |
12788 | What is the German''s fatherland? |
12788 | What is the German''s fatherland? |
12788 | What is the German''s fatherland? |
12788 | What is the distance of the sun from the earth? |
12788 | What is the land of their origin, and what is the significance of their symbolism? |
12788 | What is the relation of all these versions to one another? |
12788 | What more would thy Anacreon be? |
12788 | What other thing is left me, here above, Deprived of thee, Medoro mine? |
12788 | What says my God, who bends from heaven to hear?" |
12788 | What shall we have? |
12788 | What should I have done with a goose? |
12788 | What should we have done with a cock? |
12788 | What should we have done with a goat? |
12788 | What should we have done with a horse? |
12788 | What was it that Mephistopheles lacked? |
12788 | What was the intellectual generation that sprang from each of them? |
12788 | What would they ask of love? |
12788 | What, must I howl in the next world, Because thou wilt not listen here? |
12788 | What, then, do I believe in? |
12788 | What_ aileth_ them, therefore, that they believe not_ the resurrection_; and that, when the Korân is read unto them, they worship not? |
12788 | When he saw that this creature was alive, he addressed it and said,"Who and whence are you?" |
12788 | When is the mother coming?" |
12788 | When the trumpet shall sound, On that day, The wicked, slow- gathering, Shall say,"Is it long we have lain in our graves? |
12788 | When you ought to be thanking heaven That your Plague is out of the way, You all keep fussing and fretting--"Where is_ my_ Plague to- day?" |
12788 | Whence comest thou and whither art thou bound? |
12788 | Where are the joys of the hall I have known? |
12788 | Where are the troops? |
12788 | Where are those who possessed the countries and abased the servants of God and led armies? |
12788 | Where is he? |
12788 | Where is he?--The president Peisthetairus? |
12788 | Where is my giver of treasure and feasting? |
12788 | Where is the scar of a gash so deep and so recent?" |
12788 | Where is the sponge? |
12788 | Where is the wound? |
12788 | Where sea- gulls skim the Baltic''s brine? |
12788 | Where the sand drifts along the shore? |
12788 | Where was he? |
12788 | Where? |
12788 | Where? |
12788 | Where?" |
12788 | Which are the oldest, and which are copies, and of what versions are they copies? |
12788 | Which, therefore, of your LORD''S benefits will ye ungratefully deny? |
12788 | Which, therefore, of your LORD''S benefits will ye ungratefully deny? |
12788 | Which, therefore, of your LORD''S benefits will ye ungratefully deny? |
12788 | Which, therefore, of your LORD''S benefits will ye ungratefully deny? |
12788 | Which, therefore, of your LORD''S benefits will ye ungratefully deny? |
12788 | Which, therefore, of your LORD''S benefits will ye ungratefully deny? |
12788 | Which, therefore, of your LORD''S benefits will ye ungratefully deny? |
12788 | Which, therefore, of your LORD''S benefits will ye ungratefully deny? |
12788 | Which, therefore, of your LORD''S benefits will ye ungratefully deny? |
12788 | Which, therefore, of your LORD''S benefits will ye ungratefully deny? |
12788 | Which, therefore, of your LORD''S benefits will ye ungratefully deny? |
12788 | Which, therefore, of your LORD''S benefits will ye ungratefully deny? |
12788 | Which, therefore, of your LORD''S benefits will ye ungratefully deny? |
12788 | Which, therefore, of your LORD''S benefits will ye ungratefully deny? |
12788 | Which, therefore, of your LORD''S benefits will ye ungratefully deny? |
12788 | Which, therefore, of your LORD''S benefits will ye ungratefully deny? |
12788 | Which, therefore, of your LORD''S benefits will ye ungratefully deny? |
12788 | Which, therefore, of your LORD''S benefits will ye ungratefully deny? |
12788 | Which, therefore, of your LORD''S benefits will ye ungratefully deny? |
12788 | Which, therefore, of your LORD''S benefits will ye ungratefully deny? |
12788 | Which, therefore, of your LORD''S benefits will ye ungratefully deny? |
12788 | Which, therefore, of your LORD''S benefits will ye ungratefully deny? |
12788 | Which, therefore, of your LORD''S benefits will ye ungratefully deny? |
12788 | Which, therefore, of your LORD''S benefits will ye ungratefully deny? |
12788 | Whither, alas, are my kinspeople gone? |
12788 | Who can save himself?" |
12788 | Who filched them? |
12788 | Who is at the door other than he?" |
12788 | Who is at the door other than he?" |
12788 | Who is at the door other than he?" |
12788 | Who is at the door other than he?" |
12788 | Who is at the door?" |
12788 | Who is at the door?" |
12788 | Who ordered that their longing''s fire Should be, as soon as kindled, cooled? |
12788 | Who were the carpenters? |
12788 | Why are you tricked out like this? |
12788 | Why do we precious ointments show''r? |
12788 | Why has no one ever told me anything about it?" |
12788 | Why have I sent you to your death? |
12788 | Why was it that you were not assassinated too? |
12788 | Why, man of morals, tell me why? |
12788 | Will fortune ever, O daughter of Malik, ever bless me with thy embrace, that would cure my heart of the sorrows of love? |
12788 | Will you give me that rich banner? |
12788 | Will you give me the Emperor''s crown?" |
12788 | Will you go with us, and become a bird of passage? |
12788 | Will you listen to us, who are so anxious for your precious safety, and avoiding death, live with us secure from danger, or die horribly? |
12788 | Will you send?" |
12788 | Wilt thou go away, and leave the wretched stranger, the broken- hearted slave of love?" |
12788 | [ in a fidget_]--But who served the masons Who did you get to carry it? |
12788 | ["What is thy news?"] |
12788 | _ Dion_.--Euripides--_ Eur_.--Well, what? |
12788 | _ Dion_.--What the mischief have the smelling- salts got to do with it? |
12788 | _ Dion_.--While sacrificing? |
12788 | _ Eur_.--Let me say the whole verse, wo n''t you? |
12788 | _ Eur_.--So, you''ll show me, will you? |
12788 | _ Eur_.--What do I care? |
12788 | _ Eur_.--What? |
12788 | _ Euripides_--With a flask of smelling- salts? |
12788 | _ Mess_.--To carry it? |
12788 | _ Messenger_--Where is he? |
12788 | _ Orpheus:_ Or pleasureless shall we pass by The long cold night and leaden day, That song and tale and minstrelsy Shall make as merry as the May? |
12788 | _ Orpheus:_ Or wilt thou climb the sunny hill, In the October afternoon, To watch the purple earth''s blood fill The gray vat to the maiden''s tune? |
12788 | _ Shall_ the reward of good works_ be_ any other good? |
12788 | _ The Sirens_: Ah, will ye go, and whither then Will ye go from us, soon to die, To fill your threescore years and ten With many an unnamed misery? |
12788 | and if it is a temptation, why return to it, after having judged and conquered it? |
12788 | and what did chiefly allure you unto it, seeing not many women, but very few men, have attained thereunto?" |
12788 | and will ye stop your ears, In vain desire to do aught, And wish to live''mid cares and fears, Until the last fear makes you naught? |
12788 | asked the Princess;"or would you like to have a steady place as court Crows with all the broken bits from the kitchen?" |
12788 | but after all, to load your hods, How did you manage that? |
12788 | can it be That one exalted should seem pitiless? |
12788 | canst thou see aught of ladies, camel- borne, that journey along the upland there, above Jurthum well? |
12788 | dost thou glory in overthrowing these girls? |
12788 | hast thou forgotten it? |
12788 | how have you lost Your appetite, so as now to be content With the scant rations of one ship of war?" |
12788 | my father,"said Aucassin,"tell me where is the place so high in all the world, that Nicolette, my sweet lady and love, would not grace it well? |
12788 | or the windows of a gleaming mosque at eve, Lighted up for festal worship? |
12788 | or was all my fancy''s dream? |
12788 | or what drunken slave? |
12788 | poor souls and timorous, Will ye draw nigh to gaze at us And see if we are fair indeed? |
12788 | said I,"where are you? |
12788 | said I:"what does this mean? |
12788 | said the Troll,"will you stare your eyes out?" |
12788 | that the breeze Carried thy lovely wail away, Musical through Italian trees Which fringe thy soft blue Spezzian bay? |
12788 | the spears and generous hands? |
12788 | the world around So little loves thy strain? |
12788 | what can be In happiness compared to thee? |
12788 | what covenant, fair son?" |
12788 | what is this you ask? |
12788 | whence hath he eyes so sweet? |
12788 | whispered one to the other,"Do you remember that?" |
12788 | who could have built it? |
12788 | who, will make us feel? |
12788 | will you?'' |
12788 | wilt thou go? |
12788 | wilt thou go? |
12788 | wilt thou go?" |
12788 | wilt thou go?" |
26475 | ''Dying, is she?'' 26475 ''Have you a good strong keg for sale?'' |
26475 | ''Where''d you get those hosses?'' 26475 Ahem-- they never attack humans, I suppose?" |
26475 | All the way in that wagon? |
26475 | An''did old Bloody Bones done tol''you dey ain''no ghosts? |
26475 | An''how fur did you ever run him without a break? 26475 An''what did ye do wi''it, when ye had murdered it?" |
26475 | And if you capture him? |
26475 | Boys, do you think he''s leavin''the country? |
26475 | Broke loose, I suppose? |
26475 | But noo I''m thinkin''ye went back to yer main camp, an''lat puir Seelverhorrns live oot his life? |
26475 | But wasna there slathers o''food at the main camp? 26475 But what has happened? |
26475 | But-- but what''s he doing at Cassil''s Siding? 26475 Can he ride?" |
26475 | Can ye shoulder it? |
26475 | Can you beat that? 26475 Come all the way from Vermont?" |
26475 | Come from New York, do n''t you? |
26475 | Den what am yo''skeered ob? |
26475 | Did I ever tell you what Uncle Jerry Holman said of his bull calf? 26475 Did you ever have any very close calls?" |
26475 | Did you look all over? 26475 Did you say cigars?" |
26475 | Did-- did I-- get him? |
26475 | Do n''t they? |
26475 | Do n''t you know or care when this train is coming? |
26475 | Do you mean to say he bit those leather straps in two? |
26475 | Do you mean,said Craig, taking him up promptly,"can Jesus Christ save you from your sins and make a man of you?" |
26475 | Do you, too, want him? |
26475 | Does he come out often? 26475 Does it eat''em up?" |
26475 | Does it hurt anybody? |
26475 | Eh? |
26475 | Gettin''glory, Hoppy? |
26475 | Give me a job, wo n''t you? |
26475 | Got along far enough to take a station key somewhere? |
26475 | Hallo, McLeod,said Hemenway as he came up through the darkness,"is that you?" |
26475 | Hear that? 26475 Hoo are ye, Dud, an''whaur hae ye been murderin''the innocent beasties noo? |
26475 | How do you know? |
26475 | How''d I get a chance to learn? |
26475 | Hurt? 26475 I beg your pardon,"I asked,"but what did you say would be out to- night?" |
26475 | I played out, did n''t I? |
26475 | Is it? 26475 Katmai is pretty tough, is n''t it?" |
26475 | Lead quarters-- eh? |
26475 | Lin Slone, are you gone plumb crazy over thet red hoss? |
26475 | Lin, you''re goin''to wear out Wildfire, an''then trap him somehow-- is thet the plan? |
26475 | Lookin''fer something? |
26475 | Mother and father down there still? |
26475 | No- o,admitted Toddles reluctantly;"but----""Then why not something where there''s no handicap hanging over you?" |
26475 | No? |
26475 | Oh, forget that day on the pass, ca n''t you? |
26475 | One day a few weeks later a man came into the shop and said,''Have you a good strong keg for sale?'' 26475 Sarah, did ye get a good look at it?" |
26475 | Say, ca n''t he ring bells offen the rocks? |
26475 | Seems good to be back in the North again, does n''t it? |
26475 | So this smokin''means you both want to turn back? |
26475 | So you and Mort are still partners, eh? |
26475 | Stony River? 26475 Super hard on you this morning-- Hoogan?" |
26475 | The key, for instance? |
26475 | Think I''m a fool kid? |
26475 | To me? 26475 Well, when? |
26475 | Well? |
26475 | Wha''yo''pick up dat nonsense? |
26475 | Whash fare Loon Dam to Big Cloud? |
26475 | What did he do? 26475 What did you think it might be?" |
26475 | What do you mean? |
26475 | What do you think of that? |
26475 | What do you think they do? 26475 What does he do with''em?" |
26475 | What does it do? |
26475 | What happens to a maverick- hunter, nowadays? 26475 What makes them mad?" |
26475 | What was that, father? |
26475 | What will be my part? |
26475 | What''s he done? |
26475 | What''s that? |
26475 | What''s the matter with Mort? |
26475 | What''s the matter? |
26475 | What''s the matter? |
26475 | What''s up now, Harlan? |
26475 | What''s wrong, Bob? |
26475 | What''s yer name? 26475 What''s your name-- Toddles?" |
26475 | When I tell you that you will not want him, do you still insist on seeing him? |
26475 | When''ll he grow up? |
26475 | Where are you boys bound for? |
26475 | Where do ye hail from? |
26475 | Where the deuce did you come from, Johnny? |
26475 | Where ye bound? |
26475 | Where''s Hopalong? |
26475 | Who''d teach me? |
26475 | Whut for you try to take my head? |
26475 | Whut yo''want to say unto me? |
26475 | Why ai n''t yo''want to go? |
26475 | Why did you tell him I bit? |
26475 | Why not? 26475 Why?" |
26475 | Wonder why we do n''t see no bears? |
26475 | Ya- as? |
26475 | Yes; but how are we going to get to him? |
26475 | You have ridden far? |
26475 | You said they mostly attack persons who are sleeping out, did n''t you? |
26475 | You''d try your tricks on me, would you? |
26475 | _ Habla española?_he asked, experimentally. |
26475 | _ Still_ partners? |
26475 | _ What?_demanded the super. |
26475 | ''Who you''fraid of?'' |
26475 | Abe, could n''t you help get the timber out in a hurry so we can have a raising within a week? |
26475 | Ai n''t that a house?" |
26475 | Ai n''t ye wore out?" |
26475 | Ai n''t you heard about Stony River?" |
26475 | Am I closer to him? |
26475 | An''if de cap''n ghost an''de gin''ral ghost an''de king ghost an''all de ghostes in de whole worl''don''know ef dar am ghostes, who does?" |
26475 | An''who know but whut a great, big ghost bump right into him''ca''se it ca n''t see him? |
26475 | An''whut dem six ghostes do but stand round an''confabulate? |
26475 | An, sae thot''s the way ye didna murder puir Seelverhorrns? |
26475 | And I''m going to change your runs, unless you''ve got some good reason to give me why I should n''t?" |
26475 | And anyway, how did he know we had gone up the Yukon? |
26475 | And how did he get across the Klondike River? |
26475 | And then, coming nearer,"Must you go to- morrow?" |
26475 | And what I want to know is who told him we were up the Stewart? |
26475 | And what do you think was in it? |
26475 | And who might you be, young man?" |
26475 | Behind th''bar?" |
26475 | But the sun and air revived him; and after a long while he stirs and says:"''Old man, who are you who are so kind to me?'' |
26475 | But what was that beating in his ears-- sharp, swift, even, rhythmic? |
26475 | But ye''ll ne''er be claimin''that moose huntin''is a wark o''necessity or maircy?" |
26475 | By this time he may be----""What''s yon?" |
26475 | Could he be broke?" |
26475 | Did I say he could eat? |
26475 | Did ye see nane at all?" |
26475 | Did you ever tire thet hoss?" |
26475 | Do they?" |
26475 | Do you know what that dog did? |
26475 | Do you want one?'' |
26475 | Do you want to know what I did? |
26475 | Eh, Mort?" |
26475 | Funny, the egg part of it? |
26475 | God of heaven, man, what is that?" |
26475 | Graeme?" |
26475 | Grant eyed him with some concern, finally inquiring,"Feel bad, Johnny?" |
26475 | H''m? |
26475 | Had he come to the end of the world? |
26475 | Hae ye kilt yer moose yet? |
26475 | Have a banana?" |
26475 | Hawkeye? |
26475 | He came straight to the sleigh and, ignoring my presence completely, said:"Mr. Craig, are you dead sure of this? |
26475 | Hear me?" |
26475 | His voice was low and tender as he inquired,"Are you resting easier now?" |
26475 | Hoo was it that ye couldna slaughter stacks o''moose wi''him to help ye? |
26475 | How did he know we were coming to Dawson, to the very hour and minute, to be out there on the bank waiting for us? |
26475 | How did he know we were in Dawson, anyway? |
26475 | How did he know? |
26475 | How did it get here? |
26475 | How far might the chase take him? |
26475 | How had he ever dared to believe he could capture that wild stallion? |
26475 | How long ye been travelin''? |
26475 | How you know dey ai n''t no ghosts?" |
26475 | How''d he get there-- h''m? |
26475 | How''d he get there?" |
26475 | How''s that, you old Calvinist?" |
26475 | How? |
26475 | How?" |
26475 | Howdy, li''l Mose?" |
26475 | I mean, are you part of his parish, so to speak?" |
26475 | If you do n''t lead us to him we''ll shore have to rummage around an''poke him out for ourselves: which is it?" |
26475 | Is it a dream?" |
26475 | It was like killing a man, a conscious, brave man who looked calmly into your gun as much as to say,"Who''s afraid?" |
26475 | Let''s see now-- what was that hombre''s name?" |
26475 | Lin, have you got an extra set of shoes for him?" |
26475 | Not knowing what to make of the trapper''s excited action, I said:"That? |
26475 | Not much of a chance? |
26475 | Now how did he get loose? |
26475 | Now how did he get out of that ice? |
26475 | Now how did he know our minds were made up to eat him? |
26475 | Now how did he know we lived there? |
26475 | Now, what are you going to do about it? |
26475 | Or had the long chase and his privations unhinged his mind? |
26475 | Queer, is n''t it-- the way things happen? |
26475 | Regan glared fiercely-- then he spluttered:"Who''s Christopher Hyslop Hoogan-- h''m?" |
26475 | Remember that fellow the Hydrophoby Skunk bit down here by the rapids, Bill? |
26475 | Savvy?" |
26475 | See th''cross?" |
26475 | So he say to li''l black Mose:"''Tain''likely you met up wid a monstrous big ha''nt whut live down de lane whut he name Bloody Bones?" |
26475 | So li''l black Mose he turn he white head, an''he look roun''an''peer roun'', an''he say:"Whut you all skeered fo''?" |
26475 | Then he lay down to rest, and he said:"Wonder where Wildfire is to- night? |
26475 | Then he said abruptly,''Why did you come here?'' |
26475 | There were forty thousand people in Dawson that summer, and how did he_ savvy_ our cabin out of all the cabins? |
26475 | To me?" |
26475 | Toddles? |
26475 | Up the Kuskokwim?" |
26475 | Was he dreaming? |
26475 | Was he near any help? |
26475 | Was it a storm or an avalanche slipping or falling water? |
26475 | Weel, Dud, are ye glad? |
26475 | Welsh?" |
26475 | What and where would be the end of this chase? |
26475 | What did Toddles have to do with this? |
26475 | What do they do anywhere?" |
26475 | What do you say?" |
26475 | What do you think?" |
26475 | What is dat Ah got to remimber?" |
26475 | What''d_ you_ do?" |
26475 | What''s a mission doing up here?" |
26475 | What''s the idea?" |
26475 | What''s the matter with her? |
26475 | What''s wrong with the beastly old road, anyhow?" |
26475 | What, Slone wondered, was at the bottom of this rent in the earth? |
26475 | Whaur is he noo? |
26475 | When is she due?" |
26475 | Where are th''cows that we used to own?" |
26475 | Where are th''little herds now? |
26475 | Where had it come from? |
26475 | Where was I? |
26475 | Where was he? |
26475 | Where''ll you be then?'' |
26475 | Where''s he headin''for?" |
26475 | Who brought it, and for what purpose? |
26475 | Who''d ever believe you''d catch yourself, draggin''in the sand?" |
26475 | Whut we gwine do fo''to_ re_ward him fo''politeness?" |
26475 | Whut you skeered ob whin dey ai n''t no ghosts?" |
26475 | Why do they want him?" |
26475 | Why smash the window? |
26475 | Why waste the moment required to do it simply to answer the call? |
26475 | Will it work?" |
26475 | Would that turn back Wildfire? |
26475 | Would the great desert river stop Wildfire in his flight? |
26475 | Wull ye stay here wi''me, or gang awa''back to yer bed?" |
26475 | Ye''re no sorry that he''s leevin''yet, are ye, Dud?" |
26475 | You keep thinking,''Now, suppose there''s a flaw in that fuse, or something, and she goes off in six seconds instead of two minutes? |
26475 | You know him, do n''t you?" |
26475 | You thought I was-- hic!--s''drunk I would n''t know-- eh? |
26475 | _ Comment ça va_, Baptiste? |
26475 | _ Did n''t_ you bite? |
26475 | can He save me?'' |
26475 | he gasped; and then, quick as a steel trap:"What''s wrong?" |
26475 | returned the other;''but I want a strong one--_strong_, do you hear?'' |
20229 | ''Drown? 20229 ''O, but I''m in airnest,''says the captain;''and do you tell me, Paddy,''says he,''that you spake Frinch?'' |
20229 | ''O, then, whereabouts in the wide world are we, Captain?'' 20229 ''Tare an ouns,''says I,''do you tell me so? |
20229 | ''Then would you lind me the loan of a gridiron,''says I,''if you plase?'' 20229 ''Then, thunder an''turf,''says I,''will you lind me the loan of a gridiron?'' |
20229 | ''Well,''says I,''and how do you know but I''m as good a furriner myself as any o''thim?'' 20229 ''What do you mane?'' |
20229 | ''What for?'' 20229 ''Where is he? |
20229 | ''Why, then,''says he,''thunder and turf,''says he,''what puts a gridiron into your head?'' 20229 A trifle or so, Paddy?" |
20229 | Ah, then, your Holiness,says his Riv''rence, mighty eager,"maybe you''d have a dhrop ov the native in your cellar? |
20229 | All? |
20229 | An''how many miles would that be, Captain? |
20229 | An''might I be so bowld to ax, Captain, is Bingal much farther nor Fingal? |
20229 | An''why would n''t you tell him? |
20229 | And did you not hear me whisper to my companion? 20229 And how are you off for provisions?" |
20229 | And how do you know whether you see the nose on my face or not? |
20229 | And is it a great deal farther, your honor, the_ tay_ country is? |
20229 | And is it the Widda O''Sullivan''s boy you''d be that left this come Candlemas four years? |
20229 | And sure,said Barny,"why should n''t_ you_ do the same, and they are ready to your hand? |
20229 | And what wor you talking about me and your boat for? |
20229 | And what''s your name besides Barny? |
20229 | And when the north is fornenst you, as you say, is the east on your right or your left hand? |
20229 | And where do you think I_ am_ going? |
20229 | And where''ud the hooker be all the time? |
20229 | And who ax''d you to consayve anything about it? |
20229 | And who made you so bowld with my name? |
20229 | And why did he take you up in the tower, pray? 20229 And you know the points of the compass,--you have a compass, I suppose?" |
20229 | Are they going to fight? |
20229 | Are you in arnest that it is in fun you wer? |
20229 | Are you sure you remember my directions? |
20229 | Arrah sure, captain, an''do n''t you know that sometimes vessels is bound to sail under_ saycret ordhers_? |
20229 | Arrah, sure, sir, what would the woman that owns me do while I was away? 20229 At what hour did you see him?" |
20229 | But are you going to produce evidence? |
20229 | But there is no hill, Paddy; do n''t you know that water is always level? |
20229 | But what brought you so far out to sea? |
20229 | But what does that matter? |
20229 | But where can Uncle John and his friend be? 20229 But where?" |
20229 | But you do n''t know your course back? |
20229 | But you''re sure now, Barny, that you''re up to the coorse you have to run? |
20229 | Ca n''t you steer? |
20229 | Could not Miss Corinna sing it from memory? |
20229 | Dearest Sister Anne, do n''t you see any one coming? |
20229 | Do n''t mind praying for me till you get home, Barny; but answer me, how are you to steer when you shall leave me? |
20229 | Do you always laugh a mile from the Box Tunnel? |
20229 | Do you call it doin''no good to go fasther nor ships iver wint before? |
20229 | Do you judge by superficial misure or by the liquid contents? |
20229 | Do you mane for to say there is a bell in it at all at all? |
20229 | Do you mean to say that he did not_ kill_ them, then? |
20229 | Do you see anybody coming, Sister Anne? |
20229 | Et, tu, sacrilege nebulo,says the Pope,"quomodo audacitatem habeas, me Dei in terris vicarium, lathronem conwiciari?" |
20229 | Evidence? 20229 Fingal,--where''s Fingal?" |
20229 | Fingal,--where''s that? |
20229 | Gently, gently, my friend,replied Johnny;"there is the money: and it''s really after twelve o''clock, thou says?" |
20229 | Had,said the ensign,"he black whiskers and a red coat?" |
20229 | How do you know them? 20229 How do you make out that, Paddy?" |
20229 | How durst you call me a swaddler, sir? |
20229 | How should I frighten you? |
20229 | I believe, Pat,''twas when you were crossing the Atlantic? |
20229 | I wo n''t tell you that,--but do you tell me what ports you know best? |
20229 | If so, what is he doing there, or why does he appear at all, till we know whether the cause is to be defended? |
20229 | In the name ov God,says the Pope, very solemniously,"what_ is_ the maning ov all this at all at all?" |
20229 | Is he hurt? |
20229 | Is it back? 20229 Is it dhrink?" |
20229 | Is it like hay, your honor? |
20229 | Is it me? |
20229 | Is it round in airnest, Captain dear? 20229 Is it the Cove o''Cork?" |
20229 | Is it the darlint boat? 20229 Is the captain unwell?" |
20229 | Is there anything,exclaimed the unhappy and perplexed Fatima,"that he would have me do? |
20229 | Is this a witness? |
20229 | It really_ is_ past twelve, thou says? |
20229 | May the divil sweep you,said Barny,"and will nothin''else sarve you than comin''forninst me that away? |
20229 | Musha, bad luck to you, knowledge, but you''re a quare thing!--and where is it Bingal, bad cess to it, would be at all at all? |
20229 | My adversary says, black is not another color, that is white? 20229 No; I was only goin''to ax you what coorse you wor goin''to steer?" |
20229 | Not exactly, Paddy; what puts hay in your head? |
20229 | O, be aisy; why how could they do that? |
20229 | O, that is where they make the_ tay_, is n''t it, sir? |
20229 | O, thin he does, and for that rayson who has a right to know more about it? |
20229 | O, thin, indeed, and that''s thrue,said Jemmy and Peter,"and whin will we come to the short turn?" |
20229 | Och, thin, millia murther, weirasthru, how''ll I iver get there at all at all? |
20229 | Perhaps you had given him the key? |
20229 | Quid tibi incommodi? |
20229 | Some of us!--How do you mean? |
20229 | Something he said that almost killed you with laughing? 20229 Sure, an''ar''n''t you from Amerikay?" |
20229 | Sure, and amn''t I thrying all I can? |
20229 | Terry O''Sullivan,--who is he, pray? |
20229 | That is much the same thing; will you be advised by me? |
20229 | That''s the explanation sure enough,says his Holiness;"and now what div you say to my being a common imposther?" |
20229 | That''s, I suppose, what we call Chaynee, sir? |
20229 | Then what''s your objection, as to the time? |
20229 | Then, you do n''t know your course, it appears? |
20229 | Thou says it really_ is_ past twelve, friend? |
20229 | Thrue for you, indeed, your honor,said Barny, in his most insinuating tone;"but whin will you be at the ind o''your voyage, Captain jewel?" |
20229 | To the divil wid Terry O''Sullivan,said Barny;"how does he know what''s an iligant place? |
20229 | Tu senex lathro,says he,"quomodo audes me mendacem prà ¦ dicare?" |
20229 | W-- w-- was it a_ bl-- ue beard_? |
20229 | Was n''t your honor discoorsin''me about the points o''the compasses? |
20229 | Well, Barny,said Jemmy,"what was the captain sayin''to you at the time you wor wid him?" |
20229 | Well, I say, what ports do you know best? |
20229 | Well, an''where''s the wondher o''that? 20229 Well, and what was he the betther o''having more prate than a Scotchman?" |
20229 | Well, how is it done then? |
20229 | Well, there''s no use in talkin''aboot it now, anyhow; but when do you expec''to be there? |
20229 | Well, very well; then, for the next twenty- four hours I can go through again without paying? |
20229 | Well, what about the pig? |
20229 | Well, what does this prove,said Sister Anne,"but that somebody moved the coffin, and broke the cane?" |
20229 | Well, what if I have? |
20229 | Well, what matther? |
20229 | Well,replied Lizzy;"sure, is n''t that extraordinary? |
20229 | What are scalpeens? |
20229 | What brings you here? |
20229 | What can this larned quadhruped o''yours do? |
20229 | What do you mane? |
20229 | What else would you have me to do? |
20229 | What for? |
20229 | What for? |
20229 | What have you eatable? |
20229 | What have you to say? |
20229 | What is the difference between Lord Eldon and Sir Thomas Grouts? |
20229 | What is the matter, dear? |
20229 | What makes you call the blessed quart an irrational quantity? |
20229 | What news of the ghost, my dearest Miss Shacabac? |
20229 | What port are you a pilot of? |
20229 | What sort o''tobaccay is it that''s in it? |
20229 | What the plague are you talking about? |
20229 | What voice? |
20229 | What''s that? |
20229 | What''s that? |
20229 | What''s that? |
20229 | What''s that? |
20229 | What''s the raison you''re runnin''a nor- aist coorse now, an''we never hear''d iv it afore at all, till afther you quitted the big ship? |
20229 | What, sir? |
20229 | Where are you bound to? |
20229 | Where do you come from? |
20229 | Where? |
20229 | Which one do you prefir? |
20229 | Who is that who interrupts the service? 20229 Who is that?" |
20229 | Who says I''m afeared? |
20229 | Who towld you that, my Watherford Wondher? |
20229 | Who''s the hare now, your Holiness? 20229 Why do you call me from the tomb?" |
20229 | Why then do you object to tell? |
20229 | Why then, ai n''t you ashamed o''yourself an''not to know where Fingal is? |
20229 | Why thin now do you think me sich a born nathral as to give in to that? 20229 Why, Master Darbyshire,"said the dry old miller,"how is this? |
20229 | Why, did two people niver thravel the same road before? |
20229 | Why, do you want me to go along wid you, Barny? |
20229 | Why, sir, did you never hear a pig can see the wind? |
20229 | Why, thin,said Barny,"is n''t it to Fingal?" |
20229 | Why, what an ignoramus you must be, not to know what a compass is, and you at sea all your life? 20229 Why, what''s your objection?" |
20229 | Will you pay me or not? |
20229 | Will you see your first husband or your second husband? |
20229 | Will your Holiness take a blast ov the pipe? |
20229 | Would you have me doubt the evidence ov my sinses? |
20229 | Would you like to thry? |
20229 | Yes, I know; but what about it? |
20229 | Yes; and what then? |
20229 | You do n''t b''lieve me, do n''t you? |
20229 | You have got your flute, Frederick? |
20229 | You know Cove, then? |
20229 | Your name, is it? |
20229 | ''What dost mean, Lizzy?'' |
20229 | ''You did n''t?'' |
20229 | Ah, lave me alone always, Jimmy; did you iver know me wrong yet?" |
20229 | An''did n''t you hear o''the war? |
20229 | An''where''s the head like o''you? |
20229 | And are n''t I ready to go down on my two knees this blessed minit and beg your apostolical pardon for every word that I said to your displasement?" |
20229 | And did not he once give a most notable piece of advice to a_ rich_ Friend who was a shocking sleeper? |
20229 | And my curse light on you, Terry O''Sullivan, why did I iver come across you, you onlooky vagabone, to put sich thoughts in my head? |
20229 | And now the question came, What could the ghost want by appearing? |
20229 | And so it''s_ Bingal_, and not_ Fingal_, you''re goin''to, Captain?" |
20229 | And then the drains were all stopped; the land was drowning, was starving to death; and where were the hedges all gone to? |
20229 | And then where had the man flung the seed to? |
20229 | And where is Master Charles? |
20229 | And why did you send me in such a hurry to the leads? |
20229 | Answer me that, you ould swaddler?" |
20229 | Apropos of contributions--"Uncle, have you brought your spoons?" |
20229 | As he was about to throw it over the hedge, Miss Snubbleston, seized with an unusual fit of generosity, called out to him,--"What_ are_ you doing? |
20229 | At length she came to herself with a dreadful groan,--flashed open her eyes wide on me, and cried,''Didst see him? |
20229 | Augh? |
20229 | Bad cess to you, do you think I''ve nothin''to do but plaze you?" |
20229 | Bad luck to you, do you understand your own language?--_Parly voo frongsay_?'' |
20229 | But what are the medicaments of the apothecary in a case where the grave gives up its dead? |
20229 | But where was her carriage? |
20229 | Can any of these chaps i''th''wigs say as much? |
20229 | Could n''t he go to Fingal himself? |
20229 | Could she witness such attachment and not be touched by it? |
20229 | D-- n your stupid head, ca n''t you tell what brings you here?" |
20229 | Did not I enjoin you, did you not solemnly promise me, that nobody should cross the mare''s back?" |
20229 | Didst save him? |
20229 | Do n''t I know a bum- baily when I see him? |
20229 | Do you even know the cardinal points?" |
20229 | Do you know the four points of the wind?" |
20229 | Do you sit without parson or clerk, and expect to learn religion by looking at your shoe- toes? |
20229 | Dolignan at last found himself injured;"who was this man? |
20229 | Doth not the scorching sun nip the rose- bud as well as the bitter wind? |
20229 | During all this time, Bagshaw-- but who would attempt to describe anguish indescribable? |
20229 | Eh, Spring, is n''t that thrue?" |
20229 | Evidence? |
20229 | George, you will never forgive me?" |
20229 | Had he not received and travelled with ministers when they came on religious visits into these parts? |
20229 | Had n''t he attended first- day, week- day, preparative, monthly, quarterly, and sometimes yearly meetings too, all his life? |
20229 | Had not Mr. Bluebeard settled every shilling upon her? |
20229 | Had not he regularly and handsomely subscribed to the monthly, and the national, and the Ackworth School Stocks? |
20229 | Have n''t I seen him and heard him, too, already? |
20229 | How came we to forget him? |
20229 | How could she bear to look on them after what had occurred? |
20229 | How dare you report the monstrous calumnies regarding the best of men? |
20229 | How do you know the points?" |
20229 | How-- how should these distracting circumstances be brought to an end? |
20229 | I know this case better than any other man can, and for why? |
20229 | I say, let go your jib and foresheet,--what are you about, you lubbers?" |
20229 | I suppose you have provisions on board?" |
20229 | I''ve axed thy pardon, have n''t I? |
20229 | If I wint wid you, whin would I be home again?" |
20229 | If any one were to leave you or me a fortune, my dear friend, would we be too anxious to rake up the how and the why? |
20229 | If they drank their wine out of black bottles or crystal, what did it matter to her? |
20229 | Instead of dining at Hampstead, as we did last year, shall we go to Greenwich, or to Putney, and eat little fishes?" |
20229 | Is n''t it written in a book? |
20229 | Is not this navigation made easy? |
20229 | It is well to say''now, now, now,''and to show himself; but what is it that makes my blessed husband so uneasy in his grave?" |
20229 | It''s to Ireland you''re goin''?" |
20229 | Mr. Charles,"said Bagshaw,"where is your father?" |
20229 | Now who''s right? |
20229 | Now, sir, will you reduce the place to a mathematical certainty, and be one of the party?" |
20229 | O murther, what''ud we ha''done if we wor there at all at all?" |
20229 | O, the divil sweep you for navigation, why did I meddle or make wid you at all at all? |
20229 | One of his fellow- boatmen, at last, said to him,"Why thin, Barny O''Reirdon, what the divil is come over you, at all at all? |
20229 | Richards?" |
20229 | Sam? |
20229 | So, not to be outdone altogether, he says to his Riv''rence,"you''re a man that''s fond of the brute crayation, I hear, Misther Maguire?" |
20229 | Sure, and is n''t it a proud day for Ireland, this blessed feast ov the chair ov Saint Pether? |
20229 | Sure, ar''n''t they belongin''to the pope?" |
20229 | Tare alive, says I, what war? |
20229 | The plain- dealing reader would say,"Could n''t he ask?" |
20229 | There was nothing else to be done; so where is Miss Snubbleston''s basket? |
20229 | Thou did n''t let him drown?'' |
20229 | Was George Fox one, did they think; or William Penn, or Robert Barclay, indeed? |
20229 | Was it_ his_ fault that the doctors could not cure their maladies? |
20229 | Was n''t that stout in the blessed man? |
20229 | Was not he born in the Society, brought up in it? |
20229 | Was not that an evidence of a religious tact and practice? |
20229 | What art mumbling at there, man? |
20229 | What did she care for jokes about the major, or scandal concerning the Scotch surgeon of the regiment? |
20229 | What do you know iv navigation? |
20229 | What does the chap mean? |
20229 | What was it?" |
20229 | What was the matter? |
20229 | What was to be done? |
20229 | What was to be done? |
20229 | What''s the maynin''of your loitherin''about here, and the boat ready and a lovely fine breeze aff o''the land?" |
20229 | What''s the use sitting here where one can hear nothing but a buzzing like a bee in a blossom?" |
20229 | What? |
20229 | What?'' |
20229 | When I inquired after the mare,--you can guess-- when was a broken leg of a horse successfully set again? |
20229 | Where is he? |
20229 | Where is he?'' |
20229 | Where is your honor goin''?" |
20229 | Where''s my dear Sam? |
20229 | Who was it that drank three bottles at a sitting? |
20229 | Why, dearest, then you brought that action against me?" |
20229 | Why, thin, blur- an- agers, do you think it''s follyin''yiz I am?" |
20229 | Would n''t you, now? |
20229 | You ask me how are steamboats propagated? |
20229 | You could see it as plainly as possible written on their faces,--"Who have we got here? |
20229 | You do n''t conthravene that? |
20229 | You remember, Pat( turning to the man, evidently pleased at the notice thus paid to himself),--you remember that queer adventure you had in France?" |
20229 | You''re sure you know the four points of the wind?" |
20229 | _ Did_ you give him a pincushion, sister? |
20229 | _ Dolignan._ What is the matter? |
20229 | _ Dolignan._ You know my name? |
20229 | _ Friend._ What is the matter? |
20229 | _ Hurroo_, my darlings!--didn''t I tell you it''ud never do? |
20229 | _ The-- very-- man!_ You know Jack Richards?" |
20229 | _ did_ you give him a locket with your hair?" |
20229 | _ who''s somebody?_"said the beadle, staring round about him. |
20229 | an''how will I iver get back?" |
20229 | and bad cess to you both,"said O''Reirdon,"what the dickens are yiz goin''to fight about now, and sich good liquor before yiz? |
20229 | and is it a whit less probable than the first part of the tale? |
20229 | and what o''that? |
20229 | and what right had he to go on so? |
20229 | and who knows but it''s all dead they''d be afore I got back? |
20229 | and why did he sharpen his long knife, and roar out to you to COME DOWN?" |
20229 | and why was it that Dolly Coddlins left the town so suddenly?" |
20229 | bad luck to it for a_ Bin_gal, it''s the sore_ Bin_gal to me), is it so far off as you say?" |
20229 | but where''s the beefstake?'' |
20229 | ca n''t he be with us on the 24th?" |
20229 | can anything be more convincing than that? |
20229 | exclaims Sir John, in feigned surprise,"was Pat ever in France?" |
20229 | had they picked the windiest day of all the year to scatter his corn on the air in? |
20229 | how''ll we ever get back?" |
20229 | in other words, how is such an infinite and immovable body inveigled along its course? |
20229 | rejoined Barny;"what the dickens do you know about sayfarin''farther nor fishin''for sprats in a bowl wid your grandmother?" |
20229 | said Barny,"what''ll I do now, at all at all?" |
20229 | said Mr. Richards,"do you perceive it? |
20229 | said his two companions at once, in much surprise;"is it clothes upon cannons?" |
20229 | said the first;"Who dares disturb my grave?" |
20229 | says I,''that all the world calls so p''lite? |
20229 | says I,--''_Parly voo frongsay_?" |
20229 | says his Riv''rence,"and how do you know whether what you thought was thundher, was thundher at all? |
20229 | says his Riv''rence;"why what would your Holiness be at, at all? |
20229 | says the Pope,"what''s this at all?" |
20229 | says the Pope;"that is,"says he,"which figure of spache do you find most usefullest when you''re hard set?" |
20229 | says the Pope;"would you have me doubt the testimony of my eyes and ears?" |
20229 | thin, Captain dear, and how is it at all at all, that you make your way over the wide says intirely to them furrin parts?" |
20229 | were not his father, and his grandfather, and his great- grandfather before him all Quakers? |
20229 | what can it be? |
20229 | what_ can_ it be?" |
20229 | wherefore am I called from my grave?" |
20229 | who had a mare that ran for the plate? |
20229 | why should I be afraid of seeing my Bluebeard again?" |
20229 | why?'' |
20229 | would n''t you?" |
20229 | would you force me to choose, when I am so obedient as to choose that you should have the choice entirely your own way? |
28498 | ''Lord,''says he,''is it s''deep''s that? 28498 A dead fish?" |
28498 | A fish? |
28498 | A really state? 28498 Ai n''t I swept over every inch of this here schoolhouse myself and carried the trash outten a dust- pan?" |
28498 | And what do the rest of you think? |
28498 | And what is thy other reason? |
28498 | And will you try the same of me, Lorna? |
28498 | Another kitten? |
28498 | Are you going to knock me down, dear John? |
28498 | Are youse dumbies? |
28498 | At the eighth hour this afternoon? |
28498 | But Ardelia, you do n''t want to go back to that horribly smelly street? 28498 But what should they kill me for?" |
28498 | But why ai n''t you tellin''us what you give her? |
28498 | Could he see Hypatia? |
28498 | Did you ever see anybody act like that Fannie Leach? 28498 Do I not?" |
28498 | Do you hear me, some of you? 28498 Have you nothing else to ask him, sir?" |
28498 | How can I go without settling anything? |
28498 | How could I sleep, while at any moment you might be killed beneath my window? 28498 How could you dare?" |
28498 | How do you know she is? |
28498 | How long has her salvation been important to you, my good friend? |
28498 | How shall I know of your danger now? 28498 Huh?" |
28498 | I thought all little girls liked--"Picnic? 28498 Is it so?" |
28498 | Is n''t the new lady, Mrs. Samuels, your teacher? |
28498 | It feels like a lump of lead? |
28498 | Leave my dog behind? 28498 Mo''cancelized dis mornin'', is she?" |
28498 | My darling, is it you? |
28498 | Nobody knows what the dog did? |
28498 | Now tell me,I said;"what means all this? |
28498 | Now what do you suppose the dog did? |
28498 | Now, how do you like real milk, Ardelia? 28498 Of what is she to be warned?" |
28498 | Oh, I thought you were gone,she answered;"why did you ever come here? |
28498 | Oh, Lorna, do n''t you know me? |
28498 | On your brow? |
28498 | Ready for the two- step, children? |
28498 | She did, did she? 28498 Stands where?" |
28498 | Surely not gone to Glen Doone? |
28498 | Terrible hot to- day, ai n''t it? |
28498 | That? 28498 Well,''Pollo, how''s yo''case on Miss Lily comin''on?" |
28498 | Wha''s jam? |
28498 | Wha''s''at? |
28498 | Wha''s''at? |
28498 | What has that to do with it? 28498 What is it, Ardelia; what is it? |
28498 | What is thy name, yeoman? |
28498 | What is your name? |
28498 | What would you do if you saw a little white kitten like that? |
28498 | What''s your name? |
28498 | What? |
28498 | Where are you going? |
28498 | Where do I sleep? 28498 Where do you feel it worst, sir?" |
28498 | Where do you live? 28498 Who are you, there? |
28498 | Who''s that? |
28498 | Whom? |
28498 | Why do none of them come to him? |
28498 | Why? |
28498 | Why? |
28498 | Why? |
28498 | Why? |
28498 | With whom? |
28498 | Would n''t you like to come with me and have a nice, cool bath? |
28498 | Yesterday, children, as I came out of my yard,_ what_ do you think I saw? |
28498 | You do n''t suppose he''ll be a poet, do you? 28498 You see that tree with the seven rooks''nests, bright against the cliffs there? |
28498 | You would n''t? 28498 _ What?_""See that you''re here, that''s all. |
28498 | _ What_ is it this afternoon? |
28498 | ''What d''you take me for?'' |
28498 | A really state?" |
28498 | A snake?" |
28498 | Ai n''t he big and fat and nice? |
28498 | Ai n''t you ashamed of yourself? |
28498 | An''who was walkin''by her side all dat time, I like to know?" |
28498 | And what claim founded in justice and right has been withheld? |
28498 | And what do you think? |
28498 | And what else do you think I saw?" |
28498 | And yet who could help liking them the better for it? |
28498 | Are you a man?" |
28498 | Are you in any danger?" |
28498 | As I lay in bed this morning in Arsenius''room they thought I was asleep--""Arsenius? |
28498 | As some readers go through their lines they seem to be saying, Listen to my voice, observe my graceful gestures; is n''t this a pretty gown I have? |
28498 | At intervals I had communicated with her through the medium of Sarah Ann, the servant, and, as her rent was due on Wednesday, could I pay my bill now? |
28498 | At this Pierre turned, laughing, and said,"I s''pose you geeve''er somet''ing, too, eh?" |
28498 | Back-- and whither then? |
28498 | But do you reply that in many instances they have violated this compact and have not been faithful to their engagements? |
28498 | But the enemies of tyranny,--whither does their path tend? |
28498 | But, again, gentlemen, what have we to gain by this proposed change of our relation to the general government? |
28498 | Can you count them from above, do you think? |
28498 | Come to visit us, hey? |
28498 | Criticism? |
28498 | Day? |
28498 | Did he not know how she did it? |
28498 | Did you ever see anything so sweet?" |
28498 | Do n''t you like''em?" |
28498 | Do n''t you really like it?" |
28498 | Do n''t you want a drink, Ardelia?" |
28498 | Do n''t you want them?" |
28498 | Do n''t you, really?" |
28498 | Do you know what they would do to us if they found you here with me?" |
28498 | Do you see, they have put iron bars across?" |
28498 | Do you think I should be contented even with this lovely hand, but for these vile iron bars? |
28498 | From a place where you would be safe, dear?" |
28498 | Has that venerable fanatic, then, gone the way of all monastic flesh, and turned persecutor?" |
28498 | Has your grandfather turned against you? |
28498 | Have you a handkerchief? |
28498 | He ca n''t? |
28498 | He could recollect nothing but that something dreadful was to happen-- and that he had to prevent it, and could not.... Where was he now? |
28498 | He was just a leetle-- well, he''d had a drop too much, y''see--""Had a what?" |
28498 | Hear''i m gobble now, and see him as he proudly struts away; Do n''t you s''pose he knows there''s something in the name he bears to- day? |
28498 | How could a fish, a live fish, get in my front yard?" |
28498 | I cried;"and breaking all your orders? |
28498 | I cut it? |
28498 | I guess it''s pretty cool to what she''s accustomed to, ai n''t it, Delia?" |
28498 | I will not stay long; you tremble so; and yet for that very reason how can I leave you, Lorna?" |
28498 | If he conquers strong men, can the weak maid resist him? |
28498 | If it was not a trick to frighten him, and those were the real hours treading on each other''s heels, where would he be, when they came round again? |
28498 | If they do n''t like_ water_, what do they like?" |
28498 | If they found him, what would they not suspect? |
28498 | Is it the Dago picnic?" |
28498 | Is your mother very poor, poor boy?" |
28498 | It grew steadily, something was happening, something constant and mournful-- what? |
28498 | It was very dark; why did n''t they bring a light? |
28498 | Madden Martin 12 The Dancing School and Dicky Josephine Dodge Daskam 18 A Model Story in the Kindergarten Josephine Dodge Daskam 24 Fishin''? |
28498 | Miss Dorothy spoke to her twice-- wasn''t that dreadful? |
28498 | Moreover, I remembered my promise to sweet Lorna; and who would be left to defend her, if the rogues got rid of me? |
28498 | Mrs. Slater, wo n''t you get us some of your good, creamy milk? |
28498 | My first day in lodgings I said"Good- morning"to Sarah Ann, and she replied,"Eh?" |
28498 | My life? |
28498 | Never heard them, either, did ye? |
28498 | Not truly?" |
28498 | Now cats do n''t like the water, do they? |
28498 | Or a genius, or anything?" |
28498 | Say, where do you?" |
28498 | See how all his feathers glisten-- ain''t he big and plump and nice? |
28498 | See that turkey out there, mister? |
28498 | Shall I repent me by and by? |
28498 | She had shut herself up in her private room, strictly commanding that no visitor should be admitted...."Where was Theon, then?" |
28498 | Some day we pay to see you, no? |
28498 | Tearing her piecemeal? |
28498 | The elaborately concealed surprise in store was so obvious that Marantha rose to the occasion and suggested:"An el''phunt?" |
28498 | The same as he was in Judà ¦ a of old, Philammon? |
28498 | Then what are these, and in whose temple? |
28498 | Then, while he fanned her, he said,"Is dat so, Miss Lily, dat Mr. Pier is give you a buggy? |
28498 | To the CÃ ¦ sareum, the church of God Himself? |
28498 | To what faction do I belong? |
28498 | We girls tease her just as easy-- do you like her?" |
28498 | Well, how do you want to carry them? |
28498 | Well, would n''t you like some bread and butter and jam?" |
28498 | What are the circumstances? |
28498 | What availed the noise and bustle of cheerful morning which penetrated even there to him? |
28498 | What cared I for pistols? |
28498 | What did he care? |
28498 | What do they like?" |
28498 | What do you want with me?" |
28498 | What faction since the beginning of the Revolution, has crushed and annihilated so many detected traitors? |
28498 | What have I to say?... |
28498 | What in the name of the God of mercy were they doing? |
28498 | What interest of the South has been invaded? |
28498 | What is your name?" |
28498 | What justice has been denied? |
28498 | What made you dance all the time with Cissy Weston? |
28498 | What reasons can you give to the nations of the earth to justify it? |
28498 | What right has the North assailed? |
28498 | What tyrant is my protector? |
28498 | What was that roar below?... |
28498 | What would The Exhibition do without them? |
28498 | What''s yours?" |
28498 | When we asked a three- fifths representation in Congress for our slaves, was it not granted? |
28498 | When would they end? |
28498 | When?" |
28498 | Where are those papers?" |
28498 | Where do you suppose little Gwenny is?" |
28498 | Where were her gay pupils now? |
28498 | Whither now? |
28498 | Whither were they dragging her? |
28498 | Who Knows The Lily lifts to mine her nunlike face, But my wild heart is beating for the Rose; How can I pause to behold the Lily''s grace? |
28498 | Who knows? |
28498 | Why are you so pent up here? |
28498 | Why did the mob, increasing momentarily by hundreds, pour down upon the beach, and return brandishing flints, shells, fragments of pottery? |
28498 | Why do n''t he speak out the truth like a man? |
28498 | Why have you given me no token? |
28498 | Why not? |
28498 | Why should I make you miserable? |
28498 | Why should I see an elephant in my yard? |
28498 | Why thither of all places of the earth? |
28498 | Will you take my message, or see her--""What?" |
28498 | Wo n''t you cool off a little before you go on? |
28498 | Would this playful loving child grow up like his cruel father, and end a godless life of hatred with a death of violence? |
28498 | Would you make of Theon''s daughter a traitor like yourself?" |
28498 | You can have all you want every day-- why, what''s the matter?" |
28498 | You see that hole, that hole there?" |
28498 | [ D] Copyright, 1902, by McClure, Phillips& Co. Fishin''? |
28498 | [ Sidenote:= The Teacher=] Exercises? |
28498 | she said, as if she had every right to ask me;"and how did you come here, and what are these wet things in this great bag?" |
28498 | she whispered, softly, as I opened my eyes and looked at her;"now you will try to be better, wo n''t you?" |
28498 | they were shouting, here and there, and now and then;"where the pest is our little queen gone?" |
28498 | what right have they to butcher me?" |
35565 | Hermionagain pulled down the hand, and rather harshly demanded,"Come, say, what wouldst thou be, my boy?" |
35565 | The bells? |
35565 | What''s in a name? |
35565 | When do you play? |
35565 | Why? |
35565 | Will you go,said he,"if I wire for you and get you the engagement?" |
35565 | April 25th and 26th Ada Gray appeared in"Whose Wife?" |
35565 | At the time of which I write, 1872, John Maguire was young( about 30, eh, John? |
35565 | Could not all this flesh keep in a little life? |
35565 | He said to me,"They need you in Salt Lake badly; why do n''t you wire them? |
35565 | I inquired,"what bells?" |
35565 | If they want me why do n''t they wire me?" |
35565 | Johnny Allen and Alice Harrison were a great attraction in those days; how many remember them now? |
35565 | Miss Douglass, annoyed, pulled the little hand down testily from the child''s nose, and"Damon"repeated the question,"What wouldst thou be, my boy?" |
35565 | The President of course had heard of the new theatre,( what was there he did n''t hear of?) |
35565 | What is there in Shakespeare''s plays that lifts them so far above the average of merit and sets them on a plane so distinctively their own? |
35565 | Why are they so highly prized? |
35565 | Why, then, does the world attach so much importance to the work of Shakespeare? |
10748 | Am I to reign, or to live? |
10748 | Am I too late? |
10748 | And I am to punish M. de la Mole, as you say he is the guilty party? |
10748 | And M. de Villefort? |
10748 | And could you not show me my letters? |
10748 | And did that melt his heart? 10748 And do you really go to Paris to- night?" |
10748 | And have I combined myself with this here section, and turned out on this here memorable day, to hear men talk about their mothers? |
10748 | And how did it leave your hands? |
10748 | And how do you do, sir? |
10748 | And how is my little friend? |
10748 | And intended to make one, did you? |
10748 | And now, will monseigneur permit me to speak of my enemies, as we have spoken of yours? |
10748 | And on our return, may we, my friend and I, rely on getting our promotion-- he his barony, I my captaincy? |
10748 | And take a turn in the Bastille, by the cardinal''s order? 10748 And the guard?" |
10748 | And the maker''s name? |
10748 | And the needle? |
10748 | And the papers? |
10748 | And what are the conditions for finding them? |
10748 | And what does the boy say? |
10748 | And where is Haidà © e? |
10748 | And where is this book? 10748 And who made this figure?" |
10748 | And you know what wittles is? |
10748 | Are the gods of Olympus still worshipped on earth? |
10748 | Are these gentlemen your seconds? |
10748 | Are you dying for him? |
10748 | Are you going to show''em to- night? 10748 Are you going to take upon yourselves to swear that that boy upstairs is the boy that was put through the little window last night? |
10748 | Are you going? |
10748 | Are you not aware that we are never seen one without the others, and that we are called the three inseparables? |
10748 | Are you out of your mind, my good man? 10748 Are you prepared?" |
10748 | Are you ready to go, David? |
10748 | Are you sure that Henry will die? |
10748 | Are you willing to work, sir? |
10748 | At least, you wo n''t object to write down your name and address? |
10748 | Ay, ay; what object now? |
10748 | Blacksmith, eh? |
10748 | Brothers and sisters, too, eh? |
10748 | But ca n''t we make overtures? |
10748 | But have all gentlemen money? |
10748 | But is the old min agreeable? |
10748 | But surely God will hear your prayers in England as well as in Palestine? |
10748 | But what can you do in a foreign land; in an enemy''s country? |
10748 | But what do you want to do? 10748 But what if he persists in spite of this in making war?" |
10748 | But what is the good of loving a man condemned to live and die in prison? |
10748 | But what would you do, my dear boy? |
10748 | But where is the count? |
10748 | But your future career, D''Artagnan? 10748 By the bye, ma''am,"said Mr. Boffin, as he was leaving,"you have a lodger?" |
10748 | By your father? |
10748 | Can I do less than that when you are so good? |
10748 | Can anyone go in here? |
10748 | Caution? |
10748 | Clothes? |
10748 | Courage, bold Barnaby, what care we? 10748 Did you ever hear of the name of Boffin? |
10748 | Did you inquire the names of those three musketeers? |
10748 | Did you promise the queen to storm the Tower of London? 10748 Did you think I wanted a situation now, eh? |
10748 | Do I ask you to escape? |
10748 | Do n''t you see, man,Hugh whispered to Dennis,"that the lad''s a natural, and can be got to do anything if you take him the right way? |
10748 | Do you hear that, mother? 10748 Do you know this?" |
10748 | Do you know what I touch here? |
10748 | Do you like it? |
10748 | Do you mean to tell me, Mr. Weller, that you saw nothing of the fainting of the plaintiff in the arms of the defendant? |
10748 | Do you remember going up to Mrs. Bardell''s house one night last November? 10748 Do you see him here now?" |
10748 | Do you spell it with a''V or a''W? |
10748 | Do you think they''ll reprieve me in the night, brother? 10748 Do you, though?" |
10748 | Dr. Manette,said Mr. Lorry, looking steadfastly at him,"do you remember nothing of me? |
10748 | Father of Miss Bella Wilfer? |
10748 | Father, does Mr. Bounderby ask me to love him? |
10748 | Floy, did I ever see mamma? |
10748 | Floy,he said,"what is that-- there at the bottom of the bed?" |
10748 | For-- for yours? |
10748 | For_ more_? |
10748 | From the king? |
10748 | Going to London? |
10748 | Got any lodgings? |
10748 | Has she been very ill? |
10748 | Has your brother appeared to you? |
10748 | Hassan,one of them shouted,"is that the brother of the Queen of the English with you? |
10748 | Have you brought me any money? |
10748 | Have you found any remedy? |
10748 | Have you spoken to Lucie? |
10748 | Have you though? |
10748 | How are you, sir? |
10748 | How are you? |
10748 | How came it here? |
10748 | How can you, Louisa and Thomas? 10748 How comes he to have any name at all, then?" |
10748 | How could you ever doubt me? |
10748 | How dare you think, Frank, that we could have you marry for money? 10748 How do you mean?" |
10748 | How does that happen? |
10748 | How is the patient, sir? |
10748 | How should he have been otherwise? |
10748 | How''s this? 10748 Hullo, musketeers,"he called out;"fighting, are you, in spite of the edicts? |
10748 | I ask you,he said,"which would you have rather lost-- your grandfather''s inheritance or your right leg?" |
10748 | I fear, sir,said Nicholas,"that you object to my youth, and to not being a Master of Arts?" |
10748 | I have your word, then? |
10748 | I say, what do you think about? |
10748 | I suppose you are quite a great lawyer? |
10748 | I suppose you want some place to sleep in to- night, do n''t you? 10748 I, sir? |
10748 | I? |
10748 | If I am not yet a musketeer,said he to his new friends,"at least, I have entered upon my apprenticeship, have n''t I?" |
10748 | If I may ride with you, will you let me hold your hand? |
10748 | If he persists? 10748 If the bull was mad,"said Paul,"how did_ he_ know that the boy had asked questions? |
10748 | If they kill me-- they may; I heard it said-- what will become of Grip? |
10748 | In mourning, too, eh? |
10748 | Is Fagin upstairs? |
10748 | Is he robbed? |
10748 | Is it done? |
10748 | Is it funnier than Punch? |
10748 | Is it not-- forgive me-- a pity to live no better life? |
10748 | Is it possible to insult you? |
10748 | Is my brother in his room, Tim? |
10748 | Is that Barnaby tapping at the door? |
10748 | Is there no remedy? |
10748 | Is what? |
10748 | It went away into the distance, and what do you think it seemed to do as it moved with the waves? |
10748 | It''ll save you a good deal of trouble, wo n''t it? |
10748 | Listen, my son; you believe in magic? |
10748 | Little to do, and plenty to get, I suppose? |
10748 | M. de la Mole, is it not? 10748 Madame,"said Athos,"when must we set out? |
10748 | Margot, what if I know the real author of the crime? 10748 Me, Master Copperfield?" |
10748 | Miss Ada Clare? |
10748 | Money? |
10748 | Monsieur D''Artagnan,said the cardinal,"do you wish to become a captain?" |
10748 | Mother,he said,"how long-- how many days and nights-- shall I be kept here?" |
10748 | Mr. Dick,said my aunt,"what shall I do with this child?" |
10748 | Mr. Jarndyce of Bleak House is not married? |
10748 | Mrs. Gradgrind,said her husband solemnly,"what do you mean?" |
10748 | Must I let one of the accursed race escape? |
10748 | Myself? |
10748 | Never, Miss Amy? |
10748 | Next month? |
10748 | Noddy,said Mrs. Boffin thoughtfully,"have n''t you been a little strict with Mr. Rokesmith to- night? |
10748 | Not enter parliament? |
10748 | Not here? |
10748 | Not if it should happen to have been a tame bull, you little infidel? |
10748 | Not polite? |
10748 | Nothing is known to you? |
10748 | Now then, where''s the first boy? |
10748 | Now your dinner is done,Carton presently said,"why do n''t you give your toast?" |
10748 | Now, Mr. Weller,said Sergeant Buzfuz,"do you recollect anything particular happening on the morning when you were first engaged by the defendant?" |
10748 | Of course, Esther,he said,"you do n''t understand this Chancery business?" |
10748 | Of course, you know that he has made his matrimonial choice? |
10748 | Oh, you will let me hold your hand? |
10748 | On the what? |
10748 | One can depart, citizen? |
10748 | One word,entreated the doctor,"who has denounced him?" |
10748 | Or your left arm? |
10748 | Out? |
10748 | Perhaps you recollect me? |
10748 | Political alliance, frank and loyal? |
10748 | Shall I marry him? |
10748 | She would be proud to see me now, eh, Hugh? 10748 So you think,"said Martin,"that his old faults are in some degree of my creation?" |
10748 | So, then, the person who seeks to kill me is M. de la Mole? |
10748 | Surely not without his grandfather''s consent and approbation, my dear sir? |
10748 | The Ansarey? |
10748 | The king-- where is the king? |
10748 | The night air ai n''t quite wholesome, I suppose? |
10748 | The robber made off that way, did he? 10748 The sea, Floy, what is it that it keeps on saying?" |
10748 | Then I must die like a common criminal by the hand of the London executioner? |
10748 | Then it is for to- day? |
10748 | Then they must have money before they can buy corn? |
10748 | Then they pay for it with money? |
10748 | Then why the devil do n''t you dine? |
10748 | Then you will trust me fully? 10748 There is someone there, is there not?" |
10748 | They hold the mountains around Antioch, which are the key of Palestine, do n''t they? 10748 This tulip is yours, is it not?" |
10748 | Tired? 10748 To whom do I address it?" |
10748 | Turned you faint, sir? 10748 Wages?" |
10748 | Was the Montacute that fought by the side of King Richard in the Holy Land a visionary? |
10748 | We want to know, in the first place,said Mr. Pickwick,"whether you are discontented with your present situation?" |
10748 | Well, but_ do_ you? |
10748 | Well, now, my dear sir,said Perker,"the first question I have to ask is whether this woman is to remain here? |
10748 | Well,said Aramis, when they were alone,"what do you think of this business, my dear count?" |
10748 | Were not you warned that it was to take place this morning? |
10748 | What are the wild waves saying? |
10748 | What are we to do? |
10748 | What can I do, child? 10748 What cheer, Barnaby? |
10748 | What do we need to think of that for, if we are to save the king? 10748 What do you mean?" |
10748 | What do you think of this fire? |
10748 | What do you want? 10748 What do you want?" |
10748 | What does this mean, Monsieur le Cardinal? |
10748 | What does this mean? 10748 What does this mean?" |
10748 | What floor do you want? |
10748 | What has he come here for? 10748 What is he now?" |
10748 | What is it? |
10748 | What is that? |
10748 | What is the matter, Louisa? |
10748 | What is the matter? |
10748 | What is to be done? |
10748 | What made them say there were no more lions? |
10748 | What other? |
10748 | What pardon? |
10748 | What shall I do, then? |
10748 | What sort of fellow_ is_ our mutual friend, now? 10748 What the devil''s this?" |
10748 | What toast? |
10748 | What was the name of this woman? |
10748 | What were you doing in the back room, ma''am? |
10748 | What''s here to do? |
10748 | What''s the matter here? 10748 What''s the matter, Friday?" |
10748 | What''s your name, sir? |
10748 | What, then, do you intend to do, my boy? |
10748 | Whatever am I to call him when he is married to Louisa? 10748 Where am I to sleep to- night?" |
10748 | Where are your friends? |
10748 | Where can you find them, then? |
10748 | Where is my venerable friend? |
10748 | Where, and when? |
10748 | Where? |
10748 | Who are they? |
10748 | Who denounces the accused? |
10748 | Who is it? |
10748 | Who is that that dares to address the court? |
10748 | Who''s the plaintives? 10748 Who''s the t''other one, and where does he come from?" |
10748 | Who? |
10748 | Why did she do that? |
10748 | Why do you bring your profligate companions here? 10748 Why do you persecute me?" |
10748 | Why not? |
10748 | Why were these hard times for the poor? |
10748 | Why will it never stop, Floy? |
10748 | Why, have n''t you heard? |
10748 | Why, what is that,said I,"except it be death?" |
10748 | Why, what palaver''s this? |
10748 | Why, what''s that? |
10748 | Why,says I,"did you ever know a pirate repent?" |
10748 | Why,says William, looking a little confused,"hast thou no relatives or friends in England? |
10748 | Why? |
10748 | Will they take his life as well as mine? |
10748 | Will you hear me? |
10748 | Will you kill me, sire-- me, your brother- in- law? |
10748 | Will you take charge of the letter and deliver it? |
10748 | Work? |
10748 | Would it be better to remain here? |
10748 | Would you have given up a year of your life for that fortune trebled? |
10748 | You air, air you, sir? |
10748 | You are awake, sir? |
10748 | You are in a hurry? |
10748 | You do n''t believe it, sir? |
10748 | You have heard of a place called Hell- house Yard? |
10748 | You know who is guilty? |
10748 | You must have been on your way here when you heard the fatal news? |
10748 | You saw it-- where? |
10748 | You will be at my service when they are found? |
10748 | You wo n''t let these men alone, and leave''em to me? 10748 You would have told me if he had come?" |
10748 | You''re not a deceiving imp? 10748 Young Mr. Richard Carstone is present?" |
10748 | Your enemies? 10748 Your friend wishes to be made a baron?" |
10748 | ''Do?'' |
10748 | ''If she was to stand up for you when you was slighted,''he said to John,''and if she was to do that against her own interest, how would that do?'' |
10748 | All the way to Stone Lodge he repeated at intervals,"What would Mr. Bounderby say?" |
10748 | Am I afraid to die? |
10748 | Am I to call my own son- in- law''Mister?'' |
10748 | And do you like it?" |
10748 | And how are you, my dear boy?" |
10748 | And how he did begin, did n''t he?" |
10748 | And if there is no faith, how can there be any duty? |
10748 | And now what must I do-- for I know nothing of sorcery?" |
10748 | And the little girl I saw on that first day at Mr. Wickfield''s, where is she? |
10748 | And then, darting in and catching sight of old Martin,"My venerable friend is well?" |
10748 | And what are_ you_?" |
10748 | And what more could I possibly do if I did believe it?". |
10748 | And when I mentioned that I had been chosen to succeed to some property, he asked whose property? |
10748 | And yet with all my wealth and power what memory shall I leave? |
10748 | And,''Shall I marry him?''" |
10748 | Are you a Protestant? |
10748 | Are you not in the service of Mynheer Isaac Boxtel?" |
10748 | Are you not the Captain Fernand who betrayed, sold, and murdered his benefactor, Ali?" |
10748 | Are you not the Lieutenant Fernand who served as guide and spy to the French army in Spain? |
10748 | Are you not the soldier Fernand who deserted on the eve of Waterloo? |
10748 | Are you?" |
10748 | At the end of a week I went to him and said, rather hesitating and trembling,"Guardian, when would you like to have the answer to the letter?" |
10748 | Bounderby?" |
10748 | Bounderby?" |
10748 | But are you familiar with the place? |
10748 | But do you know that a figure dressed in royal robes and pierced to the heart was found in his rooms?" |
10748 | But in this wild, confused, and aimless age of ours, what man can see what his duties are? |
10748 | But this Isaac Boxtel, is he a thin, bald- headed, bow- legged, crook- backed, haggard- looking man?" |
10748 | But what was that girl to Dombey and Son? |
10748 | But where is my old friend Winter?" |
10748 | But, only one little whisper, Fred--_is_ the old min friendly?" |
10748 | Can she, who has always borne so fair a name, be guilty of such crimes in secret?" |
10748 | Can you not put a stranger in the way to help you?" |
10748 | Catherine gave a glance at Henry which Charles understood perfectly, and which said,"Why, then, is he alive?" |
10748 | Châteaugrand called out,"Gentlemen, are you ready?" |
10748 | Come, Porthos, what do you think of this business?" |
10748 | Confining yourself rigidly to fact, the questions of fact are:''Does Mr. Bounderby ask me to marry him?'' |
10748 | Could Louisa, sitting alone in her father''s house and gazing into the fire, foresee the childless years before her? |
10748 | Could he resist his old servant''s appeal? |
10748 | Could she picture a lonely brother, flying from England after robbery, and dying in a strange land, conscious of his want of love and penitent? |
10748 | Did n''t you know the hour of assemblage was ten o''clock?" |
10748 | Do I look as if I knowed''em? |
10748 | Do I understand that he asked for more, after he had eaten the supper allotted by the dietary?" |
10748 | Do n''t you know me?" |
10748 | Do n''t you know that he died five days ago?" |
10748 | Do n''t you think so?" |
10748 | Do n''t you think there''s a good chance yet? |
10748 | Do n''t you think we might do something for her? |
10748 | Do n''t you? |
10748 | Do you always forget your eyes when you happen to be in a hurry?" |
10748 | Do you feel that you have lost her?" |
10748 | Do you know that the King of Poland will be here very soon? |
10748 | Do you know the name of Dorrit here?" |
10748 | Do you know them, ma''am?" |
10748 | Do you like him?" |
10748 | Do you like the name of Nicodemus? |
10748 | Do you really want one?" |
10748 | Do you remember nothing of Defarge-- your old servant?" |
10748 | Do you still believe in Arabia?" |
10748 | Do you think that the doctrine of theocratic equality would appeal to them as it did to the Arabians?" |
10748 | Do you understand me, Sam?" |
10748 | Does the caravan look as if_ it_ knowed''em?" |
10748 | Dost thou think it practicable for us to put an end to our unhappy way of living, and get off?" |
10748 | From time to time he would ask her,"Would you like to be rich_ now_, my darling?" |
10748 | Had he any prescience of the day, five years to come, when Josiah Bounderby, of Coketown, was to die in a fit in the Coketown street? |
10748 | Have her to live with us? |
10748 | Have n''t you been just a little not quite like your own old self?" |
10748 | Have n''t you noticed how anxious he is always to get on-- furder away-- furder away? |
10748 | Have you any wish in reference to the period of your marriage, my child?" |
10748 | Have you for- forgotten what I told you about the apparitions in my family?" |
10748 | Have you heard of her good fortune?" |
10748 | He drew one hand through Martin''s arm, and standing so, between them, proceeded,"What''s this? |
10748 | How are you going to fit yourself for them?" |
10748 | How can it be? |
10748 | How can you build up an empire in a land divided by so many jarring creeds? |
10748 | How can you have the heart to say such bitter things to me, when you are well aware that out of this place I have n''t a single friend to turn to?" |
10748 | How could we ever part? |
10748 | How could you fly from me to him? |
10748 | How could you give me life, and take from me all the things that raise it from the state of conscious death? |
10748 | How dare you come out of your station to pester this young lady with your impudent addresses? |
10748 | How else could he get the money? |
10748 | How long do you suppose, sir, that an hour is to a man who is choking; for want of air?" |
10748 | How should poor Rick, always hovering near it, pluck reason out of it?" |
10748 | I ask you again,"thundered the doctor,"are you, on your solemn oaths, able to identify that boy?" |
10748 | I but ask the question humbly-- may I say it? |
10748 | I put my two arms around his neck and kissed him, and he said was this the mistress of Bleak House? |
10748 | I resolved to discover myself to them, and marched with Friday towards them, and called aloud in Spanish,"What are ye, gentlemen?" |
10748 | I thought I overheard Miss Havisham answer,"Well? |
10748 | Into how much of futurity did Mr. Bounderby see as he sat alone? |
10748 | Is the brother of the queen with Sheikh Salem?" |
10748 | Is the poor creature much hurt?" |
10748 | It seemed to Paul as if the great clock in the hall took this up, and went on saying,"how, is, my, lit- tle friend? |
10748 | It''s calm and-- what''s that word again-- critical? |
10748 | MR. BARLOW: And which do you prefer-- to be as you are now, or as you were before? |
10748 | May I say it? |
10748 | May I, Miss Amy? |
10748 | Mr. Swiveller then leaned back in his chair and relapsed into silence; only to break it by observing,"Gentlemen, how does the case stand? |
10748 | Mrs. Bardell do you think it''s a much greater expense to keep two people than to keep one?" |
10748 | Mrs. Nickleby, will you come on the other side? |
10748 | No acquaintance; none that thou hast any kindness or any remains of respect for?" |
10748 | Now do you recognise yourself?" |
10748 | Now what do you say?" |
10748 | Now, what are the facts of this case? |
10748 | Now, what do you complain of?" |
10748 | Of what?" |
10748 | Oh, Sammy, Sammy, vy worn''t there a alleybi?" |
10748 | Oh, my dearest and best, are you quite sure you will not share my fortune with me?" |
10748 | On rising to leave the table he said to Mr. Millbank,"By whom is that portrait, sir?" |
10748 | Only when the family had got into their carriage, and not before, Miss Fanny exclaimed,"Good gracious I Where''s Amy?" |
10748 | Or will vanity confound their fortunes, and jealousy wither their sympathies? |
10748 | Over for the day? |
10748 | Paul looked it in the face, and thought, was that his father? |
10748 | Pinch, after staring at the fire, said,"Pecksniff, of course, you knew before?" |
10748 | Save me by some other means?" |
10748 | Should you, Harry, like to go to live in some town? |
10748 | TOMMY: And have you ever been in any large town? |
10748 | Tell me,"he went on, turning to Renè,"this poison does not always kill at once?" |
10748 | That''s sleep, eh? |
10748 | The abbà ©, making an effort, said,"And Mercà © dès-- she disappeared?" |
10748 | The old fellow paused, and then startled Mr. Wegg with the question,"How did you get your wooden leg?" |
10748 | The question can never be answered, for who can disentangle the work of Dumas from that of his army of helpers? |
10748 | The wild young grandson makes answer,''You''re as rich as can be, why ca n''t you stand a trifle for your grown up relation?'' |
10748 | Then, what am I to call him?" |
10748 | There is nothing the matter?" |
10748 | There was a long pause, and the shoemaker asked,"What did you say?" |
10748 | They walked on in silence for some half a mile before Mr. Gradgrind gravely broke out with,"What would your best friends say, Louisa? |
10748 | Third boy, what''s a horse?" |
10748 | Tired and hungry he sat down on a doorstep, and presently was roused by the question"Hallo, my covey, what''s the row?" |
10748 | Well, then, ai n''t it reasonable to ask, who was it?" |
10748 | Weller?" |
10748 | Weller?" |
10748 | What are you stopping me for?" |
10748 | What books are these? |
10748 | What connection could there be between the original of the portrait, and this poor child? |
10748 | What could I say but accept the proposal thankfully? |
10748 | What did I say to this? |
10748 | What do you say to beginning with an ornamental turnpike?" |
10748 | What do you think of the terms, Wegg?" |
10748 | What does it matter? |
10748 | What does it matter?" |
10748 | What for? |
10748 | What has become of the others?" |
10748 | What if I married her?" |
10748 | What is it?" |
10748 | What is their religion? |
10748 | What is there in all this?" |
10748 | What is young Thomas in the dumps about?" |
10748 | What more can I say for you than that I know you deserve her?" |
10748 | What place is over there?" |
10748 | What was an unfortunate boy to do? |
10748 | What was that? |
10748 | What was this word to be? |
10748 | What will be their fate? |
10748 | What would Mr. Bounderby say?" |
10748 | What''s the matter, how did it all come about?" |
10748 | What, had they taken to their hearth and home a secretely contracted serpent? |
10748 | What? |
10748 | Where do you want to go?" |
10748 | Where is the Paraclete, the Comforter Who was promised us? |
10748 | Where''s the second boy?" |
10748 | Where,"he asked,"will be the great goodness in your sowing corn for your own eating? |
10748 | Which is he?" |
10748 | Who are they?" |
10748 | Who d''ye live with?" |
10748 | Who is it? |
10748 | Who knows if another attack may not come, and all be finished?" |
10748 | Who needs to be told that they were happy? |
10748 | Who stood on the bank? |
10748 | Why did n''t you say at first that you was willing to come down handsome?" |
10748 | Why did we ever part? |
10748 | Why do you come here?" |
10748 | Why does no impulse from Thy renovating will strike again into the soul of man? |
10748 | Why not the castle instead of the mill?" |
10748 | Widowed mother, perhaps?" |
10748 | Will have no secret unhappiness or anxiety concealed from me?" |
10748 | Will they maintain in august assemblies and high places the great truths, which, in study and in solitude, they have embraced? |
10748 | Will they see_ me_ tremble?" |
10748 | Will you become a suitor for her hand?" |
10748 | Will you not share it, dearest?" |
10748 | Will your eminence find out where that convent is?" |
10748 | Yield-- you yield to me, do n''t you?" |
10748 | You are convinced now, are you not, of the cause of your illness?" |
10748 | You are not afraid of a woman who has never seen the sun since you were born?" |
10748 | You believed him dead, did you not, as I believed you to be?" |
10748 | You brought no one with you?" |
10748 | You desire to make one of this body?" |
10748 | You expected to identify?" |
10748 | You have trained me from my cradle?" |
10748 | You know me, Barnaby?" |
10748 | You know what a file is?" |
10748 | You think that at no time of your father''s life was my name of Clennam ever familiar to him?" |
10748 | You von''t think o''arrestin''your own son for the money, and sendin''him off to the Fleet, will you, you unnat''ral wagabone?" |
10748 | You want a new revelation to Christendom? |
10748 | You will forgive me all this, my Ada, before I begin the world?" |
10748 | You would not object to cancel his indentures at his request and for his good?" |
10748 | You''ll think it very strange now that I never consulted you about this matter till I sent your little boy out this morning, eh?" |
10748 | You''ve been a- stealin''''em, have you? |
10748 | You''ve no respect for nothing, have n''t you?" |
10748 | Your ambition, Porthos?" |
10748 | Your documents you say are all secure?" |
10748 | _ II.--The Old Tradition_"Why was England not the same land as in the days of his light- hearted youth?" |
10748 | _ Then_ what would you have done, I should like to know? |
10748 | _ Was it you?_"He turned upon her with frightful suddenness. |
10748 | and got for answer,"Dear John, am I not rich?" |
10748 | blustered Mr. Bounderby,"what''s the matter? |
10748 | how, is, my, lit- tle friend?" |
10748 | said my aunt,"who''s this you''re bringing home?" |
10748 | you wear the colour, do you? |
30729 | A man? 30729 But where, and how, and when did you come by it?" |
30729 | Do I contradict myself? |
30729 | Do you fancy,he asks, in a lively ballad,"that I had not enough philosophy under my hood to cry out:''I appeal''? |
30729 | Do you know him, Doctor? |
30729 | Do you want to do anything? 30729 Do?" |
30729 | Have you been out alone? 30729 He?" |
30729 | Noble cousin,said he,"how are you?" |
30729 | Pay you for that? |
30729 | Shall we not dare to say of a thief,asks Montaigne,"that he has a handsome leg?" |
30729 | To oblige me? |
30729 | Well, and why not? |
30729 | Well, what should I do? |
30729 | What in the universe is all this? 30729 What is his name?" |
30729 | What? |
30729 | Where are the snows of yester year? |
30729 | Who?--not the doctor? |
30729 | Why should I? |
30729 | Why should we ever go abroad, even across the way, to ask a neighbour''s advice? |
30729 | Why then do you neither eat nor drink? |
30729 | [ 71] Now, what of the real sentiments of these loyal subjects of Elizabeth? 30729 A pardon necessary for Des Loges and another for Montcorbier? 30729 After he had avowed the authorship in his usual haughty style, Mary asked:You think, then, that I have no just authority?" |
30729 | And I shall shudder to think that the next question will be,''What did you do while you were warm?''" |
30729 | And again, hinting at the explanation:"Who that has heard a strain of music feared lest he should speak extravagantly any more for ever?" |
30729 | And for the matter of that, had not every one else done the like? |
30729 | And lastly, how does it happen that the sea was quite calm next day? |
30729 | And the upshot? |
30729 | And what else had he to expect when he would not, in a happy phrase of Carlyle''s,"nestle down into it"? |
30729 | And what work, among others, was he elaborating at this time, but the notorious"First Blast"? |
30729 | And who could be better suited for the business? |
30729 | At last one will say:''Let us see, how much wood did you burn, sir?'' |
30729 | But how, where that is not the case? |
30729 | Did you ever see the lads play knife? |
30729 | Did you think I was dead too? |
30729 | Do you want a thousand a year, a two thousand a year, or a ten thousand a year livelihood? |
30729 | Does not he who spares the wolf kill the sheep?" |
30729 | Emerson mentions having once remarked to Thoreau:"Who would not like to write something which all can read, like''Robinson Crusoe''? |
30729 | Had not he himself made anti- national treaties almost before he was out of his nonage? |
30729 | He died of being Robert Burns, and there is no levity in such a statement of the case; for shall we not, one and all, deserve a similar epitaph? |
30729 | He had just helped his brother with a loan of a hundred and eighty pounds; should he do nothing for the poor girl whom he had ruined? |
30729 | Here is the first:"I suppose I have burned up a good- sized tree to- night-- and for what? |
30729 | How can a man repent, he asks, unless the nature of his transgression is made plain to him? |
30729 | How did you manage?" |
30729 | I wish I could believe he was quite honest with us; but, indeed, who was ever quite honest who wrote a book for a purpose? |
30729 | If Doctor Johnson, that stilted and accomplished stylist, had lacked the sacred Boswell, what should we have known of him? |
30729 | If the trumpet gave so ambiguous a sound, who could heartily prepare himself for the battle? |
30729 | If they had fallen into bad odour at Geneva, where else was there left to flee to? |
30729 | If time had only spared us some particulars, might not this last have furnished us with the matter of a grisly winter''s tale? |
30729 | If you may say Admiral, he reasons, why may you not say Hatter? |
30729 | If, therefore, political and religious sympathy led Knox himself into so grave a partiality, what was he to expect from his disciples? |
30729 | Is it not Clough who has remarked that, after all, everything lies in juxtaposition? |
30729 | Is it possible that Monsieur Hugo thinks they ceased to steer the corvette while the gun was loose? |
30729 | Is there no actual piece of nature that he can show the man to his face, as he might show him a tree if they were walking together? |
30729 | Is there nothing better to be seen than sordid misery and worthless joys? |
30729 | Is this great hurricane a piece of scene- painting after all? |
30729 | It is easy enough to pick holes in the grammar of this letter, but what are we to say of its profound goodness and tenderness? |
30729 | Now, how is the poet to convince like nature, and not like books? |
30729 | Suppose I got into trouble, where would you be? |
30729 | Tell me, landlord, is he old?" |
30729 | That enigma was this:"Can a good action be a bad action? |
30729 | The question is, Why did he choose us two for his assistants? |
30729 | There was nothing to gain on the one side but disturbance, and on the other I could count on your gratitude, do n''t you see?" |
30729 | This is a long way that we have travelled: between such work and the work of Fielding is there not, indeed, a great gulf of thought and sentiment? |
30729 | To be made a class assistant-- in the name of reason, where''s the harm in that? |
30729 | Was it always one woman? |
30729 | Was not King Arthur come again? |
30729 | Was not Richelieu in disgrace more idolised than ever by the dames of Paris? |
30729 | Was she dark or fair, passionate or gentle like himself, witty or simple? |
30729 | What does he care for office or emolument? |
30729 | What harm_ can_ come to you if you hold your tongue? |
30729 | What harm_ has_ come to you? |
30729 | What is Quasimodo but an animated gargoyle? |
30729 | What is the whole book but the reanimation of Gothic art? |
30729 | What need? |
30729 | What would he not have given to wet his boots once more with morning dew, and follow his vagrant fancy among the meadows? |
30729 | Where are now the two lovers who descended the main watershed of all the Waverley Novels, and all the novels that have tried to follow in their wake? |
30729 | Where does old K---- keep his money?" |
30729 | Who is this Wolfe Macfarlane?" |
30729 | Why, man, do you know what this life is? |
30729 | Will you go to glory with me? |
30729 | You would think I was some good, old, decent Christian, would you not? |
30729 | and can you afford the one you want? |
30729 | and how should we have delighted in his acquaintance as we do? |
30729 | and lastly, in the heat of the moment, a fourth name thrown out with an assured countenance? |
30729 | and one or both of them known by the_ alias_ of Villon, however honestly come by? |
30729 | and these two the same person? |
30729 | and when did I begin? |
30729 | and when was the highwayman most acclaimed but on his way to Tyburn? |
30729 | and who does not see with regret that his page is not solid with a right materialistic treatment which delights everybody?" |
30729 | had he not a family to keep? |
30729 | he cried,"but what have I done? |
30729 | or are there a dozen here immortalised in cold indistinction? |
30729 | or what if we had been taken sick?" |
30729 | where the hatter is simply introduced, as God made him and as his fellow- men have miscalled him, at the crisis of a high- flown rhapsody? |
23432 | ''Begin to tek off-- chenge his mine-- an''say:How I ki''him?" |
23432 | ''I suppose you are not a man of science yourself? 23432 ''Vay soon Jan examine tabuh; say:"O my de- ah wife, whatta faw you setta dissa tabuh for two peoples? |
23432 | A ghost for Goresthorpe Grange? |
23432 | A ghost you said, did n''t you? 23432 Ah, but what makes birds and animals happy?" |
23432 | All night? |
23432 | And after six months? |
23432 | And could he recognise the signs if we told him? |
23432 | And is the house among the reeds still secure? |
23432 | And is the missus quite well, and are the neighbours flourishing? 23432 And that was how these criminals were_ converted_?" |
23432 | And that was why the ghost no longer opposed the match? |
23432 | And the missis,''ow is she? 23432 And what does Chan Tow mean?" |
23432 | And what happened afterward? |
23432 | And when did you get in? |
23432 | And where, may I ask? |
23432 | And why did the ghost go away? |
23432 | And''ow are you, sir? |
23432 | Another victim on the smoking altar of vegetarianism? |
23432 | Are you succeeding all right? |
23432 | Are you without pity then? |
23432 | Assuredly that is not a common article, but still, how much do you want? 23432 But he kept his title?" |
23432 | But what? |
23432 | Ca n''t you see? |
23432 | Can not you guess then when the final revelation will be? 23432 Can_ no one_ tell me?" |
23432 | Catch cold? |
23432 | Chan Tow got_ do n''t know_? |
23432 | Chan Tow kept groaning like an old barn door, and the missionary man kept perspiring like a glass of ice- water? |
23432 | Changed his mind? |
23432 | Comfortable little room, is n''t it? 23432 Did he succeed in driving the ghosts away?" |
23432 | Did he succeed? |
23432 | Did n''t I ever tell you about them? |
23432 | Did the ghost leave Scotland for America as soon as the old baron died? |
23432 | Did you hear? |
23432 | Do I strike you as such? |
23432 | Do I understand you to intimate that both ghosts were there together? |
23432 | Do you believe it? |
23432 | Do you mean to say you slept out- of- doors last night in that deluge? |
23432 | Does the highrob follow him and kill him? |
23432 | Doing what? 23432 Doing? |
23432 | Done well? 23432 From any particular spirit?" |
23432 | Given it up? |
23432 | Has Mr. Darcy come yet? |
23432 | Has that been your occupation then? |
23432 | Have you ever known this spirit on this earth? |
23432 | How God converted a Chinese criminal? |
23432 | How can you be so idiotic, Matilda? |
23432 | How could a ghost, or even two ghosts, keep a girl from marrying the man she loved? |
23432 | How did he come over,queried Dear Jones--"in the steerage, or as a cabin passenger?" |
23432 | How did he know they were swearing? 23432 How is it possible you did not hear? |
23432 | How much will you charge me for this mummy fragment? |
23432 | How the dickens is that? 23432 How''s that?" |
23432 | I hope she was n''t a daughter of that loud and vulgar old Mrs. Sutton whom I met at Saratoga, one summer, four or five years ago? |
23432 | I suppose you would like to hear from me, if I did find out anything? |
23432 | Is n''t it too bad that I should let myself be bothered by such stuff as that? |
23432 | Is this the way to the Manor House? |
23432 | It began to snow? |
23432 | It is a strange case, is n''t it? |
23432 | It made him very happy to have stolen earrings from a little girl? |
23432 | It seems curious, does n''t it? |
23432 | It was a queer sort of opinion to get from a man of science, was n''t it? 23432 Let me see,"he said at last;"we were at the inquest, were n''t we? |
23432 | Like a fortune- teller? |
23432 | Look over it, will you? |
23432 | Mad? |
23432 | Magistrate say to highrob:''You know me? 23432 Nothing happened?" |
23432 | Now how could it be the ghost of a witch, since the witches were all burned at the stake? 23432 Perhaps he kept his countenance veiled?" |
23432 | She related to me things-- But,he added, after a pause, and suddenly changing his manner,"why occupy ourselves with these follies? |
23432 | Slept well? |
23432 | So, besides being the owner of a haunted house in Salem, he was also a haunted man in Scotland? |
23432 | Spooks? |
23432 | The rival ghosts? |
23432 | The spirit medium? |
23432 | Then how came it that the father and son were lost in the yacht off the Hebrides? |
23432 | Then what about Christianity? |
23432 | To see Pan meant death, did it not? |
23432 | Trespass? 23432 Unconscious?" |
23432 | Victim? |
23432 | Was it the guardian- angel ghost warning him off the match? |
23432 | We'', dissa magistrate, whatta he do? 23432 Well, what does that matter?" |
23432 | Well? |
23432 | What country do you come from, what is your age? |
23432 | What did I do? 23432 What did he do?" |
23432 | What did he do? |
23432 | What did you do then? |
23432 | What do you mean by''such an attitude toward nature''? |
23432 | What do you think of it? |
23432 | What does that matter? |
23432 | What has all this got to do with your ghost? |
23432 | What have you done to yourself? |
23432 | What is a horse- carry- chair? |
23432 | What recompense do you desire? |
23432 | What science do you mean? |
23432 | What sort of communication do you want-- a written one? |
23432 | What then do you expect the final revelation will do for you? |
23432 | What then? |
23432 | What was he like? |
23432 | What was it, Uncle Larry? |
23432 | What was the merry jest? |
23432 | What were we looking up, again? |
23432 | What? 23432 What?" |
23432 | When are you going to do it? |
23432 | Where did they get the banjo? |
23432 | Who could get us such a thing? |
23432 | Who was she? |
23432 | Who were they? |
23432 | Why was that? |
23432 | Why, what in the world_ should_ happen? |
23432 | Will the particular spirit he desires to speak with communicate? |
23432 | Will this spirit communicate in writing with this gentleman? |
23432 | Will you not buy something from me to- day, sir? 23432 Will you seat yourself at the table, Mr. Linley,"said the medium,"and place your hands upon it?" |
23432 | Wot did I say to the young gent wot spoke to me in the bar of the Lame Dog? 23432 Would you mind saying that again, sir? |
23432 | Yes, that is my name,he said laughing,"what is the matter?" |
23432 | You do n''t mean to say that they knew any just cause or impediment why they should not forever after hold their peace? |
23432 | You do n''t mean to say that you carry ghosts about in bags? |
23432 | You do n''t mean to tell me that the ghost which haunted the house was a woman? |
23432 | You mean business? |
23432 | You remember how well he managed that business about the crest? |
23432 | You''ll have some, wo n''t you? |
23432 | ''Can you do it?'' |
23432 | ''It struck you as peculiar, did it?'' |
23432 | A gusty day, sir, is n''t it?'' |
23432 | A little more Benedictine? |
23432 | A queer thing, was n''t it? |
23432 | After all, what was the life of a little peddling Jew, in comparison with the interests of science? |
23432 | All you say to me I feel that I have heard before-- but where?--but when? |
23432 | And all the others--''ow''s all their''ealth?" |
23432 | And how is this extraordinary chapter of incomprehensibilities going to be a"lesson"to us? |
23432 | And how much have you learned? |
23432 | And how the mischief could he get run over by a horse that had already passed beyond him? |
23432 | And the result? |
23432 | And what are we to take"warning"by? |
23432 | And what has my kindness done for me? |
23432 | And where, O where, was the pride of Goresthorpe Grange, the glorious plate which was to have been the delectation of generations of D''Odds? |
23432 | And why was Mrs. D. standing in the gray light of dawn, wringing her hands and repeating her monotonous refrain? |
23432 | And, above all, what has the intoxicating"bowl"got to do with it, anyhow? |
23432 | Animula was there,--but what could have happened? |
23432 | Are you aware that we have been here nearly four hours? |
23432 | Assa conductor,''Whatta is?'' |
23432 | Besides, what would Jorrocks''ghost be to this? |
23432 | But of what account was all that? |
23432 | But the seer himself-- where was he? |
23432 | But was it worth while to spend six years of greatly occupied life in order to look twenty? |
23432 | But what to make of"Traverse Handel S.?" |
23432 | But where have you been, Dyson? |
23432 | By what name am I to call you,--since you will answer to none that I remember? |
23432 | Can it be possible?" |
23432 | Come to daw littyoneddy----""Little old what?" |
23432 | Could anything be in better taste? |
23432 | Could he hear them?" |
23432 | Did n''t it?" |
23432 | Did n''t you say that you had been bothered by something,--something which happened that night we dined together?" |
23432 | Did you really hear nothing?" |
23432 | Did you speak with anyone?" |
23432 | Dissa was littyoshantyhouse-- vay poh look----""Littyoshantyhouse?" |
23432 | Do n''t you recollect your promise to take me with you to see M. Aguado''s Spanish pictures?" |
23432 | Do you believe, then, that this woman was something too awful, too terrible, to be allowed to remain on the earth? |
23432 | Do you never paint now?" |
23432 | Do you read? |
23432 | Do you study? |
23432 | Does the sight of Pan mean that, do you think? |
23432 | Fancy a ghost with a black eye and a handkerchief tied round its waist, or turning summersaults, and saying,''How are you to- morrow?''" |
23432 | For a moment, I thought of magnetism, but who could magnetize that man with those pale, cold, bright eyes? |
23432 | For instance, I dare say that you never heard of the Harlesden case?" |
23432 | Had she a lover or a husband? |
23432 | Have you been doing that?" |
23432 | Have you five pieces of gold for my ransom?" |
23432 | His name is Fuey Fong, and he speaks to me thus:"Missa Gordon, whatta is Chrisinjin Indevil Shoshiety?" |
23432 | Hotelkipper look him, an''say,''Whatta your nem is?'' |
23432 | How are you, Salisbury?" |
23432 | How could he have obtained this treasure? |
23432 | How could that be?'' |
23432 | How does the little animal--_le renard_--name himself in the Latin?" |
23432 | How goes it all?" |
23432 | How is that difficulty to be surmounted? |
23432 | How to do this, and afterwards escape myself? |
23432 | I cried,"poring over the miniature of some fair lady? |
23432 | I.--Am I destined to accomplish this great task? |
23432 | I.--Will great discoveries result from the use of such a lens? |
23432 | If traces of two persons drinking had been found in the room, the question naturally would have arisen, Who was the second? |
23432 | In a word, what_ did_ that"distressing accident"consist in? |
23432 | Is it that nature, take it altogether, suffers horribly, suffers to a hideous inconceivable extent? |
23432 | Is that all right?" |
23432 | Is that so?" |
23432 | Is_ he_ the individual that met with the"distressing accident?" |
23432 | It goes without saying that it has not my credence.--But why are we here,_ mon ami_? |
23432 | Just repeat it again, will you? |
23432 | Linley?" |
23432 | Look at me, have I not done something to myself to begin with?" |
23432 | Missiolary man was vay sympafy, an''tole him,''Whatta is?'' |
23432 | Money? |
23432 | Mortal, wilt thou choose me?" |
23432 | Mr. Davies, you would n''t ruin me? |
23432 | Must I have you carried out into the middle of the street, and fireworks exploded in your ears? |
23432 | My eyesight, for one thing-- and under such conditions why seek further? |
23432 | Nen he begin tek off his mine----''""Took off his mind?" |
23432 | No, what is it that makes puppies play with their own tails, that sends cats on their prowling ecstatic errands at night?" |
23432 | No? |
23432 | Nothing disagreed with you, has it?" |
23432 | Nothing in your line there, I suppose?" |
23432 | Now, were these two deaths the two crimes mentioned in his letter? |
23432 | Or did it consist in the death of that person herself three years ago( albeit it does not appear that she died by accident)? |
23432 | Or did the"distressing accident"consist in the destruction of Schuyler''s mother- in- law''s property in early times? |
23432 | Said,''When you shee my husban''come home?'' |
23432 | Shall I be shown all the suffering?" |
23432 | Shall I be thine, mortal?" |
23432 | Shall I do one now?" |
23432 | She then continued,"Will the spirits communicate with this gentleman?" |
23432 | Shortly he says:"We''?" |
23432 | Tay how----""How did he steal the watch from the American missionary?" |
23432 | The fellow rose to his feet and returned the stare a little curiously, and then began in stereotyped phrase,--"What can I do for you, sir?" |
23432 | The splendid way, or merely the easy?" |
23432 | Then he asked sharply,"Did you meet anyone? |
23432 | Then he says:"Missa Gordon, I tay you how about Gaw convert China clilimal?" |
23432 | This only I know beyond doubt,--that you are of the Past: you belong to memory-- but to the memory of what dead suns?..." |
23432 | Vainly you ask yourself:--"Whose voice?--whose face?" |
23432 | Was ever mist before so deceptive? |
23432 | Was n''t that where I left off?" |
23432 | Was she not ugly?" |
23432 | Was there no member of it spirited enough to make away with his sweetheart, or take some other steps calculated to establish a hereditary spectre? |
23432 | What am I to think? |
23432 | What can be the meaning of this outburst? |
23432 | What cared I if I had waded to the portal of this wonder through another''s blood? |
23432 | What caused this sudden disappearance? |
23432 | What could it have been in the face of the old folk- lorist that made me think of this man? |
23432 | What crime was to be done, then, and who was to do it? |
23432 | What did that driveling ass of a Schuyler stand_ in the wake_ of a runaway horse for, with his shouting and gesticulating, if he wanted to stop him? |
23432 | What do you mean?" |
23432 | What do you think of it?" |
23432 | What if this spiritualism should be really a great fact? |
23432 | What is your opinion of the matter?'' |
23432 | What say you?" |
23432 | What shall I do? |
23432 | What was it that afflicted the sylph? |
23432 | What was it then?'' |
23432 | Whatta tem it is?'' |
23432 | Whatta you say-- hurt de pipe?" |
23432 | When will you give me the sequel?" |
23432 | Where did you learn hypnotism?" |
23432 | Where he is dissa morning? |
23432 | Where were the vermeil blooms, the liquid expressive eyes, the harmonious limbs of Animula? |
23432 | Who eata subbah wif you sucha- sucha night?'' |
23432 | Who talks of trespass? |
23432 | Why not? |
23432 | Why, what is the commonest crime one sees? |
23432 | Will you have anything more? |
23432 | Will you not take me?" |
23432 | You have compaly?" |
23432 | You heard about dissa case? |
23432 | You lika hea''?'' |
23432 | You never heard of anybody who was burned having a ghost, did you?" |
23432 | You remember I was getting rather hard up when you came to my place at Charlotte Street?" |
23432 | You roll in it, I suppose, and, O Darcy, how much happiness have you had all these years? |
23432 | You were with me, do you remember? |
23432 | You will remember that the doctor said it was the brain of a devil?" |
23432 | and what was this open window with a rope running out of it? |
23432 | was this the great enchantress that had drawn monarchs at her chariot- wheels? |
23432 | what occurs? |
27441 | Are those her ribs through which the Sun Did peer, as through a grate? 27441 By thy long grey beard and glittering eye, Now wherefore stopp''st thou me? |
27441 | ''Am I rewarded thus,''quoth he,''In giving all I have Unto my children, and to beg For what I lately gave? |
27441 | ''And did I not,''said Allan,''did I not Forbid you, Dora?'' |
27441 | ''And is mine one?'' |
27441 | ''And where are your bloodhounds, Lord Randal, my son? |
27441 | ''And whither are you going, child, To- night, along these lonesome ways?'' |
27441 | ''And wilt thou show no more,''quoth he,''Than doth thy duty bind? |
27441 | ''Are these your thanks, ungrateful child, Are these your thanks?'' |
27441 | ''Bless us,''cried the Mayor,''what''s that? |
27441 | ''But since your Grace on foreign coasts, Among your foes unkind, Must go to hazard life and limb, Why should I stay behind? |
27441 | ''But what good came of it at last?'' |
27441 | ''But,''quoth the Traveller,''wherefore did he leave A flock that knew his saintly worth so well?'' |
27441 | ''Can''st hear,''said one,''the breakers roar? |
27441 | ''Come riddle my riddle, dear mother,''he said,''And riddle us both as one; Whether I shall marry with fair Ellinor, And let the brown girl alone?'' |
27441 | ''Do this; how can we give to you,''They cried,''what to the poor is due?'' |
27441 | ''Doth holy Romuald dwell Still in his cell?'' |
27441 | ''His horsemen hard behind us ride; Should they our steps discover, Then who will cheer my bonny bride When they have slain her lover?'' |
27441 | ''His? |
27441 | ''How many miles is it to thy true love? |
27441 | ''How should''st thou, fair lady, love me, Whom thou know''st thy country''s foe? |
27441 | ''How?'' |
27441 | ''I say, whose house is that there here?'' |
27441 | ''If I was to leave my husband dear, And my two babes also, O what have you to take me to, If with you I should go?'' |
27441 | ''In doing so, you glad my soul,''The aged king replied;''But what say''st thou, my youngest girl, How is thy love ally''d?'' |
27441 | ''Is he there now?'' |
27441 | ''Is that my father Philip, Or is''t my brother John? |
27441 | ''Is there any room at your head, Willy, Or any room at your feet? |
27441 | ''Is this your bride?'' |
27441 | ''Last night the gifted seer did view A wet shroud swathed round lady gay; Then stay thee, Fair, in Ravensheuch; Why cross the gloomy firth to- day?'' |
27441 | ''My child, in Durham do you dwell?'' |
27441 | ''My gentle lad, what is''t you read-- Romance or fairy fable? |
27441 | ''Now cheer up, sir Abbot, did you never hear yet That a fool he may learn a wise man wit? |
27441 | ''Now who be ye, would cross Lochgyle, This dark and stormy water?'' |
27441 | ''O what a mountain is yon,''she said,''All so dreary with frost and snow?'' |
27441 | ''O what hills are yon, yon pleasant hills, That the sun shines sweetly on?'' |
27441 | ''O what is the matter?'' |
27441 | ''O, art thou blind, Lord Thomas?'' |
27441 | ''One? |
27441 | ''Or wilt thou be my chamberlain, To make my bed both soft and fine? |
27441 | ''Pray, sir, did you not send for me By such a messenger?'' |
27441 | ''Tell me, thou bonny bird, When shall I marry me?'' |
27441 | ''That is well said,''quoth Lancelot; But sith it must be so, What knight is that thou hatest thus? |
27441 | ''What a wretch,''says the cat,''''tis the vilest of brutes; Does he feed upon flesh when there''s herbage and roots?'' |
27441 | ''What ails you, child?'' |
27441 | ''What bear ye, what bear ye, ye six men tall? |
27441 | ''What got ye to dinner, Lord Randal, my son? |
27441 | ''What hast thou here?'' |
27441 | ''What is the matter, master?'' |
27441 | ''What is thy name?'' |
27441 | ''What might this honour be?'' |
27441 | ''What news, what news, Lord Thomas?'' |
27441 | ''What news? |
27441 | ''What wilt thou give me?'' |
27441 | ''What''s your boy''s name, good wife, And in what good ship sail''d he?'' |
27441 | ''What, he again? |
27441 | ''Where got ye your dinner, Lord Randal, my son? |
27441 | ''Where is he?'' |
27441 | ''Where, sir, is all this dainty cheer? |
27441 | ''Who gives me this maid?'' |
27441 | ''Who makes the bridal bed, Birdie, say truly?'' |
27441 | ''Why grieves my Rose, my sweetest Rose? |
27441 | ''Why so severe?'' |
27441 | ''Will Mary this charge on her courage allow?'' |
27441 | ''Wilt thou be usher of my hall, To wait upon my nobles all? |
27441 | --''What, is he gone? |
27441 | 4 If all the world was apple- pie, And all the sea was ink, And all the trees were bread and cheese, What should we have to drink? |
27441 | 6 When can their glory fade? |
27441 | Ah, what can ail thee, wretched wight, So haggard and so woe- begone? |
27441 | And is that Woman all her crew? |
27441 | And what shoulder, and what art Could twist the sinews of thy heart? |
27441 | And what will this poor Robin do? |
27441 | And what''s a butterfly? |
27441 | And when he came bold Robin before, Robin asked him courteously,''O, hast thou any money to spare For my merry men and me?'' |
27441 | And when thy heart began to beat, What dread hand form''d thy dread feet? |
27441 | And where are your bloodhounds, my handsome young man?'' |
27441 | And wherefore do you look so pale? |
27441 | And why should I speak low, sailor, About my own boy John? |
27441 | And why the plum''s inviting blue? |
27441 | And, woman, why do you groan so sadly, And wherefore beat your bosom madly?'' |
27441 | Are those her sails that glance in the Sun, Like restless gossameres? |
27441 | Art thou the Peter of Norway boors? |
27441 | As wistly she did me behold, How lik''st thou him? |
27441 | Away went Gilpin-- who but he? |
27441 | But fortune, that doth often frown Where she before did smile, The king''s delight and lady''s joy Full soon she did beguile: For why? |
27441 | But he like a cruel knight spurred on, His heart did not relent- a; For, till he came there, he show''d no fear; Till then, why should he repent- a? |
27441 | But presently a loud and furious hiss Caused me to stop, and to exclaim,''What''s this?'' |
27441 | But yet his horse was not a whit Inclin''d to tarry there; For why? |
27441 | By a false heart and broken vows, In early youth I die: Was I to blame, because his bride Was thrice as rich as I? |
27441 | Campbell_ LXVIII_ SONG_ I had a dove, and the sweet dove died; And I have thought it died of grieving: O, what could it grieve for? |
27441 | Can I find one to guide me, so faithful and kind? |
27441 | Children dear, was it yesterday We heard the sweet bells over the bay? |
27441 | Children dear, was it yesterday( Call yet once) that she went away? |
27441 | Children dear, was it yesterday? |
27441 | Children dear, was it yesterday? |
27441 | Children dear, were we long alone? |
27441 | Cowper_ CLII_ THE PRIEST AND THE MULBERRY- TREE_ Did you hear of the curate who mounted his mare, And merrily trotted along to the fair? |
27441 | Did God smile his work to see? |
27441 | Did He who made the lamb make thee? |
27441 | Did I say, all? |
27441 | Does not the hound betray our pace, And gins and guns destroy our race? |
27441 | For why? |
27441 | Forthwith alighting on the ground,''Whence comes,''said I,''that piteous moan?'' |
27441 | From the fiends that plague thee thus!-- Why look''st thou so?" |
27441 | Gay_ CXXXVII_ THE DÃ � MON LOVER_''O where have you been, my long, long, love, This long seven years and more?'' |
27441 | Have you not heard how the Trojan horse Held seventy men in his belly? |
27441 | Hemans_ CIV_ MARY THE MAID OF THE INN_ Who is yonder poor maniac, whose wildly fixed eyes Seem a heart overcharged to express? |
27441 | How can I pay Jaffar?'' |
27441 | How say you? |
27441 | How sayst thou, honest friend, quoth she, Wilt thou a''prentice take? |
27441 | How were these nuptials kept? |
27441 | How''s my boy-- my boy? |
27441 | How''s my boy-- my boy? |
27441 | How''s my boy-- my boy? |
27441 | How''s my boy-- my boy? |
27441 | How''s my boy-- my boy? |
27441 | Hughes_ CXLVIII_ THE KING OF THE CROCODILES_''Now, woman, why without your veil? |
27441 | I couple without more ado; My dear Dick Redcap, what say you?'' |
27441 | I fear no plots against me, I live in open cell: Then who would be a king, lads, When the beggar lives so well? |
27441 | I grant, to man we lend our pains, And aid him to correct the plains; But doth not he divide the care, Through all the labours of the year? |
27441 | I hear the church bells ring, O say, what may it be?'' |
27441 | I hear the sound of guns, O say, what may it be?'' |
27441 | I kiss''d you oft and gave you white peas; Why not live sweetly, as in the green trees? |
27441 | I say, how''s my John? |
27441 | I see a gleaming light, O say, what may it be?'' |
27441 | I seeing this little dapper elf Such arms as these to bear, Quoth I, thus softly to myself, What strange things have we here? |
27441 | I''m not their mother-- How''s my boy-- my boy? |
27441 | In the caverns where we lay, Through the surf and through the swell, The far- off sound of a silver bell? |
27441 | In what distant deeps or skies Burnt the ardour of thine eyes? |
27441 | Insulted by a lazy ribald With idle pipe and vesture piebald? |
27441 | Is Death that Woman''s mate? |
27441 | Is that a Death? |
27441 | Is this mine own countree? |
27441 | Is this the hill? |
27441 | John saw Versailles from Marli''s height, And cried, astonish''d at the sight,''Whose fine estate is that there here?'' |
27441 | Just as he said this, what should hap At the chamber door, but a gentle tap? |
27441 | My Lord, and shall we pass the bill I mention''d half an hour ago?'' |
27441 | My boy John-- He that went to sea-- What care I for the ship, sailor? |
27441 | My friends, do they now and then send A wish or a thought after me? |
27441 | Next tripping came a courtly fair, John cried, enchanted with her air,''What lovely wench is that there here?'' |
27441 | Now, when the frost was past enduring, And made her poor old bones to ache, Could any thing be more alluring Than an old hedge to Goody Blake? |
27441 | O boat, is this the bay? |
27441 | O stream, is this thy bar of sand? |
27441 | O, dost thou not see my own heart''s blood Run trickling down my knee?'' |
27441 | O, where have ye been, my handsome young man?'' |
27441 | On what wings dare he aspire-- What the hand dare seize the fire? |
27441 | Or any room at your side, Willy, Wherein that I may creep?'' |
27441 | Or is it some historic page Of kings and crowns unstable?'' |
27441 | Or is''t my true love Willy, From Scotland new come home?'' |
27441 | Or why do you kill the king''s ven''son, When your company is so few?'' |
27441 | Or wilt thou be one of my guard? |
27441 | Or wilt thou be taster of my wine, To wait on me when I do dine? |
27441 | Quoth I again, how can it be, That he his mark should find? |
27441 | Quoth I, I pray you let me know, Came he thus first to light, Or by some sickness, hurt, or blow, Deprived of his sight? |
27441 | Says the little girl to the little boy,''What shall we do?'' |
27441 | Seek''st thou the plashy brink Of weedy lake, or marge of river wide, Or where the rocking billows rise and sink On the chafed ocean side? |
27441 | Shakespeare_ IV_ ANSWER TO A CHILD''S QUESTION_ Do you ask what the birds say? |
27441 | Shakespeare_ XL_ HOW''S MY BOY?_ Ho, sailor of the sea! |
27441 | Shall haughty man my back bestride? |
27441 | Shall the sharp spur provoke my side? |
27441 | Shall then our nobler jaws submit To foam and champ the galling bit? |
27441 | Shall we our servitude retain, Because our sires have borne the chain? |
27441 | She knocked, and straight a man he cried,''Who''s there?'' |
27441 | She, seeing mine eyes still on her were, Soon, smilingly, quoth she, Sirrah, look to your rudder there, Why look''st thou thus at me? |
27441 | Southey_ CV_ THE WITCHES''MEETING__ 1st Witch._ When shall we three meet again In thunder, lightning, or in rain? |
27441 | The Traveller ask''d,''or is the old man dead?'' |
27441 | The bird that comes about our doors When autumn winds are sobbing? |
27441 | The bird, that by some name or other All men who know thee call their brother: The darling of children and men? |
27441 | The bugles that so joyfully were blown? |
27441 | The same fond mother bent at night O''er each fair sleeping brow: She had each folded flower in sight,-- Where are those dreamers now? |
27441 | Their Thomas in Finland, And Russia far inland? |
27441 | Then many a not very pleasant thing Pass''d between her and the Crocodile King;''Is this your care of the nest?'' |
27441 | Then what were perjur''d Colin''s thoughts? |
27441 | Then when the farmer pass''d into the field He spied her, and he left his men at work And came and said,''Where were you yesterday? |
27441 | Was there a man dismay''d? |
27441 | Well, what would you have? |
27441 | What ail''d thee, robin, that thou could''st pursue A beautiful creature, That is gentle by nature? |
27441 | What bear ye on your shoulders?'' |
27441 | What care I for the men, sailor? |
27441 | What cat''s averse to fish? |
27441 | What got ye to dinner, my handsome young man?'' |
27441 | What immortal hand or eye Could frame thy fearful symmetry? |
27441 | What is''t that ails young Harry Gill, That evermore his teeth they chatter, Chatter, chatter, chatter still? |
27441 | What rises white and awful as a shroud- enfolded ghost? |
27441 | What roar of rampant tumult bursts in clangour on the coast? |
27441 | What sport can earth, or sea, or sky, To match the princely chase afford?'' |
27441 | What the hammer, what the chain, In what furnace was thy brain? |
27441 | What time the daisy decks the green, Thy certain voice we hear; Hast thou a star to guide thy path, Or mark the rolling year? |
27441 | When did music come this way? |
27441 | When from these lofty thoughts I woke,''What is it?'' |
27441 | When shall the sandy bar be cross''d? |
27441 | When shall the sandy bar be cross''d? |
27441 | When shall the sandy bar be cross''d? |
27441 | Where got ye your dinner, my handsome young man?'' |
27441 | Where is the throng, the tumult of the race? |
27441 | Where now shall I go, poor, forsaken, and blind? |
27441 | Where then did the Raven go? |
27441 | Whose child is that? |
27441 | Why all around this cackling train Who haunt my ears for chickens slain?'' |
27441 | Why are those bleeding turkeys there? |
27441 | Why grows the peach''s crimson hue? |
27441 | Why should I speak low, sailor? |
27441 | Why should we yet our sail unfurl? |
27441 | Why wake you to the morning''s care? |
27441 | Why with new arts correct the year? |
27441 | Wordsworth_ XIX_ LORD RANDAL_''O, where have ye been, Lord Randal, my son? |
27441 | You come back from sea And not know my John? |
27441 | You talk of wondrous things you see, You say the sun shines bright; I feel him warm, but how can he Or make it day or night? |
27441 | You threaten us, fellow? |
27441 | Young Harry was a lusty drover, And who so stout of limb as he? |
27441 | _ 1st Witch._ Where the place? |
27441 | _ Leigh Hunt_ XV_ LA BELLE DAME SANS MERCY_ Ah, what can ail thee, wretched wight, Alone and palely loitering? |
27441 | _ Old Song_ CXVI_ THE SPANISH LADY''S LOVE_ Will you hear a Spanish lady How she woo''d an English man? |
27441 | and are there two? |
27441 | cried the Mayor,''d''ye think I''ll brook Being worse treated than a cook? |
27441 | in winter dead and dark, Where can poor Robin go? |
27441 | is this indeed The light- house top I see? |
27441 | is this the kirk? |
27441 | must I stay?'' |
27441 | quoth he;''What news hast thou to tell to me?'' |
27441 | quoth the man;''what''s this you tell us? |
27441 | said I,''that you bear Beneath the covert of your cloak, Protected from this cold damp air?'' |
27441 | said Little John,''That you blow so hastily?'' |
27441 | said Robin Hood,''In ready gold or fee, To help thee to thy true love again, And deliver her unto thee?'' |
27441 | shall I?'' |
27441 | she said,''Or canst thou not very well see? |
27441 | she said,''What news hast thou brought unto me?'' |
27441 | the young man said,''What is your will with me?'' |
27441 | then said the bishop,''Or for whom do you make this ado? |
27441 | to cry; Which as I was about to bring, And came to view my fraught, Thought I, what more than heavenly thing Hath fortune hither brought? |
27441 | what are you doing here?'' |
27441 | what can be In happiness compared to thee? |
27441 | what news? |
27441 | what''s the matter? |
27441 | what''s the matter? |
27441 | what''s the matter? |
27441 | what, the land and houses too? |
27441 | when shall we find the bay? |
27441 | when shall we find the bay? |
27441 | when shall we find the bay? |
27441 | where are the charms That sages have seen in thy face? |
27441 | where was he? |
27441 | wherefore weep you so?'' |
27441 | whose funeral''s that?'' |
27441 | why? |
27441 | would you not live with me? |
27441 | your tidings tell; Tell me you must and shall-- Say, why bare- headed you are come, Or why you come at all?'' |
36571 | _ A Key._ What is that which has been to- morrow, and will be yesterday? |
28503 | ''At any rate, did you say? 28503 ''How much per cent, sir?'' |
28503 | ''Interest?'' 28503 ''Ma''am?'' |
28503 | ''What do you want?'' 28503 ''Why do you do that?'' |
28503 | ''Why do you shine?'' 28503 And have you none left of your own?" |
28503 | Attracted by that picture? |
28503 | But say, there ai n''t any_ danger_ in a lock, is there? |
28503 | But what am I now? 28503 But what be ye a- goin''to feed him with?" |
28503 | Ca n''t ye get him out to''Sable Falls or Keeseville''n sell him fur what he''ll fetch? |
28503 | Ca n''t you find it? |
28503 | Can you sing? |
28503 | Did n''t you have to dig an awful long grave for him? |
28503 | Did you say the fire was out? 28503 Do n''t you feel well to- day?" |
28503 | Do you see this ring? |
28503 | Has anything happened? |
28503 | Have you been living in Kentucky long? |
28503 | Have you heard the new invention, my dears, That a man has invented? |
28503 | He would have preferred-- preferred--Maria, do n''t you see that child has got the scissors? |
28503 | Here''s a shoe in the water- pitcher-- is this it? |
28503 | Hev that thar red heifer o''ourn lept over the fence agin, an''got inter Pete''s corn? 28503 How my nose''ll be?" |
28503 | I was a good ways from this when you knew me, was n''t I? 28503 If Mees Lucinda would pairmit?" |
28503 | Is n''t that last part rather inconsistent? |
28503 | It''s riz? |
28503 | Killed a few robins; well, what of that? 28503 Kitty, Kitty, you mischievous elf, What have you, pray, to say for yourself?" |
28503 | Mine? 28503 Now, what d''ye s''pose that''s made of?" |
28503 | Now, where can it be? |
28503 | Pray,said he,"what do ladies find to think about besides dress and parties?" |
28503 | Query-- If steamers are named the Asia, the Russia, and the Scotia, why not call one the_ Nausea_? |
28503 | The seam we pin Driving them in, But where are they by the end of the day, With dancing, and jumping, and leaps by the sea? 28503 Well, I''m a- goin'', ai n''t I? |
28503 | Well, Sam, what did you think of the sermon? |
28503 | Well, suppose you get married? |
28503 | What be I a- goin''to do with the critter? |
28503 | What fool fetched his hoss up here? |
28503 | What upon airth did you buy a hoss for? |
28503 | What was it? |
28503 | What''s the matter? 28503 What, instead of those wearisome thorns, my dear, Those wearisome thorns?" |
28503 | When you''re fairly past the college- boys, and as far along as the law students--"Or the theologues? |
28503 | Where''s my bonnet? |
28503 | Where''s my cloak, chambermaid? |
28503 | Where''s my little red box? 28503 Where''s the baby''s nightgown?" |
28503 | Where? |
28503 | Who killed the robins? 28503 Who killed the robins? |
28503 | Why do n''t you go and hunt for a mouse? |
28503 | Why, down there, under that bridge; do n''t you see those lights? |
28503 | Why,said Miss Fuller, in surprise,"what do you wear?" |
28503 | Will some friend close the doors while we give every one an opportunity to contribute to this good cause? 28503 Will you please to get up, ma''am? |
28503 | Will you please to move, ma''am? |
28503 | You do n''t know of any poor person who''d like to have a pig, do you? |
28503 | You do n''t''spect to hab your name tuck offen dem chu''ch books? |
28503 | _ He._''Finest writing- paper? 28503 _ Helen._ Of course you would n''t tell us_ exactly_; but would you mind giving it to us in round numbers? |
28503 | ''A quire of writing- paper?'' |
28503 | ''Member that ar chap that shot hisself in the leg down to your shanty this summer?" |
28503 | ''Stead ob she call- in''ob me"daddy"and her mudder"mammy,"she say:"Par and mar, how can you bear to live in sech a one- hoss town as this? |
28503 | ''Twon''t be no great of an undertakin'', will it?" |
28503 | ''What do you want o''me?'' |
28503 | ''What per cent, sir?'' |
28503 | ***** Or, if one prefers to laugh at the experience of a"culled"brother, what can be found more irresistible than this? |
28503 | *****"What would you do in time of war if you had the suffrage?" |
28503 | ; but did I not know you better? |
28503 | A._ Well, how is everything? |
28503 | Ah, can it be That freedom''s age is past? |
28503 | Ah, what are the words of an aged crone? |
28503 | Ai n''t them did enough? |
28503 | And ai nt wind are? |
28503 | And as if it were high treason, He said:"Neither rhyme nor reason Has it; and it''s out of season,"Which? |
28503 | And den she jumped up, and says she:"What make you think I loss my senses?" |
28503 | And do you recollect the only time that Wordsworth was_ really_ witty? |
28503 | And her figure of a long leanness also? |
28503 | And is not this epigrammatic advice? |
28503 | And may I really have her?" |
28503 | And now O Sextant? |
28503 | And she departed amid the-- what shall I say? |
28503 | And the victim? |
28503 | And what was Joshua pondering on, With his widely staring eyes, And his nostrils opening sensibly To ease his frequent sighs? |
28503 | And what was that very peculiar smell? |
28503 | And when another, lamenting the various divisions of the Church, pathetically exclaimed:''And how shall we unite these several denominations in one?'' |
28503 | And where d''ye s''pose I found the gold?" |
28503 | Are there any good woods near here, Israel?" |
28503 | Are you mad?'' |
28503 | Be ye, Scotty?" |
28503 | Blaze that air track, will ye? |
28503 | Blest escape, dear, was it not? |
28503 | But some one turned to me at last,"Please, wo n''t you keep that parrot still?" |
28503 | But you b''l''eve dat gal had n''t turned stark bodily naked fool? |
28503 | But, fur all, how be I goin''to get that animile''long the trail?" |
28503 | Ca n''t anything be done? |
28503 | Can I have a pickle? |
28503 | Clock strikes twelve; soon after the lunch- bell rings._] Voice of Girl of Ten, calling: Mamma, why_ do n''t_ you come to lunch? |
28503 | Den I jes''make dem hick''ries ring for''bout five minutes, and den I say:"What chu''ch you''longs to now, Meriky?" |
28503 | Did he think you was a- goin''to set up canawl long o''Racket?" |
28503 | Did mamma drop the soap into his mouth instead of the wash- bowl? |
28503 | Did you ever try it, reader? |
28503 | Did you send them a horse?" |
28503 | Do n''t whiskey sit well on yer shtomick at all? |
28503 | Do n''t you see-- don''t you see I''m in my night- clothes? |
28503 | Do n''t you smell fire? |
28503 | Do n''t you smell something burning? |
28503 | Do n''t you think he might be killed in his sleep, Israel?" |
28503 | Do you not feel your bold cheeks turning pale? |
28503 | Do you remember how pink his pretty little nose was-- just like a rosebud-- and how bright his eyes were, and his cunning legs? |
28503 | First love? |
28503 | Fish, or brimstone? |
28503 | For sure as the blissed sun rolls, We''ll land in the State House or Congress, Thin what will become of our sowls? |
28503 | Gracious goodness, what''s the matter? |
28503 | Had he then no part in the maiden meditations of this fair, innocent girl-- he whom proud beauties of society vied with each other to win? |
28503 | Had n''t somebody better wink At my peccadillos, if houses of glass Wo n''t do to throw stones from at those who pass? |
28503 | Have I told you about his bedstead yit? |
28503 | Have yez caught a black eye from some blundhering whack? |
28503 | Have yez niver a powdher or bit av a pill? |
28503 | Have yez pains in yer bones or a throublesome ache In yer jints afther dancin''a jig at a wake? |
28503 | Have yez vertebral twists in the sphine av yer back? |
28503 | Have you any profiles to take yet, Mr. Gamboge? |
28503 | Her crown a tinsel crown-- her guests The pit that gazes with praise and jests? |
28503 | Her small eyes flashed, she swelled until She looked almost a frog;"How_ dare_ you, sir, call_ me_,"she asked,"Your_ precious_ Polly Wog? |
28503 | His mother at her spinning- wheel, Good woman, stood and spun,"And what,"says she,"is come o''er you, Is''t_ airnest_ or is''t fun?" |
28503 | How can I be quiet? |
28503 | How did that boy get out? |
28503 | How did they get it out? |
28503 | How do you do, Cornelia? |
28503 | How is Mr. Kobble? |
28503 | How was it? |
28503 | How was it? |
28503 | I ask you; say fifteen minnets, and then what''s to be did? |
28503 | I make no charges, but this I ask,-- What made such a splurge in the waste- water cask? |
28503 | I was so almost wore out by their talk, that I spoke right out, and, says I,''_ Good land!_ how did you_ s''pose_ I was a- goin''?'' |
28503 | I wonder how''twill be when I am dead? |
28503 | I wonder if the Governor had to slave As I do, if he would be so pesky fresh about Thanksgiving Day? |
28503 | I would n''t demane myself, Bridget, Like you, in disputin''with men-- Would I fly in the face of the blissed Apostles, an''Father Maginn? |
28503 | In character? |
28503 | Is n''t it curious how I got caught dressed up like my grandmother? |
28503 | John Henry, wash your face; And do get out from under foot,"Afford more Cream?" |
28503 | Know him, do n''t you? |
28503 | Love him? |
28503 | Lovely, is n''t it? |
28503 | My engagement? |
28503 | Now where, if I rin to convintions, Will be Patrick''s home- comforts and joys? |
28503 | Now, here''s a note just come from Fred:"Old fellow, will you dine With me to- day? |
28503 | Now, since I''ve told you my story, do you wonder I''m tired of life, Or think it strange I often wish I warn''t an inventor''s wife? |
28503 | Of a sonnet Or a bonnet? |
28503 | Of what use the endless labor of this sharp- nosed woman, with glasses over her eyes, at the church- house? |
28503 | Oh, where''s my teeth, and my silver soup- ladle? |
28503 | Oh, wo n''t the men let us this new thing use? |
28503 | Phat use av yer sighin''forlorn? |
28503 | Says I,"Dat is n''t dis chile''s name, Dey calls me Auntie Scraggs,"And den I axed dem, by de pound How much dey gabe for rags? |
28503 | She gazed upon the burnished brace Of plump, ruffed grouse he showed with pride, Angelic grief was in her face:"How_ could_ you do it, dear?" |
28503 | So that the remark will be appreciated of a lady to whom I said, alluding to such a talker:"Have you seen Mrs.---- lately?" |
28503 | So weak Lamira and her wants so few Who can refuse? |
28503 | So,_ ma belle_, what could I do? |
28503 | The auctioneer then in his labor began, And called out aloud, as he held up a man,"How much for a bachelor? |
28503 | The hostess paused near him, surveyed him critically, and then inquired, in a gentle tone:"Do you play also?" |
28503 | The nest is empty, and silent and lone; Where are the four little robins gone? |
28503 | Then Joshua gave a cunning look, Half bashful and half sporting,"Now what did father do,"says he,"When first he came a courting?" |
28503 | There hain''t nothing burst, has there?" |
28503 | Tink I wanted yer ter eat my teef? |
28503 | Used all you had? |
28503 | Was it Newport, at last? |
28503 | Was not that enough? |
28503 | Was that you that spoke, Mr. Little? |
28503 | We had quite a fright last night, did n''t we? |
28503 | We''ll have to be crowners an''judges, An''such like ould malefactors, Or they''ll make Common Councilmin of us; Thin where will be our char- acters? |
28503 | We- uns hain''t got no gourd hyar, hev we, Cynthy?" |
28503 | Well, I gib her anodder leetle tetch, and says I:"What chu''ch does you''long to, darter?" |
28503 | Well, I jes''walks up to her, and I says:"Darter,"says I,"what chu''ch are dat you say you gwine to jine?" |
28503 | Well, but finds it warm in town, eh? |
28503 | Well, now, how do you know? |
28503 | Were it safe to we d a woman one so oft would wish in France? |
28503 | Were not, perhaps, the glasses the consequence of such toil? |
28503 | What brung ye down hyar along o''we- uns,''Vander?" |
28503 | What character did Dora assume? |
28503 | What chu''ch does you''long to, Meriky?" |
28503 | What has become of the beautiful thrush That built her nest in the heap of brush? |
28503 | What hev you got theer?" |
28503 | What means the contrast strange and wide? |
28503 | What next I wonder? |
28503 | What signifize who preaches ef I ca nt brethe? |
28503 | What woman does not risk being called sarcastic and hateful if she throws back the merry dart, or indulges in a little sharp- shooting? |
28503 | What woman would know How to make the thing go? |
28503 | What you and she hab a fallin''-out about? |
28503 | What''s Pol? |
28503 | What''s Pollus to sinners who are ded? |
28503 | What''s that, Mr. Little? |
28503 | What, get along without An Indian pudding? |
28503 | When are you going to make jelly- cake? |
28503 | Where are your folks?" |
28503 | Where is the strap? |
28503 | Where''s my silver spoons? |
28503 | Whin ye''re walkin''the shtrates are yez likely to fall? |
28503 | Who can tell? |
28503 | Who wants to buy?" |
28503 | Why do n''t_ we_ have jelly- cake? |
28503 | Why do you lie so lazily there?" |
28503 | Why, if Will Latrobe had asked When he left two years ago, I''d have thrown up all and gone Out to Kansas, do you know? |
28503 | Wo n''t you tell us how many? |
28503 | Would you know, in this connection, How you may secure protection For yourself and city cousins From these bites and from these buzzin''s? |
28503 | Written much? |
28503 | You do n''t mean to die yet, eh? |
28503 | You thought Bridget was watching them? |
28503 | You wish I''d make you a present of that nightcap, to remember me by? |
28503 | Your eyes, do they weep? |
28503 | _ Comprenez vous?_ Oh, I do hope that beautiful_ balzarine_ like Bel''s will not be gone before another Saturday! |
28503 | _ Did_ I write you, Belle, about How she tried for Charley, till I sailed in and cut her out? |
28503 | _ Girl of Eight._ Where are my roller- skates? |
28503 | and meet the boys, A jolly number-- nine?" |
28503 | are they bringing water? |
28503 | do wake up; what is this awful noise?" |
28503 | doant you know our lungs is belluses To blo the fier of life and keep it from Going out: und how can bellusses blo without wind? |
28503 | exclaim the vivacious creatures, ever on the alert for information;"and what_ is_ a lock, pray?" |
28503 | ha!--for a lady of my age? |
28503 | have you found the place? |
28503 | have you got water? |
28503 | is that so?" |
28503 | said Aunt Anniky, scornfully,"whar''s de trick? |
28503 | says one, after surveying the little room, about ten feet long and six feet high,"where are we all to sleep to- night?" |
28503 | she called you a post; why do n''t you rail at her?'' |
28503 | the sonnet Or the bonnet? |
28503 | what''ll we do? |
28503 | where are you going with that portmanteau? |
28503 | your heart, does it bleed? |
31133 | ''Do you mean to say that I am to find two thousand pounds?'' 31133 Does that bloom, so fresh and youthful, That divine and lovely form, That sweet look, so good and truthful, Bind thee with unbounded charm? |
31133 | Heart, my heart, oh, what hath changed thee? 31133 I see her face, I hear her voice: Does she remember mine? |
31133 | Mother, who was Washington? |
31133 | What is the use,he would say,"of my talking to a lot of hungry paupers about heaven? |
31133 | Why, my dear, do n''t you know? |
31133 | ''Are you mad?'' |
31133 | ''But you can say your Archbishops of Canterbury?'' |
31133 | ''Charles,''cried Mrs. Dickens,''how can you be so silly? |
31133 | ''Did you ever think of destroying yourself?'' |
31133 | ''Oh,''she whispered forth,''I am not going to die, am I? |
31133 | ''Seen them?'' |
31133 | ''What do you think of matricide, of high treason, of rick- burning? |
31133 | And do they prefer to hear Du Chaillu tell about the gorillas he invented, or go with Jules Verne twenty thousand leagues under the sea? |
31133 | And what to her is now the boy Who fed her father''s kine?" |
31133 | And where, my soul, is thy pleasant hue? |
31133 | And will Agnes and Esther ever pall upon our taste? |
31133 | Are there any such fierce, tumultuous natures as hers to- day kneeling on stony cloister floors? |
31133 | Are there offices in that sphere which are coveted, and to obtain which men are pestered to write letters of recommendation? |
31133 | Are you not unhappy, reprobated, evil spoken of? |
31133 | Art thou not ashamed?" |
31133 | But has it ever occurred to you how awful the recovery of her lost reason would be, without the consciousness of the loss of time? |
31133 | But that he has done serious work, and that it has been work which has borne fruit, who can doubt? |
31133 | But what of that? |
31133 | But who would not willingly die at twenty- three to be immortalized in such a poem as"In Memoriam"? |
31133 | Ca n''t you preach and pray behind the hedges, or in a sandpit, or in a coal- hole, first? |
31133 | Can that be called a quarrel in which, so far as the public could judge, the wife did all the denunciation, and the husband made no reply? |
31133 | Can that be called a quarrel, piteously asks the man in''Juvenal,''where my enemy only beats and I am beaten? |
31133 | Can the purple and burning flames of genius ever float over the immaculate azure of a woman''s destiny?" |
31133 | Can we wonder that the students who crowded his lecture- room after he became a professor thought every other lecturer commonplace and dull? |
31133 | Can we wonder that those who crowded the table where he sat, lingered on till the daylight drove them from the board? |
31133 | Can you conceive my resentment, my wretchedness? |
31133 | Did the dread of assassination hover over her? |
31133 | Did you ever think of killing any one? |
31133 | Do boys persecute literary men with requests for a course of reading? |
31133 | Do people there write for autographs to those who have gained a little notoriety? |
31133 | Do we not all know the"Treadmill Song,"also, in practical life? |
31133 | Do we not all know"these crusaders sent from some infernal clime"? |
31133 | Do women there send letters asking for money? |
31133 | Do you know where you are?'' |
31133 | Do you see that? |
31133 | Dr. Holmes, too, has had his battle with the music- grinders, as who has not? |
31133 | Had she clung to her original determination not to marry him, would it have been better? |
31133 | Has not the force of genius its own exclusive and legitimate exactions, and does not the force of woman consist in the abdication of all exactions? |
31133 | Have I forgot, my only love, to love thee, Severed at last by Time''s all- severing wave? |
31133 | Have the boys outgrown"Ivanhoe"too? |
31133 | Have we not in this the key to all the sorrows of his domestic life? |
31133 | Have"Marmion,"and"The Lady of the Lake,"and the immortal"Lay"been superseded by the trivialities and inanities of modern poetasters? |
31133 | He saw everything in one light, she in another; what but disappointment and unrest could ensue? |
31133 | He says:--"Why did he not marry her at once? |
31133 | He writes thus to a friend in extreme old age:--"Is there a penny- post, do you think, in the world to come? |
31133 | Her eyes are not brilliant; has their fire gone out under frequent tears, or only in her writings? |
31133 | His brow is singular in shape, but not particularly large or prominent; where has nature expressed his majestic intellect? |
31133 | His head is small; how can it carry all he knows? |
31133 | How could I tread my hall again with such a diminished crest? |
31133 | How live a poor, indebted man, where I was once the wealthy, the honored? |
31133 | If a lovely wind- flower, fresh and fragrant as the breath of morning, was crushed in the arms of this god of thunder, what shall we say? |
31133 | If it seemed as bad as this to him, what did it seem to her, delicately reared and hating the disagreeables of life? |
31133 | If one or two of us at the present day open our eyes to a new light, is it not by a strange and unaccountable good Providence? |
31133 | Into what abysses shall we go and plunge ourselves, we three? |
31133 | Is any one dead?" |
31133 | Is it not sad to think of this?''" |
31133 | Is not the opinion of such men as these to be considered of weight in this matter? |
31133 | Is not this an accurate picture of what a poet''s childhood should be? |
31133 | Is there not in it a hint to the unsuccessful preachers of our time? |
31133 | It now beckons to me from one of my shelves, asking always,''When wilt thou have a cheerful, vacant day?''" |
31133 | On another occasion Sir David Dundas asked:--"''Macaulay, do you know your Popes?'' |
31133 | Shall we ever cease loving Mr. Jarndyce, even when the wind is in the east? |
31133 | Shall we ever weary of gentle Tom Pinch? |
31133 | Shall we not always touch our hats to Joe Gargery? |
31133 | Show us the path of Bernica, or the Lake of Sténio, or the glaciers of Jacques''?" |
31133 | Still can we ask of the English people:--"Do you hear the children weeping, O my brothers, Ere the sorrow comes with years? |
31133 | Thackeray wrote after Macaulay''s death:--"Now that wonderful tongue is to speak no more, will not many a man grieve that he no longer can listen? |
31133 | The common, impious, vulgar of this earth-- what has it to do with my life or me? |
31133 | The same friend writes:--"''What do you think of suicide?'' |
31133 | To another correspondent he writes:--"How is it in the world to come? |
31133 | To the day of Miss Bronté''s death, she would blaze with indignation at any mention of this school; and who can wonder? |
31133 | Was she the only one who found him"ill to live with"? |
31133 | Was this also true of Mrs. Dickens? |
31133 | What could be better for the youth of our land than such a pastime as this for their vacations? |
31133 | What do school boys and girls declaim now, we wonder, equal to the selections from Scott, which formed the greatest part of our stock in trade? |
31133 | What do you think she said aloud? |
31133 | What doth weigh on thee so sore? |
31133 | What hath thus from me estranged thee, That I know thee now no more? |
31133 | What have you gained by these unequal struggles, by these much- trumpeted duels of yours with Custom and Belief? |
31133 | What is the great literary guild anywhere but a mutual admiration society? |
31133 | What might he not have done in those earlier years could he have gone fresh and untired to his musings and his dreams? |
31133 | What was its foundation, what its outcome? |
31133 | What was poverty and obscurity and isolation unto these two souls, so complete in each other that nothing else was desired? |
31133 | What would years and cares and the commonplace of existence have done for such a love as this, we wonder? |
31133 | When the new spirit came, They asked him, drawing near,''Art thou become like us?'' |
31133 | Whence then came the unhappiness,--an unhappiness which, we think, has in some places been greatly exaggerated? |
31133 | Who can she be?" |
31133 | Who cares for the books of the year? |
31133 | Who that felt a love for the writer and the man could fail to rejoice that the end was quick and painless? |
31133 | Will little Nell''s friend, the old schoolmaster, ever cease to draw tears from our eyes? |
31133 | Would her nature have still asserted itself under the cap of the sister? |
31133 | Would the prayers and litanies, the penances and the fasts, have tamed her wild blood? |
31133 | Would we have this so? |
31133 | and are we not intensely weary of it sometimes? |
31133 | and have we not all felt with him the relief when"silence like a poultice comes to heal the blows of sound"? |
31133 | and that? |
31133 | how could''st thou come to this? |
31133 | of murdering your mother? |
31133 | or do the good old lines still hold their own? |
31133 | or setting rick- yards on fire?'' |
31133 | or that no man who had had him for a boon companion could ever be satisfied with another? |
31133 | was not this man a fit guest for any palace in the world, or a fit companion for any man or woman in it? |
31133 | who will have the patience to hear them? |
31133 | would she have led a revolt against authority within the church as she did without? |
13623 | Am I cruel in my love? |
13623 | And supposing you persevered in your obstinate fast, and died by that means, and they refused to bury you in the precincts of the kirk? |
13623 | And that,asked Miss Keeldar, pointing to the forest--"that is Nunnwood?" |
13623 | And the carriage? |
13623 | And who will live here then? |
13623 | And you would thrust on me a wife? |
13623 | Are you fond of Landed Proprietor? |
13623 | Are you fond of cold meat, Cousin Louise? |
13623 | Are you fond of roasted hare, Cousin Louise? |
13623 | Are you fond of roasted hare, Magister? |
13623 | Art thou a Lombard, my brother? 13623 Art thou a Romagnole?" |
13623 | Art thou from Tuscany, brother? 13623 But surely a net and a spear are poor arms against a shield and sword?" |
13623 | But where did he come from, the little dark thing, harbored by a good man to his bane? |
13623 | But who is yon handsome gladiator, nearly naked-- is it not quite improper? 13623 But why did you run away and hide yourself when you ought to be dancing with me?" |
13623 | By some queer way or other: is not this the general case and the mystery, young ladies and gentlemen? |
13623 | Calenus, priest of Isis, thou accusest Arbaces of the murder of Apæcides? |
13623 | Did you ever meet any man, much less any woman, whose mind was formed? |
13623 | Did_ I_ stop them, when a million seemed so few? |
13623 | Do you collect insects? |
13623 | Do you like birds, Cousin Louise? |
13623 | Egyptian,said the prætor, frowning,"thou didst, then, dare to imprison a priest of the gods-- and wherefore?" |
13623 | God of the waves,said Jove,"thy pride runs high; What more wouldst add to own thy stern behest?" |
13623 | Happy, master? |
13623 | How are you? 13623 How do you know that so positively?" |
13623 | How do you know? |
13623 | How would you like it? |
13623 | How? |
13623 | I must see more of her if I am to answer critically; but before you introduce me, may I be permitted to ask who and what is Lily? |
13623 | I will ask what is the matter,I thought,"or who should?" |
13623 | If so,said Kenelm to Lily,"may I come too? |
13623 | In the heart of it? |
13623 | Is John getting the carriage ready? |
13623 | Is Mr. Greeley on board? |
13623 | Is he a ghoul, or a vampire? |
13623 | Is he thy son? |
13623 | Is it you? |
13623 | Is not she beautiful? |
13623 | Is reason sufficient for mankind? 13623 Is the luggage brought down?" |
13623 | Is there some new reason for this banishment? |
13623 | It is he? 13623 Jane, are you ready?" |
13623 | Keep out of the way,said Mr. Rochester, thrusting her aside;"she has no knife now, I suppose? |
13623 | Must I close this? |
13623 | My uncle? 13623 No; so that is Lily? |
13623 | Now that I come to die Do I view the world as a vale of tears? |
13623 | On principle, I suppose? |
13623 | Paid by the world, what dost thou owe Me? |
13623 | Perhaps it may be got over-- explained away? |
13623 | Sallust,said the magistrate,"where found you Calenus?" |
13623 | Sir,said Mr. Greeley,"are you aware that I must be in Placerville at seven o''clock to- night?" |
13623 | Thou didst behold the deed? |
13623 | Turn round and tell me, are we by ourselves? |
13623 | Was it not one of Robin Hood''s haunts? |
13623 | Well, is he coming? |
13623 | Were you ever there? |
13623 | Were you happy? |
13623 | What did he say? |
13623 | What frenzy has seized you? 13623 What hast thou to say?" |
13623 | What is he buzzing in my ears? 13623 What is it like?" |
13623 | What is that which--"Yes, what is it? 13623 What is that?" |
13623 | What is the matter, my little man? |
13623 | What is the nature of the impediment? |
13623 | What king do you place above all other kings, Magister? |
13623 | What mean you? 13623 What means this raving?" |
13623 | What task would I not undertake, what privation would I not cheerfully endure, to testify my love of Thee? 13623 What under the son are you abowt?" |
13623 | What, are we going to alight here? |
13623 | What, she felt the while, Must I think? 13623 Where should good news come from to me?" |
13623 | Who are you? |
13623 | Who is the large fish there? |
13623 | Who knows the fate of his own bones? 13623 Why come we here? |
13623 | Why do I ever bet but at the dice? |
13623 | Why is it,Charlotte had once said,"that heroines must always be beautiful?" |
13623 | Will it not be presently time, O prattler, to hold your tongue? |
13623 | Will you have some breakfast? |
13623 | Would you, Elise? 13623 Wull ye never learn to say_ dust_, ye thrawn deevil?" |
13623 | Yes, I did perceive something yesterday evening; what the deuce was his meaning with those stupid questions he put to her? 13623 You are a Yorkshire girl too?" |
13623 | You do not believe that her inclination is toward Jacobi? |
13623 | Your dinner is here,I returned:"why wo n''t you get it?" |
13623 | ''Aurora Leigh''gives rise to the old question, Is it advisable to turn a three- volume novel into verse? |
13623 | ''Does cousin like this?'' |
13623 | ''Twere imbecile, hewing out roads to a wall; And when Italy''s made, for what end is it done, If we have not a son? |
13623 | *****"They are going to the Grange, then?" |
13623 | --"And are you still as happy?" |
13623 | A DISCOURSE OF POETS From''The Heroic Enthusiasts''_ Cicada_--Say, what do you mean by those who vaunt themselves of myrtle and laurel? |
13623 | A MUSICAL INSTRUMENT WHAT was he doing, the great god Pan, Down in the reeds by the river? |
13623 | A minister catechizing a raw plowboy, after asking the first question,"Who made you?" |
13623 | AFFAIRS ROUND THE VILLAGE GREEN And where are the friends of my youth? |
13623 | Ah, but a man''s reach should exceed his grasp, Or what''s a heaven for? |
13623 | Am I cold, Ungrateful, that for these most manifold High gifts, I render nothing back at all? |
13623 | Am I not thy wife? |
13623 | Am I not thy wife?" |
13623 | And I exclaimed,"Have you heard any good news, Mr. Heathcliff? |
13623 | And dost thou lift this house''s latch, too poor For hand of thine? |
13623 | And may not her uneasiness, her eagerness to question and dispute, arise from a sort of intellectual hunger? |
13623 | And tender friends go sighing round,"What love can ever cure this wound?" |
13623 | And what if cheerful shouts at noon Come, from the village sent, Or songs of maids beneath the moon, With fairy laughter blent? |
13623 | And what if, in the evening light, Betrothed lovers walk in sight Of my low monument? |
13623 | And wherefore out? |
13623 | And who then is Bear? |
13623 | And who will judge the Revolution? |
13623 | And why? |
13623 | And yet what has happened? |
13623 | And yet where was the Jane Eyre of yesterday? |
13623 | And you?" |
13623 | Another smile? |
13623 | Apropos, how is it with Jacobi? |
13623 | Arbaces of Egypt, thou hearest the charge against thee-- thou hast not yet spoken-- what hast thou to say?" |
13623 | Are our Marjories now- a- days better or worse, because they can not read''Tom Jones''unharmed? |
13623 | Are souls straight so happy, that, dizzy with heaven, They drop earth''s affections, conceive not of woe? |
13623 | Are they dull and commonplace? |
13623 | Are your chiefs to be infallible and impeccable? |
13623 | At all events, not, Was he a genius because he was a, patrician? |
13623 | Balls and masks begun at midnight, burning ever to mid- day, When they made up fresh adventures for the morrow, do you say? |
13623 | Both boys dead? |
13623 | But I said:"What name?" |
13623 | But if these so- called''Memoirs''are really not his, what has Bourrienne himself to do here? |
13623 | But is it not possible to otherwise characterize the literature of England? |
13623 | But since the scope Must widen early, is it well to droop For a few days consumed in loss and taint? |
13623 | But they answer,"Are your cowslips of the meadows Like our weeds anear the mine? |
13623 | But what is not good in the country? |
13623 | But where was the rat? |
13623 | But who is it, then, that_ has_ what is needed in order to judge Napoleon? |
13623 | But who is such? |
13623 | But who was the young lady with you? |
13623 | But you talk of taking care of butterflies: how do you do that? |
13623 | By popular election? |
13623 | COMING( APRIL, 1861) World, are thou''ware of a storm? |
13623 | CONFESSIONS What is he buzzing in my ears? |
13623 | Ca n''t we touch these bubbles then But they break?" |
13623 | Cameron?" |
13623 | Can we be too hospitable in receiving those who have charge of our souls, and keep us in the way of safety? |
13623 | Can you see a break in the forest, about the centre?" |
13623 | Contempt fell cool on Mr. Rochester-- his passion died as if a blight had shriveled it up; he only asked,"What have_ you_ to say?" |
13623 | Cousin Louise, are you fond of playing Patience? |
13623 | Dante once prepared to paint an angel: Whom to please? |
13623 | Dear dead women, with such hair, too-- what''s become of all the gold Used to hang and brush their bosoms? |
13623 | Did I not give you the best strawberries in the dish, and all my own cream?" |
13623 | Did not he magnify the mind, show clear Just what it all meant? |
13623 | Did she live and love it all her lifetime? |
13623 | Did young people take their pleasure when the sea was warm in May? |
13623 | Do I not merit to partake with thee in thy cares? |
13623 | Do I view the world as a vale of tears? |
13623 | Do n''t you know her-- don''t you know Lily?" |
13623 | Do n''t you think that we ought to speak to Jacobi, in order to get him to read and converse with her? |
13623 | Do not the names of Algarotti, Bettinelli, Beccaria, Filengieri, almost belong to France? |
13623 | Do you ask them why they stand Weeping sore before the bosoms of their mothers, In our happy Fatherland? |
13623 | Do you forget already words like those?) |
13623 | Do you hear the children weeping and disproving, O my brothers, what ye preach? |
13623 | Do you impale them on pins stuck into a glass case?" |
13623 | Do you know him?" |
13623 | Does he paint? |
13623 | Does he tell the truth or not? |
13623 | Eh? |
13623 | Eyes of mine, what are ye doing? |
13623 | Faint with that strain of heart, she moved on then to another, Stern and strong in his death:"And dost thou suffer, my brother?" |
13623 | Fear? |
13623 | For God''s sake, what is the matter? |
13623 | Go''st thou to build an early name, Or early in the task to die? |
13623 | Had I said,"Good folk, mere noise repels-- But give me your sun from yonder skies"They had answered,"And afterward, what else?" |
13623 | Had you fancies From their glances, That the grave would quickly screen"Sweetest eyes were ever seen"? |
13623 | Has your agricultural laborer ever known anything but misery? |
13623 | Have we anything else to stay for?" |
13623 | Have we not sometimes also lessened their grandeur and altered their purity? |
13623 | Have you cared for the laborer till, from a home of comfort, he has but a hovel for shelter? |
13623 | Have you come with your old music, and here''s all the good it brings? |
13623 | Have you failed to discover them already? |
13623 | Have you found Clara?" |
13623 | Have you found her?" |
13623 | He opened the door immediately, and said:--"Nelly, come here-- is it morning? |
13623 | He said,"What''s time? |
13623 | He sits down to a frugal meal, but everything he eats is excellent; and how could it be otherwise? |
13623 | He ventured neck or nothing-- heaven''s success Found, or earth''s failure:"Wilt thou trust death or not?" |
13623 | Her eyes pursued mine, and she said,"What is the matter? |
13623 | Her interrogations of"What was the matter?" |
13623 | Her liveliness and the many games and schemes which she invents--""Yes, do n''t you think they indicate a decided talent for the fine arts? |
13623 | Here''s the top- peak; the multitude below Live, for they can, there: This man decided not to Live but Know-- Bury this man there? |
13623 | How can you talk so cruelly? |
13623 | How could it end in any other way? |
13623 | How do I love thee? |
13623 | How do your new- discovered beauties please? |
13623 | How has the nation at large been affected by the development of this new type of womanhood, or rather perhaps of this variation on the English type? |
13623 | How is the dear Multiplication table going on? |
13623 | How many lives have been sacrificed during the past year to the childish infatuation of preserving game? |
13623 | How refuse to accept such offerings, or to make systematic use of them? |
13623 | How shall I describe the lustre which at that moment burst upon my vision? |
13623 | How were these priests or chiefs to be designated and installed in their office? |
13623 | I again demand, what have_ you_ to say?" |
13623 | I hope, my friends, you stay the evening here?" |
13623 | I may have erred-- but who among ye will not acknowledge the equity of self- preservation? |
13623 | I said to his brother,''Why is your brother''s soul still dark against me? |
13623 | I''ll work then for your friend''s friend, never fear, Treat his own subject after his own way? |
13623 | II Do you question the young children in their sorrow, Why their tears are falling so? |
13623 | If you would sit thus by me every night, I should work better-- do you comprehend? |
13623 | Is it God? |
13623 | Is it better in May, I ask you? |
13623 | Is it ever hot in the square? |
13623 | Is it likely God, with angels singing round him, Hears our weeping any more? |
13623 | Is it not a pretty name, Lily?" |
13623 | Is it not notorious that the rents are as high as they were fifty years ago, and probably much higher? |
13623 | Is it too late then, Evelyn Hope? |
13623 | Is she sick? |
13623 | Is there no help, no comfort-- none? |
13623 | Is this not perhaps at least one of the reasons of the inferiority of the German drama? |
13623 | Is this the result of your protection to native industry? |
13623 | Is this true, or is it not? |
13623 | It would not tire you too much to walk so far?" |
13623 | Jeanie''s glory was"putting him through the carritch"( catechism) in broad Scotch, beginning at the beginning with"Wha made ye, ma bonnie man?" |
13623 | Kirkyard these fifty and more years? |
13623 | Long he lived nameless: how should spring take note Winter would follow? |
13623 | Louise is not yet full- grown, and already people come and ask her,''Does cousin like--?'' |
13623 | Love, does that please you? |
13623 | MADAME BECK( From''Villette'')"You ayre Engliss?" |
13623 | More better than worse; but who among them can repeat Gray''s''Lines on a Distant Prospect of Eton College''as could our Maidie? |
13623 | More gaming debts to pay? |
13623 | Mr. Rochester, as his lips unclosed to ask,"Wilt thou have this woman for thy wedded wife?" |
13623 | Must see you-- you, and not with me? |
13623 | Must you go? |
13623 | My dance is finished"? |
13623 | My heart and I? |
13623 | My name on earth was ever in thy prayer, And wilt thou never utter it in heaven? |
13623 | No gleaning in the wide wheat- plains Where others drive their loaded wains? |
13623 | No sketches first, no studies, that''s long past: I do what many dream of, all their lives-- Dream? |
13623 | Of what nature were the conclusions deduced from this scrutiny? |
13623 | Oh, why came I hither? |
13623 | Only a tear for Venice? |
13623 | Perhaps you can do what the philosophers cannot-- tell me how you learned a new idea to be an incontestable fact?" |
13623 | Petrea, who was asked by no one"Do you like birds, cousin?" |
13623 | Proves she as the paved work of a sapphire Seen by Moses when he climbed the mountain? |
13623 | Proves she like some portent of an iceberg Swimming full upon the ship it founders, Hungry with huge teeth of splintered crystals? |
13623 | Sez I,"Fair youth, do you know what I''d do with you if you was my sun?" |
13623 | Shall Egypt lend out her ancients unto chirurgeons and apothecaries, and Cheops and Psammitticus be weighed unto us for drugs? |
13623 | Shall I recall the fact that in his victorious struggle against Voltaire, Lessing had to call in Diderot''s assistance? |
13623 | Shall I tell your fortune, Cousin Thure? |
13623 | Shall justice be delayed now, that it may be frustrated hereafter? |
13623 | Shall the blood of Apæcides yet cry for vengeance? |
13623 | Shall the lion be cheated of his lawful prey? |
13623 | Shall we continue this story- telling business, and be voluble to the end of our age?" |
13623 | Shall we eat of Chamnes and Amosis in electuaries and pills, and be cured by cannibal mixtures? |
13623 | Shall we speak of that swarm of cooks who have for ages been annually leaving France, to improve foreign nations in the art of good living? |
13623 | She seems now, when still about six, to have broken out into song:-- EPHIBOL[ EPIGRAM OR EPITAPH-- WHO KNOWS WHICH?] |
13623 | Should those meetings with so excellent an object not be made pleasant, and therefore frequent? |
13623 | Since he chose to change Gold for dust, If I gave him what he praised Was it strange? |
13623 | Since there my past life lies, why alter it? |
13623 | So shalt thou rest; and what if thou withdraw In silence from the living, and no friend Take note of thy departure? |
13623 | Some one may ask how far the differences between the position of women in America and their position in Europe are due to democracy? |
13623 | Somebody remarks Morello''s outline there is wrongly traced, His hue mistaken: what of that? |
13623 | Speak as they please, what does the mountain care? |
13623 | Spirit- shriven I viewed heaven, Till you smiled--"Is earth unclean, Sweetest eyes were ever seen?" |
13623 | Still, all I care for, if he spoke the truth,( What he? |
13623 | Suppose the world brought diadems To tempt us, crusted with loose gems Of powers and pleasures? |
13623 | THE BEST THING IN THE WORLD WHAT''S the best thing in the world? |
13623 | THE CRY OF THE CHILDREN I Do ye hear the children weeping, O my brothers, Ere the sorrow comes with years? |
13623 | TO GOETHE CASSEL, August 13th, 1807. Who can interpret and measure what is passing within me? |
13623 | That cousin here again? |
13623 | That heart whose fondest throbs to me were given? |
13623 | That lane sloped, much as the bottles do, From a house you could descry O''er the garden wall: is the curtain blue, Or green to a healthy eye? |
13623 | The editor called to the keeper:--"How is this? |
13623 | The happy children come to us, And look up in our faces; They ask us-- Was it thus, and thus, When we were in their places? |
13623 | The night of time far surpasseth the day; and who knows when was the equinox? |
13623 | The present by the future, what is that? |
13623 | The traveler, as he paceth amazedly through those deserts, asketh of her, Who builded them? |
13623 | The triumph was to have ended there; then, if I reached it ere the triumph, what is lost? |
13623 | Their power was to have no limit save their own wisdom and love, but who would answer for it that these would always be an effectual limit? |
13623 | Then addressing Mason, he inquired gently,"Are you aware, sir, whether or not this gentleman''s wife is still living?" |
13623 | Then speaks my heart from out the upper air,"Whither dost lead me? |
13623 | Then turning to Catherine, who was there, and who drew behind me at his approach, he added, half sneeringly:--"Will_ you_ come, chuck? |
13623 | They answer,"Who is God, that he should hear us While the rushing of the iron wheels is stirred? |
13623 | Think ye that malice could have urged me to this deed? |
13623 | This is delicious; and what harm is there in her"Devilish"? |
13623 | This is that dismal conquest we all deplore, that makes us so often cry,"Adam, quid fecisti?" |
13623 | This man said rather,"Actual life comes next? |
13623 | Those lesser thirds so plaintive, sixths diminished, sigh on sigh, Told them something? |
13623 | Those loans? |
13623 | Those suspensions, those solutions--"Must we die?" |
13623 | Thou only hast stepped unaware,-- Malice, not one can impute; And why should a heart have been there In the way of a fair woman''s foot? |
13623 | Thy golden fortunes, tower they now, Or melt the glittering spires in air? |
13623 | Wait ye the warning? |
13623 | Was it not great? |
13623 | Was it something said, Something done, Vexed him? |
13623 | Was it wrong to own, Being truth? |
13623 | We sit together, with the skies, The steadfast skies, above us; We look into each other''s eyes,"And how long will you love us?" |
13623 | We were fellow mortals, naught beside? |
13623 | Well, had I riches of my own? |
13623 | Well, this cold clay clod Was man''s heart: Crumble it, and what comes next? |
13623 | Were they favorable or otherwise? |
13623 | What art can a woman be good at? |
13623 | What art thou muttering, old boy?" |
13623 | What art''s for a woman? |
13623 | What art_ is_ she good at, but hurting her breast With the milk- teeth of babes, and a smile at the pain? |
13623 | What babble we of days and days? |
13623 | What could that have been out of the sardonic Dean? |
13623 | What demand was this? |
13623 | What did you say to that? |
13623 | What do we give to our beloved? |
13623 | What do you think now would benefit her most?" |
13623 | What else supports the industrious army of cooks, pastry- cooks, confectioners, and many other food- preparers, with all their various assistants? |
13623 | What had woke us all up so suddenly? |
13623 | What has happened? |
13623 | What has he not done for every one of us? |
13623 | What have I withheld which it was Thy pleasure to exact? |
13623 | What have been the results on the character and usefulness of women themselves? |
13623 | What is for me, Whose days so winterly go on? |
13623 | What is it that I am called to vindicate? |
13623 | What is properly the meaning of''revelation''? |
13623 | What is the condition of the county of Suffolk? |
13623 | What is the ground of morals? |
13623 | What is the issue? |
13623 | What is the power that came to our assistance? |
13623 | What is worth The rest of heaven, the rest of earth? |
13623 | What more would you have? |
13623 | What now, Gabrielle dear, what now, your Highness?" |
13623 | What of Rafael''s sonnets, Dante''s picture? |
13623 | What of a villa? |
13623 | What of him? |
13623 | What say you, Lepidus?" |
13623 | What shall I say of the famous Gottschedt? |
13623 | What so pleasant as to read of May- games, true- love knots, and shepherds piping in the shade? |
13623 | What were seen? |
13623 | What wife had Rafael, or has Agnolo? |
13623 | What wilt thou exchange for it?'' |
13623 | What would become of us, stumbling along this our path of life, if we could not, at our utmost need, stay ourselves on Him? |
13623 | What would one have? |
13623 | What would we give to our beloved? |
13623 | What, then, has made him the foremost literary critic of the present day? |
13623 | What, there''s nothing in the moon noteworthy? |
13623 | What, they lived once thus at Venice where the merchants were the kings, Where Saint Mark''s is, where the Doges used to we d the sea with rings? |
13623 | What? |
13623 | When is the pause after that sentence ever broken by reply? |
13623 | When the Angelus is ringing, Near the convent will you walk, And recall the choral singing Which brought angels down our talk? |
13623 | When you praised their sweetness so, Did you think, in singing of it, That it might be near to go? |
13623 | Where are the flowers, the fair young flowers, that lately sprang and stood In brighter light and softer airs, a beauteous sisterhood? |
13623 | Where go? |
13623 | Where was her bloom? |
13623 | Where were you last night? |
13623 | Where would you have me go?" |
13623 | Wherefore? |
13623 | While hand and eye and something of a heart Are left me, work''s my ware, and what''s it worth? |
13623 | While he smites, how can he but remember So he smote before, in such a peril, When they stood and mocked--"Shall smiting help us?" |
13623 | Whither should they fly? |
13623 | Who are these?" |
13623 | Who are they whom I have devoted to death? |
13623 | Who can but pity the founder of the pyramids? |
13623 | Who can but pity the merciful intention of those hands that do destroy themselves? |
13623 | Who could dance with such elegance and grace as the royal brother and sister? |
13623 | Who else ever, except Shakespeare, so diverted mankind, entertained and entertains a world so liberally, so wholesomely? |
13623 | Who else should he be but my own husband? |
13623 | Who is it that hath made this lay, Hath sung it, and so on? |
13623 | Who is now fluttering in thy snare? |
13623 | Who is the divinity that worked this miracle? |
13623 | Who is there present a stranger to the character of Wieland? |
13623 | Who knows him not as a husband, as a father, as a friend? |
13623 | Who mourns Or rules with HIM, while days go on? |
13623 | Who of this crowd to- night shall tread The dance till daylight gleam again? |
13623 | Who sorrow o''er the untimely dead? |
13623 | Who that one, you ask? |
13623 | Who wants them? |
13623 | Who writhe in throes of mortal pain? |
13623 | Who''d stoop to blame This sort of trifling? |
13623 | Why did he not proclaim my guilt when I proclaimed that of Glaucus? |
13623 | Why did you drag me hither?" |
13623 | Why did you hold the candle horizontally? |
13623 | Why do I need you? |
13623 | Why is everything so badly arranged in the State? |
13623 | Why must there be rich and poor?" |
13623 | Why part we then? |
13623 | Why should all the giving prove His alone? |
13623 | Why should your mother, Charles, not mine, Be weeping at her darling''s grave? |
13623 | Why talk you of death? |
13623 | Will it? |
13623 | Will not thy own meek heart demand me there? |
13623 | Will you? |
13623 | Will''t please you rise? |
13623 | Will''t please you sit and look at her? |
13623 | With such a policy, what can you expect but that which is now passing before you? |
13623 | Would you extort from me a statement of my motives? |
13623 | Yet what security have I that they will be? |
13623 | Yet who complains? |
13623 | You and I would rather read that volume( Taken to his beating bosom by it), Lean and list the bosom- beats of Raphael, Would we not? |
13623 | You smile? |
13623 | You think Guido forgot? |
13623 | You turn your face, but does it bring your heart? |
13623 | _ Cicada_--How then are the true poets to be known? |
13623 | _ Cicada_--There are then many species of poets and crowns? |
13623 | _ Cicada_--To whom then are the rules of Aristotle useful? |
13623 | _ Landed Proprietor( who takes no notice of his rival)_--Cousin Louise, are you fond of blue? |
13623 | _ Louise_--Blue? |
13623 | _ Will_ you come? |
13623 | and before whom? |
13623 | and canst thou think, and bear To let thy music drop here unaware In folds of golden fulness at my door? |
13623 | and getting the answer"God,"asked him,"How do you know that God made you?" |
13623 | and have you cherished him into starvation and rags? |
13623 | and how is your charge to- day?" |
13623 | and seest thou, dreaming in pain, Thy mother stand in the piazza, searching the list of the slain?" |
13623 | and wouldst thou kill me? |
13623 | and"Whither was I going?" |
13623 | are you asleep already, my dear?" |
13623 | are you still as much attached to 9 times 9 as you used to be?" |
13623 | but, Was he a genius at all? |
13623 | cried Calenus, turning round to the people,"shall Isis be thus contemned? |
13623 | cried I. Sez he,"What did you bring this pussylanermus cuss here fur?" |
13623 | cried the widow Fulvia to the wife of Pansa, as they leaned down from their lofty bench,"do you see that gigantic gladiator? |
13623 | did not he throw on God( He loves the burthen)-- God''s task to make the heavenly period Perfect the earthen? |
13623 | do ye hear him where he comes? |
13623 | do ye know him as he comes, In thunder of the cannon and roll of the drums, As we go marching on? |
13623 | do your voices sound As sad in naming sorrow? |
13623 | groaned Clodius to himself;--"or why can not one cog a gladiator?" |
13623 | have you more to spend? |
13623 | he fain would write a poem: Does he write? |
13623 | he waits outside? |
13623 | her soul to heaven doth rise? |
13623 | how shall I thank thee for all? |
13623 | inquired Jacobi of Henrik, with an impatient sneer;"and what is it to him if your sister Louise is fond of bream or not?" |
13623 | is he right at the bottom? |
13623 | of angling, hunting the squirrel, nut- gathering? |
13623 | of pixies and fairy- circles? |
13623 | of rustic bridals and junketings? |
13623 | or else, Rightly traced and well ordered: what of that? |
13623 | or if not to this, then to what other cause? |
13623 | or''Is cousin fond of that?'' |
13623 | said Kenelm to the child--"you who pelted me so cruelly? |
13623 | said Louise,"what use can there be in asking those questions?" |
13623 | said the grave prætor;"who is there?" |
13623 | saw you that? |
13623 | she smiled, no doubt, When''er I passed her; but who passed without Much the same smile? |
13623 | shouted her friend,"where are ye, my bonnie wee croodlin''doo?" |
13623 | tenderly? |
13623 | that wrong will not often be done, both voluntarily and involuntarily? |
13623 | was it touch of hand, Turn of head? |
13623 | what does he to please you more? |
13623 | what had I done? |
13623 | what is it you mean? |
13623 | what other child of that age would have used"beloved"as she does? |
13623 | what wise hand teacheth them to do what reason can not teach us? |
13623 | when Gaeta''s taken, what then? |
13623 | where was her life? |
13623 | where were her prospects? |
13623 | why, who but Michel Agnolo? |
13623 | would her parents, would her mother see it without displeasure? |
13623 | you are not so far wrong; and even our cousin Thure of Oestanvik,--have you perceived anything there?" |
13623 | you smiled for that? |
36078 | For why,she cries,"sit still and weep, While others dance and play?" |
36078 | ''No,''she insisted,''but what was he great in?--was he a preacher or a doctor?'' |
36078 | ''Not know,''said the American,''the house of the great Wordsworth?'' |
36078 | ''What, not the house of the man whose fame brings people here from all parts of the world?'' |
36078 | ( meaning,"what news?") |
36078 | --_Richard II._ Braised lamb and beef:--"What say you to a piece of beef and mustard? |
36078 | --_Taming of the Shrew._ Roast lamb:--"Come you to seek the lamb here?" |
36078 | According to Boswell,"When the messenger who carried the last sheet to Miller returned, Johnson asked him,''Well, what did he say?'' |
36078 | Adams:''But, sir, how can you do this in three years?'' |
36078 | And I have said, my little Will Why should not he continue still A thing of Nature''s rearing? |
36078 | And does Lord Harcourt day by day, Regret the extinct initial K? |
36078 | And still with ardour unabated, Labour to get it reinstated? |
36078 | At last her husband made a dead pause after her name, on which she looked up in an innocent manner saying,"Did you speak to me?" |
36078 | Blest Babe, why should I once bewail thy fate, Or sigh the days so soon were terminate, Sith thou art settled in an everlasting state?" |
36078 | Did a vision of Christmas pass Before their drowning eyes? |
36078 | Do you think it fit for any person to lie on? |
36078 | Have you got that man to print for? |
36078 | Heriot,"said his friend,"what are you doing in London?" |
36078 | How are you to get all the etymologies?'' |
36078 | How could the gay waves laugh and leap, landward o''er sand and stone, While he, who knew and loved them all, lay lapped in clay alone? |
36078 | I am aware that the date is too modern for fairies; however, who can prove it? |
36078 | I have found On brittle earth a consolation sound?" |
36078 | If virtue honours the low race From which I was descended, If vices your high birth disgrace Who should be most commended?" |
36078 | One of her best hymns is entitled"What has Jesus done?" |
36078 | Then why the solid fabric piece, With motley ornaments from Greece? |
36078 | This reminds us of an epigram entitled"Dress v. Dinner:"-- What is the reason, can you guess, Why men are poor, and women thinner? |
36078 | Upon this, Lowe said to His Majesty:"King or no king?" |
36078 | We give a few of the lines pleading for the letter C:--"And can his antiquarian eyes, My Anglo- Saxon C despise? |
36078 | We have before us a number of Burns dinner toast lists, and several are headed"Should auld acquaintance be forgot?" |
36078 | What hast thou to boast on? |
36078 | she replied;''and why did you not tell me that before? |
3379 | And are you taking all your household stuff with you? |
3379 | And do you pretend that the two- dollar drama is intellectual? |
3379 | And do you think you had a profitable hour at that show? |
3379 | Are you a brother Yankee? |
3379 | Do n''t you think you are going from bad to worse? |
3379 | Have you been at the circus yet? |
3379 | Profitable? |
3379 | Tell me,said my friend,"do you read the advertisements of the books of rival authors?" |
3379 | Ten cents, for instance? |
3379 | Then you do n''t believe that the offer to meet your want suggested it? |
3379 | What do you say to the ten- cent magazines? |
3379 | Why do n''t you turn it to account? |
3379 | Why,I asked,"do you see any harm in it?" |
3379 | Wof? |
3379 | Yet? |
3379 | You do n''t think you''re making yourself rather offensive? |
3379 | You goin''past Jim Marden''s? |
3379 | You will admit that there is everything else here? |
3379 | All this seems probable and natural enough at the writing; but how will it be when one has turned one''s back upon it? |
3379 | Are n''t the arts one? |
3379 | As early as ten, as nine o''clock? |
3379 | But does it ever move you to get what you do n''t want?" |
3379 | But really is it any such emotion? |
3379 | But what is to become of the race when it is penetrated at every pore with a sense of the world''s demand and supply?" |
3379 | But what was the use? |
3379 | But why should I be so violent of phrase against these guiltless means of millionairing? |
3379 | Come, is n''t there hope in that?" |
3379 | Could one say to his next- hand man,"Will you please keep my place?" |
3379 | Did some of them even meditate the thankless muse and not mind her ingratitude? |
3379 | Did they ever quarrel over questions of precedence? |
3379 | Did they read the new historical fictions aloud to one another? |
3379 | Do you still read such advertisements with your early zest?" |
3379 | Had they some comity, some etiquette, which a man forced to leave his place could appeal to, and so get it back? |
3379 | Have they any use for each other such as people of unbroken associations have? |
3379 | Honestly is not it a cruel embarrassment, which all the hypocritical pretences can not hide? |
3379 | How came they all here, seven hundred miles from any larger land? |
3379 | How can you say that any art is higher than the others? |
3379 | How can you watch three sets of trapezists at once? |
3379 | How did they pass their illimitable leisure, when they rested from the fishing- net by day and the chicken- coop by night? |
3379 | How early did these files begin to form themselves for the midnight dole of bread? |
3379 | How were all those similar souls to know themselves apart in their common eternity? |
3379 | If he reformed that and gave the saving to hunger and cold? |
3379 | If so, did the fact argue habitual destitution, or merely habitual leisure? |
3379 | If the men had borne their part as well, there would not have been these tears: and yet, what am I saying? |
3379 | Is it clear, simple, unaffected? |
3379 | Is it true to human experience generally? |
3379 | Is not each wishing the other at that end of the earth from which he came? |
3379 | It sufficed as it was; and when he said to Rosencrantz,"Will you pleh upon this pyip?" |
3379 | Now, why not suggest something that is really level with the popular taste?" |
3379 | Shall I say that he seemed the only member of that little circus who was not of an amiable temper? |
3379 | She called down, in English that sounded like some delocalized, denaturalized speech, it was so strange then and there,"Is it all right?" |
3379 | Take the article of old friends, for instance: has it ever happened to the reader to witness the encounter of old friends after the lapse of years? |
3379 | The old friends smile and laugh, and babble incoherently at one another, but are they genuinely glad? |
3379 | This must sometimes happen, and what did they do then? |
3379 | V."Does that view of the situation still satisfy you?" |
3379 | We are supposed to have associations with the old things which render them precious, but do not the associations rather render them painful? |
3379 | What do you think it was worth?" |
3379 | What remains? |
3379 | What should I do with the family in that case? |
3379 | Which of them were old- comers, and which novices? |
3379 | Who can possibly read them? |
3379 | Who cares even to look at them? |
3379 | Who would not wish his novel to sell five hundred thousand copies, for reasons besides the sordid love of gain which I am told governs novelists? |
3379 | Who would not wish his picture to draw a crowd about it? |
3379 | Why do they do it, or, having done it, why do they mind it, since the public does not? |
3379 | Why is it nobler to contort the mind than to contort the body?" |
3379 | Why not? |
3379 | Why should such an exhibition as that be supposed to give pleasure? |
3379 | Will it be credited that I became willing something should happen, anything, to vary it? |
3379 | Will it not lapse into the gross fable of travellers, and be as the things which the liars who swap them can not themselves believe? |
3379 | Would some New- Year''s day come when some President would proclaim, amid some dire struggle, that their slavery was to be no more? |
3379 | Would the world ever outlive it? |
3379 | You may call it interesting them, if you like; but, really, what is the difference? |
3379 | and would this man say to an interloper,"Excuse me, this place is engaged"? |
3379 | why should their sable shadows intrude in a picture that was meant to be all so gay and glad? |
13520 | A brougham on such a day as this? |
13520 | A man? 13520 All the fair maids are for thee, are they, Master Carver?" |
13520 | And Lady Macleod will ask of me,''Such and such a thing happened: what did you do for my son?'' 13520 And are these the children? |
13520 | And are you ferry well? |
13520 | And did he see those deer? |
13520 | And do you still hunt snakes? |
13520 | And does n''t Lassie remember coming home in the ship? |
13520 | And has he none of his own? |
13520 | And if I go not to the sea by myself,asked Mary, with natural logic,"why, who is there now to go with me?" |
13520 | And is she very beautiful? |
13520 | And my papa has seen all these places? |
13520 | And so you really like me? |
13520 | And the only house you can remember is the house on the cliff? |
13520 | And the sponsors? |
13520 | And the_ gras_? |
13520 | And they really shot away one of your earrings? 13520 And was my little Moppet born there?" |
13520 | And what do you call divine, I mean godly? |
13520 | And what does Chikno? |
13520 | And what will they cost? |
13520 | And where are you staying? |
13520 | And where are your father and mother? |
13520 | And where would you go, Hamish-- in a dead calm? |
13520 | And who is the gentleman in lace? |
13520 | And why did they come here? |
13520 | And you are not English? |
13520 | And you are what is called a Gipsy King? |
13520 | And you have a language of your own? |
13520 | And you left it? |
13520 | And you will be alone all day at your work? |
13520 | Are there other kings? |
13520 | Are they as good as the roe or the big deer? |
13520 | Are they? 13520 Are you a_ ro_?" |
13520 | Are you married, my London Caloró? |
13520 | Are you out walking so late? |
13520 | As much as Danby-- as Uncle Tom? |
13520 | But how can we live in the one place without passing the other and being made miserable by it? 13520 But not the ship?" |
13520 | But what would the poor people have done if he had never gone back? |
13520 | But why do they not go away? |
13520 | Captain, you drive me so, what can I say? 13520 Dear me, what do you mean by that?" |
13520 | Dear, dear fir, can not you let me pass? 13520 Dear, dear heather, can not you let me pass? |
13520 | Dear, dear juniper, can not you let me pass? 13520 Did Pharaoh make horse- shoes?" |
13520 | Did not my own brother marry the black Calli, her daughter, who bore him the_ chabí_, sixteen years ago, just before he was hanged by the Busné? |
13520 | Do n''t you like it? |
13520 | Do you know what you have done, Gerty? |
13520 | Do you think I am good at running away when there is any kind of danger, Hamish? 13520 Do you wish to insult me?" |
13520 | Dull, when you are here? |
13520 | For fear he should turn cannibal and eat_ you_? |
13520 | From what far- off land hast thou taken flight? |
13520 | Go ashore? |
13520 | Hamish,said he, with a strange sort of laugh,"do you remember this morning, before the light came? |
13520 | Have you been long acquainted with her? |
13520 | Have you got your_ li_? |
13520 | How can I help it, if your pony runs away so? |
13520 | How can they go out in such a boat? |
13520 | How d''ye do, Danby? |
13520 | How is this, mother? |
13520 | How is this, sir? |
13520 | How long am I to stay crouching here? |
13520 | How old are you, Mistress Moppet? |
13520 | How was it that thou thy father lost? |
13520 | How was it that thou thy lover lost? |
13520 | I am always good at parties-- ain''t I, Uncle Tom? |
13520 | I am he whom you seek,said I;"where is Antonio?" |
13520 | I will stay in the dingy, then? |
13520 | Indeed? |
13520 | Is it broken? |
13520 | Is it so? |
13520 | Is my dress so very wonderful? |
13520 | Is that fine fellow poor? |
13520 | Is that the message I was to hear? |
13520 | Is that very surprising? |
13520 | Is that your name? |
13520 | Is there anything else I can do for you? |
13520 | Is there anything else? |
13520 | Is there anything else? |
13520 | Is this a time to make music? |
13520 | Is your worship the London Caloró? |
13520 | Is your worship the London Caloró? |
13520 | It is all over, then? 13520 May I put on that blue dress?" |
13520 | My hat and mantle off I threw, And scoured across the lea; Then cried the_ beng_ with loud halloo,''Where does the gipsy flee?'' |
13520 | Not dead? |
13520 | O Lorna, do n''t you know me? |
13520 | O Sir Keith, would you have me do that? |
13520 | Oh, was that his? |
13520 | Oh, we are to come to tea, are we? |
13520 | Oh, what''s alecompane? |
13520 | Oh, why art thou silent? 13520 Oh,--oh!--is not here a great forest of fir and heather, of juniper and birch, standing upon the table- land waiting for us?" |
13520 | Perhaps you would like a boat yourself? |
13520 | Said you of this, that the expression''s flat? 13520 She called you her son, Jasper?" |
13520 | Suppose we begin now? |
13520 | Sweetheart,said he,"are you waiting for me at last? |
13520 | That is to say, on a week- day? |
13520 | Then are you the celebrated Robin Lyth-- the new Robin Hood, as they call him? 13520 Then so will I be; and why art thou not? |
13520 | Then you are married, Jasper? |
13520 | Then you are young Mistress Anerley? 13520 Then you can shift for yourself?" |
13520 | Then you like your own home better than this big house? |
13520 | They''re soldiers, are n''t they? |
13520 | This is not like London, Frank? |
13520 | This? 13520 Thy father, thy lover, thou hast then lost?" |
13520 | Toys? |
13520 | Was it-- oh, was it a man, if you please? 13520 Was my papa here?" |
13520 | Well now, that was it,said Kristen Katballe,"but why do you sit there so still, Marie Kjölvroe? |
13520 | Well, darling, what do you think of your home, now that you see it? |
13520 | Well,said her husband calmly,"what although they are deer?" |
13520 | What are you thinking of, brother? |
13520 | What birds are those? |
13520 | What can I do but be amazed at their folly? |
13520 | What do you call God, Jasper? |
13520 | What do you expect to get? |
13520 | What do you mean, Duncan Cameron, by saying''as bad as Sir Keith Macleod''? 13520 What do you take me for, brother?" |
13520 | What do you think? |
13520 | What have I to run away from now? |
13520 | What hills? |
13520 | What if we should clothe the mountain? |
13520 | What if we should clothe the mountain? |
13520 | What in the world can this be? |
13520 | What is a camomile, and does it really eat people? |
13520 | What is become of thy light, then? 13520 What is it all the others see, and not I?" |
13520 | What is that I hear? 13520 What is that I hear?" |
13520 | What is that? |
13520 | What is the matter with the juniper to- day? |
13520 | What makes you think that I want sense? |
13520 | What new thing can I learn from them, when they only repeat mine? |
13520 | What shall his name be? |
13520 | What sorrow is thine, and what thy sin? |
13520 | What stayed thy feet at our gate this night? |
13520 | What''s a nurse? |
13520 | What''s that? |
13520 | Where are they now? |
13520 | Where are your languages? 13520 Where would I go?" |
13520 | Who are you there? 13520 Who gave you that name?" |
13520 | Who is George Ranger? |
13520 | Who says I do n''t like you? |
13520 | Who wants me this time of night? |
13520 | Why and whence does it come? 13520 Why do n''t it open as Uncle Tom''s watch does when I blow?" |
13520 | Why not, pray? |
13520 | Why playest thou alway? 13520 Why this love?" |
13520 | Why, Moppet, are you tired of your new little friends? |
13520 | Why, man, do n''t you think I can keep anchor- watch? |
13520 | Why, sweetheart, are you not glad? 13520 Will Antonio be here to- night?" |
13520 | Will he, though? 13520 Will you go ashore now, Sir Keith?" |
13520 | With all my heart,said I:"where are we to sleep?" |
13520 | Would have? 13520 Would it not be a rum thing if divine and devilish were originally one and the same word?" |
13520 | Would you teach it me? |
13520 | You have no other message for me than the one you gave me last night, Gerty? |
13520 | You like us now, do n''t you? 13520 ''Are you sitting there sleeping?'' 13520 ''Are you working in this here bit of a parsonage?'' 13520 ''Gipsy gentleman,''say I to one of them,''what will you have for that donkey?'' 13520 ''Good woman,''says he,''what''s that you are talking? 13520 ''Good woman,''says the Poknees,''what was that I heard you say just now to the little boy?'' 13520 ''I wo n''t have them,''answered he,''but if ever I should sink down on one road or another, will you lend me a hand if you are near by?'' 13520 ''Same to you,''said he;''how is your cow? 13520 ''Shall I tell you what it is, my good woman?'' 13520 ''Well, now listen,''said he;''could n''t you hide me these two with their little ones a day or so? 13520 ''What do you give me for that now?'' 13520 ''Where are those women,''said I,''that you used to have with you? 13520 ''Where did you get that language?'' 13520 ''Where is he?'' 13520 ''Where is my_ ro_?'' 13520 ''Where is the scamp who has sold me this piece of furniture?'' 13520 ''Who was fool there?'' 13520 ''Why are you lying here alone?'' 13520 ***** And Monleon, our dearest guest, Will raise our mirth by many a jest; For while his laughter rings again, Can we to echo it refrain? 13520 ***** The poor fugitives crouching in among the rocks-- is it the blinding rain or the driven white surf that is in their eyes? 13520 --And why?" |
13520 | --"What, with Mr. Wilkes? |
13520 | A pretty manoeuvre, truly; and what would be the end of it? |
13520 | Accursed gipsy, how dare you enter this_ posada_ and speak before me in that speech? |
13520 | After repenting her rebellion against the King, was she not to repent her rebellion against the Pope? |
13520 | All over? |
13520 | Am I in my senses this time? |
13520 | An enemy as bad as my poor Lord Keppel?" |
13520 | And Gunnar saw her; she loved him: what cared he for all the world beside? |
13520 | And I have been out to tea often and often-- haven''t I, Lassie?" |
13520 | And after all, how become a workman unless you work? |
13520 | And are his eyes as spacious as his ears?" |
13520 | And do you not think we can look after the yacht? |
13520 | And if Morris wrung the poor boy''s hand, And his words seemed hard to speak, And tears ran down his manly cheeks, What tongue shall call him weak? |
13520 | And if you have this very night to drink a glass with me, you will not refuse it? |
13520 | And she said to me,''What have you done with Sir Keith Macleod? |
13520 | And so you are here alone?" |
13520 | And so you like my house, Moppet? |
13520 | And was this really a hotel that they stopped at-- this great building that she could only compare to Stornoway Castle? |
13520 | And what do you think of a red day, Hamish? |
13520 | And what shoulder, and what art, Could twist the sinews of thy heart? |
13520 | And who is to save my young master now? |
13520 | And who was not proud of him-- my handsome lad-- and he the last of the Macleods of Dare?" |
13520 | And will you be sorry to go away?" |
13520 | And, truly, if in rhymes the couplets close, What should it matter that the rest is prose? |
13520 | Are there not horses to_ chore?_ Yes, I trow there are, and better ones than in this land, and asses, and mules. |
13520 | Are they shooting at you?" |
13520 | Are you ever the fairer for another man''s beauty? |
13520 | Are you fond of this house?" |
13520 | Are you going to drown yourself before my eyes?" |
13520 | As well as you like junket?" |
13520 | At last he asked, but gently:"What do you propose to do now, Thord?" |
13520 | At this her brothers, making fun of her, said,"Silly creature, what do you say? |
13520 | Baggage, indeed!--what need of baggage have you? |
13520 | Before I parted with them, the Poorman said,''I''d like to repay you this piece of work: is n''t there something you want very much?'' |
13520 | But are we good judges? |
13520 | But do you know that you have killed a man''s life? |
13520 | But how has it all come so to pass? |
13520 | But then German aldermen had wives and daughters and sons, and what were they to read during the long winter evenings?... |
13520 | But then we shall often go to the Lewis?" |
13520 | But were these two men by themselves? |
13520 | But what did it prove? |
13520 | But what is this superior truth? |
13520 | But what were the wares that were offered for sale? |
13520 | But when winter comes? |
13520 | But where did this speech come from, and who were they who spoke it? |
13520 | But where, Sheila may have thought, was the one wanting to complete the group? |
13520 | But which way did he go, I mean?" |
13520 | But whither shall we turn our prows? |
13520 | But you will go ashore before the night?" |
13520 | Can I not get them ashore? |
13520 | Can I not get them in the toils? |
13520 | Can you neither sing nor tell us something?" |
13520 | Can you not join yourselves with the black people who live in the_ despoblados_? |
13520 | Could any one of them be now in truth mine,--or may a tree bear fruit twice in one year? |
13520 | Could not he tell the cost of a wooden fence? |
13520 | Crusade? |
13520 | Did He who made the lamb make thee? |
13520 | Did life begin so soon? |
13520 | Did not Gustave Flaubert compose''Bouvard et Péchuchet''under this inspiration? |
13520 | Did not the very painter consecrate to her his intense toil? |
13520 | Did the salmon come up to it? |
13520 | Did you say the sheiling was still on the island?" |
13520 | Dilly''s?" |
13520 | Do n''t you know I should be afraid of the ghost of the shepherd who killed himself? |
13520 | Do n''t you know that the English people call me a coward?" |
13520 | Do n''t you think it strange he should have seen them all, and known he could live in any of them, and then gone away back to Borva?" |
13520 | Do people eat them?" |
13520 | Do you believe that a lifeless stone can preserve you from the dangers which occasionally threaten your life? |
13520 | Do you know that I am dangerous? |
13520 | Do you know what is likely to come after a day like this?" |
13520 | Do you know whom you have to deal with? |
13520 | Do you know, sir, the sheiling that the shepherd had? |
13520 | Do you not believe that here we can find one who will baptize you? |
13520 | Do you remember that I asked you about a brass- band that I heard playing?" |
13520 | Do you remember, Hamish? |
13520 | Do you see now how strange- looking it is?" |
13520 | Do you still remember these words of a fellow- traveler from Stolpemünde? |
13520 | Do you still remember, my heart, how nineteen years ago we passed through here on the way from Prague to Vienna? |
13520 | Do you think I am so ignorant of the world as to imagine that I am to prescribe to a gentleman what company he is to have at his table? |
13520 | Do you think that? |
13520 | Do you think they are bloodshot, with my lying on deck in the cold? |
13520 | Does it develop them further? |
13520 | Does not a Grecian sage-- Aristotle, I think-- recommend that one excess per month be indulged in, in the interest of health? |
13520 | Duncan Cameron, are you a man? |
13520 | FROM BOGDANOVICH( OLD RUSSIAN)--SONG What to the maiden has happened? |
13520 | FROM DMITRIEV-- THE DOVE AND THE STRANGER STRANGER Why mourning there so sad, thou gentle dove? |
13520 | For what is the test of progress? |
13520 | Had he not watched every turn of her disposition, every expression of her wishes, every grace of her manner and look of her eyes? |
13520 | Had life forever forsaken that magnificent form, those divinest limbs? |
13520 | Had the lightning struck her when she fell so abruptly to the ground? |
13520 | Hamish, what do you see all around?" |
13520 | Has he gone down to Borvabost to see about the cargoes of fish to be sent off in the morning? |
13520 | Has power, then, the custom of exterminating and rooting out vices from the minds of great men and planting therein virtues? |
13520 | Has your contemporary literature developed any type that is palpable and easily grasped? |
13520 | Hast hyther, I say, ye folys[7] naturall, Howe oft shall I you unto my Navy call? |
13520 | Hast thou thought of capture, of mutilation? |
13520 | Have I, then, seen a- wrong? |
13520 | Have they left you to lie here by the road?'' |
13520 | Have you got into the English way? |
13520 | Have you let her get into the marsh since?'' |
13520 | He is my Absalom; he is my brave young lad: oh, do you think that I will let him drown and do nothing to try to save him? |
13520 | He then addressed himself to Davies:--"What do you think of Garrick? |
13520 | His face is fair as heaven When springing buds unfold; Oh, why to_ him_ was''t given, Whose heart is wintry cold? |
13520 | How can a person who does not know what the Star and Garter is, be told what the Star and Garter is?" |
13520 | How can he fathom the sea of dreams that lies there, or tell what strange fancies and reminiscences may be involved in an absent look? |
13520 | How could it be possible to forget an engraving of Dürer''s, even though seen but once? |
13520 | How could one hear if there was any sobbing in that departing boat, or any last cry of farewell? |
13520 | How would it be if I sunk my flies? |
13520 | However, as the luck of the matter went, it proved for my advantage; for I heard one say to the other:--"Curse it, Charlie, what was that? |
13520 | I could n''t be killed myself, could I, if I had that stuff all over me?" |
13520 | I felt sorry for her, but what was there for one to do? |
13520 | I know, I feel, how mean and how unworthy The trembling sacrifice I pour before Thee; What can I offer in Thy presence holy, But sin and folly? |
13520 | I observed him whispering to Mr. Dilly,"Who is that gentleman, sir?" |
13520 | I tremble as the tower beneath its stroke, for where now are the aims that were mine? |
13520 | I was persuaded that if I had come upon him with a direct proposal,"Sir, will you dine in company with Jack Wilkes?" |
13520 | If I boarded him, how could I get out of his way? |
13520 | If not he, who then? |
13520 | If the gale begins, how will you get ashore? |
13520 | In the name of his Majesty, which way is he gone?" |
13520 | In what distant deeps or skies Burned that fire within thine eyes? |
13520 | Ingram?" |
13520 | Is it a witch''s dance, or are they strange death- fires hovering over the dark ocean- grave? |
13520 | Is it broken language?'' |
13520 | Is it in Caló that you are speaking before me, and I a_ chalan_ and national? |
13520 | Is it likely that we shot at a woman? |
13520 | Is it necessary to recall that one of this class of élite has shown a veritable gift of prophecy? |
13520 | Is it not forbidden by the law of the land in which we are, even as it is forbidden for a gipsy to enter the_ mercado_? |
13520 | Is it on such a night that you would have me quarrel with you? |
13520 | Is n''t that a funny name for a place? |
13520 | Is not now clearly enough shown to thee the form of the false goods; namely, riches, and dignity, and power, and glory, and pleasure? |
13520 | Is not that the only gladness left for you and for me, that we should drink one glass together, and clasp hands, and say good- by? |
13520 | Is not this demonstrated in England, where favorable conditions have developed many examples? |
13520 | Is she thinking of starlit nights on some distant lake, or of the old bygone days on the hills? |
13520 | Is there no chance of victory? |
13520 | Is this a good or an evil? |
13520 | It is their own fault if they are disturbed: why do they remain so near to people and to houses?" |
13520 | It is yours, is n''t it-- your veway, veway own?" |
13520 | It will be asked:"Are you so sure of it? |
13520 | Macleod answered, with a return to this wild bantering tone,"when I am going to see my sweetheart? |
13520 | Mary, on your duty, now?" |
13520 | Moreover, there was a dead calm; if they had wanted to get away from this exposed place, how could they? |
13520 | Must I throw you into the boat?" |
13520 | Must all my thoughts and wishes so Held in these walls of ice and snow Here be imprisoned forever? |
13520 | Now I ask thee: What is knowledge without writing? |
13520 | Of what were they thinking, then, as they drove through the clear night along the lonely road? |
13520 | Oh, shall I never, never go Over the lofty mountains? |
13520 | On what wings dared he aspire? |
13520 | Once cured of her political errors, was England not to be soon cured of her theological errors? |
13520 | Or why not go to the land of the Corahai? |
13520 | Or you want to call me a coward? |
13520 | Rise in thy beauty;--wilt thou form a garland Round the fair brow of some belovèd maiden? |
13520 | STRANGER What, has thy love then fled, or faithless proved? |
13520 | Says my sister to me, when we have got fairly off,''How came that ugly one to know what you said to me?'' |
13520 | Serve in foreign lands? |
13520 | Shall I now, after a lifetime of sorrow, behold thy death? |
13520 | Shall we drink a glass now at the end of the voyage?" |
13520 | She has met them before; and can not she meet them now? |
13520 | She paid no heed to this reproach, for what were those other things over there underneath the trees? |
13520 | Should I let my violin follow in their wake? |
13520 | Should we rejoice at it or regret it? |
13520 | Start out again as merchant? |
13520 | Surely it must be better there, Broader the view and freer the air; Com''st thou these longings to bring me-- These only, and nothing to wing me? |
13520 | THE CLOISTER IN THE SOUTH From''Arnljot Gelline''"Who would enter so late the cloister in?" |
13520 | The King was pleased to say he was of the same opinion: adding,"You do not think then, Dr. Johnson, that there was much argument in the case?" |
13520 | The man who can do almost anything?" |
13520 | The young cousins, male and female, must become acquainted, and who knows when Johanna will see you again? |
13520 | Then Lavender said, quite gently:--"Do you think, Sheila, you will ever tire of living in the South?" |
13520 | Then the schoolmaster says,"Is n''t there one of you that will sing something or tell something? |
13520 | Then turning to Mr. Danby as if to dismiss the subject,"Anything stirring in London when you were there, Tom?" |
13520 | There is a chapter on Dancing,--and who ever danced except for the sake of exercise?... |
13520 | There is a chapter on Gluttony,--and who was ever more than a little exhilarated after dinner? |
13520 | There is a chapter on Misers,--and who would not gladly give a penny to a beggar? |
13520 | Therefore Gianotto said to Abraham:--"Alas, my friend, why do you desire to take this great trouble and expense of going from here to Rome? |
13520 | Therefore, calling her in presence of all the company, and smiling, he said,"What do you think of our bride?" |
13520 | Thou wilt come and thus live with me, my son, wilt thou not? |
13520 | Thou wilt stay from this battle and come quickly? |
13520 | Thus far and no farther? |
13520 | Till death shall escape be never? |
13520 | To Denmark? |
13520 | To a remonstrance from the English ambassador, somewhat arrogantly delivered in the name of Europe, Bismarck responded,"Who is Europe?" |
13520 | To this the priest said nothing, but after a while he asked,"What is your pleasure this evening?" |
13520 | WHAT OF THE NIGHT? |
13520 | WISDOM AND KNOWLEDGE Friend, wouldst know why as a rule Bookish learning marks the fool? |
13520 | Was Lady Judith Topsparkle happy, with all her blessings? |
13520 | Was it in such boats as that she had just seen? |
13520 | Was not that a loch away down there? |
13520 | Was the mind so fully awakened while the body was still so tiny? |
13520 | Was this, then, her home? |
13520 | Was wisdom really born in him with years? |
13520 | We ai n''t to go yet, is we?" |
13520 | Well,"he continued,"what do you think of her? |
13520 | Were not these rabbits over by the fence? |
13520 | What can be heard in the roar of the hurricane, and the hissing of rain, and the thundering whirl of the waves on the rocks? |
13520 | What care I for his_ patriotic friends_? |
13520 | What cared I for pistols? |
13520 | What could they have been thinking of?" |
13520 | What devil''s dance is this? |
13520 | What do the inequalities permitted by the laws of inheritance prove? |
13520 | What do we do then, Kate?" |
13520 | What do you take me for? |
13520 | What dread grasp Dared thy deadly terrors clasp? |
13520 | What else could come to you and to me? |
13520 | What else is there left? |
13520 | What fault can be found with him, save clemency? |
13520 | What force, what transport, what disturbance of the elements stirred these agitations, these violences? |
13520 | What had the poor people of Germany to read toward the end of the fifteenth century? |
13520 | What happens then, brother? |
13520 | What is Ghazel and Rubajat, as Hafiz ere was singing, Compared with one word''s mellow tone, from thy sweet mouth outwinging? |
13520 | What is Hafiz to thee? |
13520 | What is Mirza- Schaffy in comparison with me?" |
13520 | What is a drop to the ocean?" |
13520 | What is his name?" |
13520 | What is it that makes our nobility so proud in battle, so bold in its undertakings? |
13520 | What is it, then, that drove them on? |
13520 | What is the rosy- chaliced flower, where nightingales are quaffing, Compared with thy sweet rosy mouth, and thy lips''rosy laughing? |
13520 | What is the scent from Shiraz''fields, wind- borne, that''s hither straying, Compared with richer scented breath from thy sweet mouth out- playing? |
13520 | What is the sun, and what the moon, and all heaven''s constellations? |
13520 | What is wisdom without song? |
13520 | What miracle is this? |
13520 | What of the Night? |
13520 | What say you, my London Caloró; what say you to my plan? |
13520 | What should I henceforth do, hateful unto myself, and but half of myself surviving?" |
13520 | What sort of wood was the fence made of? |
13520 | What the anvil? |
13520 | What the hammer, what the chain, Knit thy strength and forged thy brain? |
13520 | What the hand dared seize the fire? |
13520 | What to the gem of the village? |
13520 | What was I to do? |
13520 | What was the name of this tree? |
13520 | What was this sudden and awful thing? |
13520 | What would her mother say if she lost the murrey skirt, which had cost six shillings at Bridlington fair? |
13520 | What, you grudge the poor people the speech they talk among themselves? |
13520 | When the stars threw down their spears, And watered heaven with their tears, Did he smile his work to see? |
13520 | When thy heart began to beat, What dread hand formed thy dread feet? |
13520 | Where am I? |
13520 | Where have you been all this long time?" |
13520 | Where was the farm? |
13520 | Where was the quaint old piano now; and the glass of hot whisky and water; and the''Lament of Monaltrie,''or''Love in thine eyes forever plays''? |
13520 | Wherefore these hinted but unconfessed secrets? |
13520 | Which way did he run, my dear?" |
13520 | Who can forget her smile, devoid of art, Her heavenly sweetness and her frozen heart? |
13520 | Who can resist Thy gentle call-- appealing To every generous thought and grateful feeling? |
13520 | Who could see in her eyes what he saw? |
13520 | Who knows how soon? |
13520 | Who knows more of the real Moors than myself? |
13520 | Who knows?" |
13520 | Who stickles now for antiquated saws, Or cramps his verses with pedantic laws? |
13520 | Why did some works speedily die while others endure through the centuries? |
13520 | Why did they not use wire netting? |
13520 | Why did we stay here, where there is no shelter and no anchorage? |
13520 | Why do you choose him? |
13520 | Why do you mind?" |
13520 | Why have you not brought him back? |
13520 | Why is the author so whimsical? |
13520 | Why this wild lamentation in the darkness of the night? |
13520 | Why, O bird, dost thou hither fare Over the lofty mountains? |
13520 | Will the brimstone catch from your pipe, my lad?" |
13520 | Will you get into the gig with me and pull out to the Umpire?" |
13520 | Wo n''t you come with Malle to Stolpmünde, and stay quietly with us for a few weeks or days? |
13520 | Would she not do business in London with the rest of the Caloré? |
13520 | Would those heavy eyelashes never again be raised from those dazzling eyes? |
13520 | Would you call me a coward too? |
13520 | You would go away from me forever? |
13520 | [ Illustration: Signature: Julian Hawthorne] AT THE HORSE- FAIR From''Lavengro''"What horse is that?" |
13520 | [_ Leads her to a seat, and falls upon his knee._]_ The Nun_--Yes, dost thou not? |
13520 | _ Antonio_--Brother, do you know what brings me hither? |
13520 | _ Antonio_--The way is far to Madrilati; there are, moreover, wars in the land, and many_ chories_ walk about; are you not afraid to journey? |
13520 | _ Johnson_--And if Jack Wilkes_ should_ be there, what is that to_ me_, sir? |
13520 | _ Johnson_--Well, sir, and what then? |
13520 | _ Johnson_--What do you mean, sir? |
13520 | _ Myself_--And what should we do in the land of the Corahai? |
13520 | _ Myself_--This is a very hopeful plan of yours, my friend: and in what manner do you propose that we shall travel? |
13520 | _ Myself_--Wherefore do you ask, O Dai de los Calés? |
13520 | _ Sigurd[ extending his hand_]--Ivar, thou wilt not leave her to- morrow? |
13520 | _ The Nun_--And these pledges thou shalt redeem-- how? |
13520 | _ The Nun_--But why now die? |
13520 | _ The Nun_--Hast thou taken thought of what may follow? |
13520 | _ The Nun_--Thou wilt follow me? |
13520 | _ The Nun_--Thou wilt keep away from this battle, is it not so? |
13520 | _ The Nun_--To what art thou now pledged? |
13520 | _ The Nun_--Wilt thou soon leave me? |
13520 | and did any sea- birds ever come inland and build their nests on its margin? |
13520 | and did rabbits live in the midst of trees and bushes? |
13520 | and how did it differ from that? |
13520 | and was he not overjoyed to find that the more he knew of her the more he loved her? |
13520 | and was it not terribly expensive to have such a protection? |
13520 | and what was its name? |
13520 | and who will carry this tale back to Castle Dare? |
13520 | are you going away from me forever? |
13520 | burning bright In the forests of the night, What immortal hand or eye Framed thy fearful symmetry? |
13520 | cried Hilary,"so you are up for your supper, are you? |
13520 | doth its beauteous ray Aught of hope or joy foretell? |
13520 | have I earned my schnapps now?" |
13520 | how become expert if you do not study, recognize your mistakes and repair them? |
13520 | if Fate, hastening its blows, should tear from me part of myself in thee, what would betide the other? |
13520 | is that you?'' |
13520 | no trick? |
13520 | not all!--"And where, Where is the faithful negro lad?" |
13520 | of the man with the face of a lion, when the gray- haired boy intimated his skepticism? |
13520 | said Antonio;"and is she not really one? |
13520 | said I:"in this town?" |
13520 | said I:''is anything the matter with you?'' |
13520 | said I;"have you been in the land of the Moors?" |
13520 | said he,"what think''st thou of the Shah? |
13520 | she cried,''where have you been all these many days?'' |
13520 | so far behind? |
13520 | the sap- engro? |
13520 | this section of a barrack- row of dwellings, all alike in steps, pillars, doors, and windows? |
13520 | try them in point- blank fight, man to man, all the strength of despair fighting with me? |
13520 | what are you two doing there? |
13520 | what could you be thinking about to bring us such morsels of humanity?" |
13520 | what is it the heather sees?" |
13520 | will its beams alone Gild the spot that gave them birth? |
36417 | ''Do you speak Scotch?'' |
36417 | ''Johnny Gaunt, Sir?'' |
36417 | ''Nor Italian?'' |
36417 | ''Spanish?'' |
36417 | ''Suffolk?'' |
36417 | ''Welsh?'' |
36417 | ''Who is it?'' |
36417 | ''_ Charon._--How? |
36417 | But what talke I of this earthy nourishment of_ fire_? |
36417 | From whence comest thou, Passenger? |
36417 | How haue the_ Fires_ of Heauen( some few yeares past) gone beyond their bounds, and appeared in the shapes of Comets and Blazing Starres?... |
36417 | How many frightfull Ecclipses both of Sun and Moone?... |
36417 | How, I thought, could artists and journalists so work concurrently that the news and the appropriate illustrations should both be fresh? |
36417 | Speak you German?'' |
36417 | The carpenter, however, rejoins,''But who regarded"hold"before? |
36417 | The writer concludes, with true newspaper vehemence, in the following words:--''Where is the glory of the British name? |
36417 | There is a dialogue between Strafford and Charon, of which the following is a specimen:--''_ Charon._--In the name of Rhodomont what ayles me? |
36417 | This was repeated so often that he became quite weary of the constantly recurring question,''Is Corder executed?'' |
36417 | Were not their ears to them as pretious as your nostrils can be to you? |
36417 | What blazing Starres( euen at Noone- dayes) in those times hung houering in the Aire? |
36417 | What is thy name? |
36417 | What was there so remarkable in the case, in the persons, or even in the costume of the accused, that they should be made the subject of a picture? |
36417 | When the Duke of A----, in full Highland costume, entered the chapel, there was a general inquiry,''Who is that?'' |
36417 | Where are the terrors that used to accompany our fleets and armies? |
36508 | ***** WILLIAM A. NORRIS OF TOO MUCH SONG Sedges, have you sung too much, Sedges gray along the shore? |
36508 | Above the gurgling gutters he heard-- surely-- a door unchained? |
36508 | And lowlier still he bent his head:"Dost thou, dear friend, not know me yet?" |
36508 | But will the promise given keep? |
36508 | Can the heart love still when''tis dead? |
36508 | Can this autumn tempest touch Answering chords in you no more? |
36508 | Drawbridge and portcullis screeching, Bugles braying soon and late; Who are they that come beseeching, Calling at my castle gate? |
36508 | Dwell in a dreamland, or else be Lost in life''s eternity? |
36508 | Have you deserted me Now in the autumn? |
36508 | Is the playing over- fast Though the answer now is strong? |
36508 | Is the summer all forgot?-- Now the ice is dark and strong That has bound you to the spot-- Did you die of too much song? |
36508 | Like the sedges at the last Will it die of too much song? |
36508 | Much longer feed on yearning and despair And all the anguish of departed time? |
36508 | THRENODY Have you forgotten me, O my beloved? |
36508 | The child is gone, O crimson rose, And stained and hardened are the hands, And who shall find your golden heart And who shall kiss your withered soul? |
36508 | Then sad, the Master bowed His head, And, through the rosy twilight, dim, Walked up and softly spake to him:"Art thou not he that late was dead?" |
36508 | We can not tell; And will He answer? |
36508 | Wert thou not Created the most beautiful of earth, And is not beauty wisdom, wisdom power? |
36508 | What hast thou done with their almighty gift?" |
36508 | What if the spirit, waked from sleep, Never recall the words it said? |
36508 | Who art thou that bendest praying Over me with clasped palms; Dim through surging darkness, saying Words of prayer and murmured psalms? |
36508 | Who art thou that kneelest weeping By the border of my bed? |
36508 | Whose was the scream that I heard In the midst of the hurrying air? |
36508 | Why do I linger now Vainly lamenting? |
36508 | Why scatter pollen on the air, Marry its pale buds each to each, The year''s unkindly tempests bear, Or to the calm clear sunlight reach? |
33148 | I beg your pardon, sir,he says,"will you take a seat in here for a moment?" |
33148 | ''And do you like this evening time?'' |
33148 | ''And do you live far away?'' |
33148 | ''And do you try to be awfully good, Valentine?'' |
33148 | ''And do you understand them?'' |
33148 | ''And have you ever tried writing anything?'' |
33148 | ''And the bright wit, the rollicking humour with which I made your pages sparkle, where are they?'' |
33148 | ''And what do you read now?'' |
33148 | ''And what do you think about?'' |
33148 | ''And what does Mama think of it?'' |
33148 | ''And what else does your Mama say about literature, Valentine?'' |
33148 | ''And what makes you like to come and sit here?'' |
33148 | ''And what would you do, Valentine, with heaps of money?'' |
33148 | ''And who was that old fellow that helped us so much?'' |
33148 | ''And you do n''t know where he is now?'' |
33148 | ''But do n''t you think your invention would give way ultimately?'' |
33148 | ''Could n''t you sort of shake''em up and condense''em, you know? |
33148 | ''Did anyone ever read you out of all those I sent you to?'' |
33148 | ''Do editors read manuscript by unknown authors?'' |
33148 | ''Have n''t an idea-- isn''t he in school?'' |
33148 | ''Have you seen what they say about your_ Cornhill_ story?'' |
33148 | ''I see,''said the publisher thoughtfully--''well, could n''t you pare''em down; give the first verse entire and sorter sample the others?'' |
33148 | ''Is Mr.---- at home?'' |
33148 | ''Never thought there were so many of the blamed things alive,''said the latter with great simplicity,''had you?'' |
33148 | ''Now why?'' |
33148 | ''Well, my boy?'' |
33148 | ''Well, sir?'' |
33148 | ''Well, then, why did you tell the boy that it should be taken with water?'' |
33148 | ''Well,''he says,''are we finished? |
33148 | ''Well,''said he,''what would you think of trying to write a story?'' |
33148 | ''Well?'' |
33148 | ''What can you read?'' |
33148 | ''What is a book?'' |
33148 | ''What is a pound?'' |
33148 | ''What is the use of saying I am?'' |
33148 | ''What things?'' |
33148 | ''What''s that?'' |
33148 | ''Where then?'' |
33148 | ''Where''s my dear old Blackstone?'' |
33148 | ''Why?'' |
33148 | ''Yes,''I said to the little pink imp;''as a study the room had its drawbacks, but we lived some grand hours there, did n''t we? |
33148 | ''Yes,''he answered;''do n''t you?'' |
33148 | ''Yes?'' |
33148 | ''You read it to her?'' |
33148 | After he had read it he said,''I suppose you want my_ candid_ opinion?'' |
33148 | And was I to be dubbed a scribbler, and pitied for my weakness? |
33148 | And what the reason that stood between its inheritors and their enjoyment of it? |
33148 | Are our young men, as are the youth of China, to be forbidden to think, because Confucius thought years ago? |
33148 | At the end of about five minutes, he, without looking up, says curtly,"What name?" |
33148 | But he only said,''Where is Y.?'' |
33148 | But is it not singular that you should doubt the only incident in the story which I personally verify? |
33148 | But, says the eminent literary authority, why write at all, at any time, about the supernatural? |
33148 | Did he die mad, or was he a MAN, and did he rise out of all doubt and terror? |
33148 | Did he not come to me in the days of weariness, making my heart glad and proud? |
33148 | Do I not love him the more for his shortcomings? |
33148 | Does he come up to your ideal?'' |
33148 | From the sorrow that he dreams, may he not learn sympathy with the sorrow that he sees? |
33148 | Has the deeply- cherish''d Aspiration perished, And are you happy, David, in that heaven where you dwell? |
33148 | Have we talked about ourselves, glorified our profession, and annihilated our enemies to our entire satisfaction? |
33148 | Have you found the secret We, so wildly, sought for, And is your soul enswath''d at last in the singing robes you fought for? |
33148 | How could I expect to dispose of work subject to such a legal''servitude''? |
33148 | I asked myself, Who is interested in the Merchant Service? |
33148 | I replied,''How should I know? |
33148 | I suppose I ought to be ashamed of him, but how can I be? |
33148 | I wrote at the close of the story:''Are there no troubles now?'' |
33148 | In a few seconds he flies back again with"Will you kindly step this way, sir?" |
33148 | Is he not my first- born? |
33148 | May not his own brave puppets teach him how a man should live and die? |
33148 | Mr. William Stevens was the only editor that I knew to whom I could go and say,''Is this right?'' |
33148 | Need I say that it was told in the first person and in the present tense, and that the heroine was anything but good- looking? |
33148 | One of them asked at once''Is it Klaas Lammerts''s?'' |
33148 | Our friend with his infinite variety and flexibility, we know-- but can we put him in? |
33148 | People would lounge into the shop, turn over the leaves of other volumes, say carelessly,''Got a new book of California poetry out, have n''t you?'' |
33148 | See?'' |
33148 | Seeing the book lying on the table, she took a volume up, saying--[ Illustration: A STUDY CORNER]''Oh, have you read''Dawn''? |
33148 | So far, so good; but what was the treasure to be? |
33148 | Stay-- did I not say my literary history? |
33148 | Suddenly it said, a little more distinctly:''Please, sir, could you tell me the time?'' |
33148 | The talk turned upon early struggles, and, with a laugh, he said:''Do you know one of the foolish things I love to do? |
33148 | The wit you appreciate now needs to be more pungent than the wit that satisfied you at twenty; are you sure it is as wholesome? |
33148 | Therefore, when I hear that editors will not read contributions, I ask if things have changed in twenty years-- and why? |
33148 | Thinking of his heroine''s failings, of his villain''s virtues, may he not grow more tolerant of all things, kinder thinking towards man and woman? |
33148 | This apologetic attitude, is it not the ca nt of the literary profession? |
33148 | Was I not ready to write an acrostic at a moment''s notice on the name of the sweetheart of any fellow who asked me to do it? |
33148 | We can put in the quaint figure that spoke a hundred words with us yesterday by the wayside; but do we know him? |
33148 | What became of him? |
33148 | What did he feel? |
33148 | What did he think? |
33148 | What did my isolation matter, when I had all the gods of Greece for company, to say nothing of the fays and trolls of Scottish Fairyland? |
33148 | What has happened to you? |
33148 | What have you done with it all?'' |
33148 | What have you done with them? |
33148 | What is it?'' |
33148 | What mercy could_ I_ expect from one who had never forgiven''Johnny''Keats for his frightful perversion of the sacred mystery of Endymion and Selene? |
33148 | What public shall I find to listen to me? |
33148 | What were his superstitions? |
33148 | What wicked fairy has bewitched you? |
33148 | What''s the good? |
33148 | Where are the roses of last summer, the snows of yester year? |
33148 | Where are they all now? |
33148 | Who ever lost a manuscript that was n''t? |
33148 | Why? |
33148 | Why?'' |
33148 | Will he please her to all time? |
33148 | Will it be possible to interest ladies in forecastle life and in the prosaics of the cabin? |
33148 | Will she always be sweet and gracious to him? |
33148 | Will she never tire of him? |
33148 | Would the editor only-- only take their article? |
33148 | Yet what could one do? |
33148 | You can not smile at humour you would once have laughed at; is it you or the humour that has grown old and stale? |
33148 | You giving more soon? |
33148 | [ Illustration: A POLICEMAN TOLD HIM TO GET DOWN]''When did you last see Y.?'' |
33148 | [ Illustration: IT''TOOK OFF''FROM HIS SHOULDER]''Are you never afraid?'' |
33148 | [ Illustration: MRS. HALL CAINE(_ From a photograph by A. M. Pettit_)] Shall I ever forget the agony of the first efforts? |
33148 | [ Illustration:''HAVE YOU SEEN WHAT THEY SAY ABOUT YOU?''] |
33148 | [ Illustration:''WOULD YOU MIND JUST READING A BIT OF IT?''] |
33148 | and who was horrified at the base''modernism''of Shelley''s''Prometheus Unbound?'' |
33148 | now? |
33148 | or''Is that wrong?'' |
33148 | what has become of all these ladies? |
36245 | Est- ce là défense et illustration,he exclaims,"ou plus tost offense et dénigration?" |
36245 | Take an actual history,says Scaliger;"how does Lucan differ, for example, from Livy? |
36245 | [ 142] But what, according to Castelvetro, are the conditions of stage representation? 36245 [ 227] That is, how does a poem differ from a well- written historical narrative, if the former be without organic unity? |
36245 | [ 61] Poetry, then, is an ideal representation of life; but should it be still further limited, and made an imitation of only human life? 36245 After all, since it is the public who pays for these stupidities, why should we not serve what it wants? 36245 But after all, what is_ extra rem_? 36245 But how out of purpose, and place, do I name art? 36245 But how should he be that just imitator of life, whilst he himself knows not its measures, nor how to guide himself by judgment and understanding? 36245 But if poetry is a matter of inspiration, how can it be called an art? 36245 But what is the origin of the two other unities,--the unities of time and place? 36245 But what produces laughter? 36245 But who can doubt it? 36245 Et voir à nos misteres Les Payens asservis sous les loix salutaires De nos Saints et Martyrs? 36245 First, what is the meaning of imitation? 36245 How did the classic spirit arise? 36245 How then are the true poets to be known? 36245 If genius alone suffices, what need is there of study and artifice? 36245 Now, in what way can we discover exactly how to imitate nature, and perceive whether or not we have imitated it correctly? 36245 Now, what constitutes a serious action, and what actions are not suited to the dignified character of tragedy? 36245 The imitation of the classics having thus become essential to literary creation, what was to be its relation to the imitation of nature? 36245 The question as Giraldi had stated it was this: Does every poem need to have unity? 36245 The question as discussed in the Tasso controversy had changed to this form: What is unity? 36245 The question at issue, as we have seen, is that of unity; that is, does the heroic poem need unity? 36245 To whom then are the rules of Aristotle useful? 36245 What is the aim of the poet? 36245 What more can the poet desire, and indeed what more can he find in life, and find there with the same certainty and accuracy? 36245 What was the origin of the principles and precepts of neo- classicism? 36245 What, then, is the function of the poet? 36245 Whence did it come, and how did it develop? 36245 [ 184] Why should tragedy be limited as to time, and not epic poetry? 36245 [ 476] Where shall you find in life such a friend as Pylades, such a hero as Orlando, such an excellent man as Æneas? 36245 and what in life is the subject- matter of this imitation? 36245 but, How are the poets to be used? 36245 et du vieux testament Voir une tragedie extraite proprement? 36245 quel plaisir seroit- ce à cette heure de voir Nos poëtes Chrestiens, les façons recevoir Du tragique ancien? 31078 But how have I excerpted_ his_ matter? |
31078 | But in what,says Gifford,"was the taste of the times_ wretched_? |
31078 | Can a head so well organised as yours imagine that such a trifle is a sentence of death? |
31078 | If such,says he,"can not escape from errors, who shall? |
31078 | Shall that which the Romans allowed to Cæcilius and to Plautus be refused to Virgil and Varius? |
31078 | They asked her whether that were her absolute resolution? 31078 Who now- a- days takes those_ Standard Rules_, either one or the other, for their_ guide_ in writing?" |
31078 | --at which his majesty seemed appalled, and asked how many were against him? |
31078 | And thus to Valour, to thy pristine Valour That swore its faith to thee, thy faith thou keep''st? |
31078 | And who does not believe in the existence of ghosts? |
31078 | Are we ourselves such indifferent artists? |
31078 | Being such, what is he in reference to king and state; how compatible or incompatible with either? |
31078 | But how do"rotten members"and"a carcass"agree with the notion of"a Rump?" |
31078 | But how stands the passage in the MS. in the Imperial Library of Vienna, which Abbé Costaing has found? |
31078 | But what remained to be done? |
31078 | But whom has he lauded? |
31078 | But why did you not execute your commission bravely[ openly]?--Why? |
31078 | But why does Van Loon envy us this lumpish invention? |
31078 | Charles the Second said to a_ petitioner_ from Taunton,"How_ dare_ you deliver me such a paper?" |
31078 | Cosi al valor, cosi al valor primiero Che a te fede giurò, la fede osservi? |
31078 | Così dunque l''onor, così conservi Gli avanzi tu del glorioso Impero? |
31078 | Could he animate into action what lies in a state of eternal tranquillity? |
31078 | Could he exhibit what represents nothing? |
31078 | Deem I right, Among offenders thy defender stands? |
31078 | Do not such things happen every day, and do the losers think themselves injured or_ abused_ when they are talked of? |
31078 | Do we flatter ourselves that the Logomachies of the Nominalists and the Realists terminated with these scolding schoolmen? |
31078 | Do we laugh at their magical works of art? |
31078 | Do you glory in your merchants and your artists? |
31078 | Does Sylvanus then deny that"the Director"was not also"entrapped?" |
31078 | Doth not this man the like? |
31078 | Dov''è ITALIA, il tuo braccio? |
31078 | For what is more delightful to the curious than to make fresh discoveries every day? |
31078 | Had it been zeal for the catholic religion, would he have delayed from 1519 to 1549 to arm? |
31078 | Had they had any life in them, would they not have moved as well as spoken? |
31078 | Hath the Cardinal any gay mansion? |
31078 | Have they met with the fate of sucked oranges?--and how much of Malone may we owe to Oldys? |
31078 | Have they no fear after the loss of the Netherlands, occasioned by the frantic obstinacy which marked the times? |
31078 | He cometh then of some noble stock? |
31078 | Hear the afflicted historian:"Have men no compassion, after forty years passed full of continual miseries? |
31078 | How can you then take upon yourself an action to which you was neither privy and consenting? |
31078 | How did she express herself when bequeathing the crown to James the First, or did she bequeath it at all? |
31078 | I asked him how many Gods there were? |
31078 | I informing him, asked again how he thought to be saved? |
31078 | I know there is a question in philosophy,_ An animæ sint oequales?_--whether souls be alike? |
31078 | I must beg of you to satisfy me very explicitly who were the persons that reported this to you, and from whom did you receive this information? |
31078 | Inquiring of Sir John by how many voices he had carried it? |
31078 | Is he a_ bibliognoste_, or a_ bibliographe_, or a_ bibliomane_, or a_ bibliophile_, or a_ bibliotaphe_? |
31078 | Is it impossible to be betrayed by a person we confided in? |
31078 | Is it not marvel,"continues the personifier of Stucley,"that he was angry with me at his death for bringing him back? |
31078 | Is it not, therefore, strange that they can not yet tell us what are_ riches_? |
31078 | It is_ now_ how corrupt nations will act against corrupt nations equally enlightened? |
31078 | It probably slept; for who would have stirred it through the Protectorate? |
31078 | It was debated in the Rump parliament, when Cromwell was general, whether they should_ dissolve the universities_? |
31078 | Joy you in fairies and in elves? |
31078 | Lord Mansfield was once asked, after the commencement of the French Revolution, when it would end? |
31078 | Lov''st thou music? |
31078 | Might it be restored for the ladies as a waltz? |
31078 | Must Delia''s softness, elegance, and ease, Submit to Marian''s dress? |
31078 | Must Marian''s robe from distant India please? |
31078 | No? |
31078 | Not only he denounced the sonnets of Shakspeare, but the sonnet itself, with an absurd question,"What has truth or nature to do with sonnets?" |
31078 | On the first of May, Secretary Cooke delivered a message, asking whether they would rely upon the_ king''s word_? |
31078 | Pym said,"We have his majesty''s coronation oath to maintain the laws of England; what need we then take his word?" |
31078 | Que fera dans la pauvreté, ce publicain qui ne sçait vivre que d''or? |
31078 | Que fera donc dans la bassesse ce satrape que vous n''aurez élevé que pour la grandeur? |
31078 | Que fera, dépourvu de tout, ce fastueux imbecille qui ne sait point user de lui- même?" |
31078 | Shall we at once condemn the king for these arbitrary measures? |
31078 | Sir Nathaniel Rich observed that,"confident as he was of the royal word, what did any indefinite word ascertain?" |
31078 | Stucley, in saluting King, asked whether he had not shown himself an honest man? |
31078 | Tell me, gentle Hour of Night, Wherein dost thou most delight? |
31078 | The French editor makes this observation:"Who could believe that these writings are of the same epoch? |
31078 | The state satire of that day was often pointed at this very circumstance, as appears in Skelton''s"Why come ye not to Court?" |
31078 | This annihilating affront Stucley hastened to convey to the king; his majesty answered him--"What wouldst thou have me do? |
31078 | This was resisted by Secretary Cooke;"What would they say in foreign parts, if the people of England would not trust their king?" |
31078 | Thus dost thou honour-- thus dost thou preserve The mighty boundaries of the glorious empire? |
31078 | Vices, thus veiled, are introduced to us as virtues, according to an old poet, As drunkenness, good- fellowship we call? |
31078 | WHETHER ALLOWABLE TO RUIN ONESELF? |
31078 | Was Shenstone to become an active or contemplative being? |
31078 | Was a devil in them? |
31078 | We tell the tale in Mr. Robertson''s words in the work already alluded to.--"Who was the party guilty of these outrages? |
31078 | Were not the Spartans allowed to steal from one another, and the bunglers only punished? |
31078 | Were these akin to the fairies of Paracelsus? |
31078 | Were these the"Biographical Institutes"Oldys refers to among his manuscripts? |
31078 | What man in his senses, who has the honour to know you, will say you gave your consent to such thing-- that you was privy to it? |
31078 | What physician would expel a burning fever with fire, or put in the shivering marrow of the bones snow and ice? |
31078 | What purpose serves So to be helped by others? |
31078 | What should we think of a people who had a proverb, that"He who gives blows is a master, he who gives none is a dog?" |
31078 | What was this but the unanimous interpretation of persons who were adoring the rising sun?" |
31078 | What will you then do? |
31078 | What words have I robbed him of?--and how have I become the richer for them? |
31078 | What''s dancing? |
31078 | When politicians can not rely upon each other''s interpretation of_ one of the commonest words_ in our language, how can they possibly act together? |
31078 | Where could Rawleigh obtain that familiar acquaintance with the rabbins, of whose language he was probably entirely ignorant? |
31078 | Wherein then? |
31078 | Whereto she replied, that_ her meaning was, that a king should succeed: and who_, quoth she,_ should, that be but our cousin of Scotland_? |
31078 | Who can tell whether he has not slurred over his defeats, and only dwelt on his victories? |
31078 | Who is this vaticinator of the uselessness of public libraries? |
31078 | Who would have credited it? |
31078 | Why doth he not speak in plain, downright English, that the world may see my faults? |
31078 | Why have the"Elegies"of Shenstone, which forty years ago formed for many of us the favourite poems of our youth, ceased to delight us in mature life? |
31078 | Why might not Oldys, however, have been seated, at least below the salt? |
31078 | Why not rather imitate the acts of those cities who so keenly disputed merely for the honour of the birth- place of the divine Homer? |
31078 | Why pensive strays his eye O''er statues, grottos, urns, by critic art Proportion''d fair? |
31078 | Will it be credited that for the enjoyment of a temporary piece of malice, Steevens would even risk his own reputation as a poetical critic? |
31078 | Will you practise less humanity than the barbarians? |
31078 | Will you remain obstinate in iniquity? |
31078 | With what triumphs, with what valorous citizens, are you splendid? |
31078 | Would Dante quit this blessed company to mingle with the remains of those hatreds and iniquities which gave him no rest in life? |
31078 | Wouldst thou have me hang him? |
31078 | Yet who does not laugh at such men?" |
31078 | Yet why should men have taken all this trouble to make, not a man, but a trumpet?" |
31078 | [ 322]"Shall we,"said one,"be sent home as we were last sessions, turned off like scattered sheep?" |
31078 | _ Economy._ He paints himself:-- Observe Florelio''s mien; Why treads my friend with melancholy step That beauteous lawn? |
31078 | _ Know thyself!_ and_ Nothing too much!_ But on what account do I mention these things? |
31078 | darest thou, who art the scorn and contempt of men, offer thyself in my presence? |
31078 | didst thou recall him? |
31078 | e a che ti servi Tu dell''altrui? |
31078 | have been taken out of your library, who will say you ought to bear the guilt of it? |
31078 | of which there was a transcript? |
31078 | or from his lofty dome Returns his eye unpleased, disconsolate? |
31078 | or how he was related to Sir John Spenser of Althorpe, in Northamptonshire? |
31078 | say, why do you love Only to frequent the grove? |
31078 | to Marian''s gold? |
31078 | what is native worth esteemed of clowns? |
31078 | what is_ rent_? |
31078 | what is_ value_? |
31078 | where is thine arm? |
31078 | why does the Dutchman quarrel with his own cheese? |
34498 | A what? |
34498 | Are you hurt? |
34498 | Do you feel the bottom there, old fellow? |
34498 | Do you slide? |
34498 | It looks a nice warm exercise, that, does n''t it? |
34498 | Just hold me at first, Sam, will you? |
34498 | Let go, sir,said Sam;"do n''t you hear the governor a- callin''? |
34498 | Sir? |
34498 | These-- these-- are very awkward skates, ai n''t they, Sam? |
34498 | Well, sister, you''re late; what''s the matter? |
34498 | Who dares--this was the patriot''s cry, As striding from the desk he came,--"Come out with me, in Freedom''s name For her to live, for her to die?" |
34498 | Why, Jane, what can I do? 34498 Why, whativer is the matter, sister?" |
34498 | You skate, of course, Winkle? |
34498 | All this? |
34498 | And if the war must go on, why put off longer the Declaration of Independence? |
34498 | And sell the mighty space of our large honors For so much trash as may be grasped thus? |
34498 | And since we must fight it through, why not put ourselves in a state to enjoy all the benefits of victory, if we gain the victory? |
34498 | And whence be the grapes of the wine- press which we tread? |
34498 | And wherefore doth your rout send forth a joyous shout? |
34498 | But what then? |
34498 | But, in good sooth, are you he that hangs the verses on the trees, wherein Rosalind is so admired? |
34498 | Chastisement? |
34498 | Come, sister, will you go? |
34498 | Cut off from all hope of royal clemency, what are you, what can you be, while the power of England remains, but outlaws? |
34498 | Did I say better? |
34498 | Did not great Julius bleed for justice''s sake? |
34498 | Did you see as the cap- box was put out?" |
34498 | Do we mean to submit to the measures of Parliament, Boston Port Bill, and all? |
34498 | Do we mean to submit, and consent that we ourselves shall be ground to powder, and our country and its rights trodden down in the dust? |
34498 | Do you confess so much? |
34498 | Do you hear, forester? |
34498 | Does the poor solitary tea- duty support the purposes of this preamble? |
34498 | Durst not tempt him? |
34498 | For on what principle does it stand? |
34498 | Gentlemen, why prostitute this noble world? |
34498 | Has seven years''struggle been yet able to force them? |
34498 | Hath Cassius lived To be but mirth and laughter to his Brutus, When grief and blood ill- tempered vexeth him? |
34498 | Have the evening clouds, suffused with sunset, dropped down and become fixed into solid forms? |
34498 | Have the rainbows that followed autumn storms faded upon the mountains and left their mantles there? |
34498 | Have you not love enough to bear with me, When that rash humor which my mother gave me, Makes me forgetful? |
34498 | I an itching palm? |
34498 | I durst not? |
34498 | I. Nay, why should I fear Death, Who gives us life and in exchange takes breath? |
34498 | I. Oh, wherefore come ye forth, in triumph from the north, With your hands, and your feet, and your raiment all red? |
34498 | If we postpone independence, do we mean to carry on or give up the war? |
34498 | Is it come to this? |
34498 | Is it possible A cur can lend three thousand ducats?" |
34498 | Is it so very magnanimous to give up a part of your income in order to save your whole property? |
34498 | Is it through you? |
34498 | Is not the supply there stated as effectually abandoned as if the tea- duty had perished in the general wreck? |
34498 | Is reform needed? |
34498 | Must I budge? |
34498 | Must I endure all this? |
34498 | Must I give way and room to your rash choler? |
34498 | Must I observe you? |
34498 | Must I stand and crouch Under your testy humor? |
34498 | Now, where is the revenue which is to do all these mighty things? |
34498 | O deep- sea- diver, who might then behold such sights as thou? |
34498 | Pickwick?" |
34498 | Shall I be frighted when a madman stares? |
34498 | Should I have answered Caius Cassius so? |
34498 | Should I not say--"Hath a dog money? |
34498 | Was that done like Cassius? |
34498 | What means this trampling of horsemen in our rear? |
34498 | What should I say to you? |
34498 | What''s the matter? |
34498 | When two of these asses met, there would be an anxious"Have you got your lantern?" |
34498 | Where''s the eye, however blue, Doth not weary? |
34498 | Where''s the face One would meet in every place? |
34498 | Where''s the maid Whose lip mature is ever new? |
34498 | Where''s the voice, however soft, One would hear so very oft? |
34498 | Whose banner do I see, boys? |
34498 | Why then, why then, sir, do we not as soon as possible change this from a civil to a national war? |
34498 | Why, then, should we defer the Declaration? |
34498 | Will you go? |
34498 | Would twenty shillings have ruined Mr. Hampden''s fortune? |
34498 | X. O broad- armed fisher of the deep, whose sports can equal thine? |
34498 | You will force them? |
34498 | _ Orl._ And why not the swift foot of Time? |
34498 | _ Orl._ Are you native of this place? |
34498 | _ Orl._ Can you remember any of the principal evils laid to the charge of women? |
34498 | _ Orl._ Did you ever cure any so? |
34498 | _ Orl._ I prithee, who doth he trot withal? |
34498 | _ Orl._ Very well: what would you? |
34498 | _ Orl._ What were his marks? |
34498 | _ Orl._ Where dwell you, pretty youth? |
34498 | _ Orl._ Who ambles Time withal? |
34498 | _ Orl._ Who doth he galop withal? |
34498 | _ Orl._ Who stays it still withal? |
34498 | _ Ros._ But are you so much in love as your rhymes speak? |
34498 | _ Ros._ I pray you, what is''t o''clock? |
34498 | _ Ros._ Me believe it? |
34498 | do you not see how it would serve to have eyes, blood, complexion, clean and sweet? |
34498 | had not that been as proper? |
34498 | let her loose; Everything is spoilt by use: Where''s the cheek that doth not fade, Too much gazed at? |
34498 | shall one of us, That struck the foremost man of all this world, But for supporting robbers;--shall we now Contaminate our fingers with base bribes? |
34498 | what will become of the preamble if you repeal this tax?" |
37970 | Goodman, Edward,_ Why the One- Act Play_?, in_ The Theatre_, Vol. |
33824 | Aller cart, father? 33824 And is the wine drinkable?" |
33824 | Are you dining anywhere to- morrow night? |
33824 | Do_ you_ ever kiss the missus, Charles? |
33824 | Er-- will somebody pass the_ salt_, please?] |
33824 | Freddy, dear, can you tell me what_ is_ the difference between''calipash''and''calipee''? |
33824 | Had? 33824 How d''ye do, my lord? |
33824 | Hullo, Monty, what have you got in your button- hole? 33824 I say, old man, what matches do you smoke?"] |
33824 | Is Mr. Binks a_ vegetarian_? |
33824 | Now George, my boy, there''s a glass of champagne for you-- don''t get such stuff at school, eh? 33824 Now, Mr. Barleymead, how do you like this''Chateau Lafitte''? |
33824 | Oh,--(_seeing it in quite a different light_)--"_next_ Thursday, did you say? |
33824 | Seventy- four, sir? |
33824 | There I stood, the terrible abyss yawning at my feet----_ That Brute Brown._"Was it yawning when you got there, or did it start after you arrived?"] |
33824 | There, my boy, what do you think of that? 33824 Twenty thousand pounds worth of plate on the table, Sir Gorgius? |
33824 | Waiter, what''s this? 33824 What am I goin''to do with it? |
33824 | What can I have for dinner, waiter? |
33824 | What table? |
33824 | What,''aven''t you''eard, sir? |
33824 | Where shall it be? |
33824 | Where shall we dine? |
33824 | Will ye take anny more drink, sor?] |
33824 | William, where''s John? 33824 Wonder how much it costs him to_ get into_''em?"] |
33824 | Would you like to propose your toast now, my lord, or should we let''em enjoy themselves a bit longer?] |
33824 | Yes?--_and was it_?] |
33824 | ''M-- let''s see-- a_ glass of milk_, sir, was n''t it?"] |
33824 | (_ Aloud._) And liqueurs? |
33824 | ***** DISCLAIMER BY A DINER- OUT Abolish party? |
33824 | *****[ Illustration: A BAD ENDING.--"Well, William, what''s become of Robert?" |
33824 | *****[ Illustration: BROWN AND JONES OVER THEIR WINE_ Jones._"How would I take Cronstadt? |
33824 | *****[ Illustration: IN THE DAYS OF THE CRINOLINE-- DINING UNDER DIFFICULTIES]*****[ Illustration: REPLETION.--_Robert._"Pudding or cheese, sir?" |
33824 | *****[ Illustration: NO EXCUSE FOR NOT BELIEVING.--"Then you do n''t believe in phrenology?" |
33824 | *****[ Illustration: QUITE A NOVELTY.--_Amiable Experimentalist._"Makes a delicious side dish, does n''t it? |
33824 | *****[ Illustration: SO VERY CONSCIENTIOUS!--_Master of the House._"Why, Jenkins, what on earth is the matter with you? |
33824 | *****[ Illustration: TOO LITERAL BY HALF SCENE.--_A"cheap"chop- house not a hundred miles from L-- nd-- n.__ Waiter._"Paysir? |
33824 | *****[ Illustration: Why not a phonographic after- dinner speech machine? |
33824 | *****[ Illustration:"IN CONFIDENCE"_ Dining- room, Apelles Club__ Diner._"Thomson, do the members ask for this wine?" |
33824 | *****[ Illustration:"WHO PAYS THE PIPER CALLS THE TUNE"_ Johnnie( to waiter)._"Aw-- you''re the boss-- head waiter, eh?" |
33824 | *****[ Illustration:_ Commissionaire._"Would you like a four- wheeler or a''ansom sir?" |
33824 | *****[ Illustration:_ Farmer._"I say, John, what do you call a pineapple-- a fruit or a vegetable?" |
33824 | *****[ Illustration:_ He._"Fond of Bridge?" |
33824 | *****[ Illustration:_ Old Jones._"Yes, my boy,_ there''s_ wine for you, eh? |
33824 | *****[ Illustration:_ Voice from above._"What are you doing down there, Parkins?" |
33824 | A-- a-- let me see-- a-- which is the elder?"] |
33824 | Am I fit to go intodrawingroom? |
33824 | And as to_ entrées_--will you have cockscomb cachous or sweetbread pilules? |
33824 | And now shall we have a whitewash before we join the ladies? |
33824 | And shall you be needing anything in the way of stimulants? |
33824 | And what about sweets, cheese, and savouries? |
33824 | Any brandy- balls with the coffee creams? |
33824 | Are n''t you ashamed of yourself?" |
33824 | Are you aware that our host has a French cook? |
33824 | Besides, who was now to pay the bill? |
33824 | Bring you a slice, sir? |
33824 | But my hostess? |
33824 | Could n''t you write and put off your friends till the week_ after_, ma''am?"] |
33824 | Godolphin._"Shall we meet at Dunchester House to- morrow?" |
33824 | Have you noticed any difference?" |
33824 | He stopped dead when he saw me, slapped me on the shoulder, and said,''Surely this must be my dear old friend, Boreham?''" |
33824 | How is it my wishes have not been attended to?" |
33824 | How is it you''re dining at the club? |
33824 | How? |
33824 | I hope it was not_ illness_ that prevented you from coming?" |
33824 | Jinks?" |
33824 | Jones._ And pray, Mr. Jones, what is the matter now? |
33824 | Let me see-- which club was that?" |
33824 | Potatoes and greens, sir-- And any French beans, sir?" |
33824 | Real turtle, eh? |
33824 | Scene closes in upon the temperance orgy._*****[ Illustration: A PERSONAL GRIEVANCE"I say, wo n''t they let_ you_ go into long trousers?"] |
33824 | See?"] |
33824 | Tea? |
33824 | That''s coming it rather strong, ai n''t it?" |
33824 | Then, with regard to fish? |
33824 | Then-- where_ am_ I?"] |
33824 | Thought your wife told me she had the Browns and Smiths to dinner this evening?" |
33824 | Turkish or Persian? |
33824 | Well, what do you think he did? |
33824 | Wha''ll er misshus shay?" |
33824 | What did Capt''n du Cane shay? |
33824 | What do you mean?" |
33824 | What do you think of that?" |
33824 | What does that mean, Polly?" |
33824 | What form are you in, old boy?" |
33824 | What more natural than that I should ask her to give me a dinner as some slight return? |
33824 | What''ll you''ave, sir?" |
33824 | What, is he gone?" |
33824 | What_ is_ the secret? |
33824 | When?" |
33824 | Where do you suppose I bought it? |
33824 | Where was Mademoiselle Faustine? |
33824 | Where was she? |
33824 | Who''s it for?" |
33824 | Whose delight were greater Than mine? |
33824 | Why had I not given him more notice? |
33824 | Why?" |
33824 | Yessir-- Whataveyeradsir?" |
33824 | You do n''t mean to say you''ve joined the blue ribbon army?" |
33824 | _ British Farmer._"What sort o''cheese do you call this? |
33824 | _ First Gilded Youth._"Had any breakfast, old chappie?" |
33824 | _ He._"Do you know I always think there''s something_ wanting_ in people who do n''t play?"] |
33824 | _ Head Waiter._"Beg pardon, sir?" |
33824 | _ Head Waiter._"The what, sir? |
33824 | _ Host._"Can you say,''The scenery''s truly rural''bout here?''" |
33824 | _ Hostess._ That would be cheaper than having each course in separate tablets,_ would n''t_ it? |
33824 | _ Hostess._ We''ve some people coming in to take a few tablets with us this evening; what do you think I''d better have? |
33824 | _ Professor Guzzleton._ And that that French cook is the best in London? |
33824 | _ Professor Guzzleton._ Then do n''t you think we had better defer all further conversation till we meet again in the drawing- room? |
33824 | _ Q._ And can anything interesting be put in about the Houses of Parliament? |
33824 | _ Q._ And in what terms does a chairman respond to the toast of his own health? |
33824 | _ Q._ How are the visitors to be treated? |
33824 | _ Q._ Is there anything new to be said in the loyal toasts? |
33824 | _ Q._ What about the toast of the evening? |
33824 | _ Q._ What can be said about the united service? |
33824 | _ Q._ Why, do you not partake of the good cheer before you with the rest of your convives? |
33824 | _ Robinson._"Ah, but do n''t you recollect the way he told it after that supper I gave you fellows at Evans''in''fifty- one''? |
33824 | _ Stranger._"What are you celebrated for here?" |
33824 | _ The Family Greengrocer._"On the twenty- fourth, ma''am? |
33824 | _ Uncle._"Now then, what is it? |
33824 | _ Voice from the kitchen._"Did he? |
33824 | _ Waiter._''Ndeed, sir? |
33824 | and venison to follow, eh?" |
33824 | eh? |
33824 | eh?" |
33824 | is gusto then so great a sin, Is feeding man so terrible a sinner That such a worse than_ Duncan_-raising din Must summon him to-- dinner? |
33824 | waiter, what do you call this soup? |
23405 | ''Is it he?'' 23405 Ah, you''re fondest o''_ me_, are n''t you?" |
23405 | And are the lions large? |
23405 | And be good to her, do you hear? 23405 And once beached,"I inquired,"how shall we get her off again?" |
23405 | And what would you do with him? |
23405 | And when we come to that line your worship speaks of,said Sancho,"how far shall we have gone?" |
23405 | And while the good Sancho was amusing himself with the goats,said the duke,"how did Señor Don Quixote amuse himself?" |
23405 | And why should I speak low, sailor, About my own boy John? 23405 Are there any enchantments that can prevail against true valor? |
23405 | Are you ready? |
23405 | But Lors ha''massy, how did you get near such mud as that? |
23405 | But if I lent you one of my books, Luke? 23405 By thy long gray beard and glittering eye, Now wherefore stopp''st thou me? |
23405 | Did I not tell thee, Sancho,said Don Quixote at this,"that we had reached the place where I am to show what the might of my arm can do? |
23405 | Did n''t you live in a beautiful house at home? |
23405 | Did you ever know such a little hussy as it is? |
23405 | Do you see it? |
23405 | Dost thou know what I suspect, Sancho? |
23405 | God save thee, ancient Mariner, From the fiends that plague thee thus!-- Why look''st thou so? |
23405 | How came you to be rambling about and lose yourself? |
23405 | How can I be mistaken in what I say, unbelieving traitor? |
23405 | How can a lion come roaring at you, you silly thing? 23405 How could you let her do so?" |
23405 | How much do we owe you? |
23405 | How now, lad? |
23405 | How''s my boy-- my boy? 23405 How''s my boy-- my boy? |
23405 | How''s my boy-- my boy? 23405 Hurt me? |
23405 | I say, Lucy,he began, nodding his head up and down with great significance, as he coiled up his string again,"what do you think I mean to do?" |
23405 | Is it far off? 23405 Is it the tipsy- cake, then?" |
23405 | Is that my fault? |
23405 | Is that where you live, my little lady? |
23405 | Is your master then so mad,asked the gentleman,"that you believe and are afraid he will engage such fierce animals?" |
23405 | Maggie, you little silly,said Tom, peeping into the room ten minutes after,"why do n''t you come and have your dinner? |
23405 | More rabbits? 23405 Much hurt?" |
23405 | My boy John-- He that went to sea-- What care I for the ship, sailor? 23405 My little lady, where are you going to?" |
23405 | Now they are tied,said Sancho;"what are we to do next?" |
23405 | Now, then, little missis,said the younger man, rising, and leading the donkey forward,"tell us where you live; what''s the name of the place?" |
23405 | Now, what would you account that spot, were you left alone to white experience to find your way through this wilderness? |
23405 | Now, which''ll you have, Maggie,--right hand or left? 23405 Oh, Lucy,"she burst out, after kissing her,"you''ll stay with Tom and me, wo n''t you? |
23405 | Oh, Tom, why did n''t you ask me? |
23405 | Oh, Tom,_ dare_ you? |
23405 | Some wine? |
23405 | Tell me, Sancho,said the duke,"did you see any he- goat among those she- goats?" |
23405 | Tell me, seest thou not yonder knight coming towards us on a dappled gray steed, who has upon his head a helmet of gold? |
23405 | Thank you,said Maggie, looking at the food without taking it;"but will you give me some bread- and- butter and tea instead? |
23405 | That will I give with all my heart,said Sancho;"but what has become of the lions? |
23405 | The devil take thee, man,said Don Quixote;"what has a helmet to do with fulling mills?" |
23405 | Tom, you naughty boy, where''s your sister? |
23405 | Tom,said Maggie, as they sat on the boughs of the elder- tree, eating their jam- puffs,"shall you run away to- morrow?" |
23405 | Tom,she said, timidly, when they were out of doors,"how much money did you give for your rabbits?" |
23405 | Well, I reckon it''s about the blessed same to me, shipmate,he replied;"so it''s strong and plenty of it, what''s the odds?" |
23405 | Well, what harm is there done? |
23405 | What are they for, Maggie? |
23405 | What art thou laughing at, Sancho? |
23405 | What did you cut it off for, then? 23405 What do you mean by alarming the citadel at this time of night consecrated to me? |
23405 | What do_ I_ care about Lucy? 23405 What dost thou think of this, Sancho?" |
23405 | What for? |
23405 | What for? |
23405 | What giants? |
23405 | What have you in charge? |
23405 | What is it, Henry? |
23405 | What is it? |
23405 | What now? |
23405 | What persons or what castle art thou talking of, madman? |
23405 | What the devil city, fortress, or castle is your worship talking about, señor? |
23405 | What wo n''t do? |
23405 | What''s the matter, Tête? |
23405 | What''s your boy''s name, good wife, And in what ship sailed he? |
23405 | What, Tom? |
23405 | What? |
23405 | When? |
23405 | Who goes there? |
23405 | Why, Maggie, how''s this, how''s this? |
23405 | Why, Tom? 23405 Why, what''s the meaning o''this?" |
23405 | Why, where did you leave her? |
23405 | Why? |
23405 | Why? |
23405 | Why? |
23405 | You come back from the sea, And not know my John? 23405 You forgot to feed''em, then?" |
23405 | You''ve been naughty to her, I doubt, Tom? |
23405 | ''Say quick,''quoth he,''I bid thee say-- What manner of man art thou?'' |
23405 | A community in little, is it not this which teaches us how to live in the great one? |
23405 | And he had said he would n''t have it, and she ate it without thinking; how could she help it? |
23405 | And here''s hooks; see here-- I say,_ wo n''t_ we go and fish to- morrow down by the Round Pool? |
23405 | And how could you think o''going to the pond, and taking your sister where there was dirt? |
23405 | And is that Woman all her crew? |
23405 | And where is that band who so vauntingly swore That the havoc of war and the battle''s confusion A home and a country should leave us no more? |
23405 | And where mought you have come from?" |
23405 | And with this he fell weeping so bitterly, that Don Quixote said to him, sharply and angrily,"What art thou afraid of, cowardly creature? |
23405 | And you shall catch your own fish, Maggie, and put the worms on, and everything; wo n''t it be fun?" |
23405 | And, if so, where were the men? |
23405 | Are n''t I a good brother to you?" |
23405 | Are the letters L, I, E, always visible? |
23405 | Are they dead or alive?" |
23405 | Are those her sails that glance in the Sun, Like restless gossameres? |
23405 | Are you mad? |
23405 | As if my tender mother laid On my shut lids, her kisses''pressure, Half- waking me at night, and said,"Who kissed you through the dark, dear guesser?" |
23405 | At last the younger woman said in her previous deferential, coaxing tone,--"This nice little lady''s come to live with us; are n''t you glad?" |
23405 | At this Don Quixote exclaimed,"Art thou on the gallows, thief, or at thy last moment, to use pitiful entreaties of that sort? |
23405 | Because Lucy''s coming?" |
23405 | But if virtue is only a word, what is there then in life which is true and real? |
23405 | But look here, Sancho; when wilt thou begin the scourging? |
23405 | But what is the edging of blacker smoke that hangs along its lower side, and which you may trace down into the thicket of hazel? |
23405 | But when he had been called in to tea, his father said,"Why, where''s the little wench?" |
23405 | But why, after displaying so much cunning, did he invariably betray himself the moment he came up by that loud laugh? |
23405 | Can Mother Genevieve be in trouble about anything? |
23405 | Can it be a living object?" |
23405 | Can you find any other poem in this volume in which the meter is the same? |
23405 | Can you find such poems in other volumes? |
23405 | Can you think of any way in which the closeness of the foe could be more effectively suggested? |
23405 | Children dear, was it yesterday( Call yet once) that she went away? |
23405 | Children dear, was it yesterday? |
23405 | Children dear, was it yesterday? |
23405 | Children dear, were we long alone? |
23405 | Did n''t it hurt you?" |
23405 | Did not his white breast enough betray him? |
23405 | Did you ever hear about Columbus?" |
23405 | Did you ever see the moon"with one bright star within the nether tip"? |
23405 | Did you ever see the sun when it seemed to have no radiance-- when it was just a red circle? |
23405 | Do n''t you see that a new invention is like a child to a workman? |
23405 | Do these allusions give any insight into his character? |
23405 | Do these qualities usually make a person attractive? |
23405 | Do you think I am ever caught napping at such an hour, and that I have not got lungs and a larynx as well as yourself? |
23405 | Do you think a person with Maggie''s nature would be likely to live a happy or an unhappy life? |
23405 | Do you think if a child is first taught that lying is unprofitable he will without further assistance learn that lying is wrong in itself? |
23405 | Do you think the author meant us to receive this impression? |
23405 | Do you think the schoolmistress is right? |
23405 | Do you think, as you read this stanza, that her objection was a valid one? |
23405 | Do you want to drown yourselves, or dash yourselves to pieces among these wheels?" |
23405 | Does Dr. Holmes mean to imply that it is natural for a little child to lie when he says that the spheres are the most convenient things in the world? |
23405 | Does Tom seem to you worthy of the intense affection she bestows upon him? |
23405 | Does it suggest the_ load_ and the_ weariness_ in the next line? |
23405 | Does this mean that lies are not always known to be lies to the person who tells them, or that they may deceive the person to whom they are told? |
23405 | Don Quixote planted himself before it and said,"Whither are you going, brothers? |
23405 | Energy, happiness-- does it not all come from them? |
23405 | F. Babcock_ 296"HOW MUCH DO WE OWE YOU?" |
23405 | FOR A''THAT AND A''THAT_ By_ ROBERT BURNS Is there, for honest poverty, Wha[149- 1] hangs his head, and a''that? |
23405 | For what have the Frenchers reared up their Quebec, if fighting is always to be done in the clearings?" |
23405 | From whence is this dejection, when one would think he had all he could wish for? |
23405 | HOW''S MY BOY? |
23405 | Had n''t she wanted to give him the money, and said how very sorry she was? |
23405 | He was no longer in the paddock behind the rickyard; where was he likely to be gone, and Yap with him? |
23405 | Hovered thy spirit o''er thy sorrowing son,-- Wretch even then, life''s journey just begun? |
23405 | How does Good- nature lead him to lie? |
23405 | How does Timidity teach a child to lie? |
23405 | How many feet are there in the first line; how many in the second; how many in the third; how many in the fourth? |
23405 | How many other feet are there containing the same number of syllables? |
23405 | How many other feet do you find containing the same number of syllables? |
23405 | How many syllables are there in the second foot in the first line? |
23405 | How many syllables in the first foot in the first line? |
23405 | How shall I tell the glories of that day so that you may be interested? |
23405 | How''s my boy-- my boy?" |
23405 | How''s my boy-- my boy?" |
23405 | How, pray, did he get these in mid- winter? |
23405 | I ai n''t partic''lar as a rule, and I do n''t take no blame for settling his hash; but I do n''t reckon him ornamental, now, do you?" |
23405 | I can see, ca n''t I? |
23405 | I doubt na, whyles, but thou may thieve; What then? |
23405 | I say, how''s my John?" |
23405 | I''m not their mother-- How''s my boy-- my boy? |
23405 | If she went down again to Tom now-- would he forgive her? |
23405 | If so, what better reasons are there for telling the truth than mere convenience and the inconvenience of lying? |
23405 | If there came a lion roaring at me, I think you''d fight him, would n''t you, Tom?" |
23405 | In the caverns where we lay, Through the surf and through the swell, The far- off sound of a silver bell? |
23405 | Is Death that Woman''s mate? |
23405 | Is Maggie proud? |
23405 | Is it marls( marbles) or cobnuts?" |
23405 | Is it some little gell you''ve picked up in the road, Kezia?" |
23405 | Is she highly sensitive? |
23405 | Is she impetuous? |
23405 | Is that a Death? |
23405 | Is there reason in my words, sagamore?" |
23405 | Is this mine own countree? |
23405 | Is this the hill? |
23405 | It was plain she was not to be interfered with, and at that rate, since I could in no way influence her course, what hope had I left of reaching land? |
23405 | Lost? |
23405 | Lucy had said,"Maggie, should n''t_ you_ like one?" |
23405 | Maggie paused in her whirling and said, staggering a little,"Oh no, it does n''t make me giddy, Luke; may I go into the mill with you?" |
23405 | North Inlet? |
23405 | Of the three children who are presented to us in these chapters, Tom, Maggie and little Lucy, which is the most attractive to you? |
23405 | Oh, looking from some heavenly hill, Or from the shade of saintly palms, Or silver reach of river calms, Do those large eyes behold me still? |
23405 | Oh, what_ shall_ I do?" |
23405 | On which syllable is the accent placed when there are three syllables in the foot? |
23405 | Safe in thy immortality, What change can reach the wealth I hold? |
23405 | Seek''st thou the plashy brink Of weedy lake, or marge of river wide, Or where the rocking billows rise and sink On the chafed ocean side? |
23405 | Shall I bring you a bit o''pudding when I''ve had mine, and a custard and things?" |
23405 | Should n''t you like to know about them, Luke?" |
23405 | So I come and take, and what do I do? |
23405 | The greatness of this influence, as it worked silently in men''s hearts, who can estimate? |
23405 | There was this here O''Brien, now-- he''s dead, ai n''t he? |
23405 | They raised loud shouts, crying,"Devils of men, where are you going to? |
23405 | This would have been the right kind of cat for me to keep, if I had kept any; for why should not a poet''s cat be winged as well as his horse? |
23405 | Useless? |
23405 | Was it for this I took the trouble to cure myself of drinking, to break with my friends, to become an example to the neighborhood? |
23405 | Was it moonlight so wondrously flashing? |
23405 | Was there a man dismay''d? |
23405 | Wha can fill a coward''s grave? |
23405 | Wha sae base as be a slave? |
23405 | Wha will be a traitor knave? |
23405 | What are some of the"polite lies"that help to make the cubes roll? |
23405 | What are you crying for, you little spooney?" |
23405 | What art thou weeping at, heart of butter- paste? |
23405 | What care I for the men, sailor? |
23405 | What cart is this? |
23405 | What chance can mar the pearl and gold Thy love hath left in trust with me? |
23405 | What do you understand by"against the peace and dignity of the universe?" |
23405 | What does Dr. Holmes mean when he says that the spheres are apt to roll into the wrong corner? |
23405 | What does the stainless ivory in the cubes indicate? |
23405 | What dost thou want, unsatisfied in the very heart of abundance? |
23405 | What fields, or waves, or mountains? |
23405 | What flags are those?" |
23405 | What have you got in it? |
23405 | What is a country without rabbits and partridges? |
23405 | What is man without those home affections which, like so many roots, fix him firmly in the earth and permit him to imbibe all the juices of life? |
23405 | What is the mainspring of Maggie''s character-- the motive for most of her actions? |
23405 | What is the meaning of the veins, streaks, and spots and the dark crimson flush in the spheres? |
23405 | What is the ocean doing?'' |
23405 | What love of thine own kind? |
23405 | What objects are the fountains Of thy happy strain? |
23405 | What shapes of sky or plain? |
23405 | What should you do, Tom?" |
23405 | What thou art we know not; What is most like thee? |
23405 | What use was anything if Tom did n''t love her? |
23405 | What was always uppermost in his mind? |
23405 | What would my islanders say when they heard their governor was going strolling about on the winds? |
23405 | What''s the use of talking?" |
23405 | What''ud father do without his little wench?" |
23405 | When can their glory fade? |
23405 | When did music come this way? |
23405 | Where are those lights so many and fair, That signal made but now?'' |
23405 | Where does the queen of the gypsies live?" |
23405 | Where''s your home?" |
23405 | Which causes the most lies, Timidity, Good- nature or Polite- behavior? |
23405 | Which cuts most deeply a substance upon which it is rubbed-- a rasp, a file, or a silken sleeve? |
23405 | Who has not felt this weakness in hours of trial, and who has not uttered, at least once, the mournful exclamation of Brutus? |
23405 | Who pursues or molests thee, thou soul of a tame mouse? |
23405 | Whose heart hath ne''er within him burned, As home his footsteps he hath turned From wandering on a foreign strand? |
23405 | Why do precisely these objects which we behold make a world? |
23405 | Why had not I, long before, reprimed and reloaded my only weapons? |
23405 | Why has man just these species of animals for his neighbors; as if nothing but a mouse could have filled this crevice? |
23405 | Why should I speak low, sailor?" |
23405 | Why should she be sorry? |
23405 | Will you come along home wi''me, and see my wife? |
23405 | Will you have white or red?" |
23405 | Without family life where would man learn to love, to associate, to deny himself? |
23405 | Would they not feel their children tread With clanging chains above their head? |
23405 | [ 30- 3] Does this line tell you anything about the direction in which they were sailing? |
23405 | [ 30- 4] Where was the ship when the sun stood"over the mast at noon"? |
23405 | [ 31- 6] Is not this an effective line? |
23405 | [ 34- 13] In what direction were they sailing now? |
23405 | [ 35- 17] How far northward had the ship returned? |
23405 | [ 39- 25]"Are those her ribs through which the Sun Did peer, as through a grate? |
23405 | [ 42- 31] Can you see any reason for the repetition in this line, and for the unusual length? |
23405 | [ Illustration: THE LITTLE GRAY CHURCH ON THE WINDY SHORE] Children dear, was it yesterday We heard the sweet bells over the bay? |
23405 | [ Illustration: THE NOTARY ENTERS THE CARRIAGE]"What is this I hear,"cried he,"that you are about to put to death one of my soldiers?" |
23405 | [ Illustration:"AH, YOU''RE FONDEST O''ME, AREN''T YOU?"] |
23405 | [ Illustration:"HOW MUCH DO WE OWE YOU?"] |
23405 | [ Illustration:"IS IT THE TIPSY- CAKE, THEN?"] |
23405 | _ First Voice_"''But why drives on that ship so fast, Without or wave or wind? |
23405 | _ Herbert N. Rudeen_ 188"OH, HE IS CRUEL"_ Herbert N. Rudeen_ 199"IS IT THE TIPSY CAKE, THEN?" |
23405 | _ Herbert N. Rudeen_ 224"AH, YOU''RE FONDEST O''ME, AREN''T YOU?" |
23405 | a big mill a little way this side o''Saint Ogg''s?" |
23405 | and Mrs. Tulliver, almost at the same moment, said,"Where''s your little sister?" |
23405 | and are there two? |
23405 | are you there?" |
23405 | demanded Hawkeye;"you saved a Huron[87- 8] from the death- shriek by that word; have you reason for what you do?" |
23405 | do you intend to pay me, after all?" |
23405 | do you want to go to her, my little lady?" |
23405 | exclaimed Mrs. Tulliver, sitting stout and helpless with the brushes on her lap,"what is to become of you if you''re so naughty? |
23405 | has n''t she been playing with you all this while?" |
23405 | he called out;"I say, stop the cart just for a minute, will you?" |
23405 | is that the game?" |
23405 | is this indeed The lighthouse top I see? |
23405 | is this the kirk? |
23405 | my pretty lady, are you come to stay with us? |
23405 | observed the neighbor to the countrywoman;"how can the poor unhappy woman pay you when he takes all?" |
23405 | quoth one,''Is this the man? |
23405 | remembering thee, Am I not richer than of old? |
23405 | said Sancho,"did I not tell your worship to mind what you were about, for they were only windmills? |
23405 | said Sancho;"do n''t you see that those are mills that stand in the river to grind corn?" |
23405 | said he, curling up his mustachios fiercely,"does the captain- general set this man of the pen to practice confusions upon me? |
23405 | said one of the millers;"art thou for carrying off the people who come to grind corn in these mills?" |
23405 | speak again, Thy soft response renewing-- What makes that ship drive on so fast? |
23405 | stammered he;"what son?" |
23405 | stammered he;"who is it that talks of wine? |
23405 | the bit with the jam run out?" |
23405 | the lop- eared one, and the spotted doe that Tom spent all his money to buy?" |
23405 | was it the night wind that rustled the leaves? |
23405 | what have you been a- doing? |
23405 | what ignorance of pain? |
23405 | what little gell''s this? |
23405 | when I learned that thou wast dead, Say, wast thou conscious of the tears I shed? |
3319 | ''And for thy drink''--(''What?'' |
3319 | ''But thee, Theocritus, wha matches?'' |
3319 | ''Then what may I eat?'' |
3319 | ''Who will open his door and gladly receive our Muses within his house, who is there that will not send them back again without a gift? |
3319 | : Eh? |
3319 | : How? |
3319 | : How? |
3319 | : Nay? |
3319 | : What? |
3319 | : What? |
3319 | : What? |
3319 | :_ Quoy?_? |
3319 | :_ Quoy?_? |
3319 | Ah, and who may tell? |
3319 | Ah, why did you not leave it in that commonplace but appropriate medium? |
3319 | Are not the Moliéristes a body who carry adoration to fanaticism? |
3319 | Are poisoned arrows fair against a bad poet? |
3319 | At Oxford you are forgiven; and the old rooms where you let the oysters burn( was not your founder, King Alfred, once guilty of similar negligence?) |
3319 | But about matter of this kind, and the unsealing of the fountains of tears, who can argue? |
3319 | But what matters this pedantry? |
3319 | But what or whose was the pastoral poem of''Thealma and Clearchus,''which thou didst set about printing in 1678, and gavest to the world in 1683? |
3319 | But what shall be said of a Professor like the egregious M. Fleury, who holds that Ronsard was despised at Court? |
3319 | Did you expect posterity to reverse the verdict of the satirists, and to do you justice? |
3319 | Do you drink when you are athirst? |
3319 | Doth any Pitcher dread the Well? |
3319 | From mortal Gratitude, decide, my Pope, Have Wits Immortal more to fear or hope? |
3319 | HERMES: Who bids for the Life Miserable, for extreme, complete, perfect, unredeemable perdition? |
3319 | HERMES: Whom shall we put first up to auction? |
3319 | Hadst_ thou_ THE SECRET? |
3319 | Hast thou not heard these sounds? |
3319 | How could this noisy man know thee-- and know thee he did, having argued with thee in Stafford-- and not love Isaak Walton? |
3319 | How else can we explain it, the dreary charge which feeble and envious tongues have brought against you, in England and at home? |
3319 | How much for this lot? |
3319 | How often, studying in thy book, have I hummed to myself that of Horace-- Laudis amore tumes? |
3319 | How saith Socrates? |
3319 | I wonder, sometimes, whether the consensus of criticism ever made you doubt for a moment whether, after all, you were not a false child of Apollo? |
3319 | In the House of Hades, Theocritus, doth there dwell aught that is fair, and can the low light on the fields of asphodel make thee forget thy Sicily? |
3319 | Is Jack as good as his master? |
3319 | Is not the movement the same, though the modern speaks a wilder recklessness? |
3319 | Is there any profound psychological truth to be gathered from consideration of the fact that humour has gone out with cruelty? |
3319 | Knowing Lydia and Kitty so intimately as you did, why did you make of them almost insignificant characters? |
3319 | May one put him through his paces? |
3319 | May we not almost welcome''Free Education''? |
3319 | Moreover, this Herodotus never speaks of Sophocles the Athenian, and why not? |
3319 | My Lord,( Do you remember how Leigh Hunt Enraged you once by writing_ My dear Byron_?) |
3319 | Nay, the very words I employ are of unknown sound to you; so how can you help us in the stress of the soul''s travailings? |
3319 | Need I add that the vulgarity and narrowness of the social circles you describe impair your popularity? |
3319 | Now thou speakest of John Chalkhill as''a friend of Edmund Spenser''s,''and how could this be? |
3319 | Now, wouldst thou credit it? |
3319 | One still laughs as heartily as ever with Dick Swiveller; but who can cry over Little Nell? |
3319 | POSITIVIST: In Man, with a large M. PURCHASER: Not in individual Man? |
3319 | PURCHASER: And, after this life, what have you to offer me? |
3319 | PURCHASER: What can you teach me? |
3319 | PURCHASER: What do you believe in? |
3319 | PURCHASER: What does he call himself? |
3319 | PURCHASER: What is your name? |
3319 | PURCHASER: What''s your pedigree, my Philosopher, and previous performances? |
3319 | Poetry herself deserts us; is it not said that Bacchus never forgives a renegade? |
3319 | Quis desiderio sit pudor aut modus Tam cari capitis? |
3319 | Samary, so exquisite a Nicole? |
3319 | So you wrote; and what said Franck, that recreant angler? |
3319 | The Learned thus, and who can quite reply, Reverse the Judgment, and Retort the Lie? |
3319 | The Pitchers we, whose Maker makes them ill, Shall He torment them if they chance to spill? |
3319 | The country and the town, nature and men, who knew them so well as you, or who ever so wisely made the best of those two worlds? |
3319 | Then, turning from the philosophers to the seekers after a sign, what change, Lucian, would you find in them and their ways? |
3319 | They say; what say they? |
3319 | To Scott, indeed, you owed the first impulse of your genius; but, once set in motion, what miracles could it not accomplish? |
3319 | To draw tears by gloating over a child''s death- bed, was it worthy of you? |
3319 | Was it the kind of work over which our hearts should melt? |
3319 | Was it thus, Father, that the heathen railed against thee? |
3319 | Was there a party at tennis when the king would not fain have had thee on his side, declaring that he ever won when Ronsard was his partner? |
3319 | Was your complacency tortured, as the complacency of true poets has occasionally been, by doubts? |
3319 | Were people simpler, or only less clear- sighted, as far as your pathos is concerned, a generation ago? |
3319 | What hadst_ thou_ to make in cities, and what could Ptolemies and Princes give thee better than the goat- milk cheese and the Ptelean wine? |
3319 | What love of fame, what lust of gold tempted thee away from the red cliffs, and grey olives, and wells of black water wreathed with maidenhair? |
3319 | What offers for the universal extinction of the species, and the collapse of the Conscious? |
3319 | What said M. de Balzac to M. Chapelain? |
3319 | What says the Précieuse about you in Boileau''s satire? |
3319 | What says your best successor, a lady who adds fresh lustre to a name that in fiction equals yours? |
3319 | What tears are''manly, Sir, manly,''as Fred Bayham has it; and of what lamentations ought we rather to be ashamed? |
3319 | What were Boursault and Le Boulanger, and Thomas Corneille and De Visé, what were they all compared to your enemy, Boileau? |
3319 | When such heroines are wooed by the nephews of Dukes, where are your Emmas and Elizabeths? |
3319 | Where are the plays, where the romances which Maquet and the rest wrote in their own strength? |
3319 | Where is taste? |
3319 | Who bids for a possible place in the Calendar of the Future? |
3319 | Who can praise them too highly-- who admire in them too much the humour, the scorn, the wisdom, the unsurpassed energy and courage? |
3319 | Who knows what he believes? |
3319 | Who suffered more than Moliére from cabals? |
3319 | _ Animis caelestibus tantaene irae_? |
3319 | _ Durum, sed levius fit patientia_? |
3319 | _ We_ can not shirk the questions''Where?'' |
3319 | and''How?'' |
3319 | are not strange to literary minds; does not even Hesiod tell us''potter hates potter, and poet hates poet''? |
3319 | has a Bill for extending the priceless boon of the vote to inmates of Pauper Lunatic Asylums? |
3319 | have they not reached thee, the voices and the lyres of Théophile Gautier and Alfred de Musset? |
3319 | were you here, I marvel, would you flutter O''er such a foe the tempest of your wings? |
3319 | where is truth? |
36111 | ''Was this life?'' 36111 Why are you so hated?" |
36111 | Why wait ye,he asks in that wonderful rhapsody on"Silence"(7)"for Heaven to open at the strike of the thunderbolt? |
36111 | ( 1886), which expounds the passage in Luke iii:10, 11:"And the people asked him, saying, What shall we do then? |
36111 | ( 30)"The Life of Tolstoy,"Later Years, p. 643 f. But in"What Then Must We Do?" |
36111 | ( also translated under the title"My Religion,"1884) and"What Then Must We Do?" |
36111 | ***** Altogether, did Tolstoy practice what he professed? |
36111 | ***** To what extent Tolstoy was a true Christian believer may best be gathered from his own writings,"What Do I Believe?" |
36111 | After raising the question, How did the Greeks contrive to dignify and ennoble their national existence? |
36111 | Again, in"Married"he answers the query, Shall women vote? |
36111 | And if ye are not willing to be fates, and inexorable, how could ye conquer with me someday? |
36111 | And if your hardness would not glance, and cut, and chip into pieces-- how could ye create with me some day? |
36111 | And is it not natural to seek that material among the largest literary apparitions of the age? |
36111 | And so the question arises, Whence shall the conscience of the ruler- man derive its distinctions between the Right and the Wrong? |
36111 | And the happiness of the spirit is this: to be anointed and consecrated by tears as a sacrificial animal;--knew ye that before?" |
36111 | And where in the meanwhile is the lost leader? |
36111 | Are ye not my brethren? |
36111 | But how to detect in the deepest recesses of the soul the echoes of universal life and give outward resonance to their faint reverberations? |
36111 | But in reality do we know more concerning Life than did our ancestors? |
36111 | But what is"beautiful"? |
36111 | By one''s own pain one''s own knowledge increaseth;--knew ye that before? |
36111 | For what compels an ambitious imagination to arrest itself at the goal of the superman? |
36111 | Has the dam burst apart and will they all be swallowed by the ocean? |
36111 | Have not civilizations risen and fallen according as they were shaped by this or that class of nations? |
36111 | He is gone to find a way out of the woods-- what can have become of him? |
36111 | His views on Art are plainly and forcibly expounded in the famous treatise on"What is Art?" |
36111 | If it be a heinous deed he is brooding, why does he pause in its execution? |
36111 | In the tumultuous agitation of his conscience, the crucial and fundamental questions, Why Do We Live? |
36111 | Is it a legitimate ambition of the race to mark time on the stand which it has reached and to entrench itself impregnably in its present mediocrity? |
36111 | May we not perchance steep our souls in light that flows from another source than science? |
36111 | Might he not sweeten his lot after the same prescription? |
36111 | One can hardly peruse it without asking: Was Strindberg insane? |
36111 | So if Truth is an alterable and shifting concept, must not morality likewise be variable? |
36111 | Sociologically the most important of these is a book on the problem of property, entitled,"What Then Must We Do?" |
36111 | The bell strikes twelve-- they wonder is it noon or night? |
36111 | The discipline of suffering,--tragical suffering,--know ye not that only this discipline has heretofore brought about every elevation of man?" |
36111 | Then questions, eager and calamitous, pass in whispers among them: Has the leader lost his way? |
36111 | Was spricht die tiefe Mitternacht? |
36111 | What saith the deep midnight? |
36111 | What, then, questions the persevering pursuer of the final verities, shall we do in order that we may press nearer to Truth? |
36111 | Why is there so little fate in your looks? |
36111 | Why is there so much disavowal and abnegation in your hearts? |
36111 | Why should it not run on beyond that first terminal? |
36111 | Why so hard? |
36111 | Why so soft, so unresisting, and yielding? |
36111 | Why so soft? |
36111 | Will he never come back? |
36111 | Yet all the gifts of fortune sank into insignificance before that vexing, unanswered Why? |
36111 | and How Should We Live? |
36111 | said once the charcoal unto the diamond, are we not near relations? |
35382 | Art thou he,they exclaim,"who hast so often sung to us the praises of our Beatrice? |
35382 | On veut savoir pourquoi je fais une_ demi chanson_? 35382 Was it treason?" |
35382 | Who taught thee,he says in another sonnet,--to make me love thee more The more I hear, and see just cause for hate? |
35382 | ***** And who was this Laura, the illustrious object of a passion which has filled the wide universe from side to side with her name and fame? |
35382 | ***** Will it be thought unfeminine or obtrusive, if I add yet a few words? |
35382 | And again, what can be more exquisitely tender, more beautiful in its fervent simplicity of expression, than the effusion which follows? |
35382 | And how have women repaid this gift of immortality? |
35382 | And since in this world some must command and some obey, what power is so legitimate as that derived from the influence of superior virtue and talent? |
35382 | And whether coldness, pride, or virtue, dignify A woman, so she is good, what does it signify? |
35382 | But is it not, as M. Ginguené remarks, equally certain that Tasso has pourtrayed himself as Olindo? |
35382 | Che fa tremar di caritate l''a''re? |
35382 | Chinava a terra il bel guardo gentile, E tacendo dicea, com''a me parve--"Chi m''allontana il mio fedele amico?" |
35382 | Deflourish''d mead, where is your heavenly hue? |
35382 | E che non puote Amor, che con catena il ciel unisce? |
35382 | E mena seco amor, sì che parlare Null''uom ne puote; ma ciascun sospira? |
35382 | Et puis comment oublier Sa beauté, son bien dire, Et son très doux regarder? |
35382 | FOOTNOTES:[ 12] Le Roi lui demande,"S''il a perdu raison?" |
35382 | Hath he not sent me wandering over the earth in search of repose? |
35382 | He left the scene of his happiness, and his regrets-- Are these the flowery banks? |
35382 | How far was it permitted, encouraged, repaid in secret? |
35382 | I would know whether she do sit or walk,-- How clothed, how waited on? |
35382 | If Love, ambitious, sought a match of birth, Whose veins bound richer blood than Lady Blanche? |
35382 | If her lips deign''d to sweeten my poor name? |
35382 | If in return for being made illustrious, she made her lover happy,--if for glory she gave a heart, was it not a rich equivalent? |
35382 | If sweetest thing thus failed thee with my death, What afterward of mortal should thy wish Have tempted? |
35382 | If zealous Love should go in search of virtue, Where should he find it purer than in Blanche? |
35382 | Is it not enough that we acknowledge her to have been Petrarch''s love-- as chaste as fair? |
35382 | Is this the goodly elm did us o''erspread, Whose tender rind, cut forth in curious flowers By that white hand, contains those flames of ours? |
35382 | Is this the murmuring spring, us music made? |
35382 | Or can proportion of the outward part Move such affection in the inward mind, That it can rob both sense, and reason blind? |
35382 | Or who with blame can justly her upbraid, For loving not; for who can love compel? |
35382 | Or why do not fair pictures like power show, In which oft- times we Nature see of Art Excell''d, in perfect limming every part? |
35382 | Passing one day by a portico, where several women were seated, one of them whispered, with a look of awe,--"Do you see that man? |
35382 | Remember how Bacchus avenged on the Thracian King,[81] the clusters torn from his sacred vines: wilt thou, who art greater far than he, do less? |
35382 | The forward violet thus did I chide: Sweet thief, whence didst thou steal thy sweet that smells, If not from my Love''s breath? |
35382 | Though her love was sought by princes, though with her dower she might have enriched an emperor,--what availed it? |
35382 | To this long tirade, Love with indignation replies:"Hearest thou the falsehood of this ungrateful man? |
35382 | Vuol che l''ami costei; ma duro freno Mi pone ancor d''aspro silenzio; or quale Avrò da lei, se non conosce il male O medecina, o refrigerio almeno? |
35382 | What have availed me all the high and precious gifts of Heaven, the talents, the genius which raised me above other men? |
35382 | What true lover ever thought of apologising for having given his time to celebrate the object of his love? |
35382 | What was her station, her birth, her lineage? |
35382 | Where dwells so excellent a beauty, can it be other than Paradise?" |
35382 | Where shines so fair a sun, can it be other than day? |
35382 | Whereof-- with whom-- how often did she talk? |
35382 | Who can describe her sweetness, her loveliness? |
35382 | Who would care for it that knows and feels Shakspeare? |
35382 | Who would listen to it that does not, if there be such? |
35382 | Wilt thou suffer the loveliest and dearest of thy possessions to be audaciously ravished, and yet bear it in silence? |
35382 | With what pastime, time''s journey she beguiled? |
35382 | Yet why these vain thoughts? |
35382 | [ 27] hath he not deprived me of peace, and of that sleep which no herbs nor chaunted spells have power to restore? |
35382 | [ 34] Petrarch asks her whether it was"pain to die?" |
35382 | [ 6] If lusty Love should go in quest of beauty, Where should he find it fairer than in Blanche? |
35382 | ah, why didst thou not come into this world a little sooner?--or I a little later? |
35382 | are you so soon weary of loving me?" |
35382 | canst thou look on without grief or indignation, to see my gentle lady bow her fair neck to the yoke of another?" |
35382 | for those whom Love and Fame have joined together, who shall henceforth sunder? |
35382 | hath he not driven me from city to city, and through forests, and woods, and wild solitudes? |
35382 | how forego Thy sweet converse and love so dearly joined, To live again in these wild woods forlorn? |
35382 | is this the mead Where she was wo nt to pass the pleasant hours? |
35382 | now tell me, why should fair be proud? |
35382 | or created his delightful Eve? |
35382 | sighed she, or smiled? |
35382 | think you that satisfies_ my_ care? |
35382 | what was it_ then_ in the eyes of her whom he adored? |
35382 | wherefore have I eyes?" |
35382 | wilt thou go? |
13028 | ''How do you mean an old story?'' 13028 ''What were your feelings there?'' |
13028 | A, John, by me thou setts noe store, And that''s a farley[21] thinge; How offt send I my men before, And tarry myselfe behinde? |
13028 | Ah, mother, how do you do? |
13028 | Am I to wear city clothes? |
13028 | And Mrs. Perry and the children, how are they? 13028 And as what are you here, Countess?" |
13028 | And of what use is it all to me? |
13028 | And what is that? |
13028 | And what will I say to my mother dear, Gin she chance to say, Willie, whar''s John? |
13028 | And what will I say to my sister dear, Gin she chance to say, Willie, whar''s John? |
13028 | And what wul ye doe wi''your towers and your ha'', Edward, Edward, And what wul ye doe wi''your towers and your ha'', That were sae fair to see O? |
13028 | And what wul ye leive to your ain mither dear, Edward, Edward, And what will ye leive to your ain mither dear? 13028 And what wul ye leive to your bairns and your wife, Edward, Edward, And what wul ye leive to your bairns and your wife, When ye gang over the sea O?" |
13028 | And whatten penance wul ye drie, for that, Edward, Edward, And whatten penance wul ye drie, for that? 13028 And which way are they gone?" |
13028 | And you do not despair at times? |
13028 | Apropos, you will be at Neptune''s_ fête champétre_ to- morrow,_ n''est ce pas?_ We shall then finally determine about abandoning the assemblies. 13028 Are n''t you too lonely here?" |
13028 | Are they? 13028 Are ye sleeping, Margret,"he says,"Or are ye waking, presentlie? |
13028 | Are you still awake? |
13028 | Black Madge is sae carefu''--"What''s that to me?" |
13028 | But I have played three acts only? |
13028 | But what will I say to her you loe[100] dear, Gin she cry, Why tarries my John? |
13028 | But what will I say to my father dear, Gin he chance to say, Willie, whar''s John? |
13028 | But why should you be sorry, sir? 13028 But you must call me''uncle''when we''re there?" |
13028 | Could a_ man_ have done that? 13028 Did the Prince sleep well?" |
13028 | Do n''t you think the house has a good motto written on its forehead? |
13028 | Do you believe,asked the stranger, in a surprised tone,"that even an indirect participation will be punished? |
13028 | Do you know who that was? |
13028 | Do you think that beasts are devoid of passions? |
13028 | Does he cry? |
13028 | Have you slept well? |
13028 | How about the pontoniers? |
13028 | How do I know? 13028 How happened it you were not killed in the ravine at Moskova?" |
13028 | How is it possible,she continued,"to tame those animals so as to be certain that he can trust them?" |
13028 | How old is Sister Theresa? |
13028 | How will it be when she is hungry? |
13028 | I ask you, was that natural? 13028 I saw the Emperor,"he resumed,"standing by the bridge, motionless, not feeling the cold-- was that human? |
13028 | I suppose you mean''Camilla''? |
13028 | Is he here too? |
13028 | Is that all? |
13028 | Is there any room at your head, Sanders? 13028 Is there never a[ bird] in a''this wood That will tell what I can say; That will go to Cockleys Well, Tell my mither to fetch me away?" |
13028 | It''s whether will ye be a rank robber''s wife, Or will ye die by my wee pen- knife? |
13028 | It''s whether will ye be a rank robber''s wife, Or will ye die by my wee pen- knife? |
13028 | Madame la duchesse,he said, in a voice shaken by emotion, to the Sister, who bowed her head,"does your companion understand French?" |
13028 | Madame? |
13028 | May I ask your Ladyship''s name? |
13028 | May I come in? |
13028 | No, sure; was it? 13028 No,"said one of the women:"what is our life in comparison with that of a priest?" |
13028 | Now, is there any man among you who will stand up and declare to me that all that was human? 13028 Now, tell me how they knew that Napoleon had a pact with God? |
13028 | Of what use is it all to me? |
13028 | Of what use is it all to me? |
13028 | Oh, good Mr. Perry, how is he, sir? |
13028 | Perhaps Sister Theresa has some interests in France; she might be glad to receive some news, or ask some questions? |
13028 | Really, Ganymede, you are very severe this evening,said Venus with a smile;"but tell me, have you heard anything of Diana?" |
13028 | Shall you not follow us? |
13028 | Thank you; but will not your horse want rest? |
13028 | Then, in spite of your good health, you must be subject to that miserable thing, a cold in the head? |
13028 | They are not coming this way, are they? 13028 They''re all just like the rest of us, and who knows but--"She was vexed at the Queen:"Why wo n''t she listen patiently when her child cries? |
13028 | Though we go out so seldom, our errands are known, our steps are watched--"What has happened? |
13028 | Was that a human man? 13028 What are you talking of? |
13028 | What became o''your bloodhounds, Lord Randal, my son? 13028 What can I say to you, dear Antoinette? |
13028 | What do you think of my Goguelat? |
13028 | What gat ye to your dinner, Lord Randal, my son? 13028 What is it?" |
13028 | What is the matter, sir? 13028 What is the matter,_ citoyenne_?" |
13028 | What man art thou( asked the Prophet), Who of all the world material Art the fairest I have e''er seen In my life, bright and immortal? |
13028 | What news, what news? |
13028 | What''s the row? |
13028 | What''s thy brother''s name? 13028 Where are you going?" |
13028 | Where gat ye your dinner, Lord Randal, my son? 13028 Where have you put--------?" |
13028 | Who is that? |
13028 | Who knows when I''ll have another chance? 13028 Who''ll fix the prize, and whither we shall go?" |
13028 | Why distrust God, my sisters? |
13028 | Why dois your brand sae drap wi bluid, Edward, Edward, Why dois your brand sae drap wi bluid, And why sae sad gang yee O? |
13028 | Why so? |
13028 | Why,( saith he) where did your great- grandfather and grandfather and father die? |
13028 | Wildenort? 13028 Would you like to go to the farm with me and be my servant?" |
13028 | You do not happen to be in love with some cruel or unhappy princess? |
13028 | You horrid, naughty man, how can you talk so? |
13028 | You know this gentleman? |
13028 | You wo n''t have such bad thoughts again? |
13028 | You''ll stay with us, wo n''t you? |
13028 | ''Pon my soul, I''ve a great mind-- Do you think,_ ma belle tante_, that anything might be done in that quarter?" |
13028 | ''What have you done with my children, the soldiers?'' |
13028 | ''_] A CONTEST OF WILLS From''The Fourchambaults''_ Madame Fourchambault_--Why do you follow me? |
13028 | ***** If our spirits live, how does Space suffice for all during all the ages? |
13028 | ***** When thou art annoyed at some one''s impudence, straightway ask thyself,"Is it possible that there should be no impudent men in the world?" |
13028 | --"What time is it?" |
13028 | --and, would you believe it? |
13028 | A WELL- MATCHED SISTER AND BROTHER From''Northanger Abbey''"My dearest Catherine, have you settled what to wear on your head to- night? |
13028 | A friend of his said to him,"My lord, why do you bathe twice a day?" |
13028 | A neat one, is it not? |
13028 | AVICEBRON( 1028-? |
13028 | Alacke, how may this be? |
13028 | Am I not obliged to be sure of the ground before I take a step? |
13028 | And I will also add, who can say that what causes durable emotion is unorthodox? |
13028 | And again she writes:"What shall_ I_ do with your''strong, manly, vigorous sketches, full of variety and glow''? |
13028 | And are not the pleasures of the intellect greater than the pleasures of the affections? |
13028 | And assuredly the secret man heareth many confessions; for who will open himself to a blab or a babbler? |
13028 | And do ye think scorn o''your Johnny, And grieve to be married at a''?" |
13028 | And especially when in the Universe all things, though separate and divided, yet work together in unity? |
13028 | And how much do you think he did, Miss Morland?" |
13028 | And how with her own heart? |
13028 | And if I do, who knows but what everything may have become strange to me? |
13028 | And is your father willing to let them use you that way?" |
13028 | And now in conclusion, what can one say about this great writer that will not fall far short of his deserts? |
13028 | And now what say you to going to Edgar''s Buildings with me, and looking at my new hat? |
13028 | And sayes,"Dost thou know Child Maurice head, If that thou dost it see? |
13028 | And where''s the city from all vice so free, But may be termed the worst of all the three? |
13028 | And wherefore did you sae? |
13028 | And who hath said to thee that the gods will not_ strengthen_ thy will? |
13028 | And, not indeed in these words, yet to this purpose, spake I much unto thee:--"And thou, O Lord, how long? |
13028 | Anyhow the modern system fails, for where are the amusing books from voracious students and habitual writers? |
13028 | Are not magnanimity, broad- mindedness, sincerity, equanimity, and a reverent spirit more"delightful"? |
13028 | Are not the pleasures of the affections greater than the pleasures of the senses? |
13028 | Are we really on such terms? |
13028 | Are we the richer by one poor invention, by reason of all the learning that hath been these many hundred years? |
13028 | Are you fond of an open carriage, Miss Morland?" |
13028 | Are you not ashamed of yourself? |
13028 | Art thou instinctive drawn to scenes of horror? |
13028 | As Sir Robert Walpole was against all committees of inquiry on the simple ground,"If they once begin that sort of thing, who knows who will be safe?" |
13028 | As we had been very merry, I repeated the following extempore satirical verses:--_ What can one do with a drunken sot like you? |
13028 | Before_ him_, did ever man recover an empire by showing his hat? |
13028 | Being so unworthy as we are, feeling what we feel, abased as we are abased, who shall say that those are beneath us? |
13028 | Besides,--to prove he was the child of God, and made to be the father of soldiers,--was he ever known to be lieutenant or captain? |
13028 | Blinded by dust? |
13028 | Boys are improved; but some in our own day have asked,"Mamma, I say, what did God make the world of?" |
13028 | But I ask: How did she continue to live-- she who was saved from being stoned to death; she who was pardoned-- that is, condemned to live? |
13028 | But if I will to have you pale and faded,--if I can not be happy unless you are with me? |
13028 | But is not the word"delightful"in this sense misleading? |
13028 | But is this a vein only of delight, and not of discovery? |
13028 | But it will be said, What has government by discussion to do with these things? |
13028 | But perhaps the desires of the body still torment thee? |
13028 | But perhaps thou art troubled concerning the portion decreed to thee in the Universe? |
13028 | But perhaps what men call Fame allures thee? |
13028 | But shall I make this garland to be put upon a wrong head? |
13028 | But suppose he must live in a palace? |
13028 | But tell me what was the end of this friendship between two beings so formed to understand each other?" |
13028 | But thou thy freedom didst recall, That it thou might elsewhere inthrall; And then how could I but disdain A captive''s captive to remain? |
13028 | But what did this awful curse prove to be? |
13028 | But what is literature? |
13028 | But what is this"little knowledge"which is supposed to be so dangerous? |
13028 | But what revelation had this monk about Aesop''s deformity? |
13028 | But what value could there be in the words, looks, gestures of a love that must be hidden from the eyes of a lynx, the claws of a tiger? |
13028 | But what was the fate of this archetype? |
13028 | But where could the first ages find Romans or a conqueror? |
13028 | But why do I in a conference of pleasure enter into these great matters, in sort that pretending to know much, I should forget what is seasonable? |
13028 | But why should that literature be our own? |
13028 | But will it answer? |
13028 | But yet the spirit of Job was in a better tune:"Shall we,"saith he,"take good at God''s hands, and not be content to take evil also?" |
13028 | But you have wounded me to the heart, Adrien, and just when I had a surprise for you--_ Fourchambault_--What is your surprise? |
13028 | But you''ve probably read Heine? |
13028 | But-- thou sayest-- are not death, dishonor, pain, really evils? |
13028 | Can I speak plainer? |
13028 | Can it prevent thy Will from being, in short, all that becomes a man? |
13028 | Can one-- I mean it in its best sense-- always be outside of one''s self?" |
13028 | Can they be cleaned and read? |
13028 | Canonchet, the chief sachem of the Narragansetts, was the son of Miantonomoh; and could he forget his father''s wrongs? |
13028 | Come in, Monsieur Vatel: you are getting up a big dinner for to- morrow? |
13028 | Could they go out? |
13028 | Could they see friends? |
13028 | Did she offer her love as a homage to God? |
13028 | Did she return to her home? |
13028 | Did the love triumph over the vows she had made to Him? |
13028 | Did you ever hear anything so stupid?" |
13028 | Did you need an order? |
13028 | Did you not promise to sacrifice all to the least of my commands? |
13028 | Did you speak to me?" |
13028 | Do but look at my horse: did you ever see an animal so made for speed in your life?" |
13028 | Do human spirits wax and wane like moons? |
13028 | Do n''t you know that these gentlemen owe you too much to refuse you anything? |
13028 | Do the children grow? |
13028 | Do you believe there is a happier man in the world than I? |
13028 | Do you know that poor Déodat''s death is a serious mishap? |
13028 | Do you know, she says she does not want to learn either music or drawing?" |
13028 | Do you like them best dark or fair?" |
13028 | Do you see the pines growing on the hill over yonder? |
13028 | Do you still remember how you refused to rob it of its mother? |
13028 | Do you understand?" |
13028 | Does he still live?" |
13028 | Does your Majesty wish me to have them brought here?" |
13028 | Doth not this suffice,--that thou hast done what conforms to thy true nature? |
13028 | Doth power in measured verses dwell, All thy vagaries wild to tell? |
13028 | Doth the Piety which we cherish in reality increase the sacred orderliness within our actions? |
13028 | Down then cam the auld Queen, Goud[79] tassels tying her hair:"O Marie, where''s the bonny wee babe That I heard greet[80] sae sair?" |
13028 | For how within thyself can a certain system exist and yet the entire Universe be chaos? |
13028 | For thou sayest,"What can be more delightful than these things?" |
13028 | For what prospect had he of success? |
13028 | For whom hast thou made the Mother- kine, the produce of joy? |
13028 | French? |
13028 | German? |
13028 | Great orators are very well; but as I said, how is the revenue? |
13028 | Had she so truly shared and comprehended his faithful and eager love that she now lay exhausted and dying in her cell? |
13028 | Hansei called out:"Is there no one at home?" |
13028 | Has he been dead a long while?" |
13028 | Has it any of them? |
13028 | Has miscellaneous reading all the dreadful consequences which Mr. Harrison depicts? |
13028 | Has one who is not wholly without sin a right to offer precepts and reflections to others? |
13028 | Have n''t I been the happiest of wives? |
13028 | He sayes,"How now, how now, Child Maurice? |
13028 | He took out his watch:--"How long do you think we have been running in from Tetbury, Miss Morland?" |
13028 | Hear what a douce and aged attorney says of your peculiarly promising barrister:--"Sharp? |
13028 | Hierusalem, where God his throne hath set, Shall any hour absent thee from my mind? |
13028 | How are they, sir?" |
13028 | How can you? |
13028 | How did she live on? |
13028 | How did she stand with the world? |
13028 | How is it possible that the delights of those lands should ever be erased from the heart? |
13028 | How is it possible to forget the delicious melons and grapes of that pleasant region? |
13028 | How many things are there which we imagine not? |
13028 | How should you know, sweet soul, to whom life is happy and goodness easy? |
13028 | How then could a[ young] man, ambitious of empire, set himself down contentedly in so insignificant a place? |
13028 | How then wilt thou be able to have within thee not a mere well that may fail thee, but a fountain that shall never cease to flow? |
13028 | How was it yesterday-- was it only yesterday when you saw the sun go down? |
13028 | I hope that you are not, for it distresses one to be loved by those--_ Clorinde_--Whom one does not love? |
13028 | I sent up these sorrowful words:"How long? |
13028 | I want them to choose--_ Baroness_--Monsieur Maréchal? |
13028 | If it be not about us, where can it be found?" |
13028 | If one should stand beside a limpid stream and cease not to revile it, would the spring stop pouring forth its refreshing waters? |
13028 | If the heart of a poet must be given to a musician, must not poetry and love be listeners ere the great musical works of art are understood? |
13028 | If then it is the former, why should one wish to tarry in a hap- hazard disordered mass? |
13028 | If they are not, why pray to them at all? |
13028 | If you had n''t given me the money, how could we have bought the farm? |
13028 | In case of failure was he not certain to lose his station and his military future, besides missing his aim? |
13028 | Indeed, every conclusion reached seems tentative; for where is the man to be found who does not change his conclusions? |
13028 | Irma, who was somewhat annoyed by her questions, said:--"I wished to ask you something-- Can you write?" |
13028 | Is it my fault that you do n''t understand business? |
13028 | Is it not a picture of terrestrial sublimity? |
13028 | Is it not knowledge that doth alone clear the mind of all perturbation? |
13028 | Is it not the same with me? |
13028 | Is not knowledge a true and only natural pleasure, whereof there is no satiety? |
13028 | Is not the error really thine own in not foreseeing that such an one would do as he did? |
13028 | Is purity merely imaginary? |
13028 | Is that a"misfortune,"in all cases, which does not defeat the purpose of man''s nature? |
13028 | Is that sin? |
13028 | Is there any here will venture To bewail our dead Dundee? |
13028 | Is there any room at your feet? |
13028 | Is this right? |
13028 | Is truth ever barren? |
13028 | Isna she very weel aff To be woo''d and married at a''? |
13028 | It will be said, What is the use of this? |
13028 | Italian? |
13028 | Julia wavered; but was he only trying to soothe and pacify her, and make her overlook the previous affront? |
13028 | Look at this man, saying to himself,"Can I triumph over God in that heart?" |
13028 | Look-- standing on the Calton Hill, behold yon blue range of mountains to the west-- cannot you name each pinnacle from its form? |
13028 | Love seldom reaches upward to solemnity; but love in the bosom of God,--is there nothing solemn there? |
13028 | Mademoiselle,--for you are an honest girl, are you not? |
13028 | May I ask who sent it?" |
13028 | May it not be a love of adventure, that genteel yet vulgar desire to undertake what is unusual or fraught with peril? |
13028 | Money? |
13028 | Money? |
13028 | Monsieur Maréchal? |
13028 | Moreover, wherein is it wicked or surprising that the ignorant man should act ignorantly? |
13028 | Must thou then have a reward, as though the eyes demanded pay for seeing or the feet for walking? |
13028 | Now, is not a certain dullness their most visible characteristic? |
13028 | O where hae ye been, my handsome young man? |
13028 | OF TRUTH From the''Essays''What is Truth? |
13028 | One variant has a verse to elaborate this:--"Where gat she those eels, Lord Randal, my son? |
13028 | Or any room at your twa sides? |
13028 | Or is it a morbid desire to wander through the world after having died, as it were? |
13028 | Or is it that in thee we trace, With all thy varied wanton grace, An emblem, viewed with kindred eye Of tricky, restless infancy? |
13028 | Ours is the wide world, Heaven on heaven; What have we done, Lord, Worthy this? |
13028 | Say, dost thou seek a lover, or any other thing? |
13028 | Says,"Will ye be a rank robber''s wife, Or will ye die by my wee pen- knife?" |
13028 | Shall I never be above all things else in your heart? |
13028 | Shall I tell about Champ- Aubert, where we used up all the cartridges and spitted the enemy on our bayonets?" |
13028 | Shall Truth and Justice and Equanimity suffer abatement in thee until all are extinguished in death? |
13028 | Shall he not as well discern the riches of nature''s warehouse, as the benefit of her shop? |
13028 | Shall he not be able thereby to produce worthy effects, and to endow the life of man with infinite commodities? |
13028 | Shall it be now?" |
13028 | Should he kill it with a shot from his musket? |
13028 | Should he use force or artifice? |
13028 | So nothing in the world-- bitter repentance or agonies of suffering, or vows of sanctity for all time to come-- may obliterate the past? |
13028 | Suddenly he interrupted himself and said:--"In the inns you''ll be my niece, wo n''t you?" |
13028 | Suppose he missed his aim? |
13028 | Suppose he were to wake it? |
13028 | Tell me, do you think I do not love you, that you should look upon me as your enemy? |
13028 | That his lifelong ambition was to reconstruct methods of thought, and guide intellect in the way of work serviceable to comfort and happiness? |
13028 | That your dead husband married his mother''s companion? |
13028 | The king sits in Dumferling toune, Drinking the blude- reid wine:"O whar will I get guid sailor, To sail this ship of mine?" |
13028 | The magic power to charm us thus? |
13028 | The one of them said to his mate,"Where shall we our breakfast take?" |
13028 | The poet says of his native city,"Dear city of Cecrops"; and shall I not say of the Universe,"Beloved City of God"? |
13028 | The soldier ordered to form the line-- do you think he was guilty?" |
13028 | The two culprits sat down a little confused, and their soup was brought them in two plates, which had been kept hot; but can you guess where? |
13028 | Then said the swallow,"Dearest, liv''st thou still? |
13028 | There is an argument from design in the subject: if the book was not meant for that purpose, for what purpose was it meant? |
13028 | There were twa brethren in the north, They went to the school thegither; The one unto the other said,"Will you try a warsle[99] afore?" |
13028 | Therefore, why should I be angry with a man for loving himself better than me? |
13028 | Thorpe?" |
13028 | Thou seest in thine, men, deeds, Clear, moving, full of speech and order; then Why may not all this world be but a dream Of God''s? |
13028 | Throughout Latin literature, this is the perpetual puzzle:--Why are we free and they slaves, we praetors and they barbers? |
13028 | To these Thy true saints hath she given the Realm through the Good Mind? |
13028 | To- morrow and to- morrow? |
13028 | Was his mistress worn out by the emotions which had wellnigh broken down his own vigorous heart? |
13028 | Was it a crocodile? |
13028 | Was it a lion? |
13028 | Was it a tiger? |
13028 | Was it hers, or that of the man overhead? |
13028 | Was it not the eternal silence, the deep peace, the near presence of the infinite? |
13028 | Was it only a day since she had passed through such terrors? |
13028 | Was it possible that it was so near, and that to- morrow we could say,"the work is accomplished"? |
13028 | Was it sea- grass that had gathered there? |
13028 | Was she lying alive at the bottom of the lake? |
13028 | Was that natural, d''ye think? |
13028 | Was this singular method of communication heard and understood? |
13028 | We plant white and red roses in the same bed, but who puts the''Messiah''and the''Henriade''on the same shelf? |
13028 | We were strictly forbidden to ask,"Have we far to go?" |
13028 | Well, how does the earth contain the bodies of those who have been buried therein during all the ages? |
13028 | What about it? |
13028 | What am I to believe? |
13028 | What are you? |
13028 | What became''o''your bloodhounds, my handsome young man?" |
13028 | What but perdition will it be to most? |
13028 | What can be done with one foolish as a she- ass?_ Before this, whatever had come into my head, good or bad, I had always committed it to writing. |
13028 | What can it be? |
13028 | What can it be? |
13028 | What can they do in heaven, A state of spiritual means and ends? |
13028 | What charm is in this world- scene to such minds? |
13028 | What could be more tragic? |
13028 | What could it have been? |
13028 | What do you mean?" |
13028 | What do you think of it? |
13028 | What do you think of my gig, Miss Morland? |
13028 | What espionage of despotism comes to your door so effectually as the eye of the man who lives at your door? |
13028 | What fault can you find with him, except his title? |
13028 | What gat ye to your dinner, my handsome young man?" |
13028 | What have these people to do with an enjoying English gentleman? |
13028 | What is it then to have or have no wife, But single thraldom, or a double strife? |
13028 | What is it you desire of me?" |
13028 | What is it"little"in relation to? |
13028 | What is it? |
13028 | What is the history of their speculative mind? |
13028 | What law is so cruel as the law of doing what he does? |
13028 | What matters what thy prescribed time hath been, five years or three? |
13028 | What more dost thou wish than to do good to man? |
13028 | What prevents thee from doing likewise? |
13028 | What spirit guides thee here? |
13028 | What then could be better for thee? |
13028 | What words there met her eye? |
13028 | What would you have? |
13028 | What yoke is so galling as the necessity of being like him? |
13028 | Whence arises this sudden longing? |
13028 | Where gat she those eels, my handsome young man?" |
13028 | Where gat ye your dinner, my handsome young man?" |
13028 | Where hae ye been, Lord Randal, my son? |
13028 | Wherein had they really more than those who were cut off untimely in their bloom? |
13028 | Which of you two is the plagiarist?" |
13028 | Who can tell the heavy hours of woman? |
13028 | Who could believe now that air or water was the principle, the pervading substance, the eternal material of all things? |
13028 | Who could change her? |
13028 | Who established that whereby the moon waxes, and whereby she wanes, save Thee? |
13028 | Who gave the recurring sun and stars their undeviating way? |
13028 | Who is safe from malice? |
13028 | Who made him beloved? |
13028 | Who made the waters and the plants? |
13028 | Who owns this mansion? |
13028 | Who spread the Auroras, the noontides and midnight, monitors to discerning man, duty''s true guides? |
13028 | Who to the wind has yoked on the storm- clouds the swift and fleetest two? |
13028 | Who would not smile at the astronomers? |
13028 | Who, as thus skillful, hath made sleep and the zest of waking hours? |
13028 | Who, through his guiding wisdom, hath made the son revering the father? |
13028 | Why choose the least capable for orator? |
13028 | Why did the Forsters ever let her go out of their sight? |
13028 | Why does he make it any business of his to wonder at what I do at my taking my family to one part of the coast or another? |
13028 | Why gazest thou upon me, with eyes so large and wide, And wherefore doth the pitcher lie broken by thy side?" |
13028 | Why is it, then, that Bacon''s is the foremost name in the history of English, and perhaps, as many insist, of all modern thought? |
13028 | Why not now? |
13028 | Why should I be concerned except to know how soon I may cease to be? |
13028 | Why should I be disquieted concerning what I do, since whatever I may do, the elements of which I am composed will at last, at last be scattered? |
13028 | Why then fear or dream About the future? |
13028 | Why then fear the death of all these-- the death of thyself? |
13028 | Why then shouldst thou call_ anything_ that befalls thee a misfortune, and not the rather a blessing? |
13028 | Why will we live and not be glorious? |
13028 | Will not the old prejudice be too strong?" |
13028 | Will you now think me worthy to claim that promise, if I tell you what I have done for your sake? |
13028 | Wilt thou say that the removal of all fear and of all desire is within thine own power? |
13028 | With the wickedness of men? |
13028 | With what indeed art thou disquieted? |
13028 | Wo n''t you come with us? |
13028 | Woe is me; and can it then be, That poverty parts sic company? |
13028 | Would anybody believe me, if I should verify this upon the knowledge that is now in use? |
13028 | Would common soldiers have been capable of such wickedness? |
13028 | Would you believe it? |
13028 | Ye highlands, and ye Lowlands, Oh where have you been? |
13028 | Yet since with sorrow here we live opprest, what life is best? |
13028 | Yet where and what shall it be? |
13028 | You like to be petted, do n''t you? |
13028 | You may say to the man, Why did you not struggle? |
13028 | You mean Victor Chauvet, Monsieur Bernard''s clerk? |
13028 | You will have to visit me in prison with a basket of provisions; you will not refuse to visit me in prison? |
13028 | You will make no concessions, eh, my fine gentleman? |
13028 | You, who have never been hungry, how should you understand the price that is asked for a mouthful of bread? |
13028 | You_ will_ undertake it, I hope?" |
13028 | [ Footnote 59: That there(?).] |
13028 | [ Illustration] THE CAVALIERS From''Thomas Babington Macaulay''What historian has ever estimated the Cavalier character? |
13028 | [_ An owl is heard screaming near him._][_ Starting._] What sound is that? |
13028 | _ Antoinette_--Don''t you think you''ll find it dull after a time, Gaston? |
13028 | _ Antoinette_--Why not, Gaston? |
13028 | _ Baroness_--And why do you wait before presenting him? |
13028 | _ Baroness_--Because they meet in my parlor? |
13028 | _ Baroness_--Do you really think so, Marquis? |
13028 | _ Baroness_--Faith, you do so much to please Monsieur Maréchal--_ Marquis_--That it seems as if I must have injured him? |
13028 | _ Baroness_--Have you finished, dear diviner? |
13028 | _ Baroness_--I have not much influence--_ Marquis_--Is that modesty, or the exordium of a refusal? |
13028 | _ Baroness_--Then you believe them? |
13028 | _ Baroness_--What do you know about it? |
13028 | _ Baroness_--Where from? |
13028 | _ Baroness_--Who says I want to? |
13028 | _ Baroness_--Why? |
13028 | _ Clorinde_--Ordered you? |
13028 | _ Célie_--God, do you say? |
13028 | _ Festus_--But pray for whom? |
13028 | _ Fourchambault_--How? |
13028 | _ Fourchambault_--I or you? |
13028 | _ Fourchambault_--I? |
13028 | _ Fourchambault_--What fault can you find with this young man? |
13028 | _ Fourchambault_--What? |
13028 | _ Fourchambault_--You are still harping on that? |
13028 | _ Gaston_--To- day? |
13028 | _ Gaston_--What then? |
13028 | _ Gaston_--Why the devil do n''t you call me Gaston? |
13028 | _ Gaston_[_ rising and leaning against the mantelpiece_]--Perhaps you want me to fight? |
13028 | _ Madame Fourchambault_--Are you going to portion Blanche? |
13028 | _ Madame Fourchambault_--The situation? |
13028 | _ Madame Fourchambault_--What does that matter? |
13028 | _ Madame Fourchambault_--Would you have to pay for it? |
13028 | _ Madame Fourchambault_--You? |
13028 | _ Marquis_--His name? |
13028 | _ Marquis_--I hope you do n''t believe this silly story? |
13028 | _ Marquis_--Maréchal shall have the oration? |
13028 | _ Marquis_--What if I tell you that I have found such another? |
13028 | _ Poirier_--And I was about to ask for it, my good friend; but as one has eight days to replace a servant--_ Vatel_--A servant, Monsieur? |
13028 | _ Poirier_--But seriously, do n''t you think that the idle life you lead may jeopardize the happiness of a young household? |
13028 | _ Poirier_--Have you the menu with you? |
13028 | _ Poirier_--I am master-- do you hear? |
13028 | _ Poirier_--What do you intend to do? |
13028 | _ Poirier_--Who is the master here, donkey? |
13028 | _ Poirier_--You must have read that, Verdelet? |
13028 | _ The Porter_--Monsieur has sent for me? |
13028 | _ The Porter_--The apartment of Monsieur le Marquis? |
13028 | _ The Porter_--The sign? |
13028 | _ Vatel_--What, Monsieur? |
13028 | _ Where you are, how is it possible for our thoughts to wander to another_? |
13028 | _ la belle Diane_? |
13028 | a blank; what their literature? |
13028 | a wild- wood life and drear? |
13028 | and does that defeat man''s nature which his_ Will_ can accept? |
13028 | cried the Queen,"and what has happened to me? |
13028 | d----,''said I,''I am your man; what do you ask?'' |
13028 | does the night- bird greet me on my way? |
13028 | he cried, furiously,"do you want to cut off our heads? |
13028 | how long, Lord, wilt thou be angry-- forever? |
13028 | how long? |
13028 | is the inspirer of the good thoughts within our souls? |
13028 | is there one left that I have not encountered_? |
13028 | my dear host,"said Genestas,"have n''t I often pretended to sleep, that I might listen to my troopers round a bivouac? |
13028 | of contentment, and not of benefit? |
13028 | or English? |
13028 | quo''the carline,"and look ye that way? |
13028 | said Flora, in evident confusion:"how should I know? |
13028 | said he, giving her a hearty shake of the hand;"where did you get that quiz of a hat? |
13028 | said the general, feigning surprise:"she must have been gratified by the triumph of the House of Bourbon?" |
13028 | sayd Robin;"Why draw you mee soe neere? |
13028 | says the Seven Forsters,"What news have ye brought to me?" |
13028 | tell me aright: Who by generation is the first father of the Righteous Order within the world? |
13028 | tell me aright: Who fashioned Aramaiti( our piety) the beloved, together with Thy Sovereign Power? |
13028 | tell me aright: Who from beneath hath sustained the earth and the clouds above that they do not fall? |
13028 | tell me aright: Who, as a skillful artisan, hath made the lights and the darkness? |
13028 | tell me aright: when praise is to be offered, how shall I complete the praise of the One like You, O Mazda? |
13028 | they were the civil and the military honor that must be kept pure; could their heads be lowered because of the cold? |
13028 | what of that?" |
13028 | what would our friends say if they heard you? |
13028 | why do the stupid people always win and the clever people always lose? |
13028 | why does everything I see or hear become a symbol of my life? |
13028 | why is there not this hour an end to my uncleanness?" |
13028 | why not leave the reading of great books till a great age? |
13028 | why plague and perplex childhood with complex facts remote from its experience and inapprehensible by its imagination? |
13028 | why sitt''st thou by the spring? |
13028 | will it prevent them, or even mitigate them? |
13028 | will you follow me?" |
13028 | will you forever place duties before my love? |
13028 | will you tell me that_ that''s_ in the nature of a mere man? |
13028 | wilt thou be ruled by me? |
13028 | would they have done that for a human man? |
27722 | ''But were you not afraid,''I asked,''downstairs?'' 27722 ''How do you mean killed?'' |
27722 | ''No,''I said, and then I stammered:''Have you?'' 27722 ''That she might follow me? |
27722 | ''What can I have done to her that she follows me so?'' 27722 ''What else? |
27722 | ''Where had I got to? 27722 ''You do n''t mean to say you saw her?'' |
27722 | ''You felt her?'' 27722 ''You remember nothing else?'' |
27722 | ); single close quote to double close quote( p. 130:Is it my uncle who is writing? |
27722 | Alive? |
27722 | And let the-- remains over the side? |
27722 | And now,said Saunders when he returned with the things,"what are we going to do?" |
27722 | And now? |
27722 | And they came back and got the''barbarian''and let_ him_ over the side, eh? 27722 And what is he looking for?" |
27722 | And when you came here, was there a Number 13? |
27722 | And you opened the desk? |
27722 | And you think it was the animal that''s been frightening the maids? |
27722 | Anything wrong with the house? |
27722 | Are you sure? |
27722 | But the hand could n''t write? |
27722 | But what in the name of Heaven does it mean? |
27722 | Can you hold it all right? |
27722 | Can you show it me? |
27722 | Cold? |
27722 | Come,said the lawyer,"what have you to say, Herr Kristensen? |
27722 | Could n''t I open the window just a little? |
27722 | Could n''t it? 27722 Did he occupy-- these very rooms?" |
27722 | Did n''t you ask what made''em so cheap? |
27722 | Do you believe it? |
27722 | Do you happen to know anything about this craft''s personal history? |
27722 | Do you remember that Doctor Parent sent you to sleep? |
27722 | For a purpose? |
27722 | Has Emily left? |
27722 | Has Mr. Saunders got back yet? |
27722 | Have you a match? |
27722 | He has written to you? |
27722 | Hear what? |
27722 | Herr Kristensen,said Jensen,"will you go and fetch the strongest servant you have in the place? |
27722 | Hiding? |
27722 | How are we to get it out of there? |
27722 | How are you getting there? |
27722 | How goes the world, Saunders? 27722 How is the world treating you?" |
27722 | How long are you going to be away? |
27722 | How long do you suppose elapsed between the boy''s murder and his breaking the nursery window? |
27722 | I say,he blurted out at last,"what in the world made you ever come to this place-- to these rooms, I mean?" |
27722 | I think you said something about a Chinaman? |
27722 | I''ll take my oath on it, and so would Saunders here; would n''t you, old chap? |
27722 | Is he mad? |
27722 | Is it anyone I know? |
27722 | Is it my uncle who is writing? |
27722 | Is the fire laid? 27722 Is this,"he said,"the Danish courage I have heard so much of? |
27722 | Janet,says he,"have you seen a black man?" |
27722 | Let us be careful,I said;"who knows what we may find?" |
27722 | Me, sir? 27722 My Number 13? |
27722 | Nor heard anything? |
27722 | Nor to- night? |
27722 | Oh, is it, sir? |
27722 | Right hand or left, or both? |
27722 | See the paper it''s written on? 27722 Sir?" |
27722 | Smoke? |
27722 | So you''ve got something aboard? |
27722 | So your husband runs into debt? |
27722 | So? |
27722 | Soon he repeated the question:''Lost anything?'' 27722 Surely, Herr Jensen, it comes from your room next door? |
27722 | Then if it''s not my uncle, what is it? |
27722 | Then tell us what to expect,I said;"what kind of a ghost is this nocturnal visitor?" |
27722 | Then you do n''t think there is any particular objection to having a Number 13? |
27722 | Then, what do you use your Number 13 for? |
27722 | This McCord a friend of yourn? |
27722 | This was a Carmelite convent, then? |
27722 | Was there anything hanging from this-- er-- say a parrot-- or something, McCord? |
27722 | Was there no door between yours and mine? |
27722 | We''re friends already; are n''t we, Eustace Borlsover? |
27722 | Well, what about the knocks? |
27722 | Well, what are we to do? |
27722 | Were you or Mrs. Monson outside a few minutes ago knocking at my door? |
27722 | What about a landing net? |
27722 | What animal? |
27722 | What are you waiting for? |
27722 | What did it look like? |
27722 | What did you do then? |
27722 | What did you do then? |
27722 | What did you do then? |
27722 | What do you know about Björnsen? |
27722 | What do you make of him-- a writing chap? |
27722 | What do you make of it? |
27722 | What do you mean? |
27722 | What do you say to some wine? |
27722 | What do you want, and why in the world do n''t you come in? |
27722 | What happened? |
27722 | What have I done? |
27722 | What in the world are you talking about? 27722 What is he doing?" |
27722 | What is his attitude in this portrait? |
27722 | What is it that it''s holding? |
27722 | What is it, cousin? |
27722 | What is the time? |
27722 | What was it? |
27722 | What was its colour? |
27722 | What''s all the row? |
27722 | What''s all this about Mrs. Merrit wanting to leave? |
27722 | What''s happened-- what''s become of her? |
27722 | What''s the matter with the servants, Morton? |
27722 | What''s the matter? 27722 What''s the use?" |
27722 | What''s up with you, Eustace? 27722 What, you?" |
27722 | When shall I see you? |
27722 | When, pray? 27722 Where is it? |
27722 | Where shall I see you? |
27722 | Where shall you not? |
27722 | Where''s Emily? |
27722 | Who are you? |
27722 | Who was it? |
27722 | Who''s that? |
27722 | Who''s there? |
27722 | Whose photograph is it? |
27722 | Why does it come after me? 27722 Why not?" |
27722 | Will you,says Mr. Soulis,"in the name of God, and before me, His unworthy minister, renounce the devil and his works?" |
27722 | Woman,says he to Janet,"is this true?" |
27722 | You did, eh? 27722 You do n''t believe all this?" |
27722 | You do n''t want us to believe that it''s true, Mr. Borlsover? 27722 You have n''t found what you were looking for, I suppose?" |
27722 | You heard? |
27722 | You mean the girl as was''ere before me? |
27722 | You would n''t think a man would be fool enough to shoot at a shadow? |
27722 | _Who is it from?" |
27722 | ''How about the tops?'' |
27722 | ''What''s the matter with the room?'' |
27722 | ''Why do n''t you go aboard of him?'' |
27722 | *****"Perhaps,"said the landlord, with hesitation,"you gentleman would like another room for to- night-- a double- bedded one?" |
27722 | After what might have been twenty seconds of this he whispered,"Do you hear?" |
27722 | Am I going mad? |
27722 | Am I going out of my mind?" |
27722 | And did you get the reserve in that''even a funeral''? |
27722 | And put them in Number 13? |
27722 | And what in the name of all that''s holy is that?" |
27722 | And would n''t he have a hot basin of bread and milk last thing at night? |
27722 | Any objection?" |
27722 | Are you sure that he commissioned you to ask me for them?" |
27722 | As soon as I have got in I double lock, and bolt it: I am frightened-- of what? |
27722 | But how could she hang there, done up in a ball, from the hatch?" |
27722 | But is it I? |
27722 | But it would see me mix it with the water; and then, would our poisons have any effect on its impalpable body? |
27722 | But was it a hallucination? |
27722 | But where? |
27722 | But who is he, this invisible being that rules me? |
27722 | But with what, with whom, was I thus momentarily imprisoned? |
27722 | Ca n''t he see at all?" |
27722 | Can it be that my memory is beginning to be affected? |
27722 | Can you believe it, Ridgeway-- in this very cabin here?" |
27722 | Catarina? |
27722 | Dead? |
27722 | Did you ever happen to see black- powder smoke in the moonlight? |
27722 | Do n''t you believe you''d keep an eye around the corners, kind of-- eh? |
27722 | Do not dogs occasionally bite and strangle their masters? |
27722 | Do you hear me?" |
27722 | Do you know the writing, sir?" |
27722 | Do you know where-- Is there anything in your municipal budget to tell me where Björnsen went? |
27722 | Do you like it?" |
27722 | Eh? |
27722 | For a moment I thought he must be walking in his sleep, but he turned to me quite naturally and said in his own boyish voice:"''Lost anything?'' |
27722 | Had not he, perhaps, kept a glass hidden in his hand, which he showed to the young woman in her sleep, at the same time as he did the card? |
27722 | Has it brought you any luck?" |
27722 | He must have been caught all of a bunch, eh?" |
27722 | He put a visiting card into her hands, and said to her:"This is a looking- glass; what do you see in it?" |
27722 | He replied:"Do we see the hundred thousandth part of what exists? |
27722 | He turned to me:"Signore, it is already two o''clock and too late for mass, is it not?" |
27722 | He was just going out, and he listened to me with a smile, and said:"Do you believe now?" |
27722 | His body? |
27722 | How is it that I have not seen them?" |
27722 | How is it then that since the beginning of the world they have never manifested themselves in such a manner precisely as they do to me? |
27722 | How should it then be surprising that he can not perceive a fresh body which is traversed by the light? |
27722 | I continued:"Do you remember what took place at your house last night?" |
27722 | I mean, did anything-- anything bad ever happen here?" |
27722 | I waited for him, made sure of him, began to feel giddy, and then a man''s voice, deep and clear:"''There is someone there; who is it?'' |
27722 | I wonder if they all scream-- these ships that have lost their souls? |
27722 | I? |
27722 | If he was not dead?... |
27722 | Is it I? |
27722 | Is it a cold shiver which, passing over my skin, has upset my nerves and given me low spirits? |
27722 | Is it not possible that one of the imperceptible keys of the cerebral finger- board has been paralyzed in me? |
27722 | Is it your uncle''s hand?" |
27722 | Is n''t there a cat or something stuck in the chimney?" |
27722 | Is not the following story again still more appalling and not less marvellous? |
27722 | Is the son in the house?" |
27722 | Is the world coming to an end? |
27722 | Is there a God? |
27722 | It could surely only be I? |
27722 | It is done;... it is done... but is he dead? |
27722 | It would be the height of folly to believe in the supernatural on the_ île de la Grenouillière_[1]... but on the top of Mont Saint- Michel?... |
27722 | Just before we left my father said,"Mr. Borlsover, may my son here shake hands with you? |
27722 | My cousin, who is also very incredulous, smiled, and Dr. Parent said to her:"Would you like me to try and send you to sleep, Madame?" |
27722 | Now I remember the words of the monk at Mont Saint- Michel:"Can we see the hundred- thousandth part of what exists? |
27722 | Oh, who will clothe me?" |
27722 | Poison? |
27722 | Premature destruction? |
27722 | Presently the door opened, and the shock to my nerves was unmistakable when I heard a man''s voice ask,"Is Mr.---- still here?" |
27722 | Prince, is that you?" |
27722 | Ridgeway, there was a pair of funks aboard this craft, eh? |
27722 | Ridgeway-- why do n''t we go out?" |
27722 | Run''s the exact word in this case, is n''t it? |
27722 | Shall we go and investigate in the next room?" |
27722 | Shall we go in?" |
27722 | She was drawing the majority to her way of thinking when, from the corner where the girl sat, a hollow- sounding voice:"And the boy? |
27722 | She was--""_ Was?_"I caught him up. |
27722 | Somebody had drunk the water, but who? |
27722 | The accumulated dust of centuries, eh?" |
27722 | The wise man says: Perhaps? |
27722 | Then, turning to me,"You will go, will you not? |
27722 | Then?... |
27722 | They called it magnetism, hypnotism, suggestion... what do I know? |
27722 | They''re not valuable, I hope? |
27722 | This unknowable being, this rover of a supernatural race? |
27722 | Twenty questions leaped to my lips: What are you? |
27722 | Up till the present time I have been frightened of nothing-- I open my cupboards, and look under my bed; I listen-- I listen-- to what? |
27722 | Valguanera thought a moment, then he said,"Bring two horses; the Signor Americano will go with you,--do you understand?" |
27722 | Was his own room to the right or to the left? |
27722 | Was it imagination? |
27722 | Was not his body, which was transparent, indestructible by such means as would kill ours? |
27722 | What are you waiting for?" |
27722 | What can they do more than we can? |
27722 | What can we do? |
27722 | What do they see which we do not know? |
27722 | What do those who are thinkers in those distant worlds know more than we do? |
27722 | What do you say?" |
27722 | What do you want? |
27722 | What does this mean?" |
27722 | What forms, what living beings, what animals are there yonder? |
27722 | What has happened? |
27722 | What in the world can it be, I wonder?... |
27722 | What is it? |
27722 | What is the matter with me? |
27722 | What is the matter with me? |
27722 | What is the reason? |
27722 | What was that? |
27722 | What was that?" |
27722 | What were the roads like?" |
27722 | What''s the game?" |
27722 | When I went back home yesterday, I noticed his singular paleness, and I asked him:"What is the matter with you, Jean?" |
27722 | Whence do these mysterious influences come, which change our happiness into discouragement, and our self- confidence into diffidence? |
27722 | Where in the world did it come from? |
27722 | Where is he?" |
27722 | Where is it?" |
27722 | Who can tell? |
27722 | Who could it be? |
27722 | Who could possibly feel cold when wearing them?" |
27722 | Who inhabits those worlds? |
27722 | Who is it? |
27722 | Who is the culprit? |
27722 | Who that has read it is likely to forget Pliny''s account in a letter to an intimate of an apparition shortly after death to a mutual acquaintance? |
27722 | Who was it? |
27722 | Who will save me? |
27722 | Who will understand my horrible agony? |
27722 | Who? |
27722 | Why are you dawdling?" |
27722 | Why do you come into my room? |
27722 | Why do you listen and watch? |
27722 | Why else should he be dancing? |
27722 | Why in thunder_ should_ he mention a cat?" |
27722 | Why not one more? |
27722 | Why not other elements besides fire, air, earth and water? |
27722 | Why not run up to town? |
27722 | Why not, also, other trees with immense, splendid flowers, perfuming whole regions? |
27722 | Why not? |
27722 | Why should there not be one more, when once that period is accomplished which separates the successive apparitions from all the different species? |
27722 | Why should we be the last? |
27722 | Why these dress togs?" |
27722 | Why this transparent, unrecognizable body, this body belonging to a spirit, if it also had to fear ills, infirmities and premature destruction? |
27722 | Why, do n''t I tell you that there is n''t such a thing in the house? |
27722 | Why? |
27722 | Why? |
27722 | Why? |
27722 | Why? |
27722 | Why?" |
27722 | Why_ should_ he mention a cat? |
27722 | Yet all my clothes lay about the floor when I awoke, where they had evidently been flung( had I tossed them?) |
27722 | You know how glad you are to wake up after a dream like that and find none of it is so? |
27722 | You will tell it, will you not?" |
27722 | _ August 10th._ Nothing; what will happen to- morrow? |
27722 | _ August 20th._ How could I kill it, as I could not get hold of it? |
27722 | _ July 5th._ Have I lost my reason? |
27722 | _"Will eleven o''clock to- night be suitable for our last appointment? |
27722 | and in India? |
27722 | asked Saunders;"black?" |
27722 | he said, meaning Salthenius, who was only an undergraduate when he committed that indiscretion,"how did he know what company he was courting?" |
27722 | perhaps?... |
27722 | said Eustace;"what in the world was the old boy driving at? |
27722 | then?... |
27722 | well?... |
37982 | In the eternal life shall we not have friends for evermore? |
37982 | Responds,--as if with unseen wings, An angel touched its quivering strings; And whispers, in its song, Where hast thou stayed so long? |
37982 | Should auld acquaintance be forgot, And days o''lang syne? |
37982 | _ Bacon_ Devotion of Friendship Friendship? |
37982 | _ Benjamin Franklin_ Should auld acquaintance be forgot, And never brought to mind? |
37982 | _ Cicero_ How were friendship possible? |
37982 | _ Emerson_ Who talks of a_ common_ friendship? |
37982 | _ Longfellow_ What shall I do, my friend, When you are gone forever? |
37982 | _ Tennyson_ If I may n''t tell you what I feel, what is the use of a friend? |
37982 | _ Theophrastus_ Now can there be a worse disgrace than this-- that I should be thought to value money more than the life of a friend? |
19826 | And who are you? |
19826 | What''ll we do? |
19826 | ( JACK_ nods._) He has? |
19826 | ( JACK_ nods._) Really and truly wings? |
19826 | ( JACK_ nods._) Then they did n''t grow on him? |
19826 | (_ Cries._) Could ye let me have a little money, mum? |
19826 | (_ Goes to the two boys and puts her arms over their shoulders._) And how''s my merry boys tonight? |
19826 | (_ Goes to_ KA- ZIN- SKI''S_ box._) What is in it, Mr. Wishing Man? |
19826 | (_ Hugs him._) I said he''d come, did n''t I, Klinker? |
19826 | (_ Lets her peep through the curtain that conceals the Christmas tree from the audience._) There; what do you think of that? |
19826 | (_ Looks around._) Have you all been verra, verra good? |
19826 | (_ Looks around._) Why, where is Lolly? |
19826 | (_ Loudly._) Understand? |
19826 | (_ Muses._) Why should thy questions, which are dark to me, Cause me to think of Him? |
19826 | (_ Removes cigar and looks at it, smells it, makes horrible grimace._) Oh, ho, so it''s you, is it? |
19826 | (_ Rushes to her and embraces her._) What is the meaning of all this? |
19826 | (_ Screams loudly._) And who are you? |
19826 | (_ Speaks to them._) Good avening, Brother----; sure, it''s a fine avening we''re having, is it not? |
19826 | (_ Takes home- made telescope from his barrel._) Now do you see anything? |
19826 | (_ To audience._) Do n''t I? |
19826 | A chromo, is it? |
19826 | A dust cap? |
19826 | A great, big tall little girl, hey? |
19826 | A hat? |
19826 | A hat? |
19826 | A present? |
19826 | A prisint for Honoria? |
19826 | A secret, Tomasso? |
19826 | A situation for me? |
19826 | Ai n''t it a beauty, mum? |
19826 | Ai n''t it a beauty? |
19826 | Ai n''t it a shame? |
19826 | Ai n''t we, Bob? |
19826 | And are you going to show me all my past misdeeds? |
19826 | And are you happy and content in the life you have chosen, Ebenezer Scrooge? |
19826 | And can you help me a little? |
19826 | And can you really grant us anything we wish for? |
19826 | And did he chase you, Mrs. O''Toole? |
19826 | And did they find one? |
19826 | And did ye have a good time at the entertainment? |
19826 | And did ye have a good time, wee Peter Pan? |
19826 | And do n''t yeez eat too much or breathe hard or ye''ll bust it, and then where''ll you be at? |
19826 | And do n''t you have any other place to go this year? |
19826 | And does she go round the world with Santa Claus on the night before Christmas? |
19826 | And have you a mother, too? |
19826 | And how de yeez like me new sash, Peter Pan? |
19826 | And how did Tiny Tim behave in the church, father? |
19826 | And how do I look, Nora? |
19826 | And how do you like being a great, big Dumpling? |
19826 | And it had sage and onion stuffing, mumsy, did n''t it, Bob? |
19826 | And me, too, did n''t I, Schwillie Willie Winkum? |
19826 | And now where''s the white table cloth? |
19826 | And so do you, hey? |
19826 | And the workhouses-- are they still in operation? |
19826 | And what are you going to call your pony, Snookums? |
19826 | And what can you say? |
19826 | And what do you intend to show me? |
19826 | And what is a pixie? |
19826 | And where is he now? |
19826 | And where is little Snookie Ookums? |
19826 | And why is n''t she sound asleep like the rest of the children? |
19826 | And will you see more? |
19826 | And ye''re willing for the whole bunch of us to come? |
19826 | And you say it''s your hat? |
19826 | And you say this lady is your aunt? |
19826 | Anything for us, Eddie? |
19826 | Anything in the wide, wide world? |
19826 | Are n''t you? |
19826 | Are there no prisons? |
19826 | Are these the shadows of the things that Will be, or are they the shadows of things that May be, only? |
19826 | Are ye sure it was a whale ye saw that day, Sergius boy? |
19826 | Are ye sure they''re all clean? |
19826 | Are you a kind master to your clerk? |
19826 | Are you acting as Santa Claus? |
19826 | Are you all of you sure you want to be made into great big, big little children? |
19826 | Are you all ready for me? |
19826 | Are you all ready? |
19826 | Are you dressed yet? |
19826 | Are you goin''to fix yerself up like a circus clown, too? |
19826 | Are you going out? |
19826 | Are you not also happy, Biddy Mary? |
19826 | Are you really sure he is coming? |
19826 | Are you sure I can get into the ruff now? |
19826 | Are you sure it''s a good wish? |
19826 | Are you sure she''s your aunt? |
19826 | Are you the Spirit whose coming was foretold to me? |
19826 | Are you the Wishing Man? |
19826 | As big as me? |
19826 | BIG D. Can we have anything we wish for here in the Wishing Land? |
19826 | BIG D. Could we get back by bedtime? |
19826 | BIG D. Say, Mr. Wishing Man? |
19826 | BIG S. Is it very far? |
19826 | BIG T. Would n''t it be awfully cold flying through the air? |
19826 | Blessed old Santa Claus, king of delights, What are you doing these long winter nights? |
19826 | Bought them? |
19826 | Boy? |
19826 | Bridget, have ye got a clane handkerchief? |
19826 | Business? |
19826 | But are you really, truly sure he''s coming? |
19826 | But good Saint Nicholas always comes the night before Christmas; do n''t he, Schwillie Willie Winkum? |
19826 | But how did you know? |
19826 | But how will he get out here in the middle of the ocean? |
19826 | But suppose we wish for something that money ca n''t buy? |
19826 | But what are you doing here on the ship? |
19826 | But where did you get it, Aunt Minerva? |
19826 | But where is your hat? |
19826 | But where would we be getting presents out here in the middle of the ocean? |
19826 | But why ca n''t we be friends? |
19826 | But why? |
19826 | Ca n''t you find something for her? |
19826 | Ca n''t you get it over your head? |
19826 | Can I have one, Mr. Wishing Man? |
19826 | Can we? |
19826 | Can ye do that? |
19826 | Can you take us there? |
19826 | Can you talk? |
19826 | Cecelia? |
19826 | Chase me? |
19826 | Christmas a humbug, uncle? |
19826 | Claus what? |
19826 | Come, then, what right have you got to be dismal? |
19826 | Could he, Hulda? |
19826 | Could n''t I take it all at once and have it over, Jacob? |
19826 | Cute, ai n''t you? |
19826 | Dat red and yaller hat? |
19826 | Did n''t he, Betty? |
19826 | Did n''t he, Bob? |
19826 | Did they now? |
19826 | Did you ev- er go in- to an I- rish- man''s shanty, Where mon- ey was scarce but where wel- come was plen- ty? |
19826 | Did you get the tickets? |
19826 | Did you hear that, Scrooge? |
19826 | Did you look on the dresser? |
19826 | Did you say oh, or hello? |
19826 | Dine with you? |
19826 | Dine with you? |
19826 | Do n''t it look funny, Peter Pan? |
19826 | Do n''t it, Maginnis? |
19826 | Do n''t you know me? |
19826 | Do n''t you, Dumpling? |
19826 | Do n''t you, Schwillie Willie Winkum? |
19826 | Do the dolls grow on trees? |
19826 | Do ye think it improves yer beauty? |
19826 | Do yeez think they be after having moving pictures? |
19826 | Do you have a Christmas tree like we do in Germany? |
19826 | Do you know the grocer''s in the next street? |
19826 | Do you know these folks, Googin? |
19826 | Do you know whether they''ve sold the prize turkey that was hanging up there? |
19826 | Do you remember your own first master? |
19826 | Do you think he is a fish? |
19826 | Do you think you can do it? |
19826 | Do you want to hear that old chestnut again? |
19826 | Does he? |
19826 | Does you want to buy a nice Christmas present for a lady? |
19826 | Dressed up, is it? |
19826 | Dropping off to sleep, ai n''t we, Klinker? |
19826 | Dumpling, are you sure you got everything you wanted for Christmas? |
19826 | Dumpling, little Dumpling, where are you? |
19826 | Eh? |
19826 | Excuse me, mum, but this bein''Christmas day, I was wonderin''whether you''d be after accepting a wee bit of a Christmas present from the likes of me? |
19826 | Fly? |
19826 | Get it? |
19826 | Get rid of her? |
19826 | Give''em a shilling, hey? |
19826 | Goblin? |
19826 | Good Mr. Wishing Man, how do you do? |
19826 | Harbor ill feeling, is it? |
19826 | Has Santa Claus a nice- a, fine- a wife? |
19826 | Has it got flowers on it or feathers? |
19826 | Hatch? |
19826 | Have I ever sought release? |
19826 | Have I the pleasure of addressing Mr. Scrooge or Mr. Marley? |
19826 | Have n''t you ever heard of Santa Claus? |
19826 | Have ye ever seen her before? |
19826 | Have ye finished the washing, maw? |
19826 | Have ye, now? |
19826 | Have you been a very, very good Teddy Bear while I was away? |
19826 | Have you ever had a great, big Christmas tree? |
19826 | Have you ever seen my old friend, Mr. Santa Claus? |
19826 | Have you had a merry Christmas, Eddie? |
19826 | Have you learned a lesson from the Spirit of Christmas Past? |
19826 | Have you learned your lesson? |
19826 | He is? |
19826 | Hello, little boys and girls, how do you do this fine winter night? |
19826 | Hello, there-- where are you? |
19826 | Hello, what is it? |
19826 | Hello, who''s this young person? |
19826 | Here on the boat? |
19826 | Hey? |
19826 | Honest? |
19826 | How can I tell him I gave his Christmas present away? |
19826 | How could he get it? |
19826 | How could he get way out here on the ocean already? |
19826 | How did he get in the rain- barrel? |
19826 | How did ye happen to spake a piece, Bridget Honora? |
19826 | How did you like the hat? |
19826 | How do you feel, Peter Pan? |
19826 | How old are you? |
19826 | How was it a surprise party, Mary Ann? |
19826 | How would you like a nice winter hat? |
19826 | How''s the taters, Peter? |
19826 | How''s the''taters, Pete? |
19826 | How''s the''taters, Peter? |
19826 | How, Grandpa; how? |
19826 | Howly snakes of Ireland, what''s that? |
19826 | I been a awfully good boy, is n''t I, Schwillie Willie Winkum? |
19826 | I beg pardon? |
19826 | I do n''t, hey? |
19826 | I pray thee, tell me, Lady Bethlehemite, If any wonders you have seen this night? |
19826 | I suppose yeez want a peek- a- boo dress all trimmed with mayonnaise ruffles down the bias, do you? |
19826 | I tell you these are something like cigars, are n''t they? |
19826 | I wonder what has become of Anita? |
19826 | I wonder what has become of Anita? |
19826 | I''d rather have Saint Nicholas, would n''t I, Schwillie Willie Winkum? |
19826 | I''m not complaining about the cold, am I? |
19826 | I''ve been a awful good boy, is n''t I, Schwillie Willie Winkum? |
19826 | I''ve been awfully good, is n''t I, Klinker? |
19826 | If I''d dock you a half a crown for it you''d think I was ill using you, would n''t you? |
19826 | In the rain- barrel? |
19826 | Is Santa Claus your daddy? |
19826 | Is dat for me? |
19826 | Is he now? |
19826 | Is it a tornado or an earthquake? |
19826 | Is it a wish? |
19826 | Is it a wonderful palace of gold? |
19826 | Is it all for me? |
19826 | Is it not wonderful? |
19826 | Is it not, Meeny? |
19826 | Is it the fern seed? |
19826 | Is it the winter sky that sings? |
19826 | Is it? |
19826 | Is n''t I, Klinker? |
19826 | Is n''t it a dear? |
19826 | Is n''t it time for the children to be home? |
19826 | Is n''t it, Warren? |
19826 | Is n''t she a beauty? |
19826 | Is n''t there, Bob? |
19826 | Is she now? |
19826 | Is she so very awful? |
19826 | Is that man the owner of this apartment? |
19826 | Is that your wish? |
19826 | Is that your wish? |
19826 | Is there anything more, sir? |
19826 | Is there anything she can use as a sash? |
19826 | Is there none to welcome me? |
19826 | Is there room for us? |
19826 | Is you? |
19826 | Is''em some ob Mistah Williamses cigars? |
19826 | It is n''t anything scary, is it? |
19826 | It is the night before Christmas, and how could Santa Claus ever hope to reach them away out in the middle of the ocean? |
19826 | It''s my name, is n''t it? |
19826 | It''s pretty, too, ai n''t it, Peter Pan? |
19826 | Just one? |
19826 | Keep it? |
19826 | Kitty, how does that ruffle thing work? |
19826 | Lawdy, Mis''Williams, what is dis yere? |
19826 | Leedle horses and pictures und candy und other things also; do n''t we, Schwillie Willie Winkum? |
19826 | Liberality? |
19826 | Long past? |
19826 | Look, Jack Frost, is that the air ship? |
19826 | Look, father, dost thou see that shining star That seems to stand above the town so far? |
19826 | MISS M. Taxi? |
19826 | MISS M. What do you mean? |
19826 | MISS M. Where are you going? |
19826 | MISS M. You are? |
19826 | MRS. MULLIGAN(_ stands C. facing audience, surrounded by the ten children._) Sure, I think we''ve had a fine Christmas celebration, do n''t you? |
19826 | MRS. O''TOOLE(_ sings briskly_): Did you ever go into an Irishman''s shanty, Where money was scarce but where welcome was plenty? |
19826 | Maginnis Googin, is it yerself? |
19826 | Maiden, I fain would stop thee in thy flight-- Can''st tell where we could lodge this winter night? |
19826 | Marble? |
19826 | Mary Ann Mulligan, and what are yeez trying to do with your nice new sash? |
19826 | Mary Ann, are you all fixed? |
19826 | Mary what? |
19826 | Mary? |
19826 | Maw, ai n''t it most time to go? |
19826 | Maw, ai n''t it time we were starting for the entertainment? |
19826 | Maw, do n''t you think it''s most time fer us to be going? |
19826 | Me goat, is it? |
19826 | Me? |
19826 | Micky Machree Mulligan, and what are yeez looking cross- eyed for? |
19826 | Money can buy everything, ca n''t it, Grandpa? |
19826 | Mrs. O''Toole, do you see that young man sitting there all by his lonesome? |
19826 | My, my, is it yourself, Mrs.----? |
19826 | Not Aunt Minerva Mockridge from Kankakee? |
19826 | Not coming-- on Christmas Day? |
19826 | Not coming? |
19826 | Not the little prize turkey, the big prize turkey? |
19826 | Now if you get to see the great big whale, that''s almost as good as having old Saint Nicholas come, ai n''t it? |
19826 | Now will you come easy or must I use the cuffs? |
19826 | Now, have n''t you? |
19826 | Now, what is the secret, Tomasso? |
19826 | Now, what shall we do? |
19826 | Now, where''s the tree? |
19826 | Oh, Santa Claus, may I wake up all the leetla children and let them see you? |
19826 | Oh, Sergius, will they harm us? |
19826 | Oh, a big,_ big_, BIG little boy, hey? |
19826 | Oh, can we? |
19826 | Oh, ho; so you''ve made a hit with my boy, Jack Frost, have you? |
19826 | Oh, how I do love oranges und candy, do n''t I, Schwillie Willie Winkum? |
19826 | Oh, it''s you, is it? |
19826 | Oh, mumsy, ai n''t this Heavenly? |
19826 | Oh, what is it, Tomasso? |
19826 | Oh, what was that? |
19826 | Oh, why did I ever leave Kankakee? |
19826 | One Fezziwig by name? |
19826 | Or what would I do at a club? |
19826 | Peter will be a man of business, wo n''t you, Peter? |
19826 | Picks the dolls? |
19826 | Pierrette, is it? |
19826 | Please, Mr. Wishing Man, could n''t you tell us what we''d better wish for? |
19826 | Ready for me? |
19826 | Scrooge and Marley''s, I believe? |
19826 | See what I brought you? |
19826 | See? |
19826 | Shall I explain to Warren? |
19826 | Shall I send the taxi away, Kittens? |
19826 | She''s at home, is n''t she? |
19826 | Sirs, whom seek ye? |
19826 | Small? |
19826 | So that pays you for the tickets, does n''t it? |
19826 | So the goat struck ye, did he? |
19826 | So you all want to be little again? |
19826 | So you want to be the very biggest children there are anywhere, do you? |
19826 | Sorry for me, hey? |
19826 | Sorry for them? |
19826 | Sorry? |
19826 | Sure and it is Christmas Eve, is n''t it? |
19826 | Sure it''s a bit of a prisint fer me and the childer, now ai n''t it, Mrs. Williams? |
19826 | Sure, und me also, do n''t I, Klinker? |
19826 | Sure, what would I do at a dance? |
19826 | Take the monkey''s place? |
19826 | Tell me, for thou art native of this place, What dost thou know about the King of Grace-- King of the Jews? |
19826 | Ten dollars, are n''t they? |
19826 | That woman just came up in the elevator, did n''t she? |
19826 | That''s enough to see us through until breakfast, is n''t it? |
19826 | The Ghost of Christmas Present? |
19826 | The hat? |
19826 | The middle of the night? |
19826 | The mines? |
19826 | The night of the day behind Christmas is always Christmas Eve, ai n''t it? |
19826 | The picture of the ould lady, is it? |
19826 | The whole tin of them? |
19826 | Then hands him a little box._) BIG D. Oh, what is it, Mr. Wishing Man? |
19826 | Then why do n''t you guess how old I am? |
19826 | Then why have n''t you followed his good example? |
19826 | Time to be going, is it? |
19826 | To Eddie? |
19826 | Tomorrow comes the great, grand festival of Christmas, is it not, Paddy Mike? |
19826 | Tonight? |
19826 | Two dollars, is it? |
19826 | Und all the angels sang,"Peace on earth, good will to men,"did n''t they, Klinker? |
19826 | Und if they''re good they get candy und oranges und toys und things, do n''t they, Schwillie Willie Winkum? |
19826 | Und me also, ai n''t I, Klinker? |
19826 | Und tomorrow we gets lots of Christmas presents always, me und Klinker; do n''t we, Klinker? |
19826 | Understand? |
19826 | Untied the goat, is it? |
19826 | Vill he come after me? |
19826 | Vot is dot hatch? |
19826 | Vot makes you so happy, Anita? |
19826 | Want me to end up in the poorhouse? |
19826 | Warren Williams, are you going to let that man stand there and insult me? |
19826 | Warren, do n''t you think we ought to remember the Googins? |
19826 | Was n''t that dandy? |
19826 | Was n''t that stupid of me? |
19826 | Well, and what is the question of the leetla Dutch twins? |
19826 | Well, are you children satisfied with your wish? |
19826 | Well, children, what do you think of the Wishing Land? |
19826 | Well, did you get it? |
19826 | Well, have you anything to show me? |
19826 | Well, little Tootsy, how do you like being a great, big Tootsy? |
19826 | Well, who were you, then? |
19826 | Well? |
19826 | Well? |
19826 | Well? |
19826 | Whales ca n''t bring you no Christmas presents, can they, Klinker? |
19826 | What are you going to do when you get to America? |
19826 | What cause have you got to be merry? |
19826 | What day is this my lad? |
19826 | What day is this, my merry lad? |
19826 | What did he do with it? |
19826 | What do you do in Ireland the night before Christmas, Biddy Mary? |
19826 | What do you mean by coming here at this time of day? |
19826 | What do you want with me? |
19826 | What do you wish, Snookums? |
19826 | What has happened? |
19826 | What idol has displaced you in my heart? |
19826 | What is a goblin, Sergius? |
19826 | What is it, Eddie? |
19826 | What is it, Mr. Googin? |
19826 | What is it, Patsy? |
19826 | What is it, my good woman? |
19826 | What is it, my little boy? |
19826 | What is it? |
19826 | What is the secret? |
19826 | What is your name? |
19826 | What kind of a stogie is it, Mr. Williams? |
19826 | What make- a you so excited, Anita? |
19826 | What makes me so happy, Meeny? |
19826 | What matters it how late it is? |
19826 | What means this crowd of men And women here in peaceful Bethlehem? |
19826 | What more do you want? |
19826 | What more would ye want? |
19826 | What shall we put you down for? |
19826 | What''ll I do with all that money? |
19826 | What''ll we do then? |
19826 | What''s Christmas time to you but a time for paying bills without money; a time for finding yourself a year older, but not an hour richer? |
19826 | What''s ixpense bechune frinds? |
19826 | What''s the matter now? |
19826 | What''s the matter with_ you_? |
19826 | What''s the matter? |
19826 | What''s the matter? |
19826 | What, the one as big as me? |
19826 | What? |
19826 | What_ do_ you mean? |
19826 | Whatever has got your precious father, I wonder? |
19826 | Where are they? |
19826 | Where are you? |
19826 | Where are your children? |
19826 | Where is Anita? |
19826 | Where is it? |
19826 | Where is little Tootsy? |
19826 | Where is your sister? |
19826 | Where you goin''? |
19826 | Where''d she come from? |
19826 | Where''s Clarissa? |
19826 | Where''s little Dumpling and Tootsy and Baby Snookums? |
19826 | Where''s me children? |
19826 | Where''s the girls, mother? |
19826 | Where''s your brother? |
19826 | Which of yeez seen him last? |
19826 | Who and what are you? |
19826 | Who are you? |
19826 | Who do you think takes care of the reindeer, and who waters the doll- tree and picks the dolls? |
19826 | Who do you think was in the shop yesterday? |
19826 | Who is this Saint Nicholas they are looking for, Hulda? |
19826 | Who is this- a Jack, Anita? |
19826 | Who knows that in a manger- bed there breathed a Child of Light? |
19826 | Who knows the town of Bethlehem, once gleamed beneath the star, Whose wondrous light the shepherds saw watching their flocks afar? |
19826 | Who thinks of Bethlehem today, and one lone winter night? |
19826 | Who you make- a the promise to? |
19826 | Who''s been pinched? |
19826 | Who''s he fur? |
19826 | Who''s he fur? |
19826 | Who''s here? |
19826 | Whoever heard of a cellar on board of a ship? |
19826 | Why are n''t you smoking one? |
19826 | Why did you get married? |
19826 | Why have you come here to me? |
19826 | Why should a young man sit all alone like a bump on a log, whin there''s so many handsome colleens waiting for the chance at him? |
19826 | Why, do n''t you know who he is yet? |
19826 | Why, where''s our Martha? |
19826 | Why? |
19826 | Why? |
19826 | Why? |
19826 | Will ye now? |
19826 | Will you decide what men shall live, and what men shall die? |
19826 | Will you look at the red color in his face? |
19826 | Will you not speak to me? |
19826 | Will your husband be long at lodge? |
19826 | With his pack and presents and a Christmas tree and everything? |
19826 | Wo n''t he come tonight, Hulda? |
19826 | Wo n''t ma lady- love be delighted with all dat gorgeousness? |
19826 | Would any of your clerks say that you were the kindest master that ever lived? |
19826 | Would he mind if I''d take a bite out of his leg? |
19826 | Would ye decave yer frinds, Honoria? |
19826 | Would you like some new toys? |
19826 | Would you like to go with me? |
19826 | Would you like to see it, maw? |
19826 | Ye hear? |
19826 | Ye say a man ran into you in the street and left this hat in your hand? |
19826 | Yes, Warren? |
19826 | Yes, he has wonderful taste, has n''t he? |
19826 | Yes, maw? |
19826 | Yes? |
19826 | Yes? |
19826 | You are going to show me the shadows of things that are to happen in the future? |
19826 | You are n''t frightened, are you? |
19826 | You can keep a secret, ca n''t you? |
19826 | You did? |
19826 | You do n''t see anything that looks like an air ship, do you? |
19826 | You do? |
19826 | You got everything you wanted, did n''t you? |
19826 | You like a good cigar, do n''t you, Eddie? |
19826 | You wish to be anonymous? |
19826 | You would n''t like a nice box of cigars for a Christmas present, would you, Eddie? |
19826 | You''ll want all day off tomorrow, I suppose? |
19826 | You''re not a girl, are you? |
19826 | You''re not? |
19826 | Your daddy? |
19826 | Your name''s Anita, is n''t it? |
19826 | _ He is?_ Oh!! |
34763 | When will that be? 34763 And can you? 34763 And they wo n''t be real savages? 34763 And what about the fine lady? 34763 And you''ll never tell me I''m to be as good as Kitty? 34763 Any entries? 34763 But can you get up, my poppet? 34763 But is it ever near the ground? 34763 But when will you pay me? 34763 But where has it gone to? 34763 Buy one? 34763 Ca n''t you hear them coming? 34763 Can she do that? 34763 Can you reckon up how much that is? 34763 Cat? 34763 Could you, Cow? 34763 Could you? 34763 Do n''t you see what I''m looking for? 34763 Do n''t you see what''s gone? 34763 Do n''t you think, Aunt Jane, I had better have it? 34763 Do you hear that, Gander? 34763 Do you like the cat? 34763 Do you suppose that''s us? 34763 Do you think it''s a horse with a cock''s head? 34763 Do you? 34763 Get out of the way, ca n''t you? 34763 Good morning''s all very well, but where is it? 34763 Goosey Goosey Gander, whither shall we wander? 34763 Goosey Goosey Gander, whither shall we wander? 34763 Have n''t you heard? 34763 How can people know what you mean? 34763 How fast can you waddle? 34763 How many entries? 34763 How much are they? 34763 How much do you want? 34763 How much were they? 34763 I ask you,_ is_ that the way to speak to a gander? 34763 I''ve done my lessons very well to- day, have n''t I? 34763 I_ do_ think it''s so boring being in bed, do n''t you? 34763 Is he as fat as ever? 34763 Is that all, ma''am? 34763 Is that called a tuffet? 34763 Jim, are you asleep? 34763 Lucy''s pocket, that I made her this morning? 34763 MRS. C. But have you a penny for the poor box? 34763 MRS. C. What about the jam then? 34763 MRS. D. Do n''t you see Mrs. Pringle, dear? 34763 MRS. D. What procession? 34763 MRS. D. Why, what''s Humpty doing? 34763 MRS. L. And what about the pence that were in it? 34763 MRS. L. Are you sure, Lucy? 34763 MRS. L. Good morning, my child, and how is my good little girl this morning? 34763 MRS. L. Where are the pence you had in the pocket, Lucy? 34763 MRS. P. Did n''t I tell you he was too fat? 34763 MRS. P. Oh, did you think so? 34763 MRS. S. And what else? 34763 MRS. S. And what inside the teapot? 34763 MRS. S. Anything else? 34763 MRS. S. Anything else? 34763 MRS. S. Do you know how to make the tea? 34763 MRS. S. Do you think I can trust you? 34763 MRS. S. Do you think you can? 34763 MRS. S. How do you make it? 34763 MRS. S. Oh dear, what can have happened? 34763 MRS. S. Then what did you do with the tea? 34763 MRS. S. What do you make the tea with, stupid? 34763 May I ask why you do n''t like me? 34763 May I enter, madam? 34763 Mother, why are the bells ringing? 34763 No prize? 34763 No, I do n''t want to give the path a treat, do I? 34763 Now, where shall I begin it? 34763 Nursie, you know that you said if I were good at my lesson I could choose my luncheon? 34763 Oh, Kitty, did you? 34763 Oh, are you the beginning of the procession, please? 34763 Old man, madam? 34763 Or a nice Albert biscuit? 34763 Or a nice scone? 34763 Or some grass in the field-- so simple? 34763 Polly, is everything ready? 34763 Something wrong? 34763 Then what about a nice ginger- nut? 34763 Then what_ do_ you want? 34763 Well, what then? 34763 Well, why do n''t you? 34763 Well? 34763 What about you? 34763 What are revels? 34763 What are you doing with it, Kitty? 34763 What are you doing? 34763 What can that be? 34763 What do you say to some nice bread and butter? 34763 What do you think Banbury Cross is like? 34763 What do you think a cock- horse is? 34763 What is it, darling? 34763 What is it, my man? 34763 What is it? 34763 What is it? 34763 What is my gander? 34763 What is that I see on the ground over there? 34763 What procession? 34763 What''s all this about? 34763 What''s it about? 34763 What''s our parish? 34763 What''s that crowing? 34763 What''s the matter, little Two- legs? 34763 What''s the matter? 34763 What? 34763 When will that be? 34763 When will that be? 34763 When will you pay me? 34763 Where am I? 34763 Where shall I start my spinning? 34763 Where? 34763 Which? 34763 Who can have taken it? 34763 Why did n''t you think so, mother? 34763 Why not? 34763 Why, what''s that down there? 34763 Why? 34763 Why_ did_ you have her to lodge with you? 34763 Will you really try? 34763 With a K.? 34763 Yes, ma''am? 34763 Yes, sound, are you? 34763 Yes? 34763 You do n''t want me to starve the child, do you? 34763 You owe me five farthings, says the bells of St. Martins, When will you pay me? 34763 You wo n''t let one come near me, nursie, will you? 34763 You wo n''t really go away, will you? 34763 You''ll let me have it outside, wo n''t you? 34763 You''ll only pretend? 34763 Your coat is my gander, Bailiff? 34763 [_ Enter MRS. D._ MRS. D. Oh, you naughty boy, did n''t I tell you not to get on the wall without me holding you? 34763 [_ Enter MRS. L., KITTY ostentatiously holding bag so that MRS. L. may see it._ MRS. L. What''s that you have, Kitty? 34763 [_ Sings_]When will you pay me? |
34763 | or is it a cock''s head and a horse''s body? |
26950 | ''Do n''t you wish it would?'' 26950 ''Well,''says Buck,''why do n''t yer give him one?'' |
26950 | ''Which way?'' 26950 ''Will Mr. Ming''s sperrit walk till he gits that button back?'' |
26950 | ''You miser''ble loony,''he yells back,''ca n''t yer see it ai n''t no Ming? 26950 ''You think I''m goin''ter tech that Ming spook?'' |
26950 | A ghost? 26950 A man? |
26950 | A what? 26950 All night?" |
26950 | An''did old Bloody Bones done tol''you dey ain''no ghosts? |
26950 | An''yet you say she ai n''t classed as crazy? 26950 And now, Mr. Hobson,"I said, throwing away the butt of my cigar,"why am_ I_ here? |
26950 | And that was why the ghost no longer opposed the match? |
26950 | And what happened afterwards? |
26950 | And what might that be? |
26950 | And what was that? |
26950 | And when did you get in? |
26950 | And why did the ghost go away? |
26950 | And you remember what I said about never marrying anybody as had more than what I have? |
26950 | And you will tell our children some day, wo n''t you? |
26950 | Are you making up this story? |
26950 | Assuredly it is not common; but, still, how much do you want for it? 26950 Barney, where are my pantaloons?" |
26950 | But Charles, what the deuce are you about? 26950 But do n''t you think that was a foolish thing to buy?" |
26950 | But he kept his title? |
26950 | But the master? |
26950 | But what have I got to do with this? |
26950 | But what induced you to get this house into such a predicament? |
26950 | But what''s the matter with you? 26950 But where did he get it from?" |
26950 | But who wants ghosts? |
26950 | But why are you afraid of him? 26950 But why did he do it?" |
26950 | But why did you wish to speak to me? |
26950 | But why, Gladolia? |
26950 | But would he not hear you? |
26950 | But you-- you come often? |
26950 | By the ghost of one of the witches, of course? |
26950 | By the name of----? 26950 Ca n''t you see me very plain?" |
26950 | Comfortable? |
26950 | Company? |
26950 | Den whut_ am_ yo''skeered ob? |
26950 | Did he succeed in driving the ghosts away? |
26950 | Did he succeed? |
26950 | Did n''t I ever tell you about them? |
26950 | Did n''t you send for me? |
26950 | Did the ghost leave Scotland for America as soon as the old baron died? |
26950 | Do I understand you to intimate that both ghosts were there together? |
26950 | Do n''t I show up good? |
26950 | Do you know,he cried,"that John Hinckman is coming up the hill? |
26950 | Do you know,he said, with a countenance that indicated anxiety,"if Mr. Hinckman will return to- night?" |
26950 | Do you want me to commit suicide? 26950 Does you hear anyone in the bushes, dear?" |
26950 | Dreams, have you? |
26950 | Dreams, have you? |
26950 | Drink? |
26950 | Excuse me, did I say queer? 26950 From what country are you, and what is your age?" |
26950 | Go? |
26950 | Has n''t Gauntmoor all the ancient inconveniences a Robber Baron could wish? |
26950 | Have n''t you heard it? |
26950 | Have you ever read the old prophecy on the library window? |
26950 | Hobson? |
26950 | How could a ghost, or even two ghosts, keep a girl from marrying the man she loved? |
26950 | How did he come over,queried Dear Jones--"in the steerage, or as a cabin passenger?" |
26950 | How did he know they were swearing? 26950 How does Perkinsville look with that-- with that curio squattin''on top of it?" |
26950 | How long have you had this here money? |
26950 | How long will this ghost keep? |
26950 | How much will you charge me for this fragment of a mummy? |
26950 | How the deuce did you ever come to get elected? |
26950 | How the devil do I know why he did n''t bark? |
26950 | How was it the dog did n''t bark? |
26950 | I hope she was n''t a daughter of that loud and vulgar old Mrs. Sutton whom I met at Saratoga one summer four or five years ago? |
26950 | I know that your first question will be:''Is there sufficient proof of his ever having been dead?'' 26950 I should reckon''twas a bit of nonsense what I''d dreamed,"he said;"but money''s money, as who should know better than me? |
26950 | I thought, of course, it was a dream; but then-- where the d----l are the breeches? |
26950 | If I break in and steal you away from this, will you go? |
26950 | If there_ be_ a trick? 26950 In a word, be you tokened again? |
26950 | Is it open for visitors? |
26950 | Is it the breeches? |
26950 | Is that a very interesting book? |
26950 | Is that all you''ve got to complain about? |
26950 | Is the fourth place for him? |
26950 | Is there any legend? |
26950 | Is-- is that where they''ve been coming from? |
26950 | It seems curious, does n''t it? |
26950 | John, why in the world are you sitting in the dark? |
26950 | Lavinia, dear, do you know anyone by the name of Helen? |
26950 | Like a good fellow,she wrote,"wo n''t you drop off at Perkinsville, Ohio, on your way, and take a look at Gauntmoor Castle? |
26950 | May I ask where did you get that hat? |
26950 | Me? 26950 Me? |
26950 | My dear Hiram,cried Mrs. Otis,"what can we do with a woman who faints?" |
26950 | No results? |
26950 | Now how could it be the ghost of a witch, since the witches were all burned at the stake? 26950 Or drive Miss Julia in the phaeton?" |
26950 | Ouija, dear, wo n''t you tell us something? |
26950 | Pardon, am I addressing Miss Annie Hobson? |
26950 | Perhaps he kept his countenance veiled? |
26950 | Poor, poor ghost,she murmured;"have you no place where you can sleep?" |
26950 | Results? 26950 S''pose we work right in the house?" |
26950 | She accepted him, of course? |
26950 | Since it have gone so long, let it go longer, and surprise him with the news on the wedding- night-- eh, James? |
26950 | So much as that, is it? |
26950 | So you want me to go, do you? |
26950 | So, besides being the owner of a haunted house in Salem, he was also a haunted man in Scotland? |
26950 | Spooks? |
26950 | Starve you to death? 26950 That''s better,"he said with a jolly chuckle;"now you do believe in me, do n''t you? |
26950 | That''s years and years afore I axed you to marry me? |
26950 | The master, sir----"Well, what does he want? |
26950 | Then how came it that the father and son were lost in the yacht off the Hebrides? |
26950 | Then why did you bother? |
26950 | Think of whom? |
26950 | This writing business_ is_ delightful, is n''t it? |
26950 | To be sure, my dear sir; do n''t you remember the rats came under the forest laws-- a minor species of venison? 26950 Very well,"said I, graciously;"shall I go on?" |
26950 | Was it the guardian- angel ghost warning him off the match? |
26950 | Well, Barney, what is it? |
26950 | Well, really,said the Ghost, rather meekly,"what was I to do? |
26950 | Well, who cares anyway? |
26950 | Well? |
26950 | Wha''yo''pick up dat nomsense? |
26950 | What are you going to do with her? |
26950 | What company was you in? |
26950 | What company? |
26950 | What did he do? |
26950 | What did he do? |
26950 | What do you here to- night? |
26950 | What do you mean by appearing here like this? |
26950 | What do you mean by that? |
26950 | What do you mean? |
26950 | What do you suppose I am waiting for? 26950 What has all this got to do with your ghost?" |
26950 | What is become of our ramble to the rocks before breakfast? |
26950 | What is? |
26950 | What key? |
26950 | What on earth has Miss Simpkinson discovered there? |
26950 | What on earth is the_ name_ of the ghost? |
26950 | What recompense do you desire? |
26950 | What the deuce is Aunt Elizabeth up to now? |
26950 | What was he like? |
26950 | What was it, Uncle Larry? |
26950 | What was that tune yo''all were singin''out yonder? |
26950 | What was the merry jest? |
26950 | What''s amiss? |
26950 | What''s old Hobson got out of it? |
26950 | What''s queer about it? |
26950 | What? |
26950 | When I was a young man,said Mr. Peters,"I remember I always made a point of----""Pray, how long ago was that?" |
26950 | Where did they get the banjo? |
26950 | Where? |
26950 | Where_ can_ they be? |
26950 | Who is there? |
26950 | Who knows? |
26950 | Who never do? |
26950 | Who was she? |
26950 | Who were they? |
26950 | Who? 26950 Who? |
26950 | Whose is the extra place? |
26950 | Whut for you try to take my head? |
26950 | Whut yo''want to say unto me? |
26950 | Why ai n''t yo''want to go? |
26950 | Why ca n''t you? 26950 Why not bide till you''m married, then?" |
26950 | Why should I be inspecting Gauntmoor Castle-- and what is a castle named Gauntmoor doing in Perkinsville, Ohio, anyway? 26950 Why, Barney, you do n''t mean to say the ghost has got them again?" |
26950 | Will you go? |
26950 | Will you not buy something from me to- day, sir? 26950 Yes, what have you done with them?" |
26950 | Yet how else can I explain that vision I saw on the ramparts? |
26950 | You do n''t mean to say that they knew any just cause or impediment why they should not forever after hold their peace? |
26950 | You do n''t mean to tell me that the ghost which haunted the house was a woman? |
26950 | You know my great- great- uncle? |
26950 | You mean Joshua, the quiet lad? |
26950 | *****"Come, Charles, the urn is absolutely getting cold; your breakfast will be quite spoiled: what can have made you so idle?" |
26950 | Aguada?" |
26950 | Ai n''t that a funny name fer a river? |
26950 | An''did n''t I use to make some excuse to send him over to Mame Maddern''s ma''s ma''s-- so''s he''d be harmlessly diverted? |
26950 | An''if de cap''n ghost an''de gin''ral ghost an''de king ghost an''all de ghostes in de whole worl''do n''t know ef dar am ghostes, who does?" |
26950 | An''their Injun niggers-- ain''t we seen their clothes in the comic op''ras an''them without their clothes in the monkey cage at Central Park? |
26950 | An''who know''but whut a great, big ghost bump right into him''ca''se it ca n''t see him? |
26950 | An''whut dem six ghostes do but stand round an''confabulate? |
26950 | And excuse me, but do you always come in sections like this? |
26950 | And suppose a ghost brought into court demanded trial by a jury of his peers? |
26950 | And this fortress-- what power has moved it overseas to this mad kingdom? |
26950 | And what do you imagine was its subject?" |
26950 | And what sort of a ghost, Barney?" |
26950 | Ask who, Ouija?" |
26950 | At last he turned to me earnestly and said:"Do you believe in ghosts?" |
26950 | But Robert got tired waiting, and spoke again in an anxious tone, a little louder, and ruther complaining,"Do n''t I show up good?" |
26950 | But ca n''t you see? |
26950 | But how can I get away from here?" |
26950 | But is it possible that you, twenty- seven years old and a college graduate, have n''t heard of Thaddeus Hobson, the Marvelous Millionaire?" |
26950 | But what good does it do in a town so intellectual as Harmony?" |
26950 | But what had become of Seaforth and his fair Caroline all this while? |
26950 | But what was the result? |
26950 | But, tell me, is it true that you are doomed to follow me about for one mortal hour-- to stand where I stand, to sit where I sit?" |
26950 | Come, de Pierrepont, will you sup with the old Earl?" |
26950 | Could I not, I thought, derive a revenue from the traffic in desirable specters? |
26950 | Could he hear them?" |
26950 | Could we see him ter- morrer night?'' |
26950 | Did n''t it?" |
26950 | Do n''t yer see who this is? |
26950 | Do n''t you know it would?" |
26950 | Do n''t you know what a strike is? |
26950 | Do you know who I am?" |
26950 | Do you think so?" |
26950 | Dull? |
26950 | Feel sick? |
26950 | Flo, what_ is_ the matter?" |
26950 | Ghosts are the product of the imagination, but if I imagine I see one he is as real to me as if he actually exists, is n''t he? |
26950 | Ghosts? |
26950 | Had the good old man been murdered? |
26950 | Have n''t you been calling on heaven and earth all afternoon to help you write a story?" |
26950 | Have you five pieces of gold with which to ransom me?" |
26950 | Hinckman?" |
26950 | How can you keep a lady up working all night and then expect her to retain all her faculties the next day? |
26950 | How can you talk such nonsense?" |
26950 | How the deuce did Hobson know my name? |
26950 | How you know dey ai n''t no ghosts?" |
26950 | Howdy, li''l''Mose?" |
26950 | I have a solemn, an indispensable engagement----""Why,"said the baron,"can not you send someone in your place?" |
26950 | I never told on you, though I was very much annoyed, and it was most ridiculous, the whole thing; for who ever heard of emerald- green blood?" |
26950 | I remember-- the private staircase; how could I be such a fool?" |
26950 | I sat still, feeling pretty helpless I can tell you, and at last she barked:"What are you gaping at?" |
26950 | I struck his trail an''follered it-- an''say, Bill, what''n thunder do yer think? |
26950 | In the meantime tell me candidly-- I ask it in all seriousness, and as a friend-- am I not a dupe to your well- known propensity to hoaxing? |
26950 | Is this any more than the logical issue of that admission? |
26950 | Lord, now, would n''t that jolt youse? |
26950 | Me touch dat t''ing? |
26950 | Me? |
26950 | Might not anything be possible? |
26950 | Must I have you dragged into the middle of the street, and have fireworks put off close to your ear, in order to waken you? |
26950 | Now did you ever hear anything innocenter than that? |
26950 | Now who''ll we begin on?" |
26950 | Oh, Mr. Ghost-- I mean Sir Simon, are you hungry? |
26950 | Or to undertake a murder for your benefit?" |
26950 | Ouija, dear, wo n''t you explain yourself more fully?" |
26950 | Ouija, wo n''t you tell us who is talking?" |
26950 | Perhaps some lines that occurred to me will suggest the thing to you-- you recall my old knack for versification? |
26950 | Peters?" |
26950 | Pie- ho? |
26950 | Shall I ever get the cold out of my backbone? |
26950 | She wore something soft and golden; her hair was night- black, and her eyes were that peculiar shade of gray that-- but what''s the use? |
26950 | Since Hobson would permit no tourists to inspect his castle, why was I here on this foolish trip? |
26950 | So he say''to li''l''black Mose:"''T ai n''t likely you met up wid a monstrous big ha''nt whut live''down de lane whut he name Bloody Bones?" |
26950 | So li''l''black Mose he turn''he white head, an''he look''roun''an''peer''roun'', an''he say'':"Whut you all skeered fo''?" |
26950 | Suppose each one of us were to be haunted by his own inane utterances? |
26950 | THE TRANSFERRED GHOST BY FRANK R. STOCKTON From_ The Lady or the Tiger? |
26950 | Then I''d ketch myself an''say,''Where''s your faith in Scripture, Mary Marthy Matthews, named after two Bible women an''born daughter to an apostle? |
26950 | There was a change in the glance--"My great- grandfather?" |
26950 | They were gone a long while, and a nice cosy chat they had; and what do you think it was all about, my dear miss? |
26950 | Use string or pins?'' |
26950 | Was it any wonder that her friends exchanged glances while Mrs. Morris entertained them in so droll a way? |
26950 | We''re rich, but what do we get out of it? |
26950 | What did he want of me at Gauntmoor this time of night? |
26950 | What did this here Judge Ming do then, John? |
26950 | What do you mean?" |
26950 | What have_ I_ got to do with all this ghost business?" |
26950 | What hideous scenes had this chamber beheld of yore? |
26950 | What is it you are trying to conceal from me?" |
26950 | What might not happen here now? |
26950 | What officer would willingly pursue a ghostly tenant to his last lodging in order to serve summons on him? |
26950 | What should you have to say to me?" |
26950 | What time does he come out at, John? |
26950 | What was the world to them, Its noise, its nonsense and its"breeches"all? |
26950 | What were yo''with?" |
26950 | What would become of me if she refused me? |
26950 | What''s that he''s wavin''? |
26950 | What''s the use?'' |
26950 | What_ does_ she mean? |
26950 | Where else?" |
26950 | Where is that Helen?" |
26950 | Where''s the pain?" |
26950 | Where, by the way, was old Hobson''s daughter, Anita? |
26950 | Who is it?" |
26950 | Who was here? |
26950 | Whut is dat Ah got to remimber?" |
26950 | Whut we gwine do fo''to_ re_ward him fo''politeness?" |
26950 | Whut yo''skeered ob whin dey ai n''t no ghosts?" |
26950 | Why did yo''never tell us befo''? |
26950 | Why do n''t you haul it up out of my way?'' |
26950 | Why, Barney, where are they?--and where the d----l are you?" |
26950 | Why, did n''t he used to get nervous just seein''_ me_ around, an''me his own selected? |
26950 | Why, look a- here,''says he,''foist, there''s the white men-- the English-- ain''t they jus''like us excep''that they''re thicker an''we''re longer? |
26950 | Why, that sensitive little woman could n''t bear to have a mouse say boo at her-- and what would she say to a ghost in her own living- room? |
26950 | Why, there was a buck I had shot in Hogley Woods, a magnificent pricket, and do you know how she had it sent to table? |
26950 | Why, what does she mean?" |
26950 | Why, what''s the matter, John?" |
26950 | Wo n''t you hurry and go? |
26950 | Would n''t that jar youse? |
26950 | Would you like it?" |
26950 | Yess? |
26950 | Yet what was the consequences? |
26950 | Yet, after all, why so strange? |
26950 | You do n''t believe that fairy story, do you?" |
26950 | You never heard of anybody who was burned having a ghost, did you?" |
26950 | You wo n''t send me back, will you? |
26950 | and had his spirit come to tell me of the deed, and to confide to me the protection of his dear--? |
26950 | and----""Mr. Simpkinson, a glass of sherry?" |
26950 | asked the valet, casting an inquiring eye round the apartment;--"is it the breeches, sir?" |
26950 | child, where have you been?" |
26950 | continued Bill, spreading out his great paws over the radiator,"ai n''t this the snappy evenin''? |
26950 | going to leave the castle at midnight? |
26950 | is it meself, then, that''s the ghost to your honor''s thinking?" |
26950 | said Charles;"did I not hear a footstep?" |
26950 | said Miss Julia Simpkinson,"wo n''t yo''be very wet?" |
26950 | says Buck when we come ter this,''do n''t that prove what heathens Chinks is? |
26950 | whut you know''bout ghosts, anner ways?" |
26950 | you do n''t mean to ride through our lanes in such toggery as that?" |
35438 | How would you be, If He, which is the top of judgment, should But judge you as you are? |
35438 | ''How can I help it,''says the Doctor,''if the courtiers give me a watch that wo n''t go right?'' |
35438 | ** Poor Stella, wo n''t Dingley leave her a little daylight to write to Presto? |
35438 | ***** As we gaze at the first of the two masks, what is it that we see? |
35438 | ***** Shakespeare, this Englishman who died two hundred and sixty years ago, what is he now to us his countrymen, who ought to know him best? |
35438 | Ah, but may not my nature suffer by the change? |
35438 | And how am I to do so except by observing him working? |
35438 | And is this the Satan of the_ Paradise Lost_? |
35438 | And what then, finally, was Goethe''s_ own_ mode of activity in a life thus defined in his general philosophy? |
35438 | And why all this? |
35438 | And zoo go dine with Manley, and lose your money, doo extravagant sluttikin? |
35438 | Art_ thou_ come hither to have fame?" |
35438 | Besides, by beginning with this, may I not worm my way to a more effective position even in infinitude? |
35438 | But where were the materials for the commencement of this new literature? |
35438 | Do you know what? |
35438 | Has she a boy or a girl? |
35438 | How could I take up arms without hatred, and how could I hate without youth? |
35438 | How could Satan have hoped for victory in that case? |
35438 | How is this to be accounted for? |
35438 | How is this? |
35438 | How many letters shall I send you before I receive an answer? |
35438 | How, then,_ did_ Shakespeare relate himself to this concrete world of nature and life in which his lot had been cast? |
35438 | If I call_ bad_ bad, what do I gain? |
35438 | In the course of ages of dealing with the puny offspring of these new beings, may I not dwindle into a mere pungent, pettifogging Spirit? |
35438 | Is it not more reasonable to adore a radiant form one has seen than one only described?" |
35438 | Is it so? |
35438 | Is it that really, during this period, there was less of available mind than before in England, that the quality of the English nerve had degenerated? |
35438 | Is there no hope even now, no room for repentance? |
35438 | Is this the Archangel ruined? |
35438 | May it not, then, be profitable to make their peculiarities and their differences a subject of study? |
35438 | Must loo mimitate_ Pdfr_, pay? |
35438 | Must you imitate_ Pdfr_, pray? |
35438 | Nay, and with that measure with which we mete out to others, with the same measure shall it not be meted out to ourselves? |
35438 | Oh, had he not been made so high, should he ever have fallen so low? |
35438 | Oh, have you forgot me? |
35438 | Or, if any such do find their way, how are they to be adjusted to so mean a rule? |
35438 | Pray, what can be wrong in seeing and advising an unhappy young woman? |
35438 | The laureateship remained vacant two years after Davenant''s death; and then it was conferred-- on whom? |
35438 | The question next was, Who would venture out of Hell to explore the way to the new World? |
35438 | There was a secret in Swift''s life: what was it? |
35438 | Through what mode of activity, practised while alive, has he won this immortality after he is dead? |
35438 | Was this, then, the case? |
35438 | Well, will_ Social Statics_ be so good as to take the foregoing passages, and whirr out of them their"possible social simultaneities"? |
35438 | What are the special claims of Shakespeare to this high worship? |
35438 | What are we to make of this? |
35438 | What could indicate the heart of a devil more than his words to Faust in the harrowing prison scene? |
35438 | What foolish patron is there found of his So blindly partial to deny me this? |
35438 | What had brought him there? |
35438 | What marks are there of a deity but what you are to be known by? |
35438 | What precise function with regard to it, if not that of an active partisan of progress, did he accept as devolving naturally on_ him_? |
35438 | What were those"vital signs,"those proofs indubitable to Milton that he had the art and faculty of a poet? |
35438 | What would Raphael, Gabriel, and Michael say, were they to see their old co- mate changed into such a being? |
35438 | When Sir Toby says to Malvolio,"Dost thou think, because thou art virtuous, there shall be no more cakes and ale?" |
35438 | Whither it is hurrying, who can tell? |
35438 | Who does not know the famous passage which is the very key- note of that poem? |
35438 | Who was the fit man to be appointed laureate at the Restoration? |
35438 | Why may not imagination trace the noble dust of Alexander till he find it stopping a bung- hole? |
35438 | Yet what can I do? |
35438 | _ Goethe''s Theory of the intention of the Supernatural with regard to the Visible._--"After all, what does it all come to? |
35438 | _ Hamlet._ And smelt so? |
35438 | _ Hamlet._ Dost thou think Alexander looked o''this fashion i''the earth? |
35438 | _ Horatio._ What''s that, my lord? |
35438 | and how far have they got? |
35438 | and who, indeed, can remember the point from which it started?" |
35438 | are you mad? |
36790 | But why should I wish to quarrel with you? |
36790 | Master,Tabarin would begin,"can you tell me which is the more generous, a man or a woman?" |
36790 | What am I? |
36790 | And why is it that the infrequent plays produced by women playwrights rarely attain high rank? |
36790 | At least, what did it connote to an Athenian? |
36790 | But what did the Greek word in the text of Aristotle which is rendered into English as"scenery"really mean? |
36790 | But why five acts? |
36790 | I have escaped you, have I? |
36790 | IV WHY FIVE ACTS? |
36790 | If Sumurun can sing, why can she not speak? |
36790 | If the Hunchback can shriek and sob audibly, why is he ordinarily reduced to mere gesture? |
36790 | In the days and weeks which followed she asked herself:''Would he like me to do this?'' |
36790 | Is he not, in fact, confessing that he esteems the play inferior to the novel? |
36790 | It is easy to see that the later Germans derived it from the French and the English; but where did the French and the English get it? |
36790 | Now that the drama is rising again into rivalry with prose fiction, is not the playwright who allows his piece to be novelized a traitor to his cause? |
36790 | Poor Tribonian had a sore job to make up the fifty books of the Pandects; what was that to the labor of a dramatist bent on filling his five acts? |
36790 | Probably very few of the spectators noticed the mishap, and if they had all observed it, what matter? |
36790 | WHY FIVE ACTS? |
36790 | WHY FIVE ACTS? |
36790 | Was he not as richly dowered with dramatic power, as inventive, as responsive to opportunity, as ready to master a new craft? |
36790 | Was not Stevenson as anxious for this theatrical triumph as any one of these? |
36790 | What are life, art, letters, the world, but what my Skelt has made them? |
36790 | What put the idea into his head? |
36790 | What warrant had he? |
36790 | Whence came the strange beast with the wide jaws? |
36790 | Where are his scowls, his growls, his stabs, As shown of old by Park and Skelt? |
36790 | Where are the villain''s spangled tabs, His cloak, his ringlets, and his belt? |
36790 | Where could they get it? |
36790 | Which is the more generous, a man or a woman?" |
36790 | Who, for example, would be bold enough to insist on his own definition of"romanticism"? |
36790 | Why can not they write a play as well as they can act in it? |
36790 | Why did Horace declare this law? |
36790 | Why did even the comic muse demand it? |
36790 | Why has five the number sacred to the tragic muse? |
36790 | Why not three acts, or seven? |
36790 | Why was it that any other number of acts was unthinkable-- or at least never thought of? |
36790 | Why, then, did he fail where they have succeeded? |
36790 | he asked in his self- revelatory essay, humorously exaggerating, no doubt, yet subconsciously stating the exact truth;"What am I? |
29809 | Air? |
29809 | All right to talk? |
29809 | An attack? |
29809 | And how about you, old man? |
29809 | And so,I said,"we don these things and stroll out into the Atlantic looking for the girl and her friends?" |
29809 | And so? |
29809 | And the chart of our course-- did the return trip check with the other? |
29809 | And then? |
29809 | And this hump on the back? |
29809 | And we have thirty men? |
29809 | And what will you do? |
29809 | Anita, listen: if anything happens and we have to make a dash--"Up through that dome- lock, Gregg? 29809 Are you ready, Anita?" |
29809 | Are you ready, dad? |
29809 | Are you setting a course, dad? |
29809 | But how do you expect to be able to land at the other end any more than this? |
29809 | But how, Mercer? 29809 But we''ll get back all right?" |
29809 | But what place is this? |
29809 | But who would n''t, with a wire like this? |
29809 | But you do n''t have to leave the Earth, do you? |
29809 | But,said Bell practically,"do you accept my terms?" |
29809 | Can you make the leap? 29809 Commander Potan tells me you were chief navigator of the_ Planetara_?" |
29809 | Did n''t tell you where he was going? |
29809 | Did you say anything about the Atom Smasher, Parrish? |
29809 | Do you know the penalty for that? |
29809 | Do you think I''ve been idle during these five years of my exile? 29809 Eh? |
29809 | Feel anything wrong with your head, Dent? |
29809 | Fools, did you think you could escape that way? |
29809 | From-- your father? 29809 George Prince''s sister? |
29809 | Gregg, do you see anything up there? 29809 Gregg, what is it?" |
29809 | How long will it take us to get back? |
29809 | How many of them? |
29809 | I mean, do you know just where we are? |
29809 | If we were all to jump out, tied together-- don''t you think we might land-- somewhere near where we want to land? |
29809 | Is he bad? |
29809 | Is he-- bad? |
29809 | Is it an attack? |
29809 | Is that an airplane motor? |
29809 | Is this George Prince''s sister? |
29809 | Jim, darling, what''s going to happen to us if dad ca n''t find how to work the machine? |
29809 | Jim, do you feel something pushing you? |
29809 | Jim, do you realize what each vibration of this boat means? |
29809 | Josef? 29809 Know where we are, Dent?" |
29809 | Leave them here? |
29809 | Nothing in sight? |
29809 | Now, what''s the alternative? |
29809 | Ready, Dent? |
29809 | Shall we go out and see? |
29809 | So devilish clever.... What are we going to do? |
29809 | Suppose the machine continues to vibrate instead of coming to a standstill? |
29809 | Suppose we go up and see? 29809 That was for him?" |
29809 | The brigands? |
29809 | The merest drop of it? |
29809 | The open air seems good, does n''t it? |
29809 | The_ Planetara_ wrecked? 29809 Truly, do the Rorn become dead? |
29809 | What are they, Senhor? |
29809 | What are we going to do? |
29809 | What are you doing out on deck? |
29809 | What are you going to do, Gregg? |
29809 | What do you know? |
29809 | What is it, Argle? |
29809 | What is it, Jim? |
29809 | What is the matter? |
29809 | What is your trade, anyways? |
29809 | What the devil are we supposed to be, criminals or what? |
29809 | What will we do with the helmets? |
29809 | What''s this? 29809 What?" |
29809 | Where am I? |
29809 | Where are you going? |
29809 | Where are you hit, darling? |
29809 | Where are you now? |
29809 | Where is the city of Atlantis? |
29809 | Which way, Parrish? 29809 Who is the man to the left?" |
29809 | Who told you so? |
29809 | Why do n''t you ask my girl herself? |
29809 | Why do they smile at us all the time in that confounded way? |
29809 | Why should I hurry, Gregg? |
29809 | Why? |
29809 | Why? |
29809 | Yes, sir? |
29809 | You are Gregg Haljan? |
29809 | You do n''t remember the bearings, I suppose? |
29809 | You have on your Erentz suits: are you going to the dome- roof? 29809 You have signaled the men on shore to send out a boat to take us off?" |
29809 | You hesitate to give me your answer, Dent? |
29809 | You hurt? |
29809 | You know what that is, Dent? |
29809 | You mean that you''ve learned how to fly, you black imp of Satan? |
29809 | You mean you can actually do that? |
29809 | You mean,he said quietly,"that an airplane could not land?" |
29809 | You see? |
29809 | You speak English? 29809 You think the signal room is in the tower, Gregg? |
29809 | You think you''re able to face the world and take up life again? |
29809 | You were an officer of the_ Planetara_? |
29809 | You''re not remembering him after all? |
29809 | You''ve-- had it? |
29809 | _ Yes? 29809 ***** Was it true, that amazing story? 29809 A Martian? 29809 A flash from some giant projector mounted on the ship? 29809 A group of captured Drilgoes near it? 29809 A lurking Martian outside? 29809 A traitor in the camp? 29809 An error in the range? 29809 And do you know what I''ve been doing during all this hellish period? 29809 And then, in pictured form, for Imee''s benefit,It has been here while much time passed?" |
29809 | And this is the sister of George Prince-- what do you want up here?" |
29809 | And to whom could Wilks be signalling across this Lunar desolation? |
29809 | And was that the captured Atom Smasher standing between what looked like grinning idols? |
29809 | And was the third figure Miko? |
29809 | Anderson''s Favorites_ Dear Editor: Just a word referring to your"What kind of stories do you like?" |
29809 | Anita whispered,"Which is their giant electronic projector, Gregg?" |
29809 | Anita whispered:"Did he mean that signal room up here in the tower? |
29809 | Anita''s metal- gloved hand was on my arm; in my ear diaphragm her voice sounded eager and unmistakable:"What was the signal, Gregg?" |
29809 | Anything I can do?" |
29809 | Are Haljan and the girl up there with you?" |
29809 | But even if it struck, what guarantee had he that it would shatter the glass, or whatever substance it was that covered the orb? |
29809 | But how could I respond to it? |
29809 | But how...? |
29809 | But up there-- how would we get down?" |
29809 | But we''re a hundred and fifty miles off the Venezuelan coast, are n''t we?" |
29809 | But what can you do?" |
29809 | But what was happening in the other side of the Eye? |
29809 | By following the course in reverse we can expect to make Atlantis again--""Back to that horrible place?" |
29809 | Ca n''t we?" |
29809 | Ca n''t you give us some of the Francis Flagg type of fiction? |
29809 | Cain''s just my pet name for him because he subsists on the fruits of the earth, do n''t you, Cain?" |
29809 | Can you arrange to give me some sign that you''re safe?" |
29809 | Can you get hold of a bit of the antidote?" |
29809 | Could it be true that Tode had solved the practical problem of traveling in time, theoretically implied since the discoveries of Einstein? |
29809 | Creeping-- or would he make a swift, unexpected rush? |
29809 | Did Wilks see me coming? |
29809 | Did he believe me? |
29809 | Did n''t know I''d worked that out, did you? |
29809 | Did we dare linger here? |
29809 | Do you hear airplane motors?" |
29809 | Do you know what I''m going to do with you? |
29809 | Do you think to match your puny will against my own? |
29809 | Do you want to know where that land is? |
29809 | Down on the plains, perhaps? |
29809 | Going there? |
29809 | Had it been tampered with from outside? |
29809 | Had someone gone out this way and broken the mechanisms after him? |
29809 | Had the Earth caught our signal? |
29809 | Had the Earthlight touched him? |
29809 | Have n''t you changed the lamps, or something? |
29809 | He answered me in ready English:"You are the man Gregg Haljan? |
29809 | He desires my services?" |
29809 | He grasped Lucille, held her tightly against his breast, stood there drawing great, labored breaths, waiting-- for what? |
29809 | His light went out very promptly, did n''t it?" |
29809 | How about picking up a little treasure from the hoards of Solomon or Genghis Khan? |
29809 | How many deputies has The Master? |
29809 | How? |
29809 | I insisted,"And Miss Prince? |
29809 | I said sharply,"Are you the commander here? |
29809 | I said,"Before we go any further-- I can trust you for my share?" |
29809 | I think you have everything in hand? |
29809 | I turned toward one of the cubby windows; she said sweetly:"Are you in charge of this room? |
29809 | If Grantline appears down there now, I''ll help you--""Is it connected?" |
29809 | If Parrish was really alive-- why not Tode too? |
29809 | If deputies in two countries that we know of have so much power, how much power has The Master?" |
29809 | If you put me in the camp and the brigands attack it and I am killed-- what then? |
29809 | In telescopic view?" |
29809 | Is everything clear to you?" |
29809 | Is it you?" |
29809 | Is not that your reason?" |
29809 | It was sublime and terrible, and on the result of that conflict depended-- what? |
29809 | Miko dead?" |
29809 | Miko''s lights? |
29809 | Miko? |
29809 | Or had Miko rejoined his party, left his camp and come here like ourselves to climb Archimedes? |
29809 | Or had someone come in from outside? |
29809 | Or had the skulking Martian outside broken this lock as he had broken the other? |
29809 | Or land, perhaps, boldly crowded upon our little ledge? |
29809 | Or sail past, after inspecting us? |
29809 | Or up here, somewhere in these miles of towering rocks? |
29809 | Or was it not a light at all? |
29809 | Or was it two hours? |
29809 | Or was our assumption wholly wrong-- perhaps the brigand ship would not land near here at all? |
29809 | Or was that a local signal- call which he had sent out? |
29809 | Or would I instead try to send a brief flash- signal to Earth? |
29809 | Pack my bags right away, will you? |
29809 | Perhaps I have you to thank for that performance? |
29809 | Ready?" |
29809 | Seems simple? |
29809 | Shall we go ashore?" |
29809 | She added,"Where do you suppose the ship is? |
29809 | She will have her brother''s share?" |
29809 | Should I run? |
29809 | Should I try the flash- signal to Earth? |
29809 | So Bell said placidly:"Well? |
29809 | Suppose Miko were to see us following? |
29809 | Suppose he stopped and lay in ambush to fire at us as we came leaping heedlessly by? |
29809 | Suppose my signal were answered by a shot? |
29809 | Suppose you chaps turn around and take me to Ribiera''s house?" |
29809 | Taylor-- she has?" |
29809 | That''s what you wanted me to do, is n''t it?" |
29809 | The answer came:"_ Where is the Grantline camp?_""_ Near here. |
29809 | The brigand, Miko? |
29809 | The idea is that he must think you are trying to fascinate me, is it not?" |
29809 | Then where is she? |
29809 | This tower outside our window here?" |
29809 | Understand?" |
29809 | Understand?" |
29809 | Was Haljan killed? |
29809 | Was Wilks still up there? |
29809 | Was he advancing, preparing to signal? |
29809 | Was it Haljan standing up there on the summit? |
29809 | Was it premonition? |
29809 | Was that Gregg Haljan who fell?" |
29809 | Was this a farewell? |
29809 | We derive knowledge through one sense only, or, shall I say, a super- sense? |
29809 | Were we acting convincingly? |
29809 | Were we plunging rashly into what was destined to mean our death? |
29809 | What could I do, alone out here with Anita, to cope with this enemy? |
29809 | What could we do? |
29809 | What difference, when all this was forgotten history, antedating the written records of the human race? |
29809 | What does he want of the other men his deputies have enslaved? |
29809 | What had become of his plane, and where was Lucille? |
29809 | What had happened that Jim had won the Drilgo''s faith? |
29809 | What use to proceed further? |
29809 | What use was it to tell Grantline anything further? |
29809 | What was going to happen next? |
29809 | What was he doing with a hand- helio? |
29809 | What was it? |
29809 | What was reality, and what was dream, then? |
29809 | What were they doing there? |
29809 | What were you thinking about me?" |
29809 | What''s it all about? |
29809 | What''s it got to do with our nation?" |
29809 | Where are you? |
29809 | Where did you learn of_ yagué_?" |
29809 | Where is he? |
29809 | Where was he now? |
29809 | Who is The Master?" |
29809 | Who was it climbing the staircase? |
29809 | Why did Cain now look upon him, apparently, as his master? |
29809 | Why did he poison the Service men? |
29809 | Why do you ask me?" |
29809 | Why not have a discussion column and print some of the letters? |
29809 | Why not have a"Reader Talks"in Astounding Stories, where each reader gives his point of view on the stories in the magazine? |
29809 | Why should Wilks be signalling? |
29809 | Will that do to relieve your suspicions?" |
29809 | Will you be good enough to open this door for me? |
29809 | Will you get my diggings on the phone?" |
29809 | Would Brotow follow us up? |
29809 | Would he dare chance my sudden fire? |
29809 | Would it circle over us, firing at us? |
29809 | Would you-- would you assist me to go out on deck, where I might fling myself overboard? |
29809 | Yet how did I dare take Anita from these concealing shadows? |
29809 | You are called Anita? |
29809 | You do n''t remember what you did at the moment, boy?" |
29809 | You fool,"he added savagely,"why did n''t you come in with me in the old days? |
29809 | You got a password?" |
29809 | You heard of it? |
29809 | You kept the record on the way out as I instructed you?" |
29809 | You recall your little talk with the wireless operator on the_ Almirante Gomez_? |
29809 | You speak the Earth English?" |
29809 | You''ll see it all later, anyway-- if you feel you''d like to share the adventure with me?" |
29809 | You''re friendly?" |
29809 | panted Bell, and hurled himself upon-- whom? |
32274 | ''And got drunk?'' 32274 ''And what else?'' |
32274 | ''Are ye not dead?'' 32274 ''Are you a dog- fancier?'' |
32274 | ''Are you certain of anything?'' 32274 ''Are you going to answer my question?'' |
32274 | ''Are you not ashamed of yourself, to be found lying drunk in door- ways?'' 32274 ''Are you not certain you are?'' |
32274 | ''Are you not sure that it was?'' 32274 ''Bad luck to you, why did n''t ye ax me that before?'' |
32274 | ''Des''say, hofficer; but did I hoffer any resistance?'' 32274 ''Did you drink liquor to- night?'' |
32274 | ''Did you have any money to- night?'' 32274 ''Did you see''em do it, or did anybody else? |
32274 | ''Do n''t you know whether you''ve been there or not?'' 32274 ''Five shillings?'' |
32274 | ''How did this occur?'' 32274 ''How did you dispose of them?'' |
32274 | ''How did you get it?'' 32274 ''How do you know these boys put torpedoes in your lock?'' |
32274 | ''How long have you been in the city?'' 32274 ''How long is that?'' |
32274 | ''How much did you get for that?'' 32274 ''How often do you drink?'' |
32274 | ''I mean what do you work at?'' 32274 ''I mean what street?'' |
32274 | ''I''m a laborin''man, sir''''At what were you employed?'' |
32274 | ''If I let you of this time will you keep sober?'' 32274 ''If you nab a cove for gettin''drunk vot do they do vith''i m?'' |
32274 | ''Is Mr. O''Grady your counsel?'' 32274 ''Is old Keene varden of the penitentiary now?'' |
32274 | ''Is that all?'' 32274 ''My perwession now, or vot it used to vos?'' |
32274 | ''My perwession?'' 32274 ''Sir,''said he,''does this stage carry me to Greenwich Avenue?'' |
32274 | ''Tell me what street the house is on?'' 32274 ''The number on the door do you mane?'' |
32274 | ''Thomas, where do you live?'' 32274 ''Vas it wiolent?'' |
32274 | ''Vich name do you vant to know?'' 32274 ''Vill they let me off if I tell vere I got the liquor?'' |
32274 | ''Vot do they do vith the coves as sells?'' 32274 ''Vot do you vant to know for?'' |
32274 | ''Vy, does n''t they muzzle cats the same as dogs?'' 32274 ''Was it gin you drank to- night?'' |
32274 | ''Was it malt or spirituous liquor?'' 32274 ''Well what is its name?'' |
32274 | ''Well, what do you do with the dogs?'' 32274 ''Well, what took place before the court?'' |
32274 | ''Well, what was your profession in the past?'' 32274 ''Well, what''s the number of the house?'' |
32274 | ''Were you ever up before the Court before?'' 32274 ''What breed of dogs do you fancy?'' |
32274 | ''What corner?'' 32274 ''What corner?'' |
32274 | ''What did they do to- night?'' 32274 ''What did you do with them there?'' |
32274 | ''What did you sell them for?'' 32274 ''What do you do with the dogs that you get there?'' |
32274 | ''What documents?'' 32274 ''What is your business?'' |
32274 | ''What is your trade?'' 32274 ''What kind of liquor did you drink?'' |
32274 | ''What kind of work?'' 32274 ''What kind was it?'' |
32274 | ''What month was it?'' 32274 ''What street?'' |
32274 | ''What was his name?'' 32274 ''What was the street called before the name was changed?'' |
32274 | ''What''s your name?'' 32274 ''Where did you get it?'' |
32274 | ''Where did you purchase it?'' 32274 ''Where do they live?'' |
32274 | ''Where do you eat?'' 32274 ''Where do you live?'' |
32274 | ''Where do you sleep?'' 32274 ''Where do you want to go madam?'' |
32274 | ''Where is his store?'' 32274 ''Where is that?'' |
32274 | ''Where were you born, Thomas?'' 32274 ''Whereabouts in Worth street?'' |
32274 | ''Who the divil can tell whin they are changin''the names of the blackguard streets so much?'' 32274 ''Why did n''t you catch them then?'' |
32274 | ''Why?'' 32274 ''Will you tell me what you work at when out of prison?'' |
32274 | ''Will you use that money to pay for a bed?'' 32274 ''With that you bought gin?'' |
32274 | ''Worth street I suppose you mean?'' 32274 ''You''ve been there, have you not?'' |
32274 | Are you seriously injured? |
32274 | But it is very funny, is n''t it? |
32274 | But what the devil were you feeling in your pockets for so mysteriously? |
32274 | But where''s Dennis? |
32274 | Could you make it convenient to apologize at once, to fully relieve my mind of the frightful anticipations? |
32274 | Do you ever imbibe? |
32274 | Do you pay for your oysters? |
32274 | Do you steal them and then run away? |
32274 | Gentlemen,said Quackenbush,"that''s a remarkably fine story, is n''t it?" |
32274 | Go,replied Dropper,"how can I go? |
32274 | Good evening, sir,said he, touching his hat,"did you say you have difficulty in getting a bill changed?" |
32274 | How do you get your living? |
32274 | I did n''t black your eye; what do you mean? |
32274 | Jolly? 32274 Mr. Quackenbush,"inquired Spout,"allow me to ask whether you are acquainted with life in the metropolis in its multiform phases?" |
32274 | Now, gentlemen,concluded Mr. Spout,"who wants to be a Higholdboy? |
32274 | Now, had n''t he ought to be ashamed of himself, the red- haired devil, for getting Old Nick into such a scrape by his drunken lies? 32274 Shall I read them to you?" |
32274 | So Nicholas,said Boggs,"you''ve come back, have you? |
32274 | Then you recollect the circumstance, do you? |
32274 | What boy is it? |
32274 | What does it mean by coming''in_ costume_?'' 32274 What the deuce does all this mean?" |
32274 | Where did you get your liquor? |
32274 | _ Clerk._--Come, tell me what kind of liquor did you drink yesterday? 32274 _ Clerk._--Do you mean hereafter to treat this Court respectfully? |
32274 | _ Clerk._--How long have you been drunk? |
32274 | _ Clerk._--How old are you? 32274 _ Clerk._--Where did you get your liquor? |
32274 | _ Counsel_( to client).--Keep your mouth shut, why do n''t you? 32274 _ Indignant Officer._--Who''re you winkin''at? |
32274 | _ Judge._--Are you the witness? 32274 _ Judge._--Did Timothy create any disturbance then? |
32274 | _ Judge._--Have you got ten dollars? 32274 _ Judge._--Hook, what have you got to say for yourself? |
32274 | _ Judge._--How did he keep the eel up in his sleeve? 32274 _ Judge._--Mr. Warbler, you have heard what the officers have stated about your eccentric course of conduct; how did you happen to get drunk? |
32274 | _ Judge._--Mrs. Hennesy, where is Timothy, the corpse? 32274 _ Judge._--Then why did you have him arrested? |
32274 | _ Judge._--What did Timothy do? 32274 _ Judge._--What has all this to do with Timothy Mulrooney''s offensive conduct? |
32274 | _ Judge._--What have you got to say, prisoner? 32274 _ Judge._--What number in Cedar street? |
32274 | _ Judge._--When was that? 32274 _ Judge._--Where did you get your liquor? |
32274 | _ Judge._--Where do you live? 32274 _ Judge_( much vexed).--What did Timothy do with your fish? |
32274 | _ Judge_( to officer).--Who is Sally? 32274 _ Judge_( very indignant).--Did you say I''ve been on a spree? |
32274 | _ Prisoner._--''Did you ever hear tell of Kate Kearney?'' 32274 _ Prisoner._--''Way down south in Cedar street; rinctum''--"_ Judge_( to officer).--What''s that he says? |
32274 | _ The Clerk._--What''s your name? 32274 _ The Court._--Boys, what have you got to say for yourselves for such conduct? |
32274 | _ The Court._--What was O''Neil doing when you found him? 32274 _ Witness._--And do n''t ye know Michael, sure? |
32274 | _ Witness._--Haven''t I been trying for the last ten minutes to tell ye, and ye''ll not not let me? 32274 _ Witness._--How do I know but ye''ll intherrupt me again before I have said five words? |
32274 | ''Michael,''sez I;''What,''sez he;''Is it here ye''s air?'' |
32274 | ''Say, old sour krout,''he continued,''what else have the boys done?'' |
32274 | ''What''s the matther wid yez?'' |
32274 | A transcript of a conversation between him and the Clerk of the Court reads as follows:"_ Clerk._--Where were you born? |
32274 | Air not their ethnological instincts runnin''in the same channels? |
32274 | Allow me to make you acquainted with my old and valued friend Mr.---- Mr.---- what the devil did you say your name is?" |
32274 | And who was they disturbin''? |
32274 | Blobb,''said the Judge,''if I let you off this time, will you cease going on these drunken sprees?'' |
32274 | But if these gentlemen will let you off, will you stop troubling him in the future?'' |
32274 | But who was he to be? |
32274 | Can I depend upon your coming?" |
32274 | Do you suppose I am going to believe it? |
32274 | Do you think I''m made of patience? |
32274 | Do you want to go?" |
32274 | Do you wish to make the acquaintance of Doesticks? |
32274 | H._--Is it for to prove that the charackther of me house is not good that yer afther axin''the question? |
32274 | Has any of my illusthrious family the O''Briens ever done annything against yer honer that yez should illthrait me in this way? |
32274 | Have n''t I made him presents enough? |
32274 | Have you got a home?" |
32274 | He called for his pipe and he called for his bowl-- wonder if he got it? |
32274 | How am I to dress? |
32274 | How do you like the idea?" |
32274 | How is it?" |
32274 | How is the financial department at present?" |
32274 | Howly St. Pathrick, do ye hear that? |
32274 | I commenced a dialogue with him, which, as near as I can recollect, was as follows:"''What are you doing here?'' |
32274 | Is Michael in court? |
32274 | Mr. Boggs, will you pass me the tobacco- box?" |
32274 | Mr. O''Grady, have your other witnesses anything to testify in addition to what Mrs. Hennesy has stated? |
32274 | Mr. Skinner testified as follows:"''This''ere feller came to my eel- stand yes''day mornin''and asked me how eels was? |
32274 | Now, thin, will ye relate the facts? |
32274 | O''G._--What kind of a house do you keep there? |
32274 | O''G._--Will you plase to state to the Coort the facts of the unfortunate occurrence that thranspired in yer house last night? |
32274 | Perhaps it''s that circumstance to which you refer?" |
32274 | Sez he,''How much?'' |
32274 | Sez he,''Is them all yer got?'' |
32274 | Shall I proceed? |
32274 | Sir, what are the facts? |
32274 | The Higholdboy and the stranger held the following conversation:"What''s your name?" |
32274 | The Judge proceeded to interrogate him somewhat as follows:"_ Judge._--What is your name, sir? |
32274 | The clerk, nothing daunted, continued:"''How long have you been in this country?'' |
32274 | The fellow''s name? |
32274 | Thou base, inglorious slave, think''st thou I will reveal the noble name of him who gave me wine? |
32274 | Warbler._--Ha, say you so? |
32274 | Was n''t every man and woman and child in Pacific Place of the same nationality of these my clients? |
32274 | Was they disturbed? |
32274 | Well, gentlemen, as I was saying that-- that-- that-- where the devil did I leave off? |
32274 | Were you ever lost at sea, sir?" |
32274 | What did you do with them at the dog- pound?'' |
32274 | What do you mean by intruding your music upon other people''s music, and thus mixing the breed? |
32274 | What do you suppose will become of you if you go on in this way?" |
32274 | What kind of a house, I''ll ax ye wonst more, do ye keep? |
32274 | What shall I put on, and where shall I get it?" |
32274 | Who knows where he will lay his bones? |
32274 | Who should be_ Laertes_ but he who"skulped"the Greek Slave, or what editor could play"the king"like the democratic conductor of the_ Tribune_? |
32274 | Why should I here conceal my fault? |
32274 | Will you accompany me?" |
32274 | Would you prefer having it in quarter eagles or twenty dollar pieces?" |
32274 | [ Illustration]"''Who the divil did that?'' |
32274 | said Mr. Cake,"where shall it be?" |
32274 | said the corner grocery- man, despairingly,''is dat not enough vat I have tell you? |
32274 | sez I;''Sure it is,''sez he;''Did you save the porgies?'' |
32274 | who, in assuming the crown, was to doff the white hat,"positively for one night only?" |
35416 | [ 122] It_ was_ too late!-- What now to her was womanhood or fame? 35416 & c.Why, O thou dearer half of my soul, dost thou watch over me thus mute and pensive? |
35416 | -- What should we fear, Castara? |
35416 | --"Why an almanack?" |
35416 | ....*....*....*....* How in the world, to me a desert grown, Abandon''d and alone, Without my sweet companion can I live? |
35416 | ....*....*....*....* Quand reverrai celui do nt as reçu la vie? |
35416 | Ah, tandis qu''eplorée et de coeur si malade, Te quier[19] la nuit, te redemande au jour-- Que deviens? |
35416 | And after all this passed purgatory, Must sad divorce make us the vulgar story? |
35416 | And now, how shall I fill up this sketch? |
35416 | At balls must she make all this rout, And bring home hearts by dozens? |
35416 | But can you as easily part from me as I from you? |
35416 | But is this merciful, or is it just? |
35416 | But tell me,( glorious lamp,) in thy survey Of things below thee, what did not decay By age to weakness? |
35416 | But who has not heard of"Swift''s Stella?" |
35416 | But who, like him, could administer to that"_ besoin de sentir_"which I am afraid is an ingredient in the feminine character all over the world? |
35416 | But why dost thou those beaming glances turn Thus downwards? |
35416 | But, says the mother,_ Un tiers_ si doux ne fait tort à plaisir? |
35416 | Ch''l mio ben m''allontani, anzi m''involi-- Fia mai quel di ch''io lo riveggia o mora? |
35416 | Che più ti resta a far per mio dispetto, Sorte crudel? |
35416 | Chi detto avesse ad ella:"Il tuo bel core Sai chi l''avra? |
35416 | Contemplating him asleep, she says, N''était ce teint fleuri des couleurs de la pomme, Ne le diriez vous dans les bras de la mort? |
35416 | Could Emilie ever have forgiven those words, or Voltaire have forgotten the look that provoked them? |
35416 | Dimmi, quando le voci a lui volgesti Tacque egli mai, qual uom che nulla sente? |
35416 | During that time, what must have been his feelings--_if_ he felt at all? |
35416 | E di segrete stille, Rugiadose si fan le tue pupille? |
35416 | Feu de son oeil, et roses de son teint.... D''où vient m''en ébahir? |
35416 | Giunse dal prato, o pur dal ciel discende? |
35416 | Had correspondence whilst the foe stood by? |
35416 | Have we for this kept guard, like spy o''er spy? |
35416 | He will soon return; but what does that help? |
35416 | His Anacreontics, and particularly his little drinking song, Come farò? |
35416 | His countenance, fitted by nature to express the dark and fierce passions, so terrified her, that she could scarce ask him whether he would sit down? |
35416 | How could she so belie her noble blood? |
35416 | Is it surprising that powers of fascination, which carried a Duchess"off her feet,"should conquer the heart of a country lass of low degree? |
35416 | Is this our patriotism? |
35416 | La prima volta ch''io m''avenni in quella Ninfa, che il cor m''accese, e ancor l''accende, Io dissi, è donna o dea, ninfa si bella? |
35416 | Loin de ta bien- aimée, Où les destins, entrainent donc tes pas? |
35416 | Meanwhile, what became of Stella? |
35416 | Must Lady Jenny frisk about, And visit with her cousins? |
35416 | O le turbate luci alteramente,( Come a me volge) a te volger vedesti? |
35416 | O wha could prudence think upon, And sae in love as I am? |
35416 | O wha could prudence think upon, And sic a lassie by him? |
35416 | O, when shall I have him?" |
35416 | Or what avails her that she once was led A glorious bride to valiant Digby''s bed? |
35416 | Or, did he turn those sweet and troubled eyes On thee, and gaze as now on me he gazeth? |
35416 | Perchè muta in pensosa atto mi guati? |
35416 | Quand reverrai, dis- moi, ton si duisant[23] visage? |
35416 | Quand te pourrai face à face mirer? |
35416 | Reading thy verse,"who cares,"said I,"If here or there his glances flew? |
35416 | Say, Stella, was Prometheus blind, And forming you, mistook your kind? |
35416 | Shadow''d with negligence our best respects? |
35416 | Shall I thumb holy books, confin''d With Abigails forsaken? |
35416 | Stolen( more to sweeten them) our many blisses Of meetings, conference, embracements, kisses? |
35416 | T''enlacer tellement à mon frément[24] corsage, Que toi, ni moi, n''en puissions respirer? |
35416 | The next day I asked one of his friends who was the author of this poem? |
35416 | The"Lines on her fainting;"those on"The fear of death,"-- Why should we fear to melt away in death? |
35416 | Then is there not the German Klopstock and his Meta,--his lovely, devoted, angelic Meta? |
35416 | Then it was, that he wrote the simple, wild, but powerful lyric,"Will ye go to the Indies, my Mary?" |
35416 | Then we shall not ask in vain who was Campbell''s Caroline? |
35416 | Varied our language through all dialects Of becks, winks, looks; and often under boards, Spoke dialogues, with our feet far from our words? |
35416 | We may repeat with Pope,"Who now reads Cowley?" |
35416 | We write to each other every post; but what are letters to presence? |
35416 | What has she better, pray, than I? |
35416 | What hidden charms to boast, That all mankind for her must die, Whilst I am scarce a toast? |
35416 | What is this world? |
35416 | What lady''s that to whom he gently bends? |
35416 | What though she be now a grandmother? |
35416 | What true poet, who felt as a poet, would have said this? |
35416 | What would Habington have said of the flaunting, fluttering, voluble beauties of Charles the Second''s time?) |
35416 | What''s honour but a hatchment? |
35416 | Whence then this strange increase of joy? |
35416 | Where could she fix on mortal ground Those tender thoughts and high? |
35416 | Where, among scholars, can you find So soft, and yet so firm a mind? |
35416 | Who was the Hannah, whose fickleness occasioned that exquisite little poem which Montgomery has inscribed"To the memory of her who is dead to me?" |
35416 | Why are thine eyes heavy with suppressed tears?" |
35416 | Why are you then so thrifty of a kiss, Authorized even by custom? |
35416 | Why doth fear So tremble on your lip, my lip being near? |
35416 | Why so careless of our care Only to yourselves so dear? |
35416 | Why so kind, and so severe? |
35416 | Will ye go to the Indies, my Mary, Across the Atlantic''s roar? |
35416 | Will ye go to the Indies, my Mary, And leave old Scotia''s shore? |
35416 | Without her lovely smile, The dear reward of every virtuous toil, What pleasures now can pall''d Ambition give? |
35416 | Yet how do her justice, but by borrowing her own sweet words? |
35416 | [ 119] It will be said, where was her sex''s delicacy, where her woman''s pride? |
35416 | [ 130] In one of his letters, written immediately after her departure, he asks her how he had looked? |
35416 | [ 25] De Surville closed his brief career of happiness and glory( and what more than these could he have asked of heaven?) |
35416 | [ 80] Du zweifelst dass ich dich wie Meta liebe? |
35416 | _ autre qu''en tout lui même, Pût- il jamais éclore de mon sein?_ This is beautiful and true; beautiful, because it is true. |
35416 | and of Cadenus and Vanessa? |
35416 | and why? |
35416 | by what right does he sit in judgment on the unhappy dead, of whom he knew nothing? |
35416 | her soul aspire Above the vulgar flight of low desire? |
35416 | how he had behaved at the last moment? |
35416 | or how could he tell by what course of suffering, disease, or tyranny, a gentle spirit may have been goaded to frenzy? |
35416 | or pleased, by being addressed with the swaggering licence of a libertine? |
35416 | or would have said to her,"Know you who is destined to touch that virgin heart? |
35416 | où cours tu? |
35416 | quand verrai celui pour qui mon coeur soupire, Au miens cotés jouir de son réveil? |
35416 | s''en crois la renommée De bien long temps ne te reverrai pas? |
35416 | thy woes compar''d to mine? |
35416 | to her who has almost banished from the world that pest which once extinguished families and desolated provinces? |
35416 | what asken men to have? |
35416 | what is here Of Percy left, or Stanley, names most dear To virtue? |
35416 | when thou look''dst, was he from silence won? |
35416 | whether he had betrayed any deeper feeling than propriety might warrant? |
35416 | why dost thou falsely feign Thyself a Sydney? |
19356 | ''An''where''d you be gittin''it from?'' 19356 ''Ave you a match about you?" |
19356 | ''Aven''t I tramped the streets day after day, lookin''for work? |
19356 | ''Blown up, ye fool, what d''ye mean? 19356 ''If this ai n''t enough t''drive a man crazy,''th''skipper yells;''McClosky, have yeh lost yer senses like all these condemned rascals here? |
19356 | ''Ow about that smell o''roasting you kep''a sniffing as we came along, an''wot were it if not cooked boy? 19356 ''Ow much''ave you pulled orf, then?" |
19356 | ''What''s th''trouble, Joe?'' 19356 ''What''s the figure?'' |
19356 | ''Wot th''''ell''s up?'' 19356 A ditty- box? |
19356 | About the course, sir? |
19356 | Academy? |
19356 | Ah, but wot is the truth to be, this time? |
19356 | Always look out the same side, I suppose? |
19356 | Am I? |
19356 | An''now that you''ve got the gun,said Texas, after an embarrassed silence,"what''s the next thing on the programme?" |
19356 | An''plaize where be I to build fire? |
19356 | An''wot did that old snake in the grass say to that bloomin''lie? |
19356 | And did you get the bird given up? |
19356 | And does anybody want a crazy woman, last seen on a Lake Shore train? |
19356 | And has n''t it entered your thick skull that to return as you suggest would cost fifty pounds''worth of coal? 19356 And how do you reckon the profits yourself?" |
19356 | And the fancy- dress people? |
19356 | And the little Carolina she is well in this weather of the devil? |
19356 | And what will become of your fancy- dress party? |
19356 | And when are you on duty? |
19356 | And why? |
19356 | And you are providing the American public with what they want-- back there? |
19356 | And you want to buy it, if you can find it? |
19356 | And you will? |
19356 | And you wrote''Flies in Ointment''? 19356 And----?" |
19356 | Any casualties? |
19356 | Any of you men happen to have a bit of candle in your pockets? |
19356 | Anything found on the body? |
19356 | Anything that would lead you to believe she knowed about it? |
19356 | Are n''t you rather foolish to tell me? |
19356 | Are you Georsh''s saunt? |
19356 | Are you ready? |
19356 | Are you there? 19356 Are you trying to frighten me, Maclean?" |
19356 | As much as that? |
19356 | At San Marcial? |
19356 | At first I did,Billy admitted,"an''then I----""Then you wot?" |
19356 | Bad, eh? |
19356 | Been to church this morning, I suppose? |
19356 | Bob,he said, after greetings had been exchanged,"have you an alarm out for a little girl kidnapped from the Pennsylvania station?" |
19356 | Brought my little girl home, eh? |
19356 | But Colonel, pardon me, where does the net come in? |
19356 | But I thought you said just now there were 15,000? |
19356 | But how will you see your canvas? |
19356 | But our own men? |
19356 | But what I would like to know,remarked the head of the house,"where, oh where is Aunt Mary?" |
19356 | But what can we do? |
19356 | But why Lord Chilminster? |
19356 | Ca n''t you think of something else for me? |
19356 | Can any of you pirate scum speak English? |
19356 | Can not I go with you to the depot? |
19356 | Dare I? 19356 Dead?" |
19356 | Did n''t I say it was a sure thing? |
19356 | Did n''t turn your hair white, Uncle? |
19356 | Did n''t us, Billy? |
19356 | Did n''t you catch wot I said to you just now, my lad? |
19356 | Did the man give you a job? |
19356 | Did they hang you well? |
19356 | Did you do figure work at all? |
19356 | Did you happen to be looking out of the window on the night of the murder? |
19356 | Did you? |
19356 | Do n''t you believe wot I''ve told you? |
19356 | Do n''t you think you''d better come up, sir? 19356 Do n''t you think,"she made reply, as he drew another chair up opposite to her,"that under the circumstances we might dispense with fine speeches? |
19356 | Do you by any chance mean Mr. Willoughby Park, Grandfather? 19356 Do you mean to assert, Lord Chilminster, that I----?" |
19356 | Do you stop here all the long summer quite alone? |
19356 | Do you-- do you really like him, Triny? |
19356 | Does anybody know how many trains there are from Niagara Falls? |
19356 | Does he stage manage for you? |
19356 | Don''t-- don''t you think we had better-- take the consequences? |
19356 | Dsham, dsham? |
19356 | Eggs? |
19356 | Have a nip? |
19356 | Have you exhibited very much? |
19356 | Here is one,pealed out the trumpet- voice,"has he come as our brother? |
19356 | His Majesty say,''How you fix him Ju- Ju?'' |
19356 | Hope you got it before the storm broke? |
19356 | How about the rest? |
19356 | How can we prevent them? 19356 How is she steaming, Bartholomew?" |
19356 | How old is that boy? |
19356 | How ought one to begin these things? |
19356 | How should I know? |
19356 | How soon can you drive me to Sapworth Hall? |
19356 | How would you like to be Darnley? |
19356 | How would you like to go pilot to- morrow for McCurdy? 19356 I do n''t want no kiddin''now, do you hear?" |
19356 | I hope they pay you well for it? |
19356 | I insert it? 19356 I mean did they put you in a good place?" |
19356 | I presume you saw the rascals making for the shrubbery, and dropped down on them? |
19356 | I wonder what road she is coming in on? |
19356 | I-- I-- damme, I, what can I do?--and what does it matter? |
19356 | I? |
19356 | If I was to give you a bounce on the jor,inquired the stoker, breathing heavily,"should you''ave the courage to land me another?" |
19356 | If only''e''ad lived--repeated the engineer in a strange far- away tone,"Oo''s''e?" |
19356 | If you fear my poor voice now, what will it be when all Wales is ringing with this last foul deed? |
19356 | In public''ouses? |
19356 | Is he still on the top of your tester- bed? |
19356 | Is he? |
19356 | Is n''t it getting late? |
19356 | Is n''t it? |
19356 | Is n''t she a dear little girl? |
19356 | Is n''t there a Miss Urmy staying at the White House? |
19356 | Is not all this superfluous? |
19356 | Is there any way we can get back to London to- night? 19356 It''s so difficult to say what one wants to a stranger in a letter, is n''t it?" |
19356 | It''s the_ Morning Post_? |
19356 | John,she said,"what is the meaning of this? |
19356 | Katriny-- Katriny, is_ that_ Sparks-- that fellow downstairs? 19356 Mate,"he stammered tremulously,"where did you keep your policy?" |
19356 | May I try? 19356 Me? |
19356 | Meanin''the bit o''blue- printed paper I''ad from the Popular Thrifty? 19356 Mistress, what heard you?" |
19356 | My life for theirs, Tad,--is that it? |
19356 | No curiosity about my-- my profession? |
19356 | Of course you detest having me here, but you wo n''t put me out in the rain, again, will you? |
19356 | Oh he did, did he? |
19356 | Oh, come now, Cadge, my man, you do n''t call that a finished job, I hope? 19356 Oh, really? |
19356 | Oh, wo n''t I? |
19356 | Paul,Bettina broke in upon his meditations, a little note of hopeful pleading in her voice,"it might not be too late for you to-- to reform?" |
19356 | Perhaps it is because I voted twice at the election last week? 19356 Rather orkard, Skipper, ai n''t it, in all this maze o''shippin''?" |
19356 | Really? |
19356 | Remarkable old lady, is n''t she? |
19356 | Say, young lady,he demanded, in a truculent manner,"what do you mean by gettin''into these grounds and rubberin''at us over our wall? |
19356 | Shall I? |
19356 | She will come then again, this lady? |
19356 | Some arms, then, to defend ourselves against the natives, if we are attacked? |
19356 | Some provisions? |
19356 | Speaking of the club, how''s Sparks, Katriny? |
19356 | Stranger to you, sir, of course? |
19356 | Thanks, many thanks friend,Luigi''s voice was deeply grateful,"perhaps some day I can do for thee----?" |
19356 | Then it is a man''s friendship? |
19356 | Then it was n''t because you knew I knew him? |
19356 | Then what happened to the cock that was brought into court on Tuesday? |
19356 | Then what, if you please, is the object I see swung aloft there in the dome? |
19356 | Then where was it? |
19356 | Then why did n''t you stop? 19356 Then you did not insert it?" |
19356 | Thou thinkest the----? |
19356 | Was it still on the top of the tester- bed? |
19356 | We''ll have to tell the owners, though-- what will they say? |
19356 | Well, Cedric, man, what devil''s game have you been playing of late? 19356 Well, Mac?" |
19356 | Well, is n''t that the whole mystery? |
19356 | Well, lad, what is it? |
19356 | Well, well, Katriny,he said, in high good humor,"so you''ve been over that gate again, eh? |
19356 | Well, what do you know about that? |
19356 | Well, what ought we to do about it? 19356 Well, what''s the matter with this?" |
19356 | Well? |
19356 | What are you doing here? |
19356 | What are you doing? 19356 What are you laughing at?" |
19356 | What can you do? |
19356 | What do I say, Maclean? |
19356 | What do you call fowling nets? |
19356 | What do you mean? |
19356 | What do you say if we do it together? |
19356 | What is it? |
19356 | What man? |
19356 | What next? |
19356 | What next? |
19356 | What now? |
19356 | What on earth are you going to do with that_ beastly_ green? |
19356 | What sort of a watch can one man keep? |
19356 | What was the best bargain you ever made? |
19356 | What were you thinking-- how did you propose to phrase it? |
19356 | What would you, Gwen? |
19356 | What you goin''to do to- day, Triny? |
19356 | What''ll you do with Number Six? |
19356 | What''s she got to say about it? 19356 What''s the trouble, sir?" |
19356 | What-- what do you mean, Tad? |
19356 | What_ are_ we to do? |
19356 | Whatyer mean? |
19356 | When I get back to a white man''s country,he murmured--"when I get home to England what is it I am going to do? |
19356 | When does she arrive? |
19356 | When you goin''over to see the Deerings''parrot? 19356 Where did you get that word from? |
19356 | Where is that? |
19356 | Where the blank blank are yer comin''to? |
19356 | Where''s the critter gone to? |
19356 | Which half? |
19356 | Which one is auntie coming on? |
19356 | Who can have put it in? |
19356 | Who was he? |
19356 | Who''s marked up to fire for you, Bartholomew? |
19356 | Who? |
19356 | Why ca n''t I go? |
19356 | Why did n''t I hear of this before? |
19356 | Why need we bother at all about it? |
19356 | Why not? 19356 Why not?" |
19356 | Why wo n''t he do? 19356 Why your aunt, of course; did n''t you see her come in?" |
19356 | Why, did n''t you guess? |
19356 | Why, wot''s wrong? |
19356 | Will you mind-- waiting-- just a moment longer? |
19356 | With no success whatever, my dear Colonel? |
19356 | Wo n''t''ave no music, wo n''t he? 19356 Wodjer want to make all that row about? |
19356 | Wot did you say was the concern you invested in? |
19356 | Wot do you call a fair job, I should like to know? |
19356 | Wot do you say to three pun''seventeen? |
19356 | Wot for? 19356 Wot man? |
19356 | Would n''t a telegram do? |
19356 | Would n''t it be as well for you to know my name, say, as a beginning? |
19356 | Would you feel safer if I saw you to a main thoroughfare? |
19356 | Would you object, Bartholomew,I suggested gently,"to a train- master for fireman?" |
19356 | Would you? |
19356 | Yellow-- why do you take me for a newspaper woman? |
19356 | You are afraid that I might keep some of it? |
19356 | You are going to put me into it? |
19356 | You did n''t happen to hear Mary Jane say anything about the express job? |
19356 | You do n''t durst dare to tell me,the frenzied mechanic shouted,"as wot you went an''insured Billy too?" |
19356 | You do n''t really think so? |
19356 | You hingry-- men-- like-- eat? |
19356 | You know old Abey Turner as keeps the little sweet- an''-tobaccer shop over to Dorton Ware? |
19356 | You mean me? |
19356 | You pipe what George says, Billy? |
19356 | You want me to sell you Charlot? 19356 You want to speak to me, Colonel?" |
19356 | You will take off your coat? |
19356 | You''ll save them, Tad? |
19356 | You''re sure you_ will_ get a profit? |
19356 | You-- you are the Earl of Chilminster? |
19356 | ''Carved or cut about a bit? |
19356 | ''Cos why? |
19356 | ''Is Alfred Evans such a savage in''is drink?'' |
19356 | ''Mind if it was a trifle old?'' |
19356 | ''Oo yer larfin''at? |
19356 | ''Ow much do you think I get for stayin''awake nights and doin''without my church on Sunday? |
19356 | ''What th''blazes does it mean? |
19356 | ''Yeh blamed rascal, whatcher been doin''ter our grub now?'' |
19356 | A bit of folly that you would n''t have suspected me of, eh? |
19356 | Ai n''t I right, mates?'' |
19356 | Am I like Byron''s woman:''Seek roses in December, ice in June''? |
19356 | Am I not going to have the hand as well as the rose, dear?" |
19356 | And I wonder why you have never made a guess about my world when you have at least let me get a peep now and then into yours?" |
19356 | And as conclusive proof that he did not mean to profit by the deal financially, would Mr. Stokes kindly examine those papers? |
19356 | And freshness do n''t go, d''you see?" |
19356 | And have you perceived the danger of discovery at Lydmouth?" |
19356 | And they pay the women, and sometimes the men, to give away the money----""Santo Cristo,"gasped Luigi,"they pay to give away the money?" |
19356 | And where did he get so close and intimate a knowledge of the old house from? |
19356 | And where the deuce is Jim?" |
19356 | And where, pray, would be his wife and family? |
19356 | And you have been laughing at me all this time? |
19356 | Anything disagreed with yer? |
19356 | Are you blind? |
19356 | Are you interested?" |
19356 | At last the woman asked:"What do you think about it, man?" |
19356 | Been lookin''over that wall, eh? |
19356 | Besides, do you know what time it is?" |
19356 | Blown up, are ye? |
19356 | Brother, we starve-- will you give us food? |
19356 | Brother, we suffer the torments of hell-- will you deliver us? |
19356 | But first would Mr. Edwards kindly call up and get second option on all Arkansas timber lands represented by Haynes, Forster& Company? |
19356 | But if it did, what then?" |
19356 | But perhaps it would be better to get someone else to go, and say that they wanted to look at the house?" |
19356 | But what was he to do? |
19356 | Ca n''t you read? |
19356 | Could Catesby meet him at Lydmouth to- morrow? |
19356 | Could he ever make her understand? |
19356 | Course it was a mistake o''mine; but ai n''t we all liable to go a bit astray? |
19356 | D''ye hear, boy?" |
19356 | Did Mr. Greenlee have twenty thousand dollars in cash to spare? |
19356 | Did he, maybe, think in that flash of Neeta and of whom she needed most-- of a young and a stalwart protector rather than an old and failing one? |
19356 | Did n''t mention me at all?" |
19356 | Did n''t you see that gate?" |
19356 | Did n''t you see the signs? |
19356 | Didst think it was for love of thee or the red curls of thy Vincenza?" |
19356 | Do n''t you know that Mr. Prentiss never allows bonfires? |
19356 | Do n''t you know you can be run in for passin''those signs? |
19356 | Do you know that that rose tree was planted a hundred years ago by Thomas à Becket after the battle of Agincourt? |
19356 | Do you know the abandoned tannery in the West Branch Clove? |
19356 | Do you know the way?" |
19356 | For instance, if a school of porpoises came along? |
19356 | For what? |
19356 | Had he done it? |
19356 | Have n''t I just told you so? |
19356 | Have n''t you any sense?" |
19356 | Have yeh all gone mad?'' |
19356 | Have you fixed that there wire across the path from the laundry?" |
19356 | Have you got any jam?" |
19356 | Have you got that much to spare at 8 per cent., on first class security?" |
19356 | Have you quinine?" |
19356 | Have you quite understood me?" |
19356 | Have you seen this?" |
19356 | He did? |
19356 | He might, after all, prove to be quite----"Do you mind if I smoke?" |
19356 | How could the comedy proceed otherwise? |
19356 | How do you suppose old Kep would like that?" |
19356 | How express in words her view of an intolerable situation which no self- respecting girl could even calmly think about? |
19356 | How long that I do not work, and if we have to eat?" |
19356 | I THE BULLDOG BREED A Story of the Russo- Japanese War By AMBROSE PRATT"WHAT do you make of her, Maclean?" |
19356 | I presume you know what a_ motif_ is?" |
19356 | I say, Raguet,"he rambled on, sitting up dizzily,"what is this Ju- Ju idol of theirs?" |
19356 | I thought they were ordinary sailors''chests that they keep their clothes in?" |
19356 | I want to find something of his, and I thought that perhaps you might have bought it?" |
19356 | If I happened to be in love with a man-- what am I saying? |
19356 | If I tell you how I feel about this meeting of ours will you try to understand me?" |
19356 | If so, why do n''t yer take something for it?" |
19356 | If thou hadst gone to another, to a man not honest, who knows? |
19356 | In a flutter, the peasant woman dropped her soap into the water, and stammered:"Is it you, my child? |
19356 | In that case you like the part of''Dorothy Kent?''" |
19356 | In their own country do the Feringhi not say that the word of the majority shall be law? |
19356 | Infernal machines, eh? |
19356 | Is it all right?" |
19356 | Is it possible?" |
19356 | Is it you, my child?" |
19356 | Is n''t he the real thing? |
19356 | Is n''t the view from Goat Island wonderful? |
19356 | Is that Inspector Merrick? |
19356 | Is that_ Sparks_?" |
19356 | It is hardly, I suppose, what one would call a usual situation, is it?" |
19356 | It might be worth a bit more if it had a secret drawer, eh?" |
19356 | It was a chance, at least a fighting chance, to save Davy, her prince; the only chance, the only way, and outside that what else mattered? |
19356 | It was in this way?" |
19356 | It''s a orful thing to think of, ai n''t it?" |
19356 | It''s in your cabin, ai n''t it?" |
19356 | Make her believe? |
19356 | May I offer you my arm?" |
19356 | McClosky?'' |
19356 | More''armony?" |
19356 | Must make an example of him-- eh?" |
19356 | Not so?" |
19356 | Now where shall we move these Elizabethan relics? |
19356 | Now, I want to know what yellow sheet you represent?" |
19356 | Now, I want to know who you represent? |
19356 | Now, if you had been in the least like the romantic type of young woman, perhaps----""How do you know that I am not? |
19356 | Now, you do not for a moment presume to put yourself on a level with''Walter Severn,''do you?" |
19356 | O brother, do you walk to Calcutta, where the High Courts be, over our bodies, and the bodies of our children? |
19356 | O brother, skilled in the Feringhi craft, high- placed to administer justice to all who are brought before thee, do I not speak the truth?" |
19356 | Of course, we can contradict it, but----""But what?" |
19356 | Oh, how could she? |
19356 | On board his ship, for example? |
19356 | Only we do n''t like the company to know it, ye understand? |
19356 | Or come you to offer us a great heart?" |
19356 | Or comes he as the slave of our masters, to spy upon our meetings, and to deal out punishment to those who dare to be free? |
19356 | Or if a fish eagle or an osprey found itself entangled in the meshes? |
19356 | Or in your old house? |
19356 | Or were they ghosts? |
19356 | Perhaps if I do n''t come across the ditty- box, I might find something else of his that would do, eh?" |
19356 | Punch and Judy show aboard?" |
19356 | Say, Katriny,"he remarked casually,"he''s a fine fellow, ai n''t he?" |
19356 | Say, Persis, who is he?" |
19356 | See?" |
19356 | Shall the few rule the many? |
19356 | Shall we be servants and poor while yet in the arms of our own golden mother? |
19356 | She asked:"You want to take Charlot from us? |
19356 | Should anything happen, and such things happen every day, where would Mr. Strumley be? |
19356 | Smith?" |
19356 | Smith?" |
19356 | So they catch sea birds that way?" |
19356 | So this is what''s th''matter, is it? |
19356 | So this was the sud- spray of his beautiful bubble? |
19356 | The officer complied presumably with this command, and when he had finished, addressed Maclean:"You can not intend to maroon us, sir?" |
19356 | The peasant asked:"This pension of twelve hundred francs, will it be promised before a notary?" |
19356 | Then Father Tuvache, in an angry tone, said:"Are you going to reproach us for having kept you?" |
19356 | Then Mr. Greenlee was willing to make the loan? |
19356 | Then she might----"There''s nothing for it but to write to the paper, I suppose?" |
19356 | Then, as though he had suddenly been inspired, he exclaimed:"What about the grammarphone, Skipper?" |
19356 | There''s the mark, boys; see the shamed blood rise to it?" |
19356 | They had upset him; then why not her? |
19356 | They''re real notes are n''t they? |
19356 | This disgustin''noise-- what is it?" |
19356 | Thou hast been in America eight months, and thou dost not know that they are mad, all quite mad, to work? |
19356 | Two seasons in England and never a catch, so I----""_ You_ did it?" |
19356 | Was he magnanimous enough to be thinking of accepting a compromising situation to save her? |
19356 | Was she coming to propose-- to molest him? |
19356 | Was she giving her pupil too much latitude? |
19356 | Was there anything special about it?" |
19356 | We should keep it-- Are you willing?" |
19356 | Well, there was a convenient and lonely spot some three miles from Llangarth-- did the lads understand? |
19356 | What could he mean? |
19356 | What delicious token could Bettina be sending him? |
19356 | What did you give him, Raguet?" |
19356 | What do you know about her?" |
19356 | What do you mean by coming in here where you do n''t belong? |
19356 | What do you say, sir?" |
19356 | What do you suppose they intend to do with us?" |
19356 | What has the Cadwallader done? |
19356 | What is it?" |
19356 | What profit did you expect to make?" |
19356 | What shall I do?" |
19356 | What should she say? |
19356 | What was he to think? |
19356 | What was the use of more? |
19356 | What yeh been doin?'' |
19356 | What''s th''meanin''o''it?'' |
19356 | What''s that yeh say, Towers? |
19356 | What''s that''owlin''row you''re making?" |
19356 | What''s that, Ced? |
19356 | What_ do_ you mean to do with it?" |
19356 | Whatever for?" |
19356 | When did you hear about the undertaking job?" |
19356 | Whence comes it in the vocabulary of a youth-- a youth? |
19356 | Where did you get her and why?" |
19356 | Where was her faith? |
19356 | Where''s my supper?" |
19356 | Who can have done it?" |
19356 | Who did it? |
19356 | Who''s blowin''ye up?'' |
19356 | Why are you pulling my roses to pieces like that? |
19356 | Why did n''t Mr. Skidmore travel in one of the corridor coaches?" |
19356 | Why do n''t you get a daylight job?" |
19356 | Why, Grandfather, did n''t you ask his name?" |
19356 | Why, do you know it''s seven days since I''ve seen you?" |
19356 | Will you come with me this afternoon?" |
19356 | Will you deal out to us life or death, you whose fathers were as our fathers? |
19356 | Will you go to the Collector- sahib with tales of a native rising, and call up our brothers of the police to kill and maim us? |
19356 | Will you shake hands before we ride?" |
19356 | Will you?" |
19356 | Wo n''t it be cute?" |
19356 | Wot do you want to know for?" |
19356 | Wot job? |
19356 | Wot was it you slipped on----?" |
19356 | Wot was it your foot crashed into when you called out awhile back? |
19356 | Wot yer got there? |
19356 | Wot''s likely to''appen to''i m?'' |
19356 | Would Mr. Strumley like to see him? |
19356 | Would he lend it to Mr. Strumley on gilt- edge collateral? |
19356 | Would n''t it jest sizzle down a day like this?'' |
19356 | Would n''t that be likely to be somewhere where you ca n''t get at it? |
19356 | Would you be willing to take me on as a pupil in housekeeping?" |
19356 | Ye did n''t happen to see any on''em as ye came along in the train?" |
19356 | You do n''t mean to paint in the open, by night?" |
19356 | You hear me?" |
19356 | You knew who he was?" |
19356 | You want to go and poke him down from my tester- bed, do you? |
19356 | You will believe that, wo n''t you?" |
19356 | _ I?_"flamed Jeannette. |
19356 | chè!_ And then, if we have every day the meat? |
19356 | not the Jack Barrett that Brother Billy knew at Harvard?'' |
19356 | said Peggy, severely,"did n''t you see me here?" |
19356 | that''s your game is it?" |
19356 | was a distinct trial to his nerves; he thrust his hands deep into his coat pockets, glared at the mate, and then growled:"Wodjer got there? |
19356 | what can I do? |
19356 | work?" |
19356 | you think so?" |
34676 | And what did he say was the matter with you? |
34676 | Are you sober this morning, sir? |
34676 | Ay? |
34676 | Can you tell me when you are likely to have_ finished_ this job? |
34676 | Cocks and hens, then? |
34676 | De''''e gang aboot wi''a chain? |
34676 | Do you know anything about bees, Isaac? |
34676 | Have you seen the library at the Hall? 34676 How did it go, marm?" |
34676 | My angel!--crying!--Whatever''s the matter? |
34676 | My boy tells me you broke your cane across his back yesterday? |
34676 | Now, I wonder if your man has remembered to put in my pastoral staff? |
34676 | Suppose we try that movement again? 34676 Then do I understand you that your aunt is on your father''s side, or your mother''s?" |
34676 | Well, Adams, how are you getting on with my watch? |
34676 | Well, Johnson, been to the doctor, as I told you? |
34676 | Well, Mr. Huggins, and has the nurse been to see you yet? |
34676 | Well, Mr. Rogers, how did you like our music? 34676 Well, Richard, hard at work, eh? |
34676 | Well, Simpson, how do you like the hot weather? |
34676 | Well, if it''s too wet to work, why do n''t you go home? |
34676 | Well, sir, I''ope you found the arrangements in the''all satisfactory last night? |
34676 | Were there a cloth_ on_?] |
34676 | What''s the matter, Noggins? 34676 Where be Bonduca?" |
34676 | Why did Uncle Jonas cry so for, Aunt? 34676 Will ye tell us how mooch ye weigh, mister?" |
34676 | You do n''t know exactly_ how_ old, I suppose? |
34676 | You''ll keep cows, I s''pose, and all that sort of thing? |
34676 | ''ave yer, though? |
34676 | (_ A pause apparently spent in mental calculation._) What might ye be askin''for''un now? |
34676 | ***** A CONUNDRUM TO FILL UP A GAP IN THE CONVERSATION.--Why is a person older than yourself like food for cattle? |
34676 | ***** A PASTORAL.--How should a shepherd arrange his dress? |
34676 | ***** A PUZZLE IN HORTICULTURE.--_Little Chris._ Daddy, what makes onions? |
34676 | ***** A RIDDLE FROM COLNEY HATCH.--_Q._ Why have we reason to suppose that a bee is a rook? |
34676 | ***** AT THE CATTLE SHOW.--_Young Farmer._"Are you fond of beasts, Miss Gusherton?" |
34676 | ***** EVERYTHING COMES TO THE MAN WHO WAITS.--_Country Rector''s Wife( engaging man- servant)._ And can you wait at dinner? |
34676 | ***** FROM THE POULTRY.--When does a hen like beer? |
34676 | ***** FURTHER ILLUSTRATION OF THE MINING DISTRICTS.--_First Polite Native._"Who''s''i m, Bill?" |
34676 | ***** QUERY.--Has the want of rain this summer, and consequent failure of the hay crops, affected the market for Grass Widows? |
34676 | ***** QUERY.--If you give two persons a seat in a cornfield, can this proceeding be called"setting them by the ears"? |
34676 | ***** SIMPLE, BUT AGRICULTURAL.--_Q._ What is the best time for sowing tares? |
34676 | *****[ Illustration: A QUESTION OF VESTED INTEREST_ Vicar._"Well, gentlemen, what can I do for you?" |
34676 | *****[ Illustration: A SLIGHT MISTAKE.--_Farmer._"Where''ave ye been all this time? |
34676 | *****[ Illustration: A SURE SIGN OF IMPROVEMENT.--_Village Doctor._"Well Scroggins, I hope your wife is much better to- day, eh? |
34676 | *****[ Illustration: A YORKSHIRE GOSSIP_ First Gossip._"So you was nivver axed tu t''funeral?" |
34676 | *****[ Illustration: ACCOMMODATING.--_Old Lady._"Now then, what do you want?" |
34676 | *****[ Illustration: DIET.--_Village Doctor._"Well, are you better? |
34676 | *****[ Illustration: FORBEARANCE.--_Young Lady._"John, how long shall you be, as I want to practise?" |
34676 | *****[ Illustration: HEAVEN HELPS THOSE WHO HELP THEMSELVES.--_ Doctor._"Well, John, how are you to- day?" |
34676 | *****[ Illustration: LITTLE AND GOOD_ Gentleman._"Who do these pigs belong to, boy?" |
34676 | *****[ Illustration: QUALIFIED ADMIRATION.--_Country Vicar._"Well, John, what do you think of London?" |
34676 | *****[ Illustration: SAGACITY.--_Countryman._"Fi''pounds too much for him? |
34676 | *****[ Illustration: THE HUMOURS OF HOUSE HUNTING.--_Lady._"Very healthy place, is it? |
34676 | *****[ Illustration: THE NEW SQUIRE_ Farmer._"Well, Giles, what do you think of him?" |
34676 | *****[ Illustration: TRIALS OF A NOVICE_ The Boy( to Brown, who has just taken a"little place"in the Country)._"Plaze, zur, wot be I to start on?" |
34676 | *****[ Illustration:"AT ONE FELL SWOOP"_ Wife._"Well, did ye find th''puddin''I left for you in the saucepan?" |
34676 | *****[ Illustration:"Be it true as your nevvy b''ain''t?] |
34676 | *****[ Illustration:"Did ye see the Lord Mayor when you was up to Lunnon?" |
34676 | *****[ Illustration:"SECOND THOUGHTS"_ Priest._"Wilt thou have this woman to thy wedded wife?" |
34676 | *****[ Illustration:"Tell your fortune, pretty gentleman?"] |
34676 | *****[ Illustration:"What''s that there blank space left for, Jim?" |
34676 | *****[ Illustration:_ Convivial Party._"I shay, ole f''ller, how long doesh it take to gerout of thish wood?"] |
34676 | *****[ Illustration:_ District Visitor._"Well, Mrs. Hodges, going to have a cup of tea?" |
34676 | *****[ Illustration:_ Doctor._"Well, Matthew, did you take those pills I sent you yesterday?" |
34676 | *****[ Illustration:_ Doctor._"Well, Mrs. Muggeridge, how are you getting on? |
34676 | *****[ Illustration:_ First Tramp._"Why do n''t you go in? |
34676 | *****[ Illustration:_ First Village Dame._"Did I bring you back that basket you lent me last week?" |
34676 | *****[ Illustration:_ Lady._"And you say you have been brought to this by your wife?" |
34676 | *****[ Illustration:_ Parson._"Why, John, what are you doing there?" |
34676 | *****[ Illustration:_ Rector._"Why, doctor, where are you off to? |
34676 | *****[ Illustration:_ Stranger._"I suppose there''s not much society about here?" |
34676 | *****[ Illustration:_ Village Gossip._"Did ye''ere as owd Sally Sergeant''s dead? |
34676 | *****[ Illustration:_ Young Lady._"Can you tell me the nearest way to get to Pulham from here?" |
34676 | --_Town Gent._"Now do you find keeping poultry answers?" |
34676 | An''did ye''ear a pianner? |
34676 | And how be things gettin''along with_ you_, sir, eh? |
34676 | And how old is your wife?" |
34676 | And how''s her temperature?" |
34676 | And where''s the old mare-- didn''t ye have her shod as I told ye?" |
34676 | Are you selling this property by the yard or by the pint?"] |
34676 | Brisket?" |
34676 | But wha''s the mon that''s walking beside ye? |
34676 | Cann''t ye, now? |
34676 | Come off o''your own farm? |
34676 | Do n''t you feel well?" |
34676 | Do n''t you see''i m a- waggin''his tail?" |
34676 | Do n''t you think you might try and stay, in future?" |
34676 | Do you live about here?" |
34676 | Do you want to hargue, you beggar? |
34676 | Fitz- Archibald Smith_(_ of London, to the Landlord_).--Is there a hair- dresser in the village? |
34676 | Fitzpudgit._"What is it, dear?" |
34676 | Fitzpudgit._"What''s the matter with the eggs, Matilda? |
34676 | Fretwail._ Why, what hev he bin up to_ now_, eh? |
34676 | Giles._"Yes, zur; but what on earth be the good o''sending they little things vor a girt big chap like he? |
34676 | Giles?" |
34676 | Giles?" |
34676 | Got the shillin''?" |
34676 | Have you any idea what the death- rate is here?" |
34676 | Have you taken your medicine regularly, and eaten plenty of animal food?" |
34676 | How is her pulse, eh? |
34676 | How would you like some soup?" |
34676 | I hope he''s all the better for it?" |
34676 | I hope that the smith is one of our friends? |
34676 | I thought you said you could''Read at sight''?" |
34676 | Is he at his old tricks still?" |
34676 | Is your husband at home?" |
34676 | Killing two birds with one stone, eh?"] |
34676 | Let me see, you_ are_ Richard, are n''t you?" |
34676 | Muggles?" |
34676 | Now, sir, what card did you select from the pack?" |
34676 | Pig- buyin''to- day, sir? |
34676 | Purch._ Five- an''-twenty? |
34676 | Purch._ I s''pose ye ai nt seen ole Jim''Arrows''bout''ere this marnin'', hev ye? |
34676 | Purch._ Old yoes-- well, ye know,''taint like_ young_ yoes,_ be_ it now? |
34676 | Ryemouth._ Speakin''o''queer ways o''hadvertisin'', hev any on ye set eyes on that farm o''young FULLACRANK''S? |
34676 | Southdowns? |
34676 | Spinks?" |
34676 | Stubbs?" |
34676 | Taken the medicine, eh?" |
34676 | Theer''s bin a genl''man from Leicestershire''ere, wawntin''me to run''i m off a dozen or so-- fur his perrk, d''ye see? |
34676 | Then I suppose you_ keep a bee_?" |
34676 | Then why do n''t us feed the canary on onions? |
34676 | Was her young life to be surrounded with infants? |
34676 | Weel, Donald, hoo gae they? |
34676 | Well, an''how''s Muster Spuddock to- day? |
34676 | What could the matter mean? |
34676 | What d''ye carl them yoes now? |
34676 | What on earth do you feed him on?" |
34676 | What was the reason, I wonder?" |
34676 | What''av''yer got?"] |
34676 | What''s that for?" |
34676 | What''s wrong with him, doctor?" |
34676 | Why do you ask?" |
34676 | Why, as likely as not,''twill all die off o''the land afore the year''s out-- and wheer wull he be_ then_? |
34676 | Wot''s that?" |
34676 | Would''e like to try him? |
34676 | [_ They all shake their heads solemnly as scene closes in._*****[ Illustration]*****[ Illustration:_ The New Curate._"Superb day, is n''t it?" |
34676 | _ Farmer._"What did a''tell ye, lads? |
34676 | _ First Stockbr._ An''how''s trade with_ you_, eh? |
34676 | _ Flippant Parishioner._"Really? |
34676 | _ Gentleman._"Yes, yes; but I mean who''s their master?" |
34676 | _ Giles._"Ay?" |
34676 | _ Giles._"Ay?" |
34676 | _ I_ niver did, and(_ aggressively_) naw moor_ yo''_ did n''t neither,''Enery,_ did_ ye now? |
34676 | _ Little Chris._ Then what makes seeds? |
34676 | _ Miss B._"Did you take her anything?" |
34676 | _ Miss B._"That was n''t much, was it?" |
34676 | _ Parson._"How is it he did n''t come to church on Sunday? |
34676 | _ Patient._"Be I to take it in four or six hale, guv''nor?"] |
34676 | _ Patient._"Yes, doctor; but could n''t''e do''em up in something different? |
34676 | _ Rustic._"Whoy?" |
34676 | _ Second Tramp._"Yus; an''do n''t you see''i m a- growlin''? |
34676 | _ Seller._ For them yoes? |
34676 | _ She._"Oh, how_ could_ he? |
34676 | _ Shepherd._"Lonely? |
34676 | _ The Inquirer._ Would ye hev any objection to sayin''why ye''re partin''wi''en? |
34676 | _ Tom._"Nor yet sheep?" |
34676 | _ Town Man._"Time passes slowly? |
34676 | _ Uncle._"Why, you bean''t never goin''to tell I as you''ve bin an''turned teetotal?"] |
34676 | _ Vicar._"Why do n''t you ask your own Vicar?" |
34676 | _ What''s_ been very fine here? |
34676 | _ Wife._"''Ow can you expect it to if you wo n''t take the doctor''s physic?"] |
34676 | _ Wife._"Did you take the cloth off?" |
34676 | a- goin''to marry that Miss Giles arter all?" |
14182 | Doth not,saith this kind of slanderer,"his temper incline him to do thus? |
14182 | I see another law in my members, warring against the law of my mind? |
14182 | Is it not monstrous,he asks,"that Calne, with 173 voters, should return a member, while Glasgow returns only two, with a constituency of 20,000?" |
14182 | O, yet a nobler task awaits thy hand, For what can war but endless war still breed? |
14182 | What could have been done more? |
14182 | Why contend,say they,"for a little territory that you do not need?" |
14182 | A treaty is a bargain between nations, binding in good faith; and what makes a bargain? |
14182 | Again, how is"Thy will be done as in heaven, so in earth,"understood? |
14182 | Again:"He doeth well,"saith the sycophant,"it is true; but why, and to what end? |
14182 | Am I asked, would you render the judges superior to the legislature? |
14182 | Am I borne out in this declaration by the clause referred to? |
14182 | And can it be more justifiable to fight for my goods than for my life?" |
14182 | And can we have a safer model in forming ours? |
14182 | And gentlemen, what has been the result? |
14182 | And he added,"How then shall they call on him in whom they have not believed? |
14182 | And how is his name hallowed in us, except while it makes us holy? |
14182 | And how shall they believe in him of whom they have not heard? |
14182 | And if we have, are we not to make use of it in judging of the expediency or inexpediency of the treaty? |
14182 | And is it not quite clear, that to such persons, God can not be said to be their God? |
14182 | And is not Christ worth the seeking? |
14182 | And now, gentlemen, what is about to happen? |
14182 | And now, gentlemen, what is the condition of the great body of the people? |
14182 | And what event of weightier intrinsic importance, or of more extensive consequences, was ever selected for this honorary distinction? |
14182 | And what has occurred? |
14182 | And what is that? |
14182 | And what is the result to Athens? |
14182 | And what object of consideration more pleasing than this can be presented to the human mind? |
14182 | And what would the bride''s guardian and conductor say, the divine and blessed Paul? |
14182 | And why was this, save that thine own head might not suffer-- thine own conscience might not be wounded? |
14182 | And why? |
14182 | And, since free labor is inevitable, will you have it in its worst forms or in its best? |
14182 | And, with this, what have you done? |
14182 | Another point is this, whether and how far a private person may aid another in distress? |
14182 | Are all that hear me this day certain they shall be saved? |
14182 | Are despots alone to be approached for unfeeling indifference to the tears and blood of their subjects? |
14182 | Are gentlemen disposed to risk the consequences? |
14182 | Are not these, my lord, very afflicting thoughts? |
14182 | Are our ears so deafened? |
14182 | Are our eyes so blinded? |
14182 | Are our hearts so hardened? |
14182 | Are our noble predecessors''souls got so far into the English cabbage stock and cauliflowers that we should show the least inclination that way? |
14182 | Are our tongues so faltered? |
14182 | Are republicans unresponsible? |
14182 | Are the very clods where we tread entitled to this ardent preference because they are greener? |
14182 | Are there not Christians enough to kill? |
14182 | Are there not associations which, overleaping the recent past, carry us back to times when, over North and South, this flag was honored alike by all? |
14182 | Are there not many who live, to all appearances, as unconscious of his existence as we fancy the inferior animals to be? |
14182 | Are there not many who never think of God or care about his service? |
14182 | Are they to be bound by popular election? |
14182 | Are we come to exult that Northern hands are stronger than Southern? |
14182 | Are we going to fight because we can not agree upon the mode of disposing of our neighbor''s lands? |
14182 | Are we sufficient for the comprehension of the sublimest spiritual truths, and unequal to material and temporal ones? |
14182 | Are you not yet weary of contest? |
14182 | As Mrs. Surratt came forward, he asked her this question,"Do you know this man?" |
14182 | At the end of a war there must be a negotiation, which is the very point we have already gained; and why relinquish it? |
14182 | Because then it was most rightly and most truly said,"How shall they call on him in whom they have not believed?" |
14182 | Blush ye not, speaking lies against the divine oracles? |
14182 | But am I reduced to the necessity of proving this point? |
14182 | But have they maturely considered the whole subject? |
14182 | But how, even for so short a time, can I be separated from my beloved ones? |
14182 | But if at that period this would be unreasonable, what makes it otherwise now? |
14182 | But if he is God, and the throne of his kingdom is everlasting, in what way could God advance? |
14182 | But if, at the same time, it does not belong to the courts of the United States, where does it lead the people? |
14182 | But is it in this house only that we find these indications of the want of maturity in our views upon this subject? |
14182 | But is this view of delight only and not of discovery-- of contentment, and not of benefit? |
14182 | But she returned not,""Is there no balm in Gilead? |
14182 | But the greatest question of all is, How will that decision affect the country as a whole? |
14182 | But to the eye of reason what can be more clear than that all men have an equal right to happiness? |
14182 | But what good do we wish for ourselves, when we say,"Thy will be done as in heaven, so in earth?" |
14182 | But what is the effect of it? |
14182 | But what is the right of a huntsman to the forest of a thousand miles over which he has accidentally ranged in quest of prey? |
14182 | But what mysterious distribution of character has the craft of statesmen, more fatal than priestcraft, introduced? |
14182 | But what purpose can arguments of this kind answer? |
14182 | But when did the President of the Senate ever undertake to call the two houses together to witness the opening and counting of the votes? |
14182 | But when hear we such questions? |
14182 | But, after all this,"shall they fall and not arise? |
14182 | But, if so, how can you expect that it will be of so much more use hereafter as to make it worth dissolving the Union? |
14182 | But, if that be true, what is the use of asking for the protection anyhow, much less in the Constitution? |
14182 | But, if we pass to the other condition, is it any more reasonable? |
14182 | But, say those who hide the absurdity under the cover of ambiguous phrases, Have we no discretion? |
14182 | But, sir, if it were a compromise, what is there in compromise that is discreditable either to men or to nations? |
14182 | By disregarding the mode and forms prescribed by the constitution for amending it? |
14182 | By nominees of the sovereign power? |
14182 | Byrhtnoth, angry and resolute, gave him this answer:--"Hearest thou, pirate, what this folk sayeth? |
14182 | Can any thing essential, any thing more, than mere ornament and decoration be added to this by robes or diamonds? |
14182 | Can anything tend more to make men think themselves mean, or degrade to a lower point their estimation of virtue and their standard of action? |
14182 | Can not men be saved without so much ado? |
14182 | Can the gentlemen relieve themselves from this dilemma? |
14182 | Can they take it upon them to say that an Indian peace, under these circumstances, will prove firm? |
14182 | Can you give the colonies any security that such a period will never come? |
14182 | Can you talk to them of transgressing their powers, when no one has a right to judge of those powers but themselves? |
14182 | Contemplate the mangled bodies of your countrymen, and then say, What should be the reward of such sacrifices? |
14182 | Could he look with affection and veneration to such a country as his parent? |
14182 | Did I say that we brought back the same banner that you bore away, noble and heroic sir? |
14182 | Did ever so many hearts, in so brief a time, touch two such boundless feelings? |
14182 | Did he ever do it? |
14182 | Did he grudge us this? |
14182 | Did the government express any disapprobation of such conduct? |
14182 | Did the protection we received annul our rights as men, and lay us under an obligation of being miserable? |
14182 | Did they not agree to go to King Street, and attack the main guard? |
14182 | Did you not know that whether of you shall be slain, the loss would be the great seignor''s?" |
14182 | Dismissing, therefore, the justice of our cause, as incontestable, the only question is, What is best for us to pursue in our present circumstances? |
14182 | Do not these make light of Christ and salvation? |
14182 | Do not those men make light of Christ and salvation that shun the mention of his name, unless it be in a vain or sinful use? |
14182 | Do not those then make light of Christ and salvation that think of them so seldom and coldly in comparison of other things? |
14182 | Do the angels need books, and interpreters, and readers? |
14182 | Do they forget that they interdicted representative government? |
14182 | Do we exult over fallen cities? |
14182 | Do we not ask rain of him, to- day, and yesterday, and the day before? |
14182 | Do you not see the men who delivered the Delphian temple invested not only with that glory but with the leadership against Persia? |
14182 | Do you want more war? |
14182 | Does not the South need peace? |
14182 | Does not the power of the legislature become absolute and omnipotent? |
14182 | Does not this open wide the door for the admission of the plea of"reasonable doubt"? |
14182 | Does the power reside in the States? |
14182 | Doth not that soul make light of all these that thinks his ease more worth than they? |
14182 | For a mountain is a height, and what is higher than heaven? |
14182 | For are there as many ages yet remaining as have already passed away? |
14182 | For is not he who attempts to murder me more injurious than he who barely attempts to rob me? |
14182 | For shall we receive the Eucharist when we shall have come to Christ himself, and begun to reign with him forever? |
14182 | For to whom doth he say,"Say, Our Father, which art in heaven?" |
14182 | For what are debts, but sins? |
14182 | For what rights of a citizen will be deemed inviolable when a State renounces the principles that constitute their security? |
14182 | For when did he not reign? |
14182 | For when this life shall have passed away, shall we ask for daily bread then? |
14182 | Further, it seems to me, we may make another question, whether you are satisfied that their real intention was to kill or maim, or not? |
14182 | God will judge impartially; why should not we do so? |
14182 | Good men and angels will cry out:"How long, O Lord, how long, wilt thou not avenge?" |
14182 | Had he not a right to kill the man? |
14182 | Had she a single eye to our advantage? |
14182 | Has it checked your progress in any one department of human effort? |
14182 | Has it crippled your resources? |
14182 | Has it impaired your energies? |
14182 | Has it paralyzed your industry? |
14182 | Has nothing been gained? |
14182 | Has our blood been expended in vain? |
14182 | Has the legislature of a State a right to declare an act of Congress void? |
14182 | Has this long and weary period of strife been an unmingled evil? |
14182 | Hath a nation changed their gods, which are yet no gods?" |
14182 | Have the principles, on which you ground the reproach upon cabinets and kings, no practical influence, no binding force? |
14182 | Have they forgotten that the Lacedemonians had the right to vote in the assemblies only when they held helots? |
14182 | Have we not said,"Our Father, which art in heaven,"and the rest which follows? |
14182 | Have you gone to them, and told them the doubtfulness of your case, and asked their help in the judging of your condition? |
14182 | Have you nobody to inquire of, that might help you in such a work? |
14182 | He( Smith) stepped to the door of the parlor and said,"Mrs. Surratt, will you step here a minute?" |
14182 | His young companions in the chase or the gymnasium? |
14182 | How are these acts proven? |
14182 | How are you to meet the case of the representation of South Lancashire in reference to its boroughs? |
14182 | How can this difficulty be got over? |
14182 | How did he give them up? |
14182 | How did she set about it? |
14182 | How have they treated them? |
14182 | How is a second chamber to be constituted? |
14182 | How is this? |
14182 | How is this? |
14182 | How many letters hast thou indited to holy men, imploring their prayers, not that thou mightest obtain these human--nuptials, shall I call them? |
14182 | How many ways of proceeding lie open before us? |
14182 | How stands the case, then? |
14182 | How then ought he to forgive who is himself forgiven, when he forgiveth all who oweth nothing that can be forgiven him? |
14182 | How were the obligations of this treaty fulfilled? |
14182 | How will these despisers of Christ and salvation be able one day to look him in the face, and to give an account of these neglects? |
14182 | How, then, does this take place? |
14182 | How, then, is it to be treated? |
14182 | How? |
14182 | I ask those who remind us of them, if it is at such government they would arrive? |
14182 | I ask, further, when such attempts have been made, have they not failed of success? |
14182 | I immediately inquire to what extent does the authority of Congress, in relation to commercial treaties, reach? |
14182 | I trust it is neither too presumptuous nor too late to ask, Can you put the dearest interest of society at risk without guilt, and without remorse? |
14182 | If he can be so mistaken about those facts, may he not be in regard to that whole transaction? |
14182 | If he goeth to clear himself from the matter of such aspersions:"What need,"saith this insidious speaker,"of that? |
14182 | If so, may they not adopt means which they believe will tend to produce a concurrence? |
14182 | If the people were willing to part with commerce, can the government dispense with it? |
14182 | If we can not speak the law as it is, where is our liberty? |
14182 | If we do mark what is done in many( might I not say, in most?) |
14182 | If we have passed through fire and water, so that neither did the fire consume us, nor the water drown us, whose is the glory? |
14182 | If we reject the treaty, will our peace be as safe as if we executed it with good faith? |
14182 | In spite of this mock solemnity, I demand, if the House will not concur in the measure to execute the treaty, what other course shall we take? |
14182 | In that period will they be still bound to acknowledge that supremacy over them which we now claim? |
14182 | In the highest possible sense of the terms; but who can tell what that highest possible sense of the terms is? |
14182 | In what manner are they to be elected? |
14182 | Is David dead? |
14182 | Is Hampden dead? |
14182 | Is Washington dead? |
14182 | Is any man that ever was fit to live dead? |
14182 | Is it a narrow affection for the spot where a man was born? |
14182 | Is it feared that the government will oppress the conquered States? |
14182 | Is it feared that the rights of the States will be withheld? |
14182 | Is it not grown so common a thing to asperse causelessly that no man wonders at it, that few dislike, that scarce any detest it? |
14182 | Is it not our great interest to place our judges upon such high ground that no fear can intimidate, no hope seduce them? |
14182 | Is it not safe to abide by such examples? |
14182 | Is it not the sport and divertisement of many to cast dirt in the faces of all they meet with? |
14182 | Is it not true that thou didst fix a punishment for him, and threaten him with death by torments? |
14182 | Is it not, as most men do, out of ill design? |
14182 | Is it ours, so that we should exult in it as if it belonged to us? |
14182 | Is it possible that this will should not be done? |
14182 | Is it to be neglected or ridiculed? |
14182 | Is memory dead? |
14182 | Is not everlasting salvation worth more than all this? |
14182 | Is not her Majesty in danger by such a method? |
14182 | Is not the monarchy in danger? |
14182 | Is not the nation''s peace and tranquillity in danger? |
14182 | Is such an instance to be found? |
14182 | Is the aid of the legislature necessary in all cases whatsoever, to give effect to a commercial treaty? |
14182 | Is the legislative sanction necessary to give it effect? |
14182 | Is the only benefit which our constancy till death has obtained for our country, that it should be sunk into a deeper and more ignominious vassalage? |
14182 | Is there a word on record of conversation between Booth and Mrs. Surratt? |
14182 | Is there any language of reproach pungent enough to express your commentary on the fact? |
14182 | Is there anything in Mrs. Surratt''s mind and course of life to show that she was prepared for the commission of this crime? |
14182 | Is there no historic pride? |
14182 | Is there no physician there? |
14182 | Is there one among you who can hear the simple and pathetic energy of these expressions without tenderness and admiration? |
14182 | Is this immense wealth always to be exposed as a prey to the rapacity of freebooters? |
14182 | Is this necessary except in this life? |
14182 | Is this to be the one idea which is to mold the policy of the government, when that gentleman and his friends shall control it? |
14182 | Is truth ever barren? |
14182 | It cried to the Lord,"Wherefore am I deposed?" |
14182 | Let us inquire also against whom she has protected us? |
14182 | Lord, when didst thou see these good things in us? |
14182 | May I not, then, well express the hope that never again may we or ours be called upon so to celebrate this anniversary? |
14182 | Must they always continue an appendage to our government and follow it implicitly through every change that can happen to it? |
14182 | Nay, does not the Lord himself say to some who now walk in the spirit of Jeremiah,"Hast thou seen what the virgin of Israel hath done unto me?" |
14182 | Need I say that we fly in the face of that resolution when we pretend that the acts of that power are not valid until we have concurred in them? |
14182 | Now, consider: How does Demosthenes answer to these conditions? |
14182 | Of such a father what shall we ask? |
14182 | On what protection does this vast property rest? |
14182 | Or how shall they hear without a preacher? |
14182 | Or how shall they preach except they be sent?" |
14182 | Or what promotion is it to the Everlasting to have put on the temporal? |
14182 | Or what was there wanting to him who was sitting on his Father''s throne? |
14182 | Or, if his life should not be invaded, what would its enjoyments be in a country odious in the eyes of strangers and dishonored in his own? |
14182 | Our peaceful triumphs? |
14182 | Our peaceful triumphs? |
14182 | Our understandings have been addressed, it is true, and with ability and effect; but, I demand, has any corner of the heart been left unexplored? |
14182 | Q,--Anything besides the carbines and ammunition? |
14182 | Q.--All three together? |
14182 | Q.--For what purpose, and for how long, did he ask you to keep these articles? |
14182 | Q.--How long a rope? |
14182 | Q.--How much ammunition was there? |
14182 | Q.--Was her question to you first, whether they were still there, or what was it? |
14182 | Q.--Were they concealed in that condition? |
14182 | Q.--Were they put in that place? |
14182 | Q.--Were those articles left at your house? |
14182 | Q.--What did they bring to your house, and what did they do there? |
14182 | Q.--What did they bring to your house? |
14182 | Q.--You say that he asked you to conceal those articles for him? |
14182 | Question.--"Was her question to you first, whether they were there, or what was it?" |
14182 | Shall a philanthropist say to a banker, who defends himself against a robber,"Why do you need so much money?" |
14182 | Shall he forbid the oaks of the forest to fall before the ax of industry, and to rise again, transformed into the habitations of ease and elegance? |
14182 | Shall he forbid the wilderness to blossom like a rose? |
14182 | Shall he not as well discern the riches of Nature''s warehouse as the beauties of her shop? |
14182 | Shall he not be able thereby to produce worthy effects and to endow the life of man with infinite commodities?" |
14182 | Shall it be ignorant, impertinent, indolent, or shall it be educated, self- respecting, moral, and self- supporting? |
14182 | Shall not we then argue for that which our progenitors have purchased for us at so dear a rate, and with so much immortal honor and glory? |
14182 | Shall the hazard of a father unbind the ligaments of a dumb son''s tongue; and shall we hold our peace, when our_ patria_ is in danger? |
14182 | Shall the liberal bounties of Providence to the race of man be monopolized by one of ten thousand for whom they were created? |
14182 | Shall the lordly savage not only disdain the virtues and enjoyments of civilization himself, but shall he control the civilization of a world? |
14182 | Shall we complain of our nature-- shall we say that man ought to have been made otherwise? |
14182 | Shall we hesitate to go forward with the work? |
14182 | Shall we, dreading to become the blind instruments of power, yield ourselves the blinder dupes of mere sounds of imposture? |
14182 | She might have said she did not know Payne-- and who within the sound of my voice can say they know him now? |
14182 | Should not the consideration of these things vivify these dry bones of ours? |
14182 | Should not the memory of our noble predecessors''valor and constancy rouse up our drooping spirits? |
14182 | Since this flag went down on that dark day, who shall tell the mighty woes that have made this land a spectacle to angels and men? |
14182 | Some of you will, perhaps, ask in amazement: Is a man to be indicted for his temperament? |
14182 | Some unforeseen Providence will fall out, that may cast the balance; some Joseph or other will say,"Why do ye strive together, since ye are brethren?" |
14182 | Suppose there shall be an interruption in the count, as has occurred in our history, can the President of the Senate do it? |
14182 | That the body whom they are to check has the power to destroy them? |
14182 | That_ mendax__ infamia_ from the press, which daily coins false facts and false motives? |
14182 | The evil spirit is cast out: why should not this nation cease to wander among tombs, cutting itself? |
14182 | The manner of the reprehension was in these words:"How durst you undertake to fight one with the other? |
14182 | The question arises, who is most responsible-- a peer for life whose dignities are not descendible, or a peer for life whose dignities are hereditary? |
14182 | The question is, Are you satisfied the people made the attack in order to kill the soldiers? |
14182 | The question was asked Lloyd, During this conversation, was the word''carbine''mentioned? |
14182 | The question was then asked,"Can you swear on your oath, that Mrs. Surratt mentioned the words''shooting irons''to you at all?" |
14182 | The single test has been, is it oratory? |
14182 | The slaveholding States will secede, and what then? |
14182 | The true question is, shall the judiciary be permanent, or fluctuate with the tide of public opinion? |
14182 | Their specific was to despoil churches and plunder landlords, and what has been the result? |
14182 | Then Justice, with an angry countenance, and meditating on a grief which she had not expected, said to her father,"Am not I thy daughter Justice? |
14182 | Then shall the righteous answer and say, Lord, why hast thou prepared such glory and such good things? |
14182 | Then they also shall answer and say, Lord, why hast thou prepared such punishments for us? |
14182 | They met each other as if each would ask the other,"Am I awake, or do I dream?" |
14182 | This principle admitted, does any constitution remain? |
14182 | To others I will urge, Can any circumstance mark upon a people more turpitude and debasement? |
14182 | Trembling and astonished, Paul cries out,"Lord, what wilt thou have me to do?" |
14182 | Truth, when she heard this, was excessively angry, and looking sternly at her father,"Am not I,"said she,"thy daughter Truth? |
14182 | Under what clause of the constitution is the right to exercise this power set up? |
14182 | Was the man true, was he brave, was he earnest, was all we thought of then;--not, did he vote or think with us, or label himself with our party name? |
14182 | Was there ever such a combination of negligence and blundering? |
14182 | We are asked, sir, if the judges are to be independent of the people? |
14182 | We read in the book of holy Job,"Is not the life of man upon earth a temptation?" |
14182 | Well, what is a treaty? |
14182 | Were there not more than three persons in Dock Square? |
14182 | Were these colonies backward in giving assistance to Great Britain, when they were called upon in 1739 to aid the expedition against Carthagena? |
14182 | Were we to hear our character as a people ridiculed with indifference? |
14182 | What additional proof of confidential relations between Weichmann and Booth could the court desire? |
14182 | What advance, then, of promotion, and reward of virtue, or generally of conduct, is proved from this in our Lord''s instance? |
14182 | What advancement, then, was it to the Immortal to have assumed the mortal? |
14182 | What am I to fear? |
14182 | What are the acts she has done? |
14182 | What are the objects to be accomplished? |
14182 | What argument, therefore, do we want to show the equity of our conduct; or motive of interest to recommend it to our prudence? |
14182 | What becomes, then, of the lively narrative of the right honorable gentleman, and what becomes of the inference and conclusions which he drew from it? |
14182 | What can any tempter from without, whether the devil or the devil''s minister, do against thee? |
14182 | What check can there be when the power designed to be checked can annihilate the body which is to restrain? |
14182 | What debts? |
14182 | What do men commonly please themselves in so much as in carping and harshly censuring, in defaming and abusing their neighbors? |
14182 | What does he mean but this? |
14182 | What does reason, what does argument avail, when party spirit presides? |
14182 | What does this signify? |
14182 | What effect must all these things have on those who have lived viciously? |
14182 | What excuse, then, remains to thee, or to any one else, when he utters such language as this? |
14182 | What follows? |
14182 | What happened in this country? |
14182 | What happened? |
14182 | What hast thou done upon earth? |
14182 | What have they done? |
14182 | What impudent servant ever carried his insane audacity so far as to fling himself upon the couch of his lord? |
14182 | What influence can be exercised by a chamber of nominees? |
14182 | What is a Legislature? |
14182 | What is patriotism? |
14182 | What is the best foundation of independence? |
14182 | What is the earth? |
14182 | What is the express language of the treaty? |
14182 | What is this twenty millions in money, and how is it to be paid? |
14182 | What means"to know"? |
14182 | What more? |
14182 | What nation in so short a time has seen so many? |
14182 | What other form of government, indeed, can so well deserve our esteem and love? |
14182 | What possible motive has the government to narrow the base of that pyramid on which its own permanence depends? |
14182 | What power of the House is relinquished? |
14182 | What power of the Senate is relinquished? |
14182 | What power that both should possess is withheld? |
14182 | What reward can be great to the Everlasting God and King, in the bosom of the Father? |
14182 | What then becomes of the equal measure of power in the two houses over this subject? |
14182 | What was the position of the American government? |
14182 | What will, at that period, be the duty of the colonies? |
14182 | What would you say, or rather what would you not say? |
14182 | What, but this? |
14182 | What, gentlemen, is the first quality which is required in a second chamber? |
14182 | What, however, are his qualifications in respect to sagacity and to power of speech? |
14182 | What, the alienations and jealousies, the discords and contentions, and the causes of them? |
14182 | What, then, are we called upon to do? |
14182 | What, then, do we pray for? |
14182 | What, then, has he hereby taught us? |
14182 | What, then, ought we to do for the death of the soul? |
14182 | What, then, shall hinder the rebuilding of the Republic? |
14182 | When Payne, according to Weichmann''s testimony, inquired,"Where is my mustache?" |
14182 | When did he begin to reign? |
14182 | When the Gospel pierceth the heart indeed, they cry out,"Men and brethren, what shall we do to be saved?" |
14182 | When the certificates have been opened, when the votes have been counted, can the President of the Senate declare the result? |
14182 | When was there a time in the history of the government that there was no North side of this Chamber and of the other? |
14182 | When, sir, did millions of people, as a single man, rise in organized, deliberate, unimpassioned rebellion against justice, truth, and honor? |
14182 | When, then, were these things spoken of him, but when he came in the flesh, and was baptized in Jordan, and the spirit descended on him? |
14182 | Where are the names of the chief men, of the noble families of Stuarts, Hamiltons, Grahams, Campbels, Gordons, Johnstons, Humes, Murrays, Kers? |
14182 | Where are the two great officers of the crown, the constables and marshals of Scotland? |
14182 | Where is it unjust? |
14182 | Where is the collision here? |
14182 | Where will this end, my lord? |
14182 | Where, then, is the reason for hesitation at calling it a riot? |
14182 | Wherefore have we come hither, pilgrims from distant places? |
14182 | Who among you, my countrymen, that is a father, would claim authority to make your child a slave because you had nourished him in infancy? |
14182 | Who can explain, who can worthily so much as conceive, how much he loveth us? |
14182 | Who can foretell the judgment of this commission upon any question of law or fact? |
14182 | Who does not delight in oratory? |
14182 | Who has an omnipotent hand to restore a million dead, slain in battle or wasted by sickness, or dying of grief, broken- hearted? |
14182 | Who has omniscience to search for the scattered ones? |
14182 | Who shall enumerate their value to the millions yet unborn? |
14182 | Who shall judge whether we govern equitably or not? |
14182 | Who shall recount our martyr''s sufferings for this people? |
14182 | Who shall restore the lost to broken families? |
14182 | Who will accuse me of wandering out of the subject? |
14182 | Who will say that I exaggerate the tendencies of our measures? |
14182 | Who would venture upon a voyage in a ship each plank and timber of which might withdraw at its pleasure? |
14182 | Who, after this, will say that republicans are ungrateful? |
14182 | Whom did he wish us to call our father, save his own father? |
14182 | Whose rights are endangered by it? |
14182 | Why did Christ bow his head on the cross? |
14182 | Why did he not go to Mrs. Surratt and communicate his suspicions at once? |
14182 | Why did this civil war begin? |
14182 | Why is it, then, persevered in, and the other rejected? |
14182 | Why need I delay you by my words and by my tears? |
14182 | Why need I say more? |
14182 | Why need any eye turn from this spectacle? |
14182 | Why require protection where you will have nothing to protect? |
14182 | Why should it not come, clothed and in its right mind, to"sit at the feet of Jesus"? |
14182 | Why will you protect your citizens and their property upon land, and leave them defenseless upon the ocean? |
14182 | Why, then, is it that harmony is not restored? |
14182 | Why, then, is not the health of the daughter of my people recovered?" |
14182 | Why? |
14182 | Why? |
14182 | Why? |
14182 | Will a change of parties make the nation more happy? |
14182 | Will any one answer by a sneer, that all this is idle preaching? |
14182 | Will any one deny that we are bound, and I would hope to good purpose, by the most solemn sanctions of duty, for the vote we give? |
14182 | Will it be called day by day when there will be one eternal day? |
14182 | Will it be pretended that the State courts have the exclusive right of deciding upon the validity of our laws? |
14182 | Will it be whispered that the treaty has made a new champion for the protection of the frontiers? |
14182 | Will reflecting men not perceive, then, the wisdom of accepting established facts, and, with alacrity of enterprise, begin to retrieve the past? |
14182 | Will the tendency to Indian hostilities be contested by any one? |
14182 | Will they be still bound to unconditional submission? |
14182 | Will they say, though a judge has no power to pronounce a law void, he has a power to declare the constitution invalid? |
14182 | Will this again be necessary in the life to come? |
14182 | Will you gather up the unexploded fragments of this prodigious magazine of all mischief, and heap them up for continued explosions? |
14182 | Will you give them letters of marque and reprisal to pay themselves by force? |
14182 | Will you go to war to avenge their injury? |
14182 | Will you have men as drudges, or will you have them as citizens? |
14182 | Will you interpose and frustrate that hope, leaving to many families nothing but beggary and despair? |
14182 | Will you pay the sufferers out of the treasury? |
14182 | Will you say afterwards that their existence depends upon the legislature? |
14182 | Will you say that we now govern equitably, and that there is no danger of such revolution? |
14182 | Without this protection what would be the condition of the Northern inventor? |
14182 | Would not the quick ears of Weichmann have heard the remark had it been made? |
14182 | Would not this be so? |
14182 | Would you render them independent of the legislature? |
14182 | You I can comfort; but how can I speak to that twilight million to whom his name was as the name of an angel of God? |
14182 | You want to know if we have a government; if you have any authority to collect revenue; to wring tribute from an unwilling people? |
14182 | __"Are you certain?" |
14182 | and art not thou called merciful? |
14182 | and what is it that you neglect? |
14182 | are thou not called just? |
14182 | art not thou called true? |
14182 | but what saith he? |
14182 | companies, what is it but one telling malicious stories of, or fastening odious characters upon, another? |
14182 | did I name you? |
14182 | do you not prejudge yourself guilty? |
14182 | had he not fair opportunity and strong temptation to it? |
14182 | hath he not acted so in like cases? |
14182 | have not others made as fair a show? |
14182 | may he not dissemble now? |
14182 | may he not recoil hereafter? |
14182 | may not his interest have swayed him thereto? |
14182 | must I needs mean you? |
14182 | rather this dishonorable defilement--but that thou mightest not fall away from the Lord Jesus? |
14182 | shall he turn away and not return?" |
14182 | shall it be said that we waver in the view of those who begin by trying to expunge the sacred memory of the fourth of July? |
14182 | that ask of his service as Judas of the ointment, What need this waste? |
14182 | that provide outward necessaries so carefully for their families, but do so little to the saving of their souls? |
14182 | the single question, is there eloquence? |
14182 | to bespatter any man with foul imputations? |
14182 | what is it you run after? |
14182 | why do you then assume it to yourself? |
34313 | ''What do you mean?'' 34313 And have you such a thing as a favorite author?" |
34313 | And just why should the exploitation of filth assume to monopolize the word''realism''? 34313 And was n''t that one of the things for which you condemned our hypothetical writer of Western tales?" |
34313 | And what changed woman? |
34313 | And what effect are the moving pictures going to have on fiction? |
34313 | And what effect can it have on our literature? 34313 And what is it that makes a man an artist, in pigments or in words?" |
34313 | And what of Boccaccio? 34313 And where does genius come in?" |
34313 | And you,I said, determined to make the conversation more personal,"prefer the romantic method?" |
34313 | But do n''t you think,I asked,"that the permanence of a book''s appeal is a proof of its greatness?" |
34313 | But do not these conditions in many instances seriously hinder individual artists? |
34313 | But do you think,I asked,"that the fault is entirely that of the public? |
34313 | But have there not been writers,I asked,"who seem to prove that there is some truth in the inspiration theory? |
34313 | But is not that what you yourself did? |
34313 | But the American Civil War produced literature, did it not? |
34313 | But was n''t that because his negro folk- tales were a sort of''glorified reporting''rather than creative work? |
34313 | But what are the manifestations of this new democratic spirit? |
34313 | But what do you think of Flaubert''s method, as a method? |
34313 | But what has this to do,I asked,"with making poetry more democratic?" |
34313 | But what,I asked,"about materialism-- not specifically commercialism, but materialism? |
34313 | But why is it,I asked,"that a great poet so often is without honor in his own generation, where mediocrity is immediately famous?" |
34313 | But you do not believe,I said,"that American literature in general is better than it used to be, do you? |
34313 | But you yourself write serial stories, do you not? |
34313 | Can you possibly have, at any time or anywhere, great art without a great faith? 34313 Did he say that the Civil War had produced no literature worthy of preservation?" |
34313 | Did you ever think,said Mrs. Marks, suddenly,"that the truest exuberance of life always expresses itself rhythmically? |
34313 | Do n''t you think that the snobs were always very much apart from our civilization and national ideals? 34313 Do you believe in the old saying that the poet-- the creative artist-- is born and not made?" |
34313 | Do you believe,I asked,"that being in the city has had a good effect on literary activity among Columbia students?" |
34313 | Do you think that Ibsen expressed the modern feminine unrest in_ The Doll''s House_? |
34313 | Do you think that a writer who works with such laborious care is right? |
34313 | Do you think that the American novel will always be inferior to the English novel? |
34313 | Do you think that the Russian novelists have influenced your work? |
34313 | Do you think that this harms their work? |
34313 | Do you think, then,I asked,"that our writers are producing work as likely to endure as that which is being produced in England?" |
34313 | Do you think,I asked,"that romanticism has lost its hold on the novelists?" |
34313 | Do you think,I asked,"that the great social problems of the day, the feminine unrest, for instance, are finding their expression in literature?" |
34313 | Do you think,I asked,"that the poetry that is written in America to- day is better than that written a generation ago?" |
34313 | Do you think,I asked,"that this is a good thing for civilization, this increased activity of women in business?" |
34313 | Do you think,I asked,"that writers should be specialists in writing? |
34313 | Does this enthusiasm for literature show itself in the college magazine? |
34313 | Has American fiction been lacking in visualization? |
34313 | Has literature been produced by people who made writing only an avocation? |
34313 | How did this happen? |
34313 | How do you account for that? |
34313 | How does this theory apply to poets? |
34313 | How far is this idolatry of the movie actor to go, anyway? 34313 How has literature been affected,"I asked,"by the suffrage movement and feminism?" |
34313 | How is a writer going to get ideas for stories,asked Mr. Beach, in turn,"unless he uses ideas? |
34313 | How is one to decide whether or not a poet is great? |
34313 | How will it alter it? |
34313 | I suppose,I said,"that the conditions you describe are distinctively modern, are they not? |
34313 | Is it not probable that the American novel will so develop as to escape the effects of serialization? |
34313 | Is n''t this rather high praise for Charlie Chaplin? |
34313 | Is not the war, which is surely the greatest event of our time, an anti- democratic thing? |
34313 | Is this true of the best short stories being written now? 34313 Is_ Huckleberry Finn_ a phase? |
34313 | Mr. Guiterman,I said,"is this the advice that you would give to John Keats if he were to ask you?" |
34313 | Mr. Herrick,I asked,"just what is a realist?" |
34313 | Now, when you walk down Broadway, do you find any reminders of the popular novels of the day? 34313 Should a poet be able to make a living out of poetry?" |
34313 | Still, in spite of their precarious financial condition, modern authors are doing good work, are they not? |
34313 | Then a novel may be at once optimistic and realistic? |
34313 | Then you believe that there is a distinctively American literature? |
34313 | Then you do n''t think,I said,"that literature has lost through the poverty of poets?" |
34313 | Then you do not share Katharine Fullerton Gerould''s belief that O. Henry''s influence on modern fiction is bad? |
34313 | Then you think that poetry is not always appreciated in the lifetime of its maker? |
34313 | Then,I said,"you would go to Georgia, I suppose, if you wanted to write a story about life in a New York apartment?" |
34313 | This has not always been the case, has it? |
34313 | To what publication had you sold it? |
34313 | War stops everything else,said Mr. McCutcheon,"so why not literature? |
34313 | Were those the days,I asked,"in which you first read Tolstoy?" |
34313 | What about present- day relationship between American publishers and authors? |
34313 | What are the forces in America to- day,I asked,"that hinder the development of art and letters?" |
34313 | What do you mean by the great American novel? |
34313 | What effect,I asked,"is the war likely to have on American literature?" |
34313 | What great literature did it produce? |
34313 | What is Bohemia? |
34313 | What is genius? |
34313 | What is it in Dickens that especially attracts you? |
34313 | What is it, then,I asked,"that has changed American humor?" |
34313 | What is the connection between democracy and the tendency you have described? |
34313 | What is the remedy for this condition, Miss Hurst? |
34313 | What is the thing that American poetry chiefly needs? |
34313 | What realists have been optimistic? |
34313 | What was it that did away with the snobs? |
34313 | What writers who use the English language seem to you to deserve best the name of realist? |
34313 | What,I asked,"are some of the extra- curricular manifestations of literary interest among the students?" |
34313 | Where,he asked,"are the German- Americans and the Italian- Americans? |
34313 | Who are some of the writers who seem to you to be especially ready to avail themselves of the commercial value of sex? |
34313 | Who are the leading romanticists of the day? |
34313 | Who was the last great poet? |
34313 | Why is it that the art of fiction is no longer taken as seriously as it was, for example, in the time of Sir Walter Scott? |
34313 | Why is it that_ Pepys''s Diary_ is interesting to us? |
34313 | Why is it, then,I asked,"that Russia, a nation of militaristic ideals, has produced so many great novels during the past century?" |
34313 | Why is it,I asked,"that Poe''s influence on American fiction has been so slight?" |
34313 | Why is it,asked Mrs. Norris,"that a girl like that can not see the value of such an incident as that? |
34313 | Why is there,Mr. Tarkington asked in turn,"no group like Homer( was n''t he a group?) |
34313 | Why unionize? 34313 Will it be good or bad?" |
34313 | Will there,I asked,"ever be the great American novel? |
34313 | Would you make a similar comment on any other poetry of our time? |
34313 | You believe,I said,"that Whitman is our greatest poet?" |
34313 | You do not agree with the critic who said that American literature was''a condition of English literature''? |
34313 | ''What is your shoe- drawer?'' |
34313 | And yet what more interesting subject is there for her to write about than that shoe- drawer? |
34313 | Are any of the short stories written since that period being bound into volumes and extensively sold? |
34313 | At Columbia-- I have Prof. John Erskine''s word for it-- there has lately developed a genuine interest in-- what do you suppose? |
34313 | At what time in the history of America have conditions been most favorable to literary expression?" |
34313 | Beyond our literature, what of Balzac? |
34313 | But do they? |
34313 | Can a mere reflection of life justly be called poetry, or must imagination be present? |
34313 | Did you ever read Brand Whitlock''s_ Forty Years of It_? |
34313 | Do the professors of English literature recommend them to their classes? |
34313 | Do you remember how Dr. Johnson wrote_ Rasselas_? |
34313 | Do you think that O. Henry''s influence is responsible for this?" |
34313 | Do you think that its evil effects are evident in contemporary literature?" |
34313 | Have n''t the authors changed, too?" |
34313 | How should he, with no one to tell him? |
34313 | I asked,"Do you think they are all they should be?" |
34313 | I asked,"What do you think of contemporary poetry?" |
34313 | If one must have a model, why not Hall Caine, infinitely the superior of Dickens as a craftsman? |
34313 | Is it because of snobbishness or literary colonialism on the part of the American public? |
34313 | Is it not the appeal of symbolism, the expression of life''s meanings in sensuous form? |
34313 | Is rhyme essential to poetry? |
34313 | Is rhythm essential to poetry? |
34313 | Just what sort of reformer is it that has taken the place of the snob?" |
34313 | Mr. William Dean Howells was the third writer to whom was put the question,"What effect will the Great War have on literature?" |
34313 | That is, will there ever be a novel which reflects American life as adequately as_ Vanity Fair_ reflects English life?" |
34313 | The good novel, it is true, is praised heartily, but then so are all the bad novels-- and how is one to tell? |
34313 | There is Tcheckoff-- have you read his_ Orchard_? |
34313 | Think how the war changed Rupert Brooke, for instance? |
34313 | Well, what if that is true? |
34313 | What could be more conventional and more democratic than the old ballad, with its recurrent refrain in which the audience joined? |
34313 | What do you think about it?" |
34313 | What else is there to think? |
34313 | What is art but self- government, the harmonizing of the elements of the mind? |
34313 | What is this elemental appeal? |
34313 | What kind of French literature of the war do you think would appear in Germany and be fostered there? |
34313 | What''s the value of my opinion that_ The Undiscovered Country_ is a''greater''novel than_ A Pair of Blue Eyes_? |
34313 | When any one says that to me, I always answer him in the chaste little way which so endears me to my day and generation:''Hell, are n''t you? |
34313 | Who is conscious of his heart- beats except at the great moments of life, and who is unconscious of them then? |
34313 | Who nowadays can find a laugh in the pages of Artemus Ward, Philander Q. Doesticks, or Petroleum V. Nasby? |
34313 | Why ca n''t I do what they''re doing?'' |
34313 | Why is this? |
34313 | Why not, when Shakespeare himself followed the line of action of which I spoke? |
34313 | Why should I go back to the people of bygone ages and of lands not my own?" |
34313 | _ MAGAZINES CHEAPEN FICTION_ GEORGE BARR McCUTCHEON Why is the modern American novel inferior to the modern English novel? |
34313 | _ WHAT IS GENIUS?_ 75 ROBERT W. CHAMBERS Robert W. Chambers was born in Brooklyn, New York, May 26, 1865. |
34313 | _"EVASIVE IDEALISM"IN LITERATURE_ ELLEN GLASGOW What is the matter with American literature? |
34313 | in Greece? |
35027 | And no more trains on the down line? |
35027 | Are we allowed five minutes for lunch? |
35027 | Did you ever''ave an old hall? |
35027 | Do I know the station? |
35027 | Do I mind the draught? |
35027 | Do you mind, sir, that window being closed? |
35027 | Is n''t this first- class? |
35027 | Is there no_ special_ train? |
35027 | Is this right for Windsor? |
35027 | Nor an_ excursion_ train? |
35027 | Porter,said that elderly gentleman,"''ave you seen my old hall?" |
35027 | Then,''ow do I know where I''m going?] |
35027 | Whose train is it?] |
35027 | You do n''t mind, I hope, the window-- eh? |
35027 | You''re quite sure? |
35027 | _ Hain''t_ it? 35027 (_ Sniff._)Oh, is n''t it lovely, Hilly? |
35027 | (_ Yawns._)"Any chance of a smash to- day!?" |
35027 | ***** SMALL POTATOES.--_Q._ Why are regular travellers by the Shepherd''s Bush and City Railway like certain vegetables? |
35027 | ***** WEDNESBURY STATION.--_First Collier._"Trains leave for Birmingham, 10.23 a.m., 6.23 p.m."_ Second Collier._"What''s p.m.?" |
35027 | *****[ Illustration: A BANK HOLIDAY SKETCH_ Facetious Individual( from carriage window)._"Change''ere,''ave we? |
35027 | *****[ Illustration: A DEFINITION WANTED"Beg pardon, sir, but do n''t you see the notice?" |
35027 | *****[ Illustration: A LUXURIOUS HABIT_ Philanthropist( to railway porter)._"Then what time do you get to bed?" |
35027 | *****[ Illustration: A SCENE AT A RAILWAY STATION_ Groom._"Beg pardon, sir,--but wos your name Tomkins?" |
35027 | *****[ Illustration: A STATION ON THE NORTH STAFFORDSHIRE LINE_ Traveller._"Now then, boy, where''s the clerk who gives the ticket?" |
35027 | *****[ Illustration: ABOLITION OF SECOND- CLASS CARRIAGES"Are there any second- class carriages on this line, Rogers?" |
35027 | *****[ Illustration: AFTER AN EASTERTIDE FESTIVITY-- ON THE INNER CIRCLE_ Guard._"Where are you for?" |
35027 | *****[ Illustration: AN INQUIRING MIND"Is this_ our_ train, aunty?" |
35027 | *****[ Illustration: BEHIND TIME_ Ticket Collector._"This your boy, mum? |
35027 | *****[ Illustration: COLD COMFORT_ Traveller( waiting for train already twenty minutes late)._"Porter, when do you expect that train to come in?" |
35027 | *****[ Illustration: FROM THE GENERAL TO THE PARTICULAR_ Young Lady( who has never travelled by this line before)._"Do you go to Kew Gardens?" |
35027 | *****[ Illustration: HIGHLY ACCOMMODATING_ Stout Party( rather hot)._"Hope you do n''t find the breeze too much, sir?" |
35027 | *****[ Illustration: INOPPORTUNE_ Newsboy( to irritable old gent who has just lost his train)._"Buy a comic paper, sir?" |
35027 | *****[ Illustration: MOST OFFENSIVE_ Railway Porter._"If you please, sir, was this your''n?"] |
35027 | *****[ Illustration: RAILWAY AMALGAMATION-- A PLEASANT STATE OF THINGS]_ Passenger._"What''s the matter, guard?" |
35027 | *****[ Illustration: RAILWAY LITERATURE_ Bookstall Keeper._"Book, ma''am? |
35027 | *****[ Illustration: REGULAR IRREGULARITY_ Passenger( in a hurry)._"Is this train punctual?" |
35027 | *****[ Illustration: RISKS_ Shrewd Clerk( with an eye to his percentage)._"Take an accident insurance ticket, sir?" |
35027 | *****[ Illustration: SATISFACTORY_ Bumptious Old Gent( in a directorial tone)._"Ah, guard-- what are we-- ah-- waiting for?" |
35027 | *****[ Illustration: THE H GRATUITOUS_ Lady._"Can I book through from here to Oban?" |
35027 | *****[ Illustration: THE LEVEL CROSSING"Are there no more trains this evening on the up line, porter?" |
35027 | *****[ Illustration: WHY TAKE A CHILL? |
35027 | *****[ Illustration:_ Friend( to minor rail official at provincial station)_"''Ullo Cocky, where''ave you been all this time?" |
35027 | *****[ Illustration:_ Impatient Traveller._"Er-- how long will the next train be, portah?" |
35027 | *****[ Illustration:_ Old Maid._"Is this a smoking compartment, young man?" |
35027 | *****[ Illustration:_ Porter._"Now, marm, will you please to move, or was you corded to your box?"] |
35027 | *****[ Illustration:_ Ticket Clerk._"Where for, ma''am?" |
35027 | --(AT ALL THE LIBRARIES)_ First Young Lady._"How did you like_ Convict Life_, dear?" |
35027 | Ai n''t that man just got out? |
35027 | And he sez,"No, I''m a Yank,"and then I knoo''oo''e was, d''ye see? |
35027 | And what time does the train leave for London?" |
35027 | And you selected a ladies''carriage? |
35027 | Anything fresh?" |
35027 | But how do you get it over the fences?"] |
35027 | But is me and Mrs. Parker expected to go third class?" |
35027 | Ca n''t yer find us a old lady and two little gals with lots o''boxes? |
35027 | Did yer know''oo he_ was_? |
35027 | Does n''t it just_ smell_ of the season?" |
35027 | Er-- by the bye, could you tell me_ what''s won to- day_?"] |
35027 | Fine sight I expect it wur?" |
35027 | Good- bye, my boy; just one kiss more; You''ll write to mother now and then? |
35027 | Hain''t it a beauty?" |
35027 | Have n''t you got any silver?" |
35027 | Have you missed it?"] |
35027 | How could he know we''re we d to- day? |
35027 | How much?" |
35027 | How much?" |
35027 | How_ do_ you pronounce Charing Cross? |
35027 | I dessay, now, when all''s put to the test, you''re not a moneyed man-- no more than I am myself? |
35027 | I still could angrily complain, Why travel so absurdly fast? |
35027 | I''m no lover of a cigar, if you understand me; but I can go into company where they_ are_, d''ye_ see_? |
35027 | Is there a panic?" |
35027 | Now, why on earth''s the fellow grinning? |
35027 | Now, you b''leeve what I''m a''goin''to tell yer? |
35027 | Now,''ow do you explain such a thing as that? |
35027 | Of the people on the platform? |
35027 | Poor things, what will be done for''em?" |
35027 | Rushes precipitately down brass- bound steps, and presents his ticket to be snipped.__ Snipper( inspecting ticket)._ Queen''s Road, Bayswater? |
35027 | SCENE--_Bar of a railway refreshment- room.__ Barmaid._"Tea, sir?" |
35027 | SCENE--_Country Station__ Gent._"Are the sandwiches fresh, my boy?" |
35027 | Simple faith assuredly, for does he not provide on the principle that our insides are hardy and vigorous and unspoilt by the art of cooking? |
35027 | Surely your American trains go much faster than this?" |
35027 | T.( after a pause)._ As you have no one to present you, I must ask"if you are any lady''s husband?" |
35027 | T.( regardless of grammar)._ Who''s somebody? |
35027 | T._ What next? |
35027 | That''s one of those curious tailless Manx cats, is it not?" |
35027 | They sit and swear at such a train, And ask,"Shall we get out and walk?" |
35027 | Want a little Sunday money, I s''pose, sir?"] |
35027 | Well I thought it_ wos, by the look of the passingers!_"]*****[ Illustration:_ Guard._"Some one been smoking, I think?" |
35027 | What do you mean by saying it is right, sir? |
35027 | What do you want a- tryin to get in there for? |
35027 | What does it matter to you, sir, whether I''m single or not? |
35027 | What is it? |
35027 | What''s your age?" |
35027 | Where''s your ticket?" |
35027 | Why could n''t I have met you yesterday, now? |
35027 | Will''t never cool? |
35027 | [_ Looks at the roof of the carriage.__ He( with meaning)._ No more pickled onions, eh? |
35027 | [_ Looks for the communicating cord!_]*****[ Illustration: RATHER SUSPICIOUS_ First Passenger._"Had pretty good sport?" |
35027 | _ At Paddington._ Guard, mark"Engaged"this carriage, pray; Now, why on earth''s the fellow grinning? |
35027 | _ At Waterloo._ Good- bye my boy; just one kiss more; You''ll write to mother now and then? |
35027 | _ Bandsman._"Aw can not? |
35027 | _ Boy._"Second- class, sir?" |
35027 | _ Cab Ruffian._"No; what sort of fare is it?" |
35027 | _ Clerk._"Oh, are you? |
35027 | _ Clerk._"Single?" |
35027 | _ Clerk._"What station?" |
35027 | _ Country Cousin( to Haughty Official, in an agony of entreaty)._ Is this train for Queen''s Road, Bayswater? |
35027 | _ Countryman._"What not a little tooy tarrier? |
35027 | _ Diner._"Wha- stashun ve- you- got?"] |
35027 | _ Elderly Female._"Yus, ai n''t it? |
35027 | _ First P._ Liberty? |
35027 | _ First Passenger._"''Make birds dear, wo n''t it?" |
35027 | _ Male T._ No doubt your husband agrees with the opinion? |
35027 | _ Mother( down upon him)._"Oh, is he? |
35027 | _ Noble Countess._"Why is it against the rules, my good man?" |
35027 | _ Our Youthful Landscape Painter( dissembling his rapture)._"All right-- most happy-- what is it to be?" |
35027 | _ Passenger( nervously)._"Wha''for?!" |
35027 | _ Passenger( puzzled)._"E-- h-- I do n''t understand----"_ Porter._"Do n''t yer? |
35027 | _ Passenger._"_ Should_ I? |
35027 | _ Porter._"Heaw long? |
35027 | _ Second Do._"Then, what''s a.m.?" |
35027 | _ Second Lift Man._"What''s up, then?" |
35027 | _ Second Passenger._"''Ave they? |
35027 | _ Small Boy( indignantly)._"Who are yer callin''a kid? |
35027 | _ The Chatty W.( to the L. of F.)._ I think I''ve seen you about Shinglebeach,''ave I not? |
35027 | _ The L. of F._???!!! |
35027 | _ The L. of F._???!!! |
35027 | _ The L. of F._???!!! |
35027 | _ The S.( afflicted by sudden compunction as he fills his pipe)._ I''ope I''m not takin''a libbaty in askin yer? |
35027 | _ The S._ He_ did_; I went up to him, and I sez,"Excuse me,"I sez, like that, I sez,"but are you an American, or a German?" |
35027 | _ Thompson( interrogatively, to beauteous but haughty damsel, whom he has just helped to alight)._"I beg your pardon?" |
35027 | _ Ticket Clerk( explosively)._ Single or return? |
35027 | _ Would_ you mind taking them into the_ second- class_ refreshment- room?"] |
35027 | are you off?" |
35027 | did he, though? |
35027 | do n''t_ you_ object to a cigar? |
35027 | is that much? |
35027 | mister, please run over a few of the willages on this railway, will yer?" |
35027 | there''s a train just behind us, is n''t there?" |
35027 | we''re stopping, I get out''ere, do n''t I? |
35027 | who will save the aural drum By softening to some gentler squeak The whistle''s shrill_ staccato_ shriek? |
35138 | Are you not tired with rolling, and never Resting to sleep? 35138 Lady Moon, Lady Moon, where are you roving?" |
35138 | Lady Moon, Lady Moon, whom are you loving? |
35138 | O is it weed, or fish, or floating hair-- A tress of golden hair, A drownèd maiden''s hair, Above the nets at sea? |
35138 | O wha is this has done this deed And tauld the king o''me, To send us out, at this time o''year, To sail upon the sea? 35138 Pussy cat, pussy cat, what did you there?" |
35138 | Shall we fight or shall we fly? 35138 What are they dreaming of? |
35138 | Will you wake him? |
35138 | ANSWER TO A CHILD''S QUESTION Do you ask what the birds say? |
35138 | And a day less or more At sea or ashore, We die-- does it matter when? |
35138 | And does it not seem hard to you, When all the sky is clear and blue, And I should like so much to play, To have to go to bed by day? |
35138 | And some were sunk and many were shatter''d, and so could fight us no more-- God of battles, was ever a battle like this in the world before? |
35138 | And the son of man, that thou visitest him? |
35138 | And was it not this book that made wonderful little Marjorie Fleming willing to sleep at the foot of the bed where she could continually read it? |
35138 | And what must be said to supplanting the subject of fairy life by the anatomy and physiology of the human body? |
35138 | And what will this poor Robin do? |
35138 | And where the land she travels from? |
35138 | And where the land she travels from? |
35138 | And who was a better judge of this than Thackeray? |
35138 | Are you a beast of field and tree, Or just a stronger child than me? |
35138 | As the light- footed fairy? |
35138 | As the light- headed fairy? |
35138 | As the light- hearted fairy? |
35138 | At what age should a boy turn to Shakespeare? |
35138 | Ay, where are they? |
35138 | But must school teachers not first recognize the truth of this last statement before parents are expected to do so? |
35138 | But what volume? |
35138 | CHILD- SONGS I THE CITY CHILD Dainty little maiden, whither would you wander? |
35138 | Can Honour''s voice provoke the silent dust, Or Flatt''ry soothe the dull cold ear of death? |
35138 | Can he talk nonsense?" |
35138 | Can no one propose a short way with book agents? |
35138 | Can storied urn or animated bust Back to its mansion call the fleeting breath? |
35138 | Children dear, was it yesterday We heard the sweet bells over the bay? |
35138 | Children dear, was it yesterday( Call yet once) that she went away? |
35138 | Children dear, was it yesterday? |
35138 | Children dear, was it yesterday? |
35138 | Children dear, were we long alone? |
35138 | Dainty little maiden, whither would you wander? |
35138 | Do you suppose that it was Livy, or the Greek grammar? |
35138 | Does any one who has cultivated a friendship give it up as soon as it is secure? |
35138 | Does any one who has laboured hard to build a house move out of it as soon as it is completed? |
35138 | Does any schoolboy from a home other than one in which Puritan notions yet prevail read"Pilgrim''s Progress"? |
35138 | Dost thou know who made thee? |
35138 | Dost thou know who made thee? |
35138 | How far has education a right to develop a sense of the beautiful? |
35138 | How far is a teacher to be influenced in his selection of books for students by their lines of taste? |
35138 | I hear the sound of guns, O say, what may it be?" |
35138 | I see a gleaming light, O say, what may it be?" |
35138 | I''ve better counsellors; what counsel they? |
35138 | III"Pussy cat, pussy cat, where have you been?" |
35138 | IV Three mice went into a hole to spin; Puss passed by and Puss looked in:"What are you doing, my little men?" |
35138 | If Homer and Ovid are forced by business demands from the academic halls, what hope is there left in Israel? |
35138 | In the caverns where we lay, Through the surf and through the swell, The far- off sound of a silver bell? |
35138 | Intend to be good, was not that Goldsmith-- and the rest of us? |
35138 | Is it to be the insipid burlesque that finds its pleasure in the medical almanac and the comic supplement? |
35138 | Is not a boy who knows the happy likeness of Old King Cole or Allan- a- Dale as well educated as he who recognizes the picture of an alcoholic liver? |
35138 | Is not vagabondia as much entitled to the floor? |
35138 | Is she kind as she is fair? |
35138 | Is there possibility of averting this sore evil? |
35138 | Just what equipment for life does a boy need, anyhow? |
35138 | Late in the night when the fires are out, Why does he gallop and gallop about? |
35138 | Let the judgment of individualism, with courage and restraint, lay bare the fashion, and where then is its habitation or what is its name? |
35138 | Now what is to be the nature of this humour? |
35138 | Now, should the boy lend his book? |
35138 | O say, what may it be?" |
35138 | O you that are so strong and cold, O blower, are you young or old? |
35138 | Or is it to be the kind that wears the sock with brains and taste, the kind that Touchstone has? |
35138 | Or where is keener and more subdued pleasure to be found? |
35138 | Return, O Lord, how long? |
35138 | Seek''st thou the plashy brink Of weedy lake, or marge of river wide, Or where the rocking billows rise and sink On the chafed ocean side? |
35138 | Shall a boy fly or shall he read? |
35138 | Should a boy read"Alice''s Adventures in Wonderland"? |
35138 | Should any one who has learned to thoroughly enjoy a good book throw it aside as soon as this is done? |
35138 | THE LAMB Little Lamb, who made thee? |
35138 | WHAT DOES LITTLE BIRDIE SAY? |
35138 | WHERE LIES THE LAND? |
35138 | WHO HAS SEEN THE WIND? |
35138 | WHO IS SYLVIA? |
35138 | We are six ships of the line; can we fight with fifty- three?" |
35138 | What abiding pleasures and tastes, if any, should the boy of school age seek and cultivate? |
35138 | What are the reading habits and tastes that he brings from his home, and how can the teacher best improve them? |
35138 | What boy can resist them or would ever think of trying to do so? |
35138 | What bundle of habits will serve its slave better than will this bundle? |
35138 | What claim has a business demand on academic policy, anyhow? |
35138 | What does little baby say, In her bed at peep of day? |
35138 | What does little birdie say, In her nest at peep of day? |
35138 | What kind of verse is to be handed over to the boy, and how much is there to be of it? |
35138 | What mathematician other than Dodgson ever put before boys and girls such enduring work? |
35138 | What shall be done with them? |
35138 | What shall the reader buy, and where shall it be bought? |
35138 | What then is to be given to the children? |
35138 | When I consider thy heavens, the work of thy fingers, The moon and the stars, which thou hast ordained; What is man that thou art mindful of him? |
35138 | When did music come this way? |
35138 | Where are the songs of Spring? |
35138 | Where can anything better be found than Jack''s descent on the harp, the Ogre''s flight, or the presentation of the boots to the King? |
35138 | Where else was there ever such clever and curious nonsense? |
35138 | Where lies the land to which the ship would go? |
35138 | Where lies the land to which the ship would go? |
35138 | Where was there ever a more intense or dramatic story written than"Red Dog"? |
35138 | Where''s the boy that looks after the sheep? |
35138 | While kings are yet in fashion could not some other one succeed as well? |
35138 | Whither from this pretty home, the home where mother dwells? |
35138 | Whither from this pretty house, this city- house of ours? |
35138 | Who can tell?" |
35138 | Who can understand his errors? |
35138 | Who cares to treat fancies and fairies according to formulæ? |
35138 | Who has seen the wind? |
35138 | Who has seen the wind? |
35138 | Who hath not seen thee oft amid thy store? |
35138 | Who is Sylvia? |
35138 | Who knoweth the power of thine anger? |
35138 | Who? |
35138 | Why look so pale and so sad as forever Wishing to weep?" |
35138 | Why should we yet our sail unfurl? |
35138 | Why then did not Cruikshank make a picture book with pictures only? |
35138 | Will a boy read"Alice''s Adventures in Wonderland"? |
35138 | Will not a girl appreciate that great poem of a sea fight,"The''Revenge''"? |
35138 | _ The Sailing_ The king sits in Dunfermline town Drinking the blude- red wine:"O whare will I get a skeely skipper To sail this new ship o''mine?" |
35138 | in winter dead and dark, Where can poor Robin go? |
35138 | what is she, That all our swains commend her? |
29848 | Abandon ship-- open the sea- cocks-- sink it for the insurance? |
29848 | All right, Paula? |
29848 | And how-- how did you get down here? 29848 And it flew?" |
29848 | And these? |
29848 | And what do you do with it? |
29848 | Anita, what are you doing? |
29848 | Any at all about the place? |
29848 | Any more little pets about? |
29848 | Are all women fools? |
29848 | Are his motors smooth? 29848 Are we all imbeciles? |
29848 | Are you hurt? |
29848 | Are you hurt? |
29848 | Are-- will you go back there? |
29848 | Blood stains? |
29848 | Breakers, you said? |
29848 | But all those gadgets inside and on the bottom--? |
29848 | But now what? |
29848 | But the monsters? |
29848 | But whoever saw a cricket fifteen inches long? |
29848 | But why the moon? |
29848 | But--Johns had unconsciously dropped his voice to a whisper--"what of these strange creatures? |
29848 | But, Robert,began Ruth Allaire,"you do n''t mean to risk your life on a foolish bet?" |
29848 | But-- but did n''t it hurt you to carry it? |
29848 | But-- but what made those fish come up that way? |
29848 | Ca n''t help you, Snap? |
29848 | Can it see in the dark? |
29848 | Can you get the_ Nagasaki_? |
29848 | Can you run? |
29848 | Can you swim, Jerry? |
29848 | Chief? 29848 Commander, where shall I put these helmets?" |
29848 | Dead? |
29848 | Did n''t know I was all ready to leave, did you? 29848 Did they go aboard another vessel?" |
29848 | Did-- did you see them? |
29848 | Do I need to tell you of the constant, ceaseless and tremendous explosion that follows? 29848 Do you see that test tube?" |
29848 | Does-- does that smoke of yours drive them away? |
29848 | Friends? 29848 Frightened, Paula?" |
29848 | Funny water, ai n''t it? |
29848 | Goodwin? 29848 Gregg--?" |
29848 | Have any trouble or excitement? 29848 Hear that?" |
29848 | Hey, Juan, what the hell''s the matter? 29848 How about it?" |
29848 | How did you ever get it here? |
29848 | How is it, Snap? |
29848 | How much of a bet? |
29848 | Hurt? |
29848 | I-- you mean somewhat like a violet ray is increased in the lightning tubes? |
29848 | If a man touched that radium,he asked,"what would happen to him?" |
29848 | If you go and I go back there, what will happen? 29848 In the dark?" |
29848 | Is that you, Thorpe? 29848 Is this radium worth as much as silver?" |
29848 | Jerry-- where are you, Jerry? |
29848 | Let''s see.... We have n''t a thing to eat, have we? |
29848 | Made it, did you? |
29848 | Must we land there? |
29848 | No other move from them yet, Johnny? |
29848 | No? |
29848 | Now, Gregg-- can you fling it from here? |
29848 | Now, when we are just at the point of success in our great experiments? 29848 Oh, Gregg, have n''t we broken the ship''s dome yet?" |
29848 | Only that one shot, Gregg? |
29848 | Paula? |
29848 | Pretty, is n''t it? |
29848 | Quien sabe? |
29848 | Say,blurted Durkin, his face working nervously,"how the hell did that frog get so big? |
29848 | See? |
29848 | So you came to rob us, eh? |
29848 | Still,said Jerry, gropingly,"what has all that to do with the moon? |
29848 | Take me where? |
29848 | Take them where? |
29848 | That is this-- see? |
29848 | That radium stuff is what makes the funny light in that mine, then? |
29848 | The jungle is a charming place, is n''t it? |
29848 | The key-- to the stone bank? |
29848 | The_ Adelaide_? |
29848 | Then why leave? |
29848 | Then why tie me up like this? |
29848 | This stuff has got to you, has it? |
29848 | Turn back now? 29848 Was your father on board, Ruth?" |
29848 | Well,asked Jerry, at length,"what''s the big idea?" |
29848 | Well? |
29848 | What charity would you like to name, Miss Allaire? 29848 What for?" |
29848 | What for? |
29848 | What is it? |
29848 | What is it? |
29848 | What is it? |
29848 | What is the matter? |
29848 | What kind of a laboratory do you call this? |
29848 | What kind of a rotten mess is this? |
29848 | What made you head in this direction, and where''s your outfit? |
29848 | What now? |
29848 | What say,said Bell suddenly,"we get aloft now? |
29848 | What will become of her? |
29848 | What will you bet that I do n''t sail alone from here to-- where are you stationed?--San Diego?--from here to San Diego? |
29848 | What''s that thing? |
29848 | What''s that? |
29848 | What''s the difference? 29848 What''s the trouble?" |
29848 | What? |
29848 | Where am I... where am I? |
29848 | Where are we, Robert? 29848 Where does it go?" |
29848 | Where is the yacht? |
29848 | Where was this? |
29848 | Who sent you? |
29848 | Who sent you? |
29848 | Why should we leave now? |
29848 | Why? |
29848 | Why? |
29848 | Will you keep me with you, then? |
29848 | Winslow,he said,"have you any rope handy?" |
29848 | Wo n''t you say good- by, Marahna? |
29848 | Yeh? 29848 You do n''t know?" |
29848 | You found this in the captain''s cabin? |
29848 | You hear that whistle? 29848 You mean the German loosened up that much?" |
29848 | You mean these Things you have called Petrolia actually work for you? 29848 You really do n''t?" |
29848 | You will do nothing about it? |
29848 | ***** Was he injured? |
29848 | *****"But why-- why?" |
29848 | *****"Then why in the name of hell do you want it?" |
29848 | A snake bite you?" |
29848 | A waiting lurking horror in the depths? |
29848 | All clear, Paula? |
29848 | All right:"Remember how you laughed when I told you that oil would some day be mined instead of pumped or flowed from the earth? |
29848 | And Winslow? |
29848 | And as for letting me die-- why did n''t you? |
29848 | And from what? |
29848 | And it would not be ours.... You saw our lights fade down while the bolt was striking?" |
29848 | And now that it is written I am tempted to destroy-- No, I will wait--""And now what is this?" |
29848 | And of what use to go out and be defeated, leaving the girls here to meet death almost immediately afterward? |
29848 | And she had let him-- them-- go...."Oh, well,"he thought,"how can I know how a princess feels-- a princess of the moon? |
29848 | And that you saved them from becoming extinct?" |
29848 | And the_ Adelaide_--where is it?" |
29848 | And what is beyond? |
29848 | And why should I care-- why should she? |
29848 | And you can steal food and cache it for use on the way, see? |
29848 | And"--he took a nervous turn around the laboratory--"if such a wild thing were possible, what has that to do with our trouble? |
29848 | And, for that matter, how can we know there is no such monster, some relic of a Mesozoic species supposed to be extinct?" |
29848 | And, knowing what you do, having seen what you have, could you call it impossible?" |
29848 | Are we safe?" |
29848 | Are you game to go up, Paula?" |
29848 | Are you planning on any reprints? |
29848 | Bolts.... How many hours have we?" |
29848 | But did you know that my mother came from Maryland?" |
29848 | But eight thousand feet is a lot of silt, Johns: ever thought of that?" |
29848 | But how can we get through them?" |
29848 | But let them realize that the thread can be broken, and what their slaves would do to them before they all went mad.... You see? |
29848 | But now--""Yes,"the other questioned,"now?" |
29848 | But what have they struck out there? |
29848 | But, supposing there is such a race of things-- what will you do?" |
29848 | But, tell me, who are you? |
29848 | CHAPTER XXXVIII_ Triumph!_"Is he conscious? |
29848 | Ca n''t we repair it, Johnny?" |
29848 | Ca n''t you feel it?" |
29848 | Can we do other than remain silent?" |
29848 | Commander-- shall I stop them? |
29848 | Could he save her if he found her? |
29848 | Dead? |
29848 | Did they lead to the outer world? |
29848 | Die? |
29848 | Do n''t you see it''s our only hope?" |
29848 | Dreaming? |
29848 | Gregg, is she dead?" |
29848 | Had Winslow gained the top? |
29848 | Had it been only five minutes? |
29848 | Had the crack in our front wall broken, threatening explosion of all the buildings? |
29848 | Had this ape escaped and menaced the officers and crew? |
29848 | Had this been the terror that drove the men into the sea? |
29848 | Had we broken the ship''s dome with a direct hit? |
29848 | Have you ever met Lee Wong, the great Chinese scientist, or his Russian geological collaborator, Krenski? |
29848 | Have you?" |
29848 | He held the trembling figure close as the girl whispered:"Where are we, Robert? |
29848 | He kept voicing aloud the question in his mind; what was in the queer tube? |
29848 | He spelled her name, over and over.... Would the sleepy operator never answer? |
29848 | He''s blind, ai n''t he? |
29848 | Here in the deep caverns, far from the surface, was fire a thing of terror to them? |
29848 | How about you?" |
29848 | How big is this lake, I wonder?" |
29848 | How can we live? |
29848 | How could there be water or anything fluid on this side? |
29848 | How many thousands of slaves do you suppose The Master has by now?" |
29848 | How many? |
29848 | How would you deal with them? |
29848 | I shall look forward to reading it... but just what are you going to do?" |
29848 | I told you, Brent, there was often a factual basis for fables-- remember? |
29848 | I was thinking-- maybe you would kiss me, Gregg--?" |
29848 | I was... where was I when you collared me? |
29848 | I wonder if he has directional for a guide? |
29848 | In one of the rooms of the house, behind strong bars, a man was kept who had been an object- lesson...."Is there any machinery?" |
29848 | In the confusion of my whirling impressions I wondered if Miko were in distress? |
29848 | Is n''t that so, Durkin?" |
29848 | Is that the way you receive your guests from another world?" |
29848 | It it wonderful, is it not? |
29848 | It''s absolutely amazing, is n''t it?" |
29848 | Jerry Foster took a minute to grasp that statement, then continued:"Granting that, why go to the moon? |
29848 | Marahna? |
29848 | My God, Thorpe, what is it? |
29848 | No? |
29848 | Now-- where are we still to find friends?" |
29848 | Of what use for our platform to rush back? |
29848 | Of what use to warn Miko?" |
29848 | Only that? |
29848 | Only these? |
29848 | Or, instead, was it not probable that they went to some deep, subterranean dens, from which this monster had learned to come at the priests''summons? |
29848 | Ready with your parachute?" |
29848 | Say, Juan, who was that big Portuguee with Professor Gurlone? |
29848 | Shall we try it?" |
29848 | Shall you land there?" |
29848 | She asked,"Are you speaking for yourself or the commander?" |
29848 | Should they chance the shelter of the jungle growth? |
29848 | Six? |
29848 | Spawned neither of God nor Satan-- what could they be? |
29848 | Still all clear before us, Paula? |
29848 | That pistol of Ribiera''s-- you have it handy? |
29848 | The Stillwater crowd? |
29848 | The old guy''s going back to- morrow, get me?" |
29848 | The priest''s robe? |
29848 | Understand? |
29848 | Was Miko making a zed- ray photograph of our interiors? |
29848 | Was fire unknown to these strange beings? |
29848 | Was he dreaming? |
29848 | Was he equal to the climb? |
29848 | Was he in time? |
29848 | Was our rescue ship from Earth coming? |
29848 | Was she dodging those breakers? |
29848 | Was the scent of the hidden, shuddering men in its red nostrils? |
29848 | Was there something really there?... |
29848 | Was this all a dream-- a mad nightmare from which he could force himself to wake? |
29848 | We''re O. K., ai n''t we?" |
29848 | Well, that means something, do n''t it?" |
29848 | Well, what if I die now... or six months from now? |
29848 | What are your readings?" |
29848 | What can it be? |
29848 | What could he do? |
29848 | What do you make of this?" |
29848 | What do you think you''re doing? |
29848 | What do you want of it?" |
29848 | What is up?" |
29848 | What mysteries awaited them? |
29848 | What sort of creatures would they be, that could live two miles beneath the surface of the earth? |
29848 | What was below? |
29848 | What was the meaning of that roaring blast?" |
29848 | What were these creatures like? |
29848 | What were they? |
29848 | What would the light disclose? |
29848 | What''s the matter?" |
29848 | Where are we going?" |
29848 | Where are you stationed?" |
29848 | Where can we live? |
29848 | Where was I headed?" |
29848 | Where was he? |
29848 | Who are you?" |
29848 | Who knows what life is there? |
29848 | Who was it?" |
29848 | Why could n''t that same pressure cool great caverns below the granite cap below the oil sands? |
29848 | Why do n''t you try for some more of the works of the other well- known authors in this line of fiction? |
29848 | Why not keep it that way? |
29848 | Why not print some( not too many) stories from H. G. Wells, E. R. Burroughs and Jules Verne? |
29848 | Why worry about a peon?" |
29848 | Why? |
29848 | Would he ever see her again... would he? |
29848 | You have n''t led me on to spend a million dollars drilling a thirty- six- inch hole, just so you could test a fantastic theory?" |
29848 | You have smashed the radio in the house?" |
29848 | You know how to work it? |
29848 | You understand?" |
29848 | You''re coming, too?" |
29848 | Young man, are you_ the_ Robert Thorpe?" |
29848 | he gasped hoarsely,"am I stark mad?" |
29848 | was the response,"ca n''t you see? |
29848 | what-- will-- it-- be...?" |
39281 | Cry you mercy, who killed my cat? |
39281 | What is a pound of butter amongst a kennel of hounds? |
39281 | What is a workman without his tools? |
39281 | What is worse than ill- luck? |
39281 | Who goes worse shod than the cobbler''s wife? |
39281 | Who so blind as he that will not see? |
39281 | keep a dog and bark myself? |
13220 | Adoption, sanctification, and justification? |
13220 | And Bell? |
13220 | And to what city are you going? |
13220 | And what else has happened very remarkable, count, since I left you? |
13220 | And what is the motive of this sudden departure? |
13220 | And you tell him a variety of little things? |
13220 | And, seen where sunbeams play, The meadows''loveliness? 13220 And, seen where sunbeams play, The meadows''loveliness? |
13220 | And, seen where sunbeams play, The meadows''loveliness? 13220 Are you ready, Francesca?" |
13220 | Are you sure? |
13220 | Ay, man, did she so? |
13220 | Because it is so dry? |
13220 | But ah, sure, woman dear, where at all''ud we come by that, wid the crathur of a goat scarce wettin''the bottom of the pan? |
13220 | But-- but where is Sam''l? |
13220 | But--- but what does Sam''l say? |
13220 | Canna ye, Sam''l? |
13220 | Come, Grey; shall I throw down a couple of napoleons on joint account? 13220 D''ye think she is, Sanders?" |
13220 | Did Adam say that? |
13220 | Did one ever see such a woman? |
13220 | Did they bite her? |
13220 | Did ye ever see Bell reddin''up? |
13220 | Did ye see the yallow floor in Bell''s bonnet? |
13220 | Did ye-- did ye kiss her, Sam''l? |
13220 | Did ye? |
13220 | Do I look superb, sentimental, or only pretty? |
13220 | Do n''t you think that''s a leetle strong, Tommy, for Sunday? 13220 Do ye no see,"asked Sanders, compassionately,"''at he''s tryin''to mak the best o''t?" |
13220 | Do ye think so, Eppie? 13220 Do you say that as a mere matter of historical criticism, or do you think that they could be improved practically?" |
13220 | Doctor, why do you trouble the child? 13220 Guid sake, Sanders, hoo did ye no speak o''this afoore?" |
13220 | Has Sam''l speired ye, Bell? |
13220 | He couldna hae done that, for was he no baffled to find Ezra himsel''? |
13220 | He''s a''the better for that, Sanders, isna he? |
13220 | Hoo d''ye kin I''ll be at the T''nowhead the nicht? |
13220 | Hoo d''ye mean, Eppie? |
13220 | Hoo d''ye mean? |
13220 | Hoo will that be? |
13220 | Hoo''s a''wi''ye? |
13220 | Hoo? |
13220 | Hoots ay; what''s to hender ye? |
13220 | How do ye kin? |
13220 | How goes the world with you? |
13220 | How is it with you, Tommy Taft? |
13220 | How is that? 13220 How is this? |
13220 | How is this? 13220 How is this?" |
13220 | How often could I hope to see you if I were living in Parma, a free man again? 13220 How shall I find my overcoat and my wife''s party cape?" |
13220 | If he come in ever so-- how do you call it? 13220 If the Duchess goes away, I shall follow her,"he told himself;"but will she tolerate my company? |
13220 | In what sense? |
13220 | Is it chokin''? |
13220 | Is it more unphilosophical to believe in a personal God, omnipotent and omniscient, than in natural forces unconscious and irresistible? 13220 Is the board cleared?" |
13220 | Is''t yersel, Eppie? |
13220 | It is the music,said Nelly,"to which the Israelites crossed the Red Sea:"a bold statement, but-- why not? |
13220 | Laying eggs at twelve to be hatched at twenty is subjecting them to some risk, is it not? |
13220 | Man, hae we no telled you? |
13220 | My dear, dear fellow, how the devil did you manage to get off so soon? 13220 Not at the time, I understand you to mean; but surely you must have long owed him a grudge?" |
13220 | O granny, granny, did he speak? 13220 Or mebbe ye was wantin''the minister?" |
13220 | Otherwise,asked Gavin the dejected,"you would not have came back to the well?" |
13220 | Prince,said the duke,"I hope Madame de Harestein approves of your trip to England?" |
13220 | Sam''l? |
13220 | Sam''l? |
13220 | Tell her what? |
13220 | That is pretty, is it not-- and this also? 13220 The stake''s then not all your own?" |
13220 | Then, in heaven''s name, what put the dreadful thought in your head? |
13220 | Tommy,she cried, quaking,"that narsty puddle ca n''t not be the Cuttle Well, can it?" |
13220 | Was I not innocent? |
13220 | Was there? 13220 Was ye lookin''for T''nowhead''s Bell, Sam''l?" |
13220 | Well, an''what will they take? |
13220 | What are you going to do? |
13220 | What can be the reason? |
13220 | What caused your quarrel with your comrade? |
13220 | What d''ye think? |
13220 | What do those words mean, Rose? |
13220 | What do ye think? |
13220 | What do you mean, Sanders? |
13220 | What does yer think? |
13220 | What for no? |
13220 | What for? |
13220 | What is it, my dear? |
13220 | What is to be done? |
13220 | What is''t, Tibbie? |
13220 | What of that? |
13220 | What reward have I then for all my labors? |
13220 | What terms? 13220 What though they say he did us harm? |
13220 | What''s the matter, my friends? 13220 What, then you knew nothing of this project of departure?" |
13220 | What,cried the expiring hero,"do they run already? |
13220 | What? |
13220 | Which words, pa? |
13220 | Who is this jackanapes? |
13220 | Who run? |
13220 | Who? |
13220 | Why not, Mr. Annesley? 13220 Why not?" |
13220 | Why was she not there? |
13220 | Why, what ails you, Jer_ a- vous neen_? |
13220 | Wid there be ony chance, think ye, Sam''l? |
13220 | Will ye hae''s, Bell? |
13220 | Will ye, though? |
13220 | Ye had? |
13220 | Ye''ll be speirin''her sune noo, I dinna doot? |
13220 | Ye''ll better? |
13220 | Ye''ll no tell Bell that? |
13220 | Yell bide a wee, an''hae something to eat? |
13220 | You have been pursued hither? |
13220 | You know,said he,"that Habeneck has been commissioned to conduct all the great official musical festivals?" |
13220 | You like caps, then? |
13220 | You make a nest of her memory, then, and put words there, like eggs, for future hatching? |
13220 | Your excellency then allows the stake to remain? |
13220 | ''No doubt,''he will say,''you were dying of hunger when you took up this life?'' |
13220 | ''What, Harry,''I cries, laughing heartier than ever,''are you afeard of your own mind with Tom Mills?'' |
13220 | --and what''s the matter wid you, at- all at- all?" |
13220 | ... Could it be possible that this man had dared to join my enemy, the Director, and Cherubini''s friends, in plotting and attempting such rascality? |
13220 | ART AND POLITICS"Good servant Mollberg, what''s happened to thee, Whom without coat and hatless I see? |
13220 | About my marriage? |
13220 | Adams Gardner, the blacksmith,--does he not look every inch a judge, now that he is clean- washed, shaved, and dressed? |
13220 | Ah, bethinkest thou, Zobeïde, still upon our solemn love- oath? |
13220 | And De Doe? |
13220 | And De Nokes and De Styles, and Lord Marmaduke Grey? |
13220 | And De Roe? |
13220 | And after all, are they so much to be pitied? |
13220 | And he cries,"What on earth has become of them all?-- What can delay De Vaux and De Saye? |
13220 | And that pretty bay Sparkling there?" |
13220 | And that pretty bay Sparkling there?" |
13220 | And that pretty bay Sparkling there?" |
13220 | And the count?" |
13220 | And when my hearth was dim Gave, while his eye did brim, What I should give to him, Soggarth Aroon? |
13220 | And who knows if the flowers whereof I dream Shall find, beneath this soil washed like the stream, The force that bids them into beauty start? |
13220 | And why can you not? |
13220 | And yet, is there not some comfort in buying books,_ to be_ paid for? |
13220 | Are not the folks proud of their children? |
13220 | Are ye no at the kirk?" |
13220 | Are you Christ- like? |
13220 | Art thou for drinking Another bottle? |
13220 | Art thou not weary, Hengo? |
13220 | As to syrups, how many are there in Paris? |
13220 | Asking"How can_ one_ brain be so ruled by Wisdom?" |
13220 | At my age, life requires a uniform equality; can this be found in our mutual relations? |
13220 | At that prediction of Figaro? |
13220 | Aunt Polly''s gittin''old, ai n''t she? |
13220 | BENVENUTO CELLINI From''Obiter Dicta''What a liar was Benvenuto Cellini!--who can believe a word he says? |
13220 | Beginning at the top? |
13220 | But St. Nicholas''s agony who may paint? |
13220 | But after all, Don Basilio''s negotiation with a lawyer--_ Bartolo_--With a lawyer? |
13220 | But ah, acushla, if we could be keepin''people that- a- way, would there be e''er a funeral iver goin''black on the road at all at all? |
13220 | But are you quite sure no one can overhear us? |
13220 | But ca n''t you possibly speak a little lower? |
13220 | But drunk on what? |
13220 | But how can we manage it? |
13220 | But how does he illustrate the particular question now engaging our attention? |
13220 | But if we can not do without the images, why can we not spare the brilliant colors? |
13220 | But lest we should seem to have planned this together, do n''t you think it would be better if she''d met you before? |
13220 | But now, how is she beautiful as the curtains of Solomon? |
13220 | But pray tell me, Whither must we go when we are dead? |
13220 | But tell me, did not I show my influence over Menelaus in his taking me again after the destruction of Troy? |
13220 | But was not Borrow the accredited agent of the British and Foreign Bible Society? |
13220 | But what made you ill, all of a sudden? |
13220 | But what to those who find? |
13220 | But who can deny dignity and even grandeur to''Luria,''or withhold the meed of a melodious tear from''Mildred Tresham''? |
13220 | But why did n''t you answer, you cruel girl, when I called you? |
13220 | But why should such a canker be tolerated in the vitals of a State, under any pretense, or in any shape whatsoever? |
13220 | But, say you, religion is in the heart, not in the garments? |
13220 | Can I believe There''s any seed of virtue in that woman Left to shoot up that dares go on in sin Known, and so known as thine is? |
13220 | Can he calm the strife of mental conflict? |
13220 | Can it be true that, centuries ended, God''s endless realm, the Hebrew, quickens Lifting its horns-- though not for always? |
13220 | Canst thou yield thy heart, thy beauty, to that old man, dead to love- thoughts? |
13220 | Could n''t you give her a lesson? |
13220 | Could not one servant harness the mule, wait at dinner, and make the bed? |
13220 | Could you not have understood that the subject you spoke of in your letter in pencil is displeasing to me? |
13220 | De Boeffleurs, how d''ye do?" |
13220 | Did Gavin make this discovery when the Egyptian left him? |
13220 | Did any of yous happen to see e''er a one of them tinkerin''people goin''by here this mornin''?" |
13220 | Did he not travel( and he had a free hand) at their charges? |
13220 | Did she, Sam''l?" |
13220 | Did the congregation, all sitting wrapped in their white robes, feel these emotions as the Voice thundered and rolled? |
13220 | Do Mr. Browning, Mr. Arnold, Mr. Lowell, Mr. Trevelyan, Mr. Stephen, Mr. Morley, know their Johnson? |
13220 | Do n''t you think I can hoodwink her all the better for that? |
13220 | Do they think, because they have black coats on, that they are parsons, and have a right to play pulpit with all the pine- trees? |
13220 | Do you know that man in a silk hat and new black coat? |
13220 | Do you not see whence blackness comes to the Church-- whence a certain rust cleaves to even the fairest souls? |
13220 | Do you think you can inform him of anything new? |
13220 | Does he play any real part in our lives? |
13220 | Does she still talk about them that''s gone?" |
13220 | Dost thou deem the sands of desert higher than are virtue-- honor? |
13220 | Doth he smile? |
13220 | Even love and war, his favorite emotions, left him disillusioned, asking"Is that all it amounts to?" |
13220 | FIFTY YEARS( ClNQUANTE ANS) Wherefore these flowers? |
13220 | FROM''BONDUCA''THE DEATH OF THE BOY HENGO[_ Scene: A field between the British and the Roman camps._]_ Caratach_--How does my boy? |
13220 | For how could she set him on the Tinker''s felonious track without apprising them likewise? |
13220 | For what is the meaning of"tents"except our bodies, in which we sojourn for a time? |
13220 | Get up out o''that, wid your dhrames-- don''t you hear''em knocking? |
13220 | Has he quickened any passion, lightened any burden, purified any taste? |
13220 | Have I in person wronged you? |
13220 | Have you a heart for humanity? |
13220 | Have you a soul that goes out for men? |
13220 | Have you known That I have aught detracted from your worth? |
13220 | Have you not seen it before? |
13220 | Have you the letter? |
13220 | He has paid his health, his conscience, his liberty, for it; and will you envy him his bargain? |
13220 | He quailed not before it, but saucily met it, And as saucily said,"Do n''t you wish you may get it?" |
13220 | He says the one question about a book which is to be part of_ literature_ is,"Does it read?" |
13220 | He will tell you that I was just going to see you, and if he had not detained me--_ Basilio[ in astonishment_]--Señor Alonzo? |
13220 | Hope sustains me, as it does half the world; through life she has been my close companion, or what would have become of me? |
13220 | How do they feel among each other? |
13220 | How do they feel toward the community? |
13220 | How does flour- bread aye fall on the buttered side?" |
13220 | How is Widow Cheney-- have you heard?" |
13220 | How is a book to answer the ceaseless demand? |
13220 | How is business with you?" |
13220 | How is cripples aye so puffed up mair than other folk? |
13220 | How long must I wait? |
13220 | How shall we devise To hold intelligence, that our true loves, On any new occasion, may agree What path is best to tread? |
13220 | How thy heart, this hour so faithless, once belonged to me, me only? |
13220 | How''s your health? |
13220 | I ask you, Does this come from the heart, or your simplicity? |
13220 | I axed him why? |
13220 | I did not add another word.... Had he done it on purpose? |
13220 | I do n''t know just how Began freshly the row, But some one from my head Knocked my hat, and thus said:''What is Poland to thee?'' |
13220 | I hope you will sympathize with me; but perhaps"''My mistress, gracious, mild, and good, Cries-- Is he dumb? |
13220 | I seem to overhear a still, small voice asking, But are they worth doing? |
13220 | I was anxious, too, to know what their long faces meant, and therefore asked at once,--"Was Mr. Dishart on the riot?" |
13220 | If it be asked, What do the general public know of Johnson''s nine volumes octavo? |
13220 | If the music is not of Western origin and character, who can disprove such an assertion? |
13220 | If you refuse to pay the price, why expect the purchase? |
13220 | In what inconceivable place can they keep the jars containing the fruit juices needed to make them? |
13220 | Is it content to describe, or does it aspire to explain? |
13220 | Is it didactical, analytical, or purely narrative? |
13220 | Is it quite impossible to wash one''s hands in, and drink from, the same vessel? |
13220 | Is it unphilosophical to combine power with intelligence? |
13220 | Is knowledge the pearl of price? |
13220 | Is n''t it heavenly-- the fish market? |
13220 | Is n''t it heavenly-- the fish- market? |
13220 | Is n''t it heavenly-- the fish- market? |
13220 | Is n''t it strange to think happiness was awaiting me in a prison?" |
13220 | Is not our love a truly celestial mansion, but firm as the vault of heaven itself? |
13220 | Is not the precise contrary the truth? |
13220 | Is sleep impossible except upon a variegated mattress, or under a foreign coverlet? |
13220 | Is there not reason to curse the moment your eyes first saw the light? |
13220 | Johnson cared nothing for pictures-- how should he? |
13220 | Just listen, wo n''t you? |
13220 | Know you not that all solemn rites are preceded by a rigorous abstinence?" |
13220 | Let from thee fall Thy purple vestments-- hear''st thou not the call? |
13220 | Local recollections of the man have molded themselves into the rhyme-- Will you hear of Cruel Coppinger? |
13220 | May I find a woman rich, And not of too high a pitch: If that pride should cause disdain, Tell me, lover, where''s thy gain? |
13220 | Moreover, who does not see that"tents"fit harmoniously with the comparison? |
13220 | My ribbon? |
13220 | No box of state, good friends, would I engage, For mine own use, where spectres tread the stage: What poor wan man with haggard eyes is this? |
13220 | Now I ask of thee If I suffered not wrongly?" |
13220 | Now what shall I do about the letter? |
13220 | O say what art thou, when no more thou''rt thee? |
13220 | O thrice- beloved, listen!--mak''st thou no reply? |
13220 | O whither, whither dost thou fly, Where bend unseen thy trackless course, And in this strange divorce, Ah, tell where I must seek this compound I? |
13220 | Oh, where have I been all this time? |
13220 | On my honor, if the letter had n''t inspired me he''d have thought me a fool!--Ah, how they are disputing in there!--What if she refuses to come? |
13220 | Or better, teach me ways and skill To labor for the common good? |
13220 | Or from the pond a lively fish? |
13220 | Or would''st thou say, light draughts betray The toper falling off? |
13220 | Or, from the well, a bowl of water fine? |
13220 | P''raps you mean afore it''s cut?" |
13220 | Perhaps you may say,"Are you sure that this story is the true one?" |
13220 | Poynings and Vavasour-- where be they? |
13220 | Reverence? |
13220 | Shall Hagar''s wandering sons be heartened After the Moslem''s haughty baiting? |
13220 | Shall I draw it? |
13220 | Shall I show it to him? |
13220 | Shall I tell you what Lord Bon Mot said of you?" |
13220 | Shall one of the cold temperament of France teach a Grecian how to love? |
13220 | Shall we pity him? |
13220 | Sharne how are you? |
13220 | She, instantly springing to the ground, advanced towards her son and said:--"What dost thou here in this little square chamber? |
13220 | Shines in the East the sun, like noonday? |
13220 | Since you did show the way, Soggarth Aroon, Their slave no more to be, While they would work with me Ould Ireland''s slavery, Soggarth Aroon? |
13220 | Sir, how can you be such a petty tyrant? |
13220 | So who''d go mindin''o''thim? |
13220 | So your accident was not very serious? |
13220 | So? |
13220 | So? |
13220 | So? |
13220 | Spare this poor child; and although the disorder in which you will find him--_ Count_--What, Madame? |
13220 | Surely her conscience troubled her, for on his not answering immediately she said,"Do you presume to disbelieve me? |
13220 | THE IRISH PEASANT''S ADDRESS TO HIS PRIEST Am I the slave they say, Soggarth Aroon? |
13220 | The interest of the community, then, is what? |
13220 | The people? |
13220 | The police? |
13220 | The poor man-- is a country his? |
13220 | The repentance of the contrite, or the admiration of the gazers? |
13220 | Theresa also said confidently with a sinking heart,"But sure, anyhow, mother jewel, what matter about it? |
13220 | Thin Misther Barry, he sez:"Musha, how''s wan to know but there''s light On t''other side o''the dark, as the day comes afther the night?" |
13220 | This seemed to please the stranger, for he patted Tommy on the head while inquiring,"How do you know that the preaching is better?" |
13220 | Thou art dead? |
13220 | To console her Mrs. O''Driscoll said,"Ah, sure, sorra a fool were you, woman dear; how would you know the villiny of him? |
13220 | To the vast ocean of empyreal flame, From whence thy essence came, Dost thou thy flight pursue, when freed From matter''s base encumbering weed? |
13220 | Was all that in the Voice? |
13220 | Was he not befriended by our minister at Madrid, Mr. Villiers, subsequently Earl of Clarendon in the peerage of England? |
13220 | Was it no provoking? |
13220 | Was it to be rich that you grew pale over the midnight lamp, and distilled the sweetness from the Greek and Roman spring? |
13220 | We are about to offer you an admirable opportunity of applying your-- what shall we call it? |
13220 | We ought, of course, to hate him, but do we? |
13220 | Well, then, why do n''t you kill this mischievous page? |
13220 | Well, what_ is_ going to be done with it? |
13220 | Well? |
13220 | Well? |
13220 | What are to me your corn and wine, Your glory and your industries, Your orators? |
13220 | What can books do for us? |
13220 | What could have made me return except to fill the pans again?" |
13220 | What did the people care about the yellow hat? |
13220 | What difference does it make what is the reality outside of me, if it has helped me to live, to know who I am and what I am? |
13220 | What disorder? |
13220 | What do such phrases mean? |
13220 | What do you intend?" |
13220 | What do you mean? |
13220 | What do you say to that?" |
13220 | What do you suppose is the object of all this? |
13220 | What do you think of this border? |
13220 | What do you want? |
13220 | What does he seek? |
13220 | What doth it boot me, that some learned eye May spell my name on gravestone, by and by? |
13220 | What else makes them ken to jump a verse now and then when giving out a psalm?" |
13220 | What greatness, or what private hidden power, Is there in me to draw submission From this rude man and beast? |
13220 | What has all this to do with monks, with professors of poverty, with men of spiritual minds? |
13220 | What hinders you from discarding this troublesome scrupulosity of yours which stands so grievously in your way? |
13220 | What in the name of the Bodleian has the general public got to do with literature? |
13220 | What is a paradise that one purchases at the expense of one''s own soul?... |
13220 | What is it, in any religion, but a form, to the baser sort? |
13220 | What is more touching than''The Reminiscences of the People''? |
13220 | What is property? |
13220 | What is that? |
13220 | What is the earth compared with the sun? |
13220 | What is the spirit of the people? |
13220 | What is''The Ring and the Book''? |
13220 | What makes Sir Gilbert de Umfraville stay? |
13220 | What materials for tragedy are wanting? |
13220 | What may all those things be-- the curb, the curvetting, the bridle stud? |
13220 | What terms are you on with him?" |
13220 | What was it? |
13220 | What were we saying yesterday? |
13220 | What will our children''s children think o''t? |
13220 | What words can express The dismay and distress Of Sir Guy, when he found what a terrible mess His cursing and banning had now got him into? |
13220 | What would we not give to know Julius Cæsar one- half as well as we know this outrageous rascal? |
13220 | What''s gone with Poyntz, and Sir Reginald Braye? |
13220 | What, Phyllis, dost thou fear? |
13220 | Whaur has he got sic a knowledge of women? |
13220 | Whaur''s the extra reverence in wearing shoon twa sizes ower sma''?" |
13220 | When he came to die, he remembered several of these outstanding accounts; but what assurance have we that he remembered them all? |
13220 | When we are in love, do we whisper him in our lady''s ear? |
13220 | When we sorrow, does he ease our pain? |
13220 | When will mankind learn that literature is one thing, and sworn testimony another? |
13220 | Where can you hide? |
13220 | Where is the beauty stairs as it wore outside for show?" |
13220 | Where now are their"novel philosophies and systems"? |
13220 | Where_ did_ you borrow it?" |
13220 | Which of them do we really know? |
13220 | Who is my neighbor? |
13220 | Who was there to oblige the Jews to wear the yellow hat? |
13220 | Who, as friend only met, Soggarth Aroon, Never did flout me yet, Soggarth Aroon? |
13220 | Whom do you think I have brought with me?" |
13220 | Why are Ralph Ufford and Marny away? |
13220 | Why at least do we not reverence the images of the saints, with which the very pavement we walk on is covered? |
13220 | Why do we not hate him? |
13220 | Why dost thou tarry? |
13220 | Why is it so? |
13220 | Why must I fly from her I so fondly love? |
13220 | Why so excellent a thing can not be eaten alone? |
13220 | Why wouldst thou, rash one, seek the maddening fight? |
13220 | Why, beauteous, wouldst thou not the combat shun?" |
13220 | Why, like the hateful bug you kill, Did you not crush me when you could? |
13220 | Why? |
13220 | Why? |
13220 | Will it be believed that puny critics have been found to quarrel with this colossal compliment on the poor pretext of its falsehood? |
13220 | Will not your candle burn anywhere but in that gold or silver candlestick of yours, which you carry with you? |
13220 | Will you hang your head and blush in his presence because he outshines you in equipage and show? |
13220 | Will you spend yourself for the sake of elevating men who need to be lifted up? |
13220 | Wilt thou try to love the tyrant lacking love despite his treasure? |
13220 | With regard to the other half, Mr. Hermann, what bills have you got?" |
13220 | Would it ha''been Ody Rafferty''s aunt? |
13220 | Would you not like to hold them back? |
13220 | Would you, for instance, be rich: Do you think that single point worth the sacrificing everything else to? |
13220 | Write no more on that subject which you know of: would you wish to make me angry?" |
13220 | Ye''ll mind the closed- in beds i''the kitchen? |
13220 | Yet canst thou without thought or feeling be? |
13220 | You have it, granny, yet?" |
13220 | You have no doubt written to Goethe about me? |
13220 | You know the lonesome little glen between the hills, on the short cut for man or horse, to Kilbroggan? |
13220 | You were saying something about poison, were n''t you-- what was it?" |
13220 | Your doctrine? |
13220 | [ Illustration: Signature: OLGA FLINCH] TO ULLA Ulla, mine Ulla, tell me, may I hand thee Reddest of strawberries in milk or wine? |
13220 | [_ Turning toward the dressing- room._] Susanna, are you there? |
13220 | ]_ What''s that? |
13220 | ]__ Countess_--But what if some one should come? |
13220 | ]__ Susanna_--Goodness, is n''t he a pretty girl? |
13220 | _ Amintor_--How now? |
13220 | _ Arethusa_--Nay, then, hear: I must and will have them, and more--_ Philaster_--What more? |
13220 | _ Bartolo[ aloud]_--Well, Basilio-- about your lawyer--? |
13220 | _ Bartolo_--Before the right moment? |
13220 | _ Bartolo_--Eh, eh, what is the matter? |
13220 | _ Bartolo_--What for, if you please? |
13220 | _ Bartolo_--Why do you_ always_ sing from''The Useless Precaution''? |
13220 | _ Bartolo_[_ laughing_]--Calumny, eh? |
13220 | _ Basilio[ aside]_--Who the devil are they trying to deceive here? |
13220 | _ Basilio[ impatient]_--Eh? |
13220 | _ Basilio[ low]_--Who told you? |
13220 | _ Basilio[ startled]_--With the lawyer? |
13220 | _ Caratach_--But thus unblown, my boy? |
13220 | _ Caratach_--O my chicken, My dear boy, what shall I lose? |
13220 | _ Caratach_--What ail''st thou? |
13220 | _ Cherubino_--When a ribbon-- has pressed the head, and-- touched the skin of one--_ Countess[ hastily]_--Very strange-- then it can cure wounds? |
13220 | _ Cherubino_--Where can I go? |
13220 | _ Count[ aside to Bartolo]_--Do you want him to explain matters before her? |
13220 | _ Count[ embarrassed]_--Sir, I was asked-- Can no one hear us? |
13220 | _ Count[ in a low tone_]--Did you notice the application? |
13220 | _ Count[ secretly slipping a purse into his hands]_--Yes: he wants to know what you are doing here, when you are so far from well? |
13220 | _ Count[ smiling]_--Haven''t you seen the lawyer? |
13220 | _ Count[ taking a sheet of music from the stand_]--Will you sing this, Madame? |
13220 | _ Count_--Did you sprain your foot, Madame? |
13220 | _ Count_--Really? |
13220 | _ Count_--So it is_ not_ Susanna? |
13220 | _ Count_--What, you knew about it? |
13220 | _ Count_--Who is in that room? |
13220 | _ Count_--Why do n''t you help me get pardon, instead of making me out as bad as you can? |
13220 | _ Count_--Won''t you tell me again that you forgive me? |
13220 | _ Count_--Would I have stopped you for anything else? |
13220 | _ Count_[_ frightened_]--Speak low yourself, wo n''t you? |
13220 | _ Count_[_ to the Countess, who at the sight of Susanna shows the greatest surprise_]--So_ you_ also play astonishment, Madame? |
13220 | _ Countess_--And-- why so? |
13220 | _ Countess_--Aren''t you glad you found her instead of Cherubino? |
13220 | _ Countess_--But not for always? |
13220 | _ Countess_--Did I marry you to be eternally subjected to jealousy and neglect? |
13220 | _ Countess_--Do you deserve it, culprit? |
13220 | _ Countess_--Does the manuscript say who wrote this-- song? |
13220 | _ Countess_--Have I said_ that_, Susanna? |
13220 | _ Countess_--Susanna, how_ can_ you go on so? |
13220 | _ Countess_--Who can be knocking like that? |
13220 | _ Countess_--Who do you think could be there? |
13220 | _ Countess_--Why should n''t I? |
13220 | _ Countess_--Will you listen to me one minute? |
13220 | _ Countess_--Will you really make yourself the laughing- stock of the chateau for such a silly suspicion? |
13220 | _ Et tibi magni satis_!--Was it in order to raise a fortune that you consumed the sprightly hours of youth in study and retirement? |
13220 | _ He_ sipped his glass, shuffled his cards, and was content with the humbler inquiry,"What are trumps?" |
13220 | _ Helen_--Tell me now sincerely, were you happy in your elevated fortune? |
13220 | _ Hengo_--Am not I your kinsman? |
13220 | _ Hengo_--And am not I as fully allied unto you In those brave things as blood? |
13220 | _ Hengo_--Do not you hear The noise of bells? |
13220 | _ Hengo_--Have you knocked his brains out? |
13220 | _ Hengo_--Hold my sides hard; stop, stop; oh, wretched fortune, Must we part thus? |
13220 | _ Hengo_--Mine aunt too, and my cousins? |
13220 | _ Hengo_--No Romans, uncle? |
13220 | _ Hengo_--To go upon my legs? |
13220 | _ Hengo_--Will you come to me? |
13220 | _ Maintenon_--And did you live tolerably with Menelaus after all your adventures? |
13220 | _ Maintenon_--But deign to inform me, Helen, if you were really as beautiful as fame reports? |
13220 | _ Philaster_--And me? |
13220 | _ Philaster_--Is''t possible? |
13220 | _ Philaster_--Madam, both? |
13220 | _ Philaster_--Madam, what more? |
13220 | _ Rosina[ aside to Basilio]--Do_ hold your tongue, ca n''t you? |
13220 | _ Rosina[ low to Basilio]_--Is it so hard to keep still? |
13220 | _ Rosina_--Why did you come out? |
13220 | _ Susanna[ returning with the oiled silk]_--Seal what? |
13220 | _ Susanna_--Already? |
13220 | _ Susanna_--And the bandage? |
13220 | _ Susanna_--And what about me, sir? |
13220 | _ Susanna_--What if they do? |
13220 | _ The Count_--But who are you talking to then? |
13220 | _ They_ discussed their great schemes and affected to prove deep mysteries, and were constantly asking,"What is truth?" |
13220 | _ c''est belle, cette garniture? |
13220 | a lady''s voice, Whom I do love? |
13220 | and what reward can you ask besides? |
13220 | and whom he quitted for an heiress and a pair of horns? |
13220 | asked Lady Squib,"and so inoculate her with gayety?" |
13220 | at this My lesson dost thou scoff? |
13220 | c''est jolie, n''est- ce pas?_ But you like caps. |
13220 | de Beauharnais?" |
13220 | et ce jabot, c''est tres séduisant, n''est- ce pas? |
13220 | exclaimed Fabrice, in alarm,"am I in danger of losing the small place I have won in your heart, my sole joy in this world?" |
13220 | exclaimed Nouronihar;"will the time come when I shall snatch my hand from thine?" |
13220 | floral applause? |
13220 | granny, granny, there he sat? |
13220 | granny, he sat there?" |
13220 | have spoken to the princesses his daughters when he had occasion to be displeased with them?" |
13220 | he cried, at the top of his lungs,"who is this jackanapes who comes here, thrusting his idiotic presence upon me?" |
13220 | he exclaimed, irritably;"why should he be big?" |
13220 | how could I possibly quit the world before bringing forth all that I felt it was my vocation to produce? |
13220 | how friended, That I should lose myself thus desperately, And none for pity show me how I wandered? |
13220 | how is this? |
13220 | how is this?" |
13220 | how is this?" |
13220 | if we are not ashamed of these absurdities, why do we not grieve at the cost of them? |
13220 | marquis, what fortune to- night?" |
13220 | or at all events, is it the province of art to do them? |
13220 | or have set My baser instruments to throw disgrace Upon your virtues? |
13220 | rap!--is rapping there? |
13220 | remains there no more mercy?" |
13220 | said Fortunatus,"I understand the Purgatory of St. Patrick is here: is it so?" |
13220 | tell me why?''" |
13220 | that pretty little woman who has such pretty caps?" |
13220 | the lady who was fond of Lord C------, and of whom he was fond? |
13220 | till now? |
13220 | what means all this?" |
13220 | what''s that now?" |
13220 | what''s the matter?" |
13220 | when shall I again feel it in the temple of nature and of man?--never? |
13220 | when the battle has been fought, Who won? |
13220 | when the book comes out, Does it read? |
13220 | where are you?" |
13220 | where is thy brother? |
13220 | whilst I''m well, beforehand you design, At vast expense, for me to build a shrine? |
13220 | whither hast thou brought us? |
13220 | who comprehends it? |
13220 | with whom can I discuss this mighty goddess? |
13220 | you and he?" |
13220 | you need n''t concern yourself about that; and as for singing this evening-- Where is this master you''re so afraid of dismissing? |
13220 | your principle? |
13220 | your system? |
13220 | your theory? |
36837 | But how ought I to start with writing? |
36837 | But why should n''t the public buy my first attempt? |
36837 | But,commented_ Punch_,"could she do any better than that even after she_ had_ slept on it?" |
36837 | Did_ I_ write that beautiful passage about the moon silvering the tree- tops? 36837 He ran joyfully to meet his master, wagging his tail the while"? |
36837 | I expect you are saying to yourself,''What was it that happened?'' 36837 Just give this story to the editor will you, please?" |
36837 | Mr. Blank of our city-- never heard of him? 36837 The newspaper is read by everybody every day,"you may tell me,"and what has it done for their style?" |
36837 | The pleasure has been mine,I assured him, and inquired how long he had been in England? |
36837 | What is wrong with it? |
36837 | Who desires to be''ladylike''? |
36837 | Almost unconsciously the back of his mind is filled with the thought,"What will the public think of ME when they read this?" |
36837 | And a very pretty home it was, no doubt; but why spoil it by the introduction of"to wit"? |
36837 | And have you ever read a story that opened with"A dripping November fog enveloped the city"? |
36837 | And then the question arise-- Why should all the eligible men in the town have proposed to her? |
36837 | And would it not be more straightforward to say,"He was two years older than she"? |
36837 | But do you, I wonder? |
36837 | But in any case, do n''t sit down at the first rebuff and say,"What''s the good of anything? |
36837 | But it does not wear-- why? |
36837 | Cut it out? |
36837 | Do they know everything about you-- your ideals and inner struggles, and aims and aspirations? |
36837 | Does your heroine decide to leave her millionaire- father''s palatial home and hide her identity in slum- work and a room in a tenement? |
36837 | How does he know? |
36837 | If not-- why not? |
36837 | Is it likely, then, that he would want another contribution calmly informing his readers that the previous article was entirely wrong and unreliable? |
36837 | Is it to expose some social wrong, or to enlist sympathy for suffering and misfortune? |
36837 | Is it to induce a light- hearted and care- free frame of mind, or to make the reader think? |
36837 | Is it to make people smile, or to make them weep? |
36837 | Is it to pander to a vicious taste, or to foster clean ideals? |
36837 | Is it to provide excitement, or to act as a soothing restorative to tired nerves and brain? |
36837 | Misnamed, you say? |
36837 | Now why is it that the girl who starts out to write fiction loves to introduce her heroine in this wise? |
36837 | Now, would she have said that, personally, either to a friend or to a class, if they were going out for a country walk? |
36837 | Perhaps you feel that you are a Dante? |
36837 | Something like that? |
36837 | The astonished preacher asked, indignantly,"Where?" |
36837 | The beginner seldom pauses to inquire: What is my object in writing this article? |
36837 | The craving for"self- expression"is one of the characteristics of this century; and what better medium is there for this than writing? |
36837 | Three Essentials in Training"How am I to set about training for literary work?" |
36837 | What are_ you_ proposing to say about the dog? |
36837 | What can be easier therefore than to write a story in diary form? |
36837 | What does it all amount to, this perversion of legitimate words or introduction of meaningless ones? |
36837 | What, I have secrets from you? |
36837 | Who would dream of measuring the influence of_ Punch_, for instance, by the figures of its circulation? |
36837 | Why did she make that irritable remark? |
36837 | Why is it that the amateur so often describes the cottager in this"poor but pious"strain? |
36837 | Why not have said,"The sun was setting"? |
36837 | Why should n''t we do likewise? |
36837 | Why"some"two summers, I wonder? |
36837 | Why? |
36837 | Why? |
36837 | Yet how few amateurs stop to consider whether what they write is really entertaining? |
36837 | Yet what is gained by all this, save a definite amount of delay? |
36837 | You think this sounds like reducing writing to a purely mechanical process, in which genius does not count? |
36837 | [ Sidenote: How much do you Know of those who are Nearest to You?] |
36837 | be typed?" |
20831 | ''And the work?'' 20831 ''And the work?'' |
20831 | ''And what are they worth?'' 20831 ''Are you Italian?'' |
20831 | ''Did he really say I''d helped?'' 20831 ''Do you come now from Falun?'' |
20831 | ''Do you have many stones like these in your country?'' 20831 ''Have you never heard of the League of the Red- headed Men?'' |
20831 | ''How can that be?'' 20831 ''Is that true?'' |
20831 | ''Oh, is it silver?'' 20831 ''Remember the old boy you were talking to this morning?'' |
20831 | ''That you, Johnny?'' 20831 ''What do you call purely nominal?'' |
20831 | ''What do you suppose this is?'' 20831 ''What is that you say, Olaf?'' |
20831 | ''What would be the hours?'' 20831 ''What, the red- headed man?'' |
20831 | ''Where could I find him?'' 20831 ''Who has died here?'' |
20831 | ''Why that?'' 20831 ''Why, what is it, then?'' |
20831 | ''Zinc, then?'' 20831 Against his wife''s wishes?" |
20831 | And William sent the baby to West Kensington to escape infection? |
20831 | And all this time he is sitting at the foot of the bed? |
20831 | And has he been with you ever since the day before yesterday? |
20831 | And has your business been attended to in your absence? |
20831 | And how could you tell that they would make their attempt to- night? |
20831 | And sit in the dark? |
20831 | And that takes place every night? 20831 And this is the friend you told me about? |
20831 | And what did you do then? |
20831 | And what did you see? |
20831 | And what does William answer to that? |
20831 | And what is there so surprising if you do? |
20831 | And what shalt thou say, quotha? 20831 And you want me to be banker,"cried Miss Bailey;"to keep the money and give Morris ten cents a day-- is that it?" |
20831 | Angry? |
20831 | Are you going to get back this fall? |
20831 | At half- wages, in fact? |
20831 | At what time? |
20831 | But William does not go straight home when he leaves the club? |
20831 | But he does not go into the house at West Kensington? |
20831 | But how could you guess what the motive was? |
20831 | But what I mean-- if I''d had to stay in the house, where would we been about the most important thing in the whole biz''nuss? |
20831 | But when does he get to bed himself? |
20831 | But wo n''t you go up and break it gently to the boss? 20831 But,"I went on desperately,"was it an accident? |
20831 | But,asked Miss Bailey, suddenly practical,"what does the poor little fellow eat? |
20831 | Consita,I said hesitatingly,"you are not angry with me?" |
20831 | D''ye mean it? |
20831 | Dear Uncle Bill: Where am I going to in vacation? 20831 Did I hear somebody call?" |
20831 | Did he send you to me? |
20831 | Did n''t you know his missis had a kid? |
20831 | Did she tell you that? |
20831 | Did the girl scorn my precious one? |
20831 | Did yonder sniffling hypocrite thrust my darling from his door? 20831 Do I have your assurance for that?" |
20831 | Do n''t you get lonesome sometimes by yourself here, huh? |
20831 | Do n''t you like me just as well, anyhow? 20831 Do n''t you see we ca n''t get back?" |
20831 | Do n''t you? |
20831 | Do n''t you? |
20831 | Do you know if any of these persons had any knowledge of minerals or geology? |
20831 | Do you realize what that means, little one? 20831 Do you see the star at his breast?" |
20831 | Do you think it likely the girl would have him then? |
20831 | Does he not care, then, how it goes with his parishioners? |
20831 | Does he seem to be happy and all right? |
20831 | Does n''t she? |
20831 | Does your mother know him? |
20831 | Hain''t I heard him? 20831 Has he, in spite of this, married and built a new parsonage?" |
20831 | Has your father come home? |
20831 | Have you a good minister here? |
20831 | Have you been married long, William? |
20831 | Have you ever observed that his ears are pierced for earrings? |
20831 | Have you had bad news? |
20831 | Have you had them? |
20831 | Have you known him long? |
20831 | Have you talked with our minister? |
20831 | Have you the chisel and the bags? 20831 He is still with you, I presume?" |
20831 | He is still with you? |
20831 | How can you know, sir? |
20831 | How could you know that? |
20831 | How could you tell him? |
20831 | How dare you, William? |
20831 | How did he come? |
20831 | How did you find out? |
20831 | How did you know, for example, that I did manual labor? 20831 How is William''s wife to- day?" |
20831 | How much do you think horses are worth, anyway? |
20831 | How we goin''to do it? |
20831 | How? |
20831 | I''m not talkin''_ now_, am I? |
20831 | Indemnity, and nothing more-- what good would their provinces be to us? 20831 Is William good to his wife?" |
20831 | Is he soft? 20831 Is he such a little fellow?" |
20831 | Is it any one that I know? |
20831 | Is it your doing again, sir? |
20831 | Is n''t it a dandy, Jim? 20831 Is she your girl?" |
20831 | It is a little off the beaten track, is n''t it? |
20831 | It was devilish odd,I said,"to run into your own handle like that, was n''t it?" |
20831 | Lady Marietta-- that''s my mother''s name-- don''t seem to fit altogether does it? 20831 Luff,[111- 1] you lubber-- why do n''t you luff? |
20831 | Ma''am? 20831 Make up a what for him?" |
20831 | May be a hundred dollars-- or sumpthing? |
20831 | More coffee, sir? |
20831 | More''n a hundred_ dollars_? |
20831 | Nathan Spiderwitz? |
20831 | No? |
20831 | None of the boys in the school? |
20831 | Now, boys, d''ye suppose you got bread enough? |
20831 | Now, who''s goin''to catch the fish for breakfast? |
20831 | Of my health, what is it? 20831 Oh, but it was fun, was n''t it, boys?" |
20831 | Oh, is his name Izzie? |
20831 | Sergeant,said Captain Adams, with a half- turn of his desk- chair,"how soon can you take the field?" |
20831 | She did not get better, sir? |
20831 | Since then the minister has remained here as poor as the others? |
20831 | So you know now, Colonel? |
20831 | Such as what? |
20831 | That is all right-- the question is, can we get back? |
20831 | That little girl comes here with a message from your wife? |
20831 | That other dog, did n''t I told you how he did n''t eat so much like Izzie, and she would n''t to let me have him? 20831 Then how can you know she is afraid of that?" |
20831 | Then who----? |
20831 | Then why does not William take her? |
20831 | Then why have the mother and child been separated? |
20831 | This is W. I suppose you mean that the child is at West Kensington? 20831 Thou canst speak, darling, canst thou?" |
20831 | To an end? |
20831 | Wait a_ minute_, ca n''t you? |
20831 | Was ever so original and exquisite a compliment? |
20831 | Was he the only applicant? |
20831 | Watson, I think you know Mr. Jones, of Scotland Yard? 20831 We''re goin''to turn right in, ai n''t we, boys?" |
20831 | Well, Watson,said Holmes, when our visitor had left us,"what do you make of it all?" |
20831 | Well, but China? |
20831 | Well, how can I? |
20831 | Well, the snuff, then, and the Freemasonry? |
20831 | Well, what if I did n''t? 20831 Well, where did you meet him?" |
20831 | Well, where_ can_ you go? |
20831 | Well, who is it, dearest? |
20831 | Well, why ca n''t you wait till I tell you? |
20831 | Well, why do n''t you tell me, then? |
20831 | Well, would you please, sir, march up- stairs, where we can get a cab to carry your highness to the police- station? |
20831 | Well, you can get excited now, ca n''t you? |
20831 | Well,rejoined Corporal Richardson, in his soft Southern tongue,"and what if I did? |
20831 | Well,said the King,"what did the farmers decide?" |
20831 | What are those troops? |
20831 | What are you goin''to do? |
20831 | What are you going to do, then? |
20831 | What are you looking for? |
20831 | What did he say in that sharp voice? |
20831 | What do you think, Watson? 20831 What does the doctor say about her?" |
20831 | What has gone wrong? |
20831 | What is he like, this Vincent Spaulding? |
20831 | What is her ailment? |
20831 | What is the name of this obliging youth? |
20831 | What makes you think he wo n''t kick? |
20831 | What old woman? |
20831 | What on earth does this mean? |
20831 | What then? |
20831 | What we better do now, Penrod? |
20831 | What we goin''do next, Penrod? |
20831 | What would people----? |
20831 | What you goin''to do? |
20831 | What you goin''to do? |
20831 | What you talkin''about? 20831 What you talkin''about?" |
20831 | What you want, you ole horse, you? |
20831 | What''d they-- do to us, Penrod, if it turned out he was some policeman''s horse? |
20831 | What''s he doin''now? |
20831 | What''s that, Penrod? |
20831 | What''s that? |
20831 | What''s the matter? |
20831 | What''s the matter? |
20831 | What_ for_? |
20831 | What_ is_ that? |
20831 | When does William reach home at night? |
20831 | Where can a fellow camp? |
20831 | Where did you see them? |
20831 | Where is he? |
20831 | Where iss your friend? 20831 Where''d we been, I''d just like to know,"he concluded,"if I had n''t got out here this afternoon?" |
20831 | Where''s their mob? |
20831 | Where-- where you goin'', Penrod? 20831 Who sent you here?" |
20831 | Who told you that? |
20831 | Whom are you speaking of? |
20831 | Why ai n''t you at home workin''like an honest man? |
20831 | Why did you beat the pavement? |
20831 | Why did you pick him? |
20831 | Why lurkest thou in the corner, lazy one? |
20831 | Why serious? |
20831 | Why should that make him good to her? |
20831 | Why, indeed? 20831 Will you buy my hair?" |
20831 | William leaves the club at one o''clock? |
20831 | Wo n''t this do? |
20831 | Would n''t she rayther die than have the kid die? |
20831 | Yes, but----"And another just for to lick the stamps? 20831 Yes, sir?" |
20831 | You are not vexed with me, sir? |
20831 | You can tell me_ now_, ca n''t you? 20831 You did n''t think I had it in me to take it so seriously, did you, Prof?" |
20831 | You do n''t care if you are? |
20831 | You have not heard, sir? |
20831 | You said she was dying for want of the child? |
20831 | You say your hair is gone? |
20831 | You see that for yourself, do n''t you, Mrs. Mowgelewsky? 20831 You''ve cut off your hair?" |
20831 | Your French gold? |
20831 | [ 133- 1]But what else is there for me to do?" |
20831 | _ Do_ you think that so much better? |
20831 | ''And the pay?'' |
20831 | ''Dim and faded,''did you call him? |
20831 | ''Do they?'' |
20831 | ''Gone west?'' |
20831 | ''How do you like our Italy? |
20831 | ''What is it you say? |
20831 | ''Would I lose a minute of you? |
20831 | ''You are?'' |
20831 | ( Editor)_ Best Short Stories of 1917__ Best Short Stories of 1918_ O''Brien, Fitz_ The Diamond Lens._ Title Story,"What Was It? |
20831 | 3. Who would you say was the main character or real hero of the story? |
20831 | About two o''clock they began, first one, and then the other:"Say, boys, do n''t you think it''s about time?" |
20831 | After a pause,"But how would she like_ this_?" |
20831 | After reading the Introduction, would you say that"The Gift of the Magi"is a true short story? |
20831 | Ai n''t a kid always growing? |
20831 | Ai n''t he comin''round to- night?" |
20831 | Ai n''t she his missis?" |
20831 | Although the English girl''s story is not told directly, can you gather what she thought of the young American? |
20831 | Am I right in my calculations?" |
20831 | And if not, why so?" |
20831 | And then a little friend of his----""Friend,"the mother repeated with a glare;"was friends here in mine house?" |
20831 | And what do you think he told me?" |
20831 | And why should my poor puppet be the only one to know himself and perish for it?" |
20831 | Anyhow, I''ll be right here, wo n''t I?" |
20831 | Are the bananas too ripe, sir?" |
20831 | Are you a married man, Mr. Wilson? |
20831 | Art thou of the brotherhood of the empty skull and demandest of me what thou shalt say? |
20831 | Bless my wits, what is the matter with me?" |
20831 | Both boys rose, and Penrod asked uneasily,"Where''d that noise come from?" |
20831 | But by what conveyance, think you, can his Lordship have voyaged or traveled hither? |
20831 | But the writing?" |
20831 | But two were duds, were n''t they?'' |
20831 | But why did I even at that moment remember that he had early bestowed upon her the nickname of"Pomposa"? |
20831 | But"( in a whisper to me)"as to thees horse-- thees Chu Chu, which I have just pass-- why is she undress? |
20831 | But, after all, if he is satisfied, why should I put ideas in his head?" |
20831 | Can you guess why? |
20831 | Could this incident make the foundation for a good moving picture scenario? |
20831 | Could your patients spare you for a few hours?" |
20831 | D''ye hear me?" |
20831 | Did I not make thee? |
20831 | Did the scenes have any effect on the imagination and feeling of these real boys and add to their enjoyment? |
20831 | Did you ever see dogs like that?" |
20831 | Do Jim and Della seem like real people you have known? |
20831 | Do Mrs. Mowgelewsky and Morris seem like any living persons you have known? |
20831 | Do n''t it sound like a made- up name out of an English novel? |
20831 | Do n''t you see?" |
20831 | Do n''t you want me to open the window? |
20831 | Do you like it as well as"The Gift of the Magi"or"A Reward of Merit"in which there are real people? |
20831 | Do you suppose a great God is more narrow- minded than we?" |
20831 | Do you think Consuelo is like other Spanish girls you have read or heard about? |
20831 | Do you think she could sleep till she knowed how the kid was?" |
20831 | Do you think the children in the first grade would like Miss Bailey as a teacher? |
20831 | Do you think this a good detective story? |
20831 | Does Hawthorne show his personality and boyhood training in this story as much as Mr. Garland showed his in"A Camping Trip"? |
20831 | Does Uncle Bill conceal his real character? |
20831 | Does he go to West Kensington to see it?" |
20831 | Does it apply to this story? |
20831 | Does it remind you of what the French people thought of our American boys when they went to France during the recent war? |
20831 | Does the fact that the story is told so largely through the conversation of the boys make it more interesting to you? |
20831 | Does the interest of this story lie more in the nature or out- of- doors setting, or in the action or plot? |
20831 | Does the introduction of"The Gift of the Magi"awaken your interest at once? |
20831 | Does this story of Miss Mayo''s gain or lack in interest, because it is founded on fact? |
20831 | Eight dollars a week or a million a year-- what is the difference? |
20831 | For Heaven''s sake, what has happened?" |
20831 | For instance, were the same people victorious in each case? |
20831 | For why? |
20831 | For why?" |
20831 | Have n''t Mr. Hicking to tell how the hair is getting darker, and heaps of things beside?" |
20831 | Have you a family?'' |
20831 | Have you ever had a camping experience? |
20831 | Have you thought of that at all, Morris? |
20831 | Hicking?" |
20831 | Holmes?" |
20831 | How are you now?" |
20831 | How could I but despise a fellow who would be thus abject for a pound a week? |
20831 | How could he suspect what was happening? |
20831 | How different? |
20831 | How do you like Italy?'' |
20831 | How does the sacrifice of the minister influence the king to noble action? |
20831 | How many of them do you know? |
20831 | How near did the Germans get to Paris in the World War? |
20831 | How would you put this idea in words? |
20831 | How-- how much do you think we''ll get, Penrod?" |
20831 | I even ventured to say gently,"And you are better?" |
20831 | I have conquer-- you observe-- for why? |
20831 | I hope that you have done what I asked you, Jones?" |
20831 | I never said I did, did I? |
20831 | I wo n''t see you again, will I? |
20831 | I would fain speak, but, being without wits, what can I say?" |
20831 | I''m me without my hair, ai n''t I?" |
20831 | III"Penrod,"said his mother,"what did you do with that loaf of bread Della says you took from the table?" |
20831 | In the ambulance service anywhere? |
20831 | In what are you most interested in this story? |
20831 | In what ways do these Swedish people differ in their faults and good qualities or any of their human ways from the people of any other nation? |
20831 | In what ways does the story show a knowledge of boy life? |
20831 | In what ways does this story of a hidden treasure differ from other stories of hidden treasure, such as"Treasure Island,"for example? |
20831 | In what ways is it similar? |
20831 | In what ways is she different from American girls? |
20831 | In what ways was your experience like that of the boys in this story? |
20831 | Is it different from"A Reward of Merit"? |
20831 | Is it silver?'' |
20831 | Is it so unusual a misfortune-- so rare a triumph? |
20831 | Is it true there''s a waiter in the club just for to open the door?" |
20831 | Is n''t there something I can do for you?" |
20831 | Is the love story, or the action of the horse, the most interesting incident in the story? |
20831 | Is the setting of the story in the school or at home? |
20831 | Is the slang this young man uses characteristic of Americans in general? |
20831 | Is there anything touching in the story? |
20831 | Is there something about this simple story that is beautiful and that would be true for people ages ago or years from now? |
20831 | Is"Chu Chu"anything like"John G."? |
20831 | It did not matter to me whether William''s wife died, but when that girl had promised to come, why did she not come? |
20831 | It''ll grow out again-- you wo n''t mind, will you? |
20831 | Knowing from the talk of the club what the lower orders are, could I doubt that this was some discreditable love affair of William''s? |
20831 | Leave him the joy, the illusion that had brought him back to life? |
20831 | Might I beg that you would have the goodness to sit down upon one of those boxes, and not to interfere?" |
20831 | Morris, my golden one, you would n''t to have no feelin''s''bout mamma havin''dogs? |
20831 | Need I say that it was to the beneficent Enriquez that I again owed my salvation? |
20831 | Need I say that our confidant and firm ally was Consuelo''s brother-- the alert, the linguistic, the ever- happy, ever- ready Enriquez? |
20831 | Of what other character in this book does he remind you? |
20831 | Penrod''s hoarse whisper came from the profound gloom:"Well, who ever said you did?" |
20831 | Pray, what steps did you take when you found the card upon the door?" |
20831 | Shall I confess the truth? |
20831 | Shall I put the chops on, Jim?" |
20831 | She finished her éclair quietly, remarking,"So you are engaged?" |
20831 | She kept me on tenterhooks by asking it offensive questions: such as,"Oo know who give me that bonnet?" |
20831 | So do n''t you believe-- that things are all right with him now?" |
20831 | Somehow I---- What business had William to tell her about my wife? |
20831 | Surely he would succumb to this new blow; and yet what could we do? |
20831 | The boat- keeper jeered at them:"Do n''t you know any more''n to go out in such a_ tub_ as that on a day like this? |
20831 | The saddle and bridle Chu Chu was becoming accustomed to, but who was this living, breathing object that had actually touched her? |
20831 | The setting of the main incident brings before you what part of the Great War? |
20831 | The £ 4 a week was a lure which must draw him, and what was it to them, who were playing for thousands? |
20831 | Thick to- day, is n''t it?'' |
20831 | This assistant of yours who first called your attention to the advertisement-- how long had he been with you?" |
20831 | Was it Chu Chu?" |
20831 | Was it neighbors? |
20831 | Was it possible that some drop of her old Spanish blood responded to its clinging embrace? |
20831 | Was it you, Miss Teacher, mine friend? |
20831 | Was the door of her grandfather''s bedroom open? |
20831 | Was this the place where you saw how the story was going to turn out? |
20831 | We could go and get back here by the usual closing time, so that whoever comes for you would never suspect-- she''s not very sharp, is she?" |
20831 | Well, what kind of a horse is this we got here? |
20831 | Well, what kind of horses do they have in a circus? |
20831 | Were any of your friends in that country? |
20831 | Were you prepared for the surprise ending of the story? |
20831 | Were you thrown? |
20831 | What American characteristics does Mr. Harrison illustrate? |
20831 | What are some of the beautiful or poetic pictures of nature given by the author? |
20831 | What are some of the things that give it the atmosphere or flavor of California? |
20831 | What can you mean?" |
20831 | What characteristics of the English does the frank American bring out in his talk with the English girl? |
20831 | What color was he?" |
20831 | What could it be, once more? |
20831 | What could it be? |
20831 | What could the witch expect? |
20831 | What difference does it make to_ you_?" |
20831 | What do the words"moralized legend"mean? |
20831 | What do they know over takin''care on mine house? |
20831 | What do you know about Sherlock Holmes? |
20831 | What do you take me for? |
20831 | What do you think are the real qualities of the narrator of this story? |
20831 | What do you think was Mr. Barrie''s purpose in making this waiter of an exclusive English club show himself to be a real human being? |
20831 | What do you think was the word that Feathertop whispered in Mr. Gookin''s ear? |
20831 | What does it matter?" |
20831 | What gives you the thrill in the story"John G."? |
20831 | What if I should let him take his chance among the other men of straw and empty fellows who go bustling about the world?" |
20831 | What is it that holds your attention in this story, is it the character of the fine old soldier, the story itself, or both? |
20831 | What kind of humor is shown in this story? |
20831 | What makes her a lovable person? |
20831 | What makes it better than the cheap ones you perhaps have bought at the news stands? |
20831 | What makes them so happy in spite of their being poor? |
20831 | What might you call this point? |
20831 | What noble qualities does war bring out in the women of a nation, as revealed by the granddaughter of the old soldier? |
20831 | What places mentioned in this story were strategic points around which great and critical battles were fought during the World War? |
20831 | What qualities of a soldier does M. Jouve show to the last? |
20831 | What recent attack on Paris does this one make you think of? |
20831 | What three people does Mrs. Andrews make real and likable to you? |
20831 | What type of story would you call this? |
20831 | What was the motive of the young American''s conduct toward the English girl? |
20831 | What was this nocturnal expedition, and why should I go on? |
20831 | What was your mother''s name?'' |
20831 | What will you? |
20831 | What would happen if she would n''t look at him?" |
20831 | What''d you want to go and give it to him for?" |
20831 | What''s his name?'' |
20831 | What_ is_ the moral of the story? |
20831 | When I was in mine trouble, was it mans or was it ladies what takes und gives me mine money back? |
20831 | When does the story become really interesting to you? |
20831 | When shall you be able to enter upon your new duties?'' |
20831 | When''ll we start?" |
20831 | Where are his own people? |
20831 | Where are you now?" |
20831 | Where did the most thrilling moment come? |
20831 | Where in the story would you say was the most critical and the most interesting point? |
20831 | Where is this story located? |
20831 | Where shall I find a name vile enough to call thee by? |
20831 | Where were we going, and what were we to do? |
20831 | Which do you admire more? |
20831 | Which do you think more difficult to write, a story wholly from the imagination like"Feathertop,"or one from experience like"A Camping Trip"? |
20831 | Who knows?" |
20831 | Whose skeleton is out of its grave now, I wonder?" |
20831 | Why are there so many Spanish words in this story? |
20831 | Why did Mr. Harrison good- humoredly assent to this really false idea, when he was seeking higher education? |
20831 | Why do n''t we have some such custom in America?" |
20831 | Why does William not go straight home from the club? |
20831 | Why does he try to conceal his real self? |
20831 | Why is neither their home nor Della in her shabby clothes, ugly or sordid? |
20831 | Why should these imps rejoice so madly that a silly maiden''s heart was about to be given to a shadow? |
20831 | Why then are there not more good Sherlock Holmeses? |
20831 | Why was the American blameless, or_ do_ you blame him? |
20831 | Why would this story make a good play? |
20831 | Why,_ our_ ole horse----""Do you expect he''s hungry now?" |
20831 | Why? |
20831 | Why?'' |
20831 | Will you be ready to- morrow?'' |
20831 | Wilson?" |
20831 | Wilson?" |
20831 | Would I, his mother being dead, take care of him? |
20831 | Would n''t you like my coat rolled up for a pillow? |
20831 | Would n''t you rather go and see the lions and the elephants with me than stay at home all by yourself?" |
20831 | Would you say that Mr. Tarkington, the writer of this story, has a sense of humor? |
20831 | You are a perfect gold mine of information to me, do you know it?" |
20831 | You are n''t goin''_ home_, are you?" |
20831 | You comprehend? |
20831 | You did n''t speak, did you?" |
20831 | You see those four closed windows above the balcony? |
20831 | You think I''m crazy?" |
20831 | You would n''t to have mads?" |
20831 | [ 156- 1] My God-- what will you? |
20831 | _ Now_ will you have me?" |
20831 | _ What_ loaf o''bread?" |
20831 | _ Will you give those tendons another ten minutes?_"Next morning John G. walked out of his stall as fresh and as fit as if he had come from pasture. |
20831 | can there be_ two_ of them?" |
20831 | or"How are you now?" |
20831 | said Mrs. Mowgelewsky,"what for a dog iss that?" |
20831 | said Pers Persson,''should I be glad? |
20831 | said the minister rather dazed;''so it is silver?'' |
20831 | snorted the matron;"What you think the neighbors make mit mine little boy? |
20831 | thought the old witch,"what step is that? |
20831 | what could I do with a dollar and eighty- seven cents?" |
38444 | And have we not the advantage of all their lights to guide us in our enquiries? |
38444 | And is it not owing to the excellence of their languages, that the noble works of their writers have been preserved? |
38444 | And is such a model likely to be a perfect one? |
38444 | Are not the rudiments of English now taught by low and ignorant masters, for wretched stipends, and for the same ends? |
38444 | But even if a man despair of reaching supreme excellence( and why should he despair, if he have talents, health, capacity and teachers to aid him? |
38444 | But suppose he could teach them, how could he find time to do it? |
38444 | But why more a shame for him, than any other gentleman who has been trained exactly in the same way? |
38444 | Can any man communicate more knowlege than he is himself possessed of? |
38444 | Can any man instruct others in a language, in which he never was instructed? |
38444 | Can any man teach an art which he never learned? |
38444 | Can either any art or language be regularly taught without a well digested system of rules? |
38444 | Did the ancients possess any advantages over us from nature, either in point of intellectual faculties, or the animal oeconomy? |
38444 | Have we not a language to study as well as they? |
38444 | Have we not the foundation of their experience to build upon, ready to our hands, whenever we are wise enough to set about raising the noble edifice? |
38444 | Have we not the same organs of speech, the same features, the same limbs, muscles, and nerves, that the ancients had? |
38444 | How did the ancients attain this art? |
38444 | How many of our wisest members, in the great national council, has shame on that score, kept silent like Mr. Addison? |
38444 | If the English language, and the art of speaking, be not in the number of those, what reason have we to expect that they should be taught? |
38444 | Is it afterwards any- where_ regularly taught_? |
38444 | Is it not probable, that masters of grammar- schools may have contracted bad habits in that respect, as well as any others trained in the same way? |
38444 | Is not this the case at this day? |
38444 | Is there any natural impediment in our way, is there any invincible obstacle to the pursuit of these studies, and to the attainment of these arts? |
38444 | Or what pattern can he afford them, but in himself? |
38444 | Verum etiam si quis summa desperet( quod cur faciat, cui ingenium, valetudo, facultas, præceptor, non deerunt?) |
38444 | Will the profession itself inspire them with propriety of pronunciation, proper management of the voice, and graceful gesture and deportment? |
38444 | Would not the same means bring us to the same end? |
38444 | and do we not, on many accounts, stand in more need of studying that language? |
38444 | or why is more expected from him? |
371 | &[]< ae>< oe> j''Thin and()? |
371 | ''''Can that, with any sort of justice, be styled a blunder? |
371 | ''''The child who gave the following brilliant answer to the question,`` What was the character of Queen Mary?'''' |
371 | (_ b_) This is done by one person going into a hall(? |
371 | 9 as,`` Know ye not that the unrighteous shall inherit the kingdom of God?'''' |
371 | is a special encode for unknown/ non ASCII characters. |
371 | A boy was asked in an examination,`` What did Moses do with the tabernacle?'''' |
371 | A country editor''s correspondent wrote:`` Will you please to insert this obituary notice? |
371 | About how many tons are below the water line? |
371 | And he proceeded:`` Fat cam to Phawraoh at his hinder end?'''' |
371 | Are here not to be found archeological and architectural riches, whose specimens are inexhaustible? |
371 | But now comes the important question: Are errors of this kind ever discovered, and especially do they occur in Shakspere? |
371 | But the ignorance of the schoolboy was quite equalled by the undergraduate who was asked`` Who was the first king of Israel?'''' |
371 | Dr. Skeat quotes a curious instance of the misreading of the thorn( p>) as_ p_, by which a strange ghost word is evolved. |
371 | Greek characters are in the Adobe symbol font delimited by< gr> italics< ae> and< oe> may be transposed?? |
371 | Greek characters are in the Adobe symbol font delimited by< gr> italics< ae> and< oe> may be transposed?? |
371 | He asked:`` Who can quote another passage from any author containing this word? |
371 | He writes,`` What does correspondence mean? |
371 | How has this been proved? |
371 | How is it proved that when a gas expands its temperature is diminished? |
371 | If this is a blunder, who would not wish to blunder so? |
371 | Is not andirons( handirons) a parallel word of the same genus?'' |
371 | So a clogged letter turns_ What beast was''t then_? |
371 | The Saxon letter for_ th_( p>) has long< p 6> been a sore puzzle to the uninitiated, and it came to be represented by the letter y. |
371 | The clergyman then said he would be glad in his turn to_ speer_ the boys, and began:`` How did Pharaoh die?'''' |
371 | The poet was answered him in the same tune:--` And you, sir, what name have you choice? |
371 | This is the account of the first conception of the Exhibition:`` Who was giving the idea of the Exhibition? |
371 | This was a brilliant stroke of imagination, for who would expect to find a colliery near Maidenhead? |
371 | What connection is there between the refractive index of a medium and the angle at which an emergent ray is totally reflected? |
371 | What influence did he exercise over the art of music in his time?'' |
371 | What is it that really happens? |
371 | What says my Printer now? |
371 | What those shaded promenades, where the sun can not almost get through with< p 196> the golden tinge of its rays? |
371 | Whence comes this? |
371 | Why are the bass strings loaded with coils of wire? |
371 | Why is this? |
371 | Will any one say it was not a stroke of genius in some printing- office humourist to alter the last word into`_ in_surrection''? |
371 | [ 14] is obtrusive) Uncertain characters are marked?? |
371 | [ 14] is obtrusive) Uncertain characters are marked?? |
371 | _ Question_ 2.--What would happen if two sound- waves exactly alike were to meet one another in the open air, moving in opposite directions? |
371 | _ Question_ 3.--What is the reason that the hammers which strike the strings of a pianoforte are made not to strike the middle of the strings? |
371 | _ Question_ 32.--Why do the inhabitants of cold climates eat fat? |
371 | _ Question_ 6.--What is the difference between a`` real''''and a`` virtual''''image? |
371 | `` And that statue of Christopher Colomb, whose installation will be accomplished in a very short time, whose price may be 500,000 francs? |
371 | `` Are not there still a number of proud buildings, richly ornamented, and splendid theaters? |
371 | `` I think, sir, the boys are not accustomed to your English accent,''''and inquired in broad Scotch,`` Hoo did Phawraoh dee?'''' |
371 | `` Indeed what may want Barcelona to deserve to be called great and handsome? |
371 | `` May we not conceive this bold jester, if haply he were a stonemason, chiselling on some tombstone`_ In_surgam''?'''' |
371 | ae>,<_!>,< oe>,<_''>,<_''m>,<_ u>,<_?>,<_:>,< AE>,< Dag>, and< Pd>"Larsen EB-11"encodes are used. |
371 | into_ What boast was''t then_?--` Lady M. What beast was''t then, That made you break this enterprise to me?'' |
371 | with Scottish z= z>= y),_ cieteyanis_ or citeyanis, Bellenden''s regular word for_ citizens_. |
38068 | And what''s the good of it? |
38068 | Not''a Landlady of France she loved an Officer,''tis said,''nor''stick''em up again in the middle of a three- cent pie''? |
38068 | Priests Should study passion; how else cure mankind, Who come for help in passionate extremes? |
38068 | What became of the baby?... 38068 Where is Samoa?" |
38068 | A very pretty girl with an affectionate disposition,--what more can be said? |
38068 | And hence, how to sugar?" |
38068 | And is the literature of our generation really slight and mean? |
38068 | And what would have become of Fenwick without the mature Rosalind? |
38068 | And, as a matter of fact, how valuable or vital would a Christian faith be that could be destroyed by the perusal of_ Robert Elsmere_? |
38068 | Are these pictures of English and native life in India faithful reflexions of fact? |
38068 | As to the secret of his power, who can say? |
38068 | But after the spell of the wizard''s imagination has left us, we can not help asking, after the manner of the small boy, Is it true? |
38068 | But how many would have recognised its superiority to the tinsel stuff of those recent days, full of galvanised knights and stuffed chatelaines? |
38068 | But what would become of Mr. De Morgan''s novels, and of the attitude toward life they so clearly reflect, if they contained no women? |
38068 | Can Sudermann have purposely set a trap for his moon- struck constituency? |
38068 | Can we depend on Mr. Kipling for India, as we can depend( let us say) on Daudet for a picture of the_ Rue de la Paix_? |
38068 | Does his sympathy with life desert him here? |
38068 | Had Mr. De Morgan died at the age of twenty- five? |
38068 | Had that been a raft on the Connecticut River, and had Huck and Jim been Yankees, they would have said to the intruders,"Whose raft is this, anyway?" |
38068 | How comes it, then, that he could so often fob us off with languid, inarticulate twaddle?... |
38068 | How do you know you wo n''t have a tremendous success, all of a sudden? |
38068 | How does the case stand with the comedies of Dryden or with the novels of Henry Fielding? |
38068 | I said,"What reasons made You call From formless void this earth I tread, When nine- and- ninety can be read Why nought should be at all? |
38068 | If immorality be the cry, what shall we say about Aristophanes or Ovid? |
38068 | If she had never met Bartley, and had married Halleck, would she have been better off? |
38068 | If some books are to be tasted, others to be swallowed, and some few to be chewed and digested, what shall we do with Sienkiewicz? |
38068 | In view of what I believe to be the standard mediocrity of her novels, how shall we account for their enormous vogue? |
38068 | Is He the Dearest One? |
38068 | Is Shakespeare dead? |
38068 | Is it possible that a book, like a dog, may be killed by a bad name? |
38068 | Is it really true that her stories are equal in value to_ Adam Bede_,_ The Mill on the Floss_, and_ Middlemarch_? |
38068 | Is it well that they should abandon Dickens, Thackeray, and Stevenson, for the novel in vogue on the Continent? |
38068 | Is the_ romanticist_ Sienkiewicz an original writer? |
38068 | Is this really a desirable state of affairs? |
38068 | The absorbing question in every reader''s mind is, of course, Will John marry Lorna? |
38068 | Those critics who saw it must have smiled, and shaken their wise heads, for had not the time for such follies gone by? |
38068 | Was there ever a better formula for Mrs. Ward''s constantly recurring heroine? |
38068 | What shall we say of her heroines? |
38068 | What would authors give for a reading public like that? |
38068 | Where had he found that extraordinarily vivid style, and what experiences had he passed through that gave him his subtle insight into character? |
38068 | Who are the English novelists of the first class? |
38068 | Who now reads Cowley? |
38068 | Who was this writer who knew so much of the nature of dogs and men? |
38068 | Whose Fault? |
38068 | Whose Fault? |
38068 | Whose Fault? |
38068 | Why does Mr. De Morgan make elderly women so disgustingly unattractive? |
38068 | Why is it that we are surprised in books and in plays by simple language and natural characters? |
38068 | Why not you?" |
38068 | Why should they live for ever? |
38068 | and if so, what is the nature of her salvation? |
38068 | are we to understand that she is finally saved by Halleck? |
39617 | Do you put tricks upon''s with savages and men of Inde? |
39617 | May I ask,says Col- o- gog( J. H. Stoddart),"in the word_ lie_, what vowel do you use, sir,_ i_ or_ y_?" |
39617 | What hempen homespuns have we swaggering here? |
39617 | Have we a Sheridan among us? |
39617 | Have we no follies here to be redressed? |
39617 | Later the King cries:"Sergeant- at- arms, say, what alarms the crowd; Loud noise annoys us; why is it allowed?" |
39617 | No crimes confessed? |
39617 | No vices gibbeted? |
39617 | The celebrated''Is it the King?'' |
39617 | Thus speaks_ one_ critic-- hear_ another''s_ creed:_ Fashion!_ What''s here? |
39617 | What right have I, whose temperament and mode of thinking are dissimilar to yours, to denounce your exposition of such a puzzle as Hamlet? |
39617 | When the historians disagree in this confusing way, who can possibly decide? |
39617 | from a_ woman''s_ pen? |
39617 | or is he still twenty years away? |
34331 | And why should I speak low, sailor, About my own boy John? 34331 How''s my boy,--my boy? |
34331 | How''s my boy,--my boy? 34331 How''s my boy,--my boy? |
34331 | My boy John,-- He that went to sea,-- What care I for the ship, sailor? 34331 What makes you be shoving and moving your stool on, And singing all wrong that old song of''The Coolun''?" |
34331 | What''s Yarrow but a river bare, That glides the dark hills under? 34331 What''s that noise that I hear at the window, I wonder?" |
34331 | What''s your boy''s name, good wife, And in what ship sailed he? |
34331 | You come back from sea, And not know my John? 34331 You want to see my Pa, I s''pose?" |
34331 | ***** Shall I compare thee to a summer''s day? |
34331 | 148 What hid''st thou in thy treasure- caves and cells? |
34331 | 192 Prithee tell me, Dimple- Chin 228 September strews the woodland o''er 63 Shall I compare thee to a summer''s day? |
34331 | 212 What was he doing, the great god Pan? |
34331 | And what shoulder, and what art, Could twist the sinews of thine heart? |
34331 | And when thy heart began to beat, What dread hand? |
34331 | Are the gleaming snows and the poppies red All that is left of the brave of yore? |
34331 | Are there none to fight as Theseus fought, Far in the young world''s misty dawn? |
34331 | Avails it whether bare or shod These feet the paths of duty trod? |
34331 | Because you have scaled the wall, Such an old mustache as I am Is not a match for you all? |
34331 | But man''s faded glory what change shall renew? |
34331 | Can its embers burn below All that chill December snow? |
34331 | Care you still soft hands to press, Bonny heads to smooth and bless? |
34331 | Couldst thou withdraw thy hand one day And answer to my claim, That fate, and that to- day''s mistake,-- Not thou,--had been to blame? |
34331 | Dead? |
34331 | Did He who made the lamb make thee? |
34331 | Do they thrill the soul of the years no more? |
34331 | Does there within thy dimmest dreams A possible future shine, Wherein thy life could henceforth breathe, Untouched, unshared by mine? |
34331 | Friend of my bosom, thou more than a brother, Why wert thou not born in my father''s dwelling? |
34331 | Gone? |
34331 | He shall not go; I do arise and ope,--"Come in, dear Lord, come in and sup with me, O blesséd guest, and let me sup with thee,"-- Where is the door? |
34331 | He sleeps, the great O''Sullivan, where thunder can not rouse; Then ask yourself, should you be proud, good Woman of Three Cows? |
34331 | He stands and knocks, and bids me ope the door; Without he stands, and asks to enter in: Why should he seek a shelter sad with sin? |
34331 | Hear''st thou the groans that rend his breast? |
34331 | Hear''st thou the groans that rend his breast? |
34331 | Het tears are hailin''ower your cheek, And hailin''ower your chin; Why weep ye sae for worthlessness, For sorrow, and for sin? |
34331 | How can I love to see thee shine So bright, whom I have bought so dear? |
34331 | How''s my boy,--my boy?" |
34331 | How''s my boy,--my boy?" |
34331 | I break all slighter bonds, nor feel A shadow of regret: Is there one link within the past That holds thy spirit yet? |
34331 | I come dasignin''"--"To see my Ma? |
34331 | I say, how''s my John?" |
34331 | I want you to come and pass sentence On two or three books with a plot; Of course you know"Janet''s Repentance"? |
34331 | I''ll tell ye o''a secret That courtiers dinna ken: What is the greatest bliss That the tongue o''man can name? |
34331 | I''m not their mother,-- How''s my boy,--my boy? |
34331 | If they were forced to bow to Fate, as every mortal bows, Can you be proud, can you be stiff, my Woman of Three Cows? |
34331 | In what distant deeps or skies Burned the fire of thine eyes? |
34331 | In what furnace was thy brain? |
34331 | Is it too late, then, Evelyn Hope? |
34331 | Is there within thy heart a need That mine can not fulfil? |
34331 | Lives there within thy nature hid The demon- spirit, change, Shedding a passing glory still On all things new and strange? |
34331 | Mother Earth, are the heroes dead? |
34331 | Mother Earth, are the heroes gone? |
34331 | My eyes were blinded, your words were few; Do you know the truth now up in heaven, Douglas, Douglas, tender and true? |
34331 | No more shall freedom smile? |
34331 | Nor yet for the ravage of winter I mourn,-- Kind nature the embryo blossom will save; But when shall spring visit the mouldering urn? |
34331 | Not there!--Where, then, is he? |
34331 | O why should the spirit of mortal be proud? |
34331 | O, when shall day dawn on the night of the grave? |
34331 | O, who could look on such a form, So nobly free, so softly tender, And darkly dream that earthly storm Should dim such sweet, delicious splendor? |
34331 | On what wings dare he aspire? |
34331 | On whose last steps I climb, Trembling at that where I had stood before; When will return the glory of your prime? |
34331 | One chord that any other hand Could better wake or still? |
34331 | Or is thy faith as clear and free As that which I can pledge to thee? |
34331 | Or to teach as the gray- haired Nestor taught? |
34331 | Or wha wad choose a crown, Wi''its perils an''its fame, And miss his bonnie lassie, When the kye come hame? |
34331 | Or with the envied rubies shine? |
34331 | Prithee tell me, Dimple- Chin, At what age does love begin? |
34331 | Say, did these fingers delve the mine? |
34331 | See''st thou thy lover lowly laid? |
34331 | See''st thou thy lover lowly laid? |
34331 | September strews the woodland o''er With many a brilliant color; The world is brighter than before,-- Why should our hearts be duller? |
34331 | Shall Britons languish, and be men no more? |
34331 | Slave of the dark and dirty mine, What vanity has brought thee here? |
34331 | So shalt thou rest; and what if thou withdraw In silence from the living, and no friend Take note of thy departure? |
34331 | Tell, O tell me, Grizzled- Face, Do your heart and head keep pace? |
34331 | That sacred hour can I forget, Can I forget the hallowed grove, Where by the winding Ayr we met, To live one day of parting love? |
34331 | The same fond mother bent at night O''er each fair sleeping brow; She had each folded flower in sight,-- Where are those dreamers now? |
34331 | Then since all nature joins In this love without alloy, O, wha wad prove a traitor To nature''s dearest joy? |
34331 | Though I fly to Istambol, Athens holds my heart and soul: Can I cease to love thee? |
34331 | To what green altar, O mysterious priest, Lead''st thou that heifer lowing at the skies, And all her silken flanks with garlands dressed? |
34331 | Waking or asleep, Thou of death must deem Things more true and deep Than we mortals dream, Or how could thy notes flow in such a crystal stream? |
34331 | Was there ever so rude or so reckless A darling as you? |
34331 | We were fellow- mortals,--naught beside? |
34331 | What can ye give my poor, starved life in lieu Of this dead cherub which I slew for ye? |
34331 | What care I for the men, sailor? |
34331 | What care I for the ship, sailor? |
34331 | What cares he? |
34331 | What cares he? |
34331 | What cares he? |
34331 | What cares he? |
34331 | What constitutes a state? |
34331 | What fields, or waves, or mountains? |
34331 | What hid''st thou in thy treasure- caves and cells? |
34331 | What ignorance of pain? |
34331 | What is the issue? |
34331 | What leaf- fringed legend haunts about thy shape Of deities or mortals, or of both, In Tempe or the dales of Arcady? |
34331 | What little town by river or sea- shore, Or mountain- built with peaceful citadel, Is emptied of its folk, this pious morn? |
34331 | What love of thine own kind? |
34331 | What mad pursuit? |
34331 | What maidens loath? |
34331 | What men or gods are these? |
34331 | What objects are the fountains Of thy happy strain? |
34331 | What pipes and timbrels? |
34331 | What shapes of sky or plain? |
34331 | What struggle to escape? |
34331 | What the anvil? |
34331 | What the hammer? |
34331 | What the hand dare seize the fire? |
34331 | What thou art we know not; What is most like thee? |
34331 | What though there comes a time of pain When autumn winds forebode decay? |
34331 | What to him are all our wars?-- What but death bemocking folly? |
34331 | What to him is friend or foeman, Rise of moon or set of sun, Hand of man or kiss of woman? |
34331 | What was he doing, the great god Pan, Down in the reeds by the river? |
34331 | What wild ecstasy? |
34331 | When does Love give up the chase? |
34331 | When does hoary Love expire, When do frosts put out the fire? |
34331 | When the stars threw down their spears, And watered heaven with their tears, Did he smile his work to see? |
34331 | When true hearts lie withered, And fond ones are flown, O, who would inhabit This bleak world alone? |
34331 | Where are the flowers, the fair young flowers, that lately sprang and stood In brighter light and softer airs, a beauteous sisterhood? |
34331 | Where is she to wear them well? |
34331 | Where is the grave of Sir Arthur O''Kellyn? |
34331 | Where is thy place of blissful rest? |
34331 | Where is thy place of blissful rest? |
34331 | Where, on thy dewy wing, Where art thou journeying? |
34331 | Wherefore did she thus despise( She with pity in her eyes) Mother''s care and lover''s warning? |
34331 | Which door, dear Lord? |
34331 | Who are these coming to the sacrifice? |
34331 | Who could have thought such darkness lay concealed Within thy beams, O Sun? |
34331 | Who knows in what abodes of want those youths were driven to house? |
34331 | Who knows the past? |
34331 | Who shall say that Fortune grieves him, While the star of hope she leaves him? |
34331 | Who told us that the years had fled, Or borne afar our blissful youth? |
34331 | Why do we then shun death with anxious strife?-- If light can thus deceive, wherefore not life? |
34331 | Why is Earth so gayly dressed? |
34331 | Why should I speak low, sailor?" |
34331 | Why wilt thou ever scare me with thy tears, And make me tremble lest a saying learnt In days far- off, on that dark earth, be true? |
34331 | Will he but knock and ask, and nothing more? |
34331 | Would the angels laugh, to mark A bright soul driven, Fiend- goaded, down the endless dark, From hope and heaven? |
34331 | Yet hold me not forever in thine East: How can my nature longer mix with thine? |
34331 | You ask me, why, though ill at ease, Within this region I subsist, Whose spirits falter in the mist, And languish for the purple seas? |
34331 | Youth and beauty,--shall they not Last beyond a brief to- morrow? |
34331 | _ Dinah Maria Mulock Craik._***** HOW''S MY BOY? |
34331 | _ James Beattie._***** O, WHY SHOULD THE SPIRIT OF MORTAL BE PROUD? |
34331 | and what dread feet? |
34331 | and who can judge us right? |
34331 | burning bright, In the forests of the night, What immortal hand or eye Dare frame thy fearful symmetry? |
34331 | burning bright, In the forests of the night; What immortal hand or eye Could frame thy fearful symmetry? |
34331 | is it weed, or fish, or floating hair,-- A tress of golden hair, A drownéd maiden''s hair, Above the nets at sea? |
34331 | or who could find, While fly, and leaf, and insect stood revealed, That to such countless orbs thou mad''st us blind? |
34331 | what dread grasp Dare its deadly terrors clasp? |
34331 | what the chain? |
34331 | what was love made for, if''t is not the same Through joy and through torment, through glory and shame? |
34331 | why should we undo it? |
34331 | why, all abandoned to darkness and woe, Why, lone Philomela, that languishing fall? |
35874 | Ah, I suppose you want something cheap an''ordinary for_ this_? |
35874 | But why do you call that the West- End? |
35874 | Could you use a little poem of mine? |
35874 | D''yer want to buy a diamond pin cheap? |
35874 | Did you see my picture safely delivered at the Royal Academy? |
35874 | Do you mean a club in Soho when you say West- End? |
35874 | Has he got a bill in his hand? |
35874 | Have you been to sit to Mr. Jones yet? |
35874 | How do you know there are such persons? |
35874 | How''s that? |
35874 | I say, is it true you were the only sober man last night? |
35874 | I say, you''re not going to sing an encore, are you? |
35874 | Mr._ George_ Jobson? |
35874 | Of the firm of Messrs. Jobson and Doodle? |
35874 | Only this]*****[ Illustration:_ Horse Dealer._"Did that little mare I sold you do for you, sir?" |
35874 | Shall I play to''clubs'', partner? |
35874 | Suppose, madam, we try a pose with just the_ least_ suggestion of-- er--_sauciness_?] |
35874 | Then you are growing rich, Horace? |
35874 | Uncle, what does 1, 3, 6, 8, after a man''s name, mean? |
35874 | Well, sir, what is it? |
35874 | What do you call that? |
35874 | What do you think of the picture? 35874 What is that?" |
35874 | What''s it made of? |
35874 | Where''s my cello? |
35874 | Who is it? |
35874 | Who''s that going out? |
35874 | Why are n''t you at work? |
35874 | Will yer want me ter tike my bun down?] |
35874 | Yes, aunt? |
35874 | Yes; he certainly_ is_ a beauty, is n''t he?] |
35874 | ( Time 3 p.m.).--_Hospitable Host._"Have c''gar, old f''lla?" |
35874 | ***** A NEEDLESS QUESTION.--"Do you want a loan?" |
35874 | ***** FROM OUR OWN IRREPRESSIBLE ONE(_ still dodging custody_).--_Q._ Why is a daily paper like a lamb? |
35874 | ***** RIDDLES BY A WRETCH.--_Q._ What is the difference between a surgeon and a wizard? |
35874 | ***** THE ENRAGED MUSICIAN.--(_A Duologue._)_ Composer._ Did you stay late at Lady Tittup''s? |
35874 | ***** THE UNITED EFFORT OF SIX ROYAL ACADEMICIANS.--What colour is it that contains several? |
35874 | ***** When is an author most likely to be sick of his own writing? |
35874 | ***** Why ought n''t a boot and shoemaker to be trusted? |
35874 | *****[ Illustration: A PROPHET IN HIS OWN COUNTRY_ Sylvia._"I wonder whether he''ll be a soldier or a sailor?" |
35874 | *****[ Illustration: AT THE ACADEMY_ Miss Jones._"How came you to think of the subject, Mr. de Brush?" |
35874 | *****[ Illustration: BROTHERS IN ART.--_New Arrival._"What should I charge for teaching ze pianoforte?" |
35874 | *****[ Illustration: HE KNEW HIS WORK_ Proprietor of Travelling Menagerie._"Are you used to looking after horses and other animals?" |
35874 | *****[ Illustration: IN THE CAUSE OF ART.--_Patron._"When are yer goin''to start my wife''s picture and mine? |
35874 | *****[ Illustration: IS THERE ROOM FOR MARY THERE? |
35874 | *****[ Illustration: TWO OLD MASTERS OF ARTS]***** ARTIST''S VADE MECUM_ Question._ Has the anxious parent been to see his child''s portrait? |
35874 | *****[ Illustration:_ Celebrated Minor Poet._"Ah, hostess, how''do? |
35874 | *****[ Illustration:_ Customer._--"Have you''How to be happy though married''?" |
35874 | *****[ Illustration:_ He._"Awfully jolly concert, was n''t it? |
35874 | *****[ Illustration:_ Jones._"Do you drink between meals?" |
35874 | *****[ Illustration:_ Jones._"How is it we see you so seldom at the club now?" |
35874 | *****[ Illustration:_ Scrumble._"Been to see the old masters?" |
35874 | *****[ Illustration:_ She._"And are all these lovely things about which you write imaginary?" |
35874 | *****_ Member of the Lyceum Club._ Have you read Tolstoi''s"Resurrection"? |
35874 | A juggins?" |
35874 | And have the other papers adopted it?" |
35874 | And may I ask what it was that first attracted you?" |
35874 | Anything else you''d like, dearie?" |
35874 | Are you much of a sportsman?" |
35874 | Be you a talkin''to Oi, zur?"] |
35874 | Bingles?" |
35874 | But you set that chap on the pivement alongside o''you an''me, to dror''arf a salmon an''a nempty''at, an''where''ud''e be?" |
35874 | But, you will say, supposing this ingenious device to fail? |
35874 | By the way, Monsieur le Marquis, have they introduced fencing into France yet?"] |
35874 | Ca n''t you fix it on the frame?" |
35874 | Can you stand by and see the children starve? |
35874 | Did you get my book I sent you yesterday?" |
35874 | Do n''t you keep books?" |
35874 | Do you know I am really a little_ frightened_ at the thought of meeting such a famous editor? |
35874 | Do you know who_ that_ is? |
35874 | Dost thou hold there still?" |
35874 | Eh?"] |
35874 | Ever dined at Dobbs''s?" |
35874 | H._"Ca n''t refuse a toothpick, then, old f''lla?"] |
35874 | H._"Cigarette then?" |
35874 | Hallo, old man, how are you? |
35874 | Have you read_ A Modern Heliogabolus_? |
35874 | How did you manage to get through it? |
35874 | How large is it?"] |
35874 | How soon do you expect them back?"] |
35874 | How?" |
35874 | I should like to know who you would consider a finished artist?" |
35874 | Is it not a fine Titian?" |
35874 | Is n''t it_ silly_ of me? |
35874 | Is that the name of Marie Corelli''s new book? |
35874 | Jobson?" |
35874 | O. T. M._"What steps would you take if a lion got loose?" |
35874 | Pictures? |
35874 | Supposing"Maria''s Marriage"to be universally"slated"? |
35874 | Tell me,_ who_ is your model?" |
35874 | That the best test of a picture is being able to live with it-- or live it down-- so why send it away from its most lenient critic? |
35874 | The principal question asked, upon insuring a man''s life, should be,"Do you sing a good song?" |
35874 | Thinking of art''s disasters, Still sinking to deeper abysses, I said,"From the Old Masters Why go to the new misses?" |
35874 | Was this your idea?" |
35874 | Well, why do n''t you tike it?"] |
35874 | What are the editors about, Whom one would think would edit out The shocking English and the style Which every page and line defile? |
35874 | What d''you take me for? |
35874 | What did the papers say?" |
35874 | What do I see? |
35874 | What do you want to see him for?" |
35874 | What do you want?" |
35874 | What does he collect? |
35874 | What is a"marine painter"? |
35874 | What is an"animal painter"? |
35874 | What offers, gentlemen?"] |
35874 | What tells you which word to use?" |
35874 | What word did you strike out?" |
35874 | What''s your latest composition? |
35874 | What? |
35874 | Where is it?" |
35874 | Who gave it her?" |
35874 | Wo n''t you buy one?" |
35874 | You play the flute, do n''t you?" |
35874 | [_ Exeunt severally._***** ART CLASS.--_Inspector._ What is a"landscape painter"? |
35874 | _ Amateur Flautist._"Are you sure the thing''s all right?" |
35874 | _ Bill Bashford._"Oh, is it? |
35874 | _ First Reveller._"Who was, then?" |
35874 | _ He._"A musician? |
35874 | _ Jones._"Which did you do last?" |
35874 | _ Mamma._"Would n''t you like him to be an artist, like papa?" |
35874 | _ Middlesex House, Park Lane, IV._ DEAR MR. SMITH,--Can you come and dine with us quite in a_ friendly_ way on Thursday at eight? |
35874 | _ Miss F._ All through? |
35874 | _ Q._ Are you well on with your Academy picture? |
35874 | _ Q._ Did he approve of it? |
35874 | _ Q._ Did he make any other suggestions? |
35874 | _ Q._ Have you secured the handsome model? |
35874 | _ Q._ How is it that a man born in Truro can never be an Irishman? |
35874 | _ Q._ Is he willing to pay anything extra for these additions? |
35874 | _ Q._ What are they? |
35874 | _ Q._ Why is America like the act of reflection? |
35874 | _ Q._ Why is my game cock like a bishop? |
35874 | _ Q._ Why is your pretty cousin like an alabaster vase? |
35874 | _ Second Painter._"Did she say anything about mine?" |
35874 | _ She._"_ Doorknob!_ Whom_ do_ you mean? |
35874 | _ Smith._ Raw day, eh? |
35874 | _ Wife._"What book is it?" |
35874 | did n''t it pay?!!"] |
35874 | how many pupils have you got?" |
35874 | she asked;"not feeling seedy, I hope?" |
29768 | Ah, so fear exists on Earth, too? |
29768 | All right? |
29768 | And Madge? |
29768 | And is there no other way-- no scientific way? |
29768 | And now that we''re friends again, would you mind asking the steward to get me something to eat? 29768 And the principle?" |
29768 | And what''s that? |
29768 | And you and Hackett figured it out and came after me-- took that risk? 29768 And you say, Professor, that you have brought back samples of this invisibility device?" |
29768 | And you, Sarka-- did you hate her, too? |
29768 | And you,he said,"what is wrong with you?" |
29768 | Are you afraid, beloved? |
29768 | Are you aware that our chances of ever getting back to Earth are smaller than you ought to have dreamed of taking? |
29768 | Are you ready, gentlemen? |
29768 | Are you willing to help, to try to get to Fellows and your city? |
29768 | Because I said you did n''t want to meet the young senorita who loved you when she saw you downstairs? 29768 But have n''t you made any attempt to get out of here-- to escape?" |
29768 | But how, if she passes the people of the Gens of Dalis through the flames, will she retain her sovereignty? |
29768 | But how,said Sarka at last,"are we to be sure? |
29768 | But is n''t there any way around it? 29768 But where are they taking us? |
29768 | But-- Charles,she asked hopefully,"is-- is it really all right, now?" |
29768 | Can such things be possible? |
29768 | Can you find your way to him-- to your city? |
29768 | Can you get us each a ray- gun? 29768 Can you glimpse a bullet passing you?" |
29768 | Can you rescue us? |
29768 | D''yuh think I was born simple? |
29768 | Did he? 29768 Did you note carefully,"she said,"those aircars which were partially destroyed by our ray directors and atom- disintegrators?" |
29768 | Did you note that no men, formed like our own, no creatures of any sort whatever, fell from the cars? |
29768 | Disintegrated? |
29768 | Do n''t you know you''ll get wrinkles if you scowl like that? 29768 Do n''t you think it is time we tried this new experiment?" |
29768 | Do you know how to use them? |
29768 | Do you know what we''re up against? |
29768 | Do you realize the risk you''re running, young woman? |
29768 | Do you realize what this means, Kendrick? 29768 Do you think I''m as dumb as that, Nat Lee? |
29768 | Does The Master manage things so? |
29768 | Does it occur to you,he asked grimly,"that it''s too important a matter for us to have any scruples about? |
29768 | Eh? |
29768 | English? |
29768 | Erebos? |
29768 | Ever hear of''getting married?'' |
29768 | Fellows was rather a buddy of you two, was n''t he? |
29768 | From Earth? |
29768 | Get down? |
29768 | Going crazy already? |
29768 | Going down? |
29768 | Has n''t it dawned that you were a little too near our own field with that machine of yours? 29768 How about the cellar?" |
29768 | How deep do you suppose it is? |
29768 | How do the people themselves get off? |
29768 | How do we get out? 29768 How do we go? |
29768 | How do we know,Sarka almost whispered it,"that she is, originally, of the Moon? |
29768 | How do you mean? 29768 How far do you think we must drop?" |
29768 | How many times can they be fired without reloading? |
29768 | How would you like a long parachute drop back to Earth? |
29768 | I do not know, but... you mean... you mean...? |
29768 | I remember, son, and now?... |
29768 | I say, Jamison, did you know Paula and I were to be married? |
29768 | I wonder,said Bell slowly, and very grimly,"if that''s The Master?" |
29768 | I? |
29768 | If the Black Caesar dies will you take me back to Earth again? 29768 If-- if it''s really over,"said Paula hopefully,"Charles--""What?" |
29768 | It is rather odd, is n''t it? |
29768 | Know what it is? |
29768 | Leland is in solitary confinement? |
29768 | Look for it? |
29768 | My dear Professor, ca n''t you really guess? |
29768 | My dear man, is n''t that my business? |
29768 | No, I did n''t,he admitted;"but where on earth did they come from, and what are they doing here?" |
29768 | Norman-- how by all that''s holy did you get here? |
29768 | Not the daughter of Henderson Blake? |
29768 | On Eros? |
29768 | Or would you prefer a steak? |
29768 | Ready? |
29768 | Say, what yuh- all tryin''to hand me? |
29768 | See this? 29768 Spooky place, is n''t it?" |
29768 | Spying, eh? |
29768 | Suppose he should come here? |
29768 | Surely the proletariat has already triumphed on earth? |
29768 | That escalator ray-- do you know how they use it? |
29768 | That''s what? |
29768 | The Ralas-- you mean these frog- men? |
29768 | The edge of the satellite''s atmosphere? |
29768 | The matter? |
29768 | The-- who? |
29768 | Then Fellows is in your city now? |
29768 | Then how--? |
29768 | Then this shaft is over a half- mile deep, you think? |
29768 | Then what''s your theory, Brent? |
29768 | Then you''re, going to attack the Rala city now? |
29768 | Then you''ve thought of a way? |
29768 | Then you-- you think those round buttons are connected with the escalator rays? |
29768 | There''s no way in and what could be in there? 29768 This crystal sphere then, is capable of bringing to our eyes and ears the happenings of centuries past?" |
29768 | Uh? |
29768 | W- what is it? |
29768 | Want to scatter it and start it growing in a half- dozen places? |
29768 | We watch? |
29768 | Well, Brent? |
29768 | Well, what do you think now? |
29768 | Well, what do you want? |
29768 | Well, who are you? |
29768 | What are the round buttons for? |
29768 | What care I if I become a prisoner on the Moon, if you are with me? |
29768 | What did you think of that woman? |
29768 | What do you advise? |
29768 | What do you want, then? |
29768 | What does that mean? |
29768 | What hope? |
29768 | What is happening? |
29768 | What is it, Jaska? |
29768 | What is it, beloved? |
29768 | What is it? |
29768 | What is the use of this secret dome? |
29768 | What on earth do you suppose that is? |
29768 | What other theory can account for their disappearance? |
29768 | What possible hope? |
29768 | What the hell''s going on here? |
29768 | What''ll I do with this devil, Bell? |
29768 | What''s the matter? |
29768 | What''s the matter? |
29768 | What''s wrong, old- timer? |
29768 | What,he asked boldly, in the language of Earth,"does the traitor Dalis say?" |
29768 | What-- who is this? |
29768 | What? 29768 What? |
29768 | Where are you? |
29768 | Where do you wish to arrive? |
29768 | Where in time is that laboratory of Leland''s? |
29768 | Where is that? |
29768 | Where''d you get it? |
29768 | Where''s Axelson? |
29768 | Which buttons control the invisibility? |
29768 | Which door? |
29768 | Who could escape the city of the Ralas? 29768 Who''s loony now?" |
29768 | Why did n''t you wake me up? 29768 Why do n''t you break in the door?" |
29768 | Why do n''t you kill us, too? |
29768 | Why do you suppose it did n''t work? |
29768 | Why not call the police? |
29768 | Why not come? |
29768 | Why? 29768 Will she make it, father?" |
29768 | Wo n''t they have guards out? |
29768 | Wonder if they are humans? |
29768 | Yes, but where is he? |
29768 | Yes? |
29768 | You are men from Earth? |
29768 | You can manage without me, father? |
29768 | You do n''t want to go down there, do you? |
29768 | You do n''t? 29768 You know English-- you understand me?" |
29768 | You know your orders, Benson? 29768 You looked for a gun?" |
29768 | You mean that during the period of transposition you are invisible? |
29768 | You mean...? |
29768 | You think we are in friendly hands? |
29768 | You trust me now? |
29768 | You''re amused? |
29768 | You''re not going to be cross about it, are you? |
29768 | You-- will be able to think about me sometimes,asked Paula wistfully,"instead of about The Master always?" |
29768 | You-- you mean--? |
29768 | Your orders are clear? |
29768 | _ Did_ he know? |
29768 | _ Vdes son de Porvenir, no es verdad?_Jamison hiccoughed, as one who has been out and been drunken ought to do. |
29768 | ***** But could Sarka and Jaska turn their new- found knowledge to their own use? |
29768 | ***** But where was the enemy? |
29768 | *****"Where is your Kommandant?" |
29768 | *****"Why not? |
29768 | 1? |
29768 | And be engulfed? |
29768 | And do you imagine The Master does n''t know we''re here?" |
29768 | And now, may I ask, are you ready to return to your own land?" |
29768 | And then....""And then--?" |
29768 | And this woman clothed in radiance-- who was she? |
29768 | And we''ll not even be bent, let alone busted?" |
29768 | And what? |
29768 | And would the improvised broadcasting apparatus of the area stand the stupendous strain that would be placed upon it if the ray came down? |
29768 | Any more than that?" |
29768 | Are you afraid to attempt it? |
29768 | Are you going to kill them?" |
29768 | Are you ready?" |
29768 | But did you see her eyes? |
29768 | But since I am to die so shortly, why not go mad, if it gives me pleasure?" |
29768 | But since the cubes could forestall his transmission of thought, and perhaps could read and understand thoughts, how was he to tell Jaska? |
29768 | But the Gnomes, what of them? |
29768 | But was there some truth in the universal fear, after all? |
29768 | But what basis was there for such a fantastic hope? |
29768 | But what was it? |
29768 | But what was the meaning of this strange imprisonment? |
29768 | But where is Leland?" |
29768 | But would n''t it make him drop that too? |
29768 | But you''re likely to let go at any second, are n''t you?" |
29768 | Could n''t they be used in some way? |
29768 | Could the force- shells be fired under water? |
29768 | Could we ever find the plane again?" |
29768 | Dalis had known the secret sign manual of these two; but would the intelligence of the cubes comprehend it? |
29768 | Disintegrated and reintegrated? |
29768 | Do Earth men mind death? |
29768 | Do n''t know what a muskrat is, huh? |
29768 | Do n''t you see? |
29768 | Do you have the issues for 1928, too? |
29768 | Do you imagine that the plane was n''t seen when it came in the Cape? |
29768 | Do you know the difference between the brain of a man and that of an anthropoid ape? |
29768 | Do you think it possible that, with all his Gens, he may go over to the Moon- men, form an alliance with them?" |
29768 | Do you think the military authorities will be able to cope with it?" |
29768 | Does she not look too much like our people, to be from another world entirely?" |
29768 | Feeling fit?" |
29768 | Fool-- why had n''t he thought of it? |
29768 | For do you realize that, unless we do so, we will never again see home?" |
29768 | Got any plans, Bell?" |
29768 | Had he dreamed of the hammer blow of that forty- five caliber bullet? |
29768 | Had the people of the disc learned of their preparations to counter the attack? |
29768 | Had they been discovered? |
29768 | He knew our secret code, did he not? |
29768 | Hell, can damn frog- men keep us here? |
29768 | How could it be done? |
29768 | How does it feel?" |
29768 | How is he?" |
29768 | How many would be brave enough to take a gamble like that, on a fellow''s mere supposition? |
29768 | How much does that figure in dollars and cents, Frank?" |
29768 | How''re we going to get down?" |
29768 | I wonder if, reading my thoughts, they would obey?" |
29768 | I wonder what it is?" |
29768 | If so, what is the cost including charges? |
29768 | If the Gens of Dalis were voluntarily bathed in the lake of white flames, would they become as Luar? |
29768 | If you charge no more than$ 3.00 would you send them C. O. D.? |
29768 | In minutes, it seemed, he was demanding:"How much can we take? |
29768 | Is Axelson in the house?" |
29768 | Is Dalis arranging a treacherous truce with the Moon- men?" |
29768 | Is he such a terrible man, this Black Caesar?" |
29768 | Is it not 2017? |
29768 | Is she safe?" |
29768 | It looks like a massive column just lighter than everything around it, yet so little lighter that you have to watch closely to see it at all?" |
29768 | It''s a long gamble, but if we can get hold of some of The Master''s poison.... Do you see?" |
29768 | Jaska went on:"Note the gleaming thing on the ground, right below the aircar? |
29768 | May I ask that you be patient until then?" |
29768 | May I see your hands again?" |
29768 | May I send for a certain medicine which will dispose of those symptoms in a very short time?" |
29768 | Might I suggest that you bring him here, trust him in all details, and let him take my place wherever possible? |
29768 | No? |
29768 | Note that column of light, scarcely lighter than the light which surrounds it everywhere? |
29768 | Now that I think of it, Jaska, how did Dalis know our secret code of fingers?" |
29768 | Now then-- will it work?" |
29768 | Now, what do we do with you? |
29768 | Of little children, even, crouching, and crushing and rending the tender flesh of other little children? |
29768 | On a day like this? |
29768 | Or would it sear through their makeshift defense, plunging them and the whole great metropolis into oblivion? |
29768 | Ready, Sarja?" |
29768 | Should he throw himself tooth and nail on the monster? |
29768 | Still in Theros?" |
29768 | That Dalis was somehow able to communicate with the Moon- men in their own language, or through their own signals?" |
29768 | That good enough for you?" |
29768 | That we can-- and will-- make you talk?" |
29768 | The revolutions, the rebellions that have made men free, were they pretty things to watch? |
29768 | The way we came?" |
29768 | There was a girl in Stamford.... Tell me, is it true that this is the year 2044 and that the proletariat has not yet triumphed?" |
29768 | These were people of the Moon: but if these were Moon- men, what, or who, were those gleaming cubes? |
29768 | This is satisfactory, I presume?" |
29768 | To what dread rendezvous were they going? |
29768 | Very clever; but what is the reason for it all?" |
29768 | Want to take a drive out there with me?" |
29768 | Was he succeeding? |
29768 | Was he to be the Prometheus who stole fire from Olympus, the Samson who toppled down the temple? |
29768 | Was he to bring the world to ruin, as a result of his blind groping after this new giant of power? |
29768 | Was it complacence or suspicion that stirred the liquid in the cyst so smoothly? |
29768 | Was it laughing at him? |
29768 | Was it susceptible to flattery? |
29768 | Was the Gens of Dalis being burned alive? |
29768 | Was the sound a warning? |
29768 | Was there even any hope? |
29768 | Was this bluish light in the abyss the source of the light in the Cone? |
29768 | Were some of those invisible little creatures on their trail? |
29768 | Were they observatories of some ancient race, placed thus to pierce the mysteries of outer space? |
29768 | What did it mean? |
29768 | What do you say?" |
29768 | What had brought it? |
29768 | What is your answer to my offer?" |
29768 | What next?" |
29768 | What on earth could it be? |
29768 | What say you?" |
29768 | What should they do? |
29768 | What was it? |
29768 | What was its purpose? |
29768 | What was its source, what the composition of the column? |
29768 | What was the meaning of this? |
29768 | What were they? |
29768 | What works the harbor door?" |
29768 | What year is this? |
29768 | What? |
29768 | When did this remarkably original idea occur to you?" |
29768 | When do we eat?" |
29768 | Whence came the glow? |
29768 | Where are we, anyway?" |
29768 | Where are we? |
29768 | Where are you, anyway? |
29768 | Where had the cube gone? |
29768 | Where was it from? |
29768 | Where''s your nerve, man?" |
29768 | Where, Sarka wondered, were the people of the Gens of Dalis? |
29768 | Where, save for the few guards at the house of Luar, were the people of the Gens of Dalis? |
29768 | Whither were they leading them? |
29768 | Who indeed would believe him if he told the story? |
29768 | Who knows? |
29768 | Why not take the train?" |
29768 | Why, of all people on earth, had he alone been singled out for this disclosure? |
29768 | Why?" |
29768 | Will you and these men join me, or will you die as the Moon man died?" |
29768 | Will you be seated? |
29768 | Will you direct me?" |
29768 | Will you risk it, to get back to Earth?" |
29768 | With what? |
29768 | Wonder what it was that frightened him?" |
29768 | Would that stupendous ray be hurled back upon itself? |
29768 | Would the proud old Earth have to come to that? |
29768 | Would you care to see our plant?" |
29768 | Would you like, Senor, to think in after days of that pleasant city filled with men and women tearing each other like beasts? |
29768 | Would you prefer that I give him the task of subduing your nation?" |
29768 | You fellows have seen pistols?" |
29768 | You have hit upon a rather profound scientific principle, yes?" |
29768 | You mean to say we are to be shot to the surface through the intervening rock and earth? |
29768 | You never heard of wild beasts sleeping in beds like these, did you?" |
29768 | You say three others vanished as I did? |
29768 | You think it''s somebody playing a hoax on Earth? |
29768 | You think that wiping out of China was just an Earth- joke?" |
29768 | You understand? |
29768 | You would have become a billionaire, do n''t you see?" |
29768 | he sent mentally,"what does it mean?" |
39532 | Why seek ye the living among the dead? |
39532 | 1589:-- Does Worm eat Worme? |
39532 | A second he took, she departed-- what then? |
39532 | But are not lilies, which the valleys hide, Perfect as cedars, tho''the valley''s pride? |
39532 | Does sympathetic fear their breasts alarm? |
39532 | Does worm eat Worme? |
39532 | Does youth, does beauty, read the line? |
39532 | For why? |
39532 | He could not work, nor fight,--what then? |
39532 | How few can conscientiously declare Their acts have been as honourably fair? |
39532 | Now, Rebel, direct thy unavailing Fires at Heaven, Art thou afraid to fight against God-- thou Who hast been a Murderer of His People? |
39532 | Robert Burns wrote the following epitaph on John Dove, innkeeper, Mauchline:-- Here lies JOHNNY PIGEON: What was his religion? |
39532 | The chest of wood was very good,-- Who says so of the other? |
39532 | Then who shall say so good a fellow Was only leather and prunella? |
39532 | Thrice twenty mounted Moors he overthrew, Singly, on foot, some wounded, some he slew, Dispersed the rest,--what more could Samson do? |
39532 | To gather laurels in their greenest bloom, To honour life and sanctify the tomb? |
39532 | What man can pause and charge this senseless dust With fraud, or subtilty, or aught unjust? |
39532 | Whence this ambition, whence this proud desire, This love of fame, this longing to aspire? |
39532 | Whether doth Cave here lie in Grave, Or Grave here lie in Cave; If Grave in Cave here buried lie, Then Grave, where is thy victory? |
39532 | Who now with Hallelujahs Sound Like him can make the roofs rebound? |
39532 | Why should we grieve life''s but an airy toy? |
39532 | Would not''rare Ben''himself have acknowledged this a good specimen of''what verse can say in a little?'' |
39532 | Ye weeping friends, let me advise, Abate your tears and dry your eyes; For what avails a flood of tears? |
39532 | is dead and gone, What signifies to cry? |
39532 | poor Buckett gone? |
35334 | ''Chan, what is this?'' 35334 ''Of what use are these boots?'' |
35334 | ''Of what use is the cap?'' 35334 ''Who art thou, maiden?'' |
35334 | And his wife was troubled, and said,''What is now to be done?'' 35334 And what have the learned said?" |
35334 | And what is thy condition, O uncle? |
35334 | And what,asked the wolf,"is the story of the falcon and the partridge?" |
35334 | And you give the thieves a full and free pardon? |
35334 | Are you tired of looking down at your last,cried another,"that you are now looking up at the planets?" |
35334 | At these words the young man said,''Thou art then their daughter?'' 35334 At this narrative, related by Kaab el- Ahbár, Mo''áwiyeh wondered, and he said to him,''Can any one of mankind arrive at that city?'' |
35334 | Do n''t you know Ahmed the cobbler? |
35334 | Do you think it possible I can suffer such gross wrong and injustice without complaining, and making it known to all the world? |
35334 | Does your Majesty require the thieves or the treasure? 35334 Hadst thou been slain,"asked he of the intelligent brute,"how should I have accomplished my enterprise?" |
35334 | How shall I,thought Ameen,"prevent my weakness being discovered? |
35334 | How? 35334 Most wonderful man,"he said,"will you honour my abode with your presence? |
35334 | Shortly after this, the three companions returned home, and said to Massang,''Now, Massang, thou hast surely had something to suffer?'' 35334 Tell me, Ahmed,"said the king,"who has stolen my treasure?" |
35334 | They now demanded of him whom they had recalled to life,''In what manner wert thou slain?'' 35334 Thus thinking, he inquired of the painter,''By what means can I reach the kingdom of the Tângâri?'' |
35334 | Very well,said the king;"but who were they? |
35334 | Well, Ahmed,said his wife, as he entered,"what news at Court?" |
35334 | What are you doing? |
35334 | What can you have to confess to me? |
35334 | What may this import? |
35334 | What proof of love,exclaimed poor Ahmed,"can you desire which I will not give?" |
35334 | Will thy cobbling, thou mean, spiritless wretch, ever enable me to go to the Hemmâm like the wife of the chief astrologer? 35334 ''And what is it, O Prince of the Faithful?'' 35334 ''Good youth,''exclaimed they both,''whence comest thou-- whither goest thou?'' 35334 ''Oh, what, there is somebody sitting there?'' 35334 ''Shall we have a tree for our Chan?'' 35334 ''What hast thou learned?'' 35334 ''What is it that ye seek here?'' 35334 ''What is this?'' 35334 ''What is this?'' 35334 ''What means this?'' 35334 ''Whence comest thou?'' 35334 ''Where are your husbands?'' 35334 ''Wherefore,''cried he,''dost thou carry that sword in thine hand?'' 35334 ''Wherefore,''cried he,''dost thou hold this hammer in thy hand?'' 35334 ''Wherefore,''inquired they,''do you thus dispute?'' 35334 ''Wherefore,''thought the minister,''does the wife of the Chan betake herself to this spot every day?'' 35334 ''Who art thou, maiden?'' 35334 ''Who art thou?'' 35334 ''Who art thou?'' 35334 ''Who art thou?'' 35334 ''Who''s there?'' 35334 ''Who,''said the old woman,''is the first in the assemblage this day?'' 35334 ''Will ye be unto me as sons?'' 35334 Addressing those around him, he said,Do not you now see the extent of the knowledge of Noosheerwân? |
35334 | Am I to experience such prosperity after such adversity?" |
35334 | And a preacher of the true religion invited us to the right way; But we opposed him, and said, Is there no refuge from it? |
35334 | And he said to the Jinn,"O my brother, what is the name of this spring?" |
35334 | And the Chan inquired of her,''What can be done for you, my noble spouse?'' |
35334 | And the man said,''What is the matter now?'' |
35334 | And when he stepped forth out of the bird, his companions asked him,''Hast thou thoroughly accomplished all that thou didst desire?'' |
35334 | And when they were thus saved, the maiden said to the youth,''Come with me, I pray you, unto the palace?'' |
35334 | Art thou she? |
35334 | But before the man could speak the fox cried out,"Dost thou not know that the recompense for good is always evil? |
35334 | But hast thou, O uncle, O comely- faced, any business in which to employ me?" |
35334 | But he said,"Know ye not that the kings of the world are obedient to me, and under my authority, and that no one who is in it disobeyeth my command?" |
35334 | But the Arschi said,''Who could have told you so? |
35334 | But what good hast thou done in behalf of this snake, to render thee worthy of punishment?" |
35334 | By what means am I to find them?" |
35334 | Can not you fill the bag and bring it away?" |
35334 | From whence have you arrived with so lovely an appearance? |
35334 | Has anything then befallen the Chan''s son?'' |
35334 | Hast thou considered me a true friend unto thee when I am an enemy who rejoiceth in thy misfortune? |
35334 | Have I not rendered thee a benefit? |
35334 | How can it be proper for him that is wise to speak falsely? |
35334 | How can it become an intelligent man to state an untruth?" |
35334 | How could a large snake such as thou be contained in so small a space?" |
35334 | How could he ascertain their exact number? |
35334 | How far, then, art thou from profiting thyself, and how far am I from receiving thine advice? |
35334 | How, then, dost thou hope, with thy little sense and thine ignorance, that I will deliver thee, when thou hast heard what rude language I used? |
35334 | If I do what she requires of me, how do I know that there will be any left?'' |
35334 | If the Chan and the wife of the Chan remain, what need is there of their son? |
35334 | Knowest thou not, O ignorant wolf, that the author of the proverb saith,''He who thinks not of results will not be secure from perils?''" |
35334 | On hearing this, the man in the hayrick crept out as far as his breast, and when the people thronged around him and asked,''What hast thou learned?'' |
35334 | On my part there was faithfulness, Why then this injustice upon thine?" |
35334 | She then said to him,"Seest thou not these servants and soldiers and wealth and treasures and hoards?" |
35334 | So the wolf raised his head towards him, and said,"Is it from thy compassion for me that thou hast wept, O Abu- l- Hoseyn?" |
35334 | So the wolf said to the fox,"What is the proof of that which thou hast declared?" |
35334 | So the wolf said,"And what is thy proposal that I am to accept?" |
35334 | So the young man wondered thereat, and asked,"How shall I return to my family?" |
35334 | So the youth said to him,"O uncle, hast thou known me before now?" |
35334 | The first man, therefore, said to the other,''Why hast thou not begun by curing thyself?'' |
35334 | The fox replied,"Thou seemest an intelligent person, why then dost thou tell me an untruth? |
35334 | The fox, putting on the garb of astonishment, said,"How can I believe this thing? |
35334 | The man cried out,"But how is this? |
35334 | The old dame''s cat requested to know what rich meat was, and what taste wheat- cakes had? |
35334 | The son of the Chan replied to these inquiries of the maiden,''Do you not know that they are now celebrating the feast of my funeral?'' |
35334 | The women replied,''What have ye to give in exchange for strong liquor?'' |
35334 | The youth asked,"And what is it, O uncle?" |
35334 | Then said her husband,''Where is my birdhouse?'' |
35334 | Then spake the Chan, full of joy, to the magician,''How can I reward you for the great deed that thou hast done?'' |
35334 | Then they betook themselves to their house, and at night- time the wife of the magician asked him,''How camest thou to be presented with such gifts?'' |
35334 | They proceeded together to the tree; and the snake, opening its mouth, said,"O tree, what is the recompense for good?" |
35334 | This bag I could hardly manage when empty; when full, it would require twenty strong men to carry it; what shall I do? |
35334 | This feast would last for a week or more; and while enjoying it she was wo nt to exclaim--"Am I, O God, when I contemplate this, in a dream or awake? |
35334 | This horseman said to him,"Who brought you, O young man, unto this place?" |
35334 | Thus thinking to himself, the elder called out to the magicians,"Saw ye ever a horse like unto this? |
35334 | Thus thinking, the Baktschi said,"Wherefore, O dove, fliest thou hither in such alarm?" |
35334 | What can a woman do without these two things? |
35334 | What could poor Ahmed do? |
35334 | What form shall I assume?" |
35334 | What have you taken?" |
35334 | What prevents your giving a proof of friendship, by taking me with you when next you visit the palace? |
35334 | What thinkest thou of him?'' |
35334 | When his wife returned and saw the bladder of butter upon the shelf, she asked,''Where found you this bladder of butter?'' |
35334 | When the sun bowed down towards the west the bird returned home, and said to his wife,''What, art thou already returned?'' |
35334 | When they came up to the cow, the snake, opening its mouth, said,"O cow, what is the recompense for benefits received?" |
35334 | Whence come you?'' |
35334 | Where have you acquired such a comeliness? |
35334 | Where, then, has my young brother found so beautiful a horse? |
35334 | Wherefore, then, should I not aid in thy destruction when thou art of the associates of the devil? |
35334 | Why, then, is such to be my recompense? |
35334 | Wilt thou be our wife? |
35334 | and how came you by that glorious strength?" |
35334 | and how can I refuse to ride thereon?" |
35334 | and night after night, without ever once being mistaken? |
35334 | and what have they done with my gold and jewels?" |
35334 | are we not linked in the ties of kindred? |
35334 | bethought the Baktschi to himself,"that this dove has fled hither pursued by seven hawks?" |
35334 | cried the Chan,''art thou returned from the kingdom of the Tângâri?'' |
35334 | exclaimed she;''was I not this night with my father and mother-- and did I not retire to sleep on a bed of silk?'' |
35334 | friend Ahmed,"said one,"have you worked till your head is turned?" |
35334 | has a woman given birth to a son in the stable of the elephants? |
35334 | he exclaimed,''art thou indeed the son of Arschi?'' |
35334 | how is it that thou hopest to effect my safety and thine own, that thou askest me to give thee a delay? |
35334 | shall this maiden be devoted to a spiritual or worldly life? |
35334 | she exclaimed,"have I not the sacred claims of a neighbour upon you? |
35334 | that thou knowest not a stratagem by means of which to save thyself from destruction? |
35334 | was there ever such a man?'' |
35334 | what success?" |
35334 | wherefore didst thou rejoice in my misfortune? |
35334 | who, indeed, would dwell with an old Arschi?'' |
29198 | A watchman killed in the night? 29198 About here, I should think.... Have you a drill? |
29198 | Allow them to land without resistance? 29198 And now,"he said dryly,"I suppose the Señor Francia will receive me?" |
29198 | And that dream? |
29198 | And that? |
29198 | And this plan of yours? |
29198 | And this secret of yours? |
29198 | And what does the government want of me now? |
29198 | And your honor? |
29198 | Are you afraid, Dalis? |
29198 | Are you sure you''ll get in, buddy? |
29198 | Astronomer? |
29198 | At what time do you estimate that the flight of the Earth in its orbit will be materially affected? |
29198 | Bluffing? |
29198 | Bond,he asked,"do you know Jim Carpenter?" |
29198 | But have you read of the loss of the NY-18? |
29198 | But how could that be? |
29198 | But is it? |
29198 | But supposing for a moment your mad scheme were possible, who should say whom, of all the earth''s people, should be saved, whom sacrificed? |
29198 | But where, then, was there any point in my giving to people the Secret of Life? |
29198 | But where,interrupted the sarcastic voice of Dalis,"are these new lands of which you speak? |
29198 | But why have they not landed and waged their war right here without warning, if that is what they now intend to do? |
29198 | But why,queried Sarka,"does she draw no nearer?" |
29198 | But, how about the acceleration? |
29198 | But, if we grant you the mastery, will you heed our advice if it is good? |
29198 | But,objected Hart,"the messages were in English, were they not?" |
29198 | Ca n''t you use the rocket tubes? |
29198 | Charles-- you-- you have been poisoned like the rest? |
29198 | Could it have been just imagination? 29198 Could the human body stand up under the strain?" |
29198 | Darling,he said,"are you badly hurt?" |
29198 | Do n''t you believe? |
29198 | Do n''t you remember me? 29198 Do n''t you remember, Pete, that the one which captured us and took us out of the hole was red while in the hole and then turned purple? |
29198 | Do n''t you see? |
29198 | Do we follow this man who promises us life again? 29198 Do you mean to tell me that we are more than sixteen miles in the air?" |
29198 | Do you not realize that within a matter of hours, some Gens must be sent into battle? 29198 Do you not wish now that you had gone out with your people as their leader?" |
29198 | Do you really believe this enemy comes from another planet? |
29198 | Do you really think...? |
29198 | Do you remember Professor Oradel? 29198 Does it not thrill you, O Dalis?" |
29198 | Great God, do you see father? |
29198 | Has the time arrived? |
29198 | Have we changed direction? |
29198 | Have you a radio beacon? |
29198 | Have you any idea of which direction to go? |
29198 | Have you noticed that? |
29198 | He is the youngest of the Spokesmen, and what better test is there for him than this? |
29198 | Hear the latest news broadcast? |
29198 | How about shells? 29198 How can anyone think that a fossil creature, penned in such a cell for thousands and thousands of years, could do any harm?" |
29198 | How can he work from a fixed position to make his attacks on the earth at such widely separated points? |
29198 | How can you tell where these heat beams are when they are turned on? |
29198 | How could you have foreseen such a thing? |
29198 | How did you know,demanded Ortiz suddenly,"that I serve because I despair?" |
29198 | How fast are we going? |
29198 | How''s this place opened? 29198 How,"he demanded,"can you return the Earth to its orbit, even granting you are able to take this initial step? |
29198 | How? |
29198 | I am wondering,said Sarka,"if you, my father, and you Dalis, have noted the peculiar appendages of the Aircars?" |
29198 | I? |
29198 | If it is a liquid, how will you prevent it from flowing back into the hole you have opened? |
29198 | Is he dead? |
29198 | Is n''t this a hell of a world, Bell? 29198 Is that coal in the biggest one with the dark center?" |
29198 | Is there anything I can do, sir? |
29198 | It is peculiar that one should love any woman,_ señores_--or do you, Señor Bell, find it natural? 29198 Just as a matter of curiosity,"said Bell mildly,"what is the excuse given on the flying field for this performance? |
29198 | Just coming out of it, Jack? |
29198 | Marie, dear,I asked gently, forcing the lump from my throat as best I could,"do n''t you know me? |
29198 | Marie,I said,"where are Jim and Jackie?" |
29198 | Mr. Barry? 29198 Now, Señor, what can I do that will serve you? |
29198 | Now, my father,queried Sarka again, telepathically,"what direction do we travel?" |
29198 | Now,I said,"how quickly can you put another object in the trap, re- seal the opening, and release the object?" |
29198 | Oh, Lord,I groaned,"ca n''t I forget the office for one evening?" |
29198 | Red? |
29198 | Rooney? 29198 Scared, Pete?" |
29198 | See? 29198 She''ll recover?" |
29198 | So,retorted Dalis,"you think me mad? |
29198 | Son, what is this thing you plan? |
29198 | Superstition is curious, is n''t it? |
29198 | Suppose we meet with Hadley''s fate? |
29198 | Surely no one from our earth has made the trip to one of the other planets? |
29198 | Take back the Secret which is known to- day to every son and daughter of woman? 29198 That would do it,"said Dalis, finding his voice at last;"but how would you control the course the Earth would take, thus thrown out of its orbit?" |
29198 | Then they wo n''t be looking for us? |
29198 | Then why ca n''t we see the red beam? |
29198 | Then why, if you had the means in the beginning to enforce your will upon us, confer with us at all? |
29198 | War? 29198 Well,"demanded Avery,"what''s all the show? |
29198 | Well-- what do you think of them? |
29198 | Well? |
29198 | Wha- a- at? |
29198 | What are you doing-- committing me? |
29198 | What are you going to do, Charles? |
29198 | What better test could be given than that which I am proposing? |
29198 | What do you mean?--a death ray evolved? |
29198 | What fuel do you use? |
29198 | What in hell are you doing here, Bell? 29198 What is it, Jim?" |
29198 | What is it, Jim? |
29198 | What is it, dear? |
29198 | What is it, dear? |
29198 | What is it, ma''am? |
29198 | What is it? |
29198 | What is it? |
29198 | What is it? |
29198 | What is to be done? |
29198 | What is your power? |
29198 | What made you ask? |
29198 | What now? |
29198 | What on earth? |
29198 | What say you, O Gens of Cleric? |
29198 | What space flyer? |
29198 | What to do now? |
29198 | What will your Gens say, O Dalis? 29198 What would happen?" |
29198 | What''s he up to now? |
29198 | What''s that? |
29198 | What''s this I hear? |
29198 | What''s your name? |
29198 | What, then,said Dalis,"do you think is the purpose of those appendages?" |
29198 | What? |
29198 | What? |
29198 | When all the world knows the Secret, when even children learn it before they are capable of walking? |
29198 | Where are we? |
29198 | Where else can they be from? |
29198 | Where then are the wrecked vessels? |
29198 | Who are they, to make war against a united Universe? |
29198 | Who is this enemy? |
29198 | Who, then, will be blamed if she does? 29198 Who, then, will control the further flight of the Earth?" |
29198 | Who-- who is it? |
29198 | Why do you not go out and lead your Gens? 29198 Why do you speak to me of The Master?" |
29198 | Why not,he began,"take away from men the Secret of Life, so that they will die, as formerly, when the world was young?" |
29198 | Why not? |
29198 | Why, miss, what is there to be wary of? 29198 Why-- why--"I stammered,"ca n''t you see? |
29198 | Why? |
29198 | Why? |
29198 | Will the_ Pioneer_ be ready? |
29198 | Will you take over? |
29198 | Will you, then, Dalis, allow your Gens to be led to glory by a woman? 29198 Would they?" |
29198 | Yes? |
29198 | You are Mr. Hartley Jones? |
29198 | You are certain that none escaped? |
29198 | You are the representative of the Council that we commanded to appear? |
29198 | You are working on something? |
29198 | You believe we have the power to do all this? |
29198 | You didt know, then, that your father''s death was arranged? |
29198 | You have a bomb in readiness? |
29198 | You hear? 29198 You know why our Ray Directors and Atom Disintegrators do not work, or work but poorly? |
29198 | You make your own fuel enroute? |
29198 | You mean work? |
29198 | You saw the same thing? |
29198 | You see? |
29198 | You see? |
29198 | You think you could reach a great enough velocity to escape the gravitational pull of the earth? |
29198 | You will get a revolver before you search further? |
29198 | You would have forced us into war? |
29198 | You''ll be careful, wo n''t you, Rooney? |
29198 | _ What?_***** Kellen nodded his magnificent old head gravely. |
29198 | *****"And is it not, Dalis,"replied Sarka the First, softly,"for this, really, that you have come to me? |
29198 | *****"We?" |
29198 | *****"What do you make it?" |
29198 | *****"What''s up?" |
29198 | A friend? |
29198 | A woman, moreover, who has duped you?" |
29198 | Aal? |
29198 | Against whom? |
29198 | All men are at their stations?" |
29198 | And a bit of quartz?" |
29198 | And how about our authors? |
29198 | And tell me, pray, if it is not true that you plan for the Sarkas their choice of the best and newest worlds of the Universe?" |
29198 | And where had his blood gone to? |
29198 | And you, Durce? |
29198 | And:"What of it?" |
29198 | Any other orders?" |
29198 | Are you ready, O my father, and father''s father?" |
29198 | At any rate, what better expedient was there to offer? |
29198 | Boler? |
29198 | But der subjects? |
29198 | But how about the bonds?" |
29198 | But how accomplish it?" |
29198 | But how to attack these formidable Aircars successfully? |
29198 | But since you do not know it, who now is master?" |
29198 | But to what avail? |
29198 | But what could their new, terrible weapon be? |
29198 | But what do you think of this mess?" |
29198 | But what is it that you wish me to do? |
29198 | CHAPTER IX_ The Attack of the Yellow Stars_"Why should I safeguard Jaska?" |
29198 | Could a person remember his own death in a former incarnation? |
29198 | Dalis, are you going to allow your Gens to go into action against these Outsiders, without the inspiration of your personal leadership?" |
29198 | Did I ever let you down in anything?" |
29198 | Did it never occur to you that the rocket motor is built on a disintegrating ray principle?" |
29198 | Did you use all you had?" |
29198 | Did you use thorium?" |
29198 | Do n''t want to quit, do you, George?" |
29198 | Do n''t you know where they are?" |
29198 | Do we follow this man who promises us that once again we shall dwell in plenty, without the blood of relatives and neighbors on our hands? |
29198 | Do you refuse, O Dalis, to send your Gens against the Moon?" |
29198 | Do you think you are teaching me anything-- about my own instrument?" |
29198 | Drop in and see us, will you? |
29198 | Eitel?" |
29198 | Had there been some other reason? |
29198 | Has he got you too?" |
29198 | Has that fiend caught you too?" |
29198 | Have you any news of what The Master plans?" |
29198 | He could see the expressions of unutterable agony on their faces, could see their cheeks turn black with-- what? |
29198 | Hime?" |
29198 | How are you?" |
29198 | How can I describe the sight which met our horrified gaze? |
29198 | How can you use it? |
29198 | How do I know, how does the world know, that you can do what you say you can do?" |
29198 | How had Dalis learned the secret sign- manual of Jaska and Sarka? |
29198 | How keep life on the Earth during its flight on this rainbow- chasing voyage you propose?" |
29198 | How long a time will be required in fitting out the_ Pioneer_ for reliable space flying?" |
29198 | How''d you get here? |
29198 | How''d you like to come along?" |
29198 | I ask you if you will go quietly into the car?" |
29198 | I demanded,"Has anything happened to my family?" |
29198 | I suppose you know what fate awaits you?" |
29198 | I thought of telephoning, but, what was the use? |
29198 | If Cleric does not fear for her to be Spokesman of a Gens, why should I? |
29198 | If an amoeba is that large here, what must an elephant look like? |
29198 | If he was to play up to Ortiz, why did n''t Jamison give him some sign of how he was to do it? |
29198 | If we could, together, devise a way to halt this rotation for as much as a few seconds, what would happen?" |
29198 | If you know, why remain here and watch the destruction of all the people of your Gens?" |
29198 | In the stillness the man''s words came harsh and commanding--"Do you see the cities,"he said,"crumbling to ruins under the cold stars? |
29198 | Inside the Earth? |
29198 | Is it not so?" |
29198 | Is it not so?" |
29198 | Is reincarnation a proven theory, or unproven? |
29198 | Is that clear?" |
29198 | Is that not so?" |
29198 | Makely?" |
29198 | May I ask you?..." |
29198 | May I invite you to be my guest on a little week- end jaunt to the Moon?" |
29198 | May I not accompany you?" |
29198 | Not pretending... what is the word?" |
29198 | Now to the point, I wonder if it is possible for you to obtain Mr. Cummings''permission to have your company publish these two stories? |
29198 | Now what is this great discovery, boy? |
29198 | Now, shall I tell you your secret?" |
29198 | Or is the entire staff subject to The Master?" |
29198 | Or should he still refuse battle-- and perhaps see some lesser Spokesman go forth to win glory and imperishable renown to himself? |
29198 | Or was it that something had happened to him? |
29198 | Prull? |
29198 | Queer, is n''t it? |
29198 | She demands that I assist you and the senorita-- it is the senorita?" |
29198 | Should he go ahead under the common leadership of the Sarkas? |
29198 | Someone has to go; otherwise, how could I prove my point? |
29198 | Stayin''late this evenin''?" |
29198 | Suppose they seared the countryside and the cities and suburbs with rays of horrible nature that would shrivel and blast all that lay in their path? |
29198 | That their revered Spokesman feared to lead them in person?" |
29198 | The fields? |
29198 | The frightful eyes-- had they then been but figments of the imagination? |
29198 | Then what happens to your scheme, Sarka the Third? |
29198 | Think you''ll be scared?" |
29198 | To berate me? |
29198 | To throw at my head mad schemes impossible of accomplishment? |
29198 | Vance? |
29198 | Vardee? |
29198 | Was it some refraction of the light?" |
29198 | What are your orders?" |
29198 | What cared I that the discoveries made in the excavating of the huge metal ring were of inestimable value to science? |
29198 | What difference who is master, so long as success attend our efforts?" |
29198 | What do you wish of me?" |
29198 | What does it mean?" |
29198 | What force could be so powerful that it could even budge so many tons? |
29198 | What have you found?" |
29198 | What if these invaders carried the war to the surface? |
29198 | What is it now?" |
29198 | What is it?" |
29198 | What say ye, Gens of Earth?" |
29198 | What say ye, Spokesmen of the Gens? |
29198 | What think you of the plan, Klaser? |
29198 | What was it?" |
29198 | What''s that got to do with it?" |
29198 | What, then? |
29198 | When is it your wish that we should start?" |
29198 | Where are you staying?" |
29198 | Where else, then?" |
29198 | Where in Sam Hill have you been keeping yourself?" |
29198 | Where now shall we find places for our people who are daily being born in myriads, to live, and love and flourish?" |
29198 | Where''s that door?" |
29198 | Which shall it be, Dalis? |
29198 | Who had murdered Rooney, and why? |
29198 | Why do n''t you drop around and see us one of these days?" |
29198 | Why do you oppose us?" |
29198 | Why do you serve him? |
29198 | Why had she done it? |
29198 | Why had she laughed, and left them, after the betrayal of the Master Beryl into the hands of Dalis? |
29198 | Why not give us several stories which helped to build his glory? |
29198 | Why not have a ballot to what size the magazine shall be? |
29198 | Why? |
29198 | Will you be seated?" |
29198 | Will you give the necessary orders?" |
29198 | Will you unseal the exit?" |
29198 | Will you?" |
29198 | With all connections in place, and all the world''s Beryls attuned to the speed of this one-- what would happen? |
29198 | Would not that also disprove the whole theory of reincarnation if it is true? |
29198 | Would they seize power the moment he moved away from the Beryl Control? |
29198 | You did n''t think I was going to send you alone, did you?" |
29198 | You doubtless recall a proposal you once made to Sarka the First? |
29198 | You fellows built a new one at Newark Airport, did n''t you?" |
29198 | You see? |
29198 | You, Marable, what''s all this mean?" |
29198 | Yuta? |
29198 | _ What Think You All?_ Dear Editor: There is one question I would like to ask. |
29198 | asked Hart,"and where?" |
29198 | he demanded;"what of it? |
21864 | ''Great Heaven, sir,''said I,''how do I know? 21864 ''Sir,''said he, with the sweetest politeness,''can you speak French?'' |
21864 | Ah!--precisely? |
21864 | Am I? |
21864 | And Farraut? |
21864 | And Jean? |
21864 | And how did little Tim behave? |
21864 | And the Union workhouses? 21864 And what is that upon your cheek?" |
21864 | And you went there to get him? |
21864 | Are spirits''lives so short? |
21864 | Are there no prisons? |
21864 | Are there no prisons? |
21864 | Are there no workhouses? |
21864 | Are they still in operation? |
21864 | Are you the Spirit, Sir, whose coming was foretold to me? |
21864 | As I was sayin'', she''s got a kind o''trouble in her breest, doctor; wull ye tak''a look at it? |
21864 | At Sersberg? |
21864 | Be quiet, will you, Père Henri? |
21864 | Bella,I say,"do you love your papa?" |
21864 | Bella,I say,"what if you should tumble in the river?" |
21864 | But I know you would; would n''t you, Paul? |
21864 | But dost thou love life? 21864 But if I would n''t pull you out?" |
21864 | But why, uncle? 21864 But why?" |
21864 | Can you-- can you sit down? |
21864 | Cold, is n''t it? |
21864 | Could n''t I take''em all at once, and have it over, Jacob? |
21864 | Do n''t you think he''s growing, wife? |
21864 | Do you know the poulterer''s, in the next street but one, at the corner? |
21864 | Do you mean when the tide is out----? |
21864 | Do you take me for a maker of almanacs? 21864 Dreadful apparition, why do you trouble me?" |
21864 | EH? |
21864 | Even if I have grown so much wiser, what then? 21864 Giv answered,''Sir, will you lay hands upon Rustem?'' |
21864 | Have I ever sought release? |
21864 | Have never walked forth with the younger members of my family; meaning( for I am very young) my elder brothers born in these later years? |
21864 | Have they no refuge or resource? |
21864 | Have you confessed yourself, brother,said the Templar,"and have you heard mass this morning, that you peril your life so frankly?" |
21864 | His blankets? |
21864 | His horsemen hard behind us ride; Should they our steps discover, Then who will cheer my bonny bride When they have slain her lover? |
21864 | Home, little Fan? |
21864 | How are you? |
21864 | How are you? |
21864 | How can I carry my arrows, club and other weapons? 21864 How can I? |
21864 | How do you do? 21864 How do you know I love Bella?" |
21864 | How''s Rab? |
21864 | I am in the presence of the Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come? |
21864 | I hope he did n''t die of anything catching? 21864 I told you so, Paul,"says Isabel--"aunty, does n''t Paul love me?" |
21864 | I want nothing from you; I ask nothing of you; why can not we be friends? |
21864 | I? |
21864 | If he wanted to keep''em after he was dead, a wicked old screw,pursued the woman,"why was n''t he natural in his lifetime? |
21864 | In what, then? |
21864 | Is it good,she said,"or bad?" |
21864 | Is it? |
21864 | Is that so, Spirit? |
21864 | Is there a peculiar flavour in what you sprinkle from your torch? |
21864 | Is your master at home, my dear? |
21864 | Knew what, my dear? |
21864 | Long past? |
21864 | May Rab and me bide? |
21864 | My dear Mr. Scrooge, are you serious? |
21864 | Now who be ye, would cross Lochgyle, This dark and stormy water? |
21864 | Old Scratch has got his own at last, hey? |
21864 | Or would you know,pursued the Ghost,"the weight and length of the strong coil you bear yourself? |
21864 | Rustem answered,''Who is the king that I should care for him? 21864 Should I have left him at the bottom to find him drowned to- morrow?" |
21864 | So you see in your surroundings only the advantages you can derive from them? |
21864 | Something, I think? |
21864 | Tell me why? |
21864 | The Treadmill[252- 4] and the Poor Law are in full vigour, then? |
21864 | The day is against England, my lord,said Cedric, in a marked tone;"are you not tempted to take the lance?" |
21864 | The forest, the mountains, the clouds, all say nothing to you? 21864 The house is yonder,"Scrooge exclaimed,"Why do you point away?" |
21864 | Their van will be upon us Before the bridge goes down; And if they once may win the bridge, What hope to save the town? |
21864 | Then there is some particular sentiment attached to it? |
21864 | Then what is, Paul? |
21864 | To whom will our debt be transferred? |
21864 | Was I apprenticed here? |
21864 | We are quite ruined? |
21864 | Well, what is it? |
21864 | What bairn? |
21864 | What can I do without my noble charger? |
21864 | What do you call this? |
21864 | What do you call wasting of it? |
21864 | What do you mean by coming here at this time of day? |
21864 | What do you want with me? |
21864 | What else can I be,returned the uncle,"when I live in such a world of fools as this? |
21864 | What evidence would you have of my reality beyond that of your senses? |
21864 | What has ever got your precious father then? |
21864 | What has he done with his money? |
21864 | What idol has displaced you? |
21864 | What invention? |
21864 | What is a butterfly? 21864 What is it?" |
21864 | What is the matter? |
21864 | What is the matter? |
21864 | What is your life? 21864 What makes you think so, Bella?" |
21864 | What place is this? |
21864 | What right have you to be dismal? 21864 What road did he take?" |
21864 | What shall I say,he inquired,"when the young men ask me who is my father? |
21864 | What then? |
21864 | What''s the case? 21864 What''s to- day, my fine fellow?" |
21864 | What''s to- day? |
21864 | What, sir,says my uncle, mistaking my meaning--"do you persuade her to disobey?" |
21864 | What, the one as big as me? |
21864 | What? 21864 What_ are_ you all thinking about? |
21864 | When did he die? |
21864 | When was it? |
21864 | Where are you going? 21864 Where is he, my love?" |
21864 | Where is the dog? 21864 Where''s Rab?" |
21864 | Who are you? |
21864 | Who could refuse anything to such a poor, afflicted little innocent? 21864 Who was it?" |
21864 | Who, and what are you? |
21864 | Who_ were_ you then? |
21864 | Whose else''s do you think? |
21864 | Why did you get married? |
21864 | Why do you doubt your senses? |
21864 | Why not? |
21864 | Why to a poor one most? |
21864 | Why, then, do n''t stand staring as if you was afraid, woman; who''s the wiser? 21864 Why, what was the matter with him?" |
21864 | Why, where''s our Martha? |
21864 | Why? |
21864 | Would it apply to any kind of dinner on this day? |
21864 | Would n''t it answer, Bobby, if I were to leave it at random-- sometime within a year or so, for example?--_must_ I say precisely? |
21864 | Would n''t you? |
21864 | Yes, but if you should? |
21864 | Yes,says Bella,"why not?" |
21864 | You are? |
21864 | You do n''t mean to say you took''em down, rings and all, with him lying there? |
21864 | You kin, kin you? |
21864 | You recollect the way? |
21864 | You see this toothpick? |
21864 | You seek to close these places on the seventh day? |
21864 | You travel fast? |
21864 | You wish to be anonymous? |
21864 | You would rather have everything level? |
21864 | ''Broth made of limestone,''says he;''what else?'' |
21864 | ''Poor Robin Crusoe, where have you been, Robin Crusoe?'' |
21864 | ''Twas but a moment,--o''er the rose A veil of moss the angel throws, And, robed in nature''s simplest weed, Could there a flower that rose exceed? |
21864 | ''What is it?'' |
21864 | ''Who is Rustem,''he cried,''that he forgets his duty to me, and disobeys my commands? |
21864 | ( Are these torn clothes his best?) |
21864 | Admiration was the universal sentiment, though some objected that the reply to"Is it a bear?" |
21864 | And Boaz saw her and loved her and asked her,"Who art thou?" |
21864 | And after all, of what use is this pride of appearance, for which so much is risked, so much is suffered? |
21864 | And as he mounted on Raksh, he cried:''What is Kaoos that he should deal with me in this fashion? |
21864 | And her mother- in- law said unto her,"Where hast thou gleaned to- day? |
21864 | And how did I know it? |
21864 | And now is not Boaz of our kindred, with whose maidens thou wast? |
21864 | And what of Rab? |
21864 | Are not they mortal, am not I myself? |
21864 | Are these fitting words for a king?'' |
21864 | Are these shadows of the things that Will be, or are they shadows of things that May be, only?" |
21864 | Are they from Heaven, these softenings of the heart? |
21864 | Are you, then, your own master? |
21864 | Art thou not Rustum? |
21864 | At an earlier date Burns wrote to another friend:"Is not the Scottish phrase,_ auld lang syne_, exceedingly expressive? |
21864 | Avarice, hard dealing, griping cares? |
21864 | Because I have kept a dog from drowning?" |
21864 | Boaz said unto Ruth,"Hearest thou not, my daughter? |
21864 | But O, what charm or magic numbers Can give me back the gentle slumbers Those weary, happy days did leave? |
21864 | But Sohrab look''d upon the horse, and said:--"Is this, then, Ruksh? |
21864 | But the king and his nobles will think,"Rustem fears this Tartar,"and they will say,"If Rustem is afraid, what can we do but leave our country?" |
21864 | But what did Scrooge care? |
21864 | But who for men of naught would do great deeds? |
21864 | But why do spirits walk the earth, and why do they come to me?" |
21864 | But, with a cold incredulous voice, he said:--"What prate is this of fathers and revenge? |
21864 | Can Honour''s voice provoke[364- 18] the silent dust, Or Flattery soothe the dull cold ear of Death? |
21864 | Can all that optics teach, unfold Thy form to please me so, As when I dreamt of gems and gold Hid in thy radiant bow? |
21864 | Can storied urn or animated bust[364- 17] Back to its mansion call the fleeting breath? |
21864 | Can you think of one that might have been used? |
21864 | Can you write out the words which will represent the rhyme scheme in the other stanzas in this poem? |
21864 | Did any of those persons resting in this neglected spot ever write great poetry, rule empires or sing inspiring songs? |
21864 | Did they have bread and vegetables? |
21864 | Dilber?" |
21864 | Do you imagine that sloth will afford you more comfort than labor? |
21864 | Do you know whether they''ve sold the prize turkey that was hanging up there? |
21864 | Do you see any reason for his being green- garbed? |
21864 | Do you suppose they had other things to eat? |
21864 | Does any curious and finely- ignorant woman wish to know how Bob''s eye at a glance announced a dog fight to his brain? |
21864 | Does he not remember that he owes to Rustem his throne-- nay, his very life? |
21864 | Eh?" |
21864 | For what care I, though all speak Sohrab''s fame? |
21864 | Have I not?" |
21864 | Have I yet any more sons that may be your husbands? |
21864 | Have you had many brothers, Spirit?" |
21864 | He bent to kiss them, one after another; then rising suddenly:"Where is Jean?" |
21864 | He put me off, and said rather rudely,"What''s_ your_ business wi''the dowg?" |
21864 | He spoke; and Sohrab answer''d, on his feet:--"Art thou so fierce? |
21864 | He thought, if this man could be raised up now, what would be his foremost thoughts? |
21864 | His teeth and his friends gone, why should he keep the peace and be civil? |
21864 | How can I defend myself? |
21864 | How could it be called a hospitable train? |
21864 | How could it be otherwise? |
21864 | How did they conceal their clothing? |
21864 | How has he been since yesterday?" |
21864 | How is this? |
21864 | How many kinds of meat were there on the table? |
21864 | How much more than is necessary do we spend in sleep? |
21864 | How shall we ever be able to pay them? |
21864 | How should I? |
21864 | I ask if we may go down to the big rock in the meadow? |
21864 | I wonder what makes him talk so?" |
21864 | III Then Naomi, her mother- in- law, said unto Ruth,"My daughter, shall I not seek rest for thee, that it may be well with thee? |
21864 | If I knew all things that are in the world and had not charity, what should that help me before God who shall judge me according to my deeds? |
21864 | If I was to stop half- a- crown for it, you''d think yourself ill- used, I''ll be bound?" |
21864 | If not, what prevented them from doing such things if they had the ability? |
21864 | If the gallows be Rustem''s reward, what shall become of us?'' |
21864 | If this had never been between us,"said the girl, looking mildly, but with steadiness, upon him;"tell me, would you seek me out and try to win me now? |
21864 | If thou knewest all the sayings of all the philosophers, what should that avail thee without charity and grace? |
21864 | If you were a servant would you not be ashamed that a good master should catch you idle? |
21864 | Is anything mentioned besides meat? |
21864 | Is it not? |
21864 | Is it well that the Persians should become the slaves of the infidel Tartars?'' |
21864 | Is it with Rustum only thou wouldst fight? |
21864 | Is its pattern strange to_ you_?" |
21864 | Is that sign the proper sign Of Rustum''s son, or of some other man''s?" |
21864 | Is that so much that he deserves this praise?" |
21864 | Is there anything peculiar in its habits of growth? |
21864 | Is there, for instance, in the poem any hint as to who Sennacherib was, or as to who the enemy was that the Assyrians came against? |
21864 | Ladies,"86 puting changed to putting 106 burden?" |
21864 | Let me entreat for them; what have they done? |
21864 | Let thine eyes be on the field that they do reap, and go thou after them: have I not charged the young men that they shall not touch thee? |
21864 | Marley?" |
21864 | Methinks I hear some of you say,"Must a man afford himself no leisure?" |
21864 | Must I always tell them that I do not know? |
21864 | Naomi said,"Turn again, my daughters, why will you go with me? |
21864 | Ned''ll see me a fair fight, wo n''t you Ned?" |
21864 | Nobody ever stopped him in the street to say, with gladsome looks,"My dear Scrooge, how are you? |
21864 | Not the little prize turkey: the big one?" |
21864 | Not to sea? |
21864 | Now who will stand on either hand, And keep the bridge with me?" |
21864 | O Sohrab, wherefore wilt thou rush on death? |
21864 | OF A HUMBLE OPINION OF OURSELVES Every man naturally desireth knowledge; but knowledge without love and fear of God, what availeth it? |
21864 | On my concluding,"Pray, sir,"said he,"who is it that you call Indian partisans?" |
21864 | Quoth he,"The she- wolf''s litter[14- 21] Stand savagely at bay: But will ye dare to follow, If Astur clears the way?" |
21864 | Rumgudgeon?" |
21864 | Say that his power lies in words and looks; in things so slight and insignificant that it is impossible to add and count''em up: what then? |
21864 | Scrooge knew he was dead? |
21864 | Scrooge?" |
21864 | She curtsied, looked at James, and said,"When?" |
21864 | Should auld acquaintance be forgot, And days o''lang syne? |
21864 | Should auld acquaintance be forgot, And never brought to min''? |
21864 | Some of the[ officers?] |
21864 | Suppose we make up a party and volunteer?" |
21864 | Tell me what man that was whom we saw lying dead?" |
21864 | The Spirit did not tarry here, but bade Scrooge hold his robe, and passing on above the moor, sped whither? |
21864 | The colour? |
21864 | The spirit paused, in silent thought,-- What grace was there that flower had not? |
21864 | Then said Boaz unto his servant that was set over the reapers,"Whose damsel is this?" |
21864 | There go!--Thou wilt not? |
21864 | They did not know what moment they might be stormed or[ blown up? |
21864 | They were backward in speaking; said that the nearest land to us was a small league called the Sugar Camp, on the bank of the[ river?]. |
21864 | To whom was it brought? |
21864 | To whom would they run to tell of his coming? |
21864 | Tut, do n''t I know?" |
21864 | Understand, eh?" |
21864 | Was n''t_ yesterday_ Sunday, I should like to know?" |
21864 | Was she making the clothes of her children, knitting, mending, darning, after the supper dishes were put away? |
21864 | Was there one point of resemblance which could attest their original brotherhood to such as he? |
21864 | We step up softly; and Isabel lays her little hand upon his arm; and he turns, and says--"Well, my little daughter?" |
21864 | We''re not going to pick holes in each other''s coats, I suppose?" |
21864 | Were there no poor homes to which its light would have conducted_ me_?" |
21864 | Were they waiting for their father''s return? |
21864 | What are the_ tinklings_? |
21864 | What are you gaping at? |
21864 | What availeth great searching of dark and hidden things for the which we shall not be blamed in the judgment though we know them not? |
21864 | What could I say? |
21864 | What custom is still said to follow the use of mistletoe at Christmastime? |
21864 | What did he do? |
21864 | What did the priest do when he reared the chalice? |
21864 | What did they want of it? |
21864 | What did they wear over their faces? |
21864 | What do you think did my father do? |
21864 | What do_ you_ say, Topper?" |
21864 | What good had it ever done to him? |
21864 | What has happened to him? |
21864 | What is a chalice? |
21864 | What is festal cheer? |
21864 | What is one more, one less, obscure or famed, Valiant or craven, young or old, to me? |
21864 | What is rosemary? |
21864 | What is the king to me but a grain of dust? |
21864 | What is the real reason for Sohrab''s desire to fight in single combat? |
21864 | What is the_ mansion_ of_ the fleeting breath_? |
21864 | What made the monster fall? |
21864 | What news? |
21864 | What noble Lucumo comes next To taste our Roman cheer?" |
21864 | What reason have you to be merry? |
21864 | What reason have you to be morose? |
21864 | What right have you to be merry? |
21864 | What shall I put you down for?" |
21864 | What should I do with slaying any more? |
21864 | What should I get out of your starlight and the setting sun? |
21864 | What then to do? |
21864 | What then? |
21864 | What was he heir to? |
21864 | What was merry Christmas to Scrooge? |
21864 | What will that grief, what will that vengeance be? |
21864 | What will you do?" |
21864 | What wonder, as he paced from shelf to shelf And conned their titles, that the squire began, Despite his ignorance, to think himself A learned man? |
21864 | What word is understood after_ such_ in the third line of this stanza? |
21864 | What would you advise us to do?" |
21864 | What, then, would it avail the reader to know their names, or the evanescent symbols of their martial rank? |
21864 | When now she came to her mother, Naomi asked,"Who art thou?" |
21864 | When shall it be? |
21864 | When will you come to see me?" |
21864 | Where had Scrooge heard those words? |
21864 | Where was it? |
21864 | Where were the texts strewn? |
21864 | Which side is it?" |
21864 | Who art thou then, that canst so touch my soul? |
21864 | Who hath a stronger battle than he that useth force to overcome himself? |
21864 | Who suffers by his ill whims? |
21864 | Who tore the dogs? |
21864 | Who was"the crown"? |
21864 | Who were Hampden, Milton and Cromwell? |
21864 | Who''s next?" |
21864 | Who''s the worse for the loss of a few things like these? |
21864 | Whose son am I?" |
21864 | Whose train was it? |
21864 | Why did he have roses in his shoes? |
21864 | Why did he not go on? |
21864 | Why did he tear them? |
21864 | Why do n''t you answer, Dorothée?" |
21864 | Why do you delight to torture me?" |
21864 | Why does the poet say it_ frowned_ on high? |
21864 | Why dost thou stay, and turn away? |
21864 | Why give it as a reason for not coming now?" |
21864 | Why had he abandoned these choice pleasures to bury himself in the country? |
21864 | Why is her reign_ solitary_? |
21864 | Why is the bird called a_ moping_ owl? |
21864 | Why should I fear his anger? |
21864 | Why should a_ bust_ be called_ animated_? |
21864 | Why should it be called_ stubborn_? |
21864 | Why should the boar''s head be called_ crested_? |
21864 | Why should they be called_ drowsy_? |
21864 | Why speak we and talk we together so gladly, since seldom we come home without hurting of conscience? |
21864 | Why was it there? |
21864 | Why was that gentle, modest, sweet woman, clean and lovable, condemned by God to bear such a burden? |
21864 | Why were the texts called_ holy?_ What was the nature of the texts? |
21864 | Why were the texts called_ holy?_ What was the nature of the texts? |
21864 | Will you come and see me?" |
21864 | Will you decide what men shall live, what men shall die? |
21864 | Will you do me that favour?" |
21864 | Will you let me in, Fred?" |
21864 | Will you not speak to me?" |
21864 | With pure heart newly stamped from nature''s mint,( Where did he learn that squint?) |
21864 | With such a stock as seemingly surpassed The best collections ever formed in Spain, What wonder if the owner grew at last Supremely vain? |
21864 | Wo n''t these heavy taxes quite ruin the country? |
21864 | Wot ye, my lords,"he said, turning round to his train,"who this gallant can be that bears himself thus proudly?" |
21864 | Would any man in his senses believe that a rational being could make such a fool of himself? |
21864 | Would monsieur like a drink of cognac? |
21864 | You have never paused before the setting sun or at the sight of the woods lighted by the stars?" |
21864 | You went to- day then, Robert?" |
21864 | You''re not a skater, I suppose?" |
21864 | [ 319- 16] In what sense has Scrooge"resorted to the sexton''s spade that buried Jacob Marley"to cultivate the kindnesses of life? |
21864 | [ 356- 2] What is cheer? |
21864 | [ 356- 3] What is a"train"? |
21864 | [ 356- 4] What is a rite? |
21864 | [ 356- 5] What bells were rung? |
21864 | [ 356- 6] What is a mass? |
21864 | [ 356- 7] What is a_ stoled_ priest? |
21864 | [ 357- 15] Who was the heir? |
21864 | [ 357- 16] Was he permitted to dance with village maidens at any other time? |
21864 | [ 357- 19] Who brought the tidings of Salvation? |
21864 | [ 357- 9] What is mistletoe? |
21864 | [ 358- 22] What are bays? |
21864 | [ 358- 23] Who was a ranger? |
21864 | [ 358- 24] What is meant by_ baiting_? |
21864 | [ 358- 27] What was near the sirloin? |
21864 | [ 359- 29] Did the maskers have rich costumes? |
21864 | [ 359- 30] Does the poet think that rich maskers would enjoy their pleasure as much as the old- fashioned Christmas merrymakers? |
21864 | [ 362- 9] What evening cares has the busy housewife? |
21864 | [ 363- 10] Where were the children? |
21864 | [ 366- 29] What facts were inscribed on the headstones? |
21864 | [ Illustration: HE READ HIS OWN NAME]"Am_ I_ that man who lay upon the bed?" |
21864 | [ Illustration: THE CLERK SMILED FAINTLY]"You''ll want all day to- morrow, I suppose?" |
21864 | [ Illustration:"THE SLEEPING FOX CATCHES NO POULTRY"] So what signifies wishing and hoping for better times? |
21864 | [ Illustration:"WHITHER THOU GOEST, I WILL GO"] There it came to pass that all the city was moved about them, and the people said,"Is this Naomi?" |
21864 | [ Illustration] FOOTNOTES:[ 356- 1] Is there a stove or a fireplace in the room where the poet sees Christmas kept? |
21864 | _ Has_ he a servant with a wooden leg?'' |
21864 | _ Uncle._"To- day''s Sunday, I say-- don''t I know?" |
21864 | an''he had n''t the money to buy a thing, so what does he do? |
21864 | and do n''t we all wish a house on fire not to be out before we see it? |
21864 | and human nature too? |
21864 | and where wroughtest thou? |
21864 | are they yours?" |
21864 | art thou not he?" |
21864 | changed to burden? |
21864 | cried Fred,"who''s that?" |
21864 | exclaimed the Ghost,"would you so soon put out, with worldly hands, the light I give? |
21864 | he said;"what unprofitable debate have we here?" |
21864 | interrupted Moser;"do people talk of such things? |
21864 | is there news, or any night alarm?" |
21864 | quoth false Sextus;"Will not the villain drown? |
21864 | repeated the carter;"you do n''t expect to sleep there to- night?" |
21864 | replied the Ghost,"do you believe in me or not?" |
21864 | says they to him again:''what''s that,_ aroo_?'' |
21864 | what did he die of?" |
21864 | wherefore dost thou vainly question thus Of Rustum? |
21864 | widow machree, When everything smiles, should a beauty look glum? |
29704 | ''And when was this?'' 29704 ''How can this be?'' |
29704 | A secret of knowledge? |
29704 | Ah, well, it''s disappointing, is n''t it? 29704 Ah, you? |
29704 | And Colonel Damer? |
29704 | And an accessory before the fact to the assassination of the Czar? |
29704 | And did her effort succeed? |
29704 | And have you found anything wrong with me,--I mean, besides this bullet, anything abnormal? |
29704 | And the box? |
29704 | And the writing on the card, have you any memory of it, for Burwell told me that the words have faded? |
29704 | And they are--? |
29704 | And this was the reason that we parted-- this the sole cause of our estrangement? |
29704 | And what is this? |
29704 | And yet this man has for years been leading a most exemplary life? |
29704 | And you will promise secrecy? 29704 And your nursery department?" |
29704 | Are you ill? |
29704 | Are you such an enthusiastic smoker? |
29704 | Aylmer, are you in earnest? |
29704 | Blanche, dearest,cried Bella, as she caught sight of her face,"what is the matter? |
29704 | But about your box, Blanche? |
29704 | But how? |
29704 | But why do we speak of dying? 29704 But why do you keep this? |
29704 | But you''ve written a book about them, and know them when you see them, do n''t you? 29704 But_ why_, my dear fellow?" |
29704 | Can not I do it for you, Blanche? |
29704 | Can you read it? |
29704 | Carwitchet? 29704 Danger? |
29704 | Did she say so? |
29704 | Did you call, my dearest? |
29704 | Did you observe, Captain, how suddenly they sank? 29704 Do n''t you think that Blanche is looking very ill?" |
29704 | Do you know what they eat? |
29704 | Do you live here? |
29704 | Do you recognize me? |
29704 | Do you remember seeing me at the_ Folies Bergère_ a month ago? |
29704 | Do you think so? 29704 Do you think,"I asked, as I gave it to him,"that any men have really been smothered in that bed, as they tried to smother_ me_?" |
29704 | Do you want anything? |
29704 | Do you, dear? 29704 Does she speak of me?" |
29704 | Fainted? |
29704 | First, have you ceased to love me? |
29704 | Georgiana,said he,"has it never occurred to you that the mark upon your cheek might be removed?" |
29704 | Has Lady Carwitchet shown you her sapphire? |
29704 | Has Mrs. Damer been abroad for as long a time? |
29704 | Have n''t you seen him? 29704 Have one?" |
29704 | Have we not shown you by the furniture, by the general appearance of the place, that you are mistaken, and that this can not be your apartment? 29704 Have you a large supply of the''gems''in your valise?" |
29704 | Have you been out? |
29704 | Her secret? |
29704 | How I know them? 29704 How can I tell you now?" |
29704 | How can you''make amends''? 29704 How could any man with a palate for the rarest flavours of life resist the temptation of taking that woman down to dinner? |
29704 | How do I know my own room? 29704 How do I know?" |
29704 | How do you design disposing of it? |
29704 | How do you mean, Colonel Damer?--when did it happen? |
29704 | How know you that it is your room? |
29704 | How long will she stay here? |
29704 | I beg your pardon-- family interests? 29704 I shall never be better; besides it is n''t my eyes; I mean myself, my soul,--you have n''t found anything wrong there?" |
29704 | I suppose I musn''t tell why I came to give quite a big sum in francs for this? |
29704 | I suppose it ca n''t be anything on her mind, Bella? |
29704 | If it''s only bogus, why are you always in such a flutter about it? 29704 In every way known to medical science?" |
29704 | Is he going with the rest, Harry? |
29704 | Is it with this lotion that you intend to bathe my cheek? |
29704 | Is it your linen box? |
29704 | Is she a politician? |
29704 | Is this your final decision, Blanche? |
29704 | Is your collection valuable? 29704 Is your wife here?" |
29704 | It ca n''t stand there; you''ll unpack it, wo n''t you? 29704 It was an accident, a misfortune;_ you_ did not do it?" |
29704 | It was,she commenced slowly, and then as if gathering up a great resolution, she suddenly exclaimed,"Do you_ really_ wish to know what parted us?" |
29704 | Mr. Burwell is dead, is he not? |
29704 | Mr. Laurence, what right have you to hold me thus? |
29704 | My God,he said weakly, sinking into a chair,"how can you know these things?" |
29704 | Now, Bella, dear, which is to be my room? |
29704 | O, you do n''t? 29704 Oh, here you are at last; will you take Mrs. Damer down to dinner?" |
29704 | Oh, why not the ruby? |
29704 | Pardon me,I said, keeping the patient''s hand in mine,"would you let me look at your palm?" |
29704 | Poor? 29704 Queer house, is n''t it?" |
29704 | She has? 29704 So you say this is rubbish?" |
29704 | Then it is really serious? |
29704 | Then why did you take me from my mother''s side? 29704 Then, for God''s sake, tell me, what does it all mean?" |
29704 | To you, Mr. Laurence-- the iron- bound box? 29704 To- day?" |
29704 | Was it not enough? |
29704 | Well, have you determined whether or not this is your room? |
29704 | What Carwitchet? 29704 What could I? |
29704 | What diabolic jugglery was at work when the exchange was made? |
29704 | What did you do? |
29704 | What do you mean? |
29704 | What do you mean? |
29704 | What do you think of my cigarettes? |
29704 | What do you want to know? |
29704 | What does she say? |
29704 | What earthly reason can you have for going, when your fixed plan was to stay with us over Christmas Day? |
29704 | What for? |
29704 | What kind of a man is the-- the poet you spoke of? |
29704 | What right, Blanche? 29704 What was she so anxious to conceal from the custom- house officers?" |
29704 | What was the Fascinating Friend supposed to have in her portmanteau? |
29704 | What was your sister''s idea in giving Burwell the card? |
29704 | What will do very well? |
29704 | What, dear, your linen box? |
29704 | When was that? |
29704 | Where is Lord Carwitchet? |
29704 | Where was the house?'' 29704 Where will you have it placed, ma''am?" |
29704 | Who is the lady who has just left the room? |
29704 | Who told you? |
29704 | Who will believe me? |
29704 | Why did n''t he go straight from Lady----''s house to the nearest police- station and put the police on the track of his''Fascinating Friend''? |
29704 | Why did n''t you tell me so? |
29704 | Why did you hesitate to tell me this? |
29704 | Why do you come hither? 29704 Why do you keep such a terrible drug?" |
29704 | Why will you persist in calling this your room? |
29704 | Why, are n''t you overjoyed? 29704 Why? |
29704 | Why? |
29704 | Will she come to Mrs. Damer? 29704 Will you not go in, my love, as your cousin proposes?" |
29704 | Will you not regret it when too late, and you are left alone with only_ that_? |
29704 | Will you swear it''s not in that wardrobe? 29704 Would you like to see the original? |
29704 | Would you like to see them? |
29704 | Would you throw the blight of that fatal birth- mark over my labours? 29704 Yes,"in a hesitating manner;"that is, it contains several things that I have in daily use; but go on about your visitors, Bella: are there any more?" |
29704 | You are so rash,he said;"it will be safer with me: let me take the box also?" |
29704 | You are thinking of the Valdez sapphire, are you not? 29704 You know a lot about precious stones, do n''t you?" |
29704 | You know this,said I, starting up,"and yet did not denounce him?" |
29704 | You mean,I exclaimed,"that you can photograph the two principles of good and evil that exist in us?" |
29704 | You would rather go there first, Blanche? |
29704 | Your sister? |
29704 | _ Will_ you do it, Bella? |
29704 | ''Watch It writhe and struggle; it has served me well, brother, sayest thou not so, the lore I gained from our wise men?'' |
29704 | *****"Do n''t you think your friend might be held an accessory after the fact to the death of the German?" |
29704 | Amid the horrible confusion of the rabbi''s thoughts, the idea darted through his brain:"Can I be already dead that they did not see me?" |
29704 | And how? |
29704 | And now, as an ancient grenadier, as an ex- brave of the French army, what remains for me to do? |
29704 | And now, what does it matter? |
29704 | And what cause had produced in a moment the whole of this strange, complicated, mysterious effect? |
29704 | And, besides, had n''t he eaten salt with her? |
29704 | Another glass? |
29704 | Are we a generation of detectives, that we should do this thing?" |
29704 | As he read, his face grew rigid with astonishment, and, looking at his questioner sharply, he exclaimed:"Where did you get this, monsieur?" |
29704 | As she neared that of Mr. Laurence, the door opened a little, and a voice asked huskily--"Is anything the matter, Mrs. Clayton? |
29704 | At peace did I say? |
29704 | But about the box, Mr. Laurence; what has all this to do with the black box?" |
29704 | But are you very intimate with this lady?" |
29704 | But is your love for her dead memory and reputation strong enough to insure your eternal secrecy on the subject?" |
29704 | But was he dead? |
29704 | But why? |
29704 | Clayton?" |
29704 | Clayton?" |
29704 | Closed? |
29704 | Could I lure him into the library-- the billiard room-- the conservatory? |
29704 | Could I, even for an instant, have been dazzled by a sham, and a sham of that quality? |
29704 | Could it be possible that he was taking leave of his senses? |
29704 | Could she have knocked her head in falling? |
29704 | Did you ever visit the place?" |
29704 | Did you never remark the food that they served up at your table? |
29704 | Did you never remark their eyes, and how they gloated on you when you passed? |
29704 | Do I know how many of those men entered the same gambling- house that_ you_ entered? |
29704 | Do n''t you remember their stand at the first Paris Exhibition? |
29704 | Do you hear, my hero of Austerlitz? |
29704 | Do you know who live there?" |
29704 | Do you think that I have lived over two years of solitary shame and grief, to break the heart that trusts in me_ now_? |
29704 | Do you think, for the little space that is left me, that I would part with the only link left between me and my dread past?" |
29704 | Does she ever wear the sapphires? |
29704 | Eager to be rid of the hateful piece of pasteboard( for who could say that the curse was not still clinging about it? |
29704 | FOREWORD A distinguished American writer of fiction said to me lately:"Did you ever think of the vital American way we live? |
29704 | Guests all right? |
29704 | Had I made any noise already? |
29704 | Had anything happened already? |
29704 | Had he ever been to Eza, the old Saracen robber- nest perched on a rock a thousand feet above the sea, halfway between Monaco and Villafranca? |
29704 | Had n''t he smoked the social cigarette with her? |
29704 | Had you any suspicion that she was unhappy in her marriage?" |
29704 | Has anyone ever seen her in them? |
29704 | Have we all finished, Harry, dear?" |
29704 | Have you candles on the chimney- piece? |
29704 | Have you known her? |
29704 | Have you no idea why she got up and went into the passage?" |
29704 | Have you no trust in your husband?" |
29704 | His face had just been soaped-- what do you call it?--lathered, is it not? |
29704 | How about the hotel robberies last summer at Cowes, eh? |
29704 | How am I to meet him again?" |
29704 | How can a man be so cursed, doctor, that his love and friendship bring only misery to those who share it? |
29704 | How can it be that one who has in his heart only good thoughts can be constantly under the shadow of evil? |
29704 | How can you ask me?" |
29704 | How could I mistake it, pray? |
29704 | How could I put it there? |
29704 | How could you think it?" |
29704 | How did this happen?" |
29704 | How long is it since you have travelled in company with that dreadful box?" |
29704 | How shall I come out of it? |
29704 | I ask what? |
29704 | I know that you will heed my wishes?" |
29704 | I made myself a deprecating smile as I took it from him, but how dare I call it false to its face? |
29704 | If he disbelieved his mother, how long would she be able to keep it from his clutches? |
29704 | In place of the hat and feathers, what dusky object was it that now hid his forehead, his eyes, his shading hand? |
29704 | Is it not so, my brothers?" |
29704 | Is n''t it pretty?" |
29704 | Is that all, Blanche?" |
29704 | Is that it?" |
29704 | Is there anyone there who can save her? |
29704 | Is this beyond your power, for the sake of your own peace, and to save your poor wife from madness?" |
29704 | It does n''t seem possible, does it, that a simple white card with some words scrawled on it in purple ink could effect a man''s undoing? |
29704 | Lady Landor on one side of Tom, on the other who? |
29704 | Laurence?" |
29704 | Looking for what? |
29704 | May I ask your attention for a few moments?" |
29704 | Might n''t the police be grateful for a hint or two? |
29704 | Mixed up in that Rawlings divorce case, was n''t he? |
29704 | Mrs. Clayton, tell me truly-- did you love your cousin?" |
29704 | Need I say more? |
29704 | No disappointments? |
29704 | Not come home, eh? |
29704 | Now, Mr. Acton, on your honour as a connoisseur and a gentleman, which of the two is the Valdez?" |
29704 | Now, tell me, doctor, you have examined me carefully, have you not?" |
29704 | Now, was not that the case?" |
29704 | Of all the wonderful faculties that help to tell us we are immortal, which speaks the sublime truth more eloquently than memory? |
29704 | On her_ mind_!--what a funny idea, Harry; what could have put that in your head?" |
29704 | On the eve, perchance, of salvation-- you wished to leave us?" |
29704 | Only in the little cigar- ash box on the window- frame I saw the flat cigarette which he had barely lighted-- how long before? |
29704 | Or was the champagne amazingly strong? |
29704 | Perhaps you can put me in the way of disposing of it?" |
29704 | Shall I call in other advice? |
29704 | Shall I ever find it? |
29704 | Shall I make an excuse for your not appearing at table this evening? |
29704 | Shall I never be able to get out of bed again?" |
29704 | Shall I send it to my room at once? |
29704 | Shall I telegraph to London? |
29704 | Shall I throw first?" |
29704 | Shall we be such crawling creatures as to seek to lay by the heels a Muse of Murder? |
29704 | Shall we go into the library?" |
29704 | Should you like to meet her? |
29704 | Surely we were more or less in number than we should be? |
29704 | Tell me, did not something very unusual, something very horrible, happen to you about ten or eleven years ago?" |
29704 | The B.--? |
29704 | Then, why did you forsake me? |
29704 | This message the sick man overheard, and lifting himself with an effort, he said excitedly:"Tell me, is he a tall man with glasses?" |
29704 | Turned out of the Dragoon Guards for cheating at cards, or picking pockets, or something-- remember the row at the Cerulean Club? |
29704 | Was I mad? |
29704 | Was ever man so tantalized? |
29704 | Was he trying to find the whereabouts of my safe? |
29704 | Was it fear, or indifference, or a sudden remorse?" |
29704 | Was it the result of a stimulant acting upon my system when I was in a highly excited state? |
29704 | Was my stomach in a particularly disordered condition? |
29704 | Was not that an exceedingly singular thing? |
29704 | Was the bed moving? |
29704 | Was the large stone no better? |
29704 | What are his crimes compared with the great secret of knowledge I am now able to give the world?" |
29704 | What connection can you possibly have with this box of my poor cousin''s, if you have only met her once in your life?" |
29704 | What could I do? |
29704 | What could be the meaning of the words on that infernal piece of pasteboard? |
29704 | What could you do with it, even if I gave it you? |
29704 | What drove you from me? |
29704 | What else could I think? |
29704 | What have I done? |
29704 | What possible knowledge can you have of my cousin''s secret?" |
29704 | What was amiss? |
29704 | What was that on his waistcoat? |
29704 | What was the immediate cause of your breaking faith with me? |
29704 | What was wrong with it? |
29704 | When she next spoke, she said, observing her cousin''s swollen eyes--"Am I dying, Bella?" |
29704 | When would that be? |
29704 | When? |
29704 | Where shall I go? |
29704 | Where the feathers-- three white, two green? |
29704 | Where was my Fascinating Friend? |
29704 | Where was my moral courage, and where was the good, honest, thumping lie that should have aided me? |
29704 | Where was the conical crown? |
29704 | Where''s that sapphire you stole?" |
29704 | Who was extra on ours? |
29704 | Who was she? |
29704 | Whom have you staying in the house at present, dear?" |
29704 | Why did you leave England without one line of farewell, and why have you refused to hold any communication with me since that time?" |
29704 | Why do you ask?" |
29704 | Why is it worse for him than anyone else?" |
29704 | Why should n''t the bishop and Lady Carwitchet meet? |
29704 | Why, where is it all gone to?" |
29704 | Will you carry up that box for me?" |
29704 | Will you have that box conveyed from her chamber to your own, and( if you will so far trust my honour) make it over to me?" |
29704 | Will you try them, such as they are?" |
29704 | Wo n''t you sit down? |
29704 | Would the executioner come into possession of his conical crowned hat and plume of feathers? |
29704 | and were privately thrown into the river, with a letter of explanation written by the murderers and placed in their pocketbooks? |
29704 | and why did you not tell us so before?" |
29704 | are we to treat like a vulgar criminal a mistress of the finest of the fine arts? |
29704 | are you not going to join the riding- party this afternoon?" |
29704 | dreaming? |
29704 | drunk? |
29704 | giddy again? |
29704 | have I been ill?" |
29704 | how are_ you_? |
29704 | or shall I have it moved into the passage?" |
29704 | sacre petit polisson de Napoleon!_ have I found thee at last? |
29704 | said Bella, sitting up in bed in her wonderment;"of course not; why, how could it be? |
29704 | said I, assuming, without knowing it, a confidential tone,"may I ask you how you know these things?" |
29704 | she said;"what are you dreaming of? |
29704 | slept in it? |
29704 | tell me, is this the truth?" |
29704 | took that bed as_ you_ took it? |
29704 | were smothered in it? |
29704 | where? |
29704 | why did n''t you, Colonel Damer?" |
29704 | why do you carry it about with you, Blanche? |
29704 | why have I delayed it so long, why did I not see to this before? |
29704 | won as_ you_ won? |
29704 | you are fond of late wanderings, then?" |
38839 | --But where is the Pompadour, too? |
38839 | --_Edmund Waller_ Song The bee to the heather, The lark to the sky, The roe to the greenwood, And whither shall I? |
38839 | --_Edmund Waller_ Why so pale and wan, fond lover? |
38839 | --_Henry David Thoreau_ Trust Thou Thy Love Trust thou thy Love: if she be proud, is she not sweet? |
38839 | --_John Ruskin_ Spiritual Love What care I tho''beauty fading Die ere Time can turn his glass? |
38839 | --_Leigh Hunt_ Under the Wattle"Why should not Wattle do For Mistletoe? |
38839 | --_Robert Burns_ O Mistress Mine, Where Are You Roaming? |
38839 | --_Robert Herrick_ The Author''s Resolution in a Sonnet Shall I, wasting in despaire Dye, because a woman''s fair? |
38839 | --_Thomas Hood_ Hermione Thou hast beauty bright and fair, Manner noble, aspect free, Eyes that are untouch''d by care; What then do we ask from thee? |
38839 | And unlesse that_ Minde_ I see What care I how great she be? |
38839 | Art thou my smiling one, Art thou my pouting one, Art thou my teasing one, A goddess, elf, or grace? |
38839 | At last he set her both his eyes; She won, and Cupid blind did rise; O Love, has she done this to thee? |
38839 | Be she fairer than the Day Or the flowry Meads in May, If she thinke not well of me, What care I_ how_ faire she be? |
38839 | Be she with that Goodness blest Which may merit name of best: If she be not such to me, What care I how good she be? |
38839 | Cause her fortunes seem too high Shall I play the fool and die? |
38839 | Glade, moorland, nor sky Without you can content me-- And whither shall I? |
38839 | He was her lover, too, Who urged her so--"Why should not Wattle do For Mistletoe?" |
38839 | If I praise a tulip, why Should I pass the primrose by? |
38839 | If she some other youth commend, Though I was once his fondest friend, His instant enemy I prove: Tell me, my heart, if this be love? |
38839 | Is she not like a maiden coy Press''d by some amorous- breathing boy? |
38839 | Juno? |
38839 | O Mistress mine, where are you roaming? |
38839 | Or her well deservings knowne Make me quite forget mine own? |
38839 | Or make pale my cheeks with care Cause anothers Rosie are? |
38839 | Paris was a pedant fool Meting beauty by the rule: Pallas? |
38839 | Prithee, why so mute? |
38839 | Prithee, why so mute? |
38839 | Prithee, why so pale? |
38839 | Prithee, why so pale? |
38839 | Shall a woman''s Vertues move Me to perish for her love? |
38839 | She who half her charms conceals, She who flashes while she feels? |
38839 | Trust thou thy Love: if she be mute, is she not pure? |
38839 | Trust thou thy Love: if she be proud, is she not sweet? |
38839 | Weavings of plot and of plan? |
38839 | What but sands or snows hath earth to give? |
38839 | What is love? |
38839 | What then can we still desire? |
38839 | What tho''locks the Graces braiding Perish like the summer grass? |
38839 | When she is absent, I no more Delight in all that pleas''d before, The clearest spring, or shadiest grove: Tell me, my heart, if this be love? |
38839 | When, fond of power, of beauty vain, Her nets she spread for every swain, I strove to hate, but vainly strove: Tell me, my heart, if this be love? |
38839 | Whene''er she speaks, my ravish''d ear No other voice but hers can hear, No other wit but hers approve: Tell me, my heart, if this be love? |
38839 | Where are the secrets it knew? |
38839 | Where shall I shelter that he slay me not? |
38839 | Which is better-- who can say?-- Mary grave or Lucy gay? |
38839 | Why should I my love confine? |
38839 | Why should fair be mine or thine? |
38839 | Why should two hearts in one breast lie, And yet not lodge together? |
38839 | Why so dull and mute, young sinner? |
38839 | Why so pale and wan, fond lover? |
38839 | Will, when looking well ca n''t move her, Looking ill prevail? |
38839 | Will, when speaking well ca n''t win her, Saying nothing do''t? |
38839 | With a frown thou wound''st my heart, With a smile thou heal''st the smart; Why play the tyrant''s part With such an innocent face? |
38839 | You should disdain, and I despair, With quite the true Augustan air; But... could I love you more, or less,--"In tea- cup times"? |
38839 | become of me? |
38839 | returned my gentle fair,"Beloved, what are names but air? |
38839 | where is thy sympathy, If thus our breasts you sever? |
38839 | you become a nun, my dear? |
38839 | you go take the vows, my dear? |
39750 | And who shall look up and say That it ought not so to be, Tho''the earth is Heaven enough for him, Is it less than that to me? 39750 Is n''t there heaven for dogs that''s dead? |
39750 | Is n''t there heaven,( She was but seven)"Is n''t there"( sobbing)"for dogs?" |
39750 | And how will he tackle the Strange Beasts there? |
39750 | Ay, what indeed? |
39750 | But answer fairly, whilom pup, Are these full proof of growing up? |
39750 | D''ye mind his scars an''his ragged ear, The like of a Dublin Fusilier? |
39750 | For all their talk who''d listen to thim, With the soul in the shining eyes of him? |
39750 | God made Davy, out of His head: If He unmake him, Does n''t He take him? |
39750 | Grown up? |
39750 | I heard an elephantine tread That jarred the rafters overhead:_ Who_ leaped in mad abandon there And tossed my slippers in the air? |
39750 | In the nether spaces Will the soul of a Little Black Dog despair? |
39750 | Nothing could bury That infinite query:"Davy,--_would_ God throw him away?" |
39750 | That loving heart, that patient soul, Had they indeed no longer span, To run their course, and reach their goal, And read their homily to man? |
39750 | What claim canst thou make good To angelhood?" |
39750 | What is it? |
39750 | What leads thee to forsake thy board and bed On days that are devoted to thy bath? |
39750 | What rapture in a run''Twixt snow and sun!_"Nay, brother of the sod, What part hast thou in God? |
39750 | What spirit art thou of?" |
39750 | When hunger- pressed, why scorn a bounteous meal That by my side he may pursue his way? |
39750 | Whence all his loyalty and faithful zeal? |
39750 | Whence came his noble soul, and where its bourn? |
39750 | Why does he share my joyous mood, and gay? |
39750 | Why dost thou filch some fragment of the cooking At times when no one seemeth to be looking? |
39750 | Why mourn with me, when I perchance do mourn? |
39750 | Why should He throw him away?" |
39750 | Will the Quiet Folk scare him with shadow- faces? |
39750 | Would God be wasting a dog like Tim? |
39750 | _ Who_ gallops madly down the breeze Pursuing specks that no one sees, Then finds some ancient boot instead And worries it till it is dead? |
39750 | _ Who_, sitting gravely on the rug, Espied a microscopic bug And stalked it, gaining bit by bit,-- Then leapt in air and fell on it? |
39750 | at every turn? |
39750 | into no more? |
30452 | A cripple named Tugh? |
30452 | A ruler of all Mars? |
30452 | All right, now what? |
30452 | And it told you it would return? |
30452 | And that''s why you sent for me, Milton? |
30452 | And what after that? |
30452 | And what do you mean--''it was a gun?'' 30452 And why,"I intercepted,"did it stop here in 1935?" |
30452 | And you are the Martians with whom we have communicated? |
30452 | And you? |
30452 | Any luck? |
30452 | Are the rays on it, sir? |
30452 | Are these things goods to eat? |
30452 | Are we ready? |
30452 | Are you all right? |
30452 | Are you alone in there? 30452 Are you hurt badly?" |
30452 | But Milton? |
30452 | But can we get out? |
30452 | But how to get out of the hands of these, even? |
30452 | But the hour, Tina? 30452 But what compared with the power of ours?" |
30452 | But what could he have to do with this? 30452 But what you going to do?" |
30452 | But when do you intend to go back? |
30452 | But when? |
30452 | But where are we? |
30452 | But where would you be if I had not been able to bring you back? |
30452 | But-- which way are we going? |
30452 | Ca n''t take it in yet, Randall? 30452 Ca n''t you understand that you are under grave suspicion of having injured her, hidden her away? |
30452 | Can you talk? |
30452 | Can you,he said,"look at her there, and deny you loved her? |
30452 | Captain, may I present Miss Mildred Meriden? 30452 Could n''t a doctor do that better than you, if she is hidden somewhere about here?" |
30452 | Could you see it? |
30452 | Did it come from this house? |
30452 | Did n''t she say something about singing to the crabs? |
30452 | Did you look in the furnace? |
30452 | Did you notice the speed indicator, sir? |
30452 | Did you see the way the top of the pit closed above us? 30452 Do you hear it?" |
30452 | Do you hear me? |
30452 | Do you see these garments? |
30452 | Do you suppose those mushroom things are good to eat? |
30452 | Do you think we can land? |
30452 | Does it mean anything to you? |
30452 | Eat? 30452 For God''s sake, what is it?" |
30452 | Full power? |
30452 | Get anything, sir? |
30452 | Go? 30452 Gone?" |
30452 | Got what? |
30452 | Has it a wall around it? |
30452 | Has it any back yard, George? |
30452 | Have we struck it yet? |
30452 | Have we struck it? |
30452 | Have you forgotten how close I came to going to jail over those charges of yours a year ago? |
30452 | Have you forgotten the disgrace to me that followed?--the stigma that forced me to disappear for months? 30452 Have you forgotten,"he said,"that you talked the matter over with me before we split last year? |
30452 | Have you gone crazy, Milton-- or is this some joke you''ve put up with Lanier and Nelson here? |
30452 | Hours? |
30452 | How big was it? |
30452 | How did you know--? |
30452 | How did you manage to bring us back? |
30452 | How long ago did it happen? |
30452 | How long were you in the cage? |
30452 | How should I know? 30452 How should I know?" |
30452 | How''s the temperature? |
30452 | I mean, what year? |
30452 | I not know, Señor,came the hesitant reply,"but....""But what?" |
30452 | I trust, sir, that I did the right thing in following you with the_ Ertak_? |
30452 | I wonder how the rest of the men are? |
30452 | If men did n''t build this, what did? |
30452 | In 1777; but which month, would you say? |
30452 | Is n''t it great? 30452 Is that true, Quade?" |
30452 | Just what do you mean? |
30452 | Like a man? |
30452 | Must she come? |
30452 | No? |
30452 | Nor anything like it? 30452 Not built by men? |
30452 | Ott? 30452 Phil did n''t have one with him, did he?" |
30452 | Randall-- those scar- marks on their-- faces-- you see--? |
30452 | Rough looking country, is n''t it? 30452 Ruler?" |
30452 | Say, Jim, why not try for that shining mountain we saw? 30452 See?" |
30452 | So, you realized your great ambition, eh? |
30452 | Talk? 30452 Talk?" |
30452 | Ten minutes? |
30452 | The blooming clock''s upside down; can you read it? |
30452 | The ray crews are on duty, I presume? |
30452 | Then tell me who built that machine? |
30452 | Then there''s no life in those crimson jungles? |
30452 | Then you did kill her? |
30452 | Then? 30452 Was that what we heard back a ways?" |
30452 | We''re in a mess, are n''t we? |
30452 | We''re still here, sir? |
30452 | Well, if somebody''s making cold light, where does he use it? |
30452 | Were we seeing things? |
30452 | What are we to do-- tell the authorities? 30452 What are you doing here?" |
30452 | What are you talking about? |
30452 | What did it do? 30452 What did you see?" |
30452 | What do you mean, gone? |
30452 | What do you mean? |
30452 | What do you say, Sue? |
30452 | What do you want to do? 30452 What do you want us to do with you?" |
30452 | What has this to do with Miss Crawford? |
30452 | What have us? 30452 What have you done with young Holmes?" |
30452 | What is the number of that house on Patton Place? 30452 What is your name? |
30452 | What the devil''s the matter with you? |
30452 | What''s the matter with you? |
30452 | What''s the matter? |
30452 | What? |
30452 | Where is your mother? |
30452 | Where was he hidin''? |
30452 | Which way, Mary? |
30452 | Why did you evade her parents''inquiries? |
30452 | Why then could not matter be sent in the same way? 30452 Why-- why did they treat us so?" |
30452 | Why? 30452 Will it shock me?" |
30452 | Will it show on the mirror? |
30452 | Will you allow me to get him? 30452 Will you give the orders, please?" |
30452 | Will you please be quiet, my man? 30452 Will you tell your men to be quiet?" |
30452 | Would not you say so? 30452 You are the Earth- beings with whom we communicated, and whom we instructed to build a matter- transmitter and receiver on earth?" |
30452 | You found her, eh? |
30452 | You have come safely to Mars by means of that station? |
30452 | You know what this is? |
30452 | You leave me like thees? |
30452 | You mean to bring her back to life? |
30452 | You see it? |
30452 | You think we can reach the coast? |
30452 | You will not hurt me? 30452 You''re better now?" |
30452 | You''re not afraid? |
30452 | You''re sure it was outdoors? |
30452 | You''ve read Scott''s diary-- that he wrote after he visited the pole in 1912--the one they found with the bodies? |
30452 | Your orders, sir? |
30452 | Your pal, the greaser? |
30452 | ***** Pressing the attention signal for Kincaide, I spoke sharply into the microphone:"Mr. Kincaide, is every ray on that large meteorite above us?" |
30452 | ***** Sue Guinness''s lips formed a frightened word:"Why?" |
30452 | *****"Could you see anything outside the cage?" |
30452 | A brickbat: Why not cut the edges of the magazine smooth? |
30452 | A ragged cheer went up, and I heard Correy''s voice raised in angry conversation with the enemy:"You will, eh? |
30452 | About the radium?--the borer?" |
30452 | An hour? |
30452 | And do you?" |
30452 | And giving us a quarterly? |
30452 | And how about cutting the edges of the paper smooth? |
30452 | And that, if we are not careful, there will be an attack upon New York?" |
30452 | And who knew the thing would break?" |
30452 | And you are going back? |
30452 | And your little Space in the Future? |
30452 | And, as Sue gasped with relief, he added:"Would you like to see him?" |
30452 | Any choice in the matter of a spot on which to set her down?" |
30452 | Anyone who wished you harm?" |
30452 | Are they fish or flesh or fowl?" |
30452 | Are you all right, Larry?" |
30452 | Are you all right?" |
30452 | Are you hurt?" |
30452 | As big as Earth, you said? |
30452 | As he stepped to the door of the earth- borer he turned and asked:"How did you know our plans? |
30452 | Bullets would not stop the thing-- could anything? |
30452 | But by whom? |
30452 | But just a few minutes ago-- oh, am I dreaming? |
30452 | But the others? |
30452 | But what if the opening were a vertical, impassable tunnel? |
30452 | But why--""Why,"Larry burst out,"did that iron monster stop in 1777 and abduct this girl?" |
30452 | But you-- you will not hurt me? |
30452 | CHAPTER II_ From Out of the Past_"Sane?" |
30452 | Ca n''t you come to the door and open it?" |
30452 | Ca n''t you explain? |
30452 | Ca n''t you print at least one for an experiment? |
30452 | Can a man be disintegrated into his component atoms and then reintegrated into two men each half the size, weight, ability and brains? |
30452 | Can you hear me?" |
30452 | Can you hear me?" |
30452 | Can you?" |
30452 | Confusing? |
30452 | Correy?" |
30452 | Could you keep me from going? |
30452 | Did you happen to notice?" |
30452 | Did you hear the glad song I sang because you have come?" |
30452 | Do you agree to that?" |
30452 | Do you feel it?" |
30452 | Do you know how to write editorials? |
30452 | From his seat at the instrument table, Harl burst out:"So he murdered a girl of 1935, and has abducted another of 1777? |
30452 | Have n''t you guessed by now what I''m going to do?" |
30452 | He paused a moment, then said:"Do you want to live?" |
30452 | He said abruptly,"What is this cripple''s name, Mistress Mary?" |
30452 | He shook his head, trying to comprehend, then muttered hazily:"You-- you''re-- Quade?" |
30452 | Hear them now?" |
30452 | How about giving us some short short stories? |
30452 | How did it happen?" |
30452 | How he vanished, with the police guarding every exit to that house-- well, it''s obvious, is n''t it? |
30452 | I ca n''t very well leave her here all unprotected, can I?" |
30452 | I called,"Can you hear us? |
30452 | I said,"Did you have any enemy? |
30452 | If you have not, why do you not tell us where Miss Crawford is?" |
30452 | Is it locked on the inside?" |
30452 | Is it my imagination or have you been using a better grade of paper in the past two issues? |
30452 | Is she familiar?" |
30452 | Is that clear?" |
30452 | Its ascent was so labored that Phil shouted to Professor Guinness:"Why so slow?" |
30452 | Killed? |
30452 | Kincaide?" |
30452 | Kincaide?" |
30452 | Kincaide?" |
30452 | Larry began,"But can you get to the other cage?" |
30452 | Larry demanded,"Are you alone in there?" |
30452 | Larry was saying,"Wish we would get a storm to clear this air--_what the devil?_ George, did you hear that?" |
30452 | Larry was saying,"Wish we would get a storm to clear this air--_what the devil?_ George, did you hear that?" |
30452 | Look around; see what''s happened?" |
30452 | Mistress Mary, did this Tugh in your Time ever consult doctors, trying to have his crippled body made whole?" |
30452 | Mistress Mary, had you never seen this cage before?" |
30452 | Mr. Hendricks will stand the eight to twelve watch as usual?" |
30452 | Now, why not reprint some of them and give us a chance to read them? |
30452 | Or go peaceably along with them-- assuming we are n''t killed at once-- on the chance that we can make a break later?" |
30452 | Perhaps you remember the shot that sounded from the water- hole? |
30452 | Ready?" |
30452 | Sail in and die fighting? |
30452 | See?" |
30452 | Several of the men were moving about, dazedly, and as I signalled to them, reassuringly, a voice hailed us from the doorway:"Any orders, sir?" |
30452 | Shall we chance it? |
30452 | Shall we see?" |
30452 | Shall we stop, Tina?" |
30452 | Shall we try it, sir?" |
30452 | She cried out in terror,"Will they add to our misery?" |
30452 | She finally exclaimed:"But-- but then Phil''s alive?" |
30452 | She murmured,"Is this New York?" |
30452 | Simple, eh?... |
30452 | Suppose there were no atmosphere surrounding Zeud to cushion their descent into the hundred- mile crater that yawned to receive them? |
30452 | Suppose we take matter and by applying electrical force to it change its wave- length, step it up to the wave- length of radio vibrations? |
30452 | Take Mistress Mary Atwood to Police Headquarters and inform them that she has come from the year 1777? |
30452 | That''s a long way from the Beginning, is n''t it? |
30452 | The minute?" |
30452 | Those others, which brought to the City of New York such amazing disaster? |
30452 | Try it? |
30452 | Was anything like that known to your Time?" |
30452 | Was it many hours?" |
30452 | Was it minutes or hours, Randall wondered afterward, of that horrible progress downward, that passed before they glimpsed light beneath? |
30452 | Was it obvious that the effects of the numbing poison was wearing off? |
30452 | Was the girl from out of the past giving us a warning of coming disaster to this great city? |
30452 | Was there no release? |
30452 | Were they on some invisible eminence, above the reach of these queer creatures? |
30452 | Wesso is great, so why not have all the illustrations by him? |
30452 | What are they, in God''s name? |
30452 | What do you mean by it?" |
30452 | What do you mean?" |
30452 | What happened? |
30452 | What is it?" |
30452 | What is it?" |
30452 | What made it break? |
30452 | What was it like?" |
30452 | What''ll we do then? |
30452 | What''s that?" |
30452 | What''s that?" |
30452 | What''s the matter with you? |
30452 | When did Tugh vanish from your world?" |
30452 | When? |
30452 | Where am I? |
30452 | Where-- where did Quade go to?" |
30452 | Who are you?" |
30452 | Why change the size? |
30452 | Why not? |
30452 | Why not? |
30452 | Why?" |
30452 | Will you please leave me alone, now, so that I can continue?" |
30452 | Will you tell Felix to bring us some food, plenty of it?" |
30452 | With such versatile authors as Burks( When does his next story appear? |
30452 | Would they be bitten again-- or eaten? |
30452 | Would this go on through eternity? |
30452 | Yes? |
30452 | You have come, then, to learn of this world and to take back what you learn to your races?" |
30452 | You will, wo n''t you-- without making a fuss?" |
30452 | [?] |
37347 | And how many choirs had you? |
37347 | And how many voices had you? |
37347 | And that mountain must bear a name equivalent to Armageddon? |
37347 | And the singing,said the Duchess,"was not that lovely?" |
37347 | And what anthem did you have to- day? |
37347 | And what did you think of him? |
37347 | But what are you whistling in that queer way for? |
37347 | Do you know what Armageddon means? |
37347 | Do you? |
37347 | Has n''t it got any wings? |
37347 | How do you account for that? |
37347 | How does she stop her ears? 37347 I ask myself what can you predicate of frogs? |
37347 | Oh, and what was it like? |
37347 | Still, I suppose,said the stranger,"there can be no objection to my saying my prayers quietly here?" |
37347 | Then,said the man,"who stole the dean''s cadges?" |
37347 | Well,I said,"what is it?" |
37347 | What words? |
37347 | What,he said,"was that the bishop? |
37347 | Where did it come from? |
37347 | Where? |
37347 | Who did you say, sir? |
37347 | Why not? |
37347 | Why not? |
37347 | ( 2)"Why did St. Paul go to Damascus?" |
37347 | ( 3)"What is the meaning of Asia in the New Testament?" |
37347 | ( 4)"What happened at Lystra?" |
37347 | A boy in Christ Church, Albany Street, School when asked,"What are the Ember weeks?" |
37347 | A friend remonstrated with her and asked,"Do you really think you and your gardener are the only two real members of the true Church on earth?" |
37347 | A very little girl was asked,"Who made you?" |
37347 | And what do you think he did?" |
37347 | And what do you think he said? |
37347 | Another boy, in reply to the question,"Why should you be kind to animals?" |
37347 | Another question was,"How may St. Paul''s Epistles be grouped?" |
37347 | Another, to the question"Who were the Ophites?" |
37347 | Before the train started a newspaper boy held up a copy of_ Church Bells_ to him, and he looked up and said,"What''s that? |
37347 | Did n''t a gentleman of the name of Hopkins help him?" |
37347 | Dost a want some o''ma brass? |
37347 | He answered,"Not many; are there many here?" |
37347 | He found a seat and then whispered to his neighbour with a strong brogue,"Is this the end of the last service, or the beginning of the next?" |
37347 | He slackened pace, finished the prayer, duly sang the Amen, and then shook hands with a hearty"How do you do, old fellow?" |
37347 | He then said,"You will allow, I presume, that the Messiah must appear from a mountain?" |
37347 | He told her not to mind about being very exact, but would she tell him what sort of a thing it was? |
37347 | He was then asked,"And why not in the morning?" |
37347 | Hearing the men in the front room he called out,"What dost a want? |
37347 | Here is a very up- to- date little story: did it happen in Leicester? |
37347 | I see,"said the gentleman,"you''re what they call the_ rude_ screen, are n''t you?" |
37347 | If an ingenious way was on this occasion found out of a difficulty, what about the next? |
37347 | In 1893, in answer to the question,"What passages in Holy Scripture bear upon cruelty to animals?" |
37347 | In answer to the question,"What is a churchwarden?" |
37347 | In the Ripon diocese an ordination candidate, in answer to the question,"What religious sects have been founded during the last two centuries?" |
37347 | Lyttelton?" |
37347 | Mr. B. answered,"Do n''t you think the Psalms were meant to be sung?" |
37347 | My cousin said,"Well, what did he fall among?" |
37347 | My friend spoke to the boy, and said,"Are you the boots at the inn at Glengariff?" |
37347 | Next Sunday the boy appeared again in his class, when the vicar said,"Was n''t it you I put out last Sunday?" |
37347 | One day one of the farmers met him, and said,"What is this new hymn- book, sir? |
37347 | One day, when a few of them were at his table, the following conversation took place: Warden to student,"Have you ever read the Apocrypha?" |
37347 | One was crying,"Who stole Jim Crow''s cadges?" |
37347 | She said,"Beant it summut in the inside of a pig?" |
37347 | She said,"What are you doing?" |
37347 | So I shouted,"Who are they, Richard?" |
37347 | So when we got to the house, before we went up, I says,''You do n''t know what''s the matter with him?'' |
37347 | Teacher:"Why did they hide Moses in the bulrushes?" |
37347 | That''s moderate, is n''t it? |
37347 | The bishop looked up with one of his merry twinkles and simply said,"Never?" |
37347 | The bishop quietly remarked,"Would a hemisphere do?" |
37347 | The boy replied,"When he is, need we say our prayers?" |
37347 | The headmaster of the Wakefield Grammar School in an examination- paper on general knowledge asked,"Who was John Wesley?" |
37347 | The vicar, thinking he was in for a theological discussion, said,"What do n''t you like?" |
37347 | There were great exclamations of horror, when Mr. Hook quietly looked up from his paper and said,"I beg your pardon, what did you see?" |
37347 | They afterwards drove through another valley, and the stranger said,"And pray what do you call this?" |
37347 | They were,( 1)"What do you know about Tarsus?" |
37347 | To this she replied rather shyly,"Please, sir, will t''same spurrings do for another chap?" |
37347 | To which the boy answered instantly with a grin,"Did yer honour pay the boots? |
37347 | Warden,"Have you read the Maccabees?" |
37347 | Warden,"How much have you read?" |
37347 | Warden,"How much?" |
37347 | Warden,"Or Esdras?" |
37347 | Warden,"Or Wisdom?" |
37347 | Warden,"Well, have you read Bell and the Dragon?" |
37347 | Well, what do you think this chap did?" |
37347 | Well, when we got to the foot of the stairs I says to him just like t''other one,''You do n''t know what''s the matter with him?'' |
37347 | What was the good of talking to him? |
37347 | When all was done she lingered at the door and the vicar said,"Well, Mary, is there anything more?" |
37347 | Which way did he go?" |
37347 | and he says,''No, what is it?'' |
37347 | and he says,''No, what is it?'' |
37347 | he asked, and on being told"No,"added,"Has n''t it got any feathers at all?" |
35394 | And Shelley? 35394 But did everybody approve of it? |
35394 | Have you happened to notice,I asked,"that_ A Winter''s Tale_ has recently been produced at His Majesty''s Theatre?" |
35394 | It''s Byron,I said,"is it not?" |
35394 | May I inquire,I said,"if you, among others, had a liberal application of the cane?" |
35394 | Surely it is Edmund Spenser, is it not? |
35394 | ''Tis a note of enchantment; what ails her? |
35394 | And Dante? |
35394 | And Milton himself? |
35394 | And what is the conclusion of the poem? |
35394 | And what, in the yet happy and in no degree morose Milton, are the"unreproved pleasures"? |
35394 | And where has it been more charmingly expressed than in Cowper''s lines on the receipt of his mother''s picture? |
35394 | And why? |
35394 | And why? |
35394 | And, in the two exceptions I have named, what is his attitude? |
35394 | Are they as good as the whole of the original work? |
35394 | As you know, it is called_ The Task_; and what are the respective titles of the six books into which it is divided? |
35394 | Ay, if dynamite and revolver leave you courage to be wise: When was age so cramm''d with menace? |
35394 | But are they equal and equivalent to the entire statue? |
35394 | But can it, with any regard to accuracy of speech, be described as"powerful"work? |
35394 | But how did he rebut it? |
35394 | But if we turn to some of the noblest productions of Gothic architecture, what do we find? |
35394 | But in the longer and more detailed passage quoted above, is not everything conceded for which we are contending? |
35394 | But is he not? |
35394 | But now let us ask, in order to redress the balance, what has Dante to show, in kind, against_ Il Penseroso_,_ L''Allegro_,_ Lycidas_, and_ Comus_? |
35394 | But to cite one or two familiar examples, is the feminine note, I may ask, the predominant, or even a frequent, note in the_ Iliad_? |
35394 | But what is Dante''s attitude towards Francesca da Rimini, in the most beautiful passage, it seems to me, in the whole range of narrative Poetry? |
35394 | But what is the one, broad, final impression we receive of the gaze with which Shakespeare looked on life? |
35394 | But what is the use of it if it does not"bring us much on our way"? |
35394 | But what, in the name of all that is fair, and manly, and magnanimous, have political opinions got to do with literary merit? |
35394 | But where is Milton?" |
35394 | But who is it that is not prepared to believe in the sorrows of a love- tale? |
35394 | But will any one affirm that their integrity, as they stand, is nothing to them, and nothing to us? |
35394 | But, if this Ode be struck out of the account, what remains to represent an"ample body of powerful work"? |
35394 | Can Honour''s voice provoke the silent dust, Or Flatt''ry soothe the dull cold ear of Death? |
35394 | Can Pessimism in Poetry go farther than that? |
35394 | Can storied urn, or animated bust, Back to its mansion call the fleeting breath? |
35394 | Can the same be said of_ Paradise Lost_? |
35394 | Could anything be more grotesque, or more utterly opposed to any sane canon of the function of an author, and his relation to his readers? |
35394 | Could there have been a more crushing yet a more parliamentary and well- bred rebuke? |
35394 | Could there well be a more feminine picture than that? |
35394 | Could you have a more realistic touch? |
35394 | Did Optimism ever find a clearer, more enthusiastic, or more confident voice than that? |
35394 | Did you happen to observe that, a little while back, I used the phrase,"the ideal realism, or realistic idealism, call it which you will"? |
35394 | Do not the words stir one''s blood to cheerfulness, and sound like a very carillon of joy? |
35394 | Equal- born? |
35394 | For what is it that renders_ Hamlet_ so great and so powerful? |
35394 | For what is the"ample body of powerful work"that Byron has left? |
35394 | For_ whose_"criticism of life"? |
35394 | Has he forgotten the passage? |
35394 | How many lyrics, as perfect as the one we have quoted, has Wordsworth written? |
35394 | How often has it happened to one to ask"What shall I read?" |
35394 | I fancy I hear some people saying,"Quite so; who ever denied or doubted it?" |
35394 | If Murdstone and Quinion could be converted and ever took to reading poetry, would not this be the sort of verse that would delight them? |
35394 | If not, may I say it for you? |
35394 | If this be not so, how comes it that he calls one volume_"Poems"of Wordsworth_, and the other_"Poetry"of Byron_? |
35394 | In ill thoughts again? |
35394 | Is it because the gods themselves are dead, that the heavenly favourites are nowadays permitted to exceed even the scriptural span of life? |
35394 | Is it detached passages of profound and elevated thought presented in poetic guise? |
35394 | Is it necessary to give their names? |
35394 | Is it pessimistic or optimistic? |
35394 | Is it single lines of beautiful poetry? |
35394 | Is not that another_ reductio ad absurdum_? |
35394 | Is not that sorry stuff, regarded as poetry? |
35394 | Is that any longer so in the case of_ Paradise Lost_? |
35394 | Is the_ Fairy Queen_ perfectly satisfactory? |
35394 | Is the_ Iliad_ perfectly satisfactory? |
35394 | Is the_ Æneid_ perfectly satisfactory? |
35394 | Is there nothing poetic in Wordsworth''s picture of a girl turning her wheel beside an English fire? |
35394 | Is this prose or verse? |
35394 | Is_ Cain_ a failure? |
35394 | Is_ Childe Harold_ a failure? |
35394 | Is_ Don Juan_ a failure? |
35394 | Is_ Manfred_ a failure? |
35394 | Ma tu perchè ritorni a tanta noia? |
35394 | May we not reasonably conclude that M. Scherer would reject at least all that we have rejected? |
35394 | Mr. Swinburne, no doubt, knows the lines by heart: Mais comment fais- tu donc, vieux maître Pour renaître? |
35394 | Now, if we consider this episode in its integrity, do we not find ourselves, from first to last, essentially in the region of the Ideal? |
35394 | Now, what do we find him saying? |
35394 | Perchè non sali il dilettoso monte, Ch''è principio e cagion di tutta gioia? |
35394 | Perhaps the plaintive numbers flow For old, unhappy, far- off things, And battles long ago: Or is it some more humble lay, Familiar matter of to- day? |
35394 | Perhaps the plaintive numbers flow For old, unhappy, far- off things, And battles long ago: Or is it some more humble lay, Familiar matter of to- day? |
35394 | Prithee, why so pale? |
35394 | Royalist, Republican, Communist, Deist, Pantheist,--what care I which of these a poet is, so he is a poet? |
35394 | Some natural sorrow, loss, or pain, That has been, and may be again? |
35394 | Some natural sorrow, loss, or pain, That has been, and may be again? |
35394 | Some, perhaps, will ask,"Surely there is nothing very poetic in the foregoing description of woman?" |
35394 | Still more, what is meant by"powerful"? |
35394 | Surely Pessimism in Poetry can no farther go, than to assume, without question, that man, life, society, patriotism are not worth a song? |
35394 | Surely music is not only the food of love, but of poetry as well; and do not"music and sweet poetry agree"? |
35394 | Surely, if there be any one who thinks this poetry, it must be Mr. Arnold''s friend, the British Philistine? |
35394 | The past is out of date, The future not yet born; And who can be alone elate, While the world lies forlorn? |
35394 | The public look on, a little bewildered; for who is to decide when doctors disagree? |
35394 | There is nothing very feminine in all this, is there? |
35394 | There would be a pair of them, would there not? |
35394 | Was there ever such a contrast as between these two_ Locksley Halls_? |
35394 | What does it mean? |
35394 | What has Wordsworth of all these? |
35394 | What is it that makes the first six books of_ Paradise Lost_ so much more telling than the later ones? |
35394 | What is meant by"ample"? |
35394 | What is the first and broad conclusion to be drawn from all that has been said? |
35394 | What is the impression left, what the result produced, by the entire canto? |
35394 | What is the name of Cowper''s principal and most ambitious poem? |
35394 | What is there in Dante to compare with that? |
35394 | What might be taken as its motto? |
35394 | What says Shakespeare, who knew men and women equally well? |
35394 | What solid reason is there to suppose that the present age is any more infallible in its literary judgments than preceding ages? |
35394 | What then is the precise value, the real calibre, the particular kind of power, of that"ampler body of powerful work"which Wordsworth has given us? |
35394 | What think you of that as a realistic treatment of the Ideal? |
35394 | What though upon her speech there hung The accents of the mountain tongue? |
35394 | What was the result? |
35394 | What, then, is feminine as contrasted with masculine? |
35394 | What, we may well ask, can a poet do more than this, when he gets into the higher range, the upper atmosphere of poetry? |
35394 | Where is Shelley?" |
35394 | Where is the stern Puritan Milton in these cheerful, generous verses? |
35394 | Where tarries He, the Power who said,_ See_, I make all things new? |
35394 | Which of you does not remember the description in the same poem of the Village Clergyman? |
35394 | Who could possibly withhold it? |
35394 | Who shall say when the fruits of harvest- time begin to ripen? |
35394 | Why do you not ascend the delectable mountain, which is the principle and cause of all true happiness? |
35394 | Will Mr. Arnold tell us what is Shakespeare''s criticism of life? |
35394 | Will no one tell me what she sings? |
35394 | Will no one tell me what she sings? |
35394 | Would they be gainers by this absolute severance? |
35394 | Yet what does Mr. Arnold say of it? |
35394 | Yet, if I stay, who will go?" |
35394 | how has the poet dealt with them? |
35394 | madness? |
35394 | or would he now expunge it? |
35394 | to your house, and see to your loom and distaff, but for war men will provide"? |
35394 | what is womanly as compared with manly, whether in literature or in life? |
35394 | who can tell how all will end? |
35394 | written, spoken lies? |
30177 | A building? |
30177 | A coil? |
30177 | All right now? |
30177 | All right? |
30177 | And do you think they are of gold? |
30177 | And is there nothing, sir, that we can do? |
30177 | And now, Professor, I wonder if you''d be willing to say a few words about this craft of yours? |
30177 | And the machine? |
30177 | And then what? 30177 And then?" |
30177 | And what is this below--? 30177 Antillia?" |
30177 | Are you safe? |
30177 | Attacking? |
30177 | Blair, do you feel it too, that eery feeling of countless eyes still watching us from Xoran? |
30177 | But I thought,he insisted nevertheless,"that you said you were going to explore the ocean floor under the Sargasso Sea?" |
30177 | But ca n''t you let me stay, now that I''m here? |
30177 | But could n''t we drop down and make sure which ship it is? |
30177 | But if you could help, would you be willing? 30177 But it_ is_ your name, is it not?" |
30177 | But our language? |
30177 | But surely you do n''t think anyone can molest us down here? |
30177 | But the big catapult--"Can you not see that the big catapult is broken? |
30177 | But what do you suppose they want with us? |
30177 | But what happened, my dear? |
30177 | But why were n''t we taken to him too? |
30177 | But why were they so eager to abandon the_ Nereid_? |
30177 | But you''ll get it all back, wo n''t you? 30177 But your age,"asked Sykes,"measured in years?" |
30177 | But, in God''s name, sir,burst forth Croy, his eyes blazing,"by what means do they, propose to inforce their infamous demands?" |
30177 | Can we use that on their fleets? |
30177 | Can you not realize that I am utterly invincible in any combat with you? 30177 Can you think of any good reason why I should n''t go, when girls are flying around the world and everything else?" |
30177 | Can you wait that long? |
30177 | Can you wait that long? |
30177 | Cause? |
30177 | Crazy, am I, Chief? 30177 Dead?... |
30177 | Dictaphone? 30177 Did Von Holtz give you that metal?" |
30177 | Did the world ever give anything to me? 30177 Did you make some wire for springs?" |
30177 | Did you not see that trespassers are forbidden? 30177 Did you not see the sign upon the gate?" |
30177 | Do I get a free hand? |
30177 | Do I look like a historian? |
30177 | Do you believe-- really-- he can strike him down-- at his desk-- from a distance? |
30177 | Do you expect to win all the time? 30177 Do you realize what that means? |
30177 | Do you see, Herr Reames, the position it puts me in? 30177 Does he know it means death?" |
30177 | Does he know-- about this? |
30177 | For witnesses? |
30177 | Four days? |
30177 | Has anyone a better? |
30177 | Have you his clothing where I can examine it? |
30177 | Have you not searched for the means to control the life principle-- you people of Earth? |
30177 | Have your countries not reached out for other countries when land was needed? |
30177 | He is marooned, Herr Reames, and you alone--"Marooned? |
30177 | How about that electronic projector on the submarine? |
30177 | How can you talk to him? |
30177 | How did you do it? |
30177 | How do they fire it? |
30177 | How do they propose to do this thing sir? 30177 How does Mr. Croy plan to frighten these people of the darkness?" |
30177 | How does this thing work? |
30177 | How is it that you can speak our tongue? |
30177 | How long did Denham use this thing to look through, before he built his globe? |
30177 | How long? |
30177 | How the deuce do they know when it is dawn, down here? |
30177 | In the middle of New York State? 30177 Is it a bet?" |
30177 | Is the President at his desk at twelve? |
30177 | Jacaro? |
30177 | Jetta of the Lowlands? |
30177 | May I come in, daddy? |
30177 | May I introduce myself? |
30177 | More killings? |
30177 | Mr. Croy,I said swiftly,"do you realize that you are speaking to your commanding officer?" |
30177 | Oh, why do n''t they kill him? |
30177 | Or shall I take Miss Keith with me by force? |
30177 | Or shall you do what? |
30177 | Perhaps--Then he paused-- for how could he say that perhaps the situation was n''t as bad as it seemed, when it was obviously hopeless? |
30177 | Reames? 30177 Remember how it melted out the heart of that big ship? |
30177 | So that is the way you reward us for giving you an exclusive story, is it? |
30177 | Some more of them damn electrons,he hazarded; then demanded of his caller:"But am I one hell of a smart guy? |
30177 | That sky-- the stars-- they are not real? |
30177 | The officials deny it, but what other answer is there? 30177 The pleasant young fellow?" |
30177 | The thing, whatever it is, has been going on for four days? |
30177 | The-- Ragged Men? |
30177 | The-- what? |
30177 | Then have you not enough gold already? |
30177 | Then we are below ground? |
30177 | Then you really expect to find the lost continent of Atlantis, Professor? |
30177 | Then-- then my captain and crew are safe? |
30177 | They are still all right? |
30177 | Those circles, that square: what would you judge they were, Professor? |
30177 | To whom, might I ask, do we owe our lives, and the honor of this interview? |
30177 | Underworld? |
30177 | Want me to take it on? |
30177 | Was he--the operative hesitated for a moment--"pretty well fried?" |
30177 | Was it a land station or a ship at sea? |
30177 | Was the door locked? |
30177 | We really ought to let Mr. Hunter come with us, daddy, do n''t you think? |
30177 | We''ll gamble on it, Del,he said;"we''ve got to-- there is no other way.... And now what do you want?" |
30177 | Well, how can we stop them? |
30177 | Well, in the first place, what does the name_ Nereid_ mean? |
30177 | Well? |
30177 | What about the earth? 30177 What are you talking about? |
30177 | What did he say? |
30177 | What did the priest say, daddy? |
30177 | What do you mean? |
30177 | What do you suppose they want with us, anyway, daddy? |
30177 | What does he say, Althora? |
30177 | What does he say? |
30177 | What does it mean? 30177 What has happened, Herr Reames?" |
30177 | What is it? |
30177 | What is it? |
30177 | What would you make of that, Del? |
30177 | What you goin''to do? |
30177 | What''s happening? |
30177 | What''s the matter with him? |
30177 | What-- what''s that? |
30177 | What? |
30177 | When do we start? |
30177 | Where are the clouds? |
30177 | Where is he? |
30177 | Who are you? |
30177 | Why do n''t they kill him? |
30177 | Why do n''t we stop and look her over? 30177 Why have you not been back?" |
30177 | Why were they in such a hurry to be off? |
30177 | Why, how could he have got down here? |
30177 | Why,he asked instead,"do you not use your own submarine for the purpose?" |
30177 | Why? |
30177 | Why? |
30177 | Why? |
30177 | Will you let her go peaceably, or shall I--? |
30177 | Without a mark? |
30177 | Wonder what I''d do,said Tommy Reames,"if another car came along from the other end?" |
30177 | Yeah? |
30177 | Yes, sir? |
30177 | Yes,said Lieutenant McGuire quietly,"for us--?" |
30177 | You have studied some physical science, of course? |
30177 | You have the catapult remade? |
30177 | You hit that gate a lick, did n''t you? |
30177 | You live here? |
30177 | You make this? |
30177 | You mean nitro- glycerine? 30177 You mean the flyer?" |
30177 | You were the man who introduced machine- guns into gang warfare, were n''t you? 30177 You will impersonate him-- yes-- but what then? |
30177 | You_ know_? 30177 ***** What was it? 30177 *****Is that possible, sir?" |
30177 | *****"The city ahead is not the one we are seeking, sir?" |
30177 | *****"Would it be possible to frighten them?" |
30177 | A defective trolley? |
30177 | A street- car? |
30177 | A-- a freighter, is n''t it?" |
30177 | Also, how about refraction? |
30177 | Am I offering so little, Tommy?" |
30177 | And I alone can help him? |
30177 | And all the time, Larry had an uneasy feeling of gathering furtive hosts about them, waiting-- waiting for what? |
30177 | And he repeated,"What does it mean?" |
30177 | And how could these new friends meet it? |
30177 | And if I failed my own folk what right would I have to you?" |
30177 | And me, Tommy.... Would you throw your life away in a hopeless attempt, when life might hold so much? |
30177 | And what do those who love you say?" |
30177 | And what is there in that stuff to get Denham in trouble?" |
30177 | And what would be the result of that audience? |
30177 | And what would they do with this? |
30177 | And why do you call it a torpedo- submarine? |
30177 | And, if we fail to make the fight, what heaven worth having is left? |
30177 | Appropriate, do n''t you think?" |
30177 | Are n''t there all sorts of Spanish galleons and pirate barques laden with gold supposed to be down there?" |
30177 | Are you convinced that I did not lie to you? |
30177 | Are you convinced that the Herr Professor Denham is in need of help?" |
30177 | Are you seriously hinting at long- distance vision through solid armor- plate-- through these walls of stone and steel? |
30177 | But did you make some springs?" |
30177 | But first there are one or two little things you would like explained-- yes? |
30177 | But this devil will get him the instant he leaves... unless... unless....""Yes-- yes?" |
30177 | But was it a room? |
30177 | But what is the power? |
30177 | But where was the populace, amid all this prodigious wealth? |
30177 | But-- what does it mean? |
30177 | Ca n''t you see that I am right, sir?" |
30177 | Can it be done? |
30177 | Can you do it?" |
30177 | Compray?" |
30177 | Could he-- or we-- wish more?" |
30177 | Did it mean an attack? |
30177 | Did it work?" |
30177 | Did the tall man speak? |
30177 | Did you hear that?" |
30177 | Did you notice how careful he was to shield his other hand with a glove before he turned the tool on? |
30177 | Do I get the Mint?" |
30177 | Do you approve, sir?" |
30177 | Do you understand me?" |
30177 | For the love of Pete, if people want scientific treatises, why do n''t they buy books and magazines dealing with the subject? |
30177 | Had he seized his opportunity and led the crew to mutiny, in the hope of converting the expedition into a treasure hunt? |
30177 | Has anything else turned up? |
30177 | Have you any more requests or suggestions?" |
30177 | He had watched Evelyn, and he loved her--"H- how do you do?" |
30177 | He went back to the torch and observed placidly:"The Professor ai n''t around, is he?" |
30177 | His generator must be insulated: would he touch it with his hand, now that his own current was off?--make of himself a conductor? |
30177 | How about a job helping?" |
30177 | How about the rest of the bet? |
30177 | How could he reach him? |
30177 | How could they invent them?" |
30177 | How do you drive it? |
30177 | How does it differ from the common or navy variety?" |
30177 | How does that let you out?" |
30177 | How far away are they?" |
30177 | How far could the Eye of Allah see? |
30177 | How far did the invisible arm reach? |
30177 | How long do you make it to Oreo?" |
30177 | How much is Jacaro going to pay you for the secret of the catapult, Von Holtz?" |
30177 | How''d it work?" |
30177 | How, may I ask, do meteors penetrate through that imaginary substance which is too much for a powerful space flyer? |
30177 | I wonder if they have forgotten him? |
30177 | I--""You are a historian?" |
30177 | Is he armed?" |
30177 | Is he goin''to boss the job?" |
30177 | Is it a joke?" |
30177 | Is n''t that a building of some kind?" |
30177 | Is n''t that it?" |
30177 | Is that as you would wish it, gentlemen?" |
30177 | Is that not so?" |
30177 | Is that not true?" |
30177 | Is the President of the United States to be a fugitive? |
30177 | It was bizarre, of course, but does n''t a drowning person catch at straws? |
30177 | Jacaro''s men come and talk to you at night, do n''t they?" |
30177 | More hurried scribbling, then:"But, say-- why do n''t you go direct to Atlantis and get the real dope?" |
30177 | Now, how about taking me up a mile or so in the air?" |
30177 | Or am I?" |
30177 | Or else--""What?" |
30177 | Perhaps"--and Bori Tulber smiled faintly and terribly--"you would like to have that message direct from its bearer?" |
30177 | Really?" |
30177 | Scoop? |
30177 | So he pulled out a cigarette case and lighted a cigarette and said sardonically:"The fifth dimension? |
30177 | Some employee of the Department listening in?" |
30177 | TNT?" |
30177 | That big thing with the solenoid-- the coil?" |
30177 | That is, why should n''t there be a Quarterly? |
30177 | That right?" |
30177 | The Herr Reames?" |
30177 | The zipping flash of a contact made and broken? |
30177 | Then he said:"Well? |
30177 | Then how about their ships? |
30177 | Then, where had this person stood-- this being who called himself the Eye of Allah? |
30177 | Tired? |
30177 | Tommy said eagerly:"Say, which of those things did you help him build? |
30177 | Tried these for fingerprints I suppose?". |
30177 | Unconsciously he voiced his thoughts:"Does the President have nails in his shoes, I wonder?" |
30177 | Von Holtz? |
30177 | Was that the reason he had been so willing to remain behind? |
30177 | Was the professor wrong? |
30177 | Was there anyone in the room-- did you enter it with him last night, Del?" |
30177 | Was there no life down here? |
30177 | Was there no way out? |
30177 | We have our bombs and our rays, it is true, but what is the power of this one ship against the people of half a world? |
30177 | Were they being led to their doom, after all? |
30177 | What are you doing? |
30177 | What did it bring to mind? |
30177 | What do you want this secret for?" |
30177 | What had happened to Captain Petersen and his crew? |
30177 | What has happened?" |
30177 | What if I am?" |
30177 | What if anything went wrong with their pressure- suits-- or if they should become lost? |
30177 | What is the joke, anyhow?" |
30177 | What is the use of having various publications if they must all be conducted along identical lines? |
30177 | What strange sub- sea enemy had overcome them? |
30177 | What throws it out through space?" |
30177 | What was now their fate? |
30177 | What was this strange sense of tension, of foreboding, that hung in the air? |
30177 | What was to be done? |
30177 | What would you care to have me say?" |
30177 | What would you suggest, sir?" |
30177 | What''s the matter? |
30177 | What''s your price?" |
30177 | When are you planning to leave, Professor?" |
30177 | Where had he slipped? |
30177 | Where was the generator-- the origin of this wireless power; along what channel did it flow? |
30177 | Where''s th''thing Jacaro wants?" |
30177 | Who is that girl?" |
30177 | Why do you permit--?" |
30177 | Why not adopt a tolerant attitude, and instead of howling about petty faults and mistakes get a good laugh over them? |
30177 | Why not this one? |
30177 | Why pick on the fifth?" |
30177 | Why should we, when we have so much fine land upon which the sun shines bright and fair always, save for the two brief seasons of rain? |
30177 | Why-- why, what are you doing here, young man?" |
30177 | Why? |
30177 | Will I not be accused of having put him out of the way?" |
30177 | Will it really cause them anguish on your Earth, Tommy?" |
30177 | Will they send another Opener of Gates to take up the work where Arlok failed?" |
30177 | Will you make the metal?" |
30177 | Will you phone for a repairman? |
30177 | Will you promise me now to receive what I am about to send, without interruption?" |
30177 | Winslow?" |
30177 | Would it but plunge them from the frying pan into the fire, wondered Larry, or would it mean their salvation? |
30177 | Would it?" |
30177 | Would they ever get back? |
30177 | Yes?" |
30177 | You do n''t mean to say the Mayas and Incas originated on that island of Antillia?" |
30177 | You have men on all the auxiliary television discs?" |
30177 | You have your menore?" |
30177 | You know how to combine the right angles?" |
30177 | You know how to work that metallic ammonium?" |
30177 | You will not go, for what can you do? |
30177 | You--"Tommy said irritably:"Are you Von Holtz? |
30177 | _ Are We All"Morons? |
30177 | and second,"How about refraction?" |
42634 | ***** Shall all we die? |
42634 | ***** To the memory of Thomas Hause:"Lord, thy grace is free,--why not for me?" |
42634 | ***** Who lies here?--Who do you think? |
42634 | All die shall we? |
42634 | O cruel Death, how cou''d you be so unkind To take him before and leave me behind? |
42634 | Who knows but in a run of years, In some tall pitcher or bread pan, She in her shop may be again? |
42634 | Ye weeping friends, let me advise, Abate your grief and dry your eyes, For what avails a flood of tears? |
42634 | art thou prepared to die? |
28617 | A murder in Laketon? 28617 Adjustable, see? |
28617 | Ah, you''re beginning to find that out, are you? |
28617 | An answer is it? |
28617 | And do you believe it? |
28617 | And now, what is the news you have for me? |
28617 | And so at last you confess that it is not well to tamper with human life? |
28617 | And who can say to what extent you have thus furthered natural evolution? |
28617 | And why did you pick me to tell it to? |
28617 | And you pleaded with him to return for us? |
28617 | Are n''t you taking any special precautions? |
28617 | Are there more like him? |
28617 | Are we going to waste the whole afternoon just to watch a man run? |
28617 | Are you going to arrest me? |
28617 | Are you really going? |
28617 | Are you telling me that this airship is operated with power from the sun? |
28617 | Besides,he said,"what do you know about dog- fights?" |
28617 | Better? 28617 But could stored sunshine alone give enough warmth for the luxuriant growth of those jungles?" |
28617 | But what of the arts, Dr. Mundson? 28617 But what sane man can believe that even perfectly developed beings, through mental control, could overcome Nature''s fixed laws?" |
28617 | But what would you think if I told you that there is not an ounce of gasoline in my heavier- than- air craft? |
28617 | But where are there volcanoes in the south polar regions? |
28617 | But, my young friend, do you realize that my sun- ship has a speed of over one thousand miles an hour, how much over I dare not tell you? |
28617 | Ca n''t I call him up and see if he still wants to see me? |
28617 | Can I do anything to help? 28617 Dale,"he said at length, turning slowly to face me,"you ask for an explanation of this horror? |
28617 | Dare we do it? |
28617 | Did he say at what time he would operate? |
28617 | Did you ever see such a girl as that? |
28617 | Did you notice anything of the sort? |
28617 | Did you see or hear anything like a shadow or a person moving? |
28617 | Did you see that Carnes? |
28617 | Did you see? |
28617 | Do I guess right,said Northwood,"that the light is responsible for this oasis in the ice?" |
28617 | Do n''t they suffer? |
28617 | Do you believe that we''ve got''em licked? |
28617 | Do you realize what this means? |
28617 | Do you understand? |
28617 | Do you want to bring more creatures like Adam into the world? |
28617 | Does what? |
28617 | Fantastic? |
28617 | General,he ordered,"will you kindly arrange for a plane? |
28617 | Give yourself up? |
28617 | Good Lord,Dodd shouted,"did you see the color of their shells, Tommy?" |
28617 | Got them? 28617 Got to land... can you take it? |
28617 | Had it occurred to you that that is our only weapon left? 28617 Had n''t we better notify the police?" |
28617 | Has any one been out on reconnaissance? |
28617 | Have I your gracious permission to arrest these three criminals? |
28617 | Have you any idea of who did it, or how it was done? |
28617 | Have you constructed such a device? |
28617 | Have you got an invitation? |
28617 | Have you got that truck I wired you to have ready? |
28617 | Have you not guessed that Adam has developed an additional sense? 28617 Have you solved the method?" |
28617 | How about the ground under the Colossus? |
28617 | How about your marsupial lion now, Bram? |
28617 | How are you going to bring us three back in your plane? |
28617 | How are you going to get it out? |
28617 | How d''you know, Haidia? |
28617 | How d''you know? |
28617 | How did you get that picture, Doctor? |
28617 | How do you know about Adam? 28617 How in thunder do you know that?" |
28617 | How long after that did you ring the alarm gongs? |
28617 | How many got caught in the building? |
28617 | How many thousands of years are you looking forward, Professor? |
28617 | How much? |
28617 | How you going to prove your contention? |
28617 | I ca n''t frighten you? |
28617 | If there was some flaw? |
28617 | Is that a telephone to the house? |
28617 | It is puzzling, is n''t it? 28617 Just what is your game?" |
28617 | May we take a peep at Lona''s twins? |
28617 | Mean? |
28617 | Mr. Jervis, will you tell the police that there is no violence threatening and ask them to wait for a few minutes? 28617 Mr. Rogers, how, on a dark day and in the absence of a timepiece, would you judge the passage of time?" |
28617 | Mr. Winston, will you answer Mr. Berger''s question? |
28617 | My dear boy, who knows what the human body can stand? 28617 No? |
28617 | No? |
28617 | No? |
28617 | Professor, have you ever played with the dead body of a frog? |
28617 | Queer, fantastic thing, is n''t it? |
28617 | Room 4167? |
28617 | Run through it now briefly, will you? 28617 Secretary of War?" |
28617 | See? 28617 Shall I go along too?" |
28617 | Slide one of them out? |
28617 | So you had trouble with my guard, did you? |
28617 | So you''re going up to Doc Livermore''s, are you? |
28617 | So you''re in on it too, are you? |
28617 | So? 28617 Suffocated?" |
28617 | That he can bring a dead man to life? |
28617 | Them? 28617 Then, what? |
28617 | They are about ready to go to the growing dome, are they not? |
28617 | Those red edges? 28617 Thurston?" |
28617 | Tom-- Tom,spoke the stranger,"you are alive? |
28617 | Tommy Travers gone, eh? 28617 Understand? |
28617 | Used to be a parson, you say? 28617 Was the warning written?" |
28617 | Was this shadow opaque enough to even momentarily obscure your vision? |
28617 | Well, how does it feel to be an ant? |
28617 | What about Winston''s confession? |
28617 | What advantage would there be in that? |
28617 | What am I to do? |
28617 | What are you going to tell them? |
28617 | What are you setting up? |
28617 | What are you trying to do, catechise me? 28617 What ca n''t be helped?" |
28617 | What can I do for you, sir? |
28617 | What did this shadow look like? |
28617 | What difference whether they die there or here...? |
28617 | What do they think this is, April Fool''s Day? |
28617 | What do you know about dog- fights? |
28617 | What do you know about flying? |
28617 | What do you mean, Dr. Mundson: that this Adam has arrived at a point in evolution beyond this age? |
28617 | What do you mean? |
28617 | What do you mean? |
28617 | What do you mean? |
28617 | What does this mean? 28617 What else?" |
28617 | What is eternity, John Northwood? 28617 What is it that explodes? |
28617 | What is it, Jim? |
28617 | What is it? |
28617 | What is special about it? |
28617 | What kind of cats? |
28617 | What kind of junk? |
28617 | What made you ask Trier if he had the money when you turned around? |
28617 | What of Eve? |
28617 | What on earth was it? 28617 What were the circumstances of the robbery?" |
28617 | What were you doing, cabareting all night? |
28617 | What''s that? |
28617 | What''s that? |
28617 | What''s the matter? |
28617 | What''s the story, Doctor? |
28617 | What, in God''s name,I cried,"could have brought such horror to a strong man? |
28617 | What? 28617 What?" |
28617 | What? |
28617 | Where are we? |
28617 | Where are you going, Doctor? |
28617 | Where did you hide the loot? |
28617 | Where did you hide the loot? |
28617 | Where did you hide the loot? |
28617 | Where do they go, Doctor? |
28617 | Where do we go, Doctor? |
28617 | Where do you think we are? |
28617 | Where had they gone? |
28617 | Where have they come from? 28617 Where is Jenks?" |
28617 | Where is this body-- this experiment? |
28617 | Where is your switch? |
28617 | Where to? |
28617 | Who are you to question my actions? 28617 Who by? |
28617 | Who can say? 28617 Who the devil are you, and what do you mean by breaking into my examination and stopping it?" |
28617 | Who wants a perfect woman? 28617 Why do n''t they try putting engines in these ships?" |
28617 | Why not close the cage for the day? |
28617 | Why not now? |
28617 | Why not? |
28617 | Why should you come here? 28617 Why, what do you mean?" |
28617 | Why, what''s the matter? |
28617 | Why-- uh-- er-- what do you mean? |
28617 | Why? 28617 Why?" |
28617 | Why?--how?--who? |
28617 | Will there be another attempt? |
28617 | Will you take me up there? |
28617 | Will you tell me your name? |
28617 | Would you hunt elephants with a pop- gun? 28617 Yes?" |
28617 | You are trying to find? |
28617 | You got letter? |
28617 | You left Los Angeles early yesterday; have you seen the papers? |
28617 | You mean that you cut them up-- kill them, perhaps? |
28617 | You understand? |
28617 | You will not harm her? |
28617 | You''re insolent, are n''t you? |
28617 | You''re not dead? |
28617 | You''ve been here before? |
28617 | _ Ach!_ Do I know? |
28617 | *****"Well, Carnes, did you have an instructive night?" |
28617 | 13== Buffalo, N.Y.=***** Sleep Disturbed? |
28617 | 20***** Ever Get Nervous When You''re Reading? |
28617 | 275-L, Chicago The World''s Largest Business Training Institution***** HOW SHARP IS YOUR RAZOR? |
28617 | = And you will not be satisfied unless you earn steady promotion.= But are you prepared for the job ahead of you? |
28617 | = Just send us your name and address.= ANDRE& CO., 751 E. 42nd St., Suite 77, Chicago***** HAVE YOU READ? |
28617 | A fool? |
28617 | A generator, obviously, forming the gas-- from what? |
28617 | A. U. track meet this afternoon got to do with a bank robbery?" |
28617 | Ai n''t there a gun on this ship?" |
28617 | Am I correct?" |
28617 | And horrors must surely inhabit it, else how could one account for that fearful thing on the grating below? |
28617 | And what is a hunch but a mental penetration into the Fourth Dimension?" |
28617 | And who knows what may rescue us?" |
28617 | Are our seats near the starting line for the sprints?" |
28617 | Are they intending to conduct sapping operations against us like engineers, or what?" |
28617 | Are you another of these alienists my father has been bringing around?" |
28617 | Are you coming, or are n''t you?" |
28617 | Better?" |
28617 | Bird?" |
28617 | But Dr. Mundson''s impatient,"Ready?" |
28617 | But how can we let light into those big steel shells, or the little ones either?" |
28617 | But how could they carry it? |
28617 | But how is she teaching her pupil?" |
28617 | But what are we going to do about it? |
28617 | But what awful terror must have gripped the fellow to make him forsake his only means of escape through those black passages? |
28617 | But what if that man_ is_ truly dead? |
28617 | CHAPTER VIII_ Recaptured_"Where are we?" |
28617 | Can we?" |
28617 | Can you find four or more of them? |
28617 | Can you imagine a more fascinating line of work than this? |
28617 | Can you pick it out? |
28617 | Can you say that all life-- all matter-- is not the result of scientific experiment? |
28617 | Can you?" |
28617 | Can you?" |
28617 | Carnes?" |
28617 | Carnes?" |
28617 | Come on, boy, where''s that old bus? |
28617 | Comprehend it? |
28617 | Could you now be satisfied with old- fashioned children who spend long, expensive years in getting an education? |
28617 | D''you get that? |
28617 | Dead? |
28617 | Did Haidia know what she was talking about? |
28617 | Did MacGregor have something? |
28617 | Did n''t you know? |
28617 | Did you get those tickets I wired for?" |
28617 | Did you have trouble shaving this morning? |
28617 | Did you notice his jaws just before the gun went?" |
28617 | Did_ you_ see anything?" |
28617 | Do I understand that you wish now to go to trial for that crime and to pay the penalty?" |
28617 | Do n''t you remember rejuvenating him? |
28617 | Do they have to lie quiet for that period miles up there in space? |
28617 | Do you believe me, Tom?" |
28617 | Do you follow?" |
28617 | Do you measure up to the standard that insures success? |
28617 | Do you understand?" |
28617 | Does the cure alter itself in any manner? |
28617 | Each hesitated to voice the new fear: had the sun- ship been destroyed? |
28617 | Had it seen the slow sinking of its companions, failed to hear them in reply to his mental call? |
28617 | Have these devils a vulnerable spot? |
28617 | Have you any question you wish to ask?" |
28617 | Have you ever seen a small bar magnet placed within the field of attraction of a large electromagnet? |
28617 | Have you gone mad?" |
28617 | Have you your binoculars with you?" |
28617 | Having no timepiece, and assuming that you were in a light- proof room, you would judge that some five hours had passed, would you not?" |
28617 | He could leave, go out into open country, but what were a few days or months-- or a year-- with this horror upon them? |
28617 | He was doubled with laughter-- or was it he who was laughing? |
28617 | He would not be delving seriously into the mysteries of evolution, would he?" |
28617 | How are you managing that?" |
28617 | How could he let the insane words pass his lips? |
28617 | How could she withhold herself from this splendid superman? |
28617 | How did they communicate? |
28617 | How did you guess, worm?" |
28617 | How do you accomplish it?" |
28617 | How do you overcome this?" |
28617 | How many are there?" |
28617 | How much of it can they lay over a city?" |
28617 | How?" |
28617 | I ca n''t frighten you-- you worm of the Black Age?" |
28617 | I chust blay und blay, und maybe you should listen, yes? |
28617 | I suppose that everything is ready?" |
28617 | I suppose that you are more or less familiar with imaginative stories of interplanetary travel?" |
28617 | I tell you, nobody will believe--""What''s that?" |
28617 | I wonder-- do you still mock the Professor''s beliefs?" |
28617 | Imagination? |
28617 | Is it not keeping forever ahead of the Destroyer? |
28617 | Is it possible that you have no desire to see Ladd, this new marvel who is smashing records right and left, run? |
28617 | Is n''t he handsomer than the pictures of him which I televisioned to you? |
28617 | Is that clear?" |
28617 | Is there any known means of attack? |
28617 | It must have been--""Must have been what?" |
28617 | It was so quiet-- the motors-- what was it that happened? |
28617 | Lights of any kind?" |
28617 | Livermore?" |
28617 | Magnesium? |
28617 | Never think it to look at me now, would you? |
28617 | No doubt you, like the rest of the world, think that I''m crazy?" |
28617 | No? |
28617 | Northwood asked:"Why does he call that girl grandmother?" |
28617 | Now listen:"How long was it from the time when you saw the first monster until we heard from them again?" |
28617 | Now what does it mean?" |
28617 | Of course not, how could I?" |
28617 | Oh, hello, Casey, is everything all right?" |
28617 | Or these things?" |
28617 | Or"--he frowned for a moment, brows drawn over deep- set gray eyes--"or generate it? |
28617 | P-1184, Chicago=***** Ruptured? |
28617 | Remember the day I captured the big rooster for you-- the monster you had created? |
28617 | Remember the hermit across the road from your son''s old laboratory? |
28617 | Remember the night you awakened me and brought me here in the moonlight? |
28617 | Remember the rabbit whose leg you amputated and re- grew? |
28617 | Remember the struggle, here in this very room? |
28617 | See?" |
28617 | Sounds pretty good, what? |
28617 | Spot here? |
28617 | Still are?" |
28617 | Tell me-- can you restore the youth of an aged person by these means?" |
28617 | Tell me-- tell me-- what is this remarkable force?" |
28617 | The laboratory housed the entire population, did n''t it?" |
28617 | The motor of your car dies-- do you bury it? |
28617 | The poor guinea pig you had suffocated and whose life you restored? |
28617 | They could never kill him.... What was it MacGregor had said? |
28617 | Think I''d waste current on an old cadger like you? |
28617 | Thurston?" |
28617 | Trier?" |
28617 | Trier?" |
28617 | Twelve years ago?" |
28617 | WHAT INSTRUMENT FOR YOU? |
28617 | Was a different kind of hell preparing to pop? |
28617 | Was it hunger that drove it, or cold rage for these puny opponents? |
28617 | Was she with him, unseen? |
28617 | Was this, then, the end of their terrible night? |
28617 | We start from the impossible, and we go-- where? |
28617 | Well, what were the others doing, down there in the streets-- in their homes? |
28617 | Were they windows? |
28617 | What beastly thoughts could that-- that_ thing_ conceive?" |
28617 | What could he do when he overtook it? |
28617 | What do you mean by your talk of smashing my tubes, of leaving me for dead?" |
28617 | What do you say to the idea?" |
28617 | What does a thing like that think of? |
28617 | What does it mean-- what is their mission? |
28617 | What does it strike upon? |
28617 | What had they done in Berlin? |
28617 | What he said was this:"Maybe, yes, I could n''t talk so good English, but you could understood it, yes? |
28617 | What if she should enter with Adam in Present Time? |
28617 | What is there? |
28617 | What is to be done?" |
28617 | What possible interest can I have in the matter?" |
28617 | What was the connection between this catastrophe and the weird strains of the Mad Musician''s violin? |
28617 | What was this girl to that hideous hunchback? |
28617 | What was to be the fate of this beautiful girl? |
28617 | What were a few minutes more or less? |
28617 | What''s this about beetles? |
28617 | Where Is That PAIN? |
28617 | Where did you hide it?" |
28617 | Where''s your bag?" |
28617 | White- lipped and trembling, Northwood groaned:"What has he done now?" |
28617 | Who had committed this ghastly crime? |
28617 | Who wants a made- to- measure lover?" |
28617 | Who was he that it mattered? |
28617 | Who was the last to go over that building?" |
28617 | Who was this strange emissary whom no one really knew? |
28617 | Whose hands?" |
28617 | Why ca n''t we agree to differ?" |
28617 | Why come to me? |
28617 | Why did the handsome stranger warn him,"_ The thing inside never will be yours_?" |
28617 | Why do they sometimes halt important meetings, to gargle with it? |
28617 | Why do they use it at the noon hour? |
28617 | Why go along at$ 25,$ 30 or$ 45 a week when the good jobs in Radio pay$ 50,$ 75 and up to$ 250 a week? |
28617 | Why? |
28617 | Will you have everything ready by eight o''clock?" |
28617 | Will you?" |
28617 | Wind? |
28617 | Winston?" |
28617 | Wo n''t you let me see you home?" |
28617 | Would n''t it be great if we could buy muscles by the bag-- take them home and paste them on our shoulders? |
28617 | Would you mind if I make friends with some of them?" |
28617 | Would you mind telling me the object of the whole thing?" |
28617 | You call me a fool for continuing it? |
28617 | You feel it? |
28617 | You know Casey, do n''t you, Carnes? |
28617 | You know how fast an ordinary movie is taken, do n''t you? |
28617 | You think I returned because I reverenced you yet?" |
28617 | You think you still are master? |
28617 | You understand? |
28617 | You were not dead when I left you on that terrible night when I smashed your precious tubes? |
28617 | You?" |
28617 | _ A Year''s Protection Against_ ACCIDENT[ Illustration: CASH_ or sympathy_?] |
28617 | _ Business men gargle daily to check colds and sore throat_ Why is Listerine to be found in the offices of a majority of American business men? |
28617 | _ Get Cash instead of Sympathy_ If you suddenly became ill-- would your income stop? |
28617 | _ Which do you want?_ Suppose you met with an accident or sickness to- night-- salary stopped-- which would you prefer,$ 25 Weekly... or Sympathy? |
28617 | _ Which do you want?_ Suppose you met with an accident or sickness to- night-- salary stopped-- which would you prefer,$ 25 Weekly... or Sympathy? |
28617 | _ Which will your family want?_ In case of your accidental death, which would you rather give your family$ 10,000 Cash... or Sympathy? |
28617 | _ Which will your family want?_ In case of your accidental death, which would you rather give your family$ 10,000 Cash... or Sympathy? |
41383 | ( PUNCH_ puts_ POLLY_ through a course of spelling._) POLLY.--Uncle, you wo n''t forget the dollar? |
41383 | ( PUNCH_ walks out._) PUNCH.--JACK, what have you got on your face? |
41383 | (_ Enter_ BLIND MAN:_ at the same time an_ IRISHMAN_ from the opposite side of the stage._) IRISHMAN.--Is your name PUNCH? |
41383 | (_ Enter_ PUNCH,_ who is addressed by the_ DR.) DR.--Is your name PUNCH? |
41383 | (_ He takes it in his lap and tries to make it sit up._) The baby want he mamma? |
41383 | (_ Hits him._) PUNCH.--I do n''t want to learn-- are you in earnest? |
41383 | FRANK.--Don''t you know me? |
41383 | IRISH.--Sure, and how should I know that? |
41383 | J. K.--Why did you kill old JOE? |
41383 | JUDY.--(_Looking around and not seeing it._) Where have you put it?--is it in the cradle? |
41383 | JUDY.--Did you see him? |
41383 | JUDY.--I''ll drop you on the floor-- depend upon it-- where is my stick? |
41383 | JUDY.--PUNCH, where''s that child? |
41383 | JUDY.--You''ll drop my poor child out at the window will you? |
41383 | M.--How can that be? |
41383 | On page 8,"Punch where''s that child tell me quickly"was replaced with"Punch, where''s that child? |
41383 | POLLY.--Did you ever catch any of them? |
41383 | POLLY.--Have they left? |
41383 | POLLY.--How do you do sir? |
41383 | POLLY.--What did you do with the pot- pie? |
41383 | PUNCH, did you call me? |
41383 | PUNCH, have you seen Polly Hopkins? |
41383 | PUNCH, where is the Child? |
41383 | PUNCH.--Good day little people-- how do you do? |
41383 | PUNCH.--I''ll not forget it-- now, POLLY, follow me--(_he proceeds and she repeats_) m- i- l- k-- what does that spell? |
41383 | PUNCH.--No it do n''t: What do you get in your little mug every morning, when you go round the corner, for your mother? |
41383 | PUNCH.--Old man, you used to be good at jumping once, how is it now? |
41383 | PUNCH.--Sir: do you take me for the Bank of England? |
41383 | PUNCH.--Through that place there? |
41383 | PUNCH.--Well sir, who are you? |
41383 | PUNCH.--What does your mother put in her tea? |
41383 | PUNCH.--What so? |
41383 | PUNCH.--Yes I am PUNCH-- who are you? |
41383 | PUNCH.--Yes,(_ aside_) how on earth did that little girl learn my name? |
41383 | What grave have they been robbing? |
41383 | What is that for? |
41383 | What is that? |
41383 | Where are you from last? |
41383 | Who sent you here? |
41383 | do you? |
41383 | old gal, and(_ hitting her_) that? |
41383 | you refuse? |
33918 | And in what particular ceremony were they engaged once a year? |
33918 | Are''maginations white behind? |
33918 | Bottom bell but one, four times, my boy? |
33918 | But there are n''t_ really_ such animals, nurse, are there?] |
33918 | But, my dear Nora, you do n''t surely propose to go without your shoes and stockings? |
33918 | Can you tell me anything peculiar about the cuckoo, in regard to nesting? |
33918 | Do you take sugar, darling? |
33918 | Hallo, missus, wot are those? |
33918 | How long ago, auntie dear? |
33918 | I suppose, mother, it does n''t mention_ which_ half of the poor thing we are to look for?] |
33918 | Mother, I hope we shall never be rich? |
33918 | Now, what are the principal things that are obtained from the earth? |
33918 | Oh, Molly, do n''t you know who it is puts such wicked thoughts into your head? |
33918 | Oh, mother, how_ will_ Santa Claus do about that poor man''s stockings?] |
33918 | Then may I say I''m not at home when Miss Krux calls to- morrow? 33918 Well, Tommy, how are you getting on at school?" |
33918 | Well, now, what causes heat without light? |
33918 | Well, then, ca n''t you read? |
33918 | What''s she crying for? |
33918 | Whatever_ are_ you children doing? |
33918 | When did you begin, then?] |
33918 | When will_ I_ be old enough, mummy, to have holes made in_ my_ head to keep my hat on?] |
33918 | Who signed Magna Charta? |
33918 | Who signed Magna Charta? |
33918 | Who signed Magna Charta? |
33918 | Why, darling? |
33918 | _ Surely_ you''ve eaten enough, have n''t you, Tommy? |
33918 | ''Ow am I to cry then?"] |
33918 | (_ Emphasising question_)"Anti- bilious?" |
33918 | (_ Pause._)"Mummy, I mean----"_ Mamma._"When Sir Fusby Dodderidge called? |
33918 | (_ To children._) What is a Red Indian''s wife called? |
33918 | ***** A CONSCIENTIOUS CHILD.--"Is your cold better this morning, darling?" |
33918 | ***** A LITTLE KNOWLEDGE.--_Daisy_(_ who has been studying Chrysanthemums_).--Maisy, do you know what''s a_ Double Begonia_? |
33918 | ***** A LITTLE LEARNING.--_Teacher._ And who was Joan of Arc? |
33918 | ***** A SCIENTIFIC NURSERY DEFINITION.--_Little Algy Muffin._ What''s the meaning of bric- à- brac, that mamma was talking about to Colonel Crumpet? |
33918 | ***** ADDING INSULT TO INJURY.--"Mamma,_ is n''t_ it very wicked to do behind one''s back what one would n''t do before one''s face?" |
33918 | ***** AT THE BOARD SCHOOL.--_Inspector._ Now, can any of you children state what is likely to be the future of China? |
33918 | ***** AT THE SUNDAY SCHOOL--_Teacher._ Now, Mary Brown, you understand what is meant by baptism? |
33918 | ***** COMPREHENSIVE.--_Preceptor._ Now, can any of you tell me anything remarkable in the life of Moses? |
33918 | ***** CONFUSED ASSOCIATIONS.--"And where did these Druids live, Tommy?" |
33918 | ***** ENGLISH HISTORY.--"And who was the king who had so many wives?" |
33918 | ***** IMPROVING THE SHINING HOUR.--_The new Governess._ What are the comparative and superlative of_ bad_, Berty? |
33918 | ***** INADEQUATE HOSPITALITY.--"Well, Guy, did you enjoy the party?" |
33918 | ***** NATURE''S LOGIC.--_Papa._ How is it, Alice, that_ you_ never get a prize at school? |
33918 | ***** PHYSICS.--"Now, George, before you go and play, are you quite sure you know the lesson Professor Borax gave you to learn?" |
33918 | ***** READY ANSWER.--_Uncle._ Now, how did the mother of Moses hide him? |
33918 | ***** ROGUES FALLING OUT.--_Mamma._ What is baby crying for, Maggie? |
33918 | ***** SUNDAY SCHOOLING.--_Teacher._ What does one mean by"Heaping coals of fire on someone''s head"now, Harry Hawkins? |
33918 | ***** THE EVIDENCE OF THE SENSES.--_Mamma._ How_ dare_ you slap your sister, George? |
33918 | ***** THE FORCE OF CLASSIC TEACHING.--_Master._ Now, boys, what is Hexham famous for? |
33918 | *****[ Illustration: A BIG PILL.--"What is it, my pet?" |
33918 | *****[ Illustration: A CANDID INQUIRER"I say, John, is there anything I have n''t tasted?" |
33918 | *****[ Illustration: A PROTEST"And pray, am I_ never_ to be naughty, Miss Grimm?"] |
33918 | *****[ Illustration: A QUESTION OF HEREDITY_ Hal._"Is there anything the matter with this egg, Martha?" |
33918 | *****[ Illustration: A Toothsome Morsel.--_ Distracted Nurse._"Gracious, children, what_ are_ you doing?" |
33918 | *****[ Illustration: BEFORE THE HEAD_ Fourth Form Boy( with recollections of a recent visit to the dentist)._"Please, sir, may I-- may I-- have gas?"] |
33918 | *****[ Illustration: BETWEEN THE ACTS_ Governess._"Well, Marjorie, have you done crying?" |
33918 | *****[ Illustration: EXPERIENTIA DOCET"And are_ you_ going to give me something for my birthday, aunty Maud?" |
33918 | *****[ Illustration: INCONTROVERTIBLE"And how_ old_ are you, my little man?" |
33918 | *****[ Illustration: INDUCTION"Is this the_ new_ baby, daddy?" |
33918 | *****[ Illustration: ON THE FACE OF IT_ Pretty Teacher._"Now, Johnny Wells, can you tell me what is meant by a miracle?" |
33918 | *****[ Illustration: OVERHEARD IN BOND STREET"Which of''em would yer''ave for a muvver, Billy?"] |
33918 | *****[ Illustration: QUESTION AND ANSWER_ Mamma._"Who was the first man,''Lina?" |
33918 | *****[ Illustration: RUDIMENTS OF ECONOMY"May I_ leave_ this piece of bread, nurse?" |
33918 | *****[ Illustration: SENSIBLE CHILD.--"Well, Jacky, and did you hang up your stocking for Santa Claus to fill?" |
33918 | *****[ Illustration: THE CHILD OF THE PERIOD"Why did that policeman touch his hat to you, aunty? |
33918 | *****[ Illustration: THE JOYS OF ANTICIPATION.--"When are you coming out with me, mummy?" |
33918 | *****[ Illustration: THEIR FIRST VISIT TO THE ZOO_ Tommy._"Them ai n''t donkeys, Billy?" |
33918 | *****[ Illustration: UNIMAGINATIVE_ Auntie._"Do you see the hair in this old brooch, Cyril? |
33918 | *****[ Illustration: UTILE CUM DULCI_ Arry._"Ai n''t yer comin''along with me, Bill?" |
33918 | *****[ Illustration: VERY NATURAL.--"Vell, and vat to you sink tit happen to me at Matame Tussaud''s de oder tay? |
33918 | *****[ Illustration: WELL BROUGHT UP.--"Now then, my little men, did n''t you see that board on that tree?" |
33918 | *****[ Illustration: WELL UP IN HER MYTHOLOGY.--_Tommy._"Madge, what''s''_ necessitas_,''masculine or feminine?" |
33918 | *****[ Illustration:"Did our hat- rack walk about and have only two pegs, once, auntie?"] |
33918 | *****[ Illustration:"SAUCE FOR THE GOOSE,"& c.--_Ethel._"Mummy dear, why did you tell Richard you''were n''t at home''just now?" |
33918 | *****[ Illustration:"WELL OUT OF IT"_ Uncle._"And you love your enemies, Ethel?" |
33918 | *****[ Illustration:_ Auntie._"Do you know you are playing with two very naughty little boys, Johnny?" |
33918 | *****[ Illustration:_ Chemist._"Pills, eh?" |
33918 | *****[ Illustration:_ Grandmamma._"And how did it happen, dear?" |
33918 | *****[ Illustration:_ Hostess._"What would you like to eat, Effie?" |
33918 | *****[ Illustration:_ Lady._"Have you lost yourself, little boy?" |
33918 | *****[ Illustration:_ Little Boy._"How many steps can you jump, grandma? |
33918 | *****[ Illustration:_ Mother._"Now, dear, why do n''t you run away and give grandpa a kiss?" |
33918 | *****[ Illustration:_ Old Gent._"Do you know what a lie is, sir?" |
33918 | *****[ Illustration:_ Old Gent._"Is it a_ board school_ you go to, my dear?" |
33918 | *****[ Illustration:_ Porter._"Why is the little girl crying, missie?" |
33918 | *****_ Auntie._ Do you love the chickens, dear? |
33918 | *****_ Auntie._ Well, Effie, did you enjoy your party last night? |
33918 | *****_ Mother._ Well, Dorothy, would you like your egg poached or boiled? |
33918 | --"Auntie, ought Bertie Wilson to have_ smiled_ so often at me in church?" |
33918 | --_Grace._ Harold, why did pa call that Mr. Blowhard a liar? |
33918 | --_Uncle._"Well, Tommy, you see I''m back; are you ready? |
33918 | Ach, vy?" |
33918 | And how often have I told you not to say"beastly"? |
33918 | And was it in the Chamber of Horrors?"] |
33918 | And was the Queen weally named after me? |
33918 | And was the little boy allowed to_ eat_ the apple afterwards? |
33918 | And what profession do you mean to choose?" |
33918 | And what was he like, eh?" |
33918 | And who was the first woman?" |
33918 | Are n''t you ashamed of yourself for being a little liar?" |
33918 | Are n''t you glad I was n''t twins, mummy? |
33918 | Are you a chemist? |
33918 | Are you not ill?" |
33918 | Are you sure he''s not getting hurt? |
33918 | At last a boy volunteers._) Well, my boy? |
33918 | Between ourselves, now, have you any choice?" |
33918 | But are n''t they rare? |
33918 | But are you and ces demoiselles going to dine viz de compagnie?" |
33918 | Can_ you_, auntie? |
33918 | D''ye tike me for a canary? |
33918 | D._ Do n''t you? |
33918 | D._ Have you got a shop with lovely large, coloured bottles in the window? |
33918 | Did n''t you want it yourself? |
33918 | Do n''t most people tell you so? |
33918 | Do n''t you know it''s very cruel?" |
33918 | Do n''t you know the difference between a_ window_ and a_ widow_?" |
33918 | Does your governess get ill on mince pies? |
33918 | Dot, got a new doll? |
33918 | Even before_ you_ were born, auntie?"] |
33918 | Had n''t I?"] |
33918 | Has goosegogs got legs? |
33918 | Has he bitten you?" |
33918 | Has mamma been telling you she''d give you''_ a lovely spoonful of delicious currant jelly, O so nice, so VERY nice_''?" |
33918 | Have I?"] |
33918 | Have n''t you some nice message to send her?" |
33918 | Have you got one as well as nurse?"] |
33918 | Have you-- er-- been to many parties? |
33918 | He calls him"Sir"--is Punch_ really_ a gentleman? |
33918 | Honeybun._ Is that Tommy underneath? |
33918 | How dare you tell such stories? |
33918 | How did that happen? |
33918 | I say,_ did_ you hear what the clown said then? |
33918 | I-- er-- you would rather stop? |
33918 | If----?" |
33918 | Is it a tooth?" |
33918 | Is n''t it a beastly shame? |
33918 | Is n''t it, Uncle Fred?" |
33918 | Is that true?" |
33918 | Is that why it''s so long?"] |
33918 | Kids?" |
33918 | Mamma, have all the angels been to Drury Lane to- night? |
33918 | Mother, will you read me the text out of my cracker?... |
33918 | Now, boys-- ah-- can any of you tell me what commandment Adam broke when he took the forbidden fruit? |
33918 | Old Bachelor Guest_(_ violently awakened out of his morning snooze._)"Who''sh there?" |
33918 | Ought she to sit so near the fire?" |
33918 | P._ Why not, my dear? |
33918 | Pefore tinner? |
33918 | Please, will everybody keep quite quiet for a minute or two; I have n''t said my grace.... Do n''t you think it''s unfair of nurse? |
33918 | Pup?" |
33918 | Say,''pa, what''s a v''cab''lary? |
33918 | Shall I be allowed to keep the whip after, mammy? |
33918 | Shall you go to the pantomime this year? |
33918 | So will you give it me to- morrow?" |
33918 | Then I suppose you do n''t sell Jones''s Jubilee Cough Jujubes? |
33918 | Then would the chicken that came out of it be a little mad?"] |
33918 | There''s generally a good deal going on just now, is n''t there? |
33918 | Tovey?" |
33918 | Was it Mr. Jones, or Mr. David Jones, or Mr. Griffith Jones, whom you met? |
33918 | What are the four seasons of the year, Phyllis? |
33918 | What are they reading about? |
33918 | What are they? |
33918 | What do you mean by bullying that little girl? |
33918 | What do you mean? |
33918 | What does it mean when a clergyman wears gaiters?" |
33918 | What have I to pay for, miss?" |
33918 | What have you been doing?" |
33918 | What have you got that string tied on that fowl''s leg for?" |
33918 | What is it?" |
33918 | What is the word you''ve forgotten? |
33918 | What will_ papa_ say when he comes home?" |
33918 | What wound?" |
33918 | What''s for supper?''" |
33918 | What''s the matter, my pet? |
33918 | Where was he sitting?" |
33918 | Where_ have_ you been?" |
33918 | Which is the most, mother? |
33918 | Why do n''t you play with good little boys?" |
33918 | Why? |
33918 | Why? |
33918 | Will you have plum or seed? |
33918 | Will you have some more bread- and- butter? |
33918 | Would n''t I? |
33918 | [_ Auntie, who was about to enter, quickly and quietly retires._]*****[ Illustration:"What are you doing in that cupboard, Cyril?" |
33918 | [_ Class dismissed immediately._*****[ Illustration: AN INNOCENT HINT_ Auntie._"What is Nellie''s nose for?" |
33918 | [_ Conference broken up by arrival of the lady in question._*****[ Illustration: WHAT IS IT? |
33918 | _ A Puzzled Child._ Mother, why is the man at the side so_ polite_ to Punch? |
33918 | _ Auntie._ And I suppose mamma was there to look after you? |
33918 | _ Auntie._"And what are Nellie''s ears for?" |
33918 | _ Auntie._"And what is Nellie''s mouth for?" |
33918 | _ Boy._"Well, then, can we sing yer some Christmas carols instead?"] |
33918 | _ Brown Minimus._ Please sir, I''d eat it before they asked for it? |
33918 | _ Did_ you hear that? |
33918 | _ Effie._"Why?" |
33918 | _ Ethel._ But do n''t you like Scott? |
33918 | _ Father._ A vocabulary, my boy-- what d''you want to know that for? |
33918 | _ Father._"Were you? |
33918 | _ Geoffrey._"Oh!----does mummy know?"] |
33918 | _ Hester._ That is n''t as jolly as the pantomime, is it? |
33918 | _ Humorous Little Boy._"Plea''sir, will you ring the bottom bell but one, four times, sir?" |
33918 | _ Inspector._ What is a Red Indian''s baby called? |
33918 | _ Interested Little Boy._"Oh, and which did you shoot first-- the lion, or the tiger, or the d''lemma?"] |
33918 | _ Is there such a thing as a bun in the house?_"]*****[ Illustration: THE FESTIVE SEASON.--_Tommy_(_ criticising the menu of the coming feast_). |
33918 | _ Just!_"]*****[ Illustration:"_ Please_, auntie,_ may_ I have the fairy off the Christmas tree--_if I do n''t ask you for it_?"] |
33918 | _ Kitty._"Oh, Mr. Softly, is that why you stutter?"] |
33918 | _ Lady._"How many lumps?" |
33918 | _ Maisy_(_ who has been studying the Classics_).--"Double Big- onia"? |
33918 | _ Mamma._ And that your friend, Louisa Sharp, gets so many? |
33918 | _ Mamma._ And what are_ you_ looking so''ndignant about? |
33918 | _ Mamma._ No, darling? |
33918 | _ Mamma._ Where did she hurt you? |
33918 | _ Mamma._"Already? |
33918 | _ Mamma._"Give you what, dear?" |
33918 | _ Mamma._"Well, what''s the matter with_ you_, Jack?" |
33918 | _ Mamma._"Why?" |
33918 | _ Marjory._"Yes, granpa''; but"--(_hesitating_)--"I do n''t fink_ one_ lock would be enough, would it?"] |
33918 | _ Messenger._"_ Wiv our comb, sir!_"]*****[ Illustration: A FATAL OBJECTION"Mother, are the Wondergilts very rich?" |
33918 | _ Mother._"That horrid boy at the farm? |
33918 | _ Mother._"What_ do_ you mean?" |
33918 | _ Now_ will you be good? |
33918 | _ Samuel._"Muvver, does a hen lay an egg when it_ likes_ or_ must_ it?"] |
33918 | _ She''s my Sweetheart!_"]*****[ Illustration:_ Grandpapa._"Well little lady, will you give me a lock of that pretty hair of yours?" |
33918 | _ Tommy._"Is n''t it Sunday in the back garden, mamma?"] |
33918 | _ Tommy._"Mummy, dear, do the angels say''dam''when a string breaks?"] |
33918 | _ Tommy._"Talking of riddles, Uncle, do you know the difference between an apple and a elephant?" |
33918 | _ Tommy._"Why?" |
33918 | _ Tommy._"You''d be a smart chap to send out to buy apples, would n''t you?"] |
33918 | _ Uncle._"And who are your enemies, dear?" |
33918 | _ Vicar''s Daughter._"If----? |
33918 | dear me, what_ are_ they doing? |
33918 | for_ she_ bores_ me_ awfully?"] |
33918 | what shall I do? |
33918 | wo n''t I? |
33918 | wot''s the trouble? |
38487 | As it happened,runs the note,"that certain characteristics which provoked most discussion in my latest story[''Jude''?] |
38487 | If Poe was not an artist of the beautiful,Professor Smith asks,"what was he an artist of?" |
38487 | What is Art? |
38487 | And the cause of all this unhappiness? |
38487 | And was there no French name for them in 1871? |
38487 | As for horses, it is now well established that there were no horses in England; otherwise why should Richard have cried,"My kingdom for a horse"? |
38487 | But how to explain, or even remember at all, that the head of living English men of letters, next to Hardy, is a Pole named Korzeniowski? |
38487 | But what is a catching phrase? |
38487 | But what is the game worth? |
38487 | But, we may well ask, what is"the profounder ethics of art,"and who, except a New England preacher, wants to be bothered with it in lyric poetry? |
38487 | Can a common man understand philosophy? |
38487 | Deliberately affected? |
38487 | Did Aaron miss because he happened not to meet the right woman? |
38487 | Did Hardy stop writing novels because of the ignorant attacks on"Jude"? |
38487 | Did he not sweepingly assert that there is no such thing as a virtuous statesman? |
38487 | Did he then love the rhythmic rise and fall of words better than their associations of legend and colour? |
38487 | Did the Romans talk in this clipped hurried fashion? |
38487 | Did you ever hear a waterfall like that? |
38487 | Does she read it and speak it well enough to be sure that Mr. Tagore has translated himself adequately? |
38487 | Does she understand Bengali? |
38487 | Has not the hysteria sufficiently subsided for wise men to quit wasting their energies in a contest with spooks? |
38487 | How could Stephen believe that those resolutions, with others"pithy and sensible,"were"for behavior in a distant future?" |
38487 | How does he do it? |
38487 | How incorporated? |
38487 | I turn to it and find this:"An inverted simile? |
38487 | In like fashion we shall understand Tolstoy''s ideals without reading"What, Then, Must We Do?" |
38487 | In point of invention how far apart are the story of the girls in"La Maison Tellier"and the story of the girl in the pathetic troupe in"Victory"? |
38487 | Is Mallarmé obscure? |
38487 | Is he of like mind with his chorus at last, and does he believe that the Will is going to grow intelligent and make all things fair? |
38487 | Is it not clear? |
38487 | Is not she affording an instance of criticism that in an excess of enthusiasm runs beyond its own knowledge? |
38487 | Is not that an irresistible man? |
38487 | Is there not here a note that suggests the opening of"The Nonne Preestes Tale,"even though the story which follows is quite unlike Chaucer''s? |
38487 | It must be understood that the essay on Shakespeare is in the nature of an appendix to his essay,"What Is Art?" |
38487 | Just what does that mean? |
38487 | Neat, is n''t it? |
38487 | On the twenty- four- page journey to the five- page sojourn in Cracow what happens? |
38487 | Or had not the British critics begun to use the French name? |
38487 | Or is it only the"widow"that makes me associate the two? |
38487 | Or was he the sort of man whom no woman could capture and satisfy? |
38487 | Other than its beauty? |
38487 | Potter''s edition: Oshkosh, Scholar and Sellum, 1913)? |
38487 | That may be so, but how does Miss Sinclair know that? |
38487 | The poem in"The Gardener,"which begins: Why do you whisper so faintly in my ears, O Death, my Death? |
38487 | The point of view of the author? |
38487 | The printers''or Shakespeare''s? |
38487 | The_ unconscious_ poetic expression? |
38487 | To what extent can the critic play the game of the reader, be guide and teacher, maintain standards, elevate taste, make the best ideas prevail? |
38487 | To what extent is the critic parasitic? |
38487 | Was such the dialect of Roman sea captains? |
38487 | Waters what scraps may yet be found in the dust- heaps? |
38487 | Well, is not that true of the speech of the Irish or any province of England or America? |
38487 | What characteristics does he intend? |
38487 | What corruptions? |
38487 | What does that mean? |
38487 | What does that mean? |
38487 | What is the result? |
38487 | What is the sphere of poetry? |
38487 | What playhouse copy? |
38487 | What sort of laborious philosopher was it who worried James about his style, his fluent, accurate, imaginative vehicle of thought? |
38487 | What, then, is"Hail and Farewell"? |
38487 | When will they( critics) be artists, only artists, but really artists? |
38487 | When? |
38487 | Where do you know a criticism? |
38487 | Where is the joke? |
38487 | Where it comes from? |
38487 | Who but an English poet would have ended"The Tragedy of Pompey the Great"with a chantey to the tune of"Hanging Johnny"? |
38487 | Who is there who is anxious about the work in itself, in an intense way?... |
38487 | Who that had not already looked into Shakespeare and Plato ever heard of Pater? |
38487 | Whose mistake? |
38487 | Why did Dr. Toynbee or the British Academy make this commemorative volume so narrowly insular? |
38487 | Why not get down to brass tacks? |
38487 | Why should we assume that he always wrote a good line? |
38487 | Why? |
38487 | [ 5] Will it? |
38487 | its composition, its style? |
32415 | I''ll give you,says Thomas,"Give me,"said Annis;"I prithee, love, tell me what?" |
32415 | Little maid, pretty maid, whither goest thou? |
32415 | Oh yes,said the pig,"I will go; what time shall you be ready?" |
32415 | Pray tell me, fair maid, where you live? |
32415 | Pray tell me, fair maid, where you live? |
32415 | Pray tell me,said he,"where you live?" |
32415 | Robert Barnes, fellow fine, Can you shoe this horse of mine? |
32415 | Shall I go with thee? |
32415 | What age may she be? 32415 What do they call you?" |
32415 | What work can she do, My boy Willy? 32415 What''s the dog''s name?" |
32415 | What''s your trade? |
32415 | Where have you been all the day, My boy Willy? |
32415 | Where were you born? |
32415 | Where were you bred? |
32415 | Where will you die? |
32415 | Where? |
32415 | Where? |
32415 | ''What,''said she,''shall I do with this little sixpence? |
32415 | A Thatcher of Thatchwood went to Thatchet a thatching; Did a thatcher of Thatchwood go to Thatchet a thatching? |
32415 | A diller, a dollar, A ten o''clock scholar, What makes you come so soon? |
32415 | A hat and a feather, To keep out cold weather; So, Johnny, how dost thou now? |
32415 | A little old man and I fell out; How shall we bring this matter about? |
32415 | A little old man of Derby, How do you think he served me? |
32415 | A peck of meal upon her back, A babby in her basket; Saw ye aught of my love a coming from the market? |
32415 | And do n''t you remember the babes in the wood?" |
32415 | And do you ken Elsie Marley, honey? |
32415 | And was going to the window, To say how do you do? |
32415 | And where was jewel and spicy? |
32415 | And why may not I love Johnny As well as another body? |
32415 | And why may not I love Johnny, As well as another body? |
32415 | And why may not I love Johnny? |
32415 | And why may not I love Johnny? |
32415 | And why may not Johnny love me? |
32415 | And why may not Johnny love me? |
32415 | And you,& c. Can you dry it on yonder thorn, Parsley,& c. Which never bore blossom since Adam was born? |
32415 | And you,& c. Can you plough it with a ram''s horn, Parsley,& c. And sow it all over with one pepper- corn? |
32415 | And you,& c. Can you reap it with a sickle of leather, Parsley,& c. And bind it up with a peacock''s feather? |
32415 | Are they nice apples?" |
32415 | As I went over the water, The water went over me, I heard an old woman crying, Will you buy some furmity? |
32415 | As titty mouse sat in the witty to spin, Pussy came to her and bid her good ev''n,"Oh, what are you doing, my little''oman?" |
32415 | Bah, bah, black sheep, Have you any wool? |
32415 | Barber, barber, shave a pig, How many hairs will make a wig? |
32415 | Bonny lass, canny lass, willta be mine? |
32415 | Bow, wow, wow, Whose dog art thou? |
32415 | Burnie bee, burnie bee, Tell me when your wedding be? |
32415 | But my lord drew a chair close by, And said, in a feeling tone,"Have you not, sir, a daughter, I pray, You never would see or own?" |
32415 | Buz, quoth the blue fly, Hum, quoth the bee, Buz and hum they cry, And so do we: In his ear, in his nose, Thus, do you see? |
32415 | Bye, baby bumpkin, Where''s Tony Lumpkin? |
32415 | C. What for? |
32415 | C. What for? |
32415 | C. What for? |
32415 | C. What for? |
32415 | Can she bake and can she brew, My boy Willy?" |
32415 | Can you make me a cambric shirt, Parsley, sage, rosemary, and thyme; Without any seam or needlework? |
32415 | Can you wash it in yonder well, Parsley,& c. Where never sprung water, nor rain ever fell? |
32415 | Clap hands, clap hands, Hie Tommy Randy, Did you see my good man? |
32415 | Cou''d ye, cou''d ye? |
32415 | Cou''d you, without you cou''d, cou''d ye? |
32415 | Cou''d you, without you cou''d, cou''d ye? |
32415 | Cuckoo, Cuckoo, What do you do? |
32415 | D. Pit, Pat, well- a- day, Little Robin flew away; Where can little Robin be? |
32415 | Dame, what ails your ducks to die? |
32415 | Dame, what makes your ducks to die, Ducks to die, ducks to die; Dame, what makes your ducks to die, On Christmas- day in the morning? |
32415 | Dame, what makes your ducks to die? |
32415 | Dame, what makes your ducks to die? |
32415 | Dame, what makes your maidens lie, Maidens lie, maidens lie; Dame, what makes your maidens lie, On Christmas- day in the morning? |
32415 | Dance o''er my lady lee; How shall we build it up again? |
32415 | Danty baby diddy, What can a mammy do wid''e, But sit in a lap, And give''un a pap? |
32415 | Did you see my wife, did you see, did you see, Did you see my wife looking for me? |
32415 | Fox a fox, a brummalary, How many miles to Lummaflary? |
32415 | Gilly Silly Jarter, Who has lost a garter? |
32415 | Give me a blow, and I''ll beat''em, Why did they vex my baby? |
32415 | Good horses, bad horses, What is the time of day? |
32415 | Good lack, how does she do? |
32415 | Goosey, goosey, gander, Where shall I wander? |
32415 | Goosy, goosy, gander, Who stands yonder? |
32415 | Here stands a post, Who put it there? |
32415 | Hey ding a ding, what shall I sing? |
32415 | High diddle ding, Did you hear the bells ring? |
32415 | Higher than a house, higher than a tree; Oh, whatever can that be? |
32415 | His stature but an inch in height, Or quarter of a span; Then think you not this little knight Was proved a valiant man? |
32415 | How can a little dog laugh? |
32415 | How could there be a blanket without a thread? |
32415 | How could there be a cherry without a stone? |
32415 | How d''''e dogs, how? |
32415 | How do you do, Mistress Pussey? |
32415 | How do you do, neighbour? |
32415 | How does my lady''s garden grow? |
32415 | How does my lady''s garden grow? |
32415 | How many days has my baby to play? |
32415 | How many holes in a skimmer? |
32415 | How shall I get home to night? |
32415 | How shall he cut it Without e''er a knife? |
32415 | How shall we build it up again? |
32415 | How will he be married Without e''er a wife? |
32415 | Hub a dub dub, Three men in a tub; And who do you think they be? |
32415 | Hurly, burly, trumpet trase, The cow was in the market place, Some goes far, and some goes near, But where shall this poor henchman steer? |
32415 | Hussy, hussy, where''s your horse? |
32415 | I am pretty well, And how does Cousin Sue do? |
32415 | I cou''dn''t, without I cou''d, cou''d I? |
32415 | I had two pigeons bright and gay, They flew from me the other day; What was the reason they did go? |
32415 | I went to the wood and kill''d a_ tory_; I went to the wood and kill''d another; Was it the same, or was it his brother? |
32415 | I would if I cou''d, If I cou''dn''t, how cou''d I? |
32415 | If a body meet a body, In a field of fitches; Can a body tell a body Where a body itches? |
32415 | If a thatcher of Thatchwood went to Thatchet a thatching, Where''s the thatching the thatcher of Thatchwood has thatch''d? |
32415 | If all the world was apple- pie, And all the sea was ink, And all the trees were bread and cheese, What should we have for drink? |
32415 | In comes the little dog, Pussy, are you there? |
32415 | Lend me thy mare to ride a mile? |
32415 | Little Bob Robin, Where do you live? |
32415 | Little John Jiggy Jag, He rode a penny nag, And went to Wigan to woo; When he came to a beck, He fell and broke his neck,-- Johnny, how dost thou now? |
32415 | Little Tom Dogget, What dost thou mean, To kill thy poor Colly Now she''s so lean? |
32415 | Little Tom Tucker Sings for his supper; What shall he eat? |
32415 | Little boy blue, come blow up your horn, The sheep''s in the meadow, the cow''s in the corn; Where''s the little boy that looks after the sheep? |
32415 | Little boy, pretty boy, where was you born? |
32415 | Little girl, little girl, what gave she you? |
32415 | Little girl, little girl, where have you been? |
32415 | Little lad, little lad, where wast thou born? |
32415 | Master Teague, what is your story? |
32415 | Master Teague, what is your story?, 7 Hot- cross Buns!, 104 How d''''e dogs, how? |
32415 | Master Teague, what is your story?, 7 Hot- cross Buns!, 104 How d''''e dogs, how? |
32415 | May I go with you, my pretty maid? |
32415 | Mistress Mary, quite contrary, How does your garden grow? |
32415 | Mistress Pussey, how d''ye do?" |
32415 | My boy Willy?" |
32415 | Neighbour, how do you do? |
32415 | O rare Harry Parry, When will you marry? |
32415 | Oh, dear, what can the matter be? |
32415 | Oh, my little nothing, my pretty little nothing, What will nothing buy for my wife? |
32415 | Oh, where are you going, My pretty maiden fair, With your red rosy cheeks, And your coal- black hair? |
32415 | Old Betty Blue Lost a holiday shoe, What can old Betty do? |
32415 | Old woman, old woman, old woman, quoth I, O whither, O whither, O whither, so high? |
32415 | Old woman, old woman, shall I love you dearly? |
32415 | Old woman, old woman, shall we go a shearing? |
32415 | Once I saw a little bird, Come hop, hop, hop; So I cried, little bird, Will you stop, stop, stop? |
32415 | One can sit in the garden and spin, Another can make a fine bed for the king; Pray ma''am will you take one in? |
32415 | Or the little god of Love turn the spit, spit, spit?" |
32415 | Peter White will ne''er go right, Would you know the reason why? |
32415 | Petrum,& c. How could there be a Bible no man could read? |
32415 | Petrum,& c. How could there be a goose without a bone? |
32415 | Pray when will that be? |
32415 | Pray, old Dame, what''s o''clock? |
32415 | Pray, old Dame, what''s o''clock? |
32415 | Pray, who do you woo, Lily bright and shine a''? |
32415 | Pray, who do you woo, My a dildin, my a daldin? |
32415 | Pretty John Watts, We are troubled with rats, Will you drive them out of the house? |
32415 | Pussey cat sits by the fire, How did she come there? |
32415 | Pussicat, wussicat, with a white foot, When is your wedding? |
32415 | Pussy sits behind the fire, How can she be fair? |
32415 | Pussy- cat, pussy- cat, what did you there? |
32415 | Pussy- cat, pussy- cat, where have you been? |
32415 | Robert Rowley rolled a round roll round, A round roll Robert Rowley rolled round; Where rolled the round roll Robert Rowley rolled round? |
32415 | Say, will you marry me, my pretty maid? |
32415 | Says the little girl to the little boy,"What shall we do?" |
32415 | See- saw sacradown, Which is the way to London town? |
32415 | See- saw, jack a daw, What is a craw to do wi''her? |
32415 | Shake a leg, wag a leg, when will you gang? |
32415 | Shall I go with thee? |
32415 | Sing, sing, what shall I sing? |
32415 | So, so, Mistress Pussy, Pray how do you do? |
32415 | Some little mice sat in a barn to spin; Pussy came by, and popped her head in;"Shall I come in, and cut your threads off?" |
32415 | The air is cold, the worms are hid, For this poor bird what can be done? |
32415 | The cat has eat the pudding- string; Do, do, what shall I do? |
32415 | The dove says coo, coo, what shall I do? |
32415 | The little maid replied, Some say a little sighed,"But what shall we have for to eat, eat, eat? |
32415 | The man in the wilderness asked me, How many strawberries grew in the sea? |
32415 | The next day the wolf came again, and said to the little pig,"Little pig, there is a fair at Shanklin this afternoon, will you go?" |
32415 | The north wind doth blow, And we shall have snow, And what will poor Robin do then? |
32415 | The nurse sings the first line, and repeats it, time after time, until the expectant little one asks, what next? |
32415 | The wife who sells the barley, honey; She wo n''t get up to serve her swine, And do you ken Elsie Marley, honey? |
32415 | Then Tatty sat down and wept; then a three legged stool said, Tatty why do you weep? |
32415 | There was a king met a king In a narrow lane, Says this king to that king,"Where have you been?" |
32415 | There was a little man, And he woo''d a little maid, And he said,"little maid, will you we d, we d, we d? |
32415 | There was an old woman, and what do you think? |
32415 | They all ran after the farmer''s wife, Who cut off their tails with the carving- knife, Did you ever see such fools in your life? |
32415 | They kick up their heels, and there they lie, What the pize ails''em now? |
32415 | Tiddle liddle lightum, Pitch and tar; Tiddle liddle lightum, What''s that for? |
32415 | Tom shall have a new bonnet, With blue ribbands to tie on it, With a hush- a- bye and a lull- a- baby, Who so like to Tommy''s daddy? |
32415 | Trip trap over the grass: If you please will you let one of your[ eldest] daughters come, Come and dance with me? |
32415 | We have mice, too, in plenty, That feast in the pantry; But let them stay, And nibble away; What harm in a little brown mouse? |
32415 | We will be married on Monday, And will not that be very good? |
32415 | We will have bacon and pudding, And will not that be very good? |
32415 | We will have mammy and daddy, And will not that be very good? |
32415 | Well, the little pig got up at five, and got the turnips before the wolf came--(which he did about six)--and who said,"Little pig, are you ready?" |
32415 | What a pize ails''em? |
32415 | What age may she be? |
32415 | What are little boys made of, made of, What are little boys made of? |
32415 | What are little girls made of, made of, made of, What are little girls made of? |
32415 | What do you want? |
32415 | What have you ate to- day, Billy, my son? |
32415 | What have you ate to- day, my only man? |
32415 | What is his name? |
32415 | What is my dame to do? |
32415 | What is the rhyme for_ poringer?_ The king he had a daughter fair, And gave the Prince of Orange her. |
32415 | What is your father, my pretty maid? |
32415 | What shoe- maker makes shoes without leather, With all the four elements put together? |
32415 | What the pize ails''em? |
32415 | What time do you mean to go?" |
32415 | What to do there? |
32415 | What to do with her? |
32415 | What''s the news of the day, Good neighbour, I pray? |
32415 | What, shall we be married no sooner? |
32415 | What, shall we have nobody else? |
32415 | What, shall we have nothing more? |
32415 | When shall we be married, My dear Nicholas Wood? |
32415 | When will you pay me? |
32415 | Where are you going, my pretty maid? |
32415 | Where art thou, Tom? |
32415 | Where have you been to- day, Billy, my son? |
32415 | Where have you been? |
32415 | Where is your money? |
32415 | Where was a sugar and fretty? |
32415 | Who comes here? |
32415 | Who goes round my house this night? |
32415 | Who is going round my sheepfold? |
32415 | Who shall we have at our wedding, My dear Nicholas Wood? |
32415 | Who steals all the sheep at night? |
32415 | Who, being miss''d, his mother went Him calling everywhere; Where art thou, Tom? |
32415 | Why did you eat the dumplings? |
32415 | Will the love that you''re so rich in Make a fire in the kitchen? |
32415 | Will you be constant, my pretty maid? |
32415 | Will you wake him? |
32415 | Willy boy, Willy boy, where are you going? |
32415 | [ Two children sit opposite to each other; the first turns her fingers one over the other, and says:]"May my geese fly over your barn?" |
32415 | [*] What shall we have for our dinner, My dear Nicholas Wood? |
32415 | are you here before me? |
32415 | are you there? |
32415 | quoth the Frog, is that what you mean? |
32415 | said Annis;"How came you to love me there?" |
32415 | said Annis;"I prithee love tell me where?" |
32415 | said Annis;"I prithee, love, tell me when?" |
32415 | say you so? |
32415 | says the gridiron, ca n''t you agree? |
32415 | shall I?" |
32415 | what a pize ails''em? |
32415 | what shall I see? |
32415 | what the pize ails''em? |
32415 | what''s that to thou? |
32415 | wilt thou be mine? |
36177 | Always open, eh? 36177 And did you go on into Italy?" |
36177 | But we can get beds there, I suppose? 36177 Can you kindly direct me the nearest way to Slagley?" |
36177 | Can you please tell me the_ exact_ time? |
36177 | Can you tell me, my good man, if I shall pass the''Red Lion''inn along this road? |
36177 | Can you tell which is the best inn in Baconhurst? |
36177 | Confound it all, you say it''s nothing? 36177 Do you know anything about salmon- poaching in the neighbourhood?" |
36177 | Do you mean to say that you and your family live here all the winter? 36177 Eh? |
36177 | Going by Dieppe or Boulogne? |
36177 | How do you mean? |
36177 | How''s that? |
36177 | I say Tom, do you think your key will fit my bag? |
36177 | I say, uncle, can yew tell me, air there ever any new camels? 36177 I wonder if you have got such a thing as lemon peel or candied peel in your shop?" |
36177 | Is there anything else to look at in the village? |
36177 | Le Fiv''o''clock,i.e., Afternoon Tea._)_ Britisher._"_ Coming to the ball to- night, Count?_"_ Monsieur le Comte._"Moi, mon cher? |
36177 | Le Fiv''o''clock,i.e., Afternoon Tea._)_ Britisher._"_ Coming to the ball to- night, Count?_"_ Monsieur le Comte._"Moi, mon cher? |
36177 | Look here, what does this mean? 36177 May I be permitted to examine that interesting stone in your field? |
36177 | My lad-- which is the-- quickest way-- for me to get to the station? |
36177 | Oh, are n''t you glad, darling, we have come this delightful tour, instead of going to one of those stupid foreign places? |
36177 | Say, guide, have n''t we seen this room before? |
36177 | This is_ Gothic_, is n''t it, John? |
36177 | Waiter, go''sh''ch a thing as a warmin''-pan? |
36177 | What dun yo''co''that wayter? |
36177 | What''s this? 36177 Where can I get some water?" |
36177 | Which do you prefer, sir? 36177 Why do n''t you call upon the girl you were flirting with all last night?" |
36177 | Will it be like this all d- d- d- day daddy?] |
36177 | You''re running this ball, ai n''t you? 36177 _ Now_, my dear fellow is n''t this jolly? |
36177 | ''Ang it, yer down''t suppowse as I were hedgerkited at Heton or''Arrow like a bloomin''swell, do yer?" |
36177 | ''_ Arry._"Why do I speak my hown langwidge so hungrammatical? |
36177 | ***** PLEASURE À LA RUSSE.--_Q._ When does a Russian give a Polish peasant a holiday? |
36177 | ***** SHE MEANT NOTHING WRONG.--_Curate to American Visitor._ How do you like our church, Mrs. Golightly? |
36177 | ***** THE SKELETON TOURIST''S VADE MECUM_ Question._ What is your object this year? |
36177 | ***** TO INTENDING TOURISTS--"Where shall we go?" |
36177 | ***** Would the epigrammatic translation of"_ sede vacanti_"as"Not well and gone away for a holiday"be accepted by an examiner? |
36177 | *****[ Illustration: GEOLOGY.--_Scientific Pedestrian._"Do you find any fossils here?" |
36177 | *****[ Illustration: ON A CERTAIN CONDESCENSION IN FOREIGNERS.--_He._"Oh, you''re from America, are you? |
36177 | *****[ Illustration: TACTFUL SYMPATHY_ Genial Friend._"Hullo, old man, getting on all right?"] |
36177 | *****[ Illustration: THE RULING PASSION_ Customs Official._"Have you anything to declare?" |
36177 | *****[ Illustration: THE WATER CURE_ Young Lady._"So you''ve been on the Continent, Professor?" |
36177 | *****[ Illustration: WHERE IGNORANCE IS BLISS,& c._ Jones._"I say, what''s the exact meaning of''voilà''?" |
36177 | *****[ Illustration: YOUNG AUSTRALIA SCENE--_Highland Gathering in the Antipodes._"Well, my little man, so you''re Scotch, eh?" |
36177 | *****[ Illustration:"BY THE CARD"_ Pedestrian._"How far is it to Sludgecombe, boy?" |
36177 | *****[ Illustration:"Carry your trunk, sir?"] |
36177 | *****[ Illustration:"Is this your favourite view, poppa darling?" |
36177 | *****[ Illustration:"Will you''urry up paintin''that tree, sir? |
36177 | *****[ Illustration:''ARRY ABROAD.--_Guide._"Monsieur finds eet a vairy eenteresting old place, ees eet not?" |
36177 | *****[ Illustration:_ Chatty Tourist._"Beautiful specimen of a Roman camp, this, is n''t it?" |
36177 | *****[ Illustration:_ First Traveller._"Can we have beds here to- night?" |
36177 | *****[ Illustration:_ Full- sized Tripper._"How does one get into the churchyard, please?" |
36177 | *****[ Illustration:_ Scientific and Nervous Visitor at Country Hotel._"I suppose there''s no''ptomaine''in this pie?" |
36177 | *****[ Illustration:_ Stout Party._"Is this path safe?" |
36177 | *****[ Illustration:_ Tourist._"Was n''t there a great battle fought about here?" |
36177 | *****[ Illustration:_ Traveller._"Can you direct me to Hollow Meadows?" |
36177 | *****[ Illustration:_ Visitor._"Will you tell me where I shall find a seat?" |
36177 | *****[ Illustration:_ Waiter._"Did you ring, Sir?" |
36177 | *****[ Illustration:_ Walking Tourist._"What''s the name of this village, my man?" |
36177 | A mountain summit white with snow Is an attractive sight, I know, But why not see it_ from below_? |
36177 | Aix- les- Bains? |
36177 | And do you find that people come here on week- days for rest and meditation?" |
36177 | And how often have I told you not to say"beastly"? |
36177 | And pray, which is the_ present_ Duchess?"] |
36177 | And where do their customers''little boys go?" |
36177 | And you? |
36177 | Are these adapted for playing only dance tunes, and therefore specially serviceable in a"Hop"county? |
36177 | Arrive at foot of"companion"( why"companion"?) |
36177 | Barkins, what brought you here? |
36177 | Bournemouth? |
36177 | Brussels? |
36177 | But how the deuce did you manage to see the table? |
36177 | But why should Toddlekins trouble to go so far afield? |
36177 | But, I say, how do you know there are no alligators here?" |
36177 | Can you tell me what egg this is?" |
36177 | Dear old Bluewater tries to keep me from going, and says,"What, after all,_ is_ sea- sickness?" |
36177 | Does that make much difference in their bill? |
36177 | Here on account of the waters? |
36177 | How about Brighton, Hastings, Eastbourne, Bexhill, Seaford, Cowes, Weymouth, Exmouth, Penzance, Lynton, or Tenby? |
36177 | How about Paris? |
36177 | How''s that? |
36177 | I can detect it distinctly now-- can''t you?" |
36177 | Is fancy dress_ de rigueur_?" |
36177 | Is n''t it funny, Archibald, to see so many foreigners about? |
36177 | Is n''t this worth all your club dinners?" |
36177 | Jones._"Am I not an expensive little wifie?" |
36177 | Most contrary, Why do you tumble so? |
36177 | Nice? |
36177 | Oderwise''ow should we live? |
36177 | One of the hands"( why"hands"?) |
36177 | People often say to me,''Do n''t you dislike Americans?'' |
36177 | Quick work, was n''t it?" |
36177 | Rome, Seville, Constantinople, Cairo? |
36177 | Say, is it true that you''ve got a real live ghost here? |
36177 | Scotland or Ireland? |
36177 | Shoddy?"] |
36177 | Smith._"Oh, I was wondering whether you and your husband would care to accompany our party to Hadrian''s Villa to- morrow?" |
36177 | Spot or plain?"] |
36177 | Such a garb should be forbidden; Where''s the grace an artist loves? |
36177 | Switzerland? |
36177 | Tell me, oh tell me, Mr. Dunk, what did_ you_ think of it all?" |
36177 | That_ was_ a change for you, was n''t it?"] |
36177 | Then do you mean to tell us that you actually reached the North Pole? |
36177 | Then why do n''t you repair it?" |
36177 | Then''ow d''yer spell''wee''?"] |
36177 | This must be the east, must n''t it? |
36177 | Torquay? |
36177 | What arm of the sea reminds one of a borrowed boot? |
36177 | What can that be?" |
36177 | What did you suppose it was-- Dundee marmalade? |
36177 | What do you say?" |
36177 | What of that? |
36177 | What payment do you expect for it?" |
36177 | What''s that mean, Tripper,"Pas de Calais"? |
36177 | What? |
36177 | What?--Forward, half- back?" |
36177 | Where can I go to at Easter to be warm and comfortable, without so much trouble? |
36177 | Where do travellers generally go?" |
36177 | Where does it come from? |
36177 | Why leave the hospitable plain And scale Mont Blanc with toil and pain Merely to scramble down again? |
36177 | Why, what do you do when any of you are ill? |
36177 | You are very pretty boy, you dress in ze most perfect''chic''; but vy do you speak your own language so ungrammaticallé?" |
36177 | You know the Bight? |
36177 | Zen ve must not go therein to berampulate?"] |
36177 | [_ Exit Querier rapidly._*****[ Illustration: THE AMERICAN RUSH.--_American Tourist._"Say, how long will it take to see over the ruins?" |
36177 | [_ Objurgations, and midnight disturber retires._]*****[ Illustration: OUR COMPATRIOTS ABROAD.--"And how did you like Switzerland?" |
36177 | _ A.__ Un tour de Force._*****_ Q._ What is the difference between a traveller and a popular vegetable? |
36177 | _ Am_ I going to be----? |
36177 | _ American Tourist._"And how long will it take you to tell us about it?"] |
36177 | _ Arabella._"_ Oui._"_ Her Husband._"What did you say?"] |
36177 | _ Captain Longbow._ See the table? |
36177 | _ Coachman._"Ah, ai n''t it beautiful? |
36177 | _ Driver._"Pull at''i m? |
36177 | _ First Traveller._"Have you-- er-- any-- er--_insects_ in this house?" |
36177 | _ First ditto._"No''W''in French? |
36177 | _ German Nimrod._"Ach zo? |
36177 | _ He._ Yes, dear; which of them? |
36177 | _ Is n''t_ it delightful? |
36177 | _ Is n''t_ this charming? |
36177 | _ Jambon d''Yorck._ What''s that mean, Mr. T.? |
36177 | _ Local Torturer._"Be it, zur? |
36177 | _ Mamma._ Why, Tommy? |
36177 | _ Niece._"That was the day of the tidal wave, was n''t it, Auntie?"] |
36177 | _ Now which moight be their busy day there,_ mister?"] |
36177 | _ Q._ And if you visited the Rhine by the railway, what object of interest would chiefly attract your attention? |
36177 | _ Q._ But I presume your outing would justify the title of this Vade Mecum? |
36177 | _ Q._ Could you not spare more time than this from your holiday? |
36177 | _ Q._ Do you consider that your mind would derive much benefit from your rapid locomotion? |
36177 | _ Q._ How do you manage this? |
36177 | _ Q._ How long would you give St. Peter''s at Rome? |
36177 | _ Q._ Is it necessary to examine the places_ en route_ with much careful consideration? |
36177 | _ Q._ What advantage would you derive from your tour? |
36177 | _ Q._ What are compulsory omissions? |
36177 | _ Q._ What object of interest would you examine in the Land of the Midnight Sun? |
36177 | _ The Professor._"Really-- what_ are_ they?" |
36177 | _ Traveller._"And got any ice?" |
36177 | _ Waiter._"Ice, sir? |
36177 | _ Young Lady._"Really? |
36177 | berth, is it!--beg pardon-- or underneath it?" |
36177 | waiter, what do you call this soup? |
36177 | what_ do_ you think? |
36177 | you are vont of_ taincher_? |
36177 | Êtes- vous la diligence? |
36529 | A-- I beg your pardon? |
36529 | Aven''t I give''yer the edgication of a gen''leman? |
36529 | But was there no_ love_ in the piece, then? |
36529 | But wha''s the other light, sir? |
36529 | But what''s the yaller light, sir? |
36529 | Can you imagine anything more utterly solemn than the_ dénoûment_ in_ Romeo and Juliet_? 36529 Do n''t you see she''s got a bird in her hat, sitting? |
36529 | Has this child been on the stage? |
36529 | How precious well them''supers''are painted, ai n''t they?] |
36529 | My dear, are we going to stay to the''bitter end''?] |
36529 | O, coachman, do you know the principal entrance to Drury Lane Theat----? |
36529 | Really? 36529 Shakspeare? |
36529 | What did you think of that cigar as I give you the other day? |
36529 | What do you think of it? |
36529 | Who do you say they are, my dear!--Christian ministers? 36529 _ À la Lady Macbeth_, eh?" |
36529 | __ Author._What is the audience shouting for?" |
36529 | ''Av you seen ze last new piece at ze''Olleborne? |
36529 | ''Ow do you do? |
36529 | (_ Enter Robinson, staggering in._) Why, my boy, what''s the matter? |
36529 | (_ Marks prompt- book._) I wonder who that chap is in the wing? |
36529 | (_ Pausing at the open door._) And will you read it to us after dinner? |
36529 | (_ Ralph starts up._) Eh? |
36529 | (_ Reflects deeply._) Er-- do you mote much? |
36529 | ***** A MODERN REHEARSAL_ Leading Lady( to Stage Manager)._ Who''s that man in the ulster coat talking to the call- boy? |
36529 | ***** FROM OUR GENERAL THEATRICAL FUND.--Why would a good- natured dramatic critic be a valuable specimen in an anatomical museum? |
36529 | ***** NO FIRST- NIGHTER.--_First Man in the Street._ See the eclipse last night? |
36529 | ***** QUESTION AND ANSWER.--"Why do n''t I write plays?" |
36529 | ***** THE MOAN OF A THEATRE- MANAGER Who gets, by hook or crook, from me Admittance free, though well knows he That myriads turned away will be? |
36529 | ***** There is a blessing on peacemakers-- is there one on playwrights? |
36529 | ***** WHEN are parsons bound in honour not to abuse theatres? |
36529 | *****[ Illustration: A DISENCHANTMENT.--_Grandpapa._"_ What_? |
36529 | *****[ Illustration: MITIGATING CIRCUMSTANCES_ Sangazur, Senior._"Look here, what''s all this nonsense I hear about your wanting to marry an actress?" |
36529 | *****[ Illustration: Mellow drammer]*****[ Illustration: FIRST NIGHT OF AN UNAPPRECIATED MELODRAMA.--_He._"Are we alone?" |
36529 | *****[ Illustration: OUR THEATRICALS.--_The Countess._"Will this cruel war_ never_ end? |
36529 | *****[ Illustration: PROGRESS_ Young Rustic._"Gran''fa''r, who was Shylock?" |
36529 | *****[ Illustration: THE NEW PLAY_ Low Comedian._"Have you seen the notice?" |
36529 | *****[ Illustration: TURNING A PHRASE.--_Dramatic Author._"What the deuce do you mean by pitching into my piece in this brutal manner? |
36529 | *****[ Illustration: The higher walk of the drama]*****[ Illustration:"Auntie, can_ you_ do that?"] |
36529 | *****[ Illustration:"THE SLEEPING BEAUTY."--"Nervous? |
36529 | *****[ Illustration:"Well, how did the new play go off last night?" |
36529 | *****[ Illustration:"Well, papa, how did you enjoy the play to- night?" |
36529 | *****[ Illustration:_ First Critic._"Well, have you seen the great tragedian in_ Romeo and Juliet_?" |
36529 | *****_ Evangeline._ Why is this called the dress circle mamma? |
36529 | *****_ Q._ When are the affairs of a theatre likely to assume a somewhat fishy aspect? |
36529 | *****_ Smart._ How do, Smooth? |
36529 | --"Ay, sir, what of him?" |
36529 | --_Mistress._"And you dare to tell me, Belinda, that you have actually answered a_ theatrical advertisement_? |
36529 | 1._ What do you mean by that? |
36529 | 3._ Then what is Mr. Tenterfore doing in town? |
36529 | A-- by the bye, have you seen Jones lately?"] |
36529 | All right, old chap, you know best-- what? |
36529 | And last, and( perhaps) not least, Why do n''t I send in a play? |
36529 | And what_ is_ the idea? |
36529 | Are there no other themes in every- day life which Mr. Pinero might take? |
36529 | Because why waste three weeks on writing a play, when it takes only three years to compose a novel? |
36529 | Bob in love with Miss Fontalba, the comic actress at the Parthenon?" |
36529 | Can you suggest anything? |
36529 | Cruche, Melon, Baudet, Dinde, Jobard, Crétin, Momie, Colin- Maillard que vous êtes?" |
36529 | D''ye take me an''the missus for a pair o''proize''osses? |
36529 | Darling, I love you-- will you marry me? |
36529 | Do you good to have half an hour out, just a few holes-- golf-- what? |
36529 | Do you know anyone? |
36529 | F.( advancing)._ Who are you, sir, who dare to trespass on my premises? |
36529 | F._ Who is that man? |
36529 | Going strong-- what? |
36529 | Hallo, Wobbler, brought your new song? |
36529 | Have something to drink? |
36529 | He groans''O, why did I ever write those letters? |
36529 | How are we to take this? |
36529 | How are you? |
36529 | How did you enjoy the piece, Miss MacGuider? |
36529 | How did you like my assumption of_ Hamlet_?" |
36529 | How the dickens am I to act such a beastly part as that?--and how am I to dress for it, I should like to know?" |
36529 | How_ could_ you be such a_ wicked_ girl?" |
36529 | How_ does_ she manage it?" |
36529 | I do n''t know if you''re keen about stopping here? |
36529 | I_ do_ hope you have n''t all been waiting for me?" |
36529 | If I can put in a word about your play-- hey?--what? |
36529 | M''Chrustie( in the washing- room of the Minerva Club)._"Look here, waiter, what''s the meaning of this? |
36529 | Mais vous savez le Français, alors?" |
36529 | Nothin''particular, only just to see how you were gettin''on-- what? |
36529 | P. agrees._]*****[ Illustration:_ Conversationalist._"Do you play ping- pong?" |
36529 | Perfect, I suppose? |
36529 | Petitpas on the bare- backed steed, was n''t it?" |
36529 | Pretty good?" |
36529 | Rippin''idea-- what? |
36529 | Shall I book places for_ Caste_ or_ Much ado about Nothing_?" |
36529 | Smith._"This is a very unpleasant piece, do n''t you think? |
36529 | Sounds tempting, but I wonder how it''s done? |
36529 | Stay-- aren''t those the Fitzsnooks? |
36529 | Supposing I had said"No,"would you have shot yourself?--would you have gone to the front?--would your life have been a blank hereafter? |
36529 | THE JEUNE PREMIER.--"_What_, Eleanor? |
36529 | They ca n''t very well talk while they are clinging to the boat; and what the deuce could they be talking about before? |
36529 | This is to distinguish it, we imagine, from the generality of acting, in which there is mostly no thinking? |
36529 | Thought I''d just look in-- hey?--what? |
36529 | Was it a dull piece, then?" |
36529 | Well, Mrs. Piggleswade, how did you like the Bishop''s sermon? |
36529 | Well, dear, and how is the play getting on? |
36529 | What are they playing? |
36529 | What did she think of my new comedy?" |
36529 | What do you want, old chap? |
36529 | What induced you to do it?" |
36529 | What on earth are these?" |
36529 | What''s a stall at the hopera?" |
36529 | What''s the matter, eh? |
36529 | What''s your business? |
36529 | What_ was_ the part?" |
36529 | Where are you? |
36529 | Who dubs the actors boorish hinds? |
36529 | Who fault with all the scenery finds? |
36529 | Who jeers and sneers At all he sees and all he hears? |
36529 | Who keeps his reputation still, For recompensing good with ill With more than pandemonium''s skill? |
36529 | Who loudly, as the drama''s plot Unfolds, declares the tale a lot Of balderdash and tommy- rot? |
36529 | Who makes the bankrupt''s doleful doom In all its blackness o''er me loom? |
36529 | Who runs us down for many a day, And keeps no end of folks away That else would for admittance pay? |
36529 | Who spreads dissatisfaction wide''Mongst those who else with all they spied Had been extremely satisfied? |
36529 | Who to his neighbour spins harangues, On how he views with grievous pangs The dust that on our hangings hangs? |
36529 | Who with disgust his molars grinds? |
36529 | Who''ll bring my grey head to the tomb? |
36529 | Who, aye withholds the claps and cheers That others give? |
36529 | Who, in a voice which rings afar, Declares, while standing at the bar, Our drinks most deleterious are? |
36529 | Who, while he for his programme pays The smallest silver coin, inveighs Against such fraud with eyes ablaze? |
36529 | Why should I? |
36529 | Will your husband mind, do you think?" |
36529 | Would anything interesting have happened? |
36529 | Would you mind accompanying me, Miss Brown?"] |
36529 | Y. D._"Ah-- er-- when was that?" |
36529 | Yes, yes? |
36529 | You do n''t mind my asking you to leave me to myself a bit? |
36529 | You enjoyed it? |
36529 | You mean the woman in the red feather at the end of the third row of the stalls? |
36529 | You surely did n''t really admire his acting?" |
36529 | You would n''t have the lady addle- headed, would you?"] |
36529 | [ Illustration: Gay at tea][ Illustration: Princesses and royal tea][ Illustration: Globe][ Illustration:"Scent, James?"] |
36529 | [ Illustration:"Toby, or not Toby? |
36529 | [_ Curtain and moral._*****[ Illustration:_ Manager of"Freak"Show._"Have I got a vacancy for a giant? |
36529 | [_ Does nothing.__ He._ Why, what''s the matter? |
36529 | [_ Wordy argument follows._]"Why, do n''t you remember, same time as Bill took us to the''Pig an''Whistle,''an''we''ad stewed eels for supper?" |
36529 | _ Author._"Then had n''t I better appear?" |
36529 | _ Belinda( whimpering)._"Well, mum,--_other_ young lidies-- gow on the-- stige-- why should n''t_ I_ gow?"] |
36529 | _ Brown._ Are you going to stay for_ The Gory Hand_? |
36529 | _ Dramatic Critic._"Pitching into it? |
36529 | _ First Quidnunc._"My dear sir, does n''t_ Hamlet_, when he handles_ Yorick''s_ skull, address_ Horatio_,''And smelt so, pa''? |
36529 | _ He._"Who wrote the piece, then?" |
36529 | _ His Wife( late of the Frivolity Theatre)._"How do, Duchess? |
36529 | _ Languid Friend._"Have we? |
36529 | _ Mademoiselle._"Indeed? |
36529 | _ Manager._"These? |
36529 | _ Maud._"_ Love?_ Oh dear no, mamma. |
36529 | _ Murphy._"What the dev''l d''ye mane? |
36529 | _ Robinson._ Do you think so? |
36529 | _ Second Ditto._"Surely a certificate is n''t necessary, dear?"] |
36529 | _ She._"Who wrote the piece? |
36529 | _ Smart( repressing something Shakspearian about"writing down"which occurs to him, continues pleasantly)._ Wrote you down? |
36529 | _ Smooth._ Matter? |
36529 | _ The Great Mathematician._"Ah, would you believe it, that bit of acting brought me more compliments than anything I ever did?" |
36529 | _ The S. in the U._ Do n''t you remember me, Mr. Footlyte? |
36529 | _ Tragedian._"No; is it a good one?" |
36529 | _ Visitor._ And what''s it all about? |
36529 | _ Voice from the Gallery._"What abeaout yer fice?"] |
36529 | how are you? |
36529 | my dear doctor, why is there not a society for the prevention of gruelty to animals?"] |
36529 | rushes off and writes furiously to the Committee!_]*****_ Q._ What were the"palmy"days of the drama? |
36529 | what is that I hear?" |
36529 | you meet with so often in Shakspeare and the old dramatists?" |
36026 | ''What do you call a successful lecture, Greeley?'' 36026 And how long did they keep you?" |
36026 | And what did they do to you? |
36026 | And what did you make out of it? |
36026 | And what has Uncle Sam had to say to all these activities? |
36026 | And you''re from New York, eh? |
36026 | Any danger, Porter? |
36026 | Any more bookings? |
36026 | Anybody round hyah knows what it costs to beat up a niggah in this hyah State? |
36026 | Are n''t there any steel cars on this train? |
36026 | Are you goin''to speak here to- night, Brother? |
36026 | Bridge? 36026 But how,"said I,"did you manage to conceal the stuff?" |
36026 | But is there for the night a resting- place? 36026 But what can I do?" |
36026 | But why does n''t the captain keep his boat closer to civilization? |
36026 | But-- would_ you_ be interested in that? |
36026 | Do they attend the lectures? |
36026 | Do toes and fingers come as high as that? |
36026 | Do you carry any insurance? |
36026 | Excuse me,said I, addressing the barker,"but is there to be a lecture here to- night?" |
36026 | Forty years? |
36026 | Friends? |
36026 | Got any children? |
36026 | Have a good time at Albany? |
36026 | Hit''s ober yander, ai n''t it? |
36026 | How about a little heat here, Son? |
36026 | How are you these days? |
36026 | How is it? |
36026 | How long you been with this hyere road, Sam? |
36026 | How so? |
36026 | I am very glad indeed to see you; but what are you doing here? |
36026 | I do n''t like to complain,said I;"but this pie--""What''s the matter with the pie?" |
36026 | I suppose you know Howells, and Mark Twain, and all that_ bunch_? |
36026 | In he bed? |
36026 | Is n''t there room for him closer to town? |
36026 | Is there more than one Auditorium in town? |
36026 | Lecture? |
36026 | Like to run it yourself? |
36026 | Maine? |
36026 | Matter? |
36026 | Natural gas? |
36026 | Now,said he, running his hand over the back of my head after he had attended to my other needs,"how do you want your hair fixed?" |
36026 | Oh, that''s it, eh? |
36026 | Oh, that''s it, eh? |
36026 | Oh, well, what of that? |
36026 | Only I was talking with a man about you the other day, and from one or two things he said--"What did he say? |
36026 | Pardon my intrusion, madam,I panted,"but can you tell me where I can find Miss So- and- So?" |
36026 | Pretty good stuff, that, eh? |
36026 | Ready to talk turkey, are you? |
36026 | Really? |
36026 | Saved your life? |
36026 | Say,he said, pointing with the scissors point to the portrait of myself,"that guy looks sump''n like you, do n''t he?" |
36026 | See that red- headed chap in the fourth row? |
36026 | Shall I find comfort, travel- sore and weak? 36026 Shall I meet other wayfarers at night? |
36026 | Tell me again-- is it Salubrities or Celebrities? |
36026 | That faker? 36026 That''s it, is it? |
36026 | To lecture? |
36026 | Twenty miles, eh? 36026 Want to buy a ticket for to- night''s lecture, mister?" |
36026 | Well, Mr. Bangs,said the chairman as we walked back to the hotel together after the lecture was over,"what did you think of your audience to- night? |
36026 | Well, if ya ca n''t move it, why in Dothan dontcha kick it out? |
36026 | Well, would you mind telling me where they are? |
36026 | Well, you''ve got it, have n''t you? |
36026 | Well,said the guest the following morning, as he started to leave for the station,"what''s the tax? |
36026 | Well-- tell me-- is there a lecture course of any kind in this town that you know of? |
36026 | Well-- what of him? |
36026 | Wh- whut''s de mattah? |
36026 | Whaddyer suppose she ast me? |
36026 | Whaddyer think of Chicago? |
36026 | What are you doing here? |
36026 | What are you trying to do, discourage me? |
36026 | What do you know about my business? |
36026 | What do you mean by that? |
36026 | What is a good lecture, Major, anyhow? |
36026 | What kind of car do you call this, anyhow? 36026 What on earth is the matter with you?" |
36026 | What the dash is the matter with you? |
36026 | What the deuce am I going to do? |
36026 | What the dickens are you doing? |
36026 | What yo''niggahs want round here dis time o''night? |
36026 | What''s Maine? |
36026 | What''s happened to you? |
36026 | What''s that-- Boggs? |
36026 | What''s that? |
36026 | What''s the name? |
36026 | What''s the trouble-- caught cold? |
36026 | What''s the trouble? |
36026 | What? |
36026 | Where are you going? |
36026 | Where is Captain Maguffy''s house? |
36026 | Who are you? |
36026 | Who is this eighth wonder of the world? |
36026 | Who publishes that book? |
36026 | Who the deuce ever told you that? |
36026 | Will you sell me that vest? |
36026 | Yank though I be, eh? |
36026 | Yes,said I,"I''ve got two sons in Detroit, and--""Dee- troit, eh?" |
36026 | Yo''got enough pillows, Cap''n? |
36026 | You are pretty bald, ai n''t you? |
36026 | You do n''t call that idiot Wilberforce Jenkins a friend of mine, do you? 36026 You mean the pall bearer with the green necktie?" |
36026 | You say he did business with me once? |
36026 | _ Did you get him?_came a deep bass voice out of the night. |
36026 | _ Faker?_retorted the major. |
36026 | _ He''s aboard his boat-- the Samuel J. Taylor._"His boat? |
36026 | _ The Idiot?_This was the title of one of my books. |
36026 | _ What?_he exploded. |
36026 | ''What the blank do yo''suppose I caiah fo''the honah?'' |
36026 | Ah do n''t know much erbout Yonkers; but Ah guess Yonkers is a nice State too, ai n''t it?" |
36026 | And is there anything pleasant I can say about you in introducing you to your audience?" |
36026 | And what do you suppose he answered, suh? |
36026 | Another in Boston, after shaving me, inquired,"Now how do you want your hair brushed?" |
36026 | Are you a Tennessee man, suh?" |
36026 | B. Pond of the Pond Lyceum Bureau?" |
36026 | Besides I was down in Tucson the other day, and-- you''re going to lecture at Tucson Tuesday night, are n''t you?" |
36026 | Burne- Jones, William Morris, Madox Brown, Holman Hunt, and Rossetti-- I suppose you know your Rossetti like a book?" |
36026 | But the other-- who was the other man?" |
36026 | Did n''t you feel anything?" |
36026 | Did you get my letter?" |
36026 | Do n''t it get on your nerves?" |
36026 | Do n''t you know that this whole dod- gasted train has fallen through the trestle? |
36026 | Do you always try your lecturers on a cat?" |
36026 | Does he call a trip up to Albany and back a tour? |
36026 | Have you ever considered the desirability of using your gifts on the lecture platform? |
36026 | How do you make deliveries?" |
36026 | How do you propose to have the lecture delivered-- by long distance telephone, or parcels post?" |
36026 | How much do I owe you?" |
36026 | How much do you want?" |
36026 | How''s things?" |
36026 | I explained my predicament to him in a few well chosen words, ending up with:"Have n''t you a white vest you can lend me?" |
36026 | I have not space for that illuminating interchange of ideas in all its verbal fullness; but part of it ran in this wise:"Whar yo''come from?" |
36026 | I hope I have n''t made you think life''s nothing but a hat to me?" |
36026 | I love that''Up Hill''thing of hers-- remember it?--"Does the road wind up- hill all the way? |
36026 | Is n''t it a trifle late for your farmers to be in town?" |
36026 | Is n''t there any way out of here? |
36026 | Is n''t this the car Shem, Ham, and Japhet took when they moved back to town from Ararat?" |
36026 | May not the darkness hide it from my face? |
36026 | More than once during our little chat together he would pause and say:"What is the title of your talk again? |
36026 | No lyrics worthy of the name Are sung to- day by living men? |
36026 | Now that I know how, what in Dothan shall I read? |
36026 | Or drops of blood dabbling the guilty feet? |
36026 | Or golden coins squander''d and still to pay? |
36026 | Or such spill''d water as in dreams must cheat The undying throats of Hell, athirst alway? |
36026 | Sellin''brains, eh?" |
36026 | So yo''was born at Yonkers, was yuh? |
36026 | So yo''was born in Dee- troit, was yuh?" |
36026 | Some responsiveness there, all right, eh?" |
36026 | Still there?" |
36026 | The connection made, I inquired:"Is this Major Pond?" |
36026 | The only trouble is that there ai n''t much in the way of good biography written these days-- is there?" |
36026 | Then must I knock, or call when just in sight? |
36026 | Well, sir, do you know what happened then? |
36026 | Well-- what seems to be the matter?" |
36026 | What about him-- he did n''t bother you, I hope?" |
36026 | What do I owe you?" |
36026 | What was his line?" |
36026 | What yo''sellin''?" |
36026 | What''s the use of puttin''in all your time on fiction when there''s so much romance to be found in the real thing? |
36026 | What''s your line?" |
36026 | Who''s this talking?" |
36026 | Will the day''s journey take the whole long day? |
36026 | Will there be beds for me and all who seek? |
36026 | Will you please tell me who you are, and_ what_ you are, and_ why_ you are? |
36026 | Wo n''t you be a Good Samaritan and give me a lift to the station? |
36026 | Wo n''t you tell me your name, that I may add it to the list of my friends?" |
36026 | Would they be ears of wheat Sown once for food but trodden into clay? |
36026 | You say he has invited you here to meet him?" |
36026 | You wrote a book called''Tea and Coffee''once, did n''t cha?" |
36026 | You''ve evidently heard of it before-- but why do n''t you have something of the kind out here?" |
36026 | [ Illustration:"But what was the point of this little joke last night?"] |
39973 | , what more natural than that he should look in the direction of the table, and perhaps even make a step toward it? 39973 (_ Goes over and takes sandwich._) By the way, Shropshire is your county, is it not? 39973 (_ Looking about her again in search of further conclusion._) I suppose you have n''t been here long? 39973 (_ She gets up._) Why should n''t you? 39973 Algernon then says:By the way, Shropshire is your county, is it not?" |
39973 | All four of us? |
39973 | And it is? |
39973 | And who are the people you amuse? |
39973 | And, speaking of the science of Life, have you got the cucumber sandwiches cut for Lady Bracknell? |
39973 | Any family? |
39973 | Are they expensive? |
39973 | Are you asleep? |
39973 | At my age? |
39973 | Because what? |
39973 | But Jack, too engrossed in the preparations, scarcely hears the other, and answers:"Eh? |
39973 | But where? |
39973 | But-- how?--Why? |
39973 | Did you hear what I was playing, Lane? |
39973 | Do n''t you think it''s jolly lucky I said what I did? |
39973 | Do you mean to say that you began practising on me? |
39973 | Do you see that dear soul opposite? |
39973 | Does Lane go out Right? |
39973 | Does he own that nice comfortable Bath chair? |
39973 | Eating as usual, I see, Algy? |
39973 | Eh? |
39973 | Either get thee from the door, or sit down at the hatch: Dost thou conjure for wenches, that thou call''st for such store, When one is one too many? |
39973 | George Nepean would have come in, you''d have plumped down on him with your lie, and what then? |
39973 | Got nice neighbors in your part of Shropshire? |
39973 | How are you, my dear Ernest? |
39973 | How can this simple incident be made to appear true and interesting? |
39973 | How much did that American_ Slight increase_{ family pay you? |
39973 | I--? |
39973 | If I had n''t asked her, what would have happened? |
39973 | If I were n''t alone? |
39973 | If I--? |
39973 | Is marriage so demoralizing as that? |
39973 | Is there anything else you would like to know? |
39973 | It is the only thing that never grows old: do you remember what genial sparkling eyes Joseph Jefferson and Mark Twain had? |
39973 | It''s true, then, if there were some way, you{ would--? |
39973 | Just a bit? |
39973 | Mademoiselle? |
39973 | Not the way I mentioned just now-- but{ another-- you would n''t leave, would you? |
39973 | Oh, will somebody tell me what to do? |
39973 | Only to read to you? |
39973 | Possibly; or is there another entrance Left, leading to the butler''s room? |
39973 | Really, do n''t you think so? |
39973 | Really, if the lower orders do n''t set us a good example, what on earth is the use of them? |
39973 | Should the coach be a professional manager or actor, or should he be an amateur? |
39973 | Shropshire? |
39973 | Shropshire? |
39973 | The foregoing remarks have been applied largely to romantic plays, but what is to be done in modern realistic pieces? |
39973 | What brings you up to town? |
39973 | What do I_ climax,_{ care if she is a watchmaker''s daughter? |
39973 | What does he do with them? |
39973 | What else should bring me anywhere? |
39973 | What for? |
39973 | What is"blocking out"? |
39973 | What on earth do you do there? |
39973 | When Algernon says:"And, speaking of the science of Life, have you got the cucumber sandwiches cut for Lady Bracknell? |
39973 | Where have you been since last Thursday? |
39973 | Where is the table? |
39973 | Who is coming to tea? |
39973 | Why all these cups? |
39973 | Why did n''t you let me give you gas? |
39973 | Why is it that at a bachelor''s establishment the servants invariably drink the champagne? |
39973 | Why out of the question--? |
39973 | Why such extravagance in one so young? |
39973 | You do n''t own the whole house, do you? |
39973 | You must be tired, Saint- Réault? |
39973 | You''d_ Quickly_{ stay here-- near me-- always-- and be happy? |
39973 | Your furniture is n''t quite the latest thing, is it? |
39973 | _ They all turn and look at Sir C. He sinks into a chair and shakes his head at them._"Into which chair does he sink? |
40127 | A Countryman admiring the stately Fabrick of St._ Paul''s_, ask''d,_ whether it was made in_ England, or_ brought from beyond Sea_? |
40127 | A Countryman passing along the_ Strand_ saw a Coach overturn''d, and asking what the Matter was? |
40127 | A Gentleman coming to an Inn in_ Smithfield_, and seeing the Hostler expert and tractable about the Horses, asked,_ how long he had lived there_? |
40127 | A Person enquiring what became of_ such a One_? |
40127 | A melting Sermon being preached in a Country Church, all fell a weeping but one Man, who being asked, why he did not weep with the rest? |
40127 | And_ What Countryman he was_? |
40127 | I do n''t know the Author of the Pamphlet, said his Friend, but I know who wrote the Motto; Ay, cry''d my Lord,_ prithee who was it? |
40127 | One asking a Girl,_ if she would have him?__ Faith, no_, John, says she,_ but you may have me if you will_. |
40127 | One seeing a kept Whore, who made a very great Figure, ask''d, what Estate she had? |
40127 | The Countryman coming Home, was ask''d what News in_ London_? |
40127 | The foresaid House, which is the very last in_ London_ one Way, being rebuilt, a Gentleman asked another, who lived in it? |
40127 | This being done, and the Wound ty''d up with a Handkerchief; Come, says the Gentleman,_ now where shall I wound you_? |
40127 | What a Pox, said the Fellow, will neither my Word, nor the Word of G-- d pass? |
40127 | Why, good Woman, said he, do you pray so much for my_ Eye- Sight_? |
40127 | _ Ay, how?_ says they. |
40127 | _ Cato_ the Censor being ask''d, how it came to pass, that he had no Statue erected for him, who had so well deserved of the Common- Wealth? |
40127 | _ Lord, my Dear_, says she,_ what d''ye mean? |
40127 | _ Rugged_ and_ Tough_, answered he,_ who gave you that Name_? |
40127 | _ Shifts, Madam_, replies he,_ D---- me, how can that be, when we make so many every Day?_ 205. |
40127 | said he,_ what have he and his Father quarrelled again already_? |
40127 | said she, they pass off like the Waters; and pray, Madam, reply''d the Gentleman do they all_ pass_ the_ same Way_? |
40148 | As for instance? |
40148 | But why should it have altered them? 40148 Have n''t you seen it?" |
40148 | How are you, old man? |
40148 | How does the dramatist know the receipts of his play? |
40148 | How? |
40148 | Is there a''star dressing room?'' |
40148 | Let''s ask him? |
40148 | On the level? |
40148 | So you wish to become an actor? |
40148 | Supposing somebody brings the''script to me and demands that$ 500? |
40148 | Well, he inquired, with agonized anxiety,"how did it go?" |
40148 | What is it? |
40148 | What is the woman doing on the bench? |
40148 | What of it? |
40148 | Who''s that meek- looking chap? |
40148 | Why is a resident theatrical organization known as a_ stock_ company? |
40148 | Yes? |
40148 | Yes? |
40148 | You''re William A. Brady, she said;"ai n''t you?" |
40148 | You''re not trying to jolly me? |
40148 | ''Is the piece as contemptible as that? |
40148 | ''You will?'' |
40148 | And would I lunch tomorrow at Mr. Fitch''s town house, in East Fortieth Street? |
40148 | But then-- how be sure that it_ is_ a good book? |
40148 | Can you tell me what the play is about?" |
40148 | Dead? |
40148 | Did he receive you well? |
40148 | Did you assay him to any pastime? |
40148 | Did you ever hear of the operation called"counting up?" |
40148 | Do I make myself clear? |
40148 | Do not the titles of the pieces presented indicate the truth of the situation? |
40148 | Do you think John Mason could have held his audience through the episode under the electrolier in"The Witching Hour"if he had n''t believed in it? |
40148 | Does n''t make sense, does it? |
40148 | Does n''t sound like English, does it? |
40148 | Give me a job, will you?" |
40148 | I hope he is n''t seriously hurt, Lord Dash? |
40148 | Parisians call their actors"_ M''as- tu- vu_", which means"Have you seen me?" |
40148 | Rippin''weather, is n''t it? |
40148 | That is because the first question a French actor asks is"Have you seen me in such- and- such a role?" |
40148 | What is it? |
40148 | What was in the letter?" |
40148 | What would be your translation of this, gentle reader? |
40148 | What would not your two dollar impressario give if he could transplant this enthusiasm to Broadway? |
40148 | Will you have a cup of tea, Lord Dash? |
40148 | Would Judge Parker receive a delegation from this society? |
40148 | You do n''t believe it? |
40148 | You do n''t? |
40148 | [ Illustration:"''_ You''re William A. Brady, ai n''t you?_''"]"Well", exclaimed the duchess of dishes,"my name''s Minnie Clark. |
40148 | [ Illustration:"_ Matches that can not be lit_"]"Well?" |
40148 | _ Lady Blank_: Indeed? |
37882 | A little more jelly? |
37882 | All bog like this? |
37882 | And which is the way to her house? |
37882 | Are n''t you hungry? |
37882 | Aye, mon, an''he''s no a bad shot? |
37882 | But, sir, said Mr. Macdougall,"do you belong to any clan, or what tartan will you have?" |
37882 | Ca n''t you sit still? |
37882 | Did ye hear Dougal? 37882 Do n''t you think we might sit on the bed?" |
37882 | Do you expect a circulating library on the top of Ben- y- Gloe? |
37882 | Eh, sir, yer gun''s no loaded is''t? 37882 Going to smoke in here?" |
37882 | Hech, sir, what for would it need washing? 37882 I hope we sha n''t miss the train at Stirling?" |
37882 | I say, Mac, confound it all,_ which eye do you use_?] |
37882 | I suppose, remarked Gwendolen,"one_ could_ get a bath at the Temperance Inn we passed on the road?" |
37882 | Is''t zebras? 37882 Now I suppose, farmer, that large cairn of stones has some history?" |
37882 | Oh, we''ll soon put that all right-- have you got a cork? |
37882 | Smethdid ye say his neem was? |
37882 | That must be the cowhouse byre, do n''t you call it? |
37882 | Well, now-- er-- what can you give us for dinner, as soon as we''ve had a wash? |
37882 | What are you reading, dear? |
37882 | What hill? |
37882 | What will you have, coachman? |
37882 | Who is the truculent- looking villain with red whiskers? |
37882 | Would you like them done in''Russia''or''Morocco,''sir? |
37882 | Ye''ll be the gentry from London Mistress McDiarmat is expectin''? |
37882 | ''A little late to- day, are n''t we?'' |
37882 | ( Why does n''t Horatio MacCulloch, noble artist and Highland- man, come to London and be_ our_ tartan R.A.?) |
37882 | (_ After a pause-- to vindicate his character as a cicerone._) Did ye nottice a bit building at the end of the loch over yonder? |
37882 | (_ Miss Rose shakes her head._) No? |
37882 | (_ To Miss Rose,"pawkily"._) Ye''ll hae an affaictionate regaird for that neem, I''m thenking, Mess Rawse? |
37882 | (_ To a friend of his, who joins them._) An''hoo''s a''wi''ye, Mester McKerrow? |
37882 | (_ With gallantry._) What do ye say, noo, Messis McTarvish-- wull ye no come an''tak''a bite wi''me? |
37882 | ***** FROM THE MOORS.--_Sportsman._"Much rain Donald?" |
37882 | ***** TWO ON A TOUR"Can you tell me which is Croft Lochay?" |
37882 | *****[ Illustration: A POOR ADVERTISEMENT_ Tourist._"I suppose you feel proud to have such a distinguished man staying in your house?" |
37882 | *****[ Illustration: AUGUST IN SCOTLAND_ Bag Carrier( to Keeper)._"What does the maister aye ask that body tae shoot wi''him for? |
37882 | *****[ Illustration: CAUTIOUS_ Visitor( at out- of- the- way inn in the North)._"Do you know anything about salmon- poaching in this neighbourhood?" |
37882 | *****[ Illustration: HIS IDEA OF IT_ Native._"Is''t no a daft- like place this tae be takin''a view? |
37882 | *****[ Illustration: ILLUSTRATED QUOTATIONS(_ One so seldom finds an Artist who realises the poetic conception._)"Is this the noble Moor...?" |
37882 | *****[ Illustration: ISOLATION!--OFF THE ORKNEYS_ Southern Tourist._"''Get any newspapers here?" |
37882 | *****[ Illustration: LATEST FROM THE MOORS_ Intelligent Foreigner._"Tell me-- zee''Ilanders, do zay always wear zee raw legs?"] |
37882 | *****[ Illustration: LOCAL SUNDAY MORNING_ Tourist( staying at the Glenmulctem Hotel-- dubiously)._"Can I-- ah-- have a boat?" |
37882 | *****[ Illustration: ON THE HILLS_ Deer Stalker( old hand, and fond of it)._"Is n''t it exciting? |
37882 | *****[ Illustration: THE MATERNAL INSTINCT_ The Master._"I''m sayin'', wumman, ha''e ye gotten the tickets?" |
37882 | *****[ Illustration: ZEAL_ Saxon Tourist._"Been at the kirk?" |
37882 | *****[ Illustration:"CANNY"_ First North Briton._"''T''s a fine day, this?" |
37882 | *****[ Illustration:"GAME"IN THE HIGHLANDS_ Captain Jinks._"Birds plentiful, I hope, Donald?" |
37882 | *****[ Illustration:"IN FOR IT"_ Innocent Tourist._"No fish to be caught in Loch Fine now? |
37882 | *****[ Illustration:"THE LAST STRAW""Tired out, are you? |
37882 | *****[ Illustration:"UNCO CANNY"_ Noble Sportsman._"Missed, eh?" |
37882 | *****[ Illustration:"VITA FUMUS"_ Tonal._"Whar''ll ye hae been till, Tugal?" |
37882 | *****[ Illustration:"WINGED"_ First Gael._"What''s the matter, Tonal?" |
37882 | *****[ Illustration:"Where can that confounded fellow have got to with the lunch- basket?"] |
37882 | *****[ Illustration:( LOCH) FYNE GRAMMAR(_ A Sad Fact for the School Board_)_ Tugal._"Dud ye''ll ever see the_ I- oo- na_ any more before?" |
37882 | *****[ Illustration:_ Cockney Sportsman._"Haw-- young woman, whose whiskies do you keep here?" |
37882 | *****[ Illustration:_ English Tourist( in the far North, miles from anywhere)._"Do you mean to say that you and your family live here all the winter? |
37882 | A HINT TO LUSTY SPORTSMEN]*****[ Illustration: SOONER OR LATER_ Old Gent._"When is the steamer due here?" |
37882 | A went to hev a bit talk wi''him th''ither evenin'', an''he offered me a glass o''whuskey, d''ye see? |
37882 | Ah, that''s rather like a goldfish in shape, eh? |
37882 | All very well to say go back; but where were we? |
37882 | An''I suppose that''s the costume you go_ salmon- stalking_ in?"] |
37882 | And how do you support yourself?" |
37882 | But I essay of new,"How many has he of it from here to the lake?" |
37882 | But ye''ll be in nae hurry till I get tae the end o''the raw?" |
37882 | Can ye no gie a whustle on tha ram''lin''brute o''mine? |
37882 | Do those facts suggest anything to you in the way of costume?" |
37882 | Do you know''Glen Accron''?" |
37882 | Fitz- James who?__ Her Comp._ I fancy he''s the man who owns this line of coaches. |
37882 | Have n''t you got a_ dry_ one somewhere? |
37882 | Haw-- who the deuce is McPherson?" |
37882 | How far is it to this Glenstarvit? |
37882 | I indicate the sky and my umbrella, and I say"Rain?" |
37882 | I say,"Distance?" |
37882 | I should like to----What is the legend----?" |
37882 | I''m having no luck!--and yet I seem to see two birds in place of one? |
37882 | Is n''t there a train in the morning?" |
37882 | Is that the house, do you think?" |
37882 | It is true that I see not how I can to descend, for I am_ entouré_--how say you? |
37882 | McFuskey?" |
37882 | More snorin''in the sermon?" |
37882 | O Jack, is n''t it heavenly?" |
37882 | Parr._ I''d like to ask ye if ye conseeder it fair or jest to charrge us tippence every time we''d go aff the groon? |
37882 | Parr._ Ye''ll hae a boatle o''leemonade at my expense? |
37882 | Parr._ Yon grup- luikin''tyke? |
37882 | S._"McPherson? |
37882 | That was surely very strong whiskey your master gave me at lunch?" |
37882 | Then maybe ye''ll be acquaint with a Mester Alexawnder Smeth fro''Paisley? |
37882 | Then, holding firmly the most strong of my umbrellas, I say to the coacher,"He goes to fall of the rain, is it not?" |
37882 | There is but that which one calls a"boot", and me, Auguste, can I to lie myself there at the middle of the baggages? |
37882 | To think there are folk that still revel In Summer, and fling themselves down, In the Park, or St. James? |
37882 | Wad ony o''them dae, sir?"] |
37882 | What the d---- Possessed us to hurry from town? |
37882 | What''s wrang the noo? |
37882 | When we wos talking to one of the''ands, did you notice''i m saying''_ nozzing_''for''_ nothink_,''and''_ she_''for''_ e_''?"] |
37882 | Why have n''t you cleaned my carriage, as I told you last night?" |
37882 | Why, what do you do when any of you are ill? |
37882 | Will ye gie''s a haund up wi''''t?" |
37882 | Would those be_ grouse_? |
37882 | Wull ye bait sexpence against McBannock, Mester Pairritch? |
37882 | Ye''ll no? |
37882 | You have seen the cataracts of the Nile? |
37882 | [_ He relapses into a contented silence.__ Chatty P._ Anything remarkable about the building? |
37882 | [_ They pass a shooting party with beaters.__ Chatty P.( as before)._ What are they going to shoot? |
37882 | _ A Chatty P.( to the driver; not because he cares, but simply for the sake of conversation)._ What fish do you catch in that river there? |
37882 | _ Artist( pointing to St. Bannoch''s, in the distance)._"What place is that down at the bottom of the loch?" |
37882 | _ Cantire._--Can''t you? |
37882 | _ Captain J._"And gorillas, no doubt?" |
37882 | _ Captain J._"Any zebras?" |
37882 | _ Chatty P.( persistently)._ You''ve seen goldfish-- know what they''re like, eh? |
37882 | _ Cottager( with bob- curtsey)._"Thank ye, sir, I''sure it''s very kind of ye-- but dinna ye think that little one over yonder wants it more?"] |
37882 | _ Driver._ Yon hell? |
37882 | _ First Gillie._"Wull yon be the MacWhannel, Ian Gorm?" |
37882 | _ First ditto._"Gaun t''Aberdeen, maybe?" |
37882 | _ First ditto._"Ye''ll be travellin''?" |
37882 | _ Highland Grocer._"Decent cigars? |
37882 | _ Highland Shepherd( doubtingly)._"Ye''ll get porter tae yir parrich?" |
37882 | _ Highland Shepherd._"An''drink, too?" |
37882 | _ His Comp._ What--_that_? |
37882 | _ Hostess of the Village Inn._"_ Ile_, sir? |
37882 | _ Jock._"An''whaur''s yer faither?" |
37882 | _ Landlord._"Mistake? |
37882 | _ Old Stalker._"Hoot, mon, wad he hae me bring out a scythe?"] |
37882 | _ Sandy the piper._"An''fat kin''o''a piper would your lordship be needin''?" |
37882 | _ Sandy._"An''what like is he?" |
37882 | _ Sapristi!_ I say,"Hours?" |
37882 | _ Saxon Passenger( who had just bought the estate)._"What sort of a place is it?" |
37882 | _ Saxon T._"How far is it?" |
37882 | _ The Chatty P._ Perch? |
37882 | _ The Chatty P._ What do you call that mountain, driver, eh? |
37882 | _ Tourist._"Are they Havanahs, or Manillas?" |
37882 | _ Tourist._"But I thought you-- ah-- never broke the-- aw-- Sabbath in Scotland?" |
37882 | _ Tourist._"Have you any decent cigars?" |
37882 | _ Tugal._"At ta McTavishes''funeral----"_ Tonal._"An''is ta Tavish deed?" |
37882 | he says, with increased joyousness of manner;"the wind is blowing that way, is it? |
39160 | Are you aware, sir, that ai n''t my''orse? |
39160 | Are you going to take this hedge, sir? |
39160 | Beg pardon, sir, but ai n''t you the gent that broke down that there gate of mine this morning? |
39160 | Blank it all, Rogerson, what''s the good o''me trying to keep the field off seeds, and a fellow like you coming slap across''em? |
39160 | Can you kindly point out the way to the Fox and Cock Inn? |
39160 | Confound you, did n''t you say there was a sound bottom here? |
39160 | Could you tell me if there is a bridge anywhere handy?] |
39160 | Do you know what the total is for the season? |
39160 | Eh-- why-- hang it!--what do you mean? |
39160 | Er-- did I? 39160 Hallo, Thompson, is that you? |
39160 | Have n''t ye seen him, Tom? |
39160 | How long have you been working here, master? |
39160 | How much do you want for that nag o''yours, sir? |
39160 | I say, we shall see you at dinner on the nineteenth, sha n''t we? |
39160 | It''s all very well to shout''Loose your reins,''but what the deuce_ am_ I to hang on to?] |
39160 | Know anything about this mare? 39160 Now then, have you seen anything of him?" |
39160 | Now then, where is he? |
39160 | Now where the dickens has that horse gone to?] |
39160 | Oh, Mr. Rowel, do you mind going back? 39160 Put out? |
39160 | Readin''''ard, sir? |
39160 | Run away down and get some o''your fellows to come up with spades, will ye? 39160 Think so, my dear Sproozer? |
39160 | Well, ai n''t the Fox and Cock the same as the Brush and Comb? |
39160 | Well, you might do me a bright little article-- about half a column, you know-- on hunting, will you? |
39160 | What do you think of this horse? |
39160 | Where did you see him? |
39160 | Where''s the fox? |
39160 | ''Ave you seen my whiskers?"] |
39160 | ''Ow''s that?" |
39160 | )_:"Do you mind putting me back in the saddle, sir?"] |
39160 | ***** HUNTING EXTRAORDINARY Jobson, who edits a cheerful little weekly, said to me the other day:"You hunt, do n''t you?" |
39160 | ***** RATHER"Is fox- hunting dangerous?" |
39160 | ***** UNCOMMONLY KEEN"Why, where''s the horse, Miss Kitty? |
39160 | ***** WHY HE WAITED"What''s the matter with Jack''s new horse? |
39160 | *****''INTS ON''UNTING, BY''ARRY[ Illustration:( 1) ON CLOTHES.--"Why not employ local talent? |
39160 | *****[ Illustration: A BLANK-- BLANK-- DAY]*****[ Illustration: WHOSE FAULT? |
39160 | *****[ Illustration: A CHECK_ Huntsman._"Seen the fox, my boy?" |
39160 | *****[ Illustration: A LION IN THE PATH? |
39160 | *****[ Illustration: DRAWN BLANK_ Huntsman._"How is it you never have any foxes here now?" |
39160 | *****[ Illustration: DRY HUMOUR"Be''n''t ye comin''over for''i m, mister?"] |
39160 | *****[ Illustration: MOTTOES; OR,"WHO''S WHO?" |
39160 | *****[ Illustration: NOT TO BE BEATEN_ Cissy._"Why should they call the hare''s tail the scut?" |
39160 | *****[ Illustration: THE HUNTING SEASON_ Rector._"Is that the parcels post, James? |
39160 | *****[ Illustration: TRIALS OF A NOVICE_ Unsympathetic Bystander._"Taking''i m back to''is cab, guv''nor?"] |
39160 | *****[ Illustration:"THE CART WITHOUT THE HORSE"Scene--_Cub- hunting._ Time--_About one o''clock.__ Lady._"Well, Count, what have you lost? |
39160 | *****[ Illustration:"WHAT''S IN A NAME?" |
39160 | *****[ Illustration:_ Gorgeous Stranger._"I say, Huntsman, would you mind blowing your horn two or three times? |
39160 | 1._"Ulloah, Danny, what are you lookin''for?" |
39160 | Am I going to hunt the hounds or are you?" |
39160 | An''''ow''s that, missie?" |
39160 | Been puttin''up some wire to keep the fox- hunter away?" |
39160 | But-- er-- do you mind leaving me my hat?"] |
39160 | By the way, how is that beautiful collie of yours that I admired so much?" |
39160 | Do n''t you?"] |
39160 | H. M._"Why so?" |
39160 | Hardhit._"Do n''t you think, Miss Highflier, that men look much better in pink-- less like waiters?" |
39160 | Have you seen my hare?" |
39160 | He''s early this morning, is n''t he?" |
39160 | How could you be so stupid as to let him go?"] |
39160 | I hope we did n''t hurt you?" |
39160 | I seemed once more to see the little rose- covered porch, the----"What on earth are you mooning about?" |
39160 | Not hurt, I hope?" |
39160 | Not the horse, I hope?"] |
39160 | Now, do you mind just bringing him over?"] |
39160 | Of course, people will come at me open- mouthed for this assertion, and say,"How about the keep of your horses?" |
39160 | Pure whiskey, is it not?" |
39160 | She has curbs on her hocks and no hair on her knees; She has splints and has spavins wherever you please? |
39160 | Sure I met you in the passage, and I took you by the hand, And says I,"How many dances, Molly, darlint, will ye stand?" |
39160 | The hunted one put his horse resolutely at it-- must say he rode very straight, but what_ wo n''t_ men do to avoid"parting?" |
39160 | Uncertain voice from within--"Eh? |
39160 | Wather- cresses?"] |
39160 | Well, how much is the damage?"] |
39160 | What are yer givin''us? |
39160 | What can be more exhilarating?" |
39160 | What has happened?" |
39160 | What the doose are yer doin''of with that second''oss?" |
39160 | What''s up?" |
39160 | Where_ are_ you going with that brute?" |
39160 | Who''ve you got there?" |
39160 | Why should I hesitate? |
39160 | Wotcher makin''all that noise for, then? |
39160 | Would you mind going in again for my hat?"] |
39160 | Your lunch?" |
39160 | _ Friend._"Clever as a man? |
39160 | _ Huntsman._"Then, what are you hollarin''for?" |
39160 | _ Irish Huntsman._"And what would ye be after down there? |
39160 | _ Jack._"Have you? |
39160 | _ Miss Highflier._"Yes, but more like ringmasters-- eh?" |
39160 | _ Native._"D''ye mean the Barber''s Arms?" |
39160 | _ Stranger._"Strong language? |
39160 | laugh away, but who be the roight side o''the fence, masters?"] |
41230 | What have I done? |
41230 | --I hear you cry, And writhe beneath some critic''s eye;''What did I want?'' |
41230 | 1885._ Missal of the Gothic age, Missal with the blazoned page, Whence, O Missal, hither come, From what dim scriptorium? |
41230 | Ah, who can say that even this blade of grass No mission has-- superfluous as it looks? |
41230 | And big are my eyes, and my heart''s a- beat; And my whole soul''s lost-- in what?--who knows? |
41230 | And for the Holy Bible there, It greets us with mild teaching; Though no one its contents may hear, Does it not go on preaching? |
41230 | And what the charm that can such health distil From wither''d leaves-- oft poisons in their bloom? |
41230 | And who can say That life would be quite the same life to- day-- That Love would mean so much, if she Had not taught me its A B C? |
41230 | As thus they lie upon the shelves, Such wisdom in their pages, Do they rehearse it to themselves, Or rest like silent sages? |
41230 | But its contents? |
41230 | But what strange art, what magic can dispose The troubled mind to change its native woes? |
41230 | But which take with me, could I take but one? |
41230 | But who are these? |
41230 | But who the shelter''s forc''d to give? |
41230 | Friend, do not Heber and De Thou, And Scott, and Southey, kind and wise,_ La chasse au bouquin_ still pursue Within that Bookman''s Paradise? |
41230 | Gives not the teeming press a book too much-- Not one, but in its dense neglect shall find Some needful heart to touch? |
41230 | How am I to sing your praise, Happy chimney- corner days, Sitting safe in nursery nooks, Reading picture story- books? |
41230 | I do not say so, companion mine, For what, without it, would I be here? |
41230 | Is any one jealous, I wonder, now, Of my love for Perdita? |
41230 | Is it all needed for the varied mind? |
41230 | Is it the myriad spawn of vagrant tides, Whose growth would overwhelm both sea and shore, Yet often necessary loss, provides Sufficient and no more? |
41230 | Is it then right to dream the sirens sing? |
41230 | On earth below, in heaven above, Is there anything better than woman''s love? |
41230 | One book we know such fun invokes, As well were worth the telling: Must it not chuckle o''er the jokes That it is ever spelling? |
41230 | Or lead us, willing from ourselves, to see Others more wretched, more undone than we? |
41230 | Or mount enraptured on the dragon''s wing? |
41230 | Perhaps Shirley had in view this passage of Persius,-- Nunc non é tumulo, fortunataque favilla Nascentur Violæ? |
41230 | Say, doth thy lord my Claribel withhold? |
41230 | Shall he not rather feel a double share Of mortal woe, when doubly armed to bear? |
41230 | Shall he who soars, inspired by loftier views, Life''s little cares and little pains refuse? |
41230 | V. Ye make the Past our heritage and home: And is this all? |
41230 | Well, when we read thee, does the dogma taint? |
41230 | What art so prevalent, what proofs so strong, That will convince him his attempt is wrong? |
41230 | What bliss? |
41230 | What gives this beauty to the grave? |
41230 | What more can I require of thee? |
41230 | What though the prints be not so bright, The paper dark, the binding slight? |
41230 | What thought so wild, what airy dream so light, That will not prompt a theorist to write? |
41230 | What wonder, as he paced from shelf to shelf, And conned their titles, that the squire began, Despite his ignorance, to think himself A learned man? |
41230 | Where fade away and placidly expire? |
41230 | Wherefore thine own foul form shap''st thou with envious toil? |
41230 | With Fiction then does real joy reside, And is our reason the delusive guide? |
41230 | With such a stock as seemingly surpassed The best collection ever formed in Spain, What wonder if the owner grew at last Supremely vain? |
41230 | _ Do they live?_ If so, believe me, TIME hath made them pure. |
41230 | _ From''Wide- Awake''for May, 1885._ Within these solemn, book- lined walls, Did mortal ever see A critic so unprejudiced, So full of mirthful glee? |
41230 | magic verse inscribed on golden gate; And bloody hand that beckons on to fate:--"And who art thou, thou little page, unfold? |
41230 | wert thou born for the evil thou workest? |
29255 | ... Might eavesdrop? 29255 A great man,"she murmured,"but is he-- a little mad?" |
29255 | A private citizen? |
29255 | Am I a prisoner? |
29255 | Am I crazy, Jim,I asked,"or do you see these things too?" |
29255 | And am I to land there, sir? |
29255 | And are we to stand here and let them do it? |
29255 | And gagged? 29255 And in this case?" |
29255 | And so he has walked away from you? 29255 And the_ Dorlos_?" |
29255 | And this,indicating the cross,"is the spot where the Quabos will break in?" |
29255 | And we are the first to enter thy realm from the upper world? |
29255 | And why, Perona? 29255 And you want to get rid of this fellow? |
29255 | And you will go to the mine? |
29255 | And you will pay it? |
29255 | Are n''t you satisfied? |
29255 | Are there three of them? |
29255 | Are they dead, Jim? |
29255 | Are you Spawn''s daughter? |
29255 | Are you ready down there? 29255 Are you ready, Pete?" |
29255 | But they must be, else why were n''t they seen? |
29255 | But this then, is not an ordinary time? |
29255 | But why are you dressed as a boy? |
29255 | But will they pay? |
29255 | But wo n''t it be just a repetition of the first battle? |
29255 | But, Professor,I argued,"it''s all over, is n''t it? |
29255 | But.... You can think of no explanation? |
29255 | Ca n''t you see anything, Pete? |
29255 | Can you imagine what would happen in New York in case of a break- down in water- supply, electric power, and communication? 29255 Chief?" |
29255 | Coincidence or connection? |
29255 | Come to your house? 29255 Conscious of the time, of the locality you went to? |
29255 | Dale,he said at length,"have you ever hunted tiger?" |
29255 | Dale,he whispered hoarsely,"what was it?" |
29255 | De duvel, why should I have sealed him in? 29255 Did n''t he once take a hand in Nareda''s politics?" |
29255 | Difference in temperature? |
29255 | Do any of you know where you are? |
29255 | Do n''t you know-- can''t drown a fish-- holding it under water? |
29255 | Do n''t you suppose these people who lock us in and censor our mail are n''t smart enough to spy on what we say to each other? |
29255 | Do you expect me to go on another one of your crack- brained expeditions into the unknown with you? |
29255 | Do you expect this hunt of ours will be something of a blind chase? |
29255 | Do you see? 29255 Do you suppose there is any hope of your embracing the Faith?" |
29255 | Doctor Dale? |
29255 | Does that window frame contain glass or not? |
29255 | Earthquake? |
29255 | Failed? |
29255 | Father,he sent his thoughts racing on ahead of him,"are those lights which are striking the Earth causing any damage?" |
29255 | From fear? |
29255 | Had they heard the details of the second disappearance? |
29255 | Has this frame glass in it? |
29255 | Hast thou, in the palace, any lengths of pipe like to that which the Quabos drag behind them? |
29255 | Have you been waiting here long? |
29255 | Have you ever been in a crowd, Dale, and watched a certain individual intently, until that particular individual turned to look at you? 29255 Have you found out what they intend to do with us?" |
29255 | Have you seen Smith and Francisco? |
29255 | Have you seen a morning paper? |
29255 | Have you seen everything? 29255 Have you solved the secret of their invisibility?" |
29255 | Hear them, Chief? |
29255 | Hello, Bond,came his voice over the wire,"have you just arrived? |
29255 | Hello, Williams,he said,"how are things going? |
29255 | Here at the mine? |
29255 | Here is the_ Dorlos_; the second of the two, was it not? |
29255 | How do they like it? |
29255 | How dost thou know of the tunneling? |
29255 | How long, father,queried Sarka,"should it take to empty the Gens areas?" |
29255 | How will we see them if they are invisible? |
29255 | I am sure you appreciate the fact that every precaution will be taken to hear the least word that you say to him during his stay here? 29255 I hope you did not intimate your real purpose?" |
29255 | I must certainly get my hands on one of these monsters... superhumanly intelligent fish... marvelous-- akin to the octopus, perhaps? |
29255 | If they are, why have n''t we received evidence of it years ago? |
29255 | If you can get President Markes, he can send some police to the mine--"And find all Nareda''s police bribed by Perona? 29255 Interplanetary cars? |
29255 | Is he a partner of Spawn''s? |
29255 | Is n''t it a beauty? |
29255 | Is n''t it? |
29255 | Is this a roughly accurate plan of the city? |
29255 | Jetta? |
29255 | Jim, all that sounds reasonable, but have you any proof of it? |
29255 | Just where are we going? |
29255 | Marry? |
29255 | May I meet you here to- morrow night? |
29255 | Much further, Hugo? |
29255 | Nine or ten hours? 29255 Of the trees?" |
29255 | Philip? |
29255 | Shall I call you? |
29255 | Shall we reduce speed, sir? |
29255 | So you''ve fallen in love with a girl? 29255 So, Perona?" |
29255 | So? 29255 Spawn has told you that?" |
29255 | Spawn? 29255 Stanley-- can either of you move? |
29255 | Suppose they are armed too? |
29255 | That means I''ve got to feed him taffy while he''s here? |
29255 | The hell-- how do I know, Perona? 29255 The invaders? |
29255 | The other two television observers? |
29255 | Then what of the Spokesmen of the Gens, who will be out of contact with me? |
29255 | Then you got me in here by fraud? |
29255 | There is no other entrance but the sea- way into which we were drawn? |
29255 | To lead another invasion? |
29255 | Was it in broad daylight? |
29255 | Was it too bold? |
29255 | Was that the thing I saw hoisted aboard just before we left? |
29255 | Well, gentlemen? 29255 Well, then, if Markes has told you, then might I not as well admit it? |
29255 | Well? |
29255 | What about reloading? |
29255 | What about the moon? |
29255 | What are they? |
29255 | What are we going to do with our prisoner? |
29255 | What are you going to do? |
29255 | What brings you here, young lad? 29255 What do I owe you?" |
29255 | What do you anticipate, sir? |
29255 | What do you find to talk about? |
29255 | What do you talk about all the time? 29255 What forms?" |
29255 | What is it you would plan to do about it, Señorito? |
29255 | What is that? |
29255 | What of it? |
29255 | What rule? 29255 What were the two reports, Dival?" |
29255 | What will happen? 29255 What will we do if we find them?" |
29255 | What''s the difference? |
29255 | What''s this? 29255 What''s up now? |
29255 | What''s your opinion, Martin? |
29255 | What? 29255 Where did they come from?" |
29255 | Who are you? |
29255 | Who are you? |
29255 | Who are you? |
29255 | Who would attack it? 29255 Why are they taking children, Jim? |
29255 | Why are they taking them to Mercury? |
29255 | Why at night? |
29255 | Why do n''t you run up to New York for a few days? |
29255 | Why do you marry-- unless you''re in love? 29255 Why do you take them?" |
29255 | Why is it impossible? |
29255 | Why so? |
29255 | Why? |
29255 | Will my friend be permitted to depart again, if he once gets in here? |
29255 | Wilson, tell me-- in God''s name-- what has happened? |
29255 | Would you like to come? |
29255 | Would you stand by and see people perish if a turn of your hand could save them? 29255 Yes, O my father; and is there anything else?" |
29255 | Yes, Vardee? 29255 You are, are n''t you?" |
29255 | You came very close to committing a murder on your way here, did you not, Dale? |
29255 | You got away? |
29255 | You have heard of the Special Patrol Ship_ Filanus_? |
29255 | You have n''t become a Science Communist yourself? |
29255 | You have no documents? |
29255 | You here? |
29255 | You know why I have come? |
29255 | You see now, Dale,Drake said quietly,"why I let Hartnett go with you before? |
29255 | You were conscious of every detail? |
29255 | You''re all right, Phil? 29255 _ Dios!_ Gone where, Spawn?" |
29255 | ***** Hanley''s microscopic voice cut in:"Getting it, Phil? |
29255 | ***** Was it a boy, observing us from the shadowed moonlit garden? |
29255 | ***** Woman? |
29255 | A beautiful name...."How did your kingdom begin?" |
29255 | A private individual: that fellow Jacob Spawn--""Spawn?" |
29255 | A treasure of quicksilver ingots here? |
29255 | A week, you say?" |
29255 | And I stammered,"But why are you going to marry?" |
29255 | And is each inhabited by some form of life?" |
29255 | And now, after we had gained admission, what excuse would Hartnett offer for the intrusion? |
29255 | And still the one question remained unanswered: Who was Luar? |
29255 | And the water-- did you notice its color, sir?" |
29255 | And why do n''t you have him to do all of your illustrating? |
29255 | And, if the descent were accomplished, what in the world would we see when we got down there? |
29255 | And, son....""Yes, O my father?" |
29255 | Are we going to make a trip to the moon and interview the inhabitants?" |
29255 | Are you alone? |
29255 | Are you beginning to itch and burn?" |
29255 | Are you interested?" |
29255 | Are you?" |
29255 | As I stepped to the telephone, I heard her murmur, in a weary, troubled voice:"Hypnotism? |
29255 | As the glowing people hurried to obey, Sarka softly asked his father:"But what shall we do with the Martians?" |
29255 | Balls of fire? |
29255 | Because of Jetta? |
29255 | Big, red- faced chap?" |
29255 | But this power-- this awful thing that has been controlling me-- is there no way to fight it?" |
29255 | But what conceivable fate could that be? |
29255 | But what? |
29255 | But who does it make rich? |
29255 | But why not give us a change? |
29255 | But.... How? |
29255 | CHAPTER V_ Mysterious Meeting_"Ah, Grant-- have you enjoyed yourself?" |
29255 | Call it an accident; what matter? |
29255 | Can it be that our planet is honeycombed with such hollows as this we are in? |
29255 | Can mere words describe my feelings? |
29255 | Can you pick off ten in ten shots?" |
29255 | Can you picture it? |
29255 | Can you say that the oceans will never drain of their water? |
29255 | Cleric?" |
29255 | Correy?" |
29255 | Could I get across the floor of the bowl without discovery? |
29255 | Could it further hold against the strain of lifting that combined tonnage through the press of the water? |
29255 | Could there be smuggling going on from this mine? |
29255 | Could we make it? |
29255 | Could you, by chance, secure an artist by the name of Leo Morey or Hugh Mackay? |
29255 | De Boer:"... Get up with my men through the streets to Spawn''s house? |
29255 | Descend and investigate? |
29255 | Did he?" |
29255 | Did not he mention it? |
29255 | Did you ever see anything like it?" |
29255 | Dival?" |
29255 | Dival?" |
29255 | Do you know about it?" |
29255 | Do you mind telling me just what it is?" |
29255 | Do you not ever pick the newscasters''reports, De Boer? |
29255 | Do you not see that she is waiting for you to speak?" |
29255 | Do you think that the world has been invaded?" |
29255 | Do you understand everything?" |
29255 | Do you understand?" |
29255 | Do you understand?" |
29255 | Does it?" |
29255 | Even though you might think it silly?" |
29255 | Ever you have heard of him?" |
29255 | Everything shipshape: perhaps, a degree or two of elevation when we were a little closer--"May I come in sir?" |
29255 | Evidently Hartnett had been carefully instructed as to his course of action-- but why this seemingly unnecessary caution on Drake''s part? |
29255 | Evolution working backward from human to reptile and then fish-- or a new freak of evolution whereby a fish on a short cut toward becoming human?" |
29255 | Father, will you please arrange the division? |
29255 | Gigantic, hitherto unknown fishes? |
29255 | Going to marry her to this Perona? |
29255 | Got her bound and gagged, have they? |
29255 | Granted that such is the case, do you believe that living organisms can be invisible?" |
29255 | Had Sarka the Second been able to prepare for the approaching catastrophe? |
29255 | Had he heard us discussing Jetta? |
29255 | Had the Earth been taken by surprise? |
29255 | Hanley''s microscopic voice:"Phil? |
29255 | Has any observer been able to see any of the purple amoeba which we know are so numerous on the outer side of the heaviside layer?" |
29255 | Has he a daughter?" |
29255 | Has it not been a scandal that this administration does very little for its citizens abroad?" |
29255 | Has your message anything to do with this?" |
29255 | Have you any idea who did?" |
29255 | Have you any preconceived ideas on the disappearance epidemic?" |
29255 | Have you come to be a coward, De Boer?" |
29255 | Have you ever been under hypnotism, Dale? |
29255 | Have you ever thought of combining the two?" |
29255 | Have you got flash- fuses?" |
29255 | He added,"You think-- Hanley thinks-- the smuggling is on too large a scale to be any illicit producer?" |
29255 | He merely asked a question:"Was Lunar very beautiful, and just a bit unearthly in appearance?" |
29255 | How can I? |
29255 | How could I make anything out of it? |
29255 | How could I read any message out of that? |
29255 | How could I? |
29255 | How could Strange, working his terrible murder machine, concentrate his power on any individual, when the whole of London lay before him? |
29255 | How had they managed the first contact, the first negotiations leading to the compact between two such alien peoples? |
29255 | How had they salvaged us from Penguin Deep? |
29255 | How is your marksmanship? |
29255 | How is your menore adjusted, sir?" |
29255 | How many were there? |
29255 | How near to us are they, Kilor?" |
29255 | How, in God''s name, could this man read my thoughts so completely? |
29255 | I believe you are familiar with the traps provided for the purpose?" |
29255 | I said suddenly, out of a silence:"Spawn, why did n''t you tell me you were a producer of quicksilver?" |
29255 | I said,"Are n''t you afraid to leave this stored here?" |
29255 | I said,"You''ll house and care for my machine?" |
29255 | I suppose they have some kind of rock drilling machinery here?" |
29255 | I wonder if we are free to move about?" |
29255 | I wonder why you rate this distinction?" |
29255 | I wonder, do I make myself clear?" |
29255 | I wonder--""Have you any idea how we were rescued?" |
29255 | I wonder.... Is that part of their plan? |
29255 | If I brought the_ Kalid_ down, would she make a third to remain there, to be marked"lost in space"on the records of the Service? |
29255 | If she were a native of Earth, how had she reached the Moon? |
29255 | In Great New York, there are theatres and music?" |
29255 | In an hour, you say? |
29255 | Is it a dream to have some damnable force move me about like a mechanical robot?" |
29255 | Is it not so here? |
29255 | Is it so?" |
29255 | Is that clear?" |
29255 | Is that it, Perona? |
29255 | Is that not reason enough for murder? |
29255 | Is there any way they could manage...?" |
29255 | Jealous, eh?" |
29255 | Jetta was gagged; how could she answer me? |
29255 | Klaser? |
29255 | Like the Middle Ages?" |
29255 | Listening?" |
29255 | Marine growths, half animal and half vegetable? |
29255 | Maximum attraction, eh? |
29255 | Maybe he followed you here? |
29255 | Might he not have known, two centuries ago, of the Secret Exit Dome, and somehow managed to make use of it in some ghastly experiment? |
29255 | Miles J. Breuer, Dr. David H. Keller, R. F. Starzl, and a few more such notable authors? |
29255 | Molecules of water driven by sheer pressure through five feet of glass to unite in drops on the inside? |
29255 | Near here, perhaps: who knows? |
29255 | Now when the hero killed them all with the disintegrating ray, would he not have affected their birth? |
29255 | Or beings of Mars?" |
29255 | Or both? |
29255 | Or should they try to ride out the storm in spite of being crippled by the drag of us? |
29255 | Our commander-- you probably remember him, Hanson: David McClellan? |
29255 | Perona was saying,"Spawn, was Jetta still in her room? |
29255 | Precisely where and for what purpose? |
29255 | Prull? |
29255 | Quite a little plant I have here? |
29255 | Return and report? |
29255 | Rockets? |
29255 | Savvy?" |
29255 | Science Fiction? |
29255 | See where I am? |
29255 | See where I am?"] |
29255 | Shall we descend further?" |
29255 | She might call to him, and he would release her--"De Boer:"How do you know he is not around here? |
29255 | Should they cut the cable, figuring that the lives of the three of us were certainly not to be set against the thirty on the yacht? |
29255 | Should they disconnect the electric control and try to haul us up regardless? |
29255 | So she is there, Spawn? |
29255 | So that was what Perona had told him over the audiphone just before our noonday meal? |
29255 | Spawn, come back to peer in at me? |
29255 | Speaking of New York, will you do me a little service? |
29255 | Stanley, Martin-- are you ready?" |
29255 | Suppose the Americano was back there now? |
29255 | That an earthquake will not open a rift-- some day in the future-- and lower the water into subterranean caverns? |
29255 | That book full of leaves, bugs, and sticks? |
29255 | That is, I mean, can it be done?" |
29255 | That''s Earth time, is n''t it? |
29255 | The volume of water of all the oceans is no more to the volume of the earth than a tissue paper wrapping on an orange.__ Is it too great a fantasy? |
29255 | Through wandering underground mazes, from some cave mouth in the Fiji Islands to the north? |
29255 | Was Spawn in on it? |
29255 | We''re being cheated, what? |
29255 | What arms could possibly be contrived at such short notice? |
29255 | What can it be?" |
29255 | What can they do against countless millions of them? |
29255 | What colors?" |
29255 | What could Perona, a Minister, be engaged in, wandering off alone into this black, deserted region? |
29255 | What destroys it? |
29255 | What do you say that we put him on his ship and turn him loose?" |
29255 | What do you suppose they mean to do with us?" |
29255 | What does it empty into? |
29255 | What in the name of God could possibly happen to help us? |
29255 | What is it?" |
29255 | What possible arrangement could they have brought in which to make that awful descent? |
29255 | What should I do? |
29255 | What weapon could be called forth to be effective against the thick glass helmets? |
29255 | What were those lights? |
29255 | What will we find there?" |
29255 | What''s the story?" |
29255 | When do we start?" |
29255 | When had she been sent there? |
29255 | When? |
29255 | Whence did they emanate? |
29255 | Where are some stories by H. G. Wells, Stanton Coblens, Gawain Edwards, Francis Flagg, Henrik Jarve and Dr. Keller? |
29255 | Where are you?" |
29255 | Where are you?" |
29255 | Where can I have a room and meals?" |
29255 | Where did it happen? |
29255 | Where does that come from? |
29255 | Where had they come from? |
29255 | Where, then, is it flowing? |
29255 | Which of us would survive? |
29255 | Which way was Jetta''s room? |
29255 | Which way? |
29255 | Who is he?" |
29255 | Who is this fellow-- so important?" |
29255 | Who was Luar? |
29255 | Who was she? |
29255 | Who--?" |
29255 | Why Spawn?" |
29255 | Why are they holding me here, paying me a profligate salary, for a job that is a joke for a grown- up man? |
29255 | Why bother with it, Spawn?" |
29255 | Why do you ask about her, sir?" |
29255 | Why not beetles, or fish, or horned toads, for that matter?" |
29255 | Why not? |
29255 | Why princely? |
29255 | Why should I roll in a pity for myself? |
29255 | Why this attack upon me? |
29255 | Why were they being kept prisoners in the city? |
29255 | Why were they so anxious to get rid of me? |
29255 | Why, Perona?" |
29255 | Why? |
29255 | Why? |
29255 | Why? |
29255 | Why? |
29255 | Will any more be printed soon? |
29255 | Will you call me should there be any developments of interest?" |
29255 | Will you go?" |
29255 | Will you have many of them in the future? |
29255 | Will you like to see it?" |
29255 | Would it not be a good idea to publish a reprint at least once a year? |
29255 | Would n''t adults suit their purpose better?" |
29255 | Would the cube now be subservient to his will? |
29255 | Would they head back for Spawn''s inn? |
29255 | Would they use their flyer? |
29255 | Yes? |
29255 | Yet, who am I, to judge persons who have read and know all about Science Fiction? |
29255 | You are sure it was not some fantastic dream?" |
29255 | You did not untie her?" |
29255 | You expected to find human beings; so did I, but what reason had we for doing so? |
29255 | You have a pistol, have n''t you?" |
29255 | You have heard also of radio? |
29255 | You have heard of hypnotism, Dale? |
29255 | You have it fixed?" |
29255 | You have n''t seen her? |
29255 | You have? |
29255 | You know that radium is activated and glows under ultra- violet?" |
29255 | You notice the bug I am talking to? |
29255 | You propose to land, sir?" |
29255 | You think the bird will be there for me to seize?" |
29255 | You''ll be there, Spawn?" |
29255 | Your will still rules the cubes which piloted you from the Moon?" |
29255 | _ And the depths between? |
40758 | And pray, madam, did it cure you?] |
40758 | And pray, madam,he inquired,"what made you go to Bath?" |
40758 | Can not some one whistle it? |
40758 | Difficult, do you call it, sir? |
40758 | How do you manage it? |
40758 | If you were in a strait,asks Thackeray,"would you like such a benefactor? |
40758 | Is that all you have to say in its favor? |
40758 | Very well, father,was the reply;"but where is the shilling to come from?" |
40758 | Well, sir, what did you think of his acting? |
40758 | What in the devil''s name,he writes,"have you to do with either Mr. Disraeli or Mr. Gladstone? |
40758 | Why do you laugh? |
40758 | Why, what''s the matter? |
40758 | Will you do me the honor of accepting a copy of my works? |
40758 | ''Why so?'' |
40758 | Another peculiarity of Newton was that he fancied himself a poet; but who ever saw a verse of his composition? |
40758 | Being asked,"What is a communist?" |
40758 | Besides, did he not write an original cook- book, which still stands for good authority in the cafés of the boulevards? |
40758 | Bracegirdle''s name had been mentioned; when Lord Halifax said:"You all of you praise the virtue of this lady; why not reward her for not selling it? |
40758 | Canst thou be kind, And from thy darling part? |
40758 | Canst thou range earth, sea, and air, And so meet me everywhere? |
40758 | Could we have a clearer instance of monomania? |
40758 | Did I ever attack your head?" |
40758 | Did not Cervantes"laugh Spain''s chivalry away"? |
40758 | Did not Thoreau also affect humility in his rudely built cabin on the borders of Walden Pond? |
40758 | Does not this truthful sketch from life, of a poor wood- sawyer''s son, read like romance? |
40758 | Garrick?" |
40758 | Hall?" |
40758 | Has Luther been crucified for the world?" |
40758 | Have not these historic characters tested the familiar axiom that calamity is man''s true touchstone? |
40758 | How many of our readers remember the one recorded scene when Queen Elizabeth condescended to coquet with Shakespeare? |
40758 | In a poem called"Clio''s Protest; or, the Picture Varnished,"we find the following really beautiful lines:--"Marked you her cheek of rosy hue? |
40758 | Is it not difficult to recall an instance where a pronounced genius has also enjoyed the quiet beauty of domestic life? |
40758 | Is not this a quiet peep behind the curtain?] |
40758 | Is not"Tristram Shandy"a synonym for its author, Sterne? |
40758 | Is there not a ceaseless interest hanging over the domestic and professional habits of these famous men of the past? |
40758 | Marked you her eye of sparkling blue? |
40758 | Must not earth be rent before her gems are found?" |
40758 | Of how many American books, of a similar character, can this be said?] |
40758 | Thackeray''s tender and beautiful thoughts upon this subject occur to us here:"To be rich, to be famous? |
40758 | They are pretty sure to have some idiosyncrasies more or less peculiar; and who, indeed, has not? |
40758 | Was there ever pleasanter or more genial reading than"Cowper''s Familiar Letters,"full to the brim with sparkling humor? |
40758 | When Coleridge once asked Lamb,"Charles, did you ever hear me preach?" |
40758 | Where was all the monarch''s pride of State, his kingly dignity? |
40758 | Who and what is Luther? |
40758 | Who does not enjoy recalling these silent friends, favorite authors grown dear to us by age and long association? |
40758 | Why am I grown old in seeking so unprofitable a reward as fame? |
40758 | Why does not some popular author give us a book upon this theme, and entitle it"Behind the Prison Bars"? |
40758 | Would it not seem, in the light of these many instances, that practical labor forms the best training even for genius? |
40758 | [ Footnote 147: We find these two verses in Thoreau''s published journal: I. Canst thou love with thy mind, And reason with thy heart? |
40758 | [ Footnote 18: Is it generally known that among the accomplishments of his after years was that of music and an instrumental performer? |
40758 | [ Footnote 8:"What can they see in the longest kingly line in Europe,"asks Sir Walter Scott,"save that it runs back to a successful soldier?"] |
40758 | is there no bribing death?" |
38683 | !_*****[ Illustration: ANOTHER LENTEN SACRIFICE.--_Golf Caddie( to Curate)._"High tee, sir?" |
38683 | !__ Miggs._"What''s he doing?" |
38683 | And what shall I take now? |
38683 | And which of the sticks am I to use now? |
38683 | And-- is that all? |
38683 | Aunt Susannah, what am I to say? 38683 Do you Laurence?" |
38683 | Do you mean that it will be half an hour before those men have played two shots? |
38683 | Does your caddie take all those things? |
38683 | Drive off? 38683 How much will you charge me to mend this umbrella?"] |
38683 | I? 38683 Is that allowed?" |
38683 | Nothing very formidable, I hope? |
38683 | Perhaps you would like to watch us a little first, just to see how the game goes? |
38683 | Shall I drive off? |
38683 | Then do you mind waiting one moment? |
38683 | Then you just try to get a little ball into a little hole? |
38683 | There should be a modern form for golf- balls and aunts-- hey, Laurence? |
38683 | This is my ball, I think? |
38683 | Uncle, do they pronounce that rico_chay_ing or rico_chet_ting?] |
38683 | We want to teach you-- what do you think? |
38683 | What are you looking there for? 38683 What in the world do you want so many sticks for, child?" |
38683 | What next? |
38683 | What''s a putter? 38683 What''s to be done,''Enery?" |
38683 | Where is it gone? 38683 Where was''is yusual absentmindedness? |
38683 | Why do you call it''goff''if there''s an''l''in it? |
38683 | Why? |
38683 | You do n''t mean to say you give them names like a little girl with her dolls? |
38683 | You will be here for the twenty- seventh, I hope? |
38683 | _ What_ do you say it is called? |
38683 | _ What_ shall we do? 38683 _ Why_ ca n''t I do it?" |
38683 | ''Enery, what''s the nime of your yung woman?" |
38683 | ***** GOLF AND GOOD FORM(_ By the Expert Wrinkler_) Is it good form to golf? |
38683 | ***** SHOULD MARRIED MEN BE ALLOWED TO PLAY GOLF? |
38683 | *****[ Illustration: A MARTYR TO APPEARANCES_ Young Lady._"I say, caddie, what_ does_ Mr. McFadjock do with all these clubs?" |
38683 | *****[ Illustration: A POSER.--"Farmers always grumbling? |
38683 | *****[ Illustration: DISTINCTION WITHOUT DIFFERENCE.--_Sensitive Golfer( who has foozled)._"Did you laugh at me, boy?" |
38683 | *****[ Illustration: ERRATIC_ Pedestrian( anxious for his safety)._"Now, which way are you going to hit the ball?" |
38683 | *****[ Illustration: INGRATITUDE_ Brown._"Why does n''t Walker stop to speak? |
38683 | *****[ Illustration: SCENE--_Country Police Court__ Magistrate._"My boy, do you fully realise the nature of an oath?" |
38683 | *****[ Illustration:"HOW''S THAT, UMPIRE?" |
38683 | *****[ Illustration:"Mummy, what''s that man for?"] |
38683 | *****[ Illustration:"SHE WAS NOT A GOLFER"_ Husband._"What on earth has happened to my driver?" |
38683 | *****[ Illustration:_ Brer Rabbit._"I suppose you have n''t seen such a thing as a golf- ball about anywhere, have you?"] |
38683 | *****[ Illustration:_ Caddie( visiting)._"What kind o''player is he?" |
38683 | *****[ Illustration:_ First Enthusiast._"I say, will you play another round with me on Thursday?" |
38683 | *****[ Illustration:_ Golfer._"And what''s your name?" |
38683 | *****[ Illustration:_ Licensed Caddy._"Carry your clubs, sir?" |
38683 | *****[ Illustration:_ McFoozler( after a steady sequence of misses)._"Ah-- er-- is there a_ limit_ for these links?"] |
38683 | *****[ Illustration:_ Policeman._"Where did you get that bag?" |
38683 | *****[ Illustration:_ Sanguine Golfer._"Is that on the''carpet,''caddie?" |
38683 | *****[ Illustration:_ She._"Why, Mr. Smith, you do n''t mean to say you have taken up golf?" |
38683 | *****[ Illustration:_ Tommy._"I say, do you know who''s winning?" |
38683 | And you''re never going out without your theodolite? |
38683 | And_ would_ you mind driving that sheep away?"] |
38683 | Are you a Protectionist or a Total Abstainer? |
38683 | Are you married or single? |
38683 | Been round the links yet?" |
38683 | Besides, I was told that the standard of play had been so raised----"Raised? |
38683 | Browning_) Do you hear the widows weeping, O my brothers, Wedded but a few brief years? |
38683 | D''ye no ca''that excitement?"] |
38683 | Did you do as I told you, winning smile and all?" |
38683 | Div ye ken what he says when he foozles a ba''?" |
38683 | Do n''t you know where the ball is?" |
38683 | Do you ask their grazing widows in their sorrow Why their tears are falling so? |
38683 | Elder MacNab._"Wha- at, man, gie up gowf?" |
38683 | Got your clubs? |
38683 | Have you seen a lady''s club anywhere?" |
38683 | How does he play?" |
38683 | Is n''t that the handle?" |
38683 | My drive lay on a buttercup, and who the deuce can be expected to play off buttercups? |
38683 | New idea? |
38683 | Not very; even a year ago you must have seen pneumatic golf balls-- filled with compressed air? |
38683 | Or choose between the Premier''s predilection And Rosebery''s deliberate rejection? |
38683 | Shall I lead the way?" |
38683 | Simkins?" |
38683 | Smythe?" |
38683 | So I ses to them quite respeckfull like, as''ow both their scores is inakkerite and should I keep them both in fuchure? |
38683 | What do you use it for?" |
38683 | What do_ you_ think, Mr. Nobbs? |
38683 | What does he say?" |
38683 | What''s the programme for to- morrow?" |
38683 | Where is it gone?" |
38683 | Where to? |
38683 | Which stick----?" |
38683 | Who then, in face of functions so diverse, Will call thee, golf, a blessing or a curse? |
38683 | Why are you going away?" |
38683 | Why ca n''t they do something? |
38683 | Why do n''t you_ take it away_ from the dog?"] |
38683 | Why not a Golf Court on the links?] |
38683 | Yes, the young golf widows, O my brothers, Do you ask them why they weep? |
38683 | _ Caddie( engaged)._"_''I m?_ He just plays as if it was for pleesure!"] |
38683 | _ Golf Player._"Now then, what are you grinning at, boy? |
38683 | _ Golfer._"What d''you mean, you idiot?" |
38683 | _ Inoffensive Stranger._ Yes? |
38683 | _ Licensed Caddy._"Carry your caddy, sir?"] |
38683 | _ Old Hand._"Whot did you go round in?" |
38683 | _ Really_, you know----_ Second M._ 420 yards? |
38683 | _ Second G.M._ When did you get to know him? |
38683 | _ Sensitive Golfer._"And what''s funny about him?" |
38683 | _ Tinker._"What for?" |
38683 | _ Tinker._"What?" |
38683 | _ Young Lady._"Why?" |
38683 | have you seen a golf- ball fall anywhere here, please?" |
27523 | ''A rope of fear''was what he said, was n''t it? 27523 ''So far as his labours extended''?" |
27523 | ''We will suppose,''said the miser,''that his symptoms are such and such; now, Doctor, what would you have directed him to take?'' 27523 ''What then?'' |
27523 | A mistake? 27523 A rope?" |
27523 | Absolutely? |
27523 | And Irene Adler? |
27523 | And Mr. Van Broecklyn? 27523 And afterward?" |
27523 | And confidential? |
27523 | And for present expenses? |
27523 | And how did you find out? |
27523 | And mademoiselle''s address? |
27523 | And now, Dupin, what would you advise me to do? |
27523 | And now? |
27523 | And that door? |
27523 | And the master cut you out with her? |
27523 | And the paper on the walls? |
27523 | And the papers? |
27523 | And what do you want to know that for? 27523 And what is the difficulty now?" |
27523 | And what of Irene Adler? |
27523 | And what then? |
27523 | And what, after all, is the matter on hand? |
27523 | And when will you call? |
27523 | And where is Marcus Ivanovitch? |
27523 | And who are these gentlemen? |
27523 | And who is Nicholas? |
27523 | And why in hopes? |
27523 | And why? |
27523 | And you saw nothing, heard nothing? |
27523 | And your father- in- law? |
27523 | Another feather in the cap of foolish old Scotland Yard, is n''t it? |
27523 | Anyone hurt? |
27523 | Are you going Saturday night? |
27523 | But could not the cavity be detected by sounding? |
27523 | But how did you find out? 27523 But how will you look?" |
27523 | But how? |
27523 | But is this really the poet? |
27523 | But the article lost-- what is it? |
27523 | But the safety match? 27523 But to whom?" |
27523 | But what is it you wish? |
27523 | But what purpose had you,I asked,"in replacing the letter by a fac- simile? |
27523 | But where is it-- where is the murdered man? |
27523 | But you have hopes? |
27523 | But, Puss, why one more? 27523 Ca n''t you reproduce a copy of it from memory?" |
27523 | Ca n''t you see it in my face? |
27523 | Can they hear us? |
27523 | Can you hear anything-- anything? |
27523 | Can you see that from the floor, Walter? |
27523 | Can you tell me who the thief is? |
27523 | Come where? |
27523 | Did I not tell you how quick and resolute she was? 27523 Did any of you look into the window?" |
27523 | Did he leave any message? |
27523 | Did you know Aquilina? |
27523 | Do you know that you have not told me in whose house I am? 27523 Do you mean that she has left England?" |
27523 | Do you see any light, however? |
27523 | Do you see any objection, dear, to obliging the sergeant with a sight of the books? |
27523 | Do you think this Albano had anything to do with the letter? |
27523 | For not only have the notes vanished, but I''ve lost the best night- watchman I ever had, a good, trustworthy man--"Lost him? |
27523 | Good Heavens, Calcott, where did this come from? 27523 Happened, sir-- happened?" |
27523 | Have a drop of brandy and water? 27523 Have you anything to tell, Miss Strange?" |
27523 | Have you come to help me? |
27523 | He made no statement, I suppose, before he died, to give an idea of the assassin? 27523 How did that help you?" |
27523 | How did you come here? 27523 How is this known?" |
27523 | How many? 27523 How much was the reward offered, did you say?" |
27523 | How often? |
27523 | How should I know what happened? 27523 How,_ hopes_?" |
27523 | How? 27523 How? |
27523 | How? |
27523 | I am afraid, ma''am,says I,"that you have not hit on any little criminating discovery in the lodger''s room?" |
27523 | I am to be neutral? |
27523 | I heard a cry-- at least--"Right through the closed door of a nine- inch concrete- walled vault, Wilson? |
27523 | I thought you gave good customers more than three years''credit? |
27523 | Is Mr. Spielhagen sure that the missing page was with the others when he sat down in the adjoining room to read his thesis? |
27523 | Is it likely that anyone overheard your conversation then? 27523 Is it possible, gentlemen?" |
27523 | Is it possible? 27523 Is it-- I mean the table-- in the same condition it was then? |
27523 | Is she hurt? |
27523 | Is the poor gentleman much hurt? |
27523 | Is this chair standing exactly as it did when Mr. Spielhagen occupied it? |
27523 | It is a most unfortunate tragedy indeed, almost a dual one, one might say, but I think you can safely trust yourself in our hands, eh, Headland? |
27523 | Its susceptibility of being produced? |
27523 | Madam, what is the use of these questions? 27523 May I have a look at its emptiness?" |
27523 | Might be aconite-- but how administered? |
27523 | Mr. Sherlock Holmes, I believe? |
27523 | No ghosts? |
27523 | No idea as to the cause of death, Mr. Brent? 27523 No legal papers or certificates?" |
27523 | No sign of it? |
27523 | No whispers from impalpable lips or touches from spectre hands? 27523 No? |
27523 | Nor running a chance of arrest? |
27523 | Not by me? |
27523 | Not my shopman? |
27523 | Nothing more in the assassination way, I hope? |
27523 | Now, I wonder who the deuce that could have been? |
27523 | Now, Walter, do you think you could stand another dip into that red ink of Albano''s? |
27523 | One of that sort is he? 27523 Patterson?" |
27523 | Say, is there a candy store on this block? |
27523 | Simmons had been shut in there by myself, Mr. Headland, and--"Shut in, Mr. Brent? 27523 Simple and odd?" |
27523 | So soon as that? |
27523 | So? |
27523 | Still, may I not have a look at it? |
27523 | Surely you do n''t allow smoking in the vault, Mr. Brent? 27523 That idle slut, the maid?" |
27523 | Then how do you know? |
27523 | Then how many are there? |
27523 | Then, as to money? |
27523 | Then, in the name of heaven, who is? |
27523 | There''s nothing extraordinary about that--"She first liked you and then preferred Klausoff? |
27523 | They do n''t usually kill anyone, do they? |
27523 | This Wilson, Mr. Brent,Cleek asked quietly,"is he a young man?" |
27523 | This is a very unexpected turn of affairs,said I;"and what then?" |
27523 | This is strictly private? |
27523 | Was he tied or bound then? |
27523 | Was the photograph a cabinet? |
27523 | Well, and how about the boot? |
27523 | Well, and what of that? |
27523 | Well, what of that? |
27523 | What are you here for? |
27523 | What boot? |
27523 | What colour was his last suit? |
27523 | What do you imagine that it means? |
27523 | What do you make of that? |
27523 | What do you want me to do? |
27523 | What do you want? |
27523 | What does that mean? |
27523 | What evidence have you of that? |
27523 | What exactly do you mean by that, Mr. Brent? 27523 What good would his strength be, supposing he was asleep?" |
27523 | What has that to do with the case? |
27523 | What have you found, Headland? |
27523 | What is incomprehensible about it? |
27523 | What is it? |
27523 | What notes? |
27523 | What then? |
27523 | What was that? |
27523 | What yard? 27523 What''s that, Inspector?" |
27523 | What''s the matter now, Jack? |
27523 | What''s the matter? |
27523 | What''s the matter? |
27523 | What- a you get- a you pay for? 27523 What? |
27523 | What? 27523 When may I pay you the same compliment on finding the thief?" |
27523 | Where are you going? |
27523 | Where is your master? |
27523 | Where were you when you woke up? |
27523 | Where, indeed? |
27523 | Where, then? |
27523 | Which are? |
27523 | Who else could it be? 27523 Who has taken it?" |
27523 | Who is George? |
27523 | Who is it then? |
27523 | Who is sneaking in here? |
27523 | Who is young Wilson, Mr. Brent, and why should he instead of the inspector have been left alone with the body? |
27523 | Who told you? |
27523 | Who''ll go down and get me a bottle of ginger ale? |
27523 | Who''s going to look in, if all their bones are shaking? |
27523 | Whom have I the honour of addressing? |
27523 | Why did I suspect Mr. Brent? 27523 Why should n''t I be here, if I am all right here?" |
27523 | Why so? |
27523 | Why will you not believe in the guilt of Maria Ivanovna? 27523 Why, indeed?" |
27523 | Will you please to prepare yourself for a very disagreeable surprise, sir? |
27523 | You are ready to assert this? |
27523 | You are sure she has not sent it yet? |
27523 | You aren''t-- what''s- its- name? 27523 You do n''t mind breaking the law?" |
27523 | You do n''t understand? 27523 You explored the floors beneath the carpets?" |
27523 | You had my note? |
27523 | You have not showed this to the police, I presume? |
27523 | You have really got it? |
27523 | You have the photograph? |
27523 | You have, of course, an accurate description of the letter? |
27523 | You include the grounds about the houses? |
27523 | You looked among D----''s papers, of course, and into the books of the library? |
27523 | You looked into the cellars? |
27523 | You say you have left your hotel? |
27523 | You-- Marcus-- Ivanovitch? 27523 You-- knew?" |
27523 | You_ knew_? 27523 ''Tisn''t that chap I suppose? |
27523 | ''What would either''s life be worth with the other alive and happy in this world?'' |
27523 | A man who has stolen money, or a man who has stolen a wife?" |
27523 | After that I rushed to the safe and--""Why did you do that?" |
27523 | Again: have you ever noticed which of the street signs, over the shop doors, are the most attractive of attention?" |
27523 | And run over to the orderly; why should he sit there, kicking his heels? |
27523 | And so what does it all come to? |
27523 | And then your agitation made me risk the guess.... What''s that, Inspector? |
27523 | And what did the local police say? |
27523 | And what does Lyeskoff say about them, or Petcherski? |
27523 | And what does she propose to do with the photograph?" |
27523 | And who''s that other mug down there? |
27523 | And why is there blood under the master''s window?" |
27523 | Are there not proofs enough for you?" |
27523 | Are you positively certain Simmons said nothing as to the cause of his death? |
27523 | Are you quite sure of that?" |
27523 | As he entered the wine- shop he snorted, after the manner of gasmen,"Where''s de leak?" |
27523 | At length I said:"Well, but, G----, what of the purloined letter? |
27523 | Brent?" |
27523 | Brent?" |
27523 | Brent?" |
27523 | But did they get anyone this time? |
27523 | But do you think she would have given those few minutes of perfect understanding with her blind husband for a few years more of miserable life?" |
27523 | But her tone was light as she ventured to say:"Then it can no longer be opened by your hand or any other?" |
27523 | But how--""Was there a secret marriage?" |
27523 | But how?" |
27523 | But the note itself-- what do you deduce from it?" |
27523 | But where are you off to, Chubikoff? |
27523 | But where is he now? |
27523 | But where look? |
27523 | But who brought you here? |
27523 | But, I say, Jack, is somebody else ready too? |
27523 | Cleek?" |
27523 | Coming our way, Mr. Wilson? |
27523 | Could this be the explanation of the mystery? |
27523 | Could you give a little advice in the case of a friend of mine?" |
27523 | Could you not help us with some clew, some explanation--?" |
27523 | D''youse all wanter be blown ter pieces wid dem pipes and cigarettes? |
27523 | Did he expect a murder or robbery beforehand? |
27523 | Did he know the notes had vanished? |
27523 | Did he say?" |
27523 | Did he vanish with the notes?" |
27523 | Did it so allow and so provide? |
27523 | Did n''t get his watch, I suppose?" |
27523 | Did this mean fear? |
27523 | Did you know Aquilina?" |
27523 | Do I look pretty good?" |
27523 | Do honourable women murder their husbands? |
27523 | Do you happen to know any of the shopkeepers on it or near it?" |
27523 | Do you know who she is? |
27523 | Do you know who the third person was?" |
27523 | Do you note the peculiar construction of the sentence--''This account of you we have from all quarters received''? |
27523 | Do you remember the story they tell of Abernethy?" |
27523 | Do you see any objection to my shutting myself in there for a few minutes?" |
27523 | Do you think he would let me use his store for a few minutes Saturday night-- of course without any risk to himself?" |
27523 | Do you want some more tea, Eugraph Kuzmitch?" |
27523 | Do you want to see what I found, gentlemen? |
27523 | Do you wonder that I have never been or lived like other men?" |
27523 | For Heaven''s sake, how did your boot get into the garden?" |
27523 | For example, an arrant simpleton is his opponent, and, holding up his closed hand, asks,''Are they even or odd?'' |
27523 | Friends, let us bring this-- What are you looking at? |
27523 | Granted the fact of the marriage, what proof does it afford me of the innocence of the three persons concerned in that clandestine transaction? |
27523 | Had Mr. Van Broecklyn a suggestion to offer? |
27523 | Had a few weeks''work and a close connection with the really serious things of life made this change in him? |
27523 | Had any discovery been made in our absence; or would it be made now that renovation and repairs of all kinds were necessary? |
27523 | Had it feet-- hands? |
27523 | Has nothing been taken from it except the manuscript?" |
27523 | Have they found any clues yet?" |
27523 | Have you forgotten it? |
27523 | Have you never been here before?" |
27523 | Have you never met him?" |
27523 | He comes to me this morning, and says:''Why is the master so long getting up? |
27523 | He had n''t time to take the second boot off when--""There you go!--and how do you know they strangled him?" |
27523 | He telephoned to the office and-- Was there anything else Miss Strange would like to know? |
27523 | His vanity, do n''t you see? |
27523 | How could I know that the house was so still and the rooms so dark because everyone was out searching for some clue to my mother''s flight? |
27523 | How could I know?" |
27523 | How did you find out that I was here? |
27523 | How do I know that you have been getting yourself very wet lately, and that you have a most clumsy and careless servant girl?" |
27523 | How do you explain her unwillingness to give us any information? |
27523 | How should I act to get my little Adelina back without harming a hair of her head?" |
27523 | How should I escape them, how ever reach my own little room again, undetected and in safety? |
27523 | How was the murder committed, and what did this little rattler have to do with it? |
27523 | I ai n''t supposed to do dis wit''out orders, see?" |
27523 | I hope that I have made myself clear?" |
27523 | I know nothing-- What can I do? |
27523 | I must be cleared, and instantly, of every suspicion,"he gravely asserted,"or how can I marry Miss Digby to- morrow?" |
27523 | I presume you have at last made up your mind that there is no such thing as overreaching the Minister?" |
27523 | If this young person should produce her letters for blackmailing or other purposes, how is she to prove their authenticity?" |
27523 | Immediately:''Who bought the other box?'' |
27523 | Intelligent, is n''t it? |
27523 | Is it not a pity that she was not on my level?" |
27523 | Is it possible?" |
27523 | Is it the less real? |
27523 | Is n''t that so, Mr. Brent? |
27523 | Is this an unjustifiable imputation of bad motives? |
27523 | Just give me permission--""What are you going on about?" |
27523 | Marcus Ivanovitch murdered?" |
27523 | Marcus Ivanovitch? |
27523 | May we bring him in, marm?" |
27523 | Miss Digby--""The lady who is to be married to- morrow?" |
27523 | Mr. George Barrington, eh? |
27523 | Murdered? |
27523 | My dear old man, wo n''t you intrust this business to me? |
27523 | Nicholas and Psyekoff held him, but who smothered him? |
27523 | Nothing to explain the mystery of that room so long shut up that even Mr. Van Broecklyn declares himself ignorant of its secret?" |
27523 | Now the question is-- where are we to find the photograph?" |
27523 | Now this mode of reasoning in the schoolboy, whom his fellows termed''lucky,''--what, in its last analysis, is it?" |
27523 | Of course you were here last Saturday evening?" |
27523 | One of them had the impertinence to say to me,"If you please, sir, who is it that we are after? |
27523 | Otherwise, we--""What do you want with him?" |
27523 | Over his shoulder I could see a tangled mass of dark brown curls, and a childish voice lisped:"Why did n''t you come for me, papa? |
27523 | Peppermint drops, or aniseed balls, eh?" |
27523 | Perhaps you have forgotten--?" |
27523 | Shall we call it off and fly, as the poor creatures in there think we have, to the opposite ends of the earth?'' |
27523 | Should she know it if she did see it? |
27523 | Shut in, did you say? |
27523 | Six hours later another note was found, this time; from the wife:"FATHER:"Tied to a rotting corpse what does one do? |
27523 | Some third person did the smothering; but who was it?" |
27523 | Suppose you tell Mr. Narkom and myself the details, right from the beginning, please? |
27523 | That''s you, Dukovski? |
27523 | The money is all right, he says? |
27523 | Then he sniffed the air, and uttered a casual remark:"Fond of sweets still, are you Mr. Wilson? |
27523 | Then how did Mr. Wilson here, and the inspector enter?" |
27523 | Then young Wilson told me that he himself had closed the safe door.... What are you smiling at, Mr. Headland? |
27523 | There was a door which no man ever opened-- had never opened since Revolutionary times-- should she see it? |
27523 | Thought you''d have escaped with that £ 200,000 and left your confederate to bear the brunt of the whole thing, did you? |
27523 | Very well, let us say that I am crazy; but how do you explain her confusion when we appeared? |
27523 | Was his look one of rebuke at her presumption, or just the constrained expression of a perturbed mind? |
27523 | Was it a pitfall into which the poor little lady had fallen? |
27523 | Was it a presence which could be felt? |
27523 | Was it not so? |
27523 | Was she his client, his friend, or his mistress? |
27523 | Was there any explanation for this strangely self- centred life? |
27523 | Was this Arthur? |
27523 | We have caught three already-- isn''t that so? |
27523 | We have two of them in our hands; but who is the third? |
27523 | Well, what is the matter with you?" |
27523 | What are you getting up for? |
27523 | What did they say?" |
27523 | What do you think of that, Inspector Theakstone? |
27523 | What else could she do? |
27523 | What exactly were his last words to you?" |
27523 | What fate has brought him here?" |
27523 | What good will it do me if they catch them and my little Adelina is returned to me dead? |
27523 | What had happened? |
27523 | What if the real Black Hand is any gang of criminals who choose to use that convenient name to extort money? |
27523 | What in heaven''s name can they want now? |
27523 | What is it, Luigi?" |
27523 | What is the address of this Albano''s?" |
27523 | What is the case?" |
27523 | What is the natural conclusion to draw from the conversation which I have just set down? |
27523 | What is this, 23- 1/2 Prince Street?" |
27523 | What made you ask?" |
27523 | What the devil do you want here? |
27523 | What time was it when young Wilson discovered the door of the bank unlatched?" |
27523 | What was that, Luigi? |
27523 | What was the doctor''s verdict?" |
27523 | What was the relation between them, and what the object of his repeated visits? |
27523 | What was to be done? |
27523 | What were they to do? |
27523 | What were they to think? |
27523 | What, for example, in this case of D----, has been done to vary the principle of action? |
27523 | What? |
27523 | When was the murder discovered and who discovered it?" |
27523 | When will you learn enough to drop your deductions? |
27523 | When you got downstairs with the inspector, Mr. Brent, did you happen to notice the safe or not?" |
27523 | When?" |
27523 | Where are you going?" |
27523 | Where can I find a quiet spot? |
27523 | Where can I find you to- morrow?" |
27523 | Where had it vanished, and through whose agency had this misadventure occurred? |
27523 | Where is Klausoff? |
27523 | Where is his body?" |
27523 | Where were you lunching?" |
27523 | Where were you, my good fellow, the night the master was murdered? |
27523 | Where? |
27523 | Who could have been his confederate?" |
27523 | Who else could it be? |
27523 | Who told you?" |
27523 | Who would think of looking here for either you or me?'' |
27523 | Who--?" |
27523 | Whom have I the honour to address?" |
27523 | Why are you all looking at me like that, as if I was the murderer?" |
27523 | Why do n''t you drink, devil take you? |
27523 | Why should I attempt to conceal it?" |
27523 | Why should she hand it over to anyone else? |
27523 | Why should they not combine together and steal a cash- box? |
27523 | Why was it that after such a loss Mr. Van Broecklyn seemed to renew his youth? |
27523 | Will Simmons? |
27523 | Will you humour me so far?" |
27523 | Wilson, you understand you are to come with us? |
27523 | Would it advance? |
27523 | Would it not have been better, at the first visit, to have seized it openly and departed?" |
27523 | Would she not have made an admirable queen? |
27523 | Would you like to stand in Mr. Sharpin''s shoes? |
27523 | Would you mind telling me what you know about it if I promise you that I, too, have something to reveal?" |
27523 | You agree? |
27523 | You did not take to pieces all the chairs?" |
27523 | You do not mean to set at naught the well- digested idea of centuries? |
27523 | You have come from the examination?" |
27523 | You have n''t a pain in it?" |
27523 | You might-- do a little more, I think, eh?" |
27523 | You quite follow me?" |
27523 | You remember, you heard the sound of that pipe, Mr. Wilson? |
27523 | You understand?" |
27523 | You want to preach me a sermon? |
27523 | You want- a me do your work?" |
27523 | You were one of Aquilina''s admirers yourself-- does it follow that you are implicated too?" |
27523 | You''re not going already?" |
27523 | You''re not insinuating that that boy murdered old Simmons, are you? |
27523 | Your head is n''t what- do- you- call- it? |
27523 | Your majesty will, of course, stay in London for the present?" |
27523 | a rich man-- a favourite of the gods, you may say, as Pushkin has it, and what did he come to? |
27523 | did you put anything particular in it?" |
27523 | in what way?" |
27523 | my boy, what do you make of that?" |
27523 | someone asked;"and insert it in its proper place among the pages you hold there?" |
27523 | was n''t that the reason why she was kneeling before the icons, when we came in, just to take our attention away? |
27523 | who ever heard of such an idea?" |
44517 | Have you heard,said he,"the strange, stories of the subterraneous passage, and that it winds in intricate mazes round the cloister?" |
44517 | Holloa there, John of Mengden!--how fare you? |
44517 | Courts for cowards were erected, Churches built to please the priest._ What is title, what is treasure, What is reputation''s care? |
44517 | Does the sober bed of marriage Witness brighter scenes of love? |
44517 | Does the train- attended carriage Thrp''the country lighter rove? |
44517 | Here a question arose,"who should go down first?" |
44517 | Sleep when he wakes, and creep into the jaundice by being peevish?" |
44517 | The wall was not high; but must his Eminence endanger his sacred person? |
44517 | What have you heard or seen?" |
44517 | What was to be done? |
44517 | Where have you been? |
44517 | YES OR NO? |
44517 | he vociferated--"are you alive, or dead?" |
44517 | is it thus you pay respect to the sacred person of the Cardinal Bernis? |
44517 | what can have happened? |
44898 | When shall we''two''meet again-- In thunder, lightning, or in rain? |
44898 | Did you walk or were you brought in your chair? |
44898 | Do you live on little girls and boys, Or merely cakes and pies? |
44898 | Have they been up to something bad And in it got detected? |
44898 | How did you get in? |
44898 | Their tails are very, very long,-- But does it really matter? |
44898 | [ Illustration] A WARNING Are these Quumps or Zagabogs, Golliwogs or Quees? |
44898 | [ Illustration] SIAMESE TWINS? |
44898 | [ Illustration] SORRY GRIGS What makes these little Grigs so sad? |
29882 | ''Would it?'' 29882 ... Bring all Nareda on our ears? |
29882 | A little gag, Spawn? 29882 Admit that they took your bribes? |
29882 | Afraid for your wits? |
29882 | After all, he does stand for that aristocracy that has disappeared from the modern world, does he not? 29882 All right, Jetta?" |
29882 | And does he talk as you do? |
29882 | And this antidote of yours? |
29882 | And what did you get? 29882 And who are you?" |
29882 | And who rules over and beyond? |
29882 | And who will believe him? 29882 Any ill effects?" |
29882 | Any luck? |
29882 | Are the rest of the party on their way? |
29882 | Are they dangerous? |
29882 | Are we going on a case? |
29882 | Are you all right, William? |
29882 | Are you in there? 29882 Better?" |
29882 | But Commander--"Armed? 29882 But how does this darkness make the invisible airships luminous?" |
29882 | But suppose she should get out? 29882 But these are times when the Intelligence Service demands much of its men, is it not so?" |
29882 | But we can ask her when she awakens, ca n''t we? |
29882 | By the way, have you folks eaten? |
29882 | By the way,he inquired suddenly,"did n''t I have an extraordinarily obnoxious grandson with me when I came?" |
29882 | De Boer, do you intend to ask a ransom for Jetta? |
29882 | Did I? |
29882 | Did everything go all right? |
29882 | Did n''t President Hargreaves tell you? |
29882 | Did n''t he get a full dose of lethane? |
29882 | Did n''t your men leave him in the cabin when you kidnapped me? |
29882 | Did you hear something moving in back of us, Nan? |
29882 | Did you-- did you kill my father? |
29882 | Do you feel perfectly normal? |
29882 | Do you think that is not known all over Washington? |
29882 | Do you think--? |
29882 | Do you want to strangle me? |
29882 | Dog of an American,he roared,"do you know why you were brought here? |
29882 | Everything all ready, Aaron? |
29882 | Father--"About this young American? 29882 For why would I hurt him? |
29882 | Freda, what are you doing in here? 29882 Good fishing? |
29882 | Got it? |
29882 | Grandfather, what''s that? |
29882 | Grandpa, are polar bears_ always_ white? |
29882 | Have you had time to make an examination of that ship of Slavatsky''s, yet? |
29882 | Have you met with success, Doctor? |
29882 | Have you quite finished? |
29882 | How are you going to ransom me? |
29882 | How did you get back here? |
29882 | How did you know? |
29882 | How long have we been gone, Nan? |
29882 | How many cases did you find, Carnes? |
29882 | How many, grandfather? 29882 How?" |
29882 | I might marry her: why not? 29882 I? |
29882 | If a light ray is nullified upon entering the field of darkness, will it emerge at the other edge as a perfect light ray again? |
29882 | In here? 29882 Invisibility? |
29882 | Is it seemly,he asked,"that an officer of the American army should be brought here in chains and cords?" |
29882 | Is it so? 29882 Is n''t there anything we can do?" |
29882 | Jetta, are you in there? 29882 Jetta, are you near the window?" |
29882 | Jetta, dear, do you trust me? 29882 Jetta, to- night you plan to see him again, no? |
29882 | Jetta, you''re not too frightened, are you? |
29882 | Jetta,Perona said to her accusingly,"that is true, then: you did talk with that miserable Americano last night? |
29882 | Karl, what''s the meaning of this? 29882 Luke, do n''t you know me?" |
29882 | Maynard? |
29882 | Me? 29882 Now then, Jetta, you have heard some of what we have been saying, perhaps?" |
29882 | Now you are perhaps in a more gracious mood, Professor? 29882 Oh, what is it? |
29882 | Ready? |
29882 | Run where? |
29882 | So this is it? 29882 So you''re the smuggler I was sent after?" |
29882 | So, you say? |
29882 | Sooner? |
29882 | That gas-- you can not be so vile as to send it forth again, to destroy the American ships? |
29882 | That''s a record, is n''t it? |
29882 | The gentleman who spent forty years of his life upon a tall pillar, in atonement for his sins? 29882 The girl''s an old friend, Commander? |
29882 | The key to the place where President Hargreaves is? |
29882 | Then,said Stopford,"the logical application of your method is to plunge every city in the land into darkness by means of this gas?" |
29882 | There''s no other way out of here? |
29882 | They held the wire while you called up the President? |
29882 | Think we were never coming? |
29882 | This attack will be successful, eh, Hans? |
29882 | Those police guards at the mine to- night? |
29882 | Try to ransom me for a fat price from the United States? |
29882 | Well, Captain Rennell, what have you to report to us this evening? |
29882 | What are they waiting for? 29882 What are you going to do with me?" |
29882 | What are you going to do with me? |
29882 | What do you expect to happen, Doctor? |
29882 | What do you mean, Carson? |
29882 | What do you mean? |
29882 | What do you mean? |
29882 | What do you read? |
29882 | What happened to the little rat, Aaron? |
29882 | What happened? |
29882 | What has happened? |
29882 | What have you to say, Rennell? |
29882 | What is it, Aaron? |
29882 | What is it, Aaron? |
29882 | What is it? |
29882 | What is there to be worried about? |
29882 | What is this? |
29882 | What keys? |
29882 | What of that? 29882 What on earth were they doing?" |
29882 | What the dickens? |
29882 | What will we use? |
29882 | What''s happened? |
29882 | What''s happening? |
29882 | What''s that for? |
29882 | What''s that noise? |
29882 | Where am I? |
29882 | Where are the others? |
29882 | Where are we? 29882 Where are you, Rennell? |
29882 | Where is Captain Rennell? |
29882 | Where was I? |
29882 | Where''s the President''s secretary? 29882 Where''s your officer?" |
29882 | Where''s your ship? |
29882 | Where? |
29882 | Who are you? 29882 Who told you I was attached to Intelligence?" |
29882 | Who was he? |
29882 | Why does not your darkness destroy all light? |
29882 | Why should he not? 29882 Why--""Is it not so?" |
29882 | Will you answer a question, Doctor? |
29882 | Will you help me, Willis? 29882 Y- yes, but I am not--""A man?" |
29882 | You call my master a forger? |
29882 | You can rush the fleet there, sir? |
29882 | You come, Commander? |
29882 | You do n''t suppose, Aaron, by any chance that Professor Dahlgren is still alive and on our planet? |
29882 | You do n''t think we''re in any danger from these beasts, do you? |
29882 | You have heard of St. Simeon Stylites, Yankee? |
29882 | You hear me? |
29882 | You hear, Spawn? 29882 You insist with that question?" |
29882 | You know your orders, Maynard? |
29882 | You mean,breathed the girl,"that he never moved from that spot after the rays touched his body? |
29882 | You recognize that signature, gentlemen? |
29882 | You refuse to answer? |
29882 | You seal her in? |
29882 | You seriously propose to darken the greater part of eastern North America? |
29882 | You think that? 29882 You yourselves repudiate your own Constitution, which places the control of army and navy in the hands of your President? |
29882 | ''Me stand naked in front of all them lamps and get turned into smoke? |
29882 | *****"Did that feel good, American swine?" |
29882 | *****"Do you know what all this means?" |
29882 | *****"The United States Government has sunk pretty low, to involve itself in a deal of this character, do n''t you think, my dear Superintendent?" |
29882 | *****"Well, gentlemen, am I to receive the courtesies of an ambassador?" |
29882 | *****"What''s that, what''s that, what''s that?" |
29882 | *****"Who''s Jackson Gee? |
29882 | A single word came to Carruthers''ear--"Man?" |
29882 | Against your word, Spawn? |
29882 | And I shall see you at Mrs. Wansleigh''s ball to- night?" |
29882 | And Jetta? |
29882 | And is it not interesting to note that some of his stories have become actual realizations? |
29882 | And it is that this Grant might be your rival, that worries you? |
29882 | And the gale-- was it now sweeping northward on its mission of destruction? |
29882 | Are n''t you going to tell me about that?" |
29882 | Are polar bears always white? |
29882 | Are polar bears always white? |
29882 | Are you all right?" |
29882 | Are you in there?" |
29882 | Are you ready, Carnes?" |
29882 | Are you willing to instruct me while I remove the menthium from him?" |
29882 | As much as fifty? |
29882 | At what time of day did they occur?" |
29882 | But could n''t your taste be improved? |
29882 | But had they understood the significance of those bare patches? |
29882 | But surely the utmost ingenuity of man had not contrived to render a modern plane, with its metalwork and machinery, absolutely transparent? |
29882 | But they''ll catch us--""Which is the key?" |
29882 | But what about Jetta? |
29882 | But what was I going to do about it? |
29882 | But where are we?" |
29882 | But who controlled them? |
29882 | But you will ransom me? |
29882 | But-- are you willing to follow me?" |
29882 | By the way, may I say a few good words for Sophie Wenzel Ellis? |
29882 | Ca n''t they open it? |
29882 | Can they send him to prison?'' |
29882 | Can you stand alone?" |
29882 | Can you stand up?" |
29882 | Carnes?" |
29882 | Could I hold them off? |
29882 | Could I save it, and her as well? |
29882 | Could n''t you get the rays to work sooner?" |
29882 | De Boer''s voice:"Is he conscious now? |
29882 | Did De Boer think he could out- distance this patrol- ship, the swiftest type of flyer in the Service? |
29882 | Did any points of similarity strike you as you read them?" |
29882 | Did father know him? |
29882 | Did n''t they get us?" |
29882 | Did you bring any with you?" |
29882 | Did you have any trouble in getting here unobserved?" |
29882 | Did you meet-- did you talk to Grant last night?" |
29882 | Do n''t you see what the end must be? |
29882 | Do n''t you think it would be a good idea to publish in each issue the picture of one of the authors, and a short synopsis of his life? |
29882 | Do you?" |
29882 | Does father know him? |
29882 | Fifty? |
29882 | For, I asked myself, why, if such a machine could produce two human identities, why not a score, a hundred, a thousand? |
29882 | Fought out, when everything was disorganized? |
29882 | Frighten them off, for a time, and make enough noise so that perhaps someone passing in the nearby street would give the alarm and bring help? |
29882 | God, man, what''s happened to your legs?" |
29882 | Grant, you hear her?" |
29882 | Had he only dreamed all this? |
29882 | Had the murdered man really bumped into an invisible airship, or had he only thought he had? |
29882 | Had those devils learned to apply the gas to the surfaces of airplanes? |
29882 | Hans?" |
29882 | Has he any polar bears? |
29882 | Has it got bears in it? |
29882 | Have I your permission to do so?" |
29882 | Have you arranged the elements? |
29882 | Have you seen the evening paper?" |
29882 | Have you thought of that, Perona? |
29882 | He can get here to my house safely?" |
29882 | Hear me?" |
29882 | How about your precautions for to- morrow night?" |
29882 | How can you account for it? |
29882 | How could a bulky man glide so smoothly? |
29882 | How could the apes and gorillas, huge as they were, hope to force the dinosaur away? |
29882 | How did I get here?" |
29882 | How did you get back here?" |
29882 | How did you get here so opportunely?" |
29882 | How did you get here?" |
29882 | I am skilful at persuasion, no? |
29882 | I called, louder,"Why do n''t you come in?" |
29882 | I presume you thought that we had no way of detecting the substitution? |
29882 | I said abruptly,"De Boer, since we are to be friends--""So you prefer to sit down now?" |
29882 | I ventured,"And Jetta?" |
29882 | If it was true, why had they suddenly become silent, inert? |
29882 | If you leave her here, De Boer--""Why should I leave her? |
29882 | In the second place Bird should have yielded more menthium, and in the third place, did you notice his hands? |
29882 | Is father fifty?" |
29882 | Is he not a contemptuous fellow, this American?" |
29882 | Is it a nice story? |
29882 | Is it not so? |
29882 | Is she seventeen? |
29882 | Is the ship well stocked?" |
29882 | It has gone so far as this, has it? |
29882 | Just what is the first step in removing the menthium from a brain?" |
29882 | Leave her-- for Perona?" |
29882 | May I add my voice to every other reader''s in the cry for the reprinting of"People of the Pit,"by A. Merritt? |
29882 | Meanwhile, what did he intend to do with me? |
29882 | Mr. Bryant asks:"Could a person remember his own death in a former reincarnation?" |
29882 | Must they stay here? |
29882 | My X- flyer''s a very handy thing to have, is n''t it?" |
29882 | My second suggestion in this: Why not have a fixed position for your announcement of the stories for the next issue? |
29882 | Or could I escape with her, and still find some means to save the treasure? |
29882 | Polar bears? |
29882 | Ransom me? |
29882 | Ready, Karl?" |
29882 | Rennell,_ Von Kettler was there!_""He went to this restaurant, sir?" |
29882 | Shall I proceed?" |
29882 | Shall I tell what else I saw?" |
29882 | Shall we break in? |
29882 | So this was that lost invisible flyer? |
29882 | So you have awakened?" |
29882 | Spawn said,"You think De Boer will believe that?" |
29882 | Spawn:"You will arrange about your police on the streets? |
29882 | Squires?" |
29882 | Suppose I could not find an opportunity to escape with Jetta? |
29882 | Suppose, as De Boer climbed in the window, I killed him? |
29882 | The question is, what we shall do about it?'' |
29882 | The question we wish to put to you is, can you trace the exact course taken by the hurricane?" |
29882 | The unknown isotope in that black gas of yours-- you are disposed to give us the chemical formula?" |
29882 | The wind velocity--?" |
29882 | Then came Spawn''s voice:"Got him, De Boer? |
29882 | This Grant?" |
29882 | To- night?--here?" |
29882 | Vice- president,"laughed Von Kettler,"are you sure this is n''t all very much exaggerated?" |
29882 | Vice- president?" |
29882 | Was Captain Rennell crazy too? |
29882 | Was De Boer rushing into a collision? |
29882 | Was it conceivable that a gas factory, hangars, ammunition depots could exist here invisibly, when he could look straight down upon the ground? |
29882 | Was it possible that the headquarters of the Invisible Emperor existed on this desolate prairie? |
29882 | Was my love for her foredoomed to end in tragedy? |
29882 | Was the other a dummy, too?" |
29882 | Was there a torch here at Spawn''s? |
29882 | We''re prisoners on an electron, and as such we are destined to rush through infinite space for the remainder of our lives unless....""Unless what?" |
29882 | Well, sir, what have you to say to that?" |
29882 | Well, why not me as well? |
29882 | What about Jetta? |
29882 | What are the chances of its reaching Washington?" |
29882 | What are the soldiers for? |
29882 | What are you talking about? |
29882 | What became of that little rat?" |
29882 | What did they mean? |
29882 | What do you suppose happened?" |
29882 | What happened?" |
29882 | What has happened? |
29882 | What is it?" |
29882 | What matter if the herds of dinosaurs overrun us and destroy lives? |
29882 | What was the matter with his mind? |
29882 | What was the matter, Karl? |
29882 | What were they doing, bunching together like a flock of sheep, when at any moment the enemy planes might come swooping in, riddling them with bullets? |
29882 | What''s D- r- a- y- l- e? |
29882 | What''s in the box? |
29882 | What''s that got to do with it?" |
29882 | When do you expect trouble?" |
29882 | Where did the attacks take place?" |
29882 | Where had he seen them before? |
29882 | Where is Captain Rennell, I say?" |
29882 | Where is Spawn? |
29882 | Where is he?" |
29882 | Which side would win? |
29882 | Who told you that I did?" |
29882 | Who was he? |
29882 | Who will dare to give me the lie because a bandit tells a wild tale with no real facts to prop it?" |
29882 | Who''s seen him? |
29882 | Why did n''t his feet sound upon the floor? |
29882 | Why did n''t the red mouth of the mighty dinosaur close over him and crush out life? |
29882 | Why do n''t they go away?" |
29882 | Why had they not long ago wiped out these few Marines? |
29882 | Why must he kneel in torture? |
29882 | Why not get the opinion of other readers? |
29882 | Why not give us some stories by him? |
29882 | Why not? |
29882 | Why should any person ask not to have such good stories in your magazine? |
29882 | Why should any such great author be disregarded in so good a magazine? |
29882 | Why should n''t I feel normal? |
29882 | Why? |
29882 | Why? |
29882 | Why?" |
29882 | Will you be able to restore them?" |
29882 | Will you come?" |
29882 | Will you guide Carnes to the tent and then return here and I''ll join him?" |
29882 | Will you please tell me what you are talking about?" |
29882 | Would I come to the garden tryst? |
29882 | Would that moment come before he crashed? |
29882 | Would the returning ray work? |
29882 | You are much concerned for your safety, Grant? |
29882 | You have a flash- light?" |
29882 | You have pack''chutes, have n''t you?" |
29882 | You have the tent set up for us, Major?" |
29882 | You heard from De Boer?" |
29882 | You heard my orders to Lieutenant Maynard, did n''t you?" |
29882 | You refuse to honor his signature?" |
29882 | You understand?" |
29882 | You understand?" |
29882 | You''ve heard about the man Von Kettler''s escape last night, of course?" |
29882 | You, an honest and wealthy mine owner? |
29882 | Your craft is equipped with a Bird silencer?" |
29882 | Your magazine( or should I say"our"magazine?) |
29882 | groaned Carnes as he fumbled for the rip cord of his parachute,"suppose this thing does n''t open?" |
29882 | what are the lives of these swarming millions worth when compared with a Caesar, a Napoleon, an Alexander, a Charlemagne? |
43626 | 1589:-- Does Worm eat Worme? |
43626 | A second he took, she departed-- what then? |
43626 | But are not lilies, which the valleys hide, Perfect as cedars, tho''the valley''s pride? |
43626 | Does worm eat Worme? |
43626 | For why? |
43626 | He could not work, nor fight,--what then? |
43626 | How few can conscientiously declare Their acts have been as honourably fair? |
43626 | Now, Rebel, direct thy unavailing Fires at Heaven, Art thou afraid to fight against God-- thou Who hast been a Murderer of His People? |
43626 | Robert Burns wrote the following epitaph on John Dove, innkeeper, Mauchline:-- Here lies Johnny Pigeon: What was his religion? |
43626 | The chest of wood was very good,-- Who says so of the other? |
43626 | Then who shall say so good a fellow Was only leather and prunella? |
43626 | Thrice twenty mounted Moors he overthrew, Singly, on foot, some wounded, some he slew, Dispersed the rest,--what more could Samson do? |
43626 | To gather laurels in their greenest bloom, To honour life and sanctify the tomb? |
43626 | What man can pause and charge this senseless dust With fraud, or subtilty, or aught unjust? |
43626 | Whence this ambition, whence this proud desire, This love of fame, this longing to aspire? |
43626 | Who now with Hallelujahs Sound Like Him can make the Roofs rebound? |
43626 | Why should we grieve life''s but an airy toy? |
43626 | Would not''rare Ben''himself have acknowledged this a good specimen of''what verse can say in a little?'' |
43626 | Ye weeping friends, let me advise, Abate your tears and dry your eyes; For what avails a flood of tears? |
43626 | is dead and gone, What signifies to cry? |
43626 | poor Buckett gone? |
44524 | O ye shepherds, what have ye seen, The snow in the street, and the wind on the door, To stay your sorrow and heal your teen? |
44524 | And then they heard the angels tell"Who were the first to cry NOWELL? |
44524 | Be here any maids? |
44524 | Following straight the Noël star? |
44524 | For as we wandered far and wide, The snow in the street, and the wind on the door, What hap do you deem there should us betide? |
44524 | Into this stable, poor and drear?" |
44524 | Lov''st Thou me? |
44524 | Now who would house Him from the cold? |
44524 | O King, in my hour of danger, Wilt thou be strong for me? |
44524 | Sleep, Thou little Child of Mary, Some fair day Wilt Thou, as Thou wert a brother, Come away Over hills and over hollow? |
44524 | Thou wilt have disdain of me When Thou''rt lifted, royally, Very high for all to see: Smilest Thou? |
44524 | What can I give Him, Poor as I am? |
44524 | Where and what his dwelling?" |
44524 | Who goes there a- knocking like that? |
44524 | Who goes there a- knocking so loudly? |
44524 | With love divine, the song began; there shone a light serene: O, who hath heard what I have heard, or seen what I have seen? |
44524 | Yonder peasant, who is he? |
45166 | Hither, page, and stand by me, If thou know''st, telling, Yonder peasant, who is he? 45166 How else cam''st hither? 45166 Robin( appeased)--Waits, that''s better, and who gave word of this widow and her dozen brats? 45166 Robin( hectoring)--And who gave ye leave to break the mighty silence of our wood? 45166 Robin( scornfully)--And what be waits? 45166 Robin-- Canst fly? 45166 Where and what his dwelling? |
45166 | Who smote me? |
45482 | [ Illustration: 0015] There was an old miser who said,"why Do you still importune me to buy?" |
45482 | [ Illustration: 0032] There was a young woman of Zug, who said"do I see a huge bug? |
30166 | A meteor? 30166 A pteranodon? |
30166 | A what? |
30166 | All right, Alan? |
30166 | All right, Hammond? |
30166 | All right? |
30166 | Am I dreaming? 30166 And have the Quebec police up here lookin''fer''em? |
30166 | And we do your bidding, will ye give us back His Splendor? |
30166 | And where did Virginia go? |
30166 | And why not? |
30166 | And you think he does n''t count in this? |
30166 | Are there many giants? |
30166 | Are you hurt, Dick? |
30166 | Are you no conscious yet? |
30166 | Are you positive,Alden demanded of Hero John,"that this revolution in Atlans will die out if Altara is returned?" |
30166 | Are you sure, Lina? 30166 Art thou sure?" |
30166 | But how can that be? 30166 But what good is a.45 against brutes like those? |
30166 | But what the devil is all this revolt about? |
30166 | But what''s that noise? |
30166 | But why? 30166 But you?" |
30166 | Ca n''t you understand me? |
30166 | Calaboose? 30166 Can you land us, Alan?" |
30166 | Dad,she was saying,"why do n''t you give it up? |
30166 | Did he see you? |
30166 | Do I? 30166 Do n''t you see? |
30166 | Einstein again? |
30166 | Ever see so many stairs? |
30166 | George, when we knew Polter, he was about twenty- five, was n''t he? 30166 George-- where are you? |
30166 | Glora, do you know if any of Dr. Polter''s men have the drug? 30166 Glora, where will you be?" |
30166 | Got any weapons here, Shelton? |
30166 | Guns are n''t loaded, are they? |
30166 | Have n''t you guys got enough? |
30166 | Have those foul swine of Jarmuth dared--? |
30166 | Have you any enemies who might be able to duplicate the impulses of that apparatus? |
30166 | Hear me? |
30166 | Heavens-- how do I know? 30166 Help you off? |
30166 | Here-- what''s this? |
30166 | His car-- stolen? 30166 His_ Tao_?" |
30166 | How am I to know Altara if I see her? 30166 How big were those pteranodons?" |
30166 | How can they ever combat a thing they can not see? |
30166 | How did it happen? |
30166 | How large are they? 30166 How long?" |
30166 | How many? |
30166 | How should I know how they did it? |
30166 | How will ye accomplish this mad boast? |
30166 | I am from Zahn: do you know the good land of Zahn? 30166 It''s a big brute: see how small the gunners look beside it? |
30166 | Jail, eh? 30166 Know ye that the Sacred Virgin lies captive in the dungeons of the great temple of Beelzebub? |
30166 | Know ye,continued, the graybeard priest,"that Altara is ever guarded by two thousand picked priests and warriors? |
30166 | Might do what? |
30166 | Mind telling me the principle? |
30166 | No other cities? |
30166 | Not very pretty are they? 30166 Now what, Glora? |
30166 | Ready, George? |
30166 | Ready, Glora? |
30166 | Save Atlans--? |
30166 | Something fell? |
30166 | Speak on: is that all? |
30166 | Terrible, are n''t they, Vic? |
30166 | That the house? |
30166 | Then what''s weird?? 30166 Then what''s weird?? |
30166 | Then you''ll leave the old place down here? |
30166 | There are his lights; see them? |
30166 | There now-- see? |
30166 | They''ve sent you to find me? |
30166 | They? |
30166 | Think this idea of yours is sure- fire? |
30166 | Thought you could put one over on Al Cadorna, did you? |
30166 | Try to take my woman, will you? |
30166 | Want to grab the old one? |
30166 | What about your robots? |
30166 | What are you going to do with us? |
30166 | What are you going to do? |
30166 | What are you talking about? 30166 What can we do?" |
30166 | What do they amount to? |
30166 | What do you want me to do? |
30166 | What in the devil is Vic doing? 30166 What in the devil is your idea?" |
30166 | What is it, Mr. Vail? 30166 What of the divine Altara, fool?" |
30166 | What sayest thou, mad fellow? |
30166 | What the devil are these idiots trying to do? |
30166 | What would ye with these creature? |
30166 | What''ll we do with it? |
30166 | What''s it for? |
30166 | What''s the good in Einstein, anyhow? |
30166 | What''s the idea? |
30166 | What''s the matter? 30166 What''s the matter?" |
30166 | What''s this rot about your going into Jarmuth alone? 30166 What''s wrong with them?" |
30166 | What-- what happened? |
30166 | What? |
30166 | Where is it? |
30166 | Where''s what? |
30166 | Who is he? |
30166 | Who''s gone? 30166 Why did he wish this?" |
30166 | Why not? 30166 Why were we arrested? |
30166 | Will you fly me, George? |
30166 | Will you take us? |
30166 | Wonder if they could be handled? |
30166 | Wonder what I''m booked for? |
30166 | Wouldst thou not doubly save her, now? |
30166 | Yeah? |
30166 | Yes, Mr. Hammond, what do you think of Einstein now? |
30166 | Yes? 30166 Yes?" |
30166 | You can find out? |
30166 | You can make this one invisible? |
30166 | You hurt? |
30166 | You knew of the first one''s escape, did n''t you? |
30166 | You know of father''s break with Universal Electric? 30166 You like it? |
30166 | You like it? 30166 You mean Polter''s men?" |
30166 | You mean to go? 30166 You see the little box with bars? |
30166 | You think really it best to go? 30166 You understand me? |
30166 | You understand? 30166 You will not harm her, Polter?" |
30166 | You would n''t want to leave George, would you? 30166 You''ll not report to Universal?" |
30166 | You, George? 30166 ***** A mechanism of some sort-- but what? 30166 ***** But what was the purpose of the long sleep? 30166 ***** Had the fascination of the outer world drawn her back? 30166 ***** Launch himself upon it? 30166 ***** This afternoon? 30166 *****The giants live, there?" |
30166 | *****"You know me?" |
30166 | A crack under the door-- is that it, off there?" |
30166 | A faster time- rate prevailed in here? |
30166 | A gold mine? |
30166 | A tiny figure? |
30166 | About Einstein? |
30166 | Alan panted,"Glora, this-- does this lead out?" |
30166 | Alan, where are you?" |
30166 | Am I so different from other girls? |
30166 | An''that damn girl he stole off the terrace-- What did he call her, Barbara Kent?" |
30166 | And Babs, abducted by him, to be taken-- where? |
30166 | And Luhra!--what hope for her out there?... |
30166 | And now, the rest of you Readers, what are you going to do with your share? |
30166 | And to your normal size?" |
30166 | And where was Polter? |
30166 | And-- for what? |
30166 | Another pellet?" |
30166 | Are n''t there any tall girls in your imaginations? |
30166 | Are n''t we all signed up as associate editors for the future"ideal magazine?" |
30166 | Are you still rebellious? |
30166 | As Mr. Addison says in his letter,"Why ruin a truly great magazine by catering to a misguided minority?" |
30166 | Babs gone?" |
30166 | Babs?" |
30166 | Bars? |
30166 | Big as a Moth plane, is n''t he?" |
30166 | But Babs? |
30166 | But how is that going to pay my grocery bill-- or yours?" |
30166 | But how? |
30166 | But how? |
30166 | But in what size? |
30166 | But who could it be? |
30166 | But you no longer rebel?" |
30166 | Can this priest save Altara? |
30166 | Can you hear me?" |
30166 | Can you not publish four new novels and one reprint in 1931? |
30166 | Can you see her? |
30166 | Could he and his two fellows beat off the infuriated Jarmuthians long enough? |
30166 | Could n''t that be possible? |
30166 | Could we chance landing inside the wall? |
30166 | Did Horab know the truth? |
30166 | Did you see it?" |
30166 | Dimly, he recalled having once before encountered such an odor; when was it? |
30166 | Do n''t you think of that? |
30166 | Do n''t you understand? |
30166 | Do n''t you understand?" |
30166 | Do not the dark hordes of Jereboam beat back our frontiers?" |
30166 | Do you remember what a pteranodon was?" |
30166 | Do you want to crush him, and crush that young girl with him?" |
30166 | Doggone it, but why do n''t you cut out some of that romantic stuff in your stories? |
30166 | Dr. Polter, will you let me be with my father? |
30166 | Following us now? |
30166 | For instance, can a baby read magazines? |
30166 | Forever? |
30166 | Get it? |
30166 | Get large, shall we?" |
30166 | Had Polter stolen that missing fragment of golden quartz the size of a walnut which had been beneath Dr. Kent''s microscope? |
30166 | Had she trusted too greatly in the power of his Tao to shield her from harm? |
30166 | Half and half-- that''s fair, is n''t it? |
30166 | Has any new and terrible engine of destruction ever accomplished that result? |
30166 | Have ye forgotten the battle by Lake Copias?" |
30166 | He murmured:"But what do we do? |
30166 | He shouted,"You do that? |
30166 | He''d know at once-- and where is Babs? |
30166 | Here''s one point that I do n''t like: Why are all those invaders from other planets hostile? |
30166 | How about it, Mr. Bates? |
30166 | How could he get his hands free? |
30166 | How d''you know they wo n''t skin you alive once you''re over the border?" |
30166 | How deep is it?" |
30166 | How far away in size, who knows? |
30166 | How long will you be gone, Alan?" |
30166 | How many shots you got?" |
30166 | How much have you? |
30166 | How on earth can they keep going? |
30166 | How? |
30166 | I mean, do they come in and out here?" |
30166 | I rubbed my eyes doubtfully, said to Charlie,"Do you see a sort of blue haze in the pit?" |
30166 | I would like to know if the story,"Marooned Under the Sea,"was found near New Zealand or is it just fiction? |
30166 | I''m not asking you to do that, am I?" |
30166 | If Virginia cares for scientific reputation--""But what is it?" |
30166 | If he feels that way about it, why does n''t he subscribe to it and take the cover off when he reads it? |
30166 | Is it true the phalanxes at Tricca have risen for the priests?" |
30166 | Is n''t a sequel possible? |
30166 | Is n''t all fiction more or less of a fairy tale? |
30166 | Is that clear?" |
30166 | Is that someone coming?" |
30166 | Is that where he took the Earth girl?" |
30166 | Is that where he went? |
30166 | Is there a statue, a painting or something--?" |
30166 | Is this it? |
30166 | Iss it not so? |
30166 | It is an island, as you know, for have you not come here from afar?" |
30166 | It''s funny, is n''t it? |
30166 | Just like''em to be swiping a new war machine; but had n''t they gotten enough in 1944? |
30166 | Know that?" |
30166 | Know what I think? |
30166 | Know ye that this temple is in the center of Jezreel, capitol of Jarmuth?" |
30166 | Know ye, moreover, that this vile sacrifice will be made but two days hence?" |
30166 | Lost in size? |
30166 | My world?" |
30166 | Never see him again? |
30166 | No kiddin''--where is your Editor''s pride? |
30166 | No? |
30166 | Now, one thing more: what part of the border is still unquestionably loyal?" |
30166 | Of his private experiments?" |
30166 | Or was it someone creeping along the wall of the house? |
30166 | Or were we star- crossed, doomed like the realm of the atom? |
30166 | Our little Babs will lof me; why should she not? |
30166 | Polter?" |
30166 | Quarter of a mile? |
30166 | Question: What is the difference between an egg and a copy of Astounding Stories? |
30166 | Savvy? |
30166 | See the starlight on the lake? |
30166 | See?" |
30166 | See?" |
30166 | Seest thou yonder Ziggurat which o''er towers all others?" |
30166 | Seriously, now, why not consider this and take up a vote among your Readers to see what they think? |
30166 | She called:"Why? |
30166 | So big?" |
30166 | Something different, do n''t you think? |
30166 | Suppose she had seen you?" |
30166 | Sure? |
30166 | That girl of your world the doctor just now steal, she is friend of yours? |
30166 | That will be nice? |
30166 | The divinely beautiful Altara-- butchered for meat like a calf? |
30166 | The hand of a woman-- a girl!--what marvel of miracles was this? |
30166 | Then why should we quarrel now? |
30166 | Thirty feet away? |
30166 | To get larger, or smaller? |
30166 | Try to blind him, would he? |
30166 | Trying to dig out one of his eyes? |
30166 | Understand that? |
30166 | Very small? |
30166 | Was he too late? |
30166 | Was it true or was it a mirage? |
30166 | Was it-- compared to my stature now-- a thousand miles, perhaps even a million miles up to where we had been two or three hours ago? |
30166 | Was this an accident-- or treachery? |
30166 | Was this swift embrace now marking the end of everything for us? |
30166 | We want a magazine to be proud of, do n''t we? |
30166 | Were the heinies mixed up in this thing? |
30166 | What about the poor readers who want to have a Science Fiction library? |
30166 | What did it cover? |
30166 | What did it matter? |
30166 | What do they amount to, after all? |
30166 | What do you care what I do to your world? |
30166 | What do you want?" |
30166 | What does it all mean?" |
30166 | What happened? |
30166 | What happens? |
30166 | What has happened? |
30166 | What have I done?" |
30166 | What if Alden or Hero Giles failed in their share of the great scheme for rescue? |
30166 | What if something went wrong?" |
30166 | What if the stories are like fairy tales? |
30166 | What in the devil was a pteranodon? |
30166 | What point was there in prolonging the pitiful struggle? |
30166 | What say? |
30166 | What terrible thing might happen then? |
30166 | What the devil? |
30166 | What to do? |
30166 | What was happening? |
30166 | What was it supposed to do?" |
30166 | What''s happened?" |
30166 | What''s happened?" |
30166 | Whatever happens, you think of nothing else: you wo n''t, will you?" |
30166 | Where the devil was he? |
30166 | Where was Babs? |
30166 | Where was Glora? |
30166 | Where was that damned door? |
30166 | Where were Alan and Glora? |
30166 | Which? |
30166 | Who are you, and who is this black beast? |
30166 | Who are you?" |
30166 | Who could know what some of them might contain? |
30166 | Who stole it?" |
30166 | Who the devil was this fellow Carlos anyway? |
30166 | Who were"they?" |
30166 | Why ca n''t they go on an exploring expedition to our Earth? |
30166 | Why did I let you go?" |
30166 | Why do n''t you try publishing a thick Quarterly? |
30166 | Why do these skeptical and scientifically disposed critics continue to waste your valuable time picking scientific flaws in various stories? |
30166 | Why how dare you? |
30166 | Why not coat a teleview screen with some radio- active material?" |
30166 | Why not have a vote on this? |
30166 | Why should Five- Novels Monthly get all the breaks? |
30166 | Why should I not be, with my dear little Babs? |
30166 | Why should n''t he? |
30166 | Why waste your time, Mr. Johnston, telling us you do n''t like A. S.? |
30166 | Why we were arrested and-- nearly made into allosaurus fodder?" |
30166 | Why? |
30166 | Will ye still do my bidding and help to save our sovereign lord?" |
30166 | Will you be ready?" |
30166 | Will you come?" |
30166 | Will you?" |
30166 | Wo n''t you open the gate? |
30166 | Would Hero Giles remain friendly? |
30166 | Would Polter make the entire trip without a stop? |
30166 | Would he? |
30166 | Would we be in time? |
30166 | Wrestle with it in a hand to hand combat? |
30166 | Yes? |
30166 | Yet how could he prevent the pitiful tragedy? |
30166 | You always knew I would nefer be satisfied until I had my little Babs? |
30166 | You are afraid? |
30166 | You are all right, Babs?" |
30166 | You eat your prisoners?" |
30166 | You got Babs?" |
30166 | You haf still determined to compound no more of our drugs? |
30166 | You hear me?" |
30166 | You see the island off there?" |
30166 | You swear you''ll not reveal what I am about to show you?" |
30166 | You think, my little Babs, that he has the drugs? |
30166 | You understand that, both of you? |
30166 | You would rather I killed you? |
30166 | _ Two Problems_ Dear Editor: My last letter was entirely commendatory, but this time I am losing the full force of my critical powers(?) |
30166 | and printing flops by cheap writers, who are ruining other Science Fiction magazines? |
30166 | he told himself-- it was as near as he could come to a name for the machine--"and it''s been running here all this time.... What for, I wonder? |
30166 | she whispered;"yes, my dear one?" |
42773 | And hast thou slain the Jabberwock? 42773 A missing closing quote was inserted after the phrase''worthy of his attention?'' 42773 And behold, there came a voice unto him, and said:What doest thou here, Elijah?" |
42773 | And think''st thou not how wretched we shall be,-- A widow I, a helpless orphan he? |
42773 | As Mrs. Browning puts it:-- What angel but would seem To sensual eyes, ghost- dim? |
42773 | As you read, do you comprehend the exquisite propriety of the succession of the ideas? |
42773 | But what if there be something prior to all such"net results,"something higher than it? |
42773 | Do we go over the enchanting scene mechanically and at speed, as if it were the account of a political disturbance on the borders of Beloochistan? |
42773 | Do you know what that means, or that it goes back to the days of the Druids? |
42773 | Does one claim to be won to the heart of a friend and yet to be willing never to see that friend more? |
42773 | Does the anecdote of St. Ambrose come to mind when the saying is"At Rome do as the Romans do"? |
42773 | Does the word bring before the inner eye that uncouth monster wherewith the caricaturist of his day vexed the soul of Governor Gerry? |
42773 | How far, then, was my friend right? |
42773 | In England what has not happened from the fact that the Bible was translated? |
42773 | In his ear, in his nose, Thus, do you see? |
42773 | Is a man better for knowing with Zola all the diseased genealogy of the Rougon- Macquart family, morbid, criminal, and foul? |
42773 | Is it true that the majority of readers find the works of the great writers of the past dull and unattractive? |
42773 | Or would you taste the passion of young and ardent hearts, their woe at parting, and their resolved devotion which death itself can not abate? |
42773 | The crucial question in regard to artistic workmanship is:"Does it faithfully and fully convey the emotion which is the essence of the work?" |
42773 | There are two tests by which the novel- reader is to be tried: What sort of fiction does he read, and how does he read it? |
42773 | To be literature a work must express sincere emotion; but how is feeling which is genuine to be distinguished from that which is affected? |
42773 | To- day who reads"Ground Arms"without being chiefly impressed with its arguments against war? |
42773 | We should all agree that"The Scarlet Letter"is literature and that the latest sensational novel is not,--but are we sure what makes the difference? |
42773 | What later singer is there who has surpassed in pathos that makes the heart ache the exquisite beauty of"Fair Helen"? |
42773 | When you hear the phrase"where the shoe pinches"do you recall Plutarch''s story? |
42773 | Who could count the number to whom"In Memoriam"has carried comfort when living friends had no message? |
41474 | Besides,said many,"why stir up these old matters? |
41474 | Is that you, Peter? |
41474 | La, Marse Phil, whar you gwine? |
41474 | Miss-- hold de wire-- Will you marry me? 41474 Ole Mis''Anne? |
41474 | What did he say, Remus? |
41474 | Why-- yas-- Of course I loves my beau-- Say what''s de reason you wants to know? |
41474 | Yas.--Dis Angeline-- Dis me--"I-- des wanter say-- dat I does-- love you-- Miss Angeline-- does you love me, too--? |
41474 | ( Quoted by) HENRY STILES BRADLEY July Nineteenth What was my offense? |
41474 | ( What meks you rattle de handle so?) |
41474 | A cricket dirging days that soon must die? |
41474 | And I says to a man settin''next to me, s''I"what sort of fool play''n is that?... |
41474 | And shall not the evening call another star Out of the infinite regions of the night, To mark this day in Heaven? |
41474 | And what is meant by character? |
41474 | Ask the world-- The world has heard his story-- If all its annals can unfold A prouder tale of glory? |
41474 | But were a man never so usurious, would he not lend a winter seed for a summer song? |
41474 | Ca n''t I, Mammy Phyllis?" |
41474 | Courage? |
41474 | DANIEL B. LUCAS(_ The South Shall Claim Her Own Again_) July Fifteenth FACT OR FICTION? |
41474 | Dat you?" |
41474 | Did n''t my rooster always clap his wings and crow whenever he passed our quarters? |
41474 | Do your folks know how to make it pay? |
41474 | During the rest of my visit you call me Marse Charles, you hear?" |
41474 | HENRY KYD DOUGLAS_ Capture of Harper''s Ferry by Jackson, 1862_ September Sixteenth Mr. Lincoln, sir, have you any late news from Mr. Harper''s Ferry? |
41474 | He wields no warlike weapons now, Returns no foeman''s thrust,-- Who but a coward would revile An honest soldier''s dust? |
41474 | Honesty? |
41474 | I say, Main twenty----what''s ailin''you? |
41474 | If ever merely human life Hath taught diviner moral-- If ever round a worthier brow Was twined a purer laurel? |
41474 | Lee?... |
41474 | Lord, to thy will I yield my parting breath, Yet many a dream hath charmed my youthful eye; And must life''s visions all depart? |
41474 | Love of truth? |
41474 | MAJOR CHARLES H. SMITH(_ Bill Arp_)_ Joseph E. Johnston born, 1807_ February Eighth Hath not the morning dawned with added light? |
41474 | One day, on meeting the old colored man, he asked:"Where do you get your wood, Uncle?" |
41474 | Or did the ghost of Summer wander by? |
41474 | Or heart- sick bird that sang of happier hours? |
41474 | Or wilt thou, ere this very day be done, Blaze Saladin still, with unforgiving fire? |
41474 | POE-- How can so strange and fine a genius and so sad a life be expressed and compressed in one line? |
41474 | Pride of race? |
41474 | Take him by the hand and help him up and brush the dirt off his clothes? |
41474 | The school in which the training was given is closed, and who wishes to open it? |
41474 | Thou canst not measure Mistress Nature''s hair, Not one sweet inch: nay, if thy sight is sharp, Wouldst count the strings upon an angel''s harp? |
41474 | True--?" |
41474 | WALTER MALONE October Sixth Who said"false as dreams"? |
41474 | Was it a voice lamenting for the flowers? |
41474 | Well, what did the big feller do? |
41474 | What a nigger gwineter learn outen books? |
41474 | What matter if our feet are torn? |
41474 | What matter if our shoes are worn? |
41474 | Who is you?" |
41474 | Wilt warm the world with peace and love- desire? |
41474 | Would he refuse to invest his stale crumbs in an orchestra of divine instruments and a choir of heavenly voices? |
41474 | _ Stonewall Jackson born, 1824_ January Twenty- Second Wherein, then, lay his strength, and what was the secret of his influence over all this land? |
41474 | is it fancy, That beneath us sighs, As that warm lap receives the largesse of the skies? |
41474 | what were slumber''s drowsy kiss, To golden visions such as this, Through all the wakeful night? |
44989 | ( H) Where is the dough of yesteryear? |
44989 | ( H) Why do those today whom you can work tomorrow? |
44989 | ( H)[ Illustration: FINISH][ Illustration: The Eternal Deception-- Find the Devil?] |
44989 | ( M) As thou hast made thy bed, why lie about it? |
44989 | ( T) Does a virtue cease to be a virtue when embraced by a woman? |
44989 | ( T) If a penny is wise, who says a pound is foolish? |
44989 | ( T) In one''s old coterie may one sport the old pantry and vestry? |
44989 | ( T) What is home without another? |
44989 | ( T)[ Illustration: DEDICATION] DEDICATION, 1908 Reader-- would you a Cynic be? |
44989 | ( T)[ Illustration: What are the Wild Waves saying, Sister?] |
44989 | The burning question-- Will we get the insurance? |
44989 | Vindictive-- Vitriolic? |
44989 | Whose service is perfect freedom??? |
44989 | Whose service is perfect freedom??? |
44989 | Whose service is perfect freedom??? |
44989 | Why marry? |
30124 | Accidentally, or were they put out? |
30124 | And now what''s Hay''s mission? |
30124 | And now what, Captain? |
30124 | Anything been happening at the front, sir? |
30124 | Are n''t you glad we won through? |
30124 | Are you sure, Hemmy? |
30124 | Are you sure? |
30124 | Ask Wells about that, why do n''t you? 30124 Atlantean?" |
30124 | Bob? 30124 But methinks thou art in need of food and sustenance?" |
30124 | But what can they do? |
30124 | But what,he wondered, as he stopped the helicopters,"did he mean by''give a_ last_ handshake''?" |
30124 | But where does this steam come from? 30124 But why did you look that way?" |
30124 | But,put in Lance,"how do the torpedoes fly? |
30124 | But-- but, are you a prisoner? |
30124 | But-- but--he exclaimed,"how the devil could he do that?" |
30124 | But-- how did I do it? |
30124 | But-- what about Hemmy Bowman? |
30124 | Captain? 30124 Captain?" |
30124 | Could they see it coming? |
30124 | Days? 30124 Days?" |
30124 | Did that shock--? |
30124 | Did you have the car wait? |
30124 | Did you know that the model of the Breslau gun had been stolen? |
30124 | Did you see his dead body? |
30124 | Do n''t you think that this is the end of it, Doctor? |
30124 | Do short waves fog glass, Doctor? |
30124 | Do you feel perfectly normal now? |
30124 | Do you recognize the photo? |
30124 | Do you want them to get us with their paralyzing ray? |
30124 | Dost thou realize what would hang upon thy skill? 30124 Enemies?" |
30124 | Everybody with me? |
30124 | Everything right? |
30124 | Fog? |
30124 | God, Keith, what_ is_ it? |
30124 | Got it? |
30124 | Got the depth charge ready, Keith? 30124 Graham, you there?" |
30124 | Have they been moved there recently? |
30124 | Have ye heard? 30124 Heliopolis? |
30124 | Heliopolis? |
30124 | Hemmy? |
30124 | Hero Giles Hudson begs thy pardon,he said,"but methought thou spoke in the language of Sir Henry Hudson, my ancestor?" |
30124 | Home? |
30124 | How are they treating him? |
30124 | How did you get word that you were to be rescued from Atlanta? |
30124 | How do we know that he did n''t? 30124 How do you mean, sir?" |
30124 | How does she know? |
30124 | How high are we? |
30124 | How many of them are there, Mac? 30124 How wilt thou manage thy curious weapon?" |
30124 | How-- how did they wipe you out to- day? |
30124 | How? 30124 Huh?" |
30124 | Hurt, sir? |
30124 | I wonder if he''s still alive? |
30124 | I wonder what deviltry they''re cooking up? |
30124 | I wonder what he''ll hatch up to combat our helmet- lights? 30124 I wonder where they''ve taken Alden?" |
30124 | I would know why the all powerful Wanderer, of whom thou makest so much, did not rescue Princess Altara? |
30124 | I''m not much of an artilleryman, but I''m wondering how you take up the recoil? |
30124 | Impossible? 30124 Is Saranoff alive?" |
30124 | Is he coming to the United States? |
30124 | Is he in the United States? |
30124 | Is that an isolated building? |
30124 | Is there a black lamp at that gun platform? |
30124 | Is there no defence against them? |
30124 | It does seem funny, does n''t it, Wells? |
30124 | It''s obvious, Colonel: how did the Slavs know we were going to raid that comparatively unimportant base of theirs at such and such a time? 30124 Ivan Karuska,"he said slowly and distinctly,"do you hear me?" |
30124 | Ivan Karuska,repeated Dr. Bird,"do you hear me?" |
30124 | Jarmuth? |
30124 | Just why the hell,he muttered,"did I ever join the Navy?" |
30124 | Keith? 30124 Knapp?" |
30124 | Mac, did you say they were our friends? 30124 Markest thou that tree yonder, on the ledge of the valley?" |
30124 | McKegnie, can you hear me? |
30124 | McKegnie?... 30124 Not trying to get out, are you?" |
30124 | Now, what the hell''s this thing for? |
30124 | Oh, God, what''s happened? |
30124 | Oh, Mr. Wells, where are you? |
30124 | On which floor? |
30124 | One hundred leagues in two hours? 30124 Over the world? |
30124 | Powerful, is it not? 30124 So, then, no doubt, he has told you of the law of our country?" |
30124 | So? 30124 Sound happy-- eh?" |
30124 | Surely, but why did n''t Breslau hear it? |
30124 | The Emperor? |
30124 | The battery? |
30124 | The old explorer whose men turned him adrift? 30124 The real business?" |
30124 | Then he whom the dog- born Jereboam captured was thy friend? |
30124 | Then your theory is that some sort of a ray machine was put in operation before the helicopter landed? |
30124 | Then-- but-- you''re not running the_ NX-1_, are you? |
30124 | There or here-- what matter? 30124 They were washed last Friday, but they do look rather dirty, do n''t they? |
30124 | Thinkest thou couldst ride a podoko? |
30124 | Thou art ready, Friend Nelson? |
30124 | Thou seest? |
30124 | Time? 30124 Time?" |
30124 | Understand, Keith? |
30124 | Was there ever an instrument of war that had not its defence? 30124 We saw them at dusk, last evening-- remember? |
30124 | Well? |
30124 | Well? |
30124 | Wells? 30124 Wells? |
30124 | What are they doing? |
30124 | What are they? |
30124 | What can I do? 30124 What caused the row?" |
30124 | What did you say about that prisoner? |
30124 | What do you mean? |
30124 | What do you suppose they''ll try next, Doctor? |
30124 | What does it mean, Doctor? |
30124 | What dost thou propose? |
30124 | What has happened, Carnes? |
30124 | What in hell are you doing up there? |
30124 | What is Jarmuth? |
30124 | What is it, Tommy? 30124 What is it?" |
30124 | What is that? |
30124 | What is the black lamp? |
30124 | What is the idea? |
30124 | What is the thing? |
30124 | What is your name? |
30124 | What madness is this? |
30124 | What sayest thou? 30124 What the devil was that? |
30124 | What the devil? |
30124 | What the devil? |
30124 | What thinkest thou of our retortii? |
30124 | What time do you make it? |
30124 | What was in the bombs? |
30124 | What was it? |
30124 | What was that vitrilene helmet for? |
30124 | What were you going to do after you were rescued from jail? |
30124 | What wouldst thou, oh Heracles? |
30124 | What''s that? |
30124 | What''s the matter, Keith? |
30124 | What''s the matter, old man? |
30124 | What''s this? |
30124 | What''s this? |
30124 | What''s wrong? |
30124 | What? 30124 What?" |
30124 | When? |
30124 | Where are they? |
30124 | Where are you? |
30124 | Where did he get to? |
30124 | Where did you get the formula for radite? |
30124 | Where in hell''s it going? |
30124 | Where is he living in London? |
30124 | Who is the present head of the Young Labor party? |
30124 | Why do n''t you take me with them? 30124 Why?" |
30124 | Will that always be home to you, Tommy? |
30124 | Will you have him brought here at once, please? |
30124 | Will you land? 30124 Wonder if Alden had any better luck?" |
30124 | Wonder what it was? |
30124 | Wot abaht that there Captain Hay, sir? |
30124 | Would it not seem so? |
30124 | Yes.... Keith-- you''re trying to dodge out of the tunnel, are n''t you? |
30124 | Yes? |
30124 | Yes? |
30124 | You do n''t know how much he got through? |
30124 | You know how a sliver of wood is propelled by the ripples of a pond? 30124 You know the working of the beacon?" |
30124 | You mean that the current might melt the wire? |
30124 | You mean--? |
30124 | You say the boats are completely destroyed? |
30124 | You say these bright boys from over the border want to chow six more girls? 30124 You sitting beside an Emperor?" |
30124 | You were on guard here last night? |
30124 | You would-- eh? |
30124 | You''d rather drown? |
30124 | You''re all back on the_ NX-1_, Keith? 30124 You''re going right through that cavern, then, Wells?" |
30124 | You''re going to investigate what lies beyond? |
30124 | You''re sure he''s insane? |
30124 | You''ve located their headquarters? 30124 ***** But surprise? 30124 ***** He turned to Althora to ask,How are they coming? |
30124 | *****"What happened next?" |
30124 | *****"What is the law of Jarmuth?" |
30124 | Accuse him outright of his suspicions? |
30124 | All ready?" |
30124 | Am I right?" |
30124 | And then, in the octopi submarine, had come a soft glow of violet.... Was it a more deadly weapon than the paralyzing ray? |
30124 | And thou"--his heavy, golden eyebrows shot up--"and thou, what dost thou wish?" |
30124 | And with what could America hold them back? |
30124 | Any signs of life from the devil?" |
30124 | Are you all right?" |
30124 | Are you there?" |
30124 | Art thou mad? |
30124 | Bailley, have you still got that goldfish bowl?" |
30124 | Be reasonable, ca n''t you? |
30124 | But ca n''t something be done about wrong numbers? |
30124 | But can they ever destroy the rest of that swarm? |
30124 | But how far, Keith wondered, had that ship preceded her? |
30124 | But how much had he got through on the radiophone before being stopped? |
30124 | But how? |
30124 | But if I can stop this annual tribute, it wo n''t be so bad, will it?" |
30124 | But what if he should pull one and open all the exit ports? |
30124 | But where to? |
30124 | But why does n''t he show up?" |
30124 | But-- but-- Praed--""What happened?" |
30124 | But-- would Hay be there? |
30124 | By the way, you have two more communists here, Denberg and Semensky, have n''t you?" |
30124 | Ca n''t you hear it? |
30124 | Ca n''t you hear me? |
30124 | Can you hear me? |
30124 | Can you hear me?" |
30124 | Cook McKegnie?" |
30124 | Could you tell us what it means?" |
30124 | Do n''t you hear me? |
30124 | Do you get the idea now?" |
30124 | Do you understand?" |
30124 | Dost dare make threats to thy liege lord?" |
30124 | Dost doubt my words, sirrah?" |
30124 | Douglas said swiftly:"Headquarters? |
30124 | During one brief pause the anguished cook found himself groaning aloud:"Oh, Mr. Wells, where are you? |
30124 | Finally Lance snorted and burst out:"Why the hell did you run away, Praed? |
30124 | Following them-- where? |
30124 | For heaven''s sake, McKegnie, where are you?" |
30124 | Gas of some sort?" |
30124 | Get that? |
30124 | Got it?" |
30124 | Had he stumbled upon a remnant of that powerful people whose fabled empire had been drowned ten centuries ago in the cold waves of the Atlantic? |
30124 | Had he told where the rendezvous, was to be? |
30124 | Had the enemy seen Bowman leave? |
30124 | Had the ray struck him down? |
30124 | Hay, or a swooping squadron of Slav planes? |
30124 | He seems to bear a charmed life, does n''t he?" |
30124 | He went by here, did n''t he?" |
30124 | His words were audible to everyone, and they voiced the thought in every brain:"What''re we going to do now?" |
30124 | How about Hill 333?" |
30124 | How darest thou bandy words with us?" |
30124 | How far away is it?" |
30124 | How is it generated?" |
30124 | How many men have you?" |
30124 | How much did the Slavs know? |
30124 | How much had Ranth got through before he stopped him? |
30124 | How was he to know that it had gone straight through? |
30124 | How will they get here?" |
30124 | I guess that''s why he said it, old fellow...."Lance gasped:"You''re sacrificing your life?" |
30124 | I understand that one of the guards escaped the fate which overtook the rest of the persons in the infirmary?" |
30124 | I wonder what kind of devils caught him?" |
30124 | If I am not speaking out of turn, what are you planning to do in the mean time?" |
30124 | If I had something to hold them apart--"You have n''t a piece of steel about five inches long, have you?--or anything to substitute for it? |
30124 | If the thieves came in through the windows, what was their object in cutting that hole through the roof? |
30124 | If you wish to question this man, why not give him the same treatment?" |
30124 | Into the silence Lance whispered:"And that-- that is Hay''s job?" |
30124 | Is it yet time?" |
30124 | Is n''t that so?" |
30124 | Is there any way of artificially stimulating this man''s brain so that we can force the secrets of his subconscious mind from him?" |
30124 | Is there anyone now who can take up the work and bring order and results from this chaos of futility?" |
30124 | Is there anything else?" |
30124 | It that understood?" |
30124 | It was:"Now, what the hell''s this thing for?" |
30124 | Just how much did the Slavs know, then, about the torpedoes? |
30124 | Keith? |
30124 | Look''em over, will you?'' |
30124 | Much better than a correspondence course in''How to Be a Submarine Commander,''eh?" |
30124 | Need I name it?" |
30124 | Now what in hell is all this?" |
30124 | Now, let''s see: what the hell''s this thing for?... |
30124 | Now-- what? |
30124 | Oh, Mr. Wells, where are you? |
30124 | On the other''s nod of affirmation he continued:"What''s your plan?" |
30124 | One of those mound cities? |
30124 | Or, plaintively:"Now, what the hell''s_ this_ thing for?" |
30124 | Praed''s low voice, devoid of all trace of emotion, asked:"What makes you think I was scared, Lance?" |
30124 | Prithee, Wanderer, what be thy name?" |
30124 | Put him under arrest as a spy? |
30124 | Re- broadcast this news to land stations, will you? |
30124 | Says something about his skill as a pilot, does n''t it? |
30124 | Scared stiff?" |
30124 | Shall we build and launch the Great Fleet of the United States, and take upon our own shoulders the burden and responsibility of defense? |
30124 | Shall we make it? |
30124 | Stanesky, eh? |
30124 | That is, to the right-- understand? |
30124 | That would explain why their submarine had been sent through the tunnel.... A voice sounded in his ears:"Keith? |
30124 | The Ice World?" |
30124 | The cook''s stammering voice came back:"Why-- why-- is that you, Mr. Wells? |
30124 | The spy, going to transmit the news he had overheard? |
30124 | The whole crew''s with you? |
30124 | Their breadth of shoulders, the thickness of their chests-- what had these figures to do with their captivity? |
30124 | They''ve still got you prisoner?" |
30124 | They-- they''ve been experimenting on them...."***** Was he, too, Wells wondered, to be experimented on? |
30124 | Thou alone to overcome six of their best warriors? |
30124 | Thou wouldst see one fired?" |
30124 | Told the time and place, and warned the Slavs to look for Hay? |
30124 | Understand?" |
30124 | Understand?" |
30124 | Was Keith refraining from firing his torpedoes because he, Bowman, was on board the enemy boat? |
30124 | Was he doomed to dash up and down between floor and ceiling forever? |
30124 | Was it waiting with a purpose? |
30124 | Was it waiting-- and inviting attack? |
30124 | Was that a shadow?--a nightmare flying bird?--or a plane? |
30124 | Was this the unknown spy? |
30124 | We will wait... and when I am sure that-- Althora-- is-- gone... when there is nothing I can do to help--""Help?" |
30124 | Well?" |
30124 | Wells asked:"What did you hear?" |
30124 | Wells?" |
30124 | Were the Americans dead? |
30124 | What are they doing to you? |
30124 | What can have done it?" |
30124 | What caused it? |
30124 | What could he do now? |
30124 | What have they done to you?" |
30124 | What horror could have ripped them-- all of them-- to driftwood, with the weather perfect? |
30124 | What is this?" |
30124 | What kind of creatures can they be?" |
30124 | What knowest thou of their weapons?" |
30124 | What motivates them?" |
30124 | What now? |
30124 | What now? |
30124 | What was there that Earth could do to meet this overwhelming assault? |
30124 | What would Douglas say to him? |
30124 | What would it do to a man?" |
30124 | What you print there-- only letters praising your magazine to the skies?--or do you occasionally print a brickbat? |
30124 | When do we take off, sir?" |
30124 | Where are you speaking from? |
30124 | Where do you get that captain stuff?" |
30124 | Where is the place located? |
30124 | Who was the other wanderer? |
30124 | Who''s running it? |
30124 | Why not have a page devoted to the pictures and biographies of your writers, and full page illustrations? |
30124 | Why not have a space for good reprints and charge a nickel more? |
30124 | Why was n''t that noise heard?" |
30124 | Why? |
30124 | Why? |
30124 | Why? |
30124 | Wonder what devilment the priests are cooking up?" |
30124 | Wonder what the devil these are?" |
30124 | Would the plates stand it? |
30124 | Would the ray melt through the weakened steel before he could fire? |
30124 | Would they arrive at Cierum in time? |
30124 | Would you kindly oblige me? |
30124 | Yes-- but where? |
30124 | Yet what can we do? |
30124 | You all have hand grenades as well as your rifles?" |
30124 | You have it well surrounded? |
30124 | You know the fishing fleet that was near us yesterday morning?" |
30124 | You say that only one out of a hundred have n''t read reprints[?]. |
30124 | You understand? |
30124 | You will?" |
30124 | You wo n''t let this cancel our rendezvous?" |
30124 | You''re game, are n''t you?" |
30124 | You''ve what? |
30124 | _ Last._ Why did he say that?" |
30124 | _"What? |
30124 | he asked,"--some radio device? |
22495 | A captain? |
22495 | A great tease? |
22495 | And go naked? 22495 And that is, sir?" |
22495 | And what is marriage? |
22495 | And what is the plural of child? |
22495 | And what part is that? |
22495 | And what the dickens do Oi be after wantin''a thrunk? |
22495 | And what''s S.D.? |
22495 | And when was that, pray? |
22495 | And you? |
22495 | But could n''t you get anything to eat on the train? |
22495 | But how about the dew? |
22495 | But suppose I undertake to dig a well? |
22495 | By death or marriage? |
22495 | Ca n''t realize on what? |
22495 | Can I give it to you? |
22495 | Can I go with you, my pretty maid? |
22495 | Can you think of another? |
22495 | Cash a draft? 22495 Did n''t what?" |
22495 | Did n''t you? 22495 Did she give it to you?" |
22495 | Did you have any pale ale? |
22495 | Did you shoot him? |
22495 | Divorce? |
22495 | Do I think so? 22495 Do n''t need what?" |
22495 | Do n''t you think, dear, we had better wait until we get home? |
22495 | Do you really think so? |
22495 | Do you suppose we can squeeze in here? |
22495 | Do you take children''s pictures? |
22495 | Eh? 22495 Everything?" |
22495 | For what reason? |
22495 | Good work, is n''t it? |
22495 | Happily? 22495 Have you never observed a man working on a warm day?" |
22495 | Have you sold it? |
22495 | He never touched her? |
22495 | His business? 22495 Hot air?" |
22495 | How can that be? |
22495 | How did you know it was my sister? |
22495 | How do I strike you? |
22495 | How does she do it? |
22495 | How is business? |
22495 | How much do you charge? |
22495 | How so? |
22495 | How was she looking? |
22495 | How was that? |
22495 | How was that? |
22495 | How will the planting of violets upon my grave prevent them from digging me up? |
22495 | How''s that? |
22495 | How''s that? |
22495 | How? |
22495 | I do n''t know, what does he weigh? |
22495 | I''m not sure, ma''am,replied the careful domestic,"but I think they are in the wash."*****"Have you much room in your new flat?" |
22495 | In what way? |
22495 | Is he a Mormon or a Chicago man? |
22495 | Is his rheumatism done gone? |
22495 | Is that a fact? |
22495 | Is that what you do at home? |
22495 | It''s merely a cuckoo clock, is n''t it? |
22495 | Large or small head? |
22495 | Marriage? |
22495 | May I go with you, my pretty maid? |
22495 | No? |
22495 | No? |
22495 | Of what, dear? |
22495 | Oh, indeed; and may I inquire what they are? |
22495 | Oh, then its all right? |
22495 | Refused again? |
22495 | Star? 22495 Tandem or simultaneously?" |
22495 | That depends,he answered at last"Is my wife in the room?" |
22495 | That''s very fortunate, is n''t it,said his wife innocently,"but how?" |
22495 | Then how is it you do n''t own it? |
22495 | Then what is a Panama woman? |
22495 | Then you did not see her on that occasion? |
22495 | Three aces, jedge, and----"What did Jim do? |
22495 | Vell, what you tink? |
22495 | Was it well discussed? |
22495 | Well, is n''t that what I said? |
22495 | Well, what is he? |
22495 | Well, what sort of a book would you like-- a book of poems, for instance? |
22495 | Well, what''s the charge of the light brigade? |
22495 | Well? |
22495 | What did he draw? |
22495 | What did you bet? |
22495 | What did you have? |
22495 | What do you mean? |
22495 | What does your father do on a right hot day? |
22495 | What grounds? |
22495 | What has he done? |
22495 | What is all right? |
22495 | What is he, a commodore? |
22495 | What is it? |
22495 | What is the cause? |
22495 | What is your father''s business? |
22495 | What kind? |
22495 | What made you think of that? |
22495 | What possible connection is there between the two? |
22495 | What relation? |
22495 | What story did he fall from? |
22495 | What''s that? |
22495 | What''s that? |
22495 | What, a judge? |
22495 | What? |
22495 | What? |
22495 | When was it? |
22495 | When? |
22495 | Where did he get that idea? |
22495 | Where did you learn? |
22495 | Where is your brother? |
22495 | Where''s your father? |
22495 | Where''s your mother? |
22495 | Where? |
22495 | Who took him up? |
22495 | Who''s all write? |
22495 | Who? |
22495 | Why how is that? |
22495 | Why not? |
22495 | Why not? |
22495 | Why should n''t he be proud? |
22495 | Why so? |
22495 | Why so? |
22495 | Why, dear? |
22495 | Why, how does that make any difference? |
22495 | Why,they asked him,"do you have such a large number of court jesters in constant attendance on your royal person?" |
22495 | Why? |
22495 | Why? |
22495 | Why? |
22495 | Will you take it now? |
22495 | Would you bet on it? |
22495 | Yaas, and a good deal better, for one can kiss a miss, when one could n''t kiss a mile, don''cher know? |
22495 | Yes, I''d look well, would n''t I? 22495 Yes, sir; can we write you some insurance?" |
22495 | You mean a lawyer? |
22495 | You swear that this is true? |
22495 | You''re not? |
22495 | ***** A lady one day being in need of some small change called down- stairs to the cook and enquired:"Mary, have you any''coppers''down there?" |
22495 | ***** A lady was looking for her husband and inquired anxiously of a housemaid,"Do you happen to know anything of your master''s whereabouts?" |
22495 | ***** A prominent man called to condone with a lady on the death of her husband, and concluded by saying,"Did he leave you much?" |
22495 | ***** A wag who thought to have a joke at the expense of an Irish provision dealer said,"Can you supply me with a yard of pork?" |
22495 | ***** ALGY--"Charming widow, is n''t she? |
22495 | ***** AMERICAN--"You have noticed, I suppose, that the balance of trade, so far as your country and ours are concerned, is still in our favor?" |
22495 | ***** ASKIT- What is a convenient fall trip for me to take? |
22495 | ***** At a West End hotel one of the party asked:"Have you got any celery, waiter?" |
22495 | ***** Attorney for the Defense-- Have you ever been cross- examined before? |
22495 | ***** BACON-- What''s that thread tied about your little finger for? |
22495 | ***** BIGGS--"I hear the jail was afire this morning?" |
22495 | ***** BOY( with new gun)--"Pa, has a cat got nine lives?" |
22495 | ***** BROWN-- What kind of a cigar is that, old man? |
22495 | ***** Broker--"Don''t you find it easier to shave some men than others?" |
22495 | ***** CALLER-- Wonder if I can see your mother, little boy? |
22495 | ***** CITYMAN-- Do they keep a servant girl? |
22495 | ***** CONDON-- Have you been cured of that last attack of malaria? |
22495 | ***** COURTNEY-- When you proposed to Miss Dexter did you get down on your knees? |
22495 | ***** CUSTOMER-- Why do you call this electric cake? |
22495 | ***** Customer( to the coal dealer):"Have you got any name for those scales of yours?" |
22495 | ***** DAME RUMOR ought frequently to have her named spelled without the e.*****"Where are you working now?" |
22495 | ***** DICK--"Do you think you''ll have much trouble in popping the question?" |
22495 | ***** FANNIE-- Why do people always apply the name of"she"to a city? |
22495 | ***** FIRST COMEDIAN--"Did you score a hit with your new specialty?" |
22495 | ***** FIRST FLY-- Did it ever occur to you the baldheaded men have a keener sense of humor than others? |
22495 | ***** FIRST SENIOR-- Heard about Exsheff? |
22495 | ***** FRANKLIN--"Do you know, I started in life as a barefooted boy?" |
22495 | ***** FRIEND-- Do you permit your wife to have her own way? |
22495 | ***** For years she''d heard her husband sadly say:"Ca n''t we have pies like mother used to bake?" |
22495 | ***** GROCERYMAN--"Pat, do you like apples?" |
22495 | ***** GUARD-- I suppose when you were in the army you often saw a picket fence? |
22495 | ***** GUEST-- What have you got? |
22495 | ***** GUEST--"Look here, waiter, do you call this a spring chicken? |
22495 | ***** HAUGHTY LADY--(who has purchased a stamp)-Must I put it on myself? |
22495 | ***** HE-- Did you ever see anything at so- called bargain sales that was really cheap? |
22495 | ***** HE-- Don''t you think Miss Plainly is the very image of her mother? |
22495 | ***** HE-- How does it happen that none of you women have come forward with a new currency plan? |
22495 | ***** HE-- Then I am to understand that you have given me the mitten, as it were? |
22495 | ***** HE-- You saw some old ruins while in England, I presume? |
22495 | ***** HE--"Didn''t you promise to love, honor and obey me?" |
22495 | ***** HUSBAND-- My dear, how would you like a book for a present? |
22495 | ***** HUSBAND--"Where''s your mistress? |
22495 | ***** He-- Why has he put her picture in his watch? |
22495 | ***** I asked a young lady living on her pa''s farm what they did with all their fruit? |
22495 | ***** IKEY-- Fader, is"imbegunious"undt"inzolvent"der same? |
22495 | ***** ISAACS-- Undt suppose dey did send us a message from Mars, how could dey tell if we got it? |
22495 | ***** If Pearl Street is crooked; Is Union Square? |
22495 | ***** If t- o- u- g- h spells tough, And d- o- u- g- h spells dough, Does s- n- o- u- g- h spell snuff? |
22495 | ***** If the devil lost its tail, where would he go to get another one? |
22495 | ***** Irish foreman, to gang of men in a sewer:"How many men is down in that hole?" |
22495 | ***** JACK--"Are you a suitor for Miss Juliet''s hand?" |
22495 | ***** JIM--"Why do you wear your stocking wrong side outward?" |
22495 | ***** JIMSON-- Now, you would n''t marry me, would you? |
22495 | ***** JOHN-- Say, do you want to get next to a scheme for making money fast? |
22495 | ***** JOHNNY-- What makes you look so tired? |
22495 | ***** Jenks-- Why on earth did you laugh so heartily at that ancient jest of Borem''s? |
22495 | ***** KICKSY-- Wife, can you tell me why I am like a hen? |
22495 | ***** KID-- Did the dogs ever bite you? |
22495 | ***** LADY-- Why do you remove your sword, Lieutenant? |
22495 | ***** LITTLE WILLIE-- Papa, why does the railway company have those cases with the ax and saw in every car? |
22495 | ***** Lawyer:"Have you conscientious scruples against serving as a juror where the penalty is death?" |
22495 | ***** Little Mary, quite contrary, How does your appetite grow? |
22495 | ***** Lovett-- You do n''t believe in divorce, then? |
22495 | ***** MASHINGTON-- What''s the matter with your clock? |
22495 | ***** MAUD-- How do you define love? |
22495 | ***** MAY-- I wonder what the men do at the club? |
22495 | ***** MEDIUM-- Do you believe in spirits? |
22495 | ***** MILLIE--"I wonder what the holes in a porous plaster are for?" |
22495 | ***** MISTRESS( to cook who has fallen down stairs)--I hope that you did not hurt yourself, Mary? |
22495 | ***** MOSES SCHAUMBURG( to his son Jackey)--"How many are twice two, Jackey?" |
22495 | ***** MOSES--"How did you make your money, Ike?" |
22495 | ***** MOTHER--"What did your father say when he saw his broken pipe?" |
22495 | ***** MR. BIXBY-- Have you noticed how much better I rest after a day''s fishing? |
22495 | ***** MRS. SWELLERY-- What is the matter with my husband, doctor? |
22495 | ***** MRS. TILFORD OF SOROSIS--"It must have taken Daniel Webster a long time to compile the dictionary; do n''t you think so?" |
22495 | ***** NEWLYWED-"What do bachelors know about women?" |
22495 | ***** Now comes the question which will make This life a bitter cup.... How many hoopskirts will it take To fill a trolley car up? |
22495 | ***** OLD LADY( at a ball game)--"Why do they call that a fowl? |
22495 | ***** PAT-- Who is being lowered into a well;"Sthop, will ye, Murphy? |
22495 | ***** PETERS--"Are you not sick of hearing everybody sing that popular song?" |
22495 | ***** SHE( approvingly)--You won her hand, then? |
22495 | ***** SHE-- Why do they call it an arm of the sea? |
22495 | ***** SHE--"Are you fond of tea?" |
22495 | ***** SHE--"You say your automobile has been acting strangely all day?" |
22495 | ***** SILLICUS-- Do you think we shall know each other in the hereafter? |
22495 | ***** STRANGER--"Boy, can you direct me to the bank?" |
22495 | ***** STUDENT-- Professor, which is the logical way of reaching a conclusion? |
22495 | ***** SUNDAY SCHOOL TEACHER-- What is meant in the parable by a"house built upon a rock?" |
22495 | ***** She heard the fog- horn blowing,"And what is that?" |
22495 | ***** TEACHER-- Johnny, can you tell me what a section boss is? |
22495 | ***** TEACHER-- Thomas, can you tell me which battle Nelson was killed in? |
22495 | ***** TEACHER-- When does suicide become a crime? |
22495 | ***** THE BARBER-- Did I ever shave you before? |
22495 | ***** THE DOCTOR--"You regard society as merely a machine, do you? |
22495 | ***** THE MAN-- Edison''s a wonder, is n''t he? |
22495 | ***** THE SPINSTER-- How many lodges did you say your husband belonged to? |
22495 | ***** TOMMY-- Pa, did you really mean it when you said you''d spank anyone that broke that vase? |
22495 | ***** TRAMP--"Can''t you give a poor man something to eat? |
22495 | ***** The Governess-- What happened when the man killed the goose that laid the golden egg, Margie? |
22495 | ***** The judge asked an Irish policeman named O''Connell,"When did you last see your sister?" |
22495 | ***** VISITOR-- I suppose you have a great deal of poetry sent into you for publication? |
22495 | ***** WEEKS-- Well, how are things over in Boston? |
22495 | ***** WIFE- Will you see that my grave is kept green, my darling? |
22495 | ***** WIFE--"Got a dollar?" |
22495 | ***** What do you think of Windig? |
22495 | ***** What kind of essence does a young man like when he pops the question? |
22495 | ***** When a couple are about to elope the young man asks,"Does your mother know your route?" |
22495 | ***** Why is a railroad train like a bedbug? |
22495 | ***** YANKEE--"I say, Britisher, can you spell horse?" |
22495 | ***** YEAST-- Did you ever try to dye eggs? |
22495 | *****"And did you never kiss a girl under the mistletoe?" |
22495 | *****"And you really believe that Friday is an unlucky day?" |
22495 | *****"And you really think that a miss is as good as a mile?" |
22495 | *****"Anything new in your neighborhood?" |
22495 | *****"Are any of the colors discernible to the touch?" |
22495 | *****"Are n''t you afraid, dear, you''ll catch cold in the scanty bathing robe?" |
22495 | *****"Are you an amateur photographer?" |
22495 | *****"Are you engaged?" |
22495 | *****"Are you intimate with any of the nobility?" |
22495 | *****"Are you the photographer?" |
22495 | *****"Are your folks well to do?" |
22495 | *****"Betty, why do you sit up at this hour of the night darning your stockings?" |
22495 | *****"Boss, hab you got any ob dem confound cavortic pills?" |
22495 | *****"Can I sell you a nice cheap trunk to- day?" |
22495 | *****"Can you give me a front room on the first floor?" |
22495 | *****"Can you swim, little boy?" |
22495 | *****"Curious, is n''t it?" |
22495 | *****"Dear,"said the physician''s wife,"when can you let me have ten dollars?" |
22495 | *****"Did any of you ever see an elephant''s skin?" |
22495 | *****"Did the fisherman have frog''s legs, Bridget?" |
22495 | *****"Did the minister say anything comforting?" |
22495 | *****"Did you ever catch your husband flirting?" |
22495 | *****"Did you ever consider the case of the boy who stood on the burning deck?" |
22495 | *****"Did you ever hear about the two holes in our back- yard?" |
22495 | *****"Did you go into any of the New York restaurants?" |
22495 | *****"Did you have any trouble with black ants in Ireland, Bridget?" |
22495 | *****"Did you hear about Miss Jones?" |
22495 | *****"Did you hear the story about the peacock?" |
22495 | *****"Did you know that Xanthippe, wife of one of the greatest of ancient philosophers, was a great scold?" |
22495 | *****"Did you shoot anything, Henrick?" |
22495 | *****"Did your sweetheart receive you warmly last night?" |
22495 | *****"Do I bore you?" |
22495 | *****"Do you believe in luck?" |
22495 | *****"Do you believe in transmigration of souls?" |
22495 | *****"Do you go to church to hear the sermon or the music, Maude?" |
22495 | *****"Do you know the nature of an oath, ma''am?" |
22495 | *****"Do you think that as a rule people who attend theaters are superstitious?" |
22495 | *****"Do you think the elevator boy stole your watch?" |
22495 | *****"Do you think the things one eats have a direct effect on one''s disposition?" |
22495 | *****"Doing anything now, Bill?" |
22495 | *****"Have n''t I told you before,"he cried,"to sing out the names of stations clearly and distinctly? |
22495 | *****"Have you ever met my sister, Louisa?" |
22495 | *****"Have you received last month''s gas bill, dear?" |
22495 | *****"He''s quite a star as an after dinner speaker, is n''t he?" |
22495 | *****"Hey, boy, where''s your brother?" |
22495 | *****"How about the lazy man who hurt his eye looking for work?" |
22495 | *****"How are you to- day?" |
22495 | *****"How could you endure talking so long with that ugly old woman with that frightful costume without laughing in her face?" |
22495 | *****"How did that fight between the bridge tenders end?" |
22495 | *****"How did you cure your boy of swearing?" |
22495 | *****"How is Uncle Mose coming on?" |
22495 | *****"How is your house heated?" |
22495 | *****"I got your fare, did n''t I?" |
22495 | *****"I hope they do n''t give my little boy any naughty nicknames in school?" |
22495 | *****"I suppose Barnum went to heaven when he died?" |
22495 | *****"I wonder why blondes are always anxious to be wedded?" |
22495 | *****"If a guest at a restaurant ordered a lobster and ate it, and another guest did the same, what would the latter''s telephone number be?" |
22495 | *****"If you should die, what would you do with your body?" |
22495 | *****"Is a howling dog a sign of death?" |
22495 | *****"Is it raining, girls?" |
22495 | *****"Is the proprietor in?" |
22495 | *****"Is this a fire insurance office?" |
22495 | *****"Is your friend the dentist a society chap?" |
22495 | *****"John, can you tell me the difference between attraction of gravitation and attraction of cohesion?" |
22495 | *****"Kind lady,"remarked the weary wayfarer,"can you oblige me with something to eat?" |
22495 | *****"Let me see,"said the minister, who was filling out the marriage certificate and had forgotten the date,"this is the fifth, is it not?" |
22495 | *****"Ma, what is a Panama man called?" |
22495 | *****"Mike, d''I ever tell ye the story about the dirty window?" |
22495 | *****"Mother, may I go out to wheel?" |
22495 | *****"My dear, what makes you always yawn?" |
22495 | *****"My friend,"said the long- coated old man, solemnly,"have you made preparation for the day of judgment?" |
22495 | *****"Now, why,"remarked the little dog, in speaking to the tree,"Would you say that the heart of you is like the tail of me?" |
22495 | *****"Pa, what branches did you take when you went to school?" |
22495 | *****"Pa, what does Sioux Falls, S.D., mean?" |
22495 | *****"Pa,"said little Willie, who had been reading a treatise on phrenology,"what is a bump of destructiveness?" |
22495 | *****"Pat,"said one Catholic friend to another,"how would you like to be buried in a Protestant graveyard?" |
22495 | *****"Paw, can an honest man play poker?" |
22495 | *****"Say Dad, what is an expert accountant?" |
22495 | *****"Say, did you ever feel as if you wanted to''hit the pipe?''" |
22495 | *****"Say, pop, do people take snuff nowadays?" |
22495 | *****"So Maude is happily married?" |
22495 | *****"So her second husband is a tenor?" |
22495 | *****"So you were bound and gagged by bandits while in Italy, were you?" |
22495 | *****"That was a pretty good dog story, was n''t it?" |
22495 | *****"Well, Pat, and how is that bull- pup of yours doing?" |
22495 | *****"Well, have you anything to say?" |
22495 | *****"Were you attached to the place?" |
22495 | *****"What are you going to do with your boy?" |
22495 | *****"What are you writing such a big hand for, Pat?" |
22495 | *****"What became of that girl you made love to in the hammock?" |
22495 | *****"What did de lady do when yer asked her for an old collar?" |
22495 | *****"What did you wear last night?" |
22495 | *****"What do you mean by referring to Miss Elderly as a pall- bearer?" |
22495 | *****"What do you think of the statement that there are three hundred haunted houses in New York?" |
22495 | *****"What have you got to say for yourself?" |
22495 | *****"What have you here?" |
22495 | *****"What in the world shall I do with the baby, John? |
22495 | *****"What is a swell affair, Jim?" |
22495 | *****"What is love?" |
22495 | *****"What is the best way to raise cabbage?" |
22495 | *****"What is the difference between the admission to a dime museum and the admission to Sing Sing?" |
22495 | *****"What is the meaning of the saying that a man shall earn his bread in the sweat of his brow?" |
22495 | *****"What is the plural of man, Johnny?" |
22495 | *****"What is the secret of success?" |
22495 | *****"What is there about betting on horse- races that is so bad for the health?" |
22495 | *****"What is your idea of happiness?" |
22495 | *****"What kind of hen lays the longest?" |
22495 | *****"What makes so much froth in a glass of beer, pa?" |
22495 | *****"What makes your sister so stout now, she used to be very thin?" |
22495 | *****"What man in the army wore the biggest hat?" |
22495 | *****"What must a man be that he shall be buried with military honors?" |
22495 | *****"What relation is a door- step to a door- mat?" |
22495 | *****"What sort of labor is best paid in this country?" |
22495 | *****"What was the subject of your debate this evening?" |
22495 | *****"What''s the matter here?" |
22495 | *****"What''s the matter here?" |
22495 | *****"What''s the matter with Smith?" |
22495 | *****"What''s the matter, John? |
22495 | *****"When was money first invented?" |
22495 | *****"When were walking- sticks first invented?" |
22495 | *****"Where are you going, my pretty maid?" |
22495 | *****"Where are you going, my pretty maid?" |
22495 | *****"Where did you get that hair on your coat?" |
22495 | *****"Why are pugilists like chickens?" |
22495 | *****"Why are you sad, Bill?" |
22495 | *****"Why do all bank cashiers run to Canada?" |
22495 | *****"Why do n''t you demand$ 50,000 instead of$ 5,000?" |
22495 | *****"Why do they make those Oriental pipes with bowls as big as water pitchers?" |
22495 | *****"Why do you call your dog hardware?" |
22495 | *****"Why does a donkey eat thistles?" |
22495 | *****"Why is Miss B---- wearing black?" |
22495 | *****"Why is a kiss like the three graces?" |
22495 | *****"Why should a young man never raise his straw hat to a lady?" |
22495 | *****"Why so glum, Blumly? |
22495 | *****"Will the coming man use both arms?" |
22495 | *****"Would you,"said the reporter who gets novel interviews,"tell me what book helped you most in life?" |
22495 | *****"Yes, he''s got a flying- machine ready for a trial now and he''s trying hard not to be proud?" |
22495 | *****"You are absolutely certain about your statement?" |
22495 | *****"You have been losing flesh lately, have n''t you?" |
22495 | *****"You never bought a gold brick, did you?" |
22495 | *****"You own your own house, do n''t you?" |
22495 | *****"You say his wife''s a brunette? |
22495 | *****"You want a divorce from your wife, do you?" |
22495 | *****"You were thrown out?" |
22495 | *****"Young man, do n''t you know you ought to lay something by for a rainy day?" |
22495 | *****--"That Jersey murderer was clever to get off as he did, was n''t he?" |
22495 | --"What was his plea-- insanity?" |
22495 | --That is terrible, how did it happen? |
22495 | --_Life._***** Tom-- What''s that? |
22495 | --_Puck._*****"Why did you insist on only$ 99,000 a year as your salary?" |
22495 | APPLICANT-- Will I have a chance to rise? |
22495 | And why do they call you that?" |
22495 | Anything gone wrong?" |
22495 | B.--"You wo n''t want that new novel now that you have the new baby, will you?" |
22495 | B.--Have you seen the new dance called"The Automobile?" |
22495 | B.--No; sort of breakdown, I suppose? |
22495 | BOARDER--(musingly)--But what do you do with the hash that''s left over? |
22495 | Barber--"Yes; do n''t you?" |
22495 | Because I am"so sweet?" |
22495 | Boy or girl?" |
22495 | But as soon as one leaves they engage another.--_Philadelphia Press._***** If a woman would change her sex, what would her religion be? |
22495 | But got up with a happy smile, And to the young man said:"Please, sir, How many laps are to the mile?" |
22495 | Ca n''t they get nothing to take it off?" |
22495 | Clara-- What did she do? |
22495 | Comedy taken his departure yet? |
22495 | DICK-- What for? |
22495 | Did n''t he start the races? |
22495 | Did you win? |
22495 | Do n''t four pecks make a bushel?" |
22495 | Do n''t the good book tell us that Noah came forth? |
22495 | Do n''t you expect her father to kick you out?" |
22495 | Do n''t you think that was a good deal?" |
22495 | Do you hear?" |
22495 | Do you really do that?" |
22495 | Do you want them plain or coated?" |
22495 | ED--"You do n''t mean it? |
22495 | ENGLISHMAN--"''Orse? |
22495 | Ever been to Cork?" |
22495 | GENT-- What dogs? |
22495 | GRUFF HUSBAND-- You did, eh? |
22495 | Gimlet?'' |
22495 | HAROLD-- What was that you wrote to her the last time? |
22495 | HE-- And is this all? |
22495 | HE-- Run down eh? |
22495 | HUSBAND--"Where''s the last dollar I gave you?" |
22495 | Haggerty?" |
22495 | Has n''t she been speaker of the house for the last fifteen years?" |
22495 | Have n''t you ever seen him?" |
22495 | Have they named any new pie"Aristotle"yet? |
22495 | He appeared to have only one arm; is that all he has?" |
22495 | He died by inches, then?" |
22495 | He went down to the paddock, called out the jockey who had ridden him and said:"In hivin''s name, young man, phwat delayed you?" |
22495 | He-- Did you look among the Vs, dear? |
22495 | How about the industrious safe breaker doing time for making money?" |
22495 | How can you stand it?" |
22495 | How much?" |
22495 | ISAAC ISAACS-- Vy? |
22495 | Innocent--"Shall I leave out the swear words, mother?" |
22495 | Is it true?" |
22495 | Is n''t that high pay?" |
22495 | Is she engaged? |
22495 | Is she engaged?" |
22495 | Is there anything you can match? |
22495 | JONES-- What''s that? |
22495 | Jenks-- in self- defence? |
22495 | LITTLE BOY-- Engaged? |
22495 | Lawyer:"What, is your objection?" |
22495 | Lovett-- What has that to do with it? |
22495 | MANAGER-- Indeed; What now? |
22495 | MAUD--"What kind is that?" |
22495 | MAY--"Perfume? |
22495 | MISS SEARS-- Most certainly not; but why do you ask such a question? |
22495 | MOSES--"Vatt, not bedding?" |
22495 | MRS. CAMERON( spitefully)--"Yes, so Justin tells me, but he sometimes indulges too much, does n''t he?" |
22495 | MRS. KICKSY-- No, dear, why is it? |
22495 | MURPHY-- Still letting him down,"Phat for?" |
22495 | Mrs. Casey--"An''phwy?" |
22495 | Mrs. Casey--"Phwat did he say?" |
22495 | Now, who''s out that dollar? |
22495 | OLD M.D.--What do you mean? |
22495 | Or, simply snow? |
22495 | Pat-- What did he die of? |
22495 | Polly want a cracker?" |
22495 | SECOND COMEDIAN--"Did I? |
22495 | SECOND DOCTOR-- What was it, please? |
22495 | SHE--"And what are you putting the oil on it for?" |
22495 | SHE--"How do you make that out?" |
22495 | SHE: Why? |
22495 | SMITH--"Did he have a rough voyage?" |
22495 | SMITH--"You do n''t say so? |
22495 | STRANGER-- How can you tell? |
22495 | See that fat woman with the red hat over there?" |
22495 | She''s rather stout, is n''t she?" |
22495 | Soft? |
22495 | TILFORD--"Daniel? |
22495 | TIRPIE-- Why should n''t he? |
22495 | TOMMY--"He is; but what is the matter with Clara? |
22495 | The wife exclaimed, her temper gone,"Is home so dull and dreary?" |
22495 | WIFE-- Why? |
22495 | WIFE--"Where in the world can you buy them?" |
22495 | WIFE--"Who put such nonsense into your head?" |
22495 | What am I? |
22495 | What are you doing?" |
22495 | What book? |
22495 | What did he hit?" |
22495 | What do you mean? |
22495 | What do you suppose he weighs?" |
22495 | What draft?" |
22495 | What is he?" |
22495 | What is he?" |
22495 | What is it?" |
22495 | What more do you want-- a pair of socks? |
22495 | What part of the machinery do you consider me, for instance?" |
22495 | What was it? |
22495 | What''s his name?" |
22495 | What''s the answer? |
22495 | What''s the matter with him? |
22495 | What''s up?" |
22495 | What?" |
22495 | Whatcher givin''us? |
22495 | When was it?" |
22495 | Where did he find it?" |
22495 | Where did you fall?" |
22495 | Where, where is your telephone?" |
22495 | Which one did the clock strike?" |
22495 | Who is conferring?" |
22495 | Why did n''t they close up Adam? |
22495 | Why do n''t you call him a liar?" |
22495 | Why do you ask?" |
22495 | Why do you ask?" |
22495 | Why is it? |
22495 | Why is suicide a crime?" |
22495 | Why the deuce did n''t you stay there? |
22495 | Why, how is that? |
22495 | Why? |
22495 | Why?" |
22495 | Wo n''t even death stop that man''s lying?" |
22495 | Woman-"Where was you shot?" |
22495 | You do n''t like them, do you?" |
22495 | You here again? |
22495 | You mean Noah, do n''t you?" |
22495 | a wild one?" |
22495 | are you in this line, too?" |
22495 | asked the garrulous person;"regular comic- opera bandits, eh?" |
22495 | did n''t me ould mother die av apple plexy?" |
22495 | interrupted her husband;"is that so? |
22495 | said mother, sharply;"do n''t you know it''s 12 o''clock?" |
22495 | snorted the man who had been up against it,"you mean''plucking,''do n''t you?" |
22495 | waiter, where is that ox- tail soup?" |
43935 | Custom exacts, and who denies her sway? |
43935 | Do? |
43935 | Then why do n''t you put the trunks in the baggage car? |
43935 | What could I do or say? |
43935 | What shall we do with it? |
43935 | What''s to be done now? |
43935 | Who owns 57,467? |
43935 | And who shall say how many hearts were lightened, and spirits cheered, by the good genius of mirth that presided there? |
43935 | Dabchick_, in"The Happiest Day of My Life"? |
43935 | Did you never see the picture of we three?" |
43935 | How can we, in this allotted space, deal justly with our crowding memories? |
43935 | How depict him in"Turning the Tables"? |
43935 | How do we know how many years of thoughtful application the comedian''s masterpieces expressed? |
43935 | How many readers and lovers of Dickens thronged the theatre in the old days to witness that wonderful reproduction? |
43935 | How shall we describe to those who were born too late to witness them, these famous performances of the great comedian? |
43935 | Now am I not a brave old papa to carry a heart disease and a nervous cough through such scenes? |
43935 | The scene of the carousal wherein_ Sir Toby_ and_ Aguecheek_ are discovered; the arrival of the Clown with his"How, now, my hearts? |
43935 | Was there ever such a resemblance?''" |
43935 | What can we do but pillow that fair head And let the spring- time write her epitaph? |
43935 | What shall we say of_ Captain Cuttle_? |
43935 | Who does not remember Brougham and the late Charles Walcot in their respective parts of_ Powhattan_ and_ Captain Smith_? |
43935 | You remember how warm it was on Friday? |
43935 | and how many to whom Dickens was but a name were led by the impersonation to study the pages of the great novelist? |
43935 | and will not Sothern and Raymond appeal to a future generation as_ Dundreary_ of the glaring eye, and_ Sellers_ of the uplifted arm? |
43935 | how d''ye do, Doubledot?" |
43935 | laugh at Windsor, where, as tradition has it, he played before the king at this stage of his career? |
43935 | my darling children-- what is fame? |
43935 | my precious ones, did n''t that brandy bottle come in well in that scene? |
43935 | or as_ Megrim_, in"Blue Devils,"and ever so many more? |
43935 | or in"That Blessed Baby"? |
43935 | or in"The Siamese Twins"? |
46222 | Where did you come from? |
46222 | ***** Have you any original fan material you would like us to print? |
46222 | 5. Who wrote"Dr. Hackensaw''s Secrets"? |
46222 | But how is he to go about accumulating a good, worthy collection? |
46222 | In what stories did Tom Jenkins appear? |
46222 | Plagiarism? |
46222 | Simple, is n''t it? |
46222 | The best answer to"Why do you read fantasy fiction?" |
46222 | What author writes mostly of Central and South America? |
46222 | What story explained the fairy myth scientifically? |
46222 | What was Dr. Keller''s first story? |
44518 | And why, fool,said the man of the house,"do not you answer at first, when people ask you who is there? |
44518 | Dog of a humpback, are you there again? |
44518 | Will you have half? |
44518 | --"And my poor arm, you have not forgot that?" |
44518 | --"No more Frenchmen, Brandt, though we beat them sometimes, eh?" |
44518 | --"What will you do with me then?" |
44518 | --"What''s that?" |
44518 | As Backbac went out of the house, three blind men, his companions, were going by, knew him by his voice, and asked him what was the matter? |
44518 | Backbac made no answer, and knocked a second time: the master of the house asked again and again,"who is there?" |
44518 | Do you imagine that I run such a hazard of falling by the hand of my adversary?'' |
44518 | Eat, I pray you; will you have some more sawce to your leek? |
44518 | Monsieur le Baron, shall I help you to a plate of this soup?" |
44518 | One day he knocked thus, and the master of the house, who was alone, cried,"who is there?" |
44518 | Sleep when he wakes? |
44518 | The doctor, astonished, asked him how he had been able to discover this? |
44518 | The judge, perceiving that he looked upon him with his eyes open, was much surprised, and said to him,"rogue, what is the meaning of this miracle?" |
44518 | They then asked for quarter, but Brandt''s only reply was,"Will you take the half of your money?" |
44518 | Tom observing his emotion, eyed him with a frown of indignation, saying,''You an''t afraid, are you?'' |
44518 | When they reached the chamber, the man let go his hand, and sitting down, asked him again what he wanted? |
44518 | Why should a man, whose blood is warm within, Sit like his grandsire, cut in alabaster? |
44518 | Will you be so good, scald knave, as eat it? |
44518 | _ A Scene from Shakspeare.__ Enter Fluellen and Gower.__ Gow._ Nay, that''s right: but why wear you your leek to day? |
44518 | _ Pist._ Must I bite? |
44518 | am I to do nothing but carry about this humpback?" |
44518 | and creep into the jaundice By being peevish?" |
44518 | art thou bedlam? |
44518 | but to no purpose, no one answered; upon which he came down, opened the door, and asked the man what he wanted? |
44518 | d''ye take me to be a savage beast?'' |
44518 | dost thou thirst, base Trojan, to have me fold up Parca''s fatal web? |
44518 | gemmen,"says the merry- andrew,"where are you? |
44518 | replied the challenger, stammering with fear,''what should I be afraid of? |
44518 | replied the other,''d''ye think he thirsts after my blood?'' |
44518 | the worst he can do is to''take my life, and then he''ll be answerable both to God and man for the murder: do n''t you think he will?'' |
44518 | what d''ye mean? |
44518 | why do you give any body the trouble to come and open the door when they speak to you?" |
39236 | And see not ye that bonny road, That winds about the fernie brae? 39236 And see ye not that braid braid road, That lies across that lily leven? |
39236 | Dost fear? 39236 Dost fear? |
39236 | Dost thou fear? |
39236 | Is this thy mane, my fearless Surtur, That streams against my breast? 39236 My thoughts came back; where was I? |
39236 | O William, why this savage haste? 39236 O father, my father, and did you not hear The Erl- King whisper so loud in my ear?" |
39236 | O father, my father, and saw you not plain, The Erl- King''s pale daughter glide past thro''the rain? |
39236 | O see ye not yon narrow road, So thick beset with thorns and briers? 39236 O wilt thou go with me, thou loveliest boy? |
39236 | What yonder rings? 39236 Whither bound?" |
39236 | Why should I pray to ruthless Heaven, Since my loved William''s slain? 39236 ''Tis something, nay''tis much-- but then, Have you yourself what''s best for men? 39236 --No room for me?" |
39236 | --"O mother, mother, what is bliss? |
39236 | --"O mother, mother, what is bliss? |
39236 | And ask ye what means the daring race? |
39236 | And ask ye what means the daring race? |
39236 | And ask ye what means the daring race? |
39236 | And ask ye what means their daring race? |
39236 | And well the dead can ride; Does faithful Helen fear for them?" |
39236 | And what are these to thine, or thee, That thou should''st either pause or flee? |
39236 | And where thy bridal bed?" |
39236 | Are those the Nornes that beckon onward To seats at Odin''s board, Where nightly by the hands of heroes The foaming mead is poured? |
39236 | Are you-- poor, sick, old ere your time-- Nearer one whit your own sublime Than we who never have turned a rhyme? |
39236 | Away went Gilpin,--who but he? |
39236 | But a fire flashed from his eye,''twixt their thought and their reply,--_ Toll slowly._"Have ye so much time to waste? |
39236 | But who that fought in the big war Such dread sights have not seen? |
39236 | Did you know Briggs of Tuolumne?-- Busted hisself in White Pine, and blew out his brains down in''Frisco? |
39236 | Fail I alone, in words and deeds? |
39236 | Fearest thou?" |
39236 | Hast thought on me, my fair?" |
39236 | How, Helen, dost thou fare? |
39236 | I sink back shuddering from the quest-- Earth being so good, would heaven seem best? |
39236 | I''ve better counsellors; what counsel they? |
39236 | Is it the wind those branches stirs? |
39236 | Is thar, old gal,--Chiquita, my darling, my beauty? |
39236 | Is there none will ride to win me, to win me for his bride, The lady Kunigunde of Kynast? |
39236 | Is this thy neck, that curve of moonlight, Which Helva''s hand caressed? |
39236 | Know the old ford on the Fork, that nearly got Flanigan''s leaders? |
39236 | Might she have loved me? |
39236 | O art thou false or dead?" |
39236 | O mother, what is bale? |
39236 | O mother, what is bale? |
39236 | O, who rides by night thro''the woodland so wild? |
39236 | She stood upon her towers, she looked upon the land, The lady Kunigunde of Kynast: I''m all alone at home here, will no one seek my hand? |
39236 | Should he sack a town, or rob the mail, Or on the wide seas a pirate sail? |
39236 | The bell strikes twelve-- dark, dismal hour? |
39236 | The calender, amazed to see His neighbor in such trim, Laid down his pipe, flew to the gate, And thus accosted him:"What news? |
39236 | The first that the general saw were the groups Of stragglers, and then the retreating troops, What was done? |
39236 | The hour is past, the Giaour is gone; And did he fly or fall alone? |
39236 | The steeds rush on in plunging pride; But where are they the reins to guide? |
39236 | This foot once planted on the goal, This glory- garland round my soul, Could I descry such? |
39236 | Up came the reserves to the mellay infernal, Asking where to go in,--through the clearing or pine? |
39236 | Wakest thou, or sleepest? |
39236 | Was time too short? |
39236 | Were we saved? |
39236 | What act proved all its thought had been? |
39236 | What does it all mean, poet? |
39236 | What hand and brain went ever paired? |
39236 | What heart alike conceived and dared? |
39236 | What is it that beams in the bright sunshine, And echoes yet nearer and nearer? |
39236 | What need to strive with a life awry? |
39236 | What sport can earth, or sea, or sky, To match the princely chase, afford?" |
39236 | What time had passed Above our bowed heads, we pent, pinioned there By awe and nameless horror, who shall tell? |
39236 | What was it, that passed like an ominous breath-- Like a shiver of fear, or a touch of death? |
39236 | What was it? |
39236 | What will but felt the fleshly screen? |
39236 | What yonder swings And creaks''mid whistling rain?" |
39236 | Whence come they? |
39236 | Where had I been now if the worst befell? |
39236 | Whereat he stared, replying, half- amazed,"You would not let your little finger ache For such as_ these_?" |
39236 | Wherefore is it thus? |
39236 | Who knows but the world may end to- night? |
39236 | Who knows what''s fit for us? |
39236 | Who thundering comes on blackest steed, With slackened bit and hoof of speed? |
39236 | Who? |
39236 | Why does the course Of the mill- stream widen? |
39236 | Why roars in the valley the raging fight, Where swords clash red and gory? |
39236 | Why shrieks the owlet gray?" |
39236 | Why start the listeners? |
39236 | Why, all men strive and who succeeds? |
39236 | Will nobody answer those women who cry As the awful warnings thunder by? |
39236 | Will nobody speak? |
39236 | Without my William what were heaven, Or with him what were hell?" |
39236 | Would ye b''lieve it? |
39236 | You acquiesce and shall I repine? |
39236 | a ditch!--Shall we pause? |
39236 | and would you men should reck that I dared more for love''s sake As a bride than as a spouse? |
39236 | and-- What did you say!--Oh, the nevey? |
39236 | dost fear? |
39236 | dost fear? |
39236 | he says;"My boy, upon what dost thou fearfully gaze?" |
39236 | just as well She might have hated,--who can tell? |
39236 | laughest thou, or weepest? |
39236 | or did she forget That Fearnaught stood in the stables yet? |
39236 | she faintly said;"But why so stern and cold? |
39236 | the Rangers?" |
39236 | was it the twitter of frightened bird, Or was it the challenge of sentry she heard? |
39236 | what atones? |
39236 | what news? |
39236 | what to do? |
39236 | what was that, like a human shriek From the winding valley? |
39236 | what yonder sings? |
39236 | your tidings tell; Tell me you must and shall.-- Say why bareheaded you are come, Or why you come at all?" |
46534 | How many could you answer without looking them up? |
46534 | So, Amazing is trying to get rid of the word"scientifiction"that Gernsback coined, eh?... |
46534 | Why not be one of us? |
46339 | Why do I read fantasy fiction? 46339 You see?" |
46339 | ( How did that pun get into this column?)... |
46339 | After all, both science fiction and weird tales are fantastic, are n''t they? |
46339 | Ca n''t you get along without him? |
46339 | Do you want a contents page, fans, or would you rather have the space used for some interesting article? |
46339 | Here is his answer to"Why do you read fantasy fiction?" |
46339 | How about the N R A?) |
46339 | Is n''t it bad enough to find his letters appearing in all of the other magazines without having to endure more of him in''The Fantasy Fan?'' |
46339 | Like Chesterfields, huh? |
46339 | Must you be so literal, physical, in your interpretation of imaginative literature? |
46339 | The question is still unsatisfactorily: WHO is Anthony Gilmore???... |
46339 | The question is still unsatisfactorily: WHO is Anthony Gilmore???... |
46339 | The question is still unsatisfactorily: WHO is Anthony Gilmore???... |
46339 | Z is for Zagat-- whom else could it be? |
28684 | A boy? 28684 A girl, is it?" |
28684 | Ah, Posson Jone'', is that something to cry, because a man get sometime a litt''bit intoxicate? 28684 Am I a little miss? |
28684 | And have you not the same resources? |
28684 | And what necessity have you to dream of the future? |
28684 | And why,replied the good old woman,"laugh at faith, which is the first of all virtues? |
28684 | And you got the pass? |
28684 | And you think that was growin''out of the holy- water? |
28684 | Are these Afghan manners, Effendim? |
28684 | Are you a sponge, Don Frederico, so to like to receive all the water which falls from heaven? |
28684 | Bless me, is it so late? |
28684 | Brother Gabriel,interrupted Dolores,"why will you not taste my potatoes?" |
28684 | Brother Gabriel,said Maria,"did you not speak to me of a pain in your eyes? |
28684 | But may not even that,said Cecilia,"by so much study become labor?" |
28684 | Colossus, will you do ez I tell you, or shell I hev''to strike you, saw? |
28684 | Do you hear the man? |
28684 | Do you know,said a young man seated near to Stein,"what is the lesson Montés gives to his scholars? |
28684 | Do you not know the saying,she replied laughing,"''He who has children at his side will never die of indigestion,''Don Frederico? |
28684 | Does all happiness, then, depend upon sight of buildings? |
28684 | Don Frederico, do you comprehend what he said and believes as an article of faith? 28684 Dost fear? |
28684 | Dost fear? 28684 Have they caught a real live rat?" |
28684 | Have you been long in town, ma''am? |
28684 | He in the homespun? |
28684 | He knows it? |
28684 | How d''dyou know my name was Jones? |
28684 | How''s the poor girl now? |
28684 | I? 28684 If I''m designed yon lordling''s slave, By Nature''s law designed, Why was an independent wish E''er planted in my mind? |
28684 | Is he as good as you, Jools? |
28684 | Is it aisy broke they are, Grannie? |
28684 | Is it for that they are sold? |
28684 | Is that so? |
28684 | Jules who? |
28684 | Lord, Polly,said the eldest,"suppose we were to take a turn in the dark walks?" |
28684 | Mr.--Mr.--sir-- I-- will you_ please_ put your head out of the window so that I can speak to you? |
28684 | My lord Duke,he said, with an air full of sweetness and of conviction,"is it possible that this diverts you?" |
28684 | My men,he said, raising his voice so that all could hear,"can any of you tell me who last saw Fergus Derrick?" |
28684 | Never visite? |
28684 | Never w''at? |
28684 | No room for me? |
28684 | O William, why this savage haste? 28684 O mother, mother, what is bliss? |
28684 | O mother, mother, what is bliss? 28684 Perhaps, then, you are only fond of singing?" |
28684 | Pho,said he:"if those who are proper judges think it right that it should be known, why should you trouble yourself about it? |
28684 | Sir? |
28684 | The swallows? |
28684 | There is to be a bull- fight? 28684 This is not your first winter?" |
28684 | This must have been a fine treat for you, Miss,said Mr. Branghton;"why, I suppose you was never so happy in all your life before?" |
28684 | To who is he speak--? |
28684 | True? |
28684 | W''at you lookin''? |
28684 | W''at? |
28684 | Well, but did she not pay your toils? 28684 Well, den, w''at I shall do wid_ it_?" |
28684 | Well, you know,said Jones--"where''s Colossus? |
28684 | What are you doing outside in weather like this? 28684 What is the matter?" |
28684 | What will you do with them? |
28684 | What yonder rings, what yonder sings? 28684 What''s that you say, madam?" |
28684 | What, have you talked yourself out of breath? |
28684 | What? |
28684 | Whence did he learn it? |
28684 | Where? |
28684 | Who is hurt? |
28684 | Who knows it then? |
28684 | Who speaks of traveling in the middle of December? |
28684 | Who''s goin''to throw me? 28684 Why should I pray to ruthless Heaven, Since my loved William''s slain? |
28684 | Will the morrow make us the more love to- day? 28684 Will you do me the favor to repeat it?" |
28684 | Will you? |
28684 | You do not eat, Dolores? |
28684 | You only, then, like loud voices, and great powers? |
28684 | You''re bound to win? |
28684 | Young stranger, whither wanderest thou? |
28684 | _ Mais_, w''at de matter, Posson Jone''? |
28684 | _ Mais_, what could make it else? 28684 _ Miché?_""You know w''at I goin''do wid dis money?" |
28684 | _ Miché?_"You know w''at I goin''do wid dis money? |
28684 | ''It''ll be all joy soon,''you were saying, and have n''t we the child to show for it? |
28684 | 3. Who were Mr. Staple, Goodwin, Mr. Brooks, Villam, Mrs. Bunkin,"old Nobs,""cast- iron head,"young Bantam? |
28684 | 30. Who beside Mr. Pickwick is recorded to have worn gaiters? |
28684 | Ah, tell me, my soul, must I perish By pangs which a smile would dispel? |
28684 | Ah, where is Weinsberg, sir, I pray? |
28684 | And as he went down deeper he said, Grave, where is thy victory? |
28684 | And if he did, could he know what he was doing? |
28684 | And must thy lyre, so long divine, Degenerate into hands like mine? |
28684 | And she, proud Austria''s mournful flower, Thy still imperial bride, How bears her breast the torturing hour? |
28684 | And what is there better you could substitute in its place?" |
28684 | And what other bird- lover has such charming fancies about birds, in whom he finds a hundred human significances? |
28684 | And where are they? |
28684 | And where away lies Arcady, And how long yet may the journey be? |
28684 | And where thy bridal bed?" |
28684 | And wherefore slaughtered? |
28684 | And whose be the sheep that feed upon them? |
28684 | And yet our fathers deemed it two: Nor am I confident they erred;-- Are you? |
28684 | Approach, thou craven crouching slave: Say, is not this Thermopylæ? |
28684 | Are honor, virtue, conscience, all exiled? |
28684 | Are na we, mates?" |
28684 | Are ye like those within the human breast? |
28684 | Are you fond of public places, ma''am?" |
28684 | Art thou a monstrous shadow which my madness Has formed in the idle air? |
28684 | As_ Echo_ to the painter in_ Ausonius_,_ vane_,_ quid affectas_,& c.--foolish fellow, what wilt? |
28684 | At first his mind is troubled, he doth not attend what is said, if you tell him a tale, he cries at last, What said you? |
28684 | Began the reverend sage;"Does thirst of wealth thy step constrain, Or youthful pleasure''s rage? |
28684 | But can this be done? |
28684 | But how may he find Arcady Who hath nor youth nor melody? |
28684 | But how shall I do who can not sing? |
28684 | But was it not droll,"said she,"that I should recommend it to Dr. Burney? |
28684 | But when Ariovistus saw them before him in his camp, he cried out in the presence of his army,"Why were they come to him? |
28684 | But where''s the ould man at all? |
28684 | But will the North agree to this? |
28684 | By their right arms the conquest must be wrought? |
28684 | CLOTALDO-- Ay? |
28684 | CLOTALDO-- Nay, you yourself Know best how lately you awoke from that You know you went to sleep on.-- Why, have you never dreamt the like before? |
28684 | Can he smile on such deeds as his children have done? |
28684 | Can it be That all that arduous wooing not atones For Saturday shortness of trade dollars three? |
28684 | Can this with faded pinion soar From rose to tulip as before? |
28684 | Cayetano?" |
28684 | Christians war against Christ''s shrine: Must its lot be like to thine? |
28684 | Colossus and this boy can go to the kitchen.--Now, Colossus, what_ air_ you a- beckonin''at me faw?" |
28684 | DEMON-- But how Canst thou defend thyself from that or me, If my power drags thee onward? |
28684 | Did he mean to volunteer-- this young whipper- snapper of a parson? |
28684 | Do I err In deeming such inhabit many a spot? |
28684 | Do n''t you find it so, ma''am?" |
28684 | Do n''t you think so, ma''am?" |
28684 | Do you deny also that the lizard is the enemy of the woman, and the friend of man? |
28684 | Do you forget that in the very last year you stood on the precipice of general bankruptcy? |
28684 | Does any of you think that England, so wasted, would, under such a nursing attendance, so rapidly and cheaply recover? |
28684 | FABIO-- If you listened, why not so? |
28684 | FABIO-- Then avow-- FREDERICK-- What? |
28684 | FABIO-- Then you never loved this woman At one time? |
28684 | FREDERICK-- Has Flerida questioned you Aught about my love? |
28684 | FREDERICK-- In two places How could one man love? |
28684 | FREDERICK-- Said she something, then, about me? |
28684 | FREDERICK-- Think you I have heard your folly? |
28684 | Fear''st thou?" |
28684 | For on what principles does it stand? |
28684 | Gone-- glimmering through the dream of things that were: First in the race that led to Glory''s goal, They won, and passed away-- is this the whole? |
28684 | HYMN TO JUPITER At Jove''s high festival, what song of praise Shall we his suppliant adorers sing? |
28684 | Has he seen it? |
28684 | Hast thou ne''er seen rough pointsmen spy Some simple English phrase--"_With care_"Or"_ This side uppermost_"--and cry Like children? |
28684 | Hast thought on me, my fair?" |
28684 | Hath it indeed been plundered, or but cleared? |
28684 | Have they killed a so- long snake? |
28684 | Have we not a right to enjoy,_ under the Constitution, peaceably and quietly, our acknowledged rights guaranteed by it_, without annoyance? |
28684 | He counted them at break of day-- And when the sun set, where were they? |
28684 | Her cure progresses well-- is it not so, Don Frederico?" |
28684 | How can ye chant, ye little birds, And I sae weary fu''o''care? |
28684 | How did Mr. Weller, senr., define the Funds; and what view did he take of Reduced Consols? |
28684 | How did the old lady make a memorandum, and of what, at whist? |
28684 | How have you heart for any tune, You with the wayworn russet shoon? |
28684 | How is it then that thou hast run away from thy King? |
28684 | How little applicable, then, is this boasted right of petition, under our system, to political questions? |
28684 | How many eyes did Gilbert White open? |
28684 | How many lumps of sugar went into the Shepherd''s liquor as a rule? |
28684 | How, Helen, dost thou fare? |
28684 | I doubt na, whiles, but thou may thieve; What then? |
28684 | I stay my haste, I make delays, For what avails this eager pace? |
28684 | I''m all for girls myself, eh, Kitty? |
28684 | IS THERE FOR HONEST POVERTY Is there for honest poverty That hangs his head, and a''that? |
28684 | If not, why am I subject to His cruelty or scorn? |
28684 | If thou regrett''st thy youth,_ why live_? |
28684 | In what terms is his elastic force described when he assaulted Mr. Stiggins at the meeting? |
28684 | Is a man in a fit? |
28684 | Is he gone so quickly? |
28684 | Is it madness or meanness which clings to thee now? |
28684 | Is it some yet imperial hope That with such change can calmly cope, Or dread of death alone? |
28684 | Is it the wind those branches stirs? |
28684 | Is na that it, mates?" |
28684 | Is not the past all shadow? |
28684 | Is that yo''yallah boy, Jools? |
28684 | Is the day indeed begun? |
28684 | Is the love of a mother nothing but an obligation? |
28684 | Is there any ground for conjecturing that he( Sam) had more brothers than one? |
28684 | Is there no pity, no relenting ruth, Points to the parents fondling o''er their child? |
28684 | Is this a fancy which our reason scorns? |
28684 | Is this the man of thousand thrones, Who strewed our earth with hostile bones, And can he thus survive? |
28684 | It seems like a special provi_dence_.--Jools, do you believe in a special provi_dence_?" |
28684 | It''s the on''yest time I ever been from home; now you would n''t of believed that, would you? |
28684 | JUSTINA-- And who art thou, who hast found entrance hither Into my chamber through the doors and locks? |
28684 | JUSTINA-- Have you not seen him? |
28684 | JUSTINA-- It can not be!--Whom have I ever loved? |
28684 | Jools, where''s my pore old niggah?" |
28684 | Jools? |
28684 | LIVIA-- What? |
28684 | Last night? |
28684 | Let Bunyan speak for his own book:--"Wouldst thou be in a dream, and yet not sleep? |
28684 | Maria, shall we depart?" |
28684 | Mr. Gosport, who was advancing to Cecilia and had watched part of this scene, stopped him as he was retreating, and said,"Why, Meadows, how''s this? |
28684 | Much have I borne since dawn of morn; Where, William, couldst thou be?" |
28684 | Must she too bend, must she too share Thy late repentance, long despair, Thou throneless Homicide? |
28684 | Must thou be a theme for pity? |
28684 | Must_ we_ but weep o''er days more blest? |
28684 | No good for nothing, am I? |
28684 | No? |
28684 | Nothing else tempted; could that avail? |
28684 | Now, though towering like a Babel, Who to stop his steps are able? |
28684 | O art thou false or dead?" |
28684 | O mother, what is bale? |
28684 | O mother, what is bale? |
28684 | Of two such lessons, why forget The nobler and the manlier one? |
28684 | Oh, what''s the way to Arcady? |
28684 | Oh, what''s the way to Arcady? |
28684 | Oh, who can hymn thy praise? |
28684 | Or Beauty, blighted in an hour, Find joy within her broken bower? |
28684 | Or can the heated mind engender shapes From its own fear? |
28684 | Or do ye find at length, like eagles, some high nest? |
28684 | Or has it not bound thee the fastest of all The slaves, who now hail their betrayer with hymns? |
28684 | Or why has man the will and power To make his fellow mourn? |
28684 | Or wouldst thou in a moment laugh and weep? |
28684 | Our rude forefathers deemed it two; Can you imagine so absurd A view? |
28684 | Perhaps-- but wherefore vainly pry Into the page that''s folded there? |
28684 | SEGISMUND-- For you know''Tis nothing but a dream? |
28684 | SEGISMUND-- Last night? |
28684 | She took up the paper, and wrote under the first message:--_ Fine_ But that seemed curt:"for--"she added;"for"what? |
28684 | Should she complain to the janitor? |
28684 | Some time after, he addressed her again, saying,"Do n''t you find this place extremely tiresome, ma''am?" |
28684 | Speaking of the pains he took in the writing of this story, the author says:"Shall I ever forget the agonies of the first efforts?... |
28684 | Still clings she to thy side? |
28684 | THE BANKS O''DOON Ye banks and braes o''bonnie Doon, How can ye bloom sae fresh and fair? |
28684 | THE EAST From''The Bride of Abydos''Know ye the land where the cypress and myrtle Are emblems of deeds that are done in their clime? |
28684 | THE MISANTHROPE Say, honest Timon, now escaped from light, Which do you most abhor, or that or night? |
28684 | THE WAY TO ARCADY Oh, what''s the way to Arcady, To Arcady, to Arcady; Oh, what''s the way to Arcady, Where all the leaves are merry? |
28684 | THE WIVES OF WEINSBERG Which way to Weinsberg? |
28684 | That I am right in making the assertion, I put it to the Senator-- Have we not a right under the Constitution to our property in our slaves? |
28684 | That can, with studied, sly, ensnaring art, Betray sweet Jenny''s unsuspecting youth? |
28684 | The Times? |
28684 | The home reader naturally inquires, Why not travel under your English name? |
28684 | The moon shines clear, Dost fear to ride with me? |
28684 | The piper he piped on the hill- top high,(_ Butter and eggs and a pound of cheese_) Till the cow said"I die,"and the goose asked"Why?" |
28684 | The reader surrenders himself to the spell, feeling almost inclined to inquire,"And why may it not be true?" |
28684 | The shepherds then answered, Did you not see a little below these mountains a stile, that led into a meadow, on the left hand of this way? |
28684 | The steeds rush on in plunging pride; But where are they the reins to guide? |
28684 | Then he said, Since I have nothing to bequeath to any, to what purpose should I make a will? |
28684 | Then paints the ruined maid, and their distraction wild? |
28684 | Then said Christian, What meaneth this? |
28684 | Then said Christian, What means this? |
28684 | Then said Christian, What means this? |
28684 | Then said Hopeful to the shepherds, I perceive that these had on them, even every one, a show of pilgrimage, as we have now: had they not? |
28684 | Then said the shepherds one to another, Shall we show these pilgrims some wonders? |
28684 | These waters blue that round you lave, O servile offspring of the free-- Pronounce what sea, what shore is this? |
28684 | Those downcast eyes beneath the Almighty Dove-- What though''tis but a pictured image strike? |
28684 | Though I fly to Istambol, Athens holds my heart and soul: Can I cease to love thee? |
28684 | Thy shores are empires, changed in all save thee-- Assyria, Greece, Rome, Carthage, what are they? |
28684 | To Arcady, to Arcady? |
28684 | Trophies of my oblivion and disdain, Floro and Lelio did I not reject? |
28684 | Wak''st thou, or sleep''st? |
28684 | Well, I win''it by a specious providence, ai n''t it?" |
28684 | Well, ma''am, and how do you like Vauxhall?" |
28684 | Wha can fill a coward''s grave? |
28684 | Wha sae base as be a slave? |
28684 | Wha will be a traitor- knave? |
28684 | What are our woes and sufferings? |
28684 | What are they? |
28684 | What but a horse- hair for her nest, which was in an apple- tree near by? |
28684 | What church was on the valentine that first attracted Mr. Samuel''s eye in the shop? |
28684 | What did she want? |
28684 | What did"groing weather"matter to the toilers in this waste of brick and mortar? |
28684 | What do you know of the hotel next the Ball at Rochester? |
28684 | What had he to give? |
28684 | What happened? |
28684 | What matter if I stand alone? |
28684 | What matters where we fall to fill the maws Of worms-- on battle- plains or listed spot? |
28684 | What might one call yo''name? |
28684 | What operation was performed on Tom Smart''s chair? |
28684 | What say you?" |
28684 | What though on hamely fare we dine, Wear hoddin gray, and a''that? |
28684 | What would he see? |
28684 | What would you call it? |
28684 | What yonder swings And creaks''mid whistling rain?" |
28684 | What''ll Philip say?"... |
28684 | What''s that you''re saying, Mistress Nancy, ma''am? |
28684 | What, know you not, old man( quoth he)-- Your hair is white, your face is wise-- That Love must kiss that Mortal''s eyes Who hopes to see fair Arcady? |
28684 | What, silent still? |
28684 | What, sir, would a virtuous and enlightened ministry do on the view of the ruins of such works before them? |
28684 | What, then, of that vague and exceeding sinfulness of which he so bitterly accuses and repents himself? |
28684 | What? |
28684 | When did this same phenomenon occur again, and what fluid caused the pressure on the body in the latter case? |
28684 | When the day that he must go hence was come, many accompanied him to the river- side, into which as he went he said, Death, where is thy sting? |
28684 | When the fight was going on most vigorously before the fortifications, Pulfio, one of them, says:"Why do you hesitate, Varenus? |
28684 | Where I''m goin''to fin''one priest to make like dat? |
28684 | Where does he live?" |
28684 | Where the rage of the vulture, the love of the turtle, Now melt into sorrow, now madden to crime? |
28684 | Where''s that Tom Hommy now? |
28684 | Which is principal and which agent? |
28684 | Whither flies the silent lark? |
28684 | Whither shrinks the clouded sun? |
28684 | Who cares for gates or doors? |
28684 | Who ever heard of petition in the free States of antiquity? |
28684 | Who ever heard of the principal petitioning his agent-- of the master, his servant-- or of the sovereign, his subject? |
28684 | Who indeed could be, unless he were a mean, cowardly creature, in the storm and stress of the great Revolution with which France was then convulsed? |
28684 | Who now shall lead thy scattered children forth, And long accustomed bondage uncreate? |
28684 | Who would say that they are less valuable or less redolent of their native soil than the exquisite songs of Burns?" |
28684 | Why do I feel so differently from the Reverend Dr. Price and those of his lay flock who will choose to adopt the sentiments of his discourse? |
28684 | Why do you work this evening?" |
28684 | Why shrieks the owlet gray?" |
28684 | Will Gaul or Muscovite redress ye? |
28684 | Will some of you tell me how long it will be before we can make our first effort to rescue the men who are below?" |
28684 | Will thy yard of blue riband, poor Fingal, recall The fetters from millions of Catholic limbs? |
28684 | Will you embark in this weather, as you were embarked in the war of Navarre? |
28684 | Will you sleep when nations''quarrels Plow the root up of your laurels? |
28684 | With wounded wing or bleeding breast, Ah, where shall either victim rest? |
28684 | Without my William what were heaven, Or with him what were hell?" |
28684 | Would it not be a violation of the Constitution to divest us of that right? |
28684 | Would the hope, which thou once bad''st me cherish, For torture repay me too well? |
28684 | Would twenty shillings have ruined Mr. Hampden''s fortune? |
28684 | Wouldst read thyself, and read, thou knowst not what, And yet know whether thou art blest or not By reading the same lines? |
28684 | Wouldst thou lose thyself and catch no harm, And find thyself again, without a charm? |
28684 | Ye Elements!--in whose ennobling stir I feel myself exalted-- can ye not Accord me such a being? |
28684 | Ye men, who pour your blood for kings as water, What have they given your children in return? |
28684 | Yet who could speak so well? |
28684 | Yet, after all, what is there to give pleasure? |
28684 | You have the Pyrrhic dance as yet, Where is the Pyrrhic phalanx gone? |
28684 | You have the letters Cadmus gave-- Think ye he meant them for a slave? |
28684 | You see dis money-- w''at I win las''night? |
28684 | _ Apollyon_--Thou hast already been unfaithful in thy service to him, and how dost thou think to receive wages of him? |
28684 | _ Apollyon_--Whence come you? |
28684 | _ Christian_--But I have let myself to another, even to the King of Princes, and how can I with fairness go back with thee? |
28684 | _ Christian_--How far is it thither? |
28684 | _ Christian_--I have given him my faith, and sworn my allegiance to him: how then can I go back from this, and not be hanged as a traitor? |
28684 | _ Christian_--Is the way safe or dangerous? |
28684 | _ Christian_--Is there in this place any relief for pilgrims that are weary and faint in the way? |
28684 | _ Christian_--Is this the way to the Celestial City? |
28684 | _ Christian_--Wherein, O Apollyon, have I been unfaithful to him? |
28684 | _ Hopeful_--How far might they go on in pilgrimage in their day, since they notwithstanding were thus miserably cast away? |
28684 | _ Mais_, if I keep dis money, you know where it goin''be to- night?" |
28684 | _ Mais_, why you ca n''t cheer up an''be''appy? |
28684 | _ when i Say a thing i mene it i have Sed i would not Adress you and i Will not_ What was the little seamstress to do? |
28684 | and are you afraid that by accident I may faint?" |
28684 | and is any exception recorded? |
28684 | and silent all? |
28684 | and tease him so innocently to read it?" |
28684 | and where art thou, My country? |
28684 | and whither are you bound? |
28684 | and, By what means have you so persevered therein? |
28684 | and, How got you into the way? |
28684 | are you caught at last?" |
28684 | can it be That this is all remains of thee? |
28684 | cried he;"are you making mischief between the young lady and me already?" |
28684 | cried the parson, bounding up with radiant face--"is that so, Jools?" |
28684 | cried young Branghton;"why, how can she help liking it? |
28684 | do you thing I would go again''my conscien''? |
28684 | dost fear? |
28684 | dost fear? |
28684 | how I envy you!--Are you pleased with the Pantheon?" |
28684 | how many did Audubon? |
28684 | how many did Henry Thoreau? |
28684 | how many does the hunter, matching his sight against the keen and alert senses of a deer, or a moose, or a fox, or a wolf? |
28684 | in his captive''s cage, What thoughts will there be thine, While brooding in thy prisoned rage? |
28684 | in vain I implore thee My heart from these horrors to save: Will naught to my bosom restore thee? |
28684 | is the goal? |
28684 | know ye not Who would be free, themselves must strike the blow? |
28684 | laugh''st thou, or weep''st? |
28684 | or what better opportunity of signalizing your valor do you seek? |
28684 | shall a man make hisse''f to be the more sorry because the money he los''is not his? |
28684 | she faintly said;"But why so stern and cold? |
28684 | the moon shines clear And well the dead can ride; Dost, faithful Helen, fear for them?" |
28684 | through a marble wilderness? |
28684 | thy grand in soul? |
28684 | to whose immortal eyes The sufferings of mortality, Seen in their sad reality, Were not as things that gods despise: What was thy pity''s recompense? |
28684 | was it for the purpose of acting as spies?" |
28684 | what reasonings are these? |
28684 | what treasure hides beneath That lid so much the worse for wear? |
28684 | what voice is that?" |
28684 | what? |
28684 | where, Where are thy men of might? |
28684 | wherefore, but because Such were the bloody Circus''s genial laws, And such the imperial pleasure.--Wherefore not? |
28684 | which the master and which the servant? |
28684 | which the sovereign and which the subject? |
28684 | who shall trace the void, O''er the dim fragments cast a lunar light, And say,"Here was, or is,"where all is doubly night? |
28684 | why scourge thy kind Who bowed so low the knee? |
30612 | A cat may look at_ a_ king,it is said; but how about looking at_ the_ Queen? |
30612 | Do you know whose place you have just taken? |
30612 | How long ago is that? |
30612 | How old is he? |
30612 | Is it? |
30612 | Is this your man? |
30612 | Now, Mr. Rogers,said I,"what did I do to deserve that you should say that to me?" |
30612 | Now, is n''t that strange? |
30612 | Now,said I,"what shall I do? |
30612 | Oh, but how did you live? |
30612 | Oh, would n''t you, ma''am? |
30612 | Really,said I, hardly able to utter for suppressed laughter;"and may I ask, may I inquire what language it does use?" |
30612 | Well,said I to Anne,"is not this a fine house, Anne?" |
30612 | What does she eat, pray? |
30612 | What was his name? |
30612 | Where is he? |
30612 | Where is it? |
30612 | Where is your father? |
30612 | Where is your husband? |
30612 | Where,I suppose you exclaim,"were the civil authorities and military force?" |
30612 | Who? 30612 ( A woman that Mrs. Siddons was engaging as cook, replied to the question,Can you make pastry?" |
30612 | ( Does n''t that sound like a child who does n''t want to go to church, and says it has got a stomach- ache? |
30612 | ( Oh, Harriet, ought n''t you to be ashamed of yourself?) |
30612 | ( Who says that early risers always have a Pharisaical sense of their own superiority?) |
30612 | ( is n''t that an odd term of endearment to one''s mistress?) |
30612 | ), but shall be glad to fall back, in my less delightful ones, upon the devoted affection of-- you? |
30612 | --when from history, science, literature, art, nature, one receives every impression with the child''s yearning query,"But is it true?" |
30612 | Adelaide said she felt an almost irresistible inclination to twitch it from her hand, throw it on the ground again, and say,"Did you? |
30612 | After a few minutes''silence, she pursued her unceremonious catechism with"Married woman?" |
30612 | After this, how could he paint anything less than a countess? |
30612 | Am I honest? |
30612 | Am I right in your opinion and that of dear Dorothy? |
30612 | And is it in the Christian Revelation that you find your doctrine of partial immortality and partial annihilation? |
30612 | And now, dear Lady Dacre, what message will you give your kind and good husband from me? |
30612 | And now, what shall I tell you? |
30612 | And shall it be that I have crossed that terrible sea, and am to pass some time here, and to return without seeing you? |
30612 | And so, my dear T----, you are a"tied- by- the- leg"( as we used, in our laughing days, to call the penniless young Attachà © s to Legations)? |
30612 | And think nae mair on the braes of Yarrow"? |
30612 | And what are you doing with"Boz"? |
30612 | And what sort of a laugh, moreover, is it that you offer that unfortunate Dorothy for her feeble participation? |
30612 | And where are you, my dear Mrs. Jameson? |
30612 | And where will you be next spring, wanderer? |
30612 | And yet what can they be, that may give you the slightest pleasure? |
30612 | Are there two kinds of positive goodness? |
30612 | Are we to suppose He did not mean what he said? |
30612 | Are you becoming saturated with sulphur, or penetrated with iron? |
30612 | Are you chilling your inside with draughts from some unfathomable well, or warming your outside with baths from some ready- boiled spring? |
30612 | Are you not sure that I do? |
30612 | At any rate, what number of women is ever likely to be found so organized or so principled as to resist the pressure of this tremendous power? |
30612 | At length Caroline accompanied the footman to the scene of the dog- astrophe( you would n''t call it_ cat_-astrophe, would you? |
30612 | But are not Hayes''s comments on your character comical? |
30612 | But as for enough, is there such a thing as enough sleep? |
30612 | But do n''t you know that one reason why I appear to you to have positive mental results, is because I have no mental processes? |
30612 | But how come people''s nations so inside out and so upside down? |
30612 | But perhaps you are none of you there?--perhaps you are in Dublin?--on Mr. Taylor''s new estate?--or where-- where, dear Harriet-- where are you? |
30612 | But what are the rulers and guides of the people doing in England? |
30612 | But what have I to tell you of myself, or anything belonging to me? |
30612 | But why-- oh, why am I giving you a dissertation on her and her gifts, for a purpose which will never again challenge her efforts or their exercise? |
30612 | But, after all, is it not always thus? |
30612 | By whom? |
30612 | By- the- by, did you ever hear a whisper of a suggestion that Joan of Arc was_ not_ burned? |
30612 | Ca n''t you help me to some lords?" |
30612 | Can anything be stranger than to think of Cecilia trotting over the length and breadth of North America at the heels of a lecturing philosopher? |
30612 | Can folly go beyond that? |
30612 | Can one say worse of a man who is not?... |
30612 | Can you conceive, after such a spectacle, trying similar experiments upon one''s ignorant self? |
30612 | Chi sa? |
30612 | DEAREST H----, Are you conjecturing as to the fate of three letters which you have written to me from the Continent? |
30612 | Dearest Harriet, I shall soon see you again, and will not that be a blessing to both of us? |
30612 | Did I ever_ not_ answer your letters, you horrid Harriet? |
30612 | Did I tell you that one place where we dined was Cowdenknowes? |
30612 | Did I tell you what a nice long visit I had from Thackeray the other day? |
30612 | Did anyone ever say there was not a"soul of good even in things evil"? |
30612 | Did she write the words as well as the music of"The Spirit of Delight"? |
30612 | Did you do as much? |
30612 | Did you ever get it? |
30612 | Did you ever see Correggio''s picture of the Gismonda? |
30612 | Did you ever see Taglioni? |
30612 | Did you ever see a humming- bird? |
30612 | Did you ever see her in the"Sylphide"? |
30612 | Do explain to me what Sydney Smith means by disclaiming Peter Plymley''s letters as he does? |
30612 | Do n''t you find people have got to think and talk about nothing else? |
30612 | Do n''t you know I never send for any book, and never_ read_ any book, but such as I am desired, required, lent, or given to read by somebody? |
30612 | Do n''t you perceive it in the nobility of my style? |
30612 | Do n''t you see me undergoing such a process, and submitting to such"manipulation"? |
30612 | Do n''t you think that was nice? |
30612 | Do n''t you think we should have good houses? |
30612 | Do we not all three love each other dearly? |
30612 | Do we not, in some sense, possess mentally that which we most earnestly think of? |
30612 | Do you ever see Lady Francis Egerton nowadays? |
30612 | Do you hear of this horrid murder in Paris[ that of the Duchesse de Praslin, by her husband]? |
30612 | Do you know Schiller''s exquisite poem of the"Division of the Earth"? |
30612 | Do you know it by that name in Ireland? |
30612 | Do you know old South? |
30612 | Do you know, Harriet, that I have more than once seriously thought of never writing any more to any of my friends? |
30612 | Do you not think it is time I should begin to think of growing old? |
30612 | Do you not think that an ignorance, unbroken even by the slightest tincture of these, would be rather a fine thing for one''s original powers? |
30612 | Do you not wonder, too, that they should fail in self- denial, charity, mercy, all the virtues of their Divine Model? |
30612 | Do you remember that delightful negro song, the"Invitation to Hayti,"that used to make you laugh so? |
30612 | Do you remember what Sydney Smith says of Francis Horner? |
30612 | Do you remember what infinite difficulty I told you I had had in rescuing that poor little wretch out of the streets of Glasgow? |
30612 | Do you remember your admiration of philanthropy because I blew the dirty nose of a little vagabond in the street with my embroidered handkerchief? |
30612 | Do you suppose I imagine that the sudden violence of a national convulsion will make people Christians who are not so?... |
30612 | Do you suppose_ I_ sent for Paul de Kock? |
30612 | Do you think if I talk to them they will be sharpened?... |
30612 | Does Dorothy write better about nothing than I do? |
30612 | Drinking of queer- tasting waters, and soaking in queer- smelling ones? |
30612 | Faith in God, according to my understanding of it, my dearest Hal, implies faith in man; and have we not good need of both just now? |
30612 | For if"all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy,"what does the reverse do for him? |
30612 | Give my kindest love to S----.... How is Master C----? |
30612 | Had you a vision of us this morning, by the comfortable fire in my room, I reading, and she listening to, your letter?... |
30612 | Has he worked out that problem yet about that vexed question on which he threw so much light at your house, and about which you were so tiresome? |
30612 | Have they them in Italy? |
30612 | Have you looked into Marryatt''s books on this country? |
30612 | Have you none made yet?... |
30612 | Have you read Charles Murray''s book about America? |
30612 | He looked at me for a moment with a beaming face, and then said,"Do you know, I have never read a word of that thing?" |
30612 | He was always near to God, and who can doubt that, in that scene of apparent horror and despair, God was very near to him? |
30612 | Here are two of your questions answered; the third is-- whether I let the slave question rest more than I did? |
30612 | Hero has been used to luxury, both in his lodging and board; but human hearts have to do without their food, and shall not his dog''s body? |
30612 | How is his voice? |
30612 | How is it that the fable ever originated of God''s having cursed man with the doom of toil? |
30612 | How is she? |
30612 | How shall I feel, you say, acting that part again?... |
30612 | How shall I tell you of my satisfaction in Rome? |
30612 | How? |
30612 | I am about, therefore, to return with them to the Farm, where I shall pass the remainder of the winter,--how, think you? |
30612 | I asked her if she had ever heard, or read, the remark as applied to the southern people? |
30612 | I can not believe happiness to be the purpose of life, for when was anything ordained with an unattainable purpose?... |
30612 | I did so at first by accident( is there such a thing? |
30612 | I have minded what you said( as when did n''t I? |
30612 | I know that the soul may be about its work( does not George Herbert say"Who sweeps a room, as for Thy laws, Makes that and the action fine"?) |
30612 | I shall be grievously disappointed.... Was there ever such a to- do as that woman Lola Montez is kicking up? |
30612 | I suppose there was something to like in Mr. Webster''s speech, since you are surprised at my not liking it; but what was there to like? |
30612 | I was obliged to go out, however, and the skies in the interim have cleared; and where do you think I have been? |
30612 | I wonder by whom? |
30612 | I wonder why poor dear Lord Lansdowne ca n''t be asked five shillings? |
30612 | If you begin your letter with such questions as"What do you think of me?" |
30612 | In the useless struggle you persist in making to be reasonable( why do n''t you give it up? |
30612 | Is it not Goethe who says:"Thought expands and weakens the mind; action contracts and strengthens it"? |
30612 | Is it not all one, let us parcel it out as we will into hours, days, months, years, or lifetimes? |
30612 | Is it not horrible that we should make Christian prayers of Jewish imprecations? |
30612 | Is it not strange that Charles Greville and you should both be writing to me just now upon this same subject, of life after death? |
30612 | Is it not very brave? |
30612 | Is it only singing histrions who appear to you objects of compassion? |
30612 | Is it to be supposed that a man will work more for fear of the lash than he will for the sake of an adequate reward? |
30612 | Is n''t it a pity that he can no longer be my agent? |
30612 | Is n''t it a shame?... |
30612 | Is n''t that funny? |
30612 | Is not Shakespeare_ true_ to human nature? |
30612 | Is not her face handsome; and her manner and deportment fine?... |
30612 | Is not that definition of thought after my own heart, and just as I should have written it? |
30612 | Is not the position of the Emperor of Russia awful in its singularity-- the solitary despot of the civilized world? |
30612 | Is she accomplishing a great deal with her life? |
30612 | Is that a quotation from himself or some one else? |
30612 | Is that the way you say it, whereabouts you are? |
30612 | It is in this respect a far more aristocratic( should I not say democratic?) |
30612 | It is perfectly true that the clay has no right to say to the Potter,"Wherefore hast Thou fashioned me thus?" |
30612 | Let their way be dark and slippery: and let the angel of the Lord persecute them"? |
30612 | MY DEAR HAL, How did you get through that dreary time after we parted? |
30612 | MY DEAREST HARRIET, Why do you ask me if I would not write to you unless you wrote to me? |
30612 | Madame de Staël, I suppose, might have said to Rocca,"If my brains are indeed yours, why do n''t you write a book like''Corinne''with them?" |
30612 | May I ask why it is to be considered incumbent upon you, either by yourself or others, to dress and speak like an Englishman?" |
30612 | May I, with"one foot on land and one on sea,"send him word that I love him almost as well as I do you? |
30612 | Moreover, if evil have its inevitable results, has not good its inseparable consequences? |
30612 | My paper is at an end: do I tell you"nothing of my mind and soul"? |
30612 | Now, as Shylock says,"Are you answered yet?" |
30612 | Now, ladies, what would you have said? |
30612 | Now, my beloved and best Dorothy, have n''t you enough to do with that most troublesome soul, Harriet, without being my"good angel"too? |
30612 | Now, will you tell me that Providence_ intended_ that this man should so labor and so suffer? |
30612 | Of myself, my dear friend, what shall I tell you? |
30612 | Oh, have you read that"Vanity Fair"of his? |
30612 | Pilate wished to know what is truth-- or rather pretended that he did-- and I have a very general conviction that"What is truth?" |
30612 | Pray, did you ever pity me as much as you do Adelaide in the exercise of her profession? |
30612 | Pray, my dear, did I ever attempt to meddle with your constitution? |
30612 | Pray, what is the meaning of this want of feeling on your part for_ us others_, or your excess of it for Adelaide? |
30612 | Revelation, you say, alone gives any image of God to you; but which Revelation? |
30612 | Rogers?" |
30612 | Shall I stay with you till you begin, or shall I go, and leave you alone to collect yourself?" |
30612 | She came, too, with her hands full of flowers( my"good angels"brought to me by your"good angel,"which seemed to me pretty and proper, was it not? |
30612 | Should this be true, I do not wonder at my lord''s croaking, for what will the people do? |
30612 | Should you know him again?" |
30612 | Sojourning in Bohemian castles; or wandering among the ruins of old Athens? |
30612 | Surely the spontaneous, or promiscuous( which did you call it, you Irishwoman?) |
30612 | The beginning-- and whence come we? |
30612 | The end-- and whither go we?" |
30612 | The last question in your letter, which nevertheless heads it, having been added on over the date,"How is your health?" |
30612 | The universal cry and question is,"What is the news?" |
30612 | There, Hal, what do you think of that? |
30612 | They will be free assuredly, and that before many years; why not make friends of them instead of deadly enemies? |
30612 | This is melancholy, is it not? |
30612 | Those passages that Emily has marked I do not understand-- does she? |
30612 | Upon my refusing it for her, he exclaimed in astonishment--"Why, madam, do n''t you allow the little girl cake?" |
30612 | Was n''t it a pity that Mrs. Grote was taken ill this morning? |
30612 | Was not that courtly and kind of her? |
30612 | Was not that nice and kind and good- natured of her, dear old lady? |
30612 | Was not that really quite touching and nice of him? |
30612 | Was this right? |
30612 | Were you not struck with his great resemblance to your idol, John Kemble? |
30612 | What can I tell you of myself? |
30612 | What can her point have been?... |
30612 | What do you think I am reading? |
30612 | What do you think of our fine ladies amusing themselves with giving parties, at which they, and their guests, take chloroform as a pastime? |
30612 | What have you done with Lord Morpeth? |
30612 | What is she doing? |
30612 | What shall I do-- what shall I say about her_ tiff_ with Adelaide? |
30612 | What, then, is all this that I have been writing? |
30612 | When did God begin, or when has He ceased, to reveal Himself to man? |
30612 | Where are you, my dearest Harriet; and what are you doing? |
30612 | Which of your many plans, or dreams of plans have you put into execution? |
30612 | Who can say the world does not move some forward steps? |
30612 | Who invented and who suggested the expression the"poetry of motion"? |
30612 | Why did you not make_ him_, instead of the stage, the subject of our discussions together? |
30612 | Why do n''t you? |
30612 | Why does he never disgust one with it? |
30612 | Why does one feel comparatively clean in spirit after living with his creatures? |
30612 | Why is it that people do perpetually live below their own pitch? |
30612 | Why not give them at once the wages of their labor? |
30612 | Why should I write to you, when I hate writing, and yet nevertheless_ always_ answer letters? |
30612 | Will it not be a pity if I ca n''t come and be spoilt any more by you and Dorothy at St. Leonard''s? |
30612 | Will you not come back from the ends of the earth that I may not find the turret- chamber empty, and the Dell without its dear mistress at Ardgillan? |
30612 | Will you not come over and spend the summer with me, now that the sea voyage is only half as long as it was? |
30612 | With what? |
30612 | Would n''t it be a nice world if one could live all one''s time with none but the best good people? |
30612 | Would n''t it be odd to wake at the end, and find one had not lived at all? |
30612 | Would n''t it have been nice if I had said_ Yes_, and you and Dorothy had still been there? |
30612 | Would n''t one think she had had the Vatican for her second- best house, and St. Peter''s for her private chapel, all the days of her life? |
30612 | You ask me if I think letters will go on to be answered in eternity? |
30612 | You ask me if you can"do anything"about my play? |
30612 | You ask me why Mrs.----, who is undoubtedly a clever woman, is also undoubtedly a silly one? |
30612 | You enter no room that is not literally_ strewed_ with queer- looking prints of costumes; and before you can say,"How d''ye do?" |
30612 | You say I am ungrateful to it: is it because I owe many of my friends( yourself among the number) to it that you say so? |
30612 | You say our goodness and benevolence are not those of God: in_ quantity_, surely not; but in_ quality_? |
30612 | Your letter is dated July-- how many things are done that you then meant to do? |
30612 | _ Imprimis_, will you and Dorothy fasten your dinner- napkins with these things, or rings, which I have made for you? |
30612 | _ So_ what shall I do with your scissors? |
30612 | am I just? |
30612 | and are not unexpected pleasures and enjoyments furnished us quite as often as the trials which render them doubly welcome? |
30612 | and at which end of Rome, or my satisfaction, shall I begin? |
30612 | and how do you like it? |
30612 | and is not everything, no matter how trifling, of interest in that case? |
30612 | and is the offence a wife commits against her husband the one exception to the universal law of the forgiveness which Christ taught? |
30612 | and was anybody ever known to have had it? |
30612 | and what do you think I said? |
30612 | and who was he or she? |
30612 | and would n''t_ you_ come and see us?... |
30612 | come si ha da far?" |
30612 | how you do, massa? |
30612 | is it not the possession over which earthly circumstances have the least power? |
30612 | my dear Hal, the money? |
30612 | my fine fellow,"said the actor to the thief,"is that you? |
30612 | no butter? |
30612 | no tea or coffee?" |
30612 | or a blister on your heel? |
30612 | or a corn on your toe? |
30612 | or a grain of dust in your eye? |
30612 | or do you think that I forget that circumstance? |
30612 | or do your nieces do anything more juvenile than this, with all their ball- going? |
30612 | or is it only idiotical?... |
30612 | or was it an impromptu?--a seer''s vision, and friend''s warning? |
30612 | or will they be permitted to say that they are"tempted of God"? |
30612 | or"Why am I a man, and not a beast?" |
30612 | remonstrated I,"cependant quelque chose?" |
30612 | said I, almost breathless, and with a queer quaver in my voice, that I could hardly command,"may I ask why, pray?" |
30612 | sure this is never I,"136;"What for you work, Missus?" |
30612 | what shall we do? |
30612 | what? |
30612 | who ever dreamt of such vagaries? |
30612 | who ever heard the like? |
30612 | you? |
38887 | All those hours were required? |
38887 | And when,I said,"is this most melancholy of topics most poetical?" |
38887 | In your note- books? |
38887 | Shall you be gone long? |
38887 | What Makes a Novel Successful? |
38887 | What is a Realist? |
38887 | Why do Certain Works of Fiction Succeed? |
38887 | Willoughby knows that you leave him? |
38887 | You are training for your Alpine tour? |
38887 | [ 152: A] Since these words were written, the novel of politics, for example, has come to the fore; but does that mean that the subject is exhausted? 38887 [ 63: A] How many elements are here referred to? |
38887 | ''What do you think of it?'' |
38887 | 12 Is there a Deeper Question? |
38887 | 14 What about the Newspapers? |
38887 | A new thing? |
38887 | After reading this can you form a distinct idea of Helen''s beauty? |
38887 | And why? |
38887 | Anything? |
38887 | Are its chief personages living beings in your imagination? |
38887 | But the truth still remains-- the seeing of things, and the hearing of things, are but the raw material: where are your new creations? |
38887 | But who shall impose laws on the soul? |
38887 | By whom? |
38887 | CHAPTER II A GOOD STORY TO TELL Where do Novelists get their Stories from? |
38887 | CHAPTER IV CHARACTERS AND CHARACTERISATION The Chief Character In the plot previously outlined, which figure is supreme? |
38887 | CHAPTER X IS THE SUBJECT- MATTER OF NOVELS EXHAUSTED? |
38887 | Can Dickens, Thackeray, and George Meredith be reduced to an academic schedule? |
38887 | Can it be defined? |
38887 | Can the diamonds be taken from the lady while she is wearing them? |
38887 | Can you imagine Drumsheugh in Gallic? |
38887 | Could anything be more wooden than this perpetual"said he, said she,"which I have accentuated by putting into italics? |
38887 | Did Homer satisfy our love of recorded adventure once and for all? |
38887 | Do we not selfishly wish that Miss Olive Schreiner had never left the veldt, in the loneliness of which she produced"The Story of an African Farm"? |
38887 | Do you feel the throb of the life of that period about which you are going to write? |
38887 | Do you know how a cab- driver mounts on to the box, or the shape of a coal- heaver''s mouth when he cries"Coal!"? |
38887 | Do you know how their minds work? |
38887 | Do you suppose you are infallible in these commonplace things? |
38887 | Does it mean"seeing things"? |
38887 | Does this seem to be too big a programme? |
38887 | E. P. Roe: why have they a circulation numbered by the million? |
38887 | First of all, What kind of a novel is yours to be? |
38887 | First of all, what is the difference between a novel and a short story? |
38887 | For what reason? |
38887 | Have the stress and turmoil of a political career no charm? |
38887 | Have those who object to this recommendation ever thought of what practising novel- writing means? |
38887 | Have we not noticed over and over again that the first book of a novelist is his best? |
38887 | Have you never read novels where the characters are made to walk miles of country in as many minutes? |
38887 | Here is a sample from"The Egoist":"Have you walked far to- day?" |
38887 | Historical? |
38887 | How can the strong room be entered and robbed? |
38887 | How is that knowledge to be obtained? |
38887 | How long does it take to make a couple of experiments of 80,000 words each? |
38887 | How many Words a Day? |
38887 | How shall we find it? |
38887 | How will this affect your choice of characters? |
38887 | If so, have you read all the authorities? |
38887 | If, as has been said,"windiness"is the chief fault of the beginner, where can he learn to correct that error more quickly? |
38887 | Is it exhausted? |
38887 | Is it that the dignity of genius forbids it, or that pupilage is half a disgrace? |
38887 | Is not the plot concealed in the idea? |
38887 | Is the idea any good? |
38887 | Is there a Deeper Question? |
38887 | Is there anything new? |
38887 | It may be a disputed question as to whether women understand women better than men: the point is, do_ you_ understand them? |
38887 | Male devil or female devil? |
38887 | Men and women have written about love from time immemorial, but have we finished with the theme? |
38887 | Might the house be broken into by a burglar on a night when a lady had worn them and returned? |
38887 | Novelty, freshness, and excitement are to be sought for at all hazards, and where can they be found? |
38887 | Now the question arises: What was the quarrel about? |
38887 | Now, in what way will our would- be artist become acquainted with those rules? |
38887 | Now, to which class is your projected novel to belong? |
38887 | Now, what is the first thing to do? |
38887 | Perhaps you object to this kind of literary dissection? |
38887 | Should not a man perfect himself in the less minute and less delicate methods of the novel before he attempts the finer art of the short story? |
38887 | The man who sits at the far end of the car in a shabby coat, and who is regarding his boots with a fixed, anxious stare-- what is he thinking about? |
38887 | The next question is, How are you to make a start? |
38887 | Then by whom? |
38887 | Then where, it may be asked, do novelists get their stories? |
38887 | There were plenty of dramas before Shakespeare but there were no Shakespeares; and to- day there are thousands of novels but how many real novelists? |
38887 | To what use will they put the unprecedented opportunity thrown in their way? |
38887 | Was style communicable? |
38887 | We have schools of Painting, Sculpture, and Music-- why not a school of Fiction? |
38887 | Well, what do you know about women? |
38887 | What About Dialect? |
38887 | What about the Newspapers? |
38887 | What are they to talk about? |
38887 | What comes next? |
38887 | What could be stronger than the language of Guy de Maupassant? |
38887 | What does local colour mean? |
38887 | What does the river look like? |
38887 | What is a personal impress? |
38887 | What is it? |
38887 | What is the significance of the problem play on the one hand, and the cry for a"Static Theatre"on the other hand? |
38887 | What is there to do now? |
38887 | What kind of woman is it who always gives the conductor most trouble? |
38887 | Where shall I go to find my thoughts with the greatest ease and most perfect freedom? |
38887 | Where to obtain this knowledge? |
38887 | Who talks the loudest? |
38887 | Why all this careful detailing of the Customs House, the manners and the talk of the people? |
38887 | Why do the American novelists inveigh against plots? |
38887 | Why should it not be developed into a matured school? |
38887 | Why should it"occur"to one and not the others? |
38887 | Why? |
38887 | Why? |
38887 | Why? |
38887 | Will they listen to Robert Louis Stevenson? |
38887 | You think it spoils the effect of a work of art to be too familiar with its physiology? |
38887 | _ Is_ style communicable? |
38887 | and have you learned all the details respecting customs, manners, language, and dress? |
38887 | and the thousand and one trivialities that go to make up character portrayal? |
38887 | and what is his history? |
38887 | how they talk? |
38887 | or Jamie Soutar? |
38887 | or a woman when hiding feelings of love? |
38887 | or is it likely to be obsolete in the near future? |
38887 | or was it not? |
38887 | what they wear? |
29390 | All is well, Gregg Haljan? |
29390 | All right, Anita? |
29390 | All safe, Gregg? |
29390 | An error? 29390 And Dr. Frank, Anita?" |
29390 | And all the time the windows have been of fused quartz? |
29390 | And armed? 29390 Are they checked?" |
29390 | Are we going to maroon Dr. Frank with the passengers? |
29390 | Are you all right, darling? |
29390 | Are you familiar with spectroscopy, Admiral? |
29390 | Are you hungry, Haljan? |
29390 | Are you ready? |
29390 | Are you sure, Carnes? |
29390 | Are you sure? |
29390 | Believe that once a man''s heart is stilled it''s stopped for good, eh? 29390 But did you?" |
29390 | But what do you expect? 29390 But what would my superiors in the Government Bureau think?" |
29390 | But where are we going? |
29390 | But where is Miko? |
29390 | But,she began faintly,"how can this mad experiment have anything to do with saving my boy?" |
29390 | But-- but what is the matter? |
29390 | Can not you finish the experiment, Allen? 29390 Can we stop there?" |
29390 | Can you find landing space, Gregg? |
29390 | Can you see me? |
29390 | Can you send, Peter? |
29390 | Can you-- check us? 29390 Carnes, did you ever see a case of snow blindness?" |
29390 | Did you arrange for that plane? |
29390 | Did you ever think of that, Moa? 29390 Did you mark the pane of glass through which you flashed your light last night, Bolton?" |
29390 | Did you offer us choice of surrender? 29390 Did you think George Prince was a leader of this? |
29390 | Did you think I wanted you with my dying breath? 29390 Do you not understand? |
29390 | Do you suppose the poor chap has a-- a-- broken heart, or something like that? 29390 Do you think so?" |
29390 | Do you think that some exterior force is causing the President''s disability? |
29390 | Do-- do you mean it? 29390 Do-- do you mean you can bring Allen from the prison here-- just by throwing those switches?" |
29390 | Even...? |
29390 | Falling? 29390 Falling?" |
29390 | Grantline? 29390 Have I forgotten, did I do anything wrong?" |
29390 | Have we stopped swinging? |
29390 | Have you ever seen a finer one? |
29390 | Have you tried to connect this opthalmia with his mental aberrations? |
29390 | Hello, Doctor,exclaimed the Chief,"what the dickens have you got on your mind now? |
29390 | How are they doing it? |
29390 | How are you? |
29390 | How did he get out of here? 29390 How do you know what course to follow?" |
29390 | How do you know? 29390 How do you people control your being, as you express it?" |
29390 | How does he act in the daytime? |
29390 | How far away, Peter? |
29390 | How should I know, Miko? 29390 How should I know?" |
29390 | I mean to say, where to on the Moon? 29390 I presume that the President always sleeps with his head in this direction?" |
29390 | I say, we are not so bad as navigators, are we? 29390 I think you will cause no more trouble, Gregg?" |
29390 | I was thinking, Moa, when we land at the Moon to- morrow-- where is our equipment? |
29390 | If our treasure is on this hemisphere, Prince, we should pick up Gamma rays? 29390 If you are what you say you are, how did you get here?" |
29390 | In other words, it is acting like sunburn? |
29390 | In war, too? |
29390 | Insects as big as horses? |
29390 | Is he dead, Olmstead? |
29390 | Is he inside the room, Anita? |
29390 | Is he worse? |
29390 | Is it? 29390 Is that all?" |
29390 | Is that his name? |
29390 | Is that reason why we should not love? |
29390 | It''s a beautiful moon, is n''t it? |
29390 | Low scale, Peter? |
29390 | Moa, did it ever occur to you, if once you and Miko trusted me-- which you don''t-- I might show more interest in joining you? |
29390 | Moa, where is Snap? 29390 Nothing? |
29390 | Nothing? |
29390 | Oh, ye wud, wud yer, little mann? |
29390 | On such a subject as this you''re entitled to_ know_, are you? 29390 Only one, Anita?" |
29390 | Overwork? |
29390 | Pardon me a moment, Doctor,interrupted the Admiral,"but may I ask what is your connection with the matter? |
29390 | Prince? |
29390 | Professor,he wrote feverishly,"can you reverse the process used in your Vibration- Retarder? |
29390 | Ready, Haljan? |
29390 | Shall I accompany you? |
29390 | Shall I try the''graphs, Miko? |
29390 | Snap? 29390 So that is it?" |
29390 | So you do n''t believe a man can come back from the grave, eh? |
29390 | So you think it amusing? |
29390 | So, Gregg Haljan? 29390 So, Haljan-- she put some sense into your head? |
29390 | Something here? 29390 Surely you''re not going out a night like this? |
29390 | Talc? |
29390 | Talk about him? 29390 That black- whiskered sphinx, Hammersly, will he be there?" |
29390 | That gentleman, milady? |
29390 | That the turret? |
29390 | The same interval, Snap? |
29390 | Then Stokowsky had isolated Von Beyer''s new element? |
29390 | Then you_ have_ studied the moon? |
29390 | This treasure on the Moon-- did you say it was on the Moon? |
29390 | To what destination? |
29390 | Wan side, is it? |
29390 | Well, boys,he asked lightly,"what do you think of that?" |
29390 | Well, gentlemen, are you satisfied that resistance is futile? |
29390 | Well, how did he get out? |
29390 | Well, why do n''t you tell me? |
29390 | Well? |
29390 | What are you doing-- pulling my leg? |
29390 | What do you mean, Doctor? |
29390 | What do you suppose it could be, Jerry boy? |
29390 | What do you think of Von Beyer''s alleged discovery? |
29390 | What do you want me to do? |
29390 | What happened? |
29390 | What information did you wish, Doctor? |
29390 | What is it, Allen? |
29390 | What is it, Williams? |
29390 | What is there in the room? |
29390 | What on earth is it? |
29390 | What other wild animals or harmful insects have you on this planet? |
29390 | What word, Brady? |
29390 | What''s happened? 29390 What-- what are you doing now?" |
29390 | What? 29390 When did he start to sleep there?" |
29390 | Where are they? |
29390 | Where are your Gamma ray mirrors? 29390 Where do you think these insect invaders came from?" |
29390 | Where is Admiral Clay? |
29390 | Where is Miko, Ellis? |
29390 | Where is Miko? |
29390 | Where is Snap? |
29390 | Where is he? 29390 Where is the operator?" |
29390 | Where is your detail? |
29390 | Where will it join us? |
29390 | Which way do you think? |
29390 | Who th''divil arre yer? |
29390 | Who, Snap? |
29390 | Why men and women? |
29390 | Why not the moon? 29390 Why not?" |
29390 | Why should I not? 29390 Why,"he asked rather hesitatingly,"did the people of Venus always remain so small? |
29390 | Why? 29390 Why?" |
29390 | Women? |
29390 | Wonder who wrote it? |
29390 | Would a zed- ray penetrate those crater- cliffs? 29390 Would you like to have our chef prepare them for you?" |
29390 | You are going? |
29390 | You are seeking a natural enemy to this deadly flying menace, are you not? |
29390 | You armed? |
29390 | You called for winged volunteers, did you not, Kleig? |
29390 | You dare? |
29390 | You got it? |
29390 | You take command here? |
29390 | You think he may be on the Northern inner side of Tycho? |
29390 | You think the ship is coming? |
29390 | You think you love someone else? 29390 You want a true course now to the asteroid?" |
29390 | You want me to fear you? |
29390 | You will land us safely, Haljan? |
29390 | You''re sure of that? |
29390 | You, please-- you will help us? 29390 You-- you will let me be with you?" |
29390 | _ Grantline?_And the answer came. |
29390 | ''Oh, you''re one of_ those_ guys, are you?'' |
29390 | ***** But how far? |
29390 | ***** Would Professor Burr be able to save Allen as he claimed? |
29390 | *****"What are the symptoms?" |
29390 | A girl somewhere who jilted him? |
29390 | A premonition? |
29390 | A suicide? |
29390 | After the Governor has refused me? |
29390 | Am I-- a girl descended from the Martian flame- workers-- impotent now to awaken a man?" |
29390 | An abnormality upon the frowning ragged cliffs of Tycho? |
29390 | And now may I return to the subject of the vampires of Venus?" |
29390 | And some arrangement for my share of this treasure? |
29390 | And the other ship-- how fast is it?" |
29390 | And what had drowned out the voice of the radio- reporter? |
29390 | And where was Coniston, down in this broken hull? |
29390 | Are they still there?" |
29390 | Are we checked?" |
29390 | Are you ready, Gregg?" |
29390 | Astounding Stories looks all right, but may I make a suggestions? |
29390 | Bolton, have you ever seen a finer moon? |
29390 | But I wonder what is eating him?" |
29390 | But how, in all this Lunar desolation, could we hope to locate them? |
29390 | But these passengers-- what preparation are you making for them on the asteroid?" |
29390 | But to what advantage? |
29390 | But to what purpose? |
29390 | But what did it portend? |
29390 | But why? |
29390 | But why? |
29390 | But you say he claims to have found the correct alloys?" |
29390 | But_ was_ it secret? |
29390 | By the Almighty, Moa, are you up there? |
29390 | CHAPTER I_ The Hand of Moyen._"Who is that man?" |
29390 | Ca n''t you change the two bodies now?" |
29390 | Can you get me into the White House to- night?" |
29390 | Can you save him? |
29390 | Can you tell me with what type of glass it is equipped?" |
29390 | Could I make her talk of that other brigand ship which Miko had said was waiting on Mars? |
29390 | Could Miko be fooled? |
29390 | Dead? |
29390 | Did he love Anita Prince? |
29390 | Did n''t you hear what I called you? |
29390 | Did the eyes of Moyen gaze even into the depths of the Secret Room, hundreds of feet below even the documentary- treasure vaults of the Capitol? |
29390 | Did you spare the lives of our people which, with your control of your golden rays, you could easily have done? |
29390 | Do n''t you suppose I''m interested?" |
29390 | Do n''t you think so, Jerry?" |
29390 | Do n''t you think so? |
29390 | Do n''t you understand? |
29390 | Do n''t you understand? |
29390 | Do n''t you understand?" |
29390 | Do you believe it?" |
29390 | Do you believe me?" |
29390 | Do you not understand, can you not comprehend, also, that the man Smith was a martyr to science? |
29390 | Do you recognize the lines?" |
29390 | Do you see? |
29390 | Do you think, when I am deadly serious, that I mean what I say?" |
29390 | Do you understand?" |
29390 | Does everybody understand?" |
29390 | Does he speak at all, Jerry?" |
29390 | Drop me off there, will you?" |
29390 | Dying? |
29390 | Executing my signals?" |
29390 | Five hundred years?" |
29390 | Get a life belt, will you?" |
29390 | Grantline''s party? |
29390 | Gregg Haljan?" |
29390 | Gregg, why are you so foolish?" |
29390 | Had I failed my cue? |
29390 | Had Venza failed in her unknown purpose? |
29390 | Had her mind, in the excitement, betrayed her? |
29390 | Had she and Dr. Frank, perhaps, some last minute desperate purposes? |
29390 | Haljan, what''s happened?" |
29390 | Haljan, will you verify these figures?" |
29390 | Hate? |
29390 | Have n''t several elements been first discovered in the spectra of stars?" |
29390 | Have n''t you ever had time to study the history of the moon- worshipping cults? |
29390 | Have you a flashlight?" |
29390 | Have you ever heard that man say anything yet? |
29390 | Have you no answer?" |
29390 | He does not drink, gamble....""And women?" |
29390 | He had mentioned madness: was he, Professor Ramsey Burr, crazy? |
29390 | His thoughts took a strange turn:"Why do these vain people go around dressed in jeweled ornaments?" |
29390 | How close were some of these to the United States? |
29390 | How could it be the_ Planetara_? |
29390 | How could she get the authorities to consent to her son having the suit? |
29390 | How did the intervening days pass? |
29390 | How did you manage it?" |
29390 | How do you like your new assignment?" |
29390 | How much technical knowledge of signaling instruments did this brigand leader have? |
29390 | How much will you sell me your body for?'' |
29390 | How skilled at mathematics were these brigands? |
29390 | How?" |
29390 | I added,"Shall we go?" |
29390 | I felt a thrill of instinctive fear-- would she plunge that knife into me? |
29390 | I heard Moa mutter:"So that is it?" |
29390 | I said,"Shall I make the exposure?" |
29390 | I suppose that you fellows are pretty busy getting ready for Premier McDougal''s visit?" |
29390 | I thought,"Is Snap concerned with this?" |
29390 | I wonder if I could subscribe to Astounding Stories? |
29390 | I wonder...."Was it an omen of the future for the West? |
29390 | In his hand he gripped a small segment of black fabric, a piece torn from an invisible cloak? |
29390 | Is it not so? |
29390 | Is that it?" |
29390 | Is that so?" |
29390 | Is that what you''re remembering, Gregg Haljan?" |
29390 | Is there anything remarkable about that? |
29390 | Is there?" |
29390 | It struck me-- could I turn that confusion to account? |
29390 | Johnny Grantline?" |
29390 | Just think of that being loose, will you? |
29390 | Killed by something? |
29390 | Long range projectors?" |
29390 | Love? |
29390 | Maybe you''ve been--?" |
29390 | Miko, Hahn, Coniston-- could I fool them? |
29390 | Moyen? |
29390 | My cue? |
29390 | Near the crater of Archimedes? |
29390 | Need more be said? |
29390 | No more trouble? |
29390 | Not George Prince? |
29390 | Not bad at all, eh?" |
29390 | Not to encounter Grantline at once, Miko? |
29390 | Or a suicide? |
29390 | Or is Grantline so cautious it will all be protected?" |
29390 | Or was it an hour? |
29390 | Or was it? |
29390 | Or, since now I was armed, why could I not boldly start an assault? |
29390 | Our first night out from the Earth-- Grantline''s signals-- didn''t it ever occur to you that I might have some figures on his treasure?" |
29390 | Perhaps you think you are clever? |
29390 | Phwat th''divil arre yer doin''in th''house uv a rayspictable female at this hour uv th''marnin''?" |
29390 | Professor, will you kindly range the ocean, beginning at once, and see how many of these monsters of Moyen we have to contend with?" |
29390 | Remember we were arguin''it last week? |
29390 | Saved? |
29390 | Shall I call him?" |
29390 | Shall we go closer, Haljan?" |
29390 | Should I be?" |
29390 | So, Anita, you were masquerading to spy upon me? |
29390 | Suppose something went wrong, and the exchange did not take place, and her son, that is, his spirit, went back to the death house? |
29390 | Suppose you let me have a talk with Prince? |
29390 | Taking her chance for rescue with Dr. Frank, Venza and the others? |
29390 | Tell me with your eyes, for Moyen may even know this writing, and I am sure he hears what we say here, may even be able to see us?" |
29390 | That airplane of the slanted wings, the bulbous, almost bulletlike fuselage, what of it? |
29390 | That sounds wild, does n''t it? |
29390 | The brigand menace past? |
29390 | The other question is this: has he any form of skin trouble?" |
29390 | The sinking occurred at ten- thirty last evening you say, Kleig? |
29390 | Then why are you cold under my touch? |
29390 | To what purpose? |
29390 | Tycho, for instance, at this angle? |
29390 | Tycho, viewed from there--""And take another quarter- day of time?" |
29390 | Venza here, dying? |
29390 | Venza here? |
29390 | Was I invisible in this light? |
29390 | Was it nonsense, this idea of transporting bodies through the air, in invisible waves? |
29390 | Was it? |
29390 | Was that it?" |
29390 | Were her eyes going back on her? |
29390 | Were we going toward the Grantline camp? |
29390 | Were we not indeed fatuous fools? |
29390 | What am I to do besides this?" |
29390 | What can you do? |
29390 | What could we dare attempt to do? |
29390 | What could we do? |
29390 | What do his eyes look like?" |
29390 | What do you suspect?" |
29390 | What do you want with my body?'' |
29390 | What does Prester Kleig think of this man? |
29390 | What else can one say about him? |
29390 | What excuse shall I give? |
29390 | What ghastly terrors of Moyen roamed the deeps of the Atlantic, of the Pacific, the oceans of the world? |
29390 | What had happened to Hahn? |
29390 | What happened?" |
29390 | What if Burr were mad? |
29390 | What is this?" |
29390 | What is wrong? |
29390 | What more was there to be said? |
29390 | What was it Grantline said? |
29390 | What was this? |
29390 | When I had lashed him as fiercely as I was able I cried:"Why do n''t you come at me? |
29390 | When do you figure she''ll be back here, and signal us?" |
29390 | When was this mental disability on the part of the President first noticed?" |
29390 | Where are we going?" |
29390 | Where had he last thought of those two words? |
29390 | Where is Miko? |
29390 | Where is she? |
29390 | Where is that ass Coniston? |
29390 | Where was Anita? |
29390 | Where, for instance, is Grantline located?" |
29390 | Which building do you think it is, Bolton?" |
29390 | Which way? |
29390 | Who will follow me against these people?" |
29390 | Who''s winning there? |
29390 | Why did you not strive more for height? |
29390 | Why had I not contrived to have Anita desert at the asteroid? |
29390 | Why had Moyen bidden them turn their attention to these shells of erstwhile naval grandeur? |
29390 | Why not increase the size of the magazine to that of Miss 1900 or Forest and Stream? |
29390 | Why should I not? |
29390 | Why? |
29390 | Why? |
29390 | Will you come over, Commander?" |
29390 | Will you face the dangers of a trip to Venus and use your knowledge to aid us in exterminating these creatures of hell?" |
29390 | Will you let me know? |
29390 | Will you take the controls?" |
29390 | Will you tell me why you make this particular suggestion?" |
29390 | With his last frenzy determined to kill us all? |
29390 | With what recent catastrophe were they associated? |
29390 | Wonder if there could be anything to it?" |
29390 | Wonder where he got the Frying Pan idea? |
29390 | Would he tell me that? |
29390 | Would it be possible, now at the last moment, to attack these brigands? |
29390 | Would it not have been far better for her there? |
29390 | Would she be successful? |
29390 | Would she come back? |
29390 | Would she tell me? |
29390 | Would some Earth telescope be able to see us? |
29390 | Would some Earth- station pick it up? |
29390 | Would the American flyers be able to hold off the minions of Moyen until Maniel was ready? |
29390 | Would they see our tiny waving headlights? |
29390 | Would we find him lying dead? |
29390 | Would wonders never cease? |
29390 | You blame me, Haljan, for the killing of Captain Carter? |
29390 | You do n''t believe it?" |
29390 | You do n''t mind staying down? |
29390 | You do not wish me to write my name upon your chest? |
29390 | You have the suit, the cups and the director coil? |
29390 | You know that when light is reflected the angle of reflection always equals the angle of incidence? |
29390 | You say he gave you the code- words we took from Johnson?" |
29390 | You think I do not know what is on your mind, Haljan? |
29390 | You understand? |
29390 | You understand?" |
29390 | You visit your son daily at the death house, do you not?" |
29390 | You will give them apparatus with which to signal?" |
29390 | You''re Haljan? |
29390 | You''re all right? |
29390 | You''ve never seen me miss a Saturday night yet, have you now?" |
29390 | You, Dean?_"Their personal code. |
29390 | You_ know_, do you?" |
29390 | Your figures gave that, did they not, Gregg?" |
29607 | And Inga? |
29607 | And Inga? |
29607 | And how in the world is it controlled? |
29607 | And then what, Mercer? |
29607 | And we leave? |
29607 | And what do you plan to do now? |
29607 | And your world? |
29607 | Are you hit badly? |
29607 | Back to the earth? |
29607 | Burglars? |
29607 | Burst it? 29607 But how,"asked Steinholt,"can we kill them? |
29607 | But how,he demanded,"can such destruction be brought about? |
29607 | But that is Stanton''s plane there, is n''t it? |
29607 | But what do they want? |
29607 | But why were no bodies ever washed ashore? |
29607 | By the way, Mr. Vanderpool, is there anything wrong at your apartment? 29607 Can the damn thing run itself, Steinholt?" |
29607 | Carnes, are you sure that those bodies were broken into bits? 29607 Carson, will you operate the switch for us? |
29607 | Cooling off, Gregg? |
29607 | Did I? 29607 Did the critter bite you?" |
29607 | Did the purser hear him? |
29607 | Did you get him? |
29607 | Do n''t you get the idea yet? 29607 Do n''t you see, Taylor? |
29607 | Do you know Ob Hahn? |
29607 | Do you know anything about it, Sears? |
29607 | Do you know anything about it? |
29607 | Do you mean badly smashed up? |
29607 | Do you remember the trouble that you had with Zitlan? |
29607 | Do you suppose that you can get a snap of the old boy''s mug if I can get him to the window again? 29607 Do you want to kill him?" |
29607 | Does anybody know what they are going to do or what they want? |
29607 | Does n''t it seem queer that George Prince and a few of his Martian friends happen to be listed as passengers for this voyage? |
29607 | Ever heard of him? |
29607 | Excitement? |
29607 | From what part of the world do you come,asked the astounded Fragoni,"that you speak our language?" |
29607 | Gregg, do n''t you know me? |
29607 | Gregg--Gregg, do n''t you know me? |
29607 | Have these Lodorians made any demands yet? |
29607 | Have you an eavesdropping microphone, Haljan? |
29607 | Have you any theory regarding it? |
29607 | He knows about-- about the Grantline treasure? |
29607 | Her? |
29607 | Hold on, Riley, what are you talking about? |
29607 | How about making him release Handlon''s-- what d''ye call it?--astral-- from Perry''s body? |
29607 | How can you expect to slay a mad creation that can leap through space, from world to world, like a wasp goes darting from flower to flower? 29607 How do you get into it?" |
29607 | How do you like it, Skip? |
29607 | How long ago was the wreck? |
29607 | How''s the train service, if any? |
29607 | I wonder,he added,"where Stanton is? |
29607 | In God''s name, Mercer, what is it? 29607 Is Fragoni going?" |
29607 | Is he sharpening his teeth on a rock preparatory to another attack upon us? 29607 Is he? |
29607 | Is it going to be treating Handlon right to de- astralize him now? 29607 Is it necessary? |
29607 | Is it? |
29607 | Is the old party croaked yet? 29607 Is there any possible defense against it, Steinholt?" |
29607 | Is there any power line passing within twenty miles of here? |
29607 | Is there something else, sir? |
29607 | It caught fire, of course? |
29607 | It seems like a dream, does n''t it, Dirk? |
29607 | Little beauty, is n''t she? |
29607 | May I have the honor of conducting our guests back to their ship in a plane? |
29607 | Me? 29607 Navigate-- where?" |
29607 | Navigate-- where?) |
29607 | No? 29607 No? |
29607 | Nothing queer looking? |
29607 | Now will you tell? |
29607 | Oh, Dirk, what is that thing? |
29607 | Oh, Dirk,pleaded Inga,"stay here with me, wo n''t you? |
29607 | Or a little acid? 29607 Porcelain? |
29607 | Ready? |
29607 | See what''s in there, wo n''t you? 29607 Shall I make a landing on it?" |
29607 | She is conscious? |
29607 | She is not human? |
29607 | Should I? |
29607 | Sleep? 29607 Snap?" |
29607 | So they''ve bought him off, have they? 29607 So you love Anita Prince so much as that, Gregg?" |
29607 | Ten days--"You think we''ll reach Ferrok- Shahn on schedule? |
29607 | That man who keeps staring at me, who is he? |
29607 | That thing, then, is...? |
29607 | The Venza-- wasn''t that her name? 29607 The earth? |
29607 | The plans? |
29607 | Then what made it go up? |
29607 | Then you know that the thing is harmless? |
29607 | There''s more you''d like to learn? 29607 They are saying over the televisor that--""What are they saying about it?" |
29607 | They? |
29607 | Think we''ll get away on time, Gregg? |
29607 | Those strange people, where are they from? |
29607 | Venza, where did the prowler run to? 29607 Very well-- but you will talk? |
29607 | Was it from in there? 29607 Was it the Prince girl? |
29607 | Was n''t it sealed? |
29607 | We did, did n''t we? 29607 We will find out about it soon enough,"he added,"so why worry about it in the meantime?" |
29607 | Well? |
29607 | Wh- a- a- t? |
29607 | What about it, men? |
29607 | What are you doing with that? |
29607 | What are you doing-- going to Mars, Venza? 29607 What are you going to use it for?" |
29607 | What could cause such a low temperature, Doctor? |
29607 | What did he shoot me with? |
29607 | What did you find out about the cause of the wreck, Doctor? |
29607 | What do they intend to do? 29607 What do you make of it?" |
29607 | What do you make of that thing, Vanderpool? |
29607 | What do you mean? 29607 What do you mean?" |
29607 | What do you say, people? |
29607 | What do you think of her, Taylor? |
29607 | What do you want to say, Miko? |
29607 | What does it all mean, Dirk? |
29607 | What happened? |
29607 | What harm? 29607 What has happened, Set Haljan?" |
29607 | What have you done to Handlon? |
29607 | What hit me such a crack on the dome? 29607 What in hell are you doing?" |
29607 | What in the hell? 29607 What is it, Bill?" |
29607 | What is it, Gregg? |
29607 | What is it? |
29607 | What is it? |
29607 | What is that apparatus? |
29607 | What is the matter, Inga? |
29607 | What is this? 29607 What makes it move, I wonder?" |
29607 | What on earth has the train to do with our getting the Professor''s confession of crime or whatever he has to offer? 29607 What was that?" |
29607 | What was the source of your cold? |
29607 | What work? |
29607 | What''s that? |
29607 | What''s the matter? |
29607 | What? |
29607 | When do you expect to start? |
29607 | Where are you going, Doctor? |
29607 | Where in hell is Jimmie? |
29607 | Where is it? |
29607 | Where is that cold light apparatus of yours? |
29607 | Where is your compressor? |
29607 | Where''s Snap? |
29607 | Where? |
29607 | Who are you? 29607 Who are you?" |
29607 | Who are you? |
29607 | Who are you? |
29607 | Who is Hughes? |
29607 | Who is Teuxical,he asked,"but the vassal of a monarch whose corsairs, very apparently, are carrying on a war of conquest in the universe? |
29607 | Who is she? |
29607 | Who the devil are you, and what are you doing here? |
29607 | Who was it? 29607 Who was that?" |
29607 | Why do you look so furtive? |
29607 | Why do you say that? |
29607 | Why, by God, where is he? 29607 Why-- why am I here-- in Fragoni''s? |
29607 | Will you help us, Captain Carter? 29607 Would n''t that be enough to clear Skip? |
29607 | Yes,I said,"is n''t it?" |
29607 | Yes? 29607 Yield? |
29607 | You dare to invade my grounds and disturb me at my labors for such a reason? 29607 You did n''t think we had anything easy, did you?" |
29607 | You have n''t been opening any treasury vaults, have you, Gregg? |
29607 | You have n''t mentioned it, have you? |
29607 | You think he overheard Grantline''s message? |
29607 | You wha- a- t? |
29607 | You''re not in love, by any chance, and bringing me down here like this merely to back up your own opinion of them eyes and them lips, Mercer? |
29607 | You''re sure? 29607 You''ve heard of the Federated Radium Motor?" |
29607 | You''ve seen George Prince, Gregg? |
29607 | You, Haljan? |
29607 | ''Some may have gone back?'' |
29607 | ***** He added vehemently,"Do you understand now why we should be suspicious of this George Prince? |
29607 | ***** Was the air in the laboratory getting unbearably close? |
29607 | ***** What was that? |
29607 | *****"And are they-- the Lodorians-- still here?" |
29607 | *****"Webbed?" |
29607 | *****"What are your plans?" |
29607 | *****"What do you mean?" |
29607 | *****"What is it?" |
29607 | *****"What time is it now?" |
29607 | *****"Why not await developments?" |
29607 | A chance word, with you lads befuddled by alcolite?" |
29607 | A plot to seize the Planetara? |
29607 | A terrific force was emanating from that devilish globe above him, drawing him out of himself-- or-- no-- was he expanding? |
29607 | And I added seriously,"You do n''t answer my question? |
29607 | And Rankin:"But can we trust them? |
29607 | And saying:"But Miss Prince, why are you and your brother going to Ferrok- Shahn? |
29607 | And the Professor... he was getting farther and farther away... that perfecto... or was it an El Cabbajo? |
29607 | And the purser acting innocent? |
29607 | And then I heard Coniston:"See here, why would not a hundred pounds of gold- leaf tempt you? |
29607 | And what was the excitement you were in just before breakfast this morning?" |
29607 | And when a police ship sights us, what will you do then?" |
29607 | And who is this George Prince, anyway?" |
29607 | And worse: How had he dared open Snap''s box in the helio- room and abstract the code pass- words for this voyage? |
29607 | Any report to make?" |
29607 | Are you a servant here? |
29607 | Besides, would n''t it be possible for us to lead a jury out here and duplicate the experiment?" |
29607 | Big, handsome fellow, is n''t he? |
29607 | But was he? |
29607 | But was it? |
29607 | But what happened to me? |
29607 | But what was Johnson doing carrying a plan of the ship''s control rooms in his pockets? |
29607 | But when? |
29607 | But who can say that Teuxical ever will return here again? |
29607 | But why? |
29607 | By God, this murderer, whoever he is--"I stammered,"If-- if she dies-- will you flash us word?" |
29607 | By the stars, what else? |
29607 | By whom? |
29607 | CHAPTER IX_ The Murder in A 22_"Good God, what was that?" |
29607 | Can you get him to keep his mouth shut?" |
29607 | Can you suggest anything better?" |
29607 | Can you tell us?" |
29607 | Captain Carter added abruptly,"We''re insulated here, Halsey?" |
29607 | Captain Carter went on,"I know I can trust you two more than anyone else under me on the Planetara--""What do you mean by that?" |
29607 | Carnes, is your case completed?" |
29607 | Come just as you are, and--"*****"What''s the matter?" |
29607 | Confound it all... that cigar... where was it?... |
29607 | Could he have the ore insulated, fearing its Gamma rays would betray its presence to hostile watchers? |
29607 | Could it be he had purposely raised the other''s hopes in order to chaff him some more? |
29607 | Could the Professor produce it? |
29607 | Could the old villain be playing possum? |
29607 | Did you do that, Prince? |
29607 | Did you ever see a man''s body broken in pieces?" |
29607 | Did you have Prince''s cabin searched?" |
29607 | Did you hear anything?" |
29607 | Did you know that?" |
29607 | Did you know that?" |
29607 | Did you, or did you not meet George Prince and that Martian last night?" |
29607 | Do n''t you? |
29607 | Do you know I just got kicked by a poll parrot? |
29607 | Do you realize it will soon be dark?" |
29607 | Do you understand, Gaeble?" |
29607 | Do you understand?" |
29607 | Does he know anything about this Grantline affair?" |
29607 | Eh?" |
29607 | Ever hear of him?" |
29607 | Finally Bland could wait no longer, but fixed a terrible eye on the murderer and demanded harshly,"Where''s Handlon?" |
29607 | For the Earth? |
29607 | Get me?" |
29607 | Get me?" |
29607 | Gregg Haljan-- is this a truce? |
29607 | Gregg, dear...."Why, what was this? |
29607 | Had George Prince been in his own room when the attack came? |
29607 | Had Johnson been planning to sell those pass- words to Miko? |
29607 | Had he been watching me? |
29607 | Had the reporter gone insane too? |
29607 | Halsey''s words:"Things are not always what they seem--"Were these passengers masqueraders? |
29607 | He and the Englishman do n''t mesh very well, do they?" |
29607 | Heat- ray? |
29607 | His voice sounded:"Gregg Haljan, do you yield?" |
29607 | How long had they been under the influence of the lethal stuff? |
29607 | Hurt?" |
29607 | I demanded abruptly,"What did your brother want to talk to me about?" |
29607 | I guess it''s the old gag about diet, eh?" |
29607 | I heard Sir Arthur Coniston:"I say, what was that?" |
29607 | I presume that you saw that it was a catenary curve?" |
29607 | I said,"What sort of a contract?" |
29607 | I would not question you--""Is that all you have to say?" |
29607 | I-- er-- that is-- you see--""Where''s Handlon? |
29607 | If he is hurt-- killed--"So that was why Miko had tried to capture me? |
29607 | If it were not for your knowledge of radium ores--""Is this to be a personal wrangle?" |
29607 | Is everything clear?" |
29607 | Is it criminal? |
29607 | Is my apparatus in good shape outside?" |
29607 | Is the door sealed? |
29607 | Is there any chance of following that trail?" |
29607 | It was after eleven by the ship''s clock on the mantel, and if--"Taylor?" |
29607 | Mercer? |
29607 | Moa said,"Does Rankin understand that no harm is to come to Gregg Haljan?" |
29607 | Not George Prince? |
29607 | Not headed for the moon? |
29607 | Not pressure- sick, I hope?" |
29607 | Not= pressure- sick=, I hope?) |
29607 | Now? |
29607 | Oh, is that you, Balch? |
29607 | On a night like this?" |
29607 | Or might disaster have come to him? |
29607 | Or the Moon? |
29607 | Or was he a very clever scoundrel, with irony lurking in his soft voice, and a chuckle that he could so befool me? |
29607 | Or was his smile an ironical memory of how he had eluded me this morning when I chased him? |
29607 | Or was it because he was Anita''s brother? |
29607 | Or was the queer leaden feeling that had taken possession of Perry''s lungs but an indication of his overpowering weariness? |
29607 | Or-- What the deuce_ is_ he doing?" |
29607 | Out of the silence, Balch demanded,"Well, what about it, Johnson?" |
29607 | Porcelain?" |
29607 | Presently the eyelids fluttered open and a feeble voice asked,"Where the deuce am I, and how did all you guys get here?" |
29607 | Put here by George Prince? |
29607 | Rankin said calmly:"Where is the little Venus girl this meal?" |
29607 | Remember? |
29607 | See?" |
29607 | Shall I notify him of the conclave?" |
29607 | Shall we argue about it?" |
29607 | Shall we carry on?" |
29607 | She added,"Why should George Prince be sneaking around with you after him? |
29607 | Should he follow Kell and his burden, or should he not take advantage of this fine opportunity to continue his search of the upper story? |
29607 | Snap demanded,"What in the stars has this got to do with Johnny Grantline?" |
29607 | Something wrong?" |
29607 | That you think she can give us?" |
29607 | The code- words which were taken from Johnson-- I mean to say, why not tell us where they are?" |
29607 | The stewards-- the crew?" |
29607 | The surgeon said,"Can you speak now, Gregg?" |
29607 | Then I said upon impulse,"Suppose we go down to the deck, Doctor?" |
29607 | This fire- writing does not really hurt? |
29607 | Understand?" |
29607 | Vanderpool?" |
29607 | Was Anita afraid of this Martian''s wooing? |
29607 | Was George Prince in there? |
29607 | Was Miko''s room insulated? |
29607 | Was he captured-- or still holding them off? |
29607 | Was it Perry speaking, or was it Skip Handlon? |
29607 | Was it that? |
29607 | Was my accursed masculine beauty so attractive to this Martian girl? |
29607 | Was she sorry she had said that? |
29607 | Was that why Miko had struck me down, and was carrying me off? |
29607 | Was the Kell returning? |
29607 | Was the simple photographer so completely at ease that he had at length forsaken all thought of possible danger? |
29607 | Was this the mysterious Martian who had followed us from Halsey''s office? |
29607 | Were all these people aware of Grantline''s treasure on the moon? |
29607 | Were they about to be led into a trap? |
29607 | Were they planning to try and seize the Planetara? |
29607 | What about those packets that were on the plane?" |
29607 | What are they?" |
29607 | What can I do?" |
29607 | What could anyone do? |
29607 | What do you suppose it would pay for a few tons of really rich radio- active ore-- such as Grantline may have found on the Moon?" |
29607 | What had you been drinking?" |
29607 | What happened to you? |
29607 | What have you got? |
29607 | What is a thermocouple?" |
29607 | What is it you want to say?" |
29607 | What say?" |
29607 | What takes you to Mars?" |
29607 | What was Kell''s real object in giving them those drugged cigars? |
29607 | What was he sitting there for, anyway, at that hour of the morning?" |
29607 | What was it? |
29607 | What was that?" |
29607 | What was the old archfiend doing to him anyhow?... |
29607 | What was there to plan? |
29607 | What would anyone dare do? |
29607 | Whatever you learn-- anything you encounter which looks unusual-- will you tell me? |
29607 | When would the Chief finish and let him escape from the office? |
29607 | Where are you, Frank? |
29607 | Where are you, anyway?" |
29607 | Where is father? |
29607 | Where was Handlon? |
29607 | Where was Miko? |
29607 | Where''s Carter?" |
29607 | Where''s the hay, Horace? |
29607 | Where_ was_ Handlon''s body? |
29607 | Who am I to write of it, with all the poets of all the ages striving to express the unexpressible? |
29607 | Who is he?" |
29607 | Who the devil are you?" |
29607 | Whose voice was that? |
29607 | Why did Handlon grin in that idiotic manner? |
29607 | Why do n''t you go get him? |
29607 | Why had the room suddenly taken on so hazy an aspect? |
29607 | Why not? |
29607 | Why should I not say it? |
29607 | Why was he laughing and leering at them so horribly?... |
29607 | Why? |
29607 | Why? |
29607 | Wild- eyed, chasing a phantom--""You?" |
29607 | Will you come?" |
29607 | Will you?" |
29607 | Would he be in time? |
29607 | Would it be as clear to the girl? |
29607 | Would it not be the wiser to eliminate all traces of to- night''s happenings? |
29607 | Would the speed of condensation of the atoms which comprised the body of Professor Kell serve to shut out the pursuing astral of Kell? |
29607 | Would they show signs of pity? |
29607 | Would you rouse him again after the way he treated us with that gun? |
29607 | Yes-- shall we go there? |
29607 | Yet held to him by some power he might have over her brother? |
29607 | You are familiar with a searchlight, are you not?" |
29607 | You caused us a lot of trouble, did n''t you? |
29607 | You did n''t know that, Rankin? |
29607 | You have-- how many is it, Carter?--thirty or forty passengers this trip to- night?" |
29607 | You know that? |
29607 | You know that? |
29607 | You mean changing their money? |
29607 | You said, Sir Arthur?... |
29607 | You saw me?" |
29607 | You saw that look, Gregg? |
29607 | You seem to feel it was George Prince?" |
29607 | You understand that, do you not?" |
29607 | You understand?" |
29607 | You will not shoot?" |
29607 | You will, Mercer-- you will return her to the sea?" |
29607 | Your duties on the Planetara leave you comparatively free, do n''t they?" |
46234 | Ah, my dear lord, why hide it from_ me_? 46234 And that long wood thou holdest? |
46234 | And what dost thou do with them? |
46234 | And what hast thou girt at thy side? 46234 And who then slew the seven lions?" |
46234 | And with what art thou shod? 46234 And with what hast thou clad thyself, it seemeth me pierced through with little holes?" |
46234 | Didst thou then smite off the foot? 46234 Dost wish to know?" |
46234 | Now,said she,"fair son, dost know what thou must do? |
46234 | See here, my lords,he said,"what think ye of this marvel? |
46234 | Then go thy way, and when thy mother seeth thee, she will say,''Fair son, tell me, what aileth thee, and of what art thou thinking?'' 46234 What manner of beast may_ Knight_ be,"quoth Tyolet;"where doth it dwell and whence doth it come?" |
46234 | Alas, what comfort might there be for the unhappy knight who had thus made an enemy of his king? |
46234 | And what is it that hangeth at thy neck, and is red and shining?" |
46234 | Are we seriously called upon to believe that they made absolutely_ no_ use of them? |
46234 | Did he still wear them in his wolf''s shape? |
46234 | Now tell me who thou art, and what may be thy name?" |
46234 | One naturally asks where had he learnt of tourneys and joustings and the knightly duty of"largesse"? |
46234 | Surely thou hast no fear of me who love thee above all else in the world? |
46234 | Tell me, Knight- Beast, for the love of God and His fair Feast, if there be other beasts such as thou and as fair to look upon?" |
46234 | Tell me, thou Knight- Beast, what dost thou bear on thy head? |
46234 | Then Tyolet spake again:"Sir Knight, who was he who was smitten with the sword, and who was he who smote him? |
46234 | Then the knight who stood on the bank of the river spake again and said:"Wilt thou be brave and valiant?" |
46234 | What have I done? |
46234 | What is thy mind thereon, Sir King?" |
46234 | What sin have I committed that thou should''st withdraw thy confidence? |
46234 | When he had told her this his wife asked him what of his garments? |
38146 | )__ Sub- Lieutenant( of twenty- four hours''service)._Whereabouts is this pyrotechnic display of yours coming off, Colonel!!?"] |
38146 | Can you tell me how many species of pack animals there are? |
38146 | Do n''t you hear me, fellow? 38146 Do n''t you see? |
38146 | Got to give up my arms, have I? 38146 How long will you take to drive me to the fort, Cabby?" |
38146 | Impossible? |
38146 | March? 38146 Well, my dear Admiral, and how did you sleep?" |
38146 | Well? |
38146 | What the deuce are you men doing here right in the line of fire? 38146 Why do n''t you face your proper front, sentry?" |
38146 | Why? |
38146 | Yes, is n''t it fortunate? 38146 (_ No answer._)_ General._Well, do you know_ any_ kind of pack animal?" |
38146 | )_"George Hodge!--Where on earth''s George Hodge?" |
38146 | ***** A MYSTERY FROM SHOEBURY.--When does the cannon ball? |
38146 | ***** ARMY CHAPLAINS.--Wouldn''t they be all doubly serviceable in time of war if they were all canons? |
38146 | ***** QUERY BY THE NAVY LEAGUE.--Does Brittania rule the waves, or does she mean to waive her rule? |
38146 | ***** SOLVED AT LAST.--_Jawkins._ Why do they always call sailors"tars"? |
38146 | *****[ Illustration: A FORLORN HOPE_ Captain O''Dowd( of the firm of O''Dowd and Jones, stock- jobbers)._"What''ll I do now? |
38146 | *****[ Illustration: DIGNITY AND IMPUDENCE_ Hector._"Now then, young feller-- who are you staring at?" |
38146 | *****[ Illustration: FLAG WAGGING_ Sergeant of Signallers._"What ai''s Murphy to- day? |
38146 | *****[ Illustration: MULTUM IN PARVO_ Inspecting Officer._"How is it your khaki is so much too small?" |
38146 | *****[ Illustration: THE ALDERSHOT CAMPAIGN_ Private Sweeny( Highland regiment)._"Colony bog, is it? |
38146 | *****[ Illustration: THE JOKE THAT FAILED_ Lubber._"I say, Jack, do you know why they''ve painted the ships grey in time of_ peace_?" |
38146 | *****[ Illustration: VOLUNTEER MANOEUVRES_ Sergeant._"Can I do anything for you, captain?" |
38146 | *****[ Illustration:_ Doctor._"Do n''t feel well, eh? |
38146 | *****[ Illustration:_ First Bluejacket._"Well, matey, wot''appened?" |
38146 | *****[ Illustration:_ North Cork Militia Man._"Am I to shalute him, or no? |
38146 | *****[ Illustration:_ Riding Master._"I thought you said you could ride?" |
38146 | *****_ Commander._ What is your complaint against this boy? |
38146 | *****_ Historian of the War( to Private of the Dublin Fusiliers)._ Now tell me, my man, what struck you most at the battle of Colenso? |
38146 | --_Officer._"What''s all this? |
38146 | --_Pall Mall Gazette._]_ Letter from a Private in the British Army to a Private in the German Army._ Dere Ole Sauerkraut,--Ow''''re yer going along? |
38146 | 3, Mr. Buffles, how often am I to speak to you, sir? |
38146 | 6? |
38146 | Ah, we used to have pleasant days in the old place? |
38146 | Ah--''ve you been in''service before?" |
38146 | Ammunition?" |
38146 | And did your father cry?" |
38146 | And did your sister cry?" |
38146 | And how are things going on? |
38146 | And how is your dear husband? |
38146 | And how many pounds of meat do your men eat a day?" |
38146 | And our army is rotten, madam-- rotten to the core.... What? |
38146 | And why? |
38146 | Appetite all right?" |
38146 | As I was saying, the militia system must be developed, and-- eh? |
38146 | B._ What do you say, George? |
38146 | B._ You ladies always design such sensible clothes for yourselves, do you not? |
38146 | Because why? |
38146 | Because why? |
38146 | But what are these trifles, compared with the glory that will soon be ours? |
38146 | But why do you ask?" |
38146 | By the way, where are they, dad?" |
38146 | Ca n''t you see my spurs?" |
38146 | Ca n''t you stop a minute for a chat? |
38146 | Can na''a body blaw their nose?"] |
38146 | Can you tell me what''mess''this is?" |
38146 | Can you tell me where? |
38146 | Captain Ponsonby told you? |
38146 | Carn''t see''un?"] |
38146 | Curtain._*****[ Illustration:_ Irascible Lieutenant( down engine- room tube)._"Is there a blithering idiot at the end of this tube?" |
38146 | Describe it as well as you can----"_ Private Dumpy._"A fine sight, sir? |
38146 | Did you never see a war- horse before?" |
38146 | Did your mother cry when you left?" |
38146 | Distinctly it is nobly patriotic to spend a fortnight with the N. R. A., in the cause of the fatherland,_ but_ is it quite worth the trouble? |
38146 | Do you give it up?" |
38146 | Dudd._ As how? |
38146 | G. Smith._ D''ye think they''re going to make a good job of it? |
38146 | Got to go into camp for his training? |
38146 | He intended making that witticism himself._]*****[ Illustration: SCENE ON BOARD H.M.S.----"I say, why am I like the Queen''s chief cook? |
38146 | He is stopped by messenger.__ Messenger._ Yes, sir? |
38146 | How do you''xpect to see the hobject haimed at, if you do n''t keep your heye closed?"] |
38146 | How would you get into line, in the quickest possible way, facing north- east?" |
38146 | I see hus a clearin''decks for haction, do n''t you, Bill?" |
38146 | If they are not picked to- day they''ll have to wait for three weeks? |
38146 | Is he not the official jester of a warlike people? |
38146 | It began with the letter from the Colonel to the General? |
38146 | May I ask why you have been giving this interesting entertainment? |
38146 | Need we mention that its driver was none other than Henry de Plantagenet? |
38146 | Now, just tell me where you would expect to find corns?" |
38146 | Now,''ow would you like to be called a bloomin''idjit, supposin''you was n''t one? |
38146 | Oh-- er-- they''re-- well, they''re---- but do n''t you think we''d better go to lunch?"] |
38146 | Oo''s the backbone of the English service? |
38146 | Punch._"And this is what you call instructing the Volunteers?"] |
38146 | Shall we-- march?" |
38146 | Slasher._"In which direction am I to retire, sir?" |
38146 | Surely we women, if allowed, could in peace bring culture to the barrack- room, and garland the sword with bay wreaths? |
38146 | That reminds you, shall Tomkins be told to pick the apples? |
38146 | Then, where were the movements carried out to? |
38146 | Tomkins wo n''t be here for three weeks? |
38146 | W. Smith._ D''ye know anything about this army reform? |
38146 | W. Smith._ Why do n''t yer write to the Prime Minister, and give him your ideas? |
38146 | Wear them bits of pitticoats that blow about and twirl Around your blushin''knees? |
38146 | What are yer a starin''at-- ain''t yer never seed a sodger before?"] |
38146 | What are you boys staring at? |
38146 | What are you doing with that cask?" |
38146 | What else would you recermend? |
38146 | What have you got there? |
38146 | What is it? |
38146 | What sort of life do they lead? |
38146 | What the blazes, Pat Rooney, d''ye mane by not doublin''wid the squad?" |
38146 | What was it?" |
38146 | What was the matter with it?"] |
38146 | What''ll I do now? |
38146 | What''s the matter?" |
38146 | Where''s your regiment?" |
38146 | Where_ is_ the Colonel? |
38146 | Who goes there?" |
38146 | Who will I give it to?"] |
38146 | Why do n''t you serve the sponge?" |
38146 | Why should I change these dear delights For toilsome days and sleepless nights, And red Bellona''s bloody rites That bear the devil''s stamp, sir? |
38146 | Why the deuce do n''t you sound the''Cease fire''when I tell you?" |
38146 | Why, how can there be any fun without your sisters, and your cousins, and your maiden aunts? |
38146 | Why? |
38146 | Wilson( with lofty scorn)._ Do I know anything about it? |
38146 | Wilson._ As''ow, yer old thick head? |
38146 | Would not their introduction-- as above-- into Whitehall lend a new and even more quaintly picturesque touch of grandeur to the scene?] |
38146 | You young monkey, how dare you joke up in the air like that? |
38146 | You''re a Volunteer, are n''t you?" |
38146 | [_ Dives under his table.__ First Student._ What''s the lecture about? |
38146 | [_ Does so._]*****[ Illustration: A CASE OF TU QUOQUE.--_She._"How do you like my new hat?" |
38146 | _ Aide- de- Camp( at the review)._"What are you doing here, sir? |
38146 | _ Aide- de- Camp( furious)._"What the deuce d''you mean, sir? |
38146 | _ Belgian Guide._ Ze brave Picton''e fall in ze arms of_ victoire_----_ Facetious Britisher._ Where was Lord Roberts? |
38146 | _ British Subaltern._"By- the- by, Smith, can you lend me that sovereign I gave you this morning for a Christmas- box?!"] |
38146 | _ Brown._ Yes, why should we? |
38146 | _ Captain._"What''s the charge, sergeant?" |
38146 | _ Commandant._"Bless you, sir, what are you about?" |
38146 | _ Doctor._"Sleep well?" |
38146 | _ First Student._ But surely not simultaneously? |
38146 | _ Fond Father._"Oh-- where are they? |
38146 | _ General._"Mr. de Bridoon, what is the general use of cavalry in modern warfare?" |
38146 | _ Hodge._"Whoy should n''t I stare at yer? |
38146 | _ Jones._ But upon what? |
38146 | _ Jones._ But what has Gibraltar to do with it? |
38146 | _ Jones._ Or the taxes? |
38146 | _ Jones._ Where is it to come from-- out of the rates? |
38146 | _ Marks._ Did we? |
38146 | _ Marks._ Of course it doesn''t-- whoever said it did? |
38146 | _ Mary Anne._"When are they going to start this army reform they talk such a lot about?" |
38146 | _ Officer._ But is a civilian allowed to take precedence of an officer in full uniform? |
38146 | _ Officer._"Augh-- what regiment?" |
38146 | _ Patron._ And your Colonel-- in the same battle, eh? |
38146 | _ Private Mulvaney._"Shall I signal to''i m,''Will ye''ave a drink?''?" |
38146 | _ Private Mulvaney._"Shall I signal to''i m,''Will ye''ave a drink?''?" |
38146 | _ Robinson._ Or was it Italy? |
38146 | _ Robinson._ Why should we? |
38146 | _ Sergeant Major._"Number three, where''s your sword?" |
38146 | _ The Officer._ No? |
38146 | _ The Officer._ What are we to do? |
38146 | bang!_)--"a military funeral too?"] |
38146 | take away the throusers off our pathriotic knees, As if we were a regiment of disordherly M.P.''s? |
38146 | what have you been saying to Captain Coward? |
45514 | And is the king''s nephew, Gawain, there? 45514 Dwarf,"quoth the seneschal,"tell me if there be any here within save thyself?" |
45514 | Fair Sire, for the love of God, and for honesty, tell us after what manner and in what fashion we be felon and traitorous? |
45514 | Fair nephew,quoth Arthur,"shall we to- day find hostel where we may take rest, for we have sore need thereof?" |
45514 | Fair sir, are ye sure and certain? |
45514 | Friend,quoth Sir Gawain,"know ye, perchance, the which of them shall joust on the morrow?" |
45514 | Gawain, will ye that I tell ye whence came the thought which has made me thus sad and silent? |
45514 | How,quoth Arthur,"without ye, who have fasted even as we? |
45514 | I, sir? 45514 Maidens, by the faith ye owe me answer me, and hide it not, what bear ye in those pitchers?" |
45514 | Sir, are ye in need of help? |
45514 | What,quoth Sir Gawain,"have ye slain him with your own hands?" |
45514 | And know ye why he sent her hence? |
45514 | And the king asked,"Nephew, tell me straightway where do ye counsel that this my court be held?" |
45514 | And then the others spake;"Seneschal, are ye wounded?" |
45514 | And when he was disarmed the king spake unto him in the hearing of all his men, and said,"Fair friend, whence do ye come, and of what land may ye be?" |
45514 | And wherefore thus arm in haste? |
45514 | Has mischance befallen thee?" |
45514 | Quoth Sir Gawain,"Ha, God, who hath made man with Thine own hand, wherefore didst Thou make this man so fair if he be deaf and dumb? |
45514 | See ye the fair couches in yonder chamber?" |
45514 | The king marvelled greatly, and the knights said the one to the other,"Ha, God, what aileth Sir Gawain?" |
45514 | The king spake simply,"Fair nephew, say, wherefore have ye ceased to eat? |
45514 | The king went ahead, as one wise and courteous, and spake gently,"Kay, hast thou come from far? |
45514 | Then his comrades asked him,"Seneschal, have ye found nothing of that which ye went to seek?" |
45514 | Then quoth the king,"What say ye, Lords? |
45514 | Then the knight clapped hand to his side, but his sword was lacking, and he cried,"Who may ye be? |
45514 | Think ye, my lords, that he be of a truth captive?" |
45514 | What more may I tell ye? |
45514 | What more shall I tell ye? |
45514 | When he gat breath and speech he sighed forth,"Ah, God, who will slay me? |
45514 | When he saw that his dwarf bled, he spake,"Ye who be come all armed into this hall, wherefore have ye slain this my servant?" |
45514 | Why should I lie to ye? |
45514 | Why should I make long telling thereof? |
45514 | Ye make us much to marvel; tell me, I pray, doth aught ail ye?" |
46615 | An angel.... Just a trick.... Who ever heard of a bird talking?... 46615 Then,"cried Ahmed ben Becar, greatly puzzled,"what was thy reason if it was none of these?" |
46615 | A magician in disguise.... What has happened?... |
46615 | By the way, Editor, who is this Hoy Ping Pong? |
46615 | Do you think that too much space is devoted to this department? |
46615 | Do you want_ The Fantasy Fan_ to remain a monthly, or would you rather have a bi- monthly or a quarterly instead? |
46615 | Free to what? |
46615 | I''m doing my part-- are you doing yours? |
46615 | NRA? |
46615 | Surely, there must be a legend of some sort to account for them, or does their ancientness go no farther than 1924? |
46615 | Technocracy? |
46615 | That''s not vary consistent with the nature described, is it? |
46615 | To our readers: How did you like Mr. Cuthbert''s story"The Sublime Vigil"in the February 1934 issue of_ Wonder Stories_? |
46615 | Vanderbiltism? |
46615 | Were they born about the same time as_ Weird Tales_? |
46615 | What am I offered? |
46615 | Why not have Lovecraft write such a book? |
46615 | _ Weird Tales_ allows science fiction; why not_ Wonder Stories_ weird tales? |
38438 | How far can a Fairy see? 38438 How the leaves are scalloped out; Where''s the den of Dragon Fly? |
38438 | In its first radiance I have seen The sun!--why tarry then till comes the night? 38438 Nay!--You are wrong in your planting,"said he,"Have we not grass and the weeds and a tree? |
38438 | Pray are you within there? 38438 Pray, are you within there, Mistress Who- were- you?" |
38438 | What heart but fears a fragrance? |
38438 | What''s he look like, mother? |
38438 | Where have you been, you naughty child? |
38438 | ''Tis well for little buds to dream, Dream-- dream-- who knows-- Say, is it good to be a rose? |
38438 | ***** Love, need we more than our imagining To make the whole year May? |
38438 | -- I asked her--"In the fountain?" |
38438 | A garden full of fragrances, Of pauses and of cadences, Whence come they all? |
38438 | A seed''s so very small, And dirt all looks the same;-- How can they know at all The way they ought to aim? |
38438 | A sudden wind-- the pale rose- petals blow Hither and yon-- or are they flakes of snow? |
38438 | ADELAIDE CRAPSEY JEWEL- WEED Thou lonely, dew- wet mountain road, Traversed by toiling feet each day, What rare enchantment maketh thee Appear so gay? |
38438 | ARTHUR UPSON THE BLOOMING OF THE ROSE What is it like, to be a rose? |
38438 | Ah, who shall say What vast expansions shall be ours that day? |
38438 | Ah, who shall say? |
38438 | All perfect? |
38438 | And I whispered,"Alas, Little Brother, why must it befall That the passing of angels but cripples and leaves us to die? |
38438 | And I who gaze On the dark border here, Drawn like a ribbon round the pasture- ways, Embroidered with the glory of the year,-- Do I not like the wall? |
38438 | And I, how can I praise thee well and wide From where I dwell-- upon the hither side? |
38438 | And how shall the soul of a man Be larger than the life he has lived? |
38438 | And whence thy blue amid the corn, O Corn- flower? |
38438 | And whence thy red beside the stream, O Cardinal- flower? |
38438 | Are there not violets And gods-- To- day? |
38438 | BLANCHE SHOEMAKER WAGSTAFF COBWEBS Who would not praise thee, miracle of Frost? |
38438 | BLISS CARMAN THE TREES There''s something in a noble tree-- What shall I say? |
38438 | Beloved, who wert with me there, How came these shames to be?-- On what lost star are we? |
38438 | Brave little cuttings of laughter and light? |
38438 | Brother Bird: Why do you sing and sing? |
38438 | Brother Stream: Why do you run and run? |
38438 | But what new thing could you find to sing More rare than the same little rose? |
38438 | But would you guess that it was the tiny shadow of your little child? |
38438 | CATHERINE PARMENTER(_ Eleven years old_) SPRING PLANTING"What shall we plant for our Summer, my boy,-- Seeds of enchantment and seedlings of joy? |
38438 | Can I bear the beauty of this day, Or shall I be swept utterly away? |
38438 | Can ye-- if ye dwelt indeed Captives of a prison seed-- Like the Genie, once again Get you back into the grain? |
38438 | Charity, eglantine, and rue And love- in- a- mist are all in view, With coloured cousins; but where are you, Sweetwilliam? |
38438 | DOUGLAS MALLOCH IDEALISTS Brother Tree: Why do you reach and reach? |
38438 | Dere''s fina beeg wheel- barrow dere on da floor, But w''at do you s''pose? |
38438 | Did your gossips gold and blue, Sky and Sunshine, choose for you, Ere your triple forms were seen, Suited liveries of green? |
38438 | Do all the seeds make noises When they start to grow? |
38438 | Do n''t the buzzards ooze around up thare jest like they''ve allus done? |
38438 | Do n''t you know why they are in such a hurry? |
38438 | Do peonies blush as deep with pride, The larkspurs burn as bright a blue, And velvet pansies stare as wide I wonder, as they used to do? |
38438 | Do you dream some day to fill the sea? |
38438 | Do you dream some day to touch the sky? |
38438 | Do you know anything about the spring When it comes again? |
38438 | Do you remember? |
38438 | Does the medder- lark complain, as he swims high and dry Through the waves of the wind and the blue of the sky? |
38438 | Does the quail set up and whissel in a disappointed way, Er hang his head in silence, and sorrow all the day? |
38438 | EDGAR LEE MASTERS SEEDS What shall we be like when We cast this earthly body and attain To immortality? |
38438 | EDWIN MARKHAM CONSCIENCE Wisdom am I When thou art but a fool; My part the man, When thou hast played the clod; Hast lost thy garden? |
38438 | EDWIN MARKHAM THE SECRET O, little bird, you sing As if all months were June; Pray tell me ere you go The secret of your tune? |
38438 | ELSA BARKER A SONG IN A GARDEN Will the garden never forget That it whispers over and over,"Where is your lover, Nanette? |
38438 | FLORENCE EARLE COATES THE WALL"_ Something there is that does n''t like a wall._"( ROBERT FROST)"Not like a wall?" |
38438 | GERTRUDE HUNTINGTON MCGIFFERT SUN, CARDINAL, AND CORN FLOWERS Whence gets Earth her gold for thee, O Sunflower? |
38438 | HELEN HAY WHITNEY IF I COULD DIG LIKE A RABBIT If I could dig holes in the ground like a rabbit, D''you know what I''d do? |
38438 | Has Spring for you Wrought visions, As it did for her In a garden? |
38438 | Hath hellish Proserpine Her needs lent to arm thee That mischief- loving gods, Pricked sorely, may not harm thee? |
38438 | Have n''t you seen how eager they are to get there? |
38438 | Have you only this to say When I pray you for comforting? |
38438 | How are cobweb carpets made? |
38438 | I asked her--"In the tree?" |
38438 | I have mourned with you year and year, When the Autumn has left you bare, And now that my heart is sere Does not one of your roses care? |
38438 | I look at dees Tony an''say to heem:"Wal?" |
38438 | I say to heem:"Tony, why don''ta you gat Som''leetla wheel- barrow for halp you weeth dat?" |
38438 | I wonder if it_ is_ a bird That sings within the hidden tree, Or some shy angel calling me To follow far away? |
38438 | Is it a dream or ghost Of a dream that comes to me, Here in the twilight on the coast, Blue cinctured by the sea? |
38438 | Is it good? |
38438 | Is that the sting Masked in gay dress and whirring wing? |
38438 | Is the chipmuck''s health a- failin''?--Does he walk, er does he run? |
38438 | Is they anything the matter with the rooster''s lungs er voice? |
38438 | JOSEPHINE PRESTON PEABODY THE MESSAGE When one has heard the message of the Rose, For what faint other calling shall he care? |
38438 | LIZETTE WOODWORTH REESE DAFFODILS There flames the first gay daffodil Where winter- long the snows have lain: Who buried Love, all spent and still? |
38438 | Little masters, may I stand In your presence, hat in hand, Waiting till you solve for me This your threefold mystery? |
38438 | MARJORIE L. C. PICKTHALL"WHAT HEART BUT FEARS A FRAGRANCE?" |
38438 | Mute, said I? |
38438 | Night, and a flame in the embers Where the seal of the years was set,-- When the almond- bough remembers How shall my heart forget? |
38438 | Now that I walk alone Here where our hands were met, Must you whisper me everyone,"Where is your lover, Nanette?" |
38438 | O Voice!--what is thy necromantic word That all Granada waits adown the years? |
38438 | O daisy mine, what will it be to look From God''s side even of such a simple thing? |
38438 | OLIVER HERFORD DA THIEF Eef poor man goes An''steals a rose Een Juna- time-- Wan leetla rose-- You gon''su''pose Dat dat''s a crime? |
38438 | Oh, help me forget-- forget, Nor question over and over,"Where is your lover, Nanette? |
38438 | Oh, roses I helped to grow, Oh, lily and mignonette, Must you always question me so,"Where is your lover, Nanette?" |
38438 | Or do they show a paler shade, And sigh a little in the wind For one whose sheltering presence made Their step- dame Nature less unkind? |
38438 | Or, was it the charm of remembered words, That set my heart singing through somber days? |
38438 | Ort a mortul be complainin''when dumb animals rejoice? |
38438 | Outside the great world comes and goes-- I think I doubt, to be a rose--_ Old Roses_,"Doubt? |
38438 | Quiet lane, and an irised meadow...(_ How many summers have died since then?_)... |
38438 | RABINDRANATH TAGORE IN AN EGYPTIAN GARDEN Can it be winter otherwhere? |
38438 | Said Tulip to the Lily white:"About the Rose-- what do you think?-- Her color? |
38438 | She-- has she quite forgotten? |
38438 | Should you say it''s quite-- Well, quite a natural shade of pink?" |
38438 | Since you looked on my joy one day, Is my grief then a lesser thing? |
38438 | The Rose into the Tulip''s ear Murmured:"The Lily is a sight; Do n''t you believe she_ powders_, dear, To make herself so saintly white? |
38438 | The tender things that would not blow Unless I coaxed them, do they raise Their petals in a sturdy row, Forgetful, to the stranger''s gaze? |
38438 | The world was gold and azure The air was sweet with birds; My garden laughed with rapture How could I hear her words? |
38438 | Thou little veil for so great mystery, When shall I penetrate all things and thee, And then look back? |
38438 | To Messrs. Duffield& Co. for"The sweet caresses that I gave to you,"Elsa Barker, from_ The Book of Love_; for"What heart but fears a fragrance?" |
38438 | Was it a bird? |
38438 | Was it all planned,--or just some lovely blunder? |
38438 | Was it the bloom of the laurel sprays, That wakened remembrance of singing birds? |
38438 | What can I say to make him listen? |
38438 | What do You s''pose about that? |
38438 | What do crickets chirp about? |
38438 | What do you know that we humans miss? |
38438 | What he may be, who knows? |
38438 | What heart but fears a fragrance? |
38438 | What need to sing? |
38438 | What of the soul of the rose? |
38438 | What sermon can you preach, Oh, mushroom-- mentor pert and new? |
38438 | What shall we be like then? |
38438 | What spirals of sharp perfume do they fling, To blur my page with swift remembering? |
38438 | What though The wind be Winter if the heart be Spring? |
38438 | What transformations of this house of clay, To fit the heavenly mansions and the light of day? |
38438 | What was thine answer, O thou brooding earth, What token of re- birth, Of tender vernal mirth, Thou the long- prisoned in the bonds of cold? |
38438 | What we may be, who knows? |
38438 | What? |
38438 | Where do flowers go when they die? |
38438 | Where is your lover-- your lover?" |
38438 | Where is your lover-- your lover?" |
38438 | Where shall we turn for joy when flowers are dead, When birds are silent, and the cold winds blow? |
38438 | Who but a God Could draw from light and moisture, heat and cold, And fashion in earth''s mold, A multitude of blooms to deck one sod? |
38438 | Who but a God? |
38438 | Who calls, little rover, Bird or fay? |
38438 | Who lives in the hollow tree? |
38438 | Who shall build bowers To keep these thine? |
38438 | Why are woodsy things afraid? |
38438 | Why do I seem to hear Cries as lovely as music? |
38438 | Why do I think of you? |
38438 | Why does my soul awaken and shudder? |
38438 | Why does your name remorselessly Strike through my heart? |
38438 | Why, scarce it seems an hour ago These branches clashed in bitter cold; What Power hath set their veins aglow? |
38438 | Wild and free as the wild thrush, and warier-- Was ever a bee merrier, airier? |
38438 | Wings folded so, a second or two-- Was ever a crow more solemn than you? |
38438 | Yet, where the moonlight makes Nebulous silver pools, A ghostly shape is cast-- Something unseen has stirred... Was it a breeze that passed? |
38438 | You would call,"Baby, where are you?" |
38438 | a soul? |
38438 | little brown brother, Are you awake in the dark? |
38438 | little brown brother, What kind of flower will you be? |
38438 | tell me whence do you come? |
38438 | w''at? |
38438 | w''at? |
38438 | you''re a sun- flower? |
36788 | Can you not see it, Antonello? |
36788 | Is it Loupat? |
36788 | The last? 36788 ''Are you not the finest singer of San Vito?" |
36788 | ''"Dead?" |
36788 | ''"Did you see the poor old man?" |
36788 | ''"Doubt that we shall be victorious?" |
36788 | ''"Grandfather, who is that?" |
36788 | ''"Grandpapa, grandpapa, did you hear that?" |
36788 | ''"Is my aunt better?" |
36788 | ''"Loupat is absent?" |
36788 | ''"No one is missing?" |
36788 | ''"Shall I come with you, grandpapa?" |
36788 | ''"That man? |
36788 | ''"Well, how is your aunt?" |
36788 | ''"What do you reply?" |
36788 | ''"What is the matter, Monsieur Jean? |
36788 | ''"You love life?" |
36788 | ''"Your aunt? |
36788 | ''And shall they look on you with eyes As tender true as mine, And love each changing gleam that flies Across that face of thine?'' |
36788 | ''Hast Thou not heard their chanting? |
36788 | ''He asked humbly,"Why so much honour?" |
36788 | ''Hearing a rattle of plates, he asked,"Are you hungry?" |
36788 | ''Henry the Fifth''or''Romeo and Juliet''? |
36788 | ''How many dead''uns did you knock off last night?'' |
36788 | ''Richard the Third''or''Hamlet''? |
36788 | ''That loving heart, that patient soul, Had they indeed no longer span To run their course, and reach their goal, And read their homily to man?'' |
36788 | ''What is discipline except fear? |
36788 | ''When others come your love to claim, You still, you pale blue sea, Oh, shall you mean for them the same, That once you meant for me? |
36788 | ''Why will you show?'' |
36788 | ''You can not like it?'' |
36788 | A French spy, perhaps? |
36788 | A writer wrote the other day,''People speak of the law of nature; but who feels it? |
36788 | Against libel, even of the grossest character, what can one do, as the law stands, which is not more disagreeable than silently to''grin and bear''it? |
36788 | And hares unwitting close to me did pass And still the birds sang....''[ Footnote 8: Surely_ wild_ is a misprint for_ white_? |
36788 | And what can he possibly mean by no poets, which he says in another place? |
36788 | And what is the human child of the iron beast, what is the typical, notable, most conspicuous creation of the iron beast''s epoch? |
36788 | And what wilderness is there so barren as the desert of human indifference and of human egotism? |
36788 | But does this now exist anywhere? |
36788 | But how long will she be able, or be allowed, to be free from enforced service? |
36788 | But how many see the sun at all, even when they live where it is most radiant? |
36788 | But who can think that''cab''is better than''fiacre,''or''window''than''fenêtre''? |
36788 | But why should distinction be weighted by a penalty, like the successful racer? |
36788 | Can written words do anything to touch the hearts of those who read? |
36788 | Does it disappoint you, eh?" |
36788 | Does this appear exaggerated and libellous? |
36788 | Giorgio asked,--''"Which of you is Favetta?" |
36788 | Has he never heard the ringing stanzas of Cavallotti which sound like a clarion through the land? |
36788 | Has he never read a line of Carducci? |
36788 | Has he never studied the exquisite if too erotic odes of D''Annunzio, or the touching verse of Stecchetti? |
36788 | He murmured:''"Why to me so much honour?" |
36788 | How can such a populace, always haunted by the fear of death, possibly enjoy? |
36788 | How could he have stooped to drink at other cups when he had once tasted of this? |
36788 | How did it find its way into the market, that familiar and intimate thing? |
36788 | How many millions has it not cost in the last score of years, that fatal weakness of Italians for imitating others? |
36788 | How many think of the sun during the long day it illumines? |
36788 | How will it end?--why does not the family help?" |
36788 | I know not where he places Shelley, but does Milton ever touch the heart except perhaps in the Lycidas? |
36788 | I made haste, eh?" |
36788 | If it be not thus illegal, why does not general indignation render it impossible? |
36788 | If it be, as I understand, illegal, why is it permitted publicly? |
36788 | If she do merit it, why does she do so? |
36788 | If the first price be correct, why alter it to the second in a year''s time? |
36788 | If there be revolution in the air, who can wonder? |
36788 | If these mines be worth the working, why does not Italy work them herself, and take all the profits? |
36788 | If they stay to see, why may not I? |
36788 | If this be admitted, what are we to think of the Tory Party which can find no other guide and saviour than this consistent Radical? |
36788 | In either result, is the game worth its very costly candle? |
36788 | Is he an officer of franc- tireurs? |
36788 | Is he not, as I hope, planning to surprise the Prussians? |
36788 | Is it towards this already popular communism that Professor Sergi would direct the Italian nation? |
36788 | Is my grandfather giving or receiving information? |
36788 | Is not the city of Luca Signorelli set before you with those few lines? |
36788 | Is not the most eloquent voice doomed to cry without echo in the wilderness? |
36788 | Is not this delicate in expression as the sprays of the almond blossoms themselves? |
36788 | Is that an ideal or a safe position? |
36788 | Is the combat not in every sense most unjust and unequal, being less a combat indeed than an assassination by a bravo? |
36788 | Is the end worth the means? |
36788 | Is the injury made less an injury? |
36788 | Is this the result of early education, of hereditary inclinations, of female or ecclesiastical influence? |
36788 | No one else missing?" |
36788 | Of what use is it to attempt to educate the nations when such things as these are set up in their midst? |
36788 | On how many do written words, even dipped in the heart''s blood and burning with the soul''s fire, produce any lasting effect? |
36788 | Perhaps he sees more clearly than we do? |
36788 | Perhaps? |
36788 | Poor creatures, why not?'' |
36788 | Surely such ideas as these in people wholly uneducated indicate imagination in the speakers? |
36788 | The army incarnates the nation, you say? |
36788 | The beauty of the Campidoglio is already ruined in order to place that statue there: might not that suffice? |
36788 | The fault of whom, or the fault of what, lies at the root of this successful usurpation? |
36788 | The officer might have broken his legs, eh?" |
36788 | The true remedy would lie in a finer, juster, higher kind of public feeling; but where is there any likelihood of this arising in the world as it is? |
36788 | They say to themselves, and not without reason:"Where is this certainty that science promised us?" |
36788 | Through treachery, through death, through accident, through greed? |
36788 | Thy antelopes in troops, the zebras of Thy plain? |
36788 | Thy elephants, Lord, where? |
36788 | To my citation, in reply, of the words of the Emperor Julian,''If it be sufficient to deny, who will ever be found guilty?'' |
36788 | To public opinion? |
36788 | To what can we ever look for any remedy of this except from the unwritten law of opinion? |
36788 | To whom or what can we look for the pressure of an influence which would enforce honesty in literature? |
36788 | We hear_ ad nauseam_ of the gains of modern life, of what is called civilisation: does no one count its losses? |
36788 | Were you dreaming?" |
36788 | What are we to look for from nations which lie down to be stamped on thus? |
36788 | What can Italy learn from such a model? |
36788 | What can a people who flit like this, continually, know of the real meaning of a home? |
36788 | What can be more graphic, more simple, more radiant, than this picture painted in words so few? |
36788 | What can be more true or more beautiful than this? |
36788 | What can this mean? |
36788 | What could human affection offer superior in fidelity and feeling? |
36788 | What else but greed has been the motive of that shameless desecration of Rome against which Geoffroy has raised his voice from the tomb to protest? |
36788 | What else matters? |
36788 | What has either length or brevity to do with either excellence or beauty? |
36788 | What is there in all this to admire or to imitate? |
36788 | What is to be done? |
36788 | What language can strongly enough denounce such wicked and insensate acts? |
36788 | What redress, moreover, is there for the innumerable thefts from which a writer suffers during his career? |
36788 | What servant stole it? |
36788 | What shall it profit a man if he gain the whole world and lose his own soul? |
36788 | What should we think of the painter who repainted his picture after sale, or of a sculptor who sawed off an arm from his statue, and affixed another? |
36788 | What strength is here? |
36788 | What traitor sold it? |
36788 | What, then, are we to say of the constant appearance in catalogues of sales of letters of living, and of lately dead, persons? |
36788 | What, then, is to be done in such circumstances? |
36788 | Where are they now, Lord God? |
36788 | Where are they taking this fettered man? |
36788 | Where could it be discussed in public without''authority''intervening and silencing the speakers? |
36788 | Where is the water thou broughtest me? |
36788 | Where is this to end? |
36788 | Where, then, can any fresh field be found in which to plant any flowers of thought with any hope to see them root and blossom in action? |
36788 | Which is the greater play of Shakespeare--''King John''or''The Tempest''? |
36788 | Who before him struck the splendid chords of his Juan? |
36788 | Who buys them? |
36788 | Who can care for the exiles of Eden? |
36788 | Who can walk out into the country when barriers block up the end of every street? |
36788 | Who crowded into a few years of life such accomplishment, such eloquence such romance of existence? |
36788 | Who did he follow? |
36788 | Who reads them? |
36788 | Who resembled Byron before Byron lived? |
36788 | Who showed him his matchless double rhymes? |
36788 | Who was his precursor? |
36788 | Who would care if this were her fate? |
36788 | Who? |
36788 | Why are these volumes, usually worthless, ever produced? |
36788 | Why did he not carry out his intention? |
36788 | Why do the circulating libraries accept them? |
36788 | Why does he cut his own throat thus? |
36788 | Why force me to lie hidden under a hedge? |
36788 | Why is the author not bound by the same canon of art? |
36788 | Why not? |
36788 | Why not? |
36788 | Why should he lie? |
36788 | Why? |
36788 | Why? |
36788 | Will you tell me where I should find anything equal to it at its price in London? |
36788 | With whom does the fault of it lie? |
36788 | Would he have succeeded if he had been born half a century earlier? |
36788 | Yet, surely to them, as to the drapers, the apparently insensate system must be lucrative, or it would not be pursued? |
36788 | Yet, what fairer spectacle could this rude and stony country offer to us? |
36788 | [ 3] How could he have bent to taste of other joys, once having known this ecstasy? |
36788 | from the depths of an aching heart, looking on the dead features of one to whom, in the eyes of the world, we had no fault? |
36788 | which lick the spurred boots of those who outrage them? |
36788 | who? |
42205 | ( 4) Between 1190 and 1200( but after Gautier?) |
42205 | ( 8) Hebron reports this to Joseph, who goes weeping and kneels before the vessel and asks why his followers suffer? |
42205 | = BLIHIS== PC=1= Blaise? |
42205 | = KLINSCHOR== W.== LABAN== Q=35( query variant of Lambar?). |
42205 | And the Grail? |
42205 | And why the insistence upon Avalon? |
42205 | Anonymous(? |
42205 | But if the fish had really the symbolic meaning ascribed to it would not a far greater stress be laid upon it? |
42205 | But then if the Grand St. Graal is the younger work, whence does it derive Brons, Alain, and Petrus, all of whom are introduced in such a casual way? |
42205 | But why should Joseph become the Grail- keeper? |
42205 | Can a parallel be found in Celtic tradition to this sufferer awaiting deliverance? |
42205 | Can these words be a reminiscence of Chrestien''s? |
42205 | Can, too, the"two nuns,"who bring in bread and wine, be due to the"Il Abéies,"which Perceval sees on entering Blanchefleur''s town? |
42205 | Could not this form of the myth be made to yield a human, practical conception of the Quest and Winning of the Holy Grail? |
42205 | Do the foregoing facts throw any light upon the question whether the two sections of the romance are originally independent, and which is the earlier? |
42205 | Had he not seen Grail and lance pass? |
42205 | How does this affect Amfortas and the Grail? |
42205 | How is it with the testimony of the MSS.? |
42205 | How is this leading conception worked out? |
42205 | If he only knew of the Grail from Chrestien, what gave him the idea of endowing it, as he did, with mystic properties? |
42205 | If the Mabinogi be a simple copy of the Conte du Graal, whence the altered significance of the talismans? |
42205 | If, then, one French version, that followed by Heinrich, who is obviously a translator, is lost, why not another? |
42205 | In Heinrich the father is named Leigamar, the eldest daughter Fursensephin,( Fleur sans epine? |
42205 | In so far Borron was led to his conception by the story as told in the canonical books; what help did he get from the Apocrypha? |
42205 | In this case, at least, Gautier must have had two sources, and if two why not more? |
42205 | Is Manessier any nearer than Gautier to the Mabinogi in the later portion of the tale? |
42205 | Is it merely an expedient to account for their sudden vanishing at daylight? |
42205 | Is it not evident that the Queste took over these features from Chrestien, compelled thereto by the celebrity of the latter''s presentment? |
42205 | Is such a punning explanation more consonant with the earliness or the lateness of the versions in which it is found? |
42205 | Is that of Perceval, pure and tempted, on the point of yielding, yet saved by the sight of the symbol of his Faith, to be of no avail to us? |
42205 | Is the example of Galahad and his unwavering pursuit of the highest spiritual object set before him, nothing to us? |
42205 | Is the model treated in this way by the Didot- Perceval Chrestien''s poem? |
42205 | Is this so? |
42205 | May it not be urged that Chrestien''s account is obviously at variance with the older story as he found it? |
42205 | Need Perceval''s question detain us? |
42205 | No; then what is his name? |
42205 | She asks, had Perceval seen the bleeding lance, the graal, and the silver dish? |
42205 | Sources: Christian legend( Acta, Pilati, Descensus Christi, Vindicta Salvatoris) and Breton sagas( Brut?). |
42205 | The question,"Whom serve they with the Grail?" |
42205 | Then enter two damsels bearing lights, followed by two knights with a spear, and two more damsels with a"toblier"(? |
42205 | Was no other course open? |
42205 | What are these? |
42205 | What is the author''s idea? |
42205 | What light is thrown upon the matter by the remaining versions, and which of these two accounts do they support? |
42205 | What then led Borron to connect the sacramental vessel with the Joseph legend? |
42205 | What, on the other hand, is the story as told in the Mabinogi? |
42205 | [ 102] Now how had Fionn obtained this sword originally? |
42205 | [ 126] But what means the death- in- life condition of the King and his men? |
42205 | [ 149] If the author''s way of carrying out his conception can not be praised, how does it stand with the conception itself? |
42205 | [ 22] B. H.:"When will the Holy Vessel come to still the pain I feel? |
42205 | had he asked their meaning? |
42205 | had supposed; would he in that case have brought the Grail to England, and left Joseph''s fate in uncertainty? |
42205 | may not the fact be accounted for by the introduction of a strange element into the thread of the romance? |
42205 | whence also the machinery by means of which the hero is at last brought to his goal, and which is, briefly, as follows? |
42205 | which he found in Chrestien, was necessarily meaningless to him, and he replaced it by his,"Uncle, what is it tortures thee?" |
46535 | And you have brought it? |
46535 | And you will give it to me? |
46535 | Not for the Flagon? |
46535 | Well, Jim? |
46535 | What does this Ackerman guy know about weird and fantastic fiction? 46535 What''s going on here?" |
46535 | What''s wrong? |
46535 | Who was that, Tom? 46535 You are startled? |
46535 | All I''m doing is praising your mag, but what else can I do?" |
46535 | Are Smith''s tales fit for_ Wonder Stories_? |
46535 | Does Ackerman know what he''s talking about, and are the Weird Men justified in their criticisms of him? |
46535 | Funny, is n''t it?" |
46535 | Has he ever tried a magazine known as_ Weird Tales_ by any chance? |
46535 | I wonder what would happen if Schwartz fell down?!! |
46535 | If this keeps up, I wonder what the tenth issue will be like? |
46535 | If you are a science fiction fan, why do n''t you become a member? |
46535 | Now, considering the two above letters, what is the poor editor to do? |
46535 | When will we have atomic power? |
46535 | Why do you encourage superstition with all the pronouncements of science against it? |
46535 | Will all those that know of stories he has written that are not in this list please send in the names so that we can publish them? |
46535 | Will we have a story in the December issue? |
46535 | Will we have to wait until"After 5,000 Years,""After 12,000 Years,""After 1,000,000 Years,"or until"After Armageddon"?... |
46535 | Will you please tone down the remarks about my being the''most active fan,''etc? |
4249 | A story? |
4249 | Ah? |
4249 | And what is this club? |
4249 | And why not? |
4249 | Are you a damned government agent? 4249 Bishop Chuff of the Pan- Antis?" |
4249 | But how can they tell? |
4249 | But surely,said the fascinated editor,"surely not any-- well, actual MATERIALIZATION?" |
4249 | But what is this for? |
4249 | But you ask how I like it? 4249 Can it be the sea, the surf breaking on the sand?" |
4249 | Do you often have these trances? |
4249 | Do you play croquet? |
4249 | Do you remember? |
4249 | Does Mrs. Quimbleton keep up her trances? |
4249 | Have n''t I seen you before? |
4249 | Have you forgotten the miracle of Cana? |
4249 | How about another? |
4249 | How can you know what will happen? |
4249 | How do you mean? |
4249 | Is some one shooting at us? |
4249 | Is this straight stuff? |
4249 | Miss Theodolinda Chuff? |
4249 | My good Quimbleton,said Bleak, somewhat bitterly,"this is a fascinating vision indeed, but how can it be accomplished? |
4249 | Quite so, that breath of myrrh--"That balmy exhalation--? |
4249 | So this is your scheme, is it? |
4249 | Some one asks''How?'' 4249 That abounding and pervasive aroma--""That delicate bouquet--?" |
4249 | That subtle sweetness? |
4249 | The lady? |
4249 | Theo,said Quimbleton, as he wiped his brow,"do you think, dear, that if I set up the table you could give us a little trance? |
4249 | Virgil? |
4249 | Well, how do you like the job? |
4249 | What is it? |
4249 | What is it? |
4249 | What is that I hear? |
4249 | What line of talk are we going to adopt? |
4249 | What on earth do you mean? |
4249 | What shall we do? 4249 What''s going on?" |
4249 | Where have we seen you before? |
4249 | Whither are we bound? |
4249 | Who is to be spokesman? |
4249 | Who''s been robbing the mint? |
4249 | Who''s next? |
4249 | Will you have a glass? |
4249 | Will you put it down in black and white, please? |
4249 | YOU? 4249 You ca n''t mean laughter? |
4249 | You have your passport? |
4249 | You may remember that Mr. Quimbleton''s card gave his name as associate director of the Happiness Corporation? |
4249 | Your first visit, sir? |
4249 | Your psychic gift? |
4249 | At least you will not refuse us your blessing?" |
4249 | Bleak does n''t have to BUY his drinks?" |
4249 | Bleak get in?" |
4249 | Bleak had at one time been a school- teacher, and his opponents were quick to raise the cry"What can a schoolmaster know about liquor?" |
4249 | Bleak is elected to this preposterous office?" |
4249 | Bleak,"he said,"you and these other gentlemen present are men of discretion--?" |
4249 | Bleak?" |
4249 | But how can that be? |
4249 | But what''s your idea, Miss Chuff? |
4249 | But who can claim that the principle of fermentation, which she has arrogated to herself, is necessary to her health and happiness? |
4249 | Can a man be deprived of freedom for carrying concealed thoughts? |
4249 | Do you know the purpose of the parade?" |
4249 | Does the( so- called) cause of prohibition require publicity? |
4249 | Had Quimbleton hoaxed him? |
4249 | Have you leisure to listen? |
4249 | He went on:"And what is our crime? |
4249 | How can this be preserved? |
4249 | How would you ever get such a scheme accepted by Bishop Chuff, who will never forgive you for kidnaping his daughter? |
4249 | I daresay a good deal of misery would be caused in the long run, who knows? |
4249 | I suppose The Evening Balloon has made its customary enterprising preparations to report the big parade?" |
4249 | If the malt has lost its favor, wherewith shall it be malted?" |
4249 | Jerry, what''s on the counter to- day?" |
4249 | Jolly idea, is n''t it?" |
4249 | May I interview that guy?" |
4249 | Tell me, have you, before to- day, ever heard of the Corporation for the Perpetuation of Happiness?" |
4249 | The thought came to me, there must be some virtue in drink, or why would so many people have stubbornly contested its abolition? |
4249 | Was I justified in putting them to use, for the good of humanity? |
4249 | Was n''t that an irony of fate? |
4249 | What could halt this mighty pageant now? |
4249 | What do you recommend?" |
4249 | What is it?" |
4249 | What is that delicious odor in the air, that faint perfume--?" |
4249 | What''ll you have? |
4249 | Who are they, anyway?" |
4249 | cried Theodolinda,"I wonder where we are?" |
4249 | cried Theodolinda,"what does this mean-- all the crowd round the Home? |
4249 | cried Theodolinda;"How can you be so cruel? |
4249 | roared the Bishop, bringing his fist down on the desk with fury--"What is it? |
36773 | ''A thousand pound, Hal? |
36773 | ''But, even so,''it may be said,''why should the poet trouble himself about figures, events, and actions? |
36773 | ''Thou hast seen a farmer''s dog bark at a beggar, and the creature run from the cur? |
36773 | ''Why four kisses, you will say, why four? |
36773 | ( 2) How does a series of successive experiences form_ one_ poem? |
36773 | ), or, again, when he portrayed the love of Antony for Cleopatra, was he using his personal experience? |
36773 | Again, if we turn to the drama and ask why the numerous tragedies of the nineteenth century poets so rarely satisfy, what is the answer? |
36773 | And again, with this native genius and his long laborious life, did he produce anything like as many great poems as might have been expected? |
36773 | And compare the enchantment of the question,_ What, are you stepping westward_? |
36773 | And how are we to say that the greatness of most sublime objects is apprehended as incomparable or immeasurable? |
36773 | And how can it have been equally the duty of Orestes to kill his mother and not to kill her?'' |
36773 | And if any one objected, we should answer with Sir Toby Belch,''Dost thou think, because thou art virtuous, there shall be no more cakes and ale?'' |
36773 | And if not, why do they take it for granted that the others were? |
36773 | And is any one of Browning''s dramas a great play? |
36773 | And now, when all is said, the question will still recur, though now in quite another sense, What does poetry mean? |
36773 | And what does our feeling imply as to the characters of Falstaff and the new King? |
36773 | And what is its subject? |
36773 | And what was the result of this shock? |
36773 | And what, I answer, could be made of a man poking his stick into a pond to find leeches? |
36773 | And when, in the second place, we look at Falstaff''s actions, what do we find? |
36773 | And, if not, why not? |
36773 | And, if there can, is greatness of some other sort always present in such cases, and essential to the sublime effect? |
36773 | Antiquarians may naturally wish to know more; but what more is needed for intelligent enjoyment of the plays? |
36773 | But is there nothing missing? |
36773 | But what can we set? |
36773 | But what of that? |
36773 | But why should it not have its usual meaning? |
36773 | Can there be sublimity when such greatness is absent? |
36773 | Can this possibly be meant for an act of private vengeance on the part of the Chief Justice, unknown to the King? |
36773 | Can we feel sure that she would not have sacrificed him if she could have saved herself by doing so? |
36773 | Can we imagine any one of those four either inspired or imprisoned as Shelley was by the doctrines of Godwin? |
36773 | Could any of them have seen in the French Revolution no more significance than Scott appears to have detected? |
36773 | Could anything be more_ borné_ than Coleridge''s professed reason for not translating_ Faust_? |
36773 | Could he really have supposed that metre is no more than a''convenience,''which contributes nothing of any account to the influence of poetry? |
36773 | Could that well be the world of what we call emphatically a''great poem''? |
36773 | Death-- and who could in such a case bear with death? |
36773 | Did they ever''spell ruin to managers''if they were, through the whole cast, satisfactorily acted? |
36773 | Do not we ourselves adopt this point of view to some extent when we go to the theatre now? |
36773 | Do you not see how necessary a world of pains and troubles is to school an Intelligence and make it a Soul? |
36773 | Does Shakespeare put them all in with no purpose at all, or in defiance of his own intentions? |
36773 | For what do they evidently imply? |
36773 | Granted that in the sublime there is always some exceeding and overwhelming greatness, is that_ all_ there is? |
36773 | Have you your wits? |
36773 | He might easily be''reserved,''but is it not surprising to find him described as haughty, prouder than Lucifer, inhumanly arrogant? |
36773 | How but by the medium of a world like this? |
36773 | How does it differ from the language of the_ Hymn to Intellectual Beauty_? |
36773 | How long would they have continued to relish this''perpetual feast of nectared sweets''if their eyes had been feasted too? |
36773 | How shall we reconcile with these facts the idea that in his day the female parts were, on the whole, much less adequately played than the male? |
36773 | How then are souls to be made? |
36773 | How then are these sparks which are God to have identity given them-- so as ever to possess a bliss peculiar to each one''s individual existence? |
36773 | How, again, remembering him and others, should I venture to praise my predecessors? |
36773 | I can imagine such happiness carried to an extreme, but what must it end in? |
36773 | If the poet already knew exactly what he meant to say, why should he write the poem? |
36773 | If this, then, is the nature of Poetry in the widest sense, how does the poet, in the special sense, differ from other unusually creative souls? |
36773 | If we go below consciousness, what is it that happens in us? |
36773 | If we omit all reference to ethical or substantial powers and interests, what have we left? |
36773 | In fact( how could he fail to take the warning?) |
36773 | In his early poem_ Sleep and Poetry_ Keats asks himself the question, And can I ever bid these joys farewell? |
36773 | In the first place, are there no negative instances? |
36773 | In the first three Acts of our play what is there resembling this? |
36773 | Is all this insignificant? |
36773 | Is it impossible to find anything sublime which does_ not_ show this greatness? |
36773 | Is it not an astonishing proof of Shelley''s powers that the_ Cenci_ was ever written? |
36773 | Is it not pathetic? |
36773 | Is it not strange, let me add, to think that Keats and his friends were probably unconscious of the extraordinary merit of this poem? |
36773 | Is it surprising that the whole value should then be found in the form? |
36773 | Is it true that Keats was untroubled by that sense of contrast between ideal and real which haunted Shelley and was so characteristic of the time? |
36773 | Is not this a quotation from the_ Hymn_: Spirit of BEAUTY that dost consecrate With thine own hues all thou dost shine upon? |
36773 | Is not this the condition of the child in_ We are Seven_? |
36773 | Is not_ Hamlet_, if you choose so to regard it, the best melodrama in the world? |
36773 | Is the fact really as it has just been stated? |
36773 | Is the_ Ring and the Book_, however fine in parts, a great whole, or comparable as a whole with_ Andrea del Sarto_ or_ Rabbi ben Ezra_? |
36773 | Is there any standard of the''usual''here? |
36773 | Is there not in every case some further characteristic? |
36773 | Is there not such good in Macbeth? |
36773 | It is great, we say to ourselves, but why is it not greater still? |
36773 | It shows a wonderful abundance of genius: why does it not show an equal accomplishment? |
36773 | Know you what''tis you speak? |
36773 | NOTE G This new question has''quite another sense''than that of the question, What is the meaning or content expressed by the form of a poem? |
36773 | No more can man be happy in spite[? |
36773 | Now why did Shakespeare end his drama with a scene which, though undoubtedly striking, leaves an impression so unpleasant? |
36773 | Or is it likely that, once habituated to spectacular stimulants, they would have welcomed''the crystal clearness of the Muses''spring''? |
36773 | Others will teach us how to dare, And against fear our breast to steel; Others will strengthen us to bear-- But who, ah who, will make us feel? |
36773 | Otherwise how can you ask the question, In which of them does the value lie? |
36773 | See, for instance,_ Prelude_, xiii.,''Who doth not love to follow with his eye The windings of a public way?'' |
36773 | Should we expect him to make an''idol''of Milton, or to show a''strong predilection for such geniuses as Dante and Michael Angelo''? |
36773 | The bugles that so joyfully were blown? |
36773 | The cloud of mortal destiny, Others will front it fearlessly-- But who, like him, will put it by? |
36773 | The danger is in the lines, And five times to the child I said, Why, Edward, tell me why? |
36773 | The lordship of the world, we ask ourselves, what is it worth, and in what spirit do these''world- sharers''contend for it? |
36773 | The new question asks, What is it that the_ poem_, the unity of this content and form, is trying to express? |
36773 | These are his own words( from_ A Poet''s Epitaph_): But who is he, with modest looks, And clad in homely russet brown? |
36773 | These statements may appeal to us, but are they consistent with Shelley''s main views of poetry? |
36773 | This last, it will be agreed, is a startling statement; but is it a whit more extraordinary than the others? |
36773 | To what results might not this combination have led if his life had been as long as Wordsworth''s or even as Byron''s? |
36773 | Was he compelled then to use whatever he found? |
36773 | Was it his practice to do so? |
36773 | Were_ any_ produced except by Goethe? |
36773 | What are our feelings during this scene? |
36773 | What do these facts mean? |
36773 | What do we feel, and what are we meant to feel, as we witness this rejection? |
36773 | What does it matter whether the thing is a woman, or a kingdom, or a tattered cloak? |
36773 | What has become here of the substance of_ Paradise Lost_--the story, scenery, characters, sentiments, as they are in the poem? |
36773 | What have the gods in heaven to say against it? |
36773 | What is the conflict here? |
36773 | What is to be said, on Shelley''s theory, of his own melancholy lyrics, those''sweetest songs''that''tell of saddest thought''? |
36773 | What of satire, of the epic of conflict and war, or of tragic exhibitions of violent and destructive passion? |
36773 | What subject, then, in the measureless field of choice, is the poet to select and fashion into a body? |
36773 | What then does the formula''Poetry for poetry''s sake''tell us about this experience? |
36773 | What then is it? |
36773 | What, again, is the subject of_ Epipsychidion_? |
36773 | What, then, are the points where, in spite of its evident resemblance to Shelley''s, we feel a marked difference? |
36773 | What, then, makes it so? |
36773 | What, then, were the passions or the''affections of the blood''most dangerous to himself? |
36773 | Where is the throng, the tumult of the race? |
36773 | Which of them is great as a whole? |
36773 | Why has it fled? |
36773 | Why should we concern ourselves with Shakespeare''s theatre and audience? |
36773 | Why then should not the conflict of anything else that has sufficient value affect us tragically? |
36773 | Why, let us begin by asking, is_ Antony and Cleopatra_, though so wonderful an achievement, a play rarely acted? |
36773 | Why, then, are they sublime in the sparrow? |
36773 | Why, then, did Homer make them so? |
36773 | Why, when this painful incident seems to be over, should the Chief Justice return and send Falstaff to prison? |
36773 | Why? |
36773 | Wilt thou lift up Olympus?'' |
36773 | Would a mountain, a river, or a building be sublime to us if we did not read their masses and lines as symbols of force? |
36773 | Would such magnitude, however prodigious, seem to us sublime unless we insensibly construed it as the sign of power? |
36773 | Yes; but what do we mean by''_ its_ love and courage''? |
36773 | [ 11] If now we look towards the rear of this stage, what do we find? |
36773 | [ 15] What, again, is the psychical machinery employed when we attempt to measure the shoreless sea, or time, and find them immeasurable? |
36773 | [ 22] Did Shakespeare as he wrote them remember, I wonder, the dark lady to whose music he had listened( Sonnet 128)? |
36773 | [ 5] What, then, are the_ grounds_ of this position? |
36773 | [ 8] The reader will remember that in one sense of the question, Is there no more in the sublime than overwhelming greatness? |
36773 | _ Why_ are we tragically moved by the conflict of family and state? |
36773 | or,''How is it that you live, and what is it you do?'' |
36773 | xiii., where, to Cleopatra''s question after Actium,''What shall we do, Enobarbus?'' |
46616 | But how about that moan? |
46616 | Is this where Mr. de Grandin lives? |
46616 | Mr. de Grandin, will you please tell how many years you have been interested in this line of investigation? |
46616 | Were n''t you afraid in some of the gruesome cases such as''The Bleeding Mummy''and the''Band of Glory''? |
46616 | By the way, who wrote the last piece of poetry in that issue?" |
46616 | How can they be defended when people will read them and say that they are distasteful to the well and normal mind? |
46616 | I am wondering if he ever wrote any stories, besides criticizing then?" |
46616 | I entered, just as a voice from within called out,"Who was it, Friend Trowbridge?" |
46616 | Is it healthy reading? |
46616 | Is it not morbid?" |
46616 | Is there any virtue to them? |
46616 | So, write in us immediately answering the following questions:"What is there in the''horror''story as associated with weird and fantastic fiction? |
46616 | Why does a person wish to read a sinister tale of evil or monstrosities? |
46616 | Will you please come in?" |
31168 | A human or a Robot? |
31168 | Am I crazy, or what? |
31168 | And do you want anything else? |
31168 | And he succeeded? |
31168 | And one capable of carrying passengers, would you say? |
31168 | And suppose we leave it? |
31168 | And the next move? |
31168 | And what are we going to do now? |
31168 | And what was the experiment? |
31168 | And where, would you guess, are we headed? |
31168 | And you, sir? |
31168 | And--? |
31168 | Any new suggestions? |
31168 | Are we blocked, ahead? |
31168 | Are you mad? |
31168 | But can it be possible such creatures could have produced that rocket? |
31168 | But did n''t I read something, too, about some anonymous Indian rajah who was thought to be raising money by disposing of his jewels? |
31168 | But how can you say that? |
31168 | But suppose we agree not to report it? |
31168 | But surely, my dear fellow, you do n''t connect this gigantic plot with your discovery of-- whatever it is you have discovered? |
31168 | But these curious creatures? |
31168 | But where can I go? |
31168 | But where do the Lamas figure in this? 31168 But where do we want to land? |
31168 | But who are they? 31168 But why do n''t they come after us?" |
31168 | But why is he different? |
31168 | But why not Australia, for instance? |
31168 | But why talk of anything unpleasant, when there is wealth enough here for all? 31168 But why? |
31168 | But you, Jack? 31168 By the end of the third year they had showed Dad how to make one of those metal things--""Like that one that jumped at me?" |
31168 | Ca n''t you see me? |
31168 | Can they be invisible? |
31168 | Can we get there? |
31168 | Can you make it, do you think? |
31168 | Cremation? |
31168 | Davis Island? |
31168 | Dead... these twenty years? |
31168 | Did you hear that? |
31168 | Do n''t you fear him-- just a little, Migul? 31168 Do n''t you hear me?" |
31168 | Do you believe that, Migul? |
31168 | Do you mean this girl? |
31168 | Do you mean to say nothing further is to be done here-- that the disintegrator will work without any attention? |
31168 | Do you mean you intend to kill us? |
31168 | Do you think you can ever check our speed? |
31168 | Do you understand me? |
31168 | Do you want to see Xantra now? |
31168 | Does it look likely? |
31168 | Ever take any pre- law courses on how to work the invisible controls of a space ship? |
31168 | From whence came those sounds, Priest? |
31168 | George? 31168 Give us a ride, will you? |
31168 | Granted it does,--a little impatiently--"but did it ever occur to you that where there''s smoke, there''s fire? |
31168 | Have you any idea what composition this stuff is? |
31168 | Have you ever looked at Mars through a good telescope? |
31168 | How are you, Professor-- all right? |
31168 | How are you, old man? |
31168 | How long ago? |
31168 | How many of them are there on this ship: and how many like Xantra? |
31168 | How the devil could you, till I told you? 31168 How''s that?" |
31168 | In Siberia, in Brazil-- but why bore you with the multiplication of my now useless wealth? 31168 Is it locked, Migul?" |
31168 | Is it you-- or your ghost? |
31168 | Is the man from 1935 with Tugh and the Princess? |
31168 | Is this the fellow? |
31168 | Just how does it happen,he asked,"that you know so much about things here?" |
31168 | Killed him? |
31168 | Mars? |
31168 | Migul, can you hear me? |
31168 | Not here? 31168 Now what the devil will be the next step?" |
31168 | Now where the devil would you say we are? |
31168 | Now, then, are you coming back with me and have a look at my Diamond Thunderbolt, or am I going back alone? |
31168 | O divine Shabako,he questioned shrilly,"who is this stranger?" |
31168 | Of course,he explained patiently,"and what if they are? |
31168 | Radio for warships, eh? |
31168 | Ready? |
31168 | See here, you birds,he addressed the Cossacks,"where is he, eh?" |
31168 | Shall we go now? 31168 So we''re going to have a moon? |
31168 | Solar disintegrating machine? |
31168 | Something you want me to do? |
31168 | Suppose you_ do_ wipe out all the machines in this particular vicinity, wo n''t there be tremendous numbers left all through the Equatorial Belt? |
31168 | The flicker of green that stopped the signals, and the green fire that got us-- what can they mean? |
31168 | Then she is with him? |
31168 | Then what are we going to do? 31168 Then what''s the odds?" |
31168 | Then-- then you reached the top? |
31168 | There-- what? |
31168 | Tina, ca n''t we--"Follow them? |
31168 | Us? |
31168 | We-- we''ve said already all there is to say, have n''t we? |
31168 | Well what? |
31168 | Well? |
31168 | What about this island? 31168 What are you talking about?" |
31168 | What can they be?--or who? |
31168 | What do you mean, cremation? |
31168 | What do you propose to do-- murder us? |
31168 | What do you say? |
31168 | What happened, Migul? 31168 What is it?" |
31168 | What is that plan you spoke of, Keston, for reconquering the earth from the machines? |
31168 | What is this? 31168 What is thy name-- and why did he slay thy companion?" |
31168 | What then? |
31168 | What was the thing? |
31168 | What was your hunch, and how did it come to lead you here? |
31168 | What would anyone want with warships on Davis Island? |
31168 | What you t''ank? |
31168 | What''s happened? |
31168 | What''s happening here? |
31168 | What''s that? |
31168 | What''s the matter, Migul? |
31168 | What, gentlemen-- you have no further curiosity about me? 31168 What-- what is it?" |
31168 | When? 31168 Where are you hit? |
31168 | Where are you? |
31168 | Where can we hide? |
31168 | Where does he drive us? |
31168 | Where does this go, Migul? |
31168 | Where is the man? |
31168 | Where? 31168 Who are these slaves you keep mentioning?" |
31168 | Who art thou to come thus into the Temple, calling thyself Shabako-- Shabako, who has been dead these twenty years? |
31168 | Who art thou? |
31168 | Who said we were going to melt the entire glacier? 31168 Why give me up for anything so unpleasant?" |
31168 | Why is he different? |
31168 | Why mince matters? 31168 Why not?" |
31168 | Why not? |
31168 | Wo n''t the instrument show anything, Tina? |
31168 | You are sure Tugh can not open it? 31168 You did n''t think we were going to live here in this fashion the rest of our lives? |
31168 | You found them here? |
31168 | You know me? |
31168 | You see where we are? |
31168 | You think so? |
31168 | You want to know about what happened to the machine monsters? |
31168 | You will have tea, my friends? 31168 You will kill Tugh?" |
31168 | You will kill him? 31168 You''ll take us, understand? |
31168 | You''ve completed it at last? 31168 You-- you say you are--?" |
31168 | ( a) Has it not been proven actually and mathematically that the explosions of rockets and expanding gases are even more powerful in space? |
31168 | ***** Staggering to his feet a moment later, bruised and shaken, Stoddard gasped out:"Professor are you there? |
31168 | ***** What was this? |
31168 | A little more, now; and Clee would be able to take the disk out; but would the slaves restrain themselves until then? |
31168 | A man''s voice answered,"You are a human? |
31168 | Am I not Shabako? |
31168 | Am I not he who twenty years ago-- as the High Priest says-- pursued the priestess and her lover into the land of ice? |
31168 | Am I not the man who ruled thee? |
31168 | And Abud, the obedient dull- wit again? |
31168 | And did the green fire get him?" |
31168 | And finally said laboriously:"Who-- who art thou?" |
31168 | And he repeated Craig''s question:"Who art thou?" |
31168 | And how could the Dark Moon receive the light that it did? |
31168 | And it works?" |
31168 | And month after succeeding month their memory would fade from the minds of those who had loved them, while they would be-- where?... |
31168 | And what fate lay in store for him? |
31168 | And what is the matter with reprints? |
31168 | And what is the result? |
31168 | And why did the glowing needle point at Mars? |
31168 | And you say you have n''t any clothes? |
31168 | And you?" |
31168 | And you?" |
31168 | Are you all right?" |
31168 | But how about Keston? |
31168 | But how? |
31168 | But how? |
31168 | But how? |
31168 | But of what use would that be? |
31168 | But the Pharaoh Shabako''s eyes were only wrathful, and he shouted:"A god? |
31168 | But to what destination was he going? |
31168 | But what has happened to Cummings? |
31168 | But where were they? |
31168 | But where?" |
31168 | But why not foresee the demand of your Readers and have a few stories by R. F. Starzl? |
31168 | But why not? |
31168 | But....""But what?" |
31168 | By the way, did n''t I notice a rather heated argument going on in"The Readers''Corner"about reprints? |
31168 | Ca n''t the covers be more like those on the March, May, June and July, 1930, issues? |
31168 | Ca n''t you manage to get next month''s issue out a little earlier, Mr. Bates? |
31168 | Ca n''t you see that he is a throwback, lost in this world of science and machines? |
31168 | Can you do that? |
31168 | Can you prove your statement?" |
31168 | Could a Robot lie? |
31168 | Could you follow him to where he is now?" |
31168 | Dared I remain? |
31168 | Did he know I was in here? |
31168 | Did you ever have a hunch, Professor? |
31168 | Do n''t let me catch you prowling around, d''you hear? |
31168 | Do n''t you desire that, Migul?" |
31168 | Do n''t you see where we are? |
31168 | Do n''t you?" |
31168 | Do you know?" |
31168 | Do you think with your sub- human minds to overcome one of the Tillas, Masters of the Universe? |
31168 | Do you understand? |
31168 | Does he want us for slaves?" |
31168 | Does the author mean to say that the explosions of the tubes have to have something to push against to have any action? |
31168 | Feel the vibrations?" |
31168 | First, why not take a vote on the quarterly idea? |
31168 | Had Migul returned here and gone back to Mary? |
31168 | Had they got away or were they hiding somewhere? |
31168 | Has she the strength?" |
31168 | Hast thou the other, too?" |
31168 | Have n''t you yet?" |
31168 | Have you ever noticed that 99% of Edmond Hamilton''s stories have the same plot as"Monsters of Mars"? |
31168 | Have you got anything sharp? |
31168 | He bowed with mock gravity and said,"How do you do, Miss Helen Hunter?" |
31168 | He kept peering at the place pointed out, at a spot of black even darker than the inky sky; or did he only imagine it was darker? |
31168 | He looks much like a man; he is some kind of a man; but he''s not from Earth--""You''ve_ seen_ him?" |
31168 | His mind framed the question,"What will I be in a moment from now?" |
31168 | How about it? |
31168 | How come you there? |
31168 | How did that happen?" |
31168 | How do we know what state we were in?" |
31168 | How does the author calculate that in"Beyond The Vanishing Point"? |
31168 | How had these warm- blooded people come to the far north? |
31168 | How would you care to make a little scientific expedition to Mars, say?" |
31168 | Human beings--? |
31168 | I said once more,"You are sure Tugh can not do this?" |
31168 | I''m boss, do you understand?" |
31168 | If Migul can lead us...."I added,"Migul, could you follow Tugh? |
31168 | In the second place, even if we could, the whole world would be overwhelmed, and then where would we be?" |
31168 | Is n''t an eight and nine- page section a bit too much? |
31168 | Is n''t that so?" |
31168 | Is n''t there some way to get back to the top of the Glacier?" |
31168 | Is n''t this a grand old world? |
31168 | Is the_ Micrad_ coming?" |
31168 | Is this not the priestess, Taia?" |
31168 | It is but an example of our modern progress, is it not?" |
31168 | It was cruel, but he was a god; and who was to question the will of a god? |
31168 | Know how an explosive force would react in space? |
31168 | Mechanically Clee asked:"Who are you?" |
31168 | Men? |
31168 | Might not the violently expanding gases fly forth from an exhaust vent to expand instantly, frictionlessly and impotently to the ends of the universe? |
31168 | Migul, where did he take her? |
31168 | Mum''s the word-- right?" |
31168 | Now then, how do they steer this thing? |
31168 | Of course, it can be improved-- but what ca n''t? |
31168 | Or how about the sun? |
31168 | Or perhaps you would prefer whiskey and soda?" |
31168 | Right now?" |
31168 | See?" |
31168 | Shabako, he saw, really believed the superstition- conceived story he had just spun, so-- now what? |
31168 | Shall we try it?" |
31168 | Smell it?" |
31168 | So you were the brainy ones, eh? |
31168 | Something with an edge on it?" |
31168 | Take me with thee to-- to thy-- heaven.... Canst thou not-- take-- Taia?" |
31168 | The big machine on the mountain? |
31168 | The green flashes? |
31168 | The metal thing that jumps about like a grasshopper? |
31168 | The question now is, who''s back of this thing? |
31168 | The snow people? |
31168 | Their origin? |
31168 | Then the clear, sweet voice, serious again, replied,"So you swam ashore from the boat I signaled?" |
31168 | There were lost seconds while she desperately fumbled, and Larry pleaded:"Tina, dear, what''s the matter?" |
31168 | There''s only enough for a meal or two; and then what will you do?" |
31168 | They were thought to be synthetic, were they not?" |
31168 | Time- Traveler:"Say, Sulsu- D-9, has Astounding Stories brought out a Quarterly yet?" |
31168 | To which one-- near which one were they going? |
31168 | Vanished, sayest thou? |
31168 | Was Tugh in there? |
31168 | Was Tugh lurking here, waiting for me to raise myself above this opening? |
31168 | Was he coming forward? |
31168 | Was he creeping up on me? |
31168 | Was the Robot lying to me? |
31168 | Was there some legend back of it? |
31168 | Was there truth after all in those persistent rumors of the natives about the snow people who inhabited the upper slopes of the Himalayas? |
31168 | Well?" |
31168 | Were their words understood? |
31168 | Were we headed for the End? |
31168 | What connection did this great device have with the signal of distress from the cliff, and the green fire that had destroyed the_ Virginia_? |
31168 | What could they do? |
31168 | What did they mean by endangering the lives of everyone, with their damned contraption? |
31168 | What do you propose to do with us, now that you have us in your power?" |
31168 | What do you want me to do?" |
31168 | What had started the disintegrator in the dead of night? |
31168 | What is that old saying about the best articles not being always in the best wrapped parcels? |
31168 | What is their origin? |
31168 | What is this matter so grave that it has led you to disturb us at our pleasures?" |
31168 | What madness has seized you? |
31168 | What makes them the monsters they have become?" |
31168 | What manner of man was this? |
31168 | What penalty must she pay?" |
31168 | What was the meaning of the gleaming ring and needle? |
31168 | What was there to be done now? |
31168 | What would you say if I told you that I have solved even_ that_ problem? |
31168 | What''s it all about? |
31168 | What''s that?" |
31168 | What''s this?_"][ Sidenote: Locked in a rocket and fired into space!--such was the fate which awaited young Stoddard at the end of the diamond trail!] |
31168 | When will you tell the Council?" |
31168 | Where could we hide from the machines?" |
31168 | Where did they live? |
31168 | Where did you find them?" |
31168 | Where had they come from? |
31168 | Where is Ay?" |
31168 | Where is it-- Cape Cod, you want to be let off, Miss Gray?... |
31168 | Where is the girl?" |
31168 | Where was Migul now? |
31168 | Where was Tugh to meet those Robot leaders?" |
31168 | Where was she going? |
31168 | Where was the Editor when this blew in? |
31168 | Where was young Jack Stoddard, official geologist and crack mountaineer of the party? |
31168 | Where would that be?" |
31168 | Who are you to demand anything from us? |
31168 | Who are you?" |
31168 | Who are you?" |
31168 | Who art thou?" |
31168 | Who knows?" |
31168 | Who were these strange visitors? |
31168 | Why are they so small, so pale?" |
31168 | Why ca n''t Readers be reasonable? |
31168 | Why did n''t someone come out of the ship? |
31168 | Why did n''t something happen? |
31168 | Why had it been called that? |
31168 | Why not limit it to a maximum of, say, five pages? |
31168 | Why, the god Aten was the Sun God!--the divinity Egypt worshipped in five hundred B.C.? |
31168 | Why? |
31168 | Will some other kind Reader endeavor to explain it to me? |
31168 | Will you be more quick with him?" |
31168 | Will you kill him if we find him?" |
31168 | Will you protect me?" |
31168 | Will you thank your Authors for me for the very many hours of interesting reading they have given me during the past twelve months? |
31168 | Will you? |
31168 | Within a moment we were flashing off into the great stream of Time....*****"You think he has gone forward into the future?" |
31168 | Would I ever see my friend again? |
31168 | Would he fire through the doorway, or appear abruptly at the window? |
31168 | Would it respond? |
31168 | Would she prevail? |
31168 | Would they ever return to their Earth again? |
31168 | You are not sociable, after enjoying my hospitality, my transportation? |
31168 | You can understand, yes?" |
31168 | You have heard of me, perhaps?" |
31168 | You know anything about it?" |
31168 | You think I, a nobleman, am interested in the masses? |
31168 | You''ve noticed the lumps on the back of your necks? |
31168 | Your knife? |
31168 | _ Covers Too Imaginative?_ Dear Editor: For crying out loud, why ca n''t everyone be satisfied! |
31168 | _ Expert Opinion_ Dear Editor: May I express my pleasure and gratification in your worthy magazine? |
31168 | _ Heroes Too Heroic?_ Dear Editor: I wrote you a letter last month. |
31168 | crackled in his brain with almost a physical effort,"do you think to resist Xantra? |
39129 | But how shall we find out who is most worthy? |
39129 | How so, my child? |
39129 | May not the darkness hide it from my face? |
39129 | O foolish little acorn, wilt thou be all this? |
39129 | Oh, how can you? |
39129 | Rub what off? |
39129 | Then must I knock or call when just in sight? |
39129 | Then whence this wondrous perfume-- say? |
39129 | What art thou? |
39129 | What does that matter? |
39129 | Why is it that you love your teacher so well? |
39129 | Why, my child? |
39129 | Why, where''s the harm? |
39129 | Will the day''s journey take the whole long day? |
39129 | Will there be beds for me and all who seek? |
39129 | __ Pardoned? 39129 __"But is there for the night a resting- place?" |
39129 | __Shall I find comfort, travel- sore and weak?" |
39129 | __Shall I meet other wayfarers at night?" |
39129 | A rabbi, who lived nearly twenty years before Christ was born, set his pupils thinking by asking them,"What is the best thing for a man to possess?" |
39129 | A soft hand stroked it as I went by.__ What makes your cheek like a warm white rose? |
39129 | Am I not the flower of God?" |
39129 | And would not Ignotus have painted a masterpiece if he could have found good brushes and a proper canvas? |
39129 | April 10_ If the stream had no quiet eddying place, could we so admire its cascade over the rocks? |
39129 | April 23_"What is the secret of your life?" |
39129 | Are not you God''s child? |
39129 | Art Thou the Infinite Mercy, and shall we say, be merciful? |
39129 | Birth of a Baby_ Where did you come from, baby dear? |
39129 | But how and when? |
39129 | But why need he come? |
39129 | Can he do less-- receiving everything?_ CHARLOTTE PERKINS GILMAN. |
39129 | Can poet''s brain More than the Father''s heart rich good invent? |
39129 | Could ever bronze or marble so respond In wordless echo of the being''s will? |
39129 | December 18_ Did you ever see a schoolboy tumble on the ice without stooping immediately to re- buckle the strap of his skates? |
39129 | December 23_ Wouldst make thy life go fair and square? |
39129 | December 2_"A commonplace life,"we say, and we sigh; But why should we sigh as we say? |
39129 | Did we not hear The flutter of its wings and feel it near, And just within our reach? |
39129 | Do the leaves say nothing to you as they murmur to- day? |
39129 | Do we not go through life blindly, thinking that some fair tomorrow will bring us the gift we miss today?... |
39129 | Do you think the father would be particularly pleased?" |
39129 | Especially wilt Thou forgive us for all that was little and petty and mean? |
39129 | Eternal Presence, may we now speak to Thee? |
39129 | February 4_ Who art thou that complainest of thy life of toil? |
39129 | Florimel, however, clambered down the rocks and plucked the flower; and when he had got it, what do you think he did with it? |
39129 | For what can we do of ourselves? |
39129 | From the same box as the cherub''s wings.__ How did they all just come to be you? |
39129 | General Birthday_ Birthdays, what are they? |
39129 | God thought about me, and so I grew.__ But how did you come to us, you dear? |
39129 | He came to a peach tree, and said,"What are you doing for me?" |
39129 | How does the musician read the rest? |
39129 | How shall we come to Thee? |
39129 | How shall we share Thy strength and know Thy life? |
39129 | I found it waiting when I got here.__ What makes your forehead so smooth and high? |
39129 | If a man constantly aspires, is he not elevated? |
39129 | If you had not the skill of a workman, but the consideration of a man, what would you say? |
39129 | Is it Thy will that I should be in a public or private condition; dwell here, or be banished; be poor or rich? |
39129 | Is it to carry a banner in a procession? |
39129 | Is it to fling bunting from the tops of the buildings, and send off sky- rockets in the evenings? |
39129 | Is it to shout as we see the flag? |
39129 | Is not this God''s world? |
39129 | January 29_ Do n''t you touch the edge of the great gladness that is in the world, now and then, in spite of your own little single worries? |
39129 | January 8_ Have we not all, amid life''s petty strife, Some pure ideal of a noble life That once seemed possible? |
39129 | July 10_ Were any of us really disappointed or melancholy in a hayfield? |
39129 | July 12_ What shall I do to be just? |
39129 | June 17_"Does the road wind up- hill all the way?" |
39129 | Love made itself into hooks and bands.__ Feet, whence did you come, you darling things? |
39129 | March 17_ Therefore to whom turn I but to Thee, the ineffable Name? |
39129 | May 25_ What are we set on earth for? |
39129 | Must we gain a height first or can we reach up our feebleness together to the Hands that do offer us a mighty help from on high? |
39129 | My work, my home, my strength, my frugal store, The sun and rain-- what need have I of more? |
39129 | No more? |
39129 | No plant ever brought out such fruit as this?_ HENRY WARD BEECHER. |
39129 | November 17_ Do we not know that more than half our trouble is borrowed? |
39129 | November 25_ What is the crown of the whole of life lived faithfully here? |
39129 | November 7_"What is the real good?" |
39129 | Or is the adder better than the eel, Because his painted skin contents the eye?_ SHAKESPEARE. |
39129 | Our Heavenly Father, wilt Thou forgive us for the sighs and tears and frowns and doubts of yesterday? |
39129 | Our Heavenly Father, wilt Thou keep our home life bright and sweet? |
39129 | Out of the everywhere into the here.__ Where did you get your eyes so blue? |
39129 | Out of the sky as I came through.__ What makes the light in them sparkle and spin? |
39129 | Say not the days are evil,--who''s to blame? |
39129 | September 24_ To be at all-- what is better than that? |
39129 | September 28_ Forenoon and afternoon and night-- Forenoon And afternoon and night,--Forenoon, and-- what? |
39129 | September 30_ Would you like to hear what sort of questions the school- boys had to answer eighteen centuries ago? |
39129 | Shall I tear off each luminous thing To drop in the palm of the poor? |
39129 | Shall trust depart when shadows fall? |
39129 | Shall we fear to go anywhere? |
39129 | Shall we persuade the love that can not once withhold itself? |
39129 | Some of the starry spikes left in.__ Where did you get that little tear? |
39129 | Something better than anyone knows.__ Whence that three- cornered smile of bliss? |
39129 | The Optimist''s Good Morning January 1_ Throughout the year, why not keep sweet? |
39129 | Three angels gave me at once a kiss.__ Where did you get those arms and hands? |
39129 | To the chestnut he said,"What are you doing?" |
39129 | What are daily burdens? |
39129 | What did the little girl do? |
39129 | What does the furrow include? |
39129 | What is disaster? |
39129 | What is poverty? |
39129 | What is sickness? |
39129 | What is there Thou should''st do for such as I?" |
39129 | What matter how miserable one is if one can do that? |
39129 | What now? |
39129 | What secret power, I wonder, caused this blossoming miracle? |
39129 | What shall I do for the gain Of the world-- for its sadness? |
39129 | What shall I do to be just? |
39129 | What shall it profit us, if, gaining all The privilege of priest- made paradise, We lose therewith our self which is the soul? |
39129 | What signifies the desertion of friends, what of death itself so long as a man can hope? |
39129 | What traveler would faint through troublous lands To gather only what must leave his hands The moment that he takes his homeward ship? |
39129 | What, is the jay more precious than the lark, Because his feathers are more beautiful? |
39129 | When shows break up what but One''s self is sure?_ WALT WHITMAN. |
39129 | Whence comest thou when with dark Winter''s sadness The tears that fade in sunny smiles thou sharest? |
39129 | Where did this thing come from? |
39129 | Whether we work or pray, wilt Thou rule our spirits? |
39129 | Who could have dreamed that such beauty lurked in the dark earth, was latent in the tiny seed we planted? |
39129 | Who knows What earth needs from earth''s lowliest creature? |
39129 | Who shall tell me if an Easter lily is the equal of a rose, or if either is equal to an oak or a pine? |
39129 | Why not the breakfast table? |
39129 | Would you win it and wear its bright token? |
39129 | You would not dare to find fault with the blacksmith in his shop, and do you dare to find fault with God in His world?_ ST. BERNARD. |
39129 | _ But what is it to love one''s country? |
39129 | _ Did you ever hear of a man who had striven all his life faithfully and singly toward an object, and in no measure obtained it? |
39129 | _ The inconveniences and the petty annoyances, the pains and the sorrows, do we ever forget them? |
39129 | _ When do we lift each other up? |
39129 | and will not those Who love to dwell with Sharon''s Rose, Distil sweet odors all around, Though low and mean themselves are found? |
39129 | of what amount without Thee?) |
39129 | or who treat you with contempt, or dispute the passage with you?_ WALT WHITMAN. |
39129 | or, consciously within Thy presence, should our lips be still? |
39129 | was his quick demand;"Art thou some gem from Samarcand, Or spikenard in this rude disguise, Or other costly merchandise?" |
37166 | Ai n''t yer, sir? 37166 But how am I to get on?" |
37166 | Can you tell me, my good man, if this plant belongs to the''Arbutus''family? |
37166 | Do you smell the iodine from the sea, Edwin? 37166 Fine idea this, sir, for the hair, eh?"] |
37166 | Have you any experience of squalls, Brown? |
37166 | Have you got the price of two Scotch whiskies on you? |
37166 | How much are those-- ah-- improvers? |
37166 | How on earth am I to prevent it, my love? |
37166 | I say, Effie, do you know what I should like? 37166 Oh, aunt, you''re not coming in with your spectacles on?" |
37166 | Want a donkey, mister?] |
37166 | Well, Jane, have you found it dull? |
37166 | What is it? |
37166 | What sort of people do you get down here in the summer? |
37166 | Where on our earthly planet? |
37166 | Where''s Ramsgate? 37166 Where''s Ramsgate? |
37166 | Why on earth ca n''t we go to a more_ dressy_ place than this,''Enery? 37166 With Thanet Harriers, when you are Well mounted on a pony, You''ll say, for health who''d go so far As Cannes, Nice, or Mentone? |
37166 | ''Oo cares? |
37166 | ''Oo let him in''ere--_you_? |
37166 | (_ Aside to Bones._)''Oo_ is_ he? |
37166 | (_ The Children giggle, but remain seated._) Not one? |
37166 | (_ To Alf._) Kin it be? |
37166 | ***** EMBARRASSMENT OF RICHES: MARGATE.--_Mother._"Now, Tommy, which would you rather do-- have a donkey ride or watch father bathe?" |
37166 | ***** THE TRIPPER(_ By a Resident_) What does he come for? |
37166 | *****"WHERE''S RAMSGATE?" |
37166 | *****[ Illustration: BY THE SAD SEA WAVES"But, are you sure?" |
37166 | *****[ Illustration: CONVERSATIONAL PITFALLS_ Irene._"Do you remember Kitty Fowler?" |
37166 | *****[ Illustration: CURLEW]***** AT SCARBOROUGH.--_Miss Araminta Dove._ Why do they call this the Spa? |
37166 | *****[ Illustration: LOCAL INTELLIGENCE"D''year as''ow old Bob Osborne''ave give up shrimpin''an took ter winklin''?" |
37166 | *****[ Illustration: NAUGHTICAL? |
37166 | *****[ Illustration: PARIS? |
37166 | *****[ Illustration: PLEASURES OF THE SEASIDE_ Mermaiden._"I am told you keep a circulating library?" |
37166 | *****[ Illustration: UNLUCKY COMPLIMENTS_ Shy but Susceptible Youth._"Er--_could_ you tell me who that young lady is-- sketching?" |
37166 | *****[ Illustration:_ She._"How much was old Mr. Baskerville''s estate sworn at by his next- of- kin?" |
37166 | *****[ Illustration:_ The General._"And what are you going to be when you grow up, young man?" |
37166 | *****[ Illustration:_ Visitor._"Have you ever seen the sea- serpent?" |
37166 | *****_ Same day, after an early dinner, lying on the beach._ Wonder why I can never get any fish? |
37166 | *****_ Same day, after lunch, lying on the beach._ Wonder who in the house beside myself is partial to my dry sherry? |
37166 | A month hence, shall we be glad or sorry to leave Pierpoint, and go back to Paddington? |
37166 | Ai n''t he stood nothing? |
37166 | Ai n''t yer comin''up for it? |
37166 | Ai n''t you a- coming to help me?" |
37166 | And did n''t you tell me, my own, that the parents of Mr. Stuart Jones were convicts before they became millionaires? |
37166 | Are you not a relative of Mr. Dan Briggs?" |
37166 | B._ Why? |
37166 | Brown finds Sandymouth a very different place from what she remembers it years ago.__ Greengrocer._"Cabbage, mum!? |
37166 | Brown._"Might I ask how much you gave that nigger?" |
37166 | Brown?" |
37166 | But, bless you, wot''s it come to now? |
37166 | By the way, dear, did n''t you say that the Plantagenet Smiths were suspected of murdering their uncle before they inherited his property? |
37166 | Ca n''t you be quiet?" |
37166 | Children playing near me, pretty, very? |
37166 | Did you''ear that, Bert? |
37166 | Do I_ look_ as if I wanted a boat?"] |
37166 | Do n''t you recollect our meeting this summer at Harrogate? |
37166 | Do n''t you think so?" |
37166 | Do you suppose_ they_ ever gave way to strong drink?" |
37166 | For what could mortal man or maid want more Than breezy downs to stroll on, rocks to climb up, Weird labyrinthine caverns to explore? |
37166 | Fydgetts._"What''s the use of making that noise? |
37166 | Go out of town What if we do? |
37166 | Had n''t I better go to the rescue, Miss Loo? |
37166 | He wonders too? |
37166 | I want to see him do you credit, that''s all, and he could n''t''ave a better opportunity to distinguish himself-- now_ could_ he? |
37166 | I wonder( to the boatman) if it will be a fine day tomorrow? |
37166 | If so, is the tide sometimes higher than usual, as the-- ahem!--odours certainly are? |
37166 | Is n''t it refreshing?" |
37166 | It was n''t_ me_ upset him-- was it now? |
37166 | Justice Hawkins._ Where is Ramsgate? |
37166 | Now then, which is the little gal to step out first and git a medal? |
37166 | On second thoughts, wonder what I shall do if it is n''t? |
37166 | Shall I, dreaming thus at home, Left ashore behind here, Envy restless men who roam Seeking what I find here? |
37166 | Shall we be happy in our laundress? |
37166 | Shall we be photographed? |
37166 | Shall we be satisfied with our first weekly bill? |
37166 | Shall we call on the Denbigh Flints, who, according to the_ Pierpoint Pioneer_, are staying at 10, Ocean Crescent? |
37166 | Shall we carefully avoid the Wilkiesons, whom the same unerring guide reports at 33, Blue Lion Street? |
37166 | Shall we dine late or early? |
37166 | Shall we find Kate all that a Kate ought to be? |
37166 | Shall we find everything dearer here than it is at home? |
37166 | Shall we find in it any unexpected and novel extras, such as knife- cleaning, proportion of the water- rate, loan of latch- key,& c.? |
37166 | Shall we get to know the people in the drawing- room? |
37166 | Shall we like Mrs. Kittlespark? |
37166 | Shall we lock everything up, or repose a noble confidence in Mrs. Kittlespark and Kate? |
37166 | Shall we relax our minds with the newest novels, or give our intellects a bracing course of the best standard works? |
37166 | Shall we subscribe to the Pier, or pay each time we go on it? |
37166 | Since beside my native sea, Where I sit to woo it, Pleasure always comes to me, Why should I pursue it? |
37166 | T._"Well, Mr. Tomkins, and pray who may Henrietta be?" |
37166 | T._"What a wretch you must be, T.; why do n''t you take me off? |
37166 | Their interest is totally untinged with envy._]*****[ Illustration: OVERHEARD AT SCARBOROUGH"Do you know anything good for a cold?" |
37166 | Up street and down street with Dull vacant stare, Hither and thither, it Do n''t matter where? |
37166 | Was she-- er-- a person of position?" |
37166 | We both wonder together? |
37166 | Well, and what more would you have_''ad_ him say? |
37166 | Well? |
37166 | What cared he about my getting wet through twice in one day, so long as it raised the price of his wretched wheat? |
37166 | What do you mean by that, madam? |
37166 | What do you mean by that, madam? |
37166 | What does he mean by it? |
37166 | What does he want? |
37166 | What has become of Tiny? |
37166 | What_ will_ missus say?"] |
37166 | When will it be over? |
37166 | Where do you expect to go to?" |
37166 | Where_ can_ he have come from? |
37166 | Wherever can them two plegs have got to? |
37166 | Why do n''t he stay at home, Save his train fare, Soak at his native beer, Sunday clothes wear? |
37166 | Why does he come Hundreds of miles to prowl, Weary and glum, Blinking at Kosmos with Lack- lustre eye? |
37166 | Why does he come away? |
37166 | Why does he wander thus Careworn and gaunt? |
37166 | Why is he here? |
37166 | Why should it be something so unutterably miserable and depressing that its mere recollection afterwards makes one shudder? |
37166 | Why, do you know what they call us down here? |
37166 | Wife, how can she, Grown old and fat? |
37166 | Wonder how I ever could live in London? |
37166 | Wonder how the boatmen here make a livelihood by lying all day at full length on the beach? |
37166 | Wonder if I should like to be a shrimp? |
37166 | Wonder if I should like to go up in a balloon? |
37166 | Wonder if he''s going to do it again? |
37166 | Wonder if it will be a fine day? |
37166 | Wonder if it''s hot in London? |
37166 | Wonder if police inspectors are as a rule fond of bathing? |
37166 | Wonder if she came yesterday or the day before? |
37166 | Wonder if she''s pretty? |
37166 | Wonder if that little boy intended to hit me on the nose with a stone? |
37166 | Wonder if that''s the coast of France in the distance? |
37166 | Wonder if the Pope can swim? |
37166 | Wonder if the Zoological Gardens are open at sunrise? |
37166 | Wonder if there are any letters? |
37166 | Wonder if there''s any news from America? |
37166 | Wonder more than ever who there is at my lodgings so partial to my dry sherry? |
37166 | Wonder several times more than ever who it is that''s so fond of my dry sherry? |
37166 | Wonder what I shall do all the afternoon? |
37166 | Wonder what I shall do all this evening? |
37166 | Wonder what I shall do if it is? |
37166 | Wonder what I shall do to- morrow? |
37166 | Wonder what I''ve been thinking about the last ten minutes? |
37166 | Wonder what Speke and Grant had for dinner to- day? |
37166 | Wonder what age I was last birthday? |
37166 | Wonder what gave me that idea? |
37166 | Wonder what made me think of that? |
37166 | Wonder what there is for dinner? |
37166 | Wonder what there is for dinner? |
37166 | Wonder what time it is? |
37166 | Wonder what tooral looral means in a chorus? |
37166 | Wonder what''s in the paper to- day? |
37166 | Wonder who that is in a white petticoat with her hair down? |
37166 | Wonder why every one who sits on the shore throws pebbles into the sea? |
37166 | Wonder why my landlady introduces cinders into the gravy? |
37166 | Wonder( again to the boatman) if the rail will make much difference to the place? |
37166 | Would you like to see a catalogue?"] |
37166 | Your name, my dear? |
37166 | [ Illustration]_ Monday_(?) |
37166 | _ Brown._ Why odious? |
37166 | _ Brown._"Matter? |
37166 | _ Chorley._ Do you notice how they keep kicking him beyind on the sly like? |
37166 | _ Lady Artist._"Do you belong to that ship over there?" |
37166 | _ Lady Artist._"Then would you mind loosening all those ropes? |
37166 | _ Mabel._"What do you want_ them_ for?" |
37166 | _ Man with Sand Ponies._"Now then, Mister, you an''the young lady, a pony apiece? |
37166 | _ Pater._ Eh? |
37166 | _ Pater._ Eh? |
37166 | _ Paterfamilias._ What, then, do you consider extras? |
37166 | _ Q._ And what becomes of the house in town? |
37166 | _ Q._ But has not the seaside visit a compensating advantage? |
37166 | _ Q._ But surely in the last case there would be the certainty of pecuniary indemnity? |
37166 | _ Q._ Do not some of the Eastenders visit the seaside? |
37166 | _ Q._ Has a sojourn by the sea waves any disadvantages? |
37166 | _ Q._ How can this be, if it be assumed that the East is poorer than the West? |
37166 | _ Q._ Then the metropolis will become empty? |
37166 | _ Q._ Then, taking one thing with another, the benefit of a visit to the seaside is questionable? |
37166 | _ Q._ What do you consider the remaining residuum? |
37166 | _ Question._ Is it your intention to leave London at once to benefit by the ocean breezes on the English coast? |
37166 | _ Report of Twyman v. Bligh._]"Where''s Ramsgate?" |
37166 | _ Second Lady._"Yes, dear, but do n''t you see? |
37166 | _ She._"Really? |
37166 | _ T._"Well, then-- will you promise not to kick up such a row when I stop out late of a Saturday?"] |
37166 | _ after breakfast, lying on the beach._ Wonder if it is Monday, or Tuesday? |
37166 | as it''s a fine day, you''ll sit on the beach and read the paper comfortably, will you? |
37166 | is that the only boat you have in?"] |
16317 | Americans or Aliens? |
16317 | And do you know that man Jones that lives in that city? |
16317 | Are they all out, firemen? |
16317 | But what can I do about it? |
16317 | Did you expect me to give you a chance to destroy me and poison Jacqueline''s mind? 16317 Do you really believe that there is such a river?" |
16317 | Even if it does mean that,said Mr. Duthie, with impatience,"what was the need of being so particular? |
16317 | Is that so? 16317 What book?" |
16317 | What do you read, my lord? |
16317 | What is Congress going to do next? 16317 What think ye of Christ?" |
16317 | When are you going to be great? |
16317 | Who was General Grant? |
16317 | Who wrote it? 16317 Why do they lie about me the way they do?" |
16317 | Why not? |
16317 | Yes, why not? |
16317 | _ Why_,asks a critic,"_ do n''t you move FOR ALL WORKINGMEN?" |
16317 | ''"[ 6] What did this preacher do with his final consonants? |
16317 | (_ a_) What elements of appeal do you find in the following? |
16317 | (_ a_) What is an allegory? |
16317 | (_ b_) Are the cases parallel at the vital point at issue? |
16317 | (_ b_) Are the signs that point to the inference either clear or numerous enough to warrant its acceptance as fact? |
16317 | (_ b_) Are they truths of general experience? |
16317 | (_ b_) Are they weighty enough in character? |
16317 | (_ b_) Do the facts agree_ only_ when considered in the light of this explanation as a conclusion? |
16317 | (_ b_) Does it include too much? |
16317 | (_ b_) Does the law or principle clearly include the fact you wish to deduce from it, or have you strained the inference? |
16317 | (_ b_) Have you been guilty of stating a conclusion that really does not follow? |
16317 | (_ b_) Is confusion likely to arise as to its purpose? |
16317 | (_ b_) Is he mentally competent? |
16317 | (_ b_) Is it too florid? |
16317 | (_ b_) What constitutes him an authority? |
16317 | (_ b_) shame? |
16317 | (_ c_) Are the signs cumulative, and agreeable one with the other? |
16317 | (_ c_) Are they in harmony with reason? |
16317 | (_ c_) Are they truths of special experience? |
16317 | (_ c_) Can your syllogism be reduced to an absurdity? |
16317 | (_ c_) Does the importance of the law or principle warrant so important an inference? |
16317 | (_ c_) Has the parallelism been strained? |
16317 | (_ c_) Have you overlooked any contradictory facts? |
16317 | (_ c_) How could a short allegory be used as part of a public address? |
16317 | (_ c_) Is he morally credible? |
16317 | (_ c_) Is his interest in the case an impartial one? |
16317 | (_ c_) Is it stated so as to contain a trap? |
16317 | (_ c_) Is this style equally powerful today? |
16317 | (_ c_) hate? |
16317 | (_ d_) Are the contradictory facts sufficiently explained when this inference is accepted as true? |
16317 | (_ d_) Are the sentences too long and involved for clearness and force? |
16317 | (_ d_) Are there no other parallels that would point to a stronger contrary conclusion? |
16317 | (_ d_) Are they mutually harmonious or contradictory? |
16317 | (_ d_) Are they truths arrived at by experiment? |
16317 | (_ d_) Can the deduction be shown to prove too much? |
16317 | (_ d_) Could the signs be made to point to a contrary conclusion? |
16317 | (_ d_) Does he state his opinion positively and clearly? |
16317 | (_ d_) Is he in a position to know the facts? |
16317 | (_ d_) formality? |
16317 | (_ e_) Are all contrary positions shown to be relatively untenable? |
16317 | (_ e_) Are they admitted, doubted, or disputed? |
16317 | (_ e_) Is he a willing witness? |
16317 | (_ e_) excitement? |
16317 | (_ f_) Have you accepted mere opinions as facts? |
16317 | (_ f_) Is his testimony contradicted? |
16317 | (_ g_) Is his testimony corroborated? |
16317 | (_ g_)"The Effects of the Magazine on Literature;"(_ h_)"Does Modern Life Destroy Ideals?" |
16317 | (_ h_) Is his testimony contrary to well- known facts or general principles? |
16317 | (_ i_) Is it probable? |
16317 | (_ i_)"Is Competition''the Life of Trade?''" |
16317 | (_ m_)"Does Woman''s Competition with Man in Business Dull the Spirit of Chivalry?" |
16317 | (_ n_)"Are Elective Studies Suited to High School Courses?" |
16317 | (_ o_)"Does the Modern College Prepare Men for Preeminent Leadership?" |
16317 | 12. WHO IS THE TRAMP? |
16317 | A dust- cloth is a very useful thing, but why embroider it? |
16317 | A young man came to me the other day and said,"If Mr. Rockefeller, as you think, is a good man, why is it that everybody says so much against him?" |
16317 | ARE COLLEGES GROWING TOO LARGE? |
16317 | All you who are here, are you not tempted to envy him? |
16317 | And even then, would it not partly disarm your antagonism? |
16317 | And if so, how? |
16317 | And is it practicable? |
16317 | And is this all that is left of him-- this handful of dust beneath the marble stone? |
16317 | And our food, must we understand it before we eat it? |
16317 | And what have we to oppose to them? |
16317 | And who will measure the consolations of the hour of prayer? |
16317 | And why take ye thought for raiment? |
16317 | And why? |
16317 | And will you give me leave? |
16317 | And you met her-- did you tell me-- down at Newport, last July, and resolved to ask the question at a_ soirà © e_? |
16317 | Animal instinct say you? |
16317 | Are fleets and armies necessary to a work of love and reconciliation? |
16317 | Are the engines coming? |
16317 | Are the following points well considered? |
16317 | Are the people of the United States more devoted to religion than ever? |
16317 | Are there any other words here that long falling inflections would help to make expressive? |
16317 | Are there any others you would emphasize? |
16317 | Are they too high to be pleasant? |
16317 | Are ye not much better than they? |
16317 | Are you poor? |
16317 | As you recall a walk you have taken, are you able to remember better the sights or the sounds? |
16317 | Ask yourself-- or someone else-- such questions as these: What is the precise nature of the occasion? |
16317 | At first a quick contemptuous interrogation--''We fail?'' |
16317 | But an effect of what? |
16317 | But can the memory be trained to act as the warder for all the truths that we have gained from thinking, reading, and experience? |
16317 | But how shall he be able to criticise himself? |
16317 | But how shall we get the milk? |
16317 | But in what does a speaker''s reserve power consist? |
16317 | But is it more important than the amazing, imposing and perhaps disquieting apparition of Japan? |
16317 | But suppose I go into the High School to- morrow and ask,"Boys, who sunk the Merrimac?" |
16317 | But the enemies of tyranny,--whither does their path tend? |
16317 | But what followed? |
16317 | But what has been the experience of those who have been eminently successful in finance? |
16317 | But what means this sudden lowering of the heavens, and that dark cloud arising from beneath the western horizon? |
16317 | But what of the problem itself? |
16317 | But when shall we be stronger? |
16317 | But_ how_ can I relax? |
16317 | By what analytical principle did you proceed? |
16317 | By what fair rule shall the stigma be put upon one section while the other escapes? |
16317 | By what spells, what magic, did Marius reinstate himself in his natural prerogatives? |
16317 | CAN MY COUNTRY BE WRONG? |
16317 | Can gentlemen assign any other possible motive for it? |
16317 | Can suggestion arise from the audience? |
16317 | Can we solve it? |
16317 | Can you feel the forward tones strike against your hand? |
16317 | Can you feel the nose vibrate? |
16317 | Can you feel the vibration there? |
16317 | Can you imagine the average group becoming a crowd while hearing a lecture on Dry Fly Fishing, or on Egyptian Art? |
16317 | Can you suggest any combination of methods that you have found efficacious? |
16317 | Can you suggest any improvement? |
16317 | Choose an attitude toward your subject-- shall it be idealized? |
16317 | Come, for here he rests, and On this green bank, by this fair stream, We set to- day a votive stone, That memory may his deeds redeem? |
16317 | Conwell, tell me frankly, what do you think the American people think of me?" |
16317 | Could the subject be more effectively handled if somewhat modified? |
16317 | Could we dispense with either? |
16317 | Did it lose in effectiveness? |
16317 | Did n''t you ever see any of them astray at Atlantic City? |
16317 | Did not the pause surprisingly enhance the power of this statement? |
16317 | Did you ever know a really great man? |
16317 | Did you ever notice how hollow a memorized speech usually sounds? |
16317 | Do I speak first, last, or where, on the program? |
16317 | Do n''t you hear distant thunder? |
16317 | Do n''t you see those flashes of lightning? |
16317 | Do they really select the best men? |
16317 | Do we express the following thoughts and emotions in a low or a high pitch? |
16317 | Do you ask me to support a government that will tax my property: that will plunder me; that will demand my blood, and will not protect me? |
16317 | Do you ask_ how_ to concentrate? |
16317 | Do you feel it strike the lips? |
16317 | Do you feel the lips vibrate? |
16317 | Do you remember Elbert Hubbard''s tremendous little tract,"A Message to Garcia"? |
16317 | Do you say a_ bloo_ sky or a_ blue_ sky? |
16317 | Do you set down your name in the scroll of youth, that are written down old with all the characters of age? |
16317 | Do you shudder at the thought of velvet rubbed by short- nailed finger tips? |
16317 | Do you suppose I would go ahead of my men to be shot in the front by the enemy and in the back by my own men? |
16317 | Do you think we would have gained a victory if it had depended on General Grant alone? |
16317 | Do you want to know how to express victory? |
16317 | Do you want to plead a cause? |
16317 | Do your words come freely and your sentences flow out rhythmically? |
16317 | Does a direct question always require a rising inflection? |
16317 | Does conviction always result in action? |
16317 | Does effective persuasion always produce conviction? |
16317 | Does equal suffrage tend to lessen the interest of woman in her home? |
16317 | Does not that record honor him and vindicate his neighbors? |
16317 | Does that exclude those whose blood and money paid for it? |
16317 | Does the merit of the course have any bearing on the merit of the methods used? |
16317 | Does the reading of magazines contribute to intellectual shallowness? |
16317 | Does"dispose of"mean to rob the rightful owners? |
16317 | Finally, in preparing expository material ask yourself these questions regarding your subject: What is it, and what is it not? |
16317 | From what source do you intend to study gesture? |
16317 | From what walks of life do they come? |
16317 | HOW TO ACQUIRE THE IMAGING HABIT You remember the American statesman who asserted that"the way to resume is to resume"? |
16317 | Has Al Hafed returned?" |
16317 | Has Great Britain any enemy in this quarter of the world, to call for all this accumulation of navies and armies? |
16317 | Has Labor Unionism justified its existence? |
16317 | Has he completely done? |
16317 | Has manner? |
16317 | Has posture in a speaker anything to do with persuasion? |
16317 | Has voice? |
16317 | Have any been less successful than others? |
16317 | Have we anything new to offer upon the subject? |
16317 | Have we shown ourselves so unwilling to be reconciled, that force must be called in to win back our love? |
16317 | Have you carefully considered all the qualities that go to make up voice- charm in its delivery? |
16317 | Have you ever heard such an address? |
16317 | Have you ever read a book on the practise of thinking? |
16317 | Have you ever seen a speaker use such grotesque gesticulations that you were fascinated by their frenzy of oddity, but could not follow his thought? |
16317 | Have you ever stopped to analyze that expression,"a ready speaker?" |
16317 | Have you not a moist eye? |
16317 | Have you used reference books in word studies? |
16317 | He awoke that priest out of his dreams and said to him,"Will you tell me where I can find diamonds?" |
16317 | He hath brought many captives home to Rome, Whose ransoms did the general coffers fill: Did this in CÃ ¦ sar seem ambitious? |
16317 | He is_ WHITE_"than it would be by hearing you assert merely that your horse is white? |
16317 | He said to the old man:"Why do n''t you make it that way and sell it for confectionery?" |
16317 | He was watching the ladies as they went by; and where is the man that would n''t get rich at that business? |
16317 | His neighbor said to him:"Why do n''t you ask your own children?" |
16317 | His second duty is what? |
16317 | How are you trying to correct them? |
16317 | How can grace of movement be acquired? |
16317 | How can hatred be the law of development when nations have advanced in proportion as they have departed from that law and adopted the law of love? |
16317 | How can resonance and carrying power be developed? |
16317 | How could I have written songs of hate without hatred?" |
16317 | How do you intend to correct them? |
16317 | How does conviction affect the man who feels it? |
16317 | How does it build a watermelon? |
16317 | How does it collect its flavoring extract? |
16317 | How does moderate excitement affect you? |
16317 | How does my hair look? |
16317 | How does personality in a speaker affect you as a listener? |
16317 | How does the voice bend in expressing(_ a_) surprise? |
16317 | How important is the occasion to the audience? |
16317 | How is it now? |
16317 | How is it today? |
16317 | How large an audience may be expected? |
16317 | How large is the auditorium? |
16317 | How large will the audience be? |
16317 | How long would a play fill a theater if the actors held their cue- books in hand and read their parts? |
16317 | How many quotations that fit well in the speaker''s tool chest can you recall from memory? |
16317 | How much daily practise do you consider necessary for the proper development of your voice? |
16317 | How much did you miss? |
16317 | How much information, and what new ideas, does it contain? |
16317 | How much time does it require? |
16317 | How shall it be divided? |
16317 | How shall we account for Him? |
16317 | How shall you concentrate? |
16317 | How would you increase the fighting- effectiveness of a man- of- war? |
16317 | Humor was used in some of the foregoing addresses-- in which others would it have been inappropriate? |
16317 | I approached him and said,"Do you think it would be possible for me to see General Robert E. Lee, the President of the University?" |
16317 | I ask gentlemen, sir, what means this martial array, if its purpose be not to force us to submission? |
16317 | I ask this audience again who of you are going to be great? |
16317 | I can imagine him out there, as he sits by his fireside, and he is saying to his friends,"Do you know that man Conwell that lives in Philadelphia?" |
16317 | I fear that some have accepted it in the hope of escaping from the miracle, but why should the miracle frighten us? |
16317 | IS CLASSICAL EDUCATION DEAD TO RISE NO MORE? |
16317 | IS MANKIND PROGRESSING? |
16317 | IS OUR TRIAL BY JURY SATISFACTORY? |
16317 | IS THE PRESS VENAL? |
16317 | If Virginia is condemned because thirty- one per cent of her vote was silent, how shall this State escape, in which fifty- one per cent was dumb? |
16317 | If a man knows more than I know, do n''t I incline to criticise somewhat his learning? |
16317 | If a storm should come and awake the deep, What matter? |
16317 | If that were meant, why this chapter? |
16317 | If you say,"My horse is not_ black_,"what color immediately comes into mind? |
16317 | In how far are we justified in making an appeal to self- interest in order to lead men to adopt a given course? |
16317 | In moods of bitterness, of doubt and despair the heart cries out,"How could a just God permit such cruelty upon innocent Belgium?" |
16317 | In the following passage, would you make any changes in the author''s markings for emphasis? |
16317 | In what sense is description more_ personal_ than exposition? |
16317 | In what ways does personality show itself in a speaker? |
16317 | In your own opinion, do speakers usually err from the use of too much or too little force? |
16317 | Is David dead? |
16317 | Is Eugenics a science? |
16317 | Is Hampden dead? |
16317 | Is Mankind Progressing? |
16317 | Is Profit- Sharing a solution of the wage problem? |
16317 | Is Washington dead? |
16317 | Is a minimum wage law desirable? |
16317 | Is a strongly paternal government better for the masses than a much larger freedom for the individual? |
16317 | Is all this unsympathetic, do you say? |
16317 | Is any man dead that ever was fit to live? |
16317 | Is emotion without words ever persuasive? |
16317 | Is feeling more important than the technical principles expounded in chapters III to VII? |
16317 | Is he an eye- witness? |
16317 | Is it any wonder that reversing the process should reverse the result? |
16317 | Is it because she expects them to pay her back? |
16317 | Is it desirable that the national government should own all railroads operating in interstate territory? |
16317 | Is it desirable that the national government should own interstate telegraph and telephone systems? |
16317 | Is it easier to persuade men to change their course of conduct than to persuade them to continue in a given course? |
16317 | Is it fair for counsel to appeal to the emotions of a jury in a murder trial? |
16317 | Is it not true, my hearers, such tombs as this demonstrate immortality? |
16317 | Is it that insidious smile with which our petition has been lately received? |
16317 | Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? |
16317 | Is that the way to teach history? |
16317 | Is the Open Shop a benefit to the community? |
16317 | Is the Presidential System a better form of government for the United States than the Parliamental System? |
16317 | Is the church losing its hold on thinking people? |
16317 | Is the hope of permanent world- peace a delusion? |
16317 | Is the national prohibition of the liquor traffic an economic necessity? |
16317 | Is there a desk? |
16317 | Is this question debatable? |
16317 | Is this the part of wise men, engaged in a great and arduous struggle for liberty? |
16317 | It does not ask, What shall I say? |
16317 | It turns the mind in upon itself and asks, What do I think? |
16317 | Let a man stand in a pulpit and preach to thousands, and if I have fifteen people in my church, and they''re all asleep, do n''t I criticise him? |
16317 | Living in Philadelphia and looking at this wealthy generation, all of whom began as poor boys, and you want capital to begin on? |
16317 | Might gestures without words be persuasive? |
16317 | My life? |
16317 | Notice the contents of the show windows on the street; how many features are you able to recall? |
16317 | Now why do you not apply this principle in speaking a sentence? |
16317 | Of what sort are the men who can not be bought? |
16317 | Oh, gentlemen, am I this day only the counsel of my client? |
16317 | On what do you base your decision? |
16317 | One gentleman said to the other:"Is your wife entertaining this summer?" |
16317 | One of the richest men in this country came into my home and sat down in my parlor and said:"Did you see all those lies about my family in the paper?" |
16317 | Or deceive them, when we are educating them to the utmost limit of our ability? |
16317 | Or have robbed a people who, twenty- five years from unrewarded slavery, have amassed in one State$ 20,000,000 of property? |
16317 | Or if he ask a fish, will he give him a serpent? |
16317 | Or outlaw them, when we work side by side with them? |
16317 | Or shall we say that most definitions hang between platitude and paradox? |
16317 | Or that we intend to oppress the people we are arming every day? |
16317 | Or were you ever"burned"by touching an ice- cold stove? |
16317 | Or what man is there of you, whom if his son ask bread, will he give him a stone? |
16317 | Or, happier memory, can you still feel the touch of a well- loved absent hand? |
16317 | Ought it not to be so? |
16317 | Ought the judge use persuasion in making his charge? |
16317 | PARENTAGE OR POWER? |
16317 | Precisely how long am I to speak? |
16317 | Precisely how much time am I to fill? |
16317 | Precisely what is the object of the meeting? |
16317 | Recently a book- salesman entered an attorney''s office in New York and inquired:"Do you want to buy a book?" |
16317 | Rejected-- you rejected? |
16317 | Render the following passages: Has the gentleman done? |
16317 | SHALL WOMAN HELP KEEP HOUSE FOR TOWN, CITY, STATE, AND NATION? |
16317 | Said he,"What is the use of doing that? |
16317 | Say each aloud, and decide which is correct,_ Noo York_,_ New Yawk_, or_ New York_? |
16317 | Shall I descend? |
16317 | Shall we gather strength by irresolution and inaction? |
16317 | Shall we resort to entreaty and humble supplication? |
16317 | Shall we try argument? |
16317 | Should all church printing be brought out under the Union Label? |
16317 | Should all colleges adopt the self- government system for its students? |
16317 | Should all corporations doing an interstate business be required to take out a Federal license? |
16317 | Should all men be compelled to contribute to the support of universities and professional schools? |
16317 | Should arbitration of industrial disputes be made compulsory? |
16317 | Should college students who receive compensation for playing summer baseball be debarred from amateur standing? |
16317 | Should daily school- hours and school vacations both be shortened? |
16317 | Should equal compensation for equal labor, between women and men, universally prevail? |
16317 | Should football be restricted to colleges, for the sake of physical safety? |
16317 | Should home- study for pupils in grade schools be abolished and longer school- hours substituted? |
16317 | Should marginal trading in stocks be prohibited? |
16317 | Should ministers be required to spend a term of years in some trade, business, or profession, before becoming pastors? |
16317 | Should national banks be permitted to issue, subject to tax and government supervision, notes based on their general assets? |
16317 | Should our government be more highly centralized? |
16317 | Should our legislation be shaped toward the gradual abandonment of the protective tariff? |
16317 | Should public utilities be owned by the municipality? |
16317 | Should teachers of small children in the public schools be selected from among mothers? |
16317 | Should the Initiative and Referendum be adopted as a national principle? |
16317 | Should the Powers of the world substitute an international police for national standing armies? |
16317 | Should the Recall of Judges be adopted? |
16317 | Should the United States army and navy be greatly strengthened? |
16317 | Should the United States continue its policy of opposing the combination of railroads? |
16317 | Should the United States maintain the Monroe Doctrine? |
16317 | Should the United States send a diplomatic representative to the Vatican? |
16317 | Should the amount of property that can be transferred by inheritance be limited by law? |
16317 | Should the eight- hour day be made universal in America? |
16317 | Should the government of the larger cities be vested solely in a commission of not more than nine men elected by the voters at large? |
16317 | Should the honor system in examinations be adopted in public high- schools? |
16317 | Should the national government establish a compulsory system of old- age insurance by taxing the incomes of those to be benefited? |
16317 | Should the present basis of suffrage be restricted? |
16317 | Should the same standards of altruism obtain in the relations of nations as in those of individuals? |
16317 | Should woman be given the ballot on the present basis of suffrage for men? |
16317 | Soon the night will pass; and when, to the Sentinel on the ramparts of Liberty the anxious ask:"Watchman, what of the night?" |
16317 | Students of public speaking continually ask,"How can I overcome self- consciousness and the fear that paralyzes me before an audience?" |
16317 | Telling means communicating, and how can he actually communicate without making every word distinct? |
16317 | Telling? |
16317 | The egg is the most universal of foods and its use dates from the beginning, but what is more mysterious than an egg? |
16317 | The miracle raises two questions:"Can God perform a miracle?" |
16317 | The next morning when his boy came down the stairway, he said,"Sam, what do you want for a toy?" |
16317 | The priest said,"Diamonds? |
16317 | The words may be golden, but the hearers''(?) |
16317 | Then why is there a tomb on the Hudson at all? |
16317 | Then, what motives would be likely to appeal to_ your_ hearers? |
16317 | Think I''ll wander down and see you when you''re married-- eh, my boy? |
16317 | This is the whole question: Do you see a need? |
16317 | This right of equality being, then, according to justice and natural equity, a right belonging to all States, when did we give it up? |
16317 | To get a natural effect, where would you use slow and where fast tempo in the following? |
16317 | To some extent you do, in ordinary speech; but do you in public discourse? |
16317 | To think alike as to men and measures? |
16317 | To what faction do I belong? |
16317 | To what is the success due? |
16317 | Too little? |
16317 | Too much pathos? |
16317 | WHAT IS A NOVEL? |
16317 | WHAT IS HUMOR? |
16317 | WHAT IS IMAGINATION? |
16317 | WHAT IS THE THEATRE DOING FOR AMERICA? |
16317 | WHY HAVE WE BOSSES? |
16317 | WHY IS A MILITANT? |
16317 | Was it suppression in Virginia and natural causes in Massachusetts? |
16317 | Was this ambition? |
16317 | We asked him,"When do you think the time will come that these people can be placed in a position of self- support?" |
16317 | We do teach it as a mother did her little boy in New York when he said,"Mamma, what great building is that?" |
16317 | Well, why did you not say middling full-- or fell mask?" |
16317 | Were such experiments special or general? |
16317 | Were the experiments authoritative and conclusive? |
16317 | Were these changes in pitch advisable? |
16317 | Were they the best that could be used to bring out the meaning? |
16317 | Were they the best that could have been used? |
16317 | Were they well made? |
16317 | Were they well made? |
16317 | What advantages has the fluent speaker over the hesitating talker? |
16317 | What are its causes, and effects? |
16317 | What are some of the gestures, if any, that you might use in delivering Thurston''s speech, page 50; Grady''s speech, page 36? |
16317 | What are the best methods for acquiring reserve power? |
16317 | What are the causes of monotony? |
16317 | What are the four special effects of pause? |
16317 | What are the motives that arouse men to action? |
16317 | What are the other speakers going to talk about? |
16317 | What are the prime requisites for good voice? |
16317 | What are the two fundamental requisites for the acquiring of self- confidence? |
16317 | What are their ideals and interests in life? |
16317 | What are they to speak about? |
16317 | What are you going to do? |
16317 | What are your voice faults? |
16317 | What barricade of wrong, injustice, and oppression has ever been carried except by force? |
16317 | What causes a phrase to become hackneyed? |
16317 | What conclusion is to be drawn from the life, the teachings and the death of this historic figure? |
16317 | What constitutes pretentious talk? |
16317 | What could be more true? |
16317 | What difference do you notice in its rendition? |
16317 | What do the rebels demand? |
16317 | What do these things mean? |
16317 | What do we ask of you? |
16317 | What do you do mentally with the time you spend in dressing or in shaving? |
16317 | What do you understand by"the historical present?" |
16317 | What do you understand from the terms"reasoning from effect to cause"and"from cause to effect?" |
16317 | What do you want with diamonds?" |
16317 | What does he know about the subject and what right has he to speak on it? |
16317 | What does the flag stand for? |
16317 | What effect do habits of thought have on confidence? |
16317 | What effect do his own suggestions have on the speaker himself? |
16317 | What effect do such habits have on the audience? |
16317 | What effect does confidence on the part of the speaker have on the audience? |
16317 | What effect does personal magnetism have in producing conviction? |
16317 | What effect does reserve power have on an audience? |
16317 | What effects are gained by it? |
16317 | What examples illustrate it? |
16317 | What exercises did you find useful? |
16317 | What experiences does it recall? |
16317 | What faction, since the beginning of the Revolution, has crushed and annihilated so many detected traitors? |
16317 | What fitness is there in these people? |
16317 | What gestures do you use for emphasis? |
16317 | What good habit does not? |
16317 | What have I to gain from you? |
16317 | What have you done with the hundred thousand Frenchmen, my companions in glory? |
16317 | What in your opinion are the relative values of thought and feeling in a speech? |
16317 | What inferences may justly be made from the following? |
16317 | What influences, within and without the man himself, work against fluency? |
16317 | What invites the negro to the ballot- box? |
16317 | What is a"figure of speech"? |
16317 | What is emphasis? |
16317 | What is his relation to the subject at issue? |
16317 | What is it like, and unlike? |
16317 | What is it that gentlemen wish? |
16317 | What is it that, having, we live, and having not, we are as the clod? |
16317 | What is meant by a change of tempo? |
16317 | What is meant by"elastic touch"in conversation? |
16317 | What is our duty? |
16317 | What is progress? |
16317 | What is so hard as a just estimate of the events of our own time? |
16317 | What is the cause of self- consciousness? |
16317 | What is the danger of too much reading? |
16317 | What is the danger of using too much humor in an address? |
16317 | What is the derivation of the word_ vocabulary_? |
16317 | What is the effect of a lack of emphasis? |
16317 | What is the effect of over- persuasion? |
16317 | What is the effect of too much force in a speech? |
16317 | What is the effect on the emphasis? |
16317 | What is the effect? |
16317 | What is the first requisite of good gestures? |
16317 | What is the nature of the auditorium? |
16317 | What is the police power of the States? |
16317 | What is the purpose of American institutions? |
16317 | What is the result? |
16317 | What is the result? |
16317 | What is the result? |
16317 | What is the testimony of the courts? |
16317 | What is the type of persuasion used by Senator Thurston( page 50)? |
16317 | What is the use of stopping to prime a mental pump when you can fill your life with the resources for an artesian well? |
16317 | What is their probable attitude toward the theme? |
16317 | What is there to commend in delivering a speech in any of the foregoing methods? |
16317 | What is your observation regarding self- consciousness in children? |
16317 | What kinds of selections or occasions require much feeling and enthusiasm? |
16317 | What matters it whether he shares in the shouts of triumph? |
16317 | What method did Jesus employ in the following: Ye are the salt of the earth; but if the salt have lost his savour, wherewith shall it be salted? |
16317 | What methods of description does he seem to prefer? |
16317 | What methods, according to your observation, do most successful speakers use? |
16317 | What next?" |
16317 | What other methods of persuasion than those here mentioned can you name? |
16317 | What people, penniless, illiterate, has done so well? |
16317 | What principle did Richmond Pearson Hobson employ in the following? |
16317 | What profiteth it the people if they do only the electing while the invisible government does the nominating? |
16317 | What proportion of emotional ideas do you find in the extracts given in this chapter? |
16317 | What reasons can you give that disprove the general contention of this chapter? |
16317 | What reasons not already given seem to you to support it? |
16317 | What relation does pause bear to concentration? |
16317 | What relation does this have to the use of the voice? |
16317 | What shall I read for information? |
16317 | What shall our action be? |
16317 | What solution do they offer? |
16317 | What solution, then, can we offer for the problem? |
16317 | What sort of figures do you find in the selection from Stevenson, on page 242? |
16317 | What sort of people are they? |
16317 | What states of mind does falling inflection signify? |
16317 | What steps do you intend to take to develop the power of enthusiasm and feeling in speaking? |
16317 | What terms shall we find which have not been already exhausted? |
16317 | What tyrant is my protector? |
16317 | What word? |
16317 | What words come from the same root? |
16317 | What would be the effect of adhering to any one of the forms of discourse in a public address? |
16317 | What would be the effect of shifting the viewpoint in the midst of a narration? |
16317 | What would happen if you should overdraw your bank account? |
16317 | What would have been the fate of the church if the early Christians had had as little faith as many of our Christians of to- day? |
16317 | What would they have? |
16317 | What would you gather from the expressions:_ descriptive_ gesture,_ suggestive_ gesture, and_ typical_ gesture? |
16317 | What, according to your observations before a mirror, are your faults in gesturing? |
16317 | What, cries the skeptic, what has become of all the hopes of the time when France stood upon the top of golden hours? |
16317 | What, in your own words, is personality? |
16317 | What, then, is the progressive answer to these questions? |
16317 | What, then, must we do to make American business better? |
16317 | What, then, shall we Americans do? |
16317 | What, then, shall we do to make our tariff changes strengthen business instead of weakening business? |
16317 | What, then, will you take? |
16317 | When are you going to be great?" |
16317 | When comes such another? |
16317 | When has a battle for humanity and liberty ever been won except by force? |
16317 | When in doubt about a gesture what would you do? |
16317 | When is it permissible to emphasize every single word in a sentence? |
16317 | When the honeymoon is over and you''re settled down, we''ll try-- What? |
16317 | When will he have the civil rights that are his?" |
16317 | When will the black man cast a free ballot? |
16317 | When will the blacks cast a free ballot? |
16317 | Where does it find its coloring matter? |
16317 | Where does that little seed get its tremendous power? |
16317 | Where is there ground for any hope of peaceful change? |
16317 | Where would you pause in the following selections? |
16317 | Where, on thy dewy wing Where art thou journeying? |
16317 | Where? |
16317 | Wherein hath CÃ ¦ sar thus deserv''d your loves? |
16317 | Which in your judgment is the most suitable of delivery for you? |
16317 | Which in your opinion is the most important of the technical principles of speaking that you have studied so far? |
16317 | Which is the more important? |
16317 | Which may be expressed in either high or low pitch? |
16317 | Which method do you prefer, and why? |
16317 | Which of the following do you prefer, and why? |
16317 | Which one do you like best? |
16317 | Which parts of the selection on page 84 require the most force? |
16317 | Which require little? |
16317 | Which words should be emphasized, which subordinated, in a sentence? |
16317 | Which, in each instance, is the more effective-- and why? |
16317 | Who am I that I should attempt to measure the arm of the Almighty with my puny arm, or to measure the brain of the Infinite with my finite mind? |
16317 | Who am I that I should attempt to put metes and bounds to the power of the Creator? |
16317 | Who are the great inventors? |
16317 | Who are the great inventors? |
16317 | Who are the great inventors? |
16317 | Who are the great men of the world? |
16317 | Who can say? |
16317 | Who can tell the new thoughts that have been awakened, the ambitions fired and the high achievements that will be wrought through this Exposition? |
16317 | Who else is to speak? |
16317 | Who else will speak? |
16317 | Who ever can forget the brazen robberies forced into the Payne- Aldrich bill which Mr. Taft defended as"the best ever made?" |
16317 | Who has forgotten the tariff scandals that made President Cleveland denounce the Wilson- Gorman bill as"a perfidy and a dishonor?" |
16317 | Who knows the people''s needs so well as the people themselves? |
16317 | Who recognizes him as authority? |
16317 | Who says it will? |
16317 | Who selects the speakers''themes? |
16317 | Who so long suffering, who so just? |
16317 | Who so patient as the people? |
16317 | Who so wise to solve their own problems? |
16317 | Who speaks before I do and who follows? |
16317 | Who will estimate the peace which a belief in a future life has brought to the sorrowing hearts of the sons of men? |
16317 | Who would have credited a century ago the stories that are now told of the wonder- working electricity? |
16317 | Why are animals free from it? |
16317 | Why are you free from it under the stress of unusual excitement? |
16317 | Why do speeches have to be spoken with more force than do conversations? |
16317 | Why do we move for this class? |
16317 | Why do we teach history in that way? |
16317 | Why do we use this principle everywhere except in the communication of ideas? |
16317 | Why is a continual change of pitch necessary in speaking? |
16317 | Why is it Mr. Carnegie is criticised so sharply by an envious world? |
16317 | Why is it impossible to lay down steel- clad rules for gesturing? |
16317 | Why is monotony one of the worst as well as one of the most common faults of speakers? |
16317 | Why is range of voice desirable? |
16317 | Why is this? |
16317 | Why not charm men instead of capturing them by assault?" |
16317 | Why not take me?" |
16317 | Why or why not? |
16317 | Why plunge a pump into a dry hole? |
16317 | Why should Germany be permitted to fight France, or Bulgaria fight Turkey? |
16317 | Why should humor find a place in after- dinner speaking? |
16317 | Why stand we here idle? |
16317 | Why stand ye here idle? |
16317 | Why this restraint? |
16317 | Why wait for a more convenient season for this broad, general preparation? |
16317 | Why was he the hero? |
16317 | Why was it appropriate? |
16317 | Why was this Republic established? |
16317 | Why? |
16317 | Why? |
16317 | Why? |
16317 | Why? |
16317 | Why? |
16317 | Why? |
16317 | Why? |
16317 | Why? |
16317 | Why? |
16317 | Why? |
16317 | Why? |
16317 | Why? |
16317 | Will it be the next week, or the next year? |
16317 | Will it be when we are totally disarmed, and when a British guard shall be stationed in every house? |
16317 | Will you please get the text- book and let me see it?" |
16317 | Will you stay awhile? |
16317 | With what other recognized authorities does he agree or disagree?" |
16317 | With what subjects is it correlated? |
16317 | Wo n''t you learn the lesson, young man; that it is_ prima facie_ evidence of littleness to hold public office under our form of government? |
16317 | Would circumstances make any difference in such grading? |
16317 | Would not such an introduction give you confidence in the speaker, unless you were strongly opposed to him? |
16317 | Would the triumph of socialistic principles result in deadening personal ambition? |
16317 | Would this amendment interfere with any State carrying on the promotion of its domestic order? |
16317 | Yet how can we induce an effect if we are not certain as to the cause? |
16317 | You all did love him once, not without cause; What cause withholds you then to mourn for him? |
16317 | You may"make a fool of yourself"once or twice, but is that too great a price to pay for success? |
16317 | _ 3 Ple._ Has he, masters? |
16317 | _ 4 Ple._ Mark''d ye his words? |
16317 | _ Ant._ Will you be patient? |
16317 | _ Ant._ You will compel me then to read the will? |
16317 | _ Can Force be Acquired?_ Yes, if the acquirer has any such capacities as we have just outlined. |
16317 | _ Deductions_(_ a_) Is the law or general principle a well- established one? |
16317 | _ FROM NAPOLEON''S ADDRESS TO THE DIRECTORY ON HIS RETURN FROM EGYPT_ What have you done with that brilliant France which I left you? |
16317 | _ Facial Expression is Important_ Have you ever stopped in front of a Broadway theater and looked at the photographs of the cast? |
16317 | _ How are We to Acquire and Develop Enthusiasm?_ It is not to be slipped on like a smoking jacket. |
16317 | _ Inductions_(_ a_) Are the facts numerous enough to warrant accepting the generalization as being conclusive? |
16317 | _ Inferences_(_ a_) Are the antecedent conditions such as would make the allegation probable? |
16317 | _ Is it a debatable question?_ 4. |
16317 | _ Is it clearly stated?_(_ a_) Do the terms of statement mean the same to each disputant? |
16317 | _ Is it clearly stated?_(_ a_) Do the terms of statement mean the same to each disputant? |
16317 | _ Is it fairly stated?_(_ a_) Does it include enough? |
16317 | _ Is it fairly stated?_(_ a_) Does it include enough? |
16317 | _ Parallel cases_(_ a_) Are the cases parallel at enough points to warrant an inference of similar cause or effect? |
16317 | _ Syllogisms_(_ a_) Have any steps been omitted in the syllogisms? |
16317 | _ The authorities cited as evidence_(_ a_) Is the authority well- recognized as such? |
16317 | _ The facts adduced as evidence_(_ a_) Are they sufficient in number to constitute proof? |
16317 | _ The principles adduced as evidence_(_ a_) Are they axiomatic? |
16317 | _ The witnesses as to facts_(_ a_) Is each witness impartial? |
16317 | _ To secure confidence, be confident._ How can you expect others to accept a message in which you lack, or seem to lack, faith yourself? |
16317 | _ What are the subordinate points?_ II. |
16317 | _ What is Force?_ Some of our most obvious words open up secret meanings under scrutiny, and this is one of them. |
16317 | _ What is the pivotal point in the whole question?_ 5. |
16317 | _ Why Use Force?_ There is much truth in such an appeal, but not all the truth. |
16317 | a decreasing leg? |
16317 | a dry hand? |
16317 | a white beard? |
16317 | a yellow cheek? |
16317 | an increasing belly? |
16317 | and every part about you blasted with antiquity? |
16317 | and will you yet call yourself young? |
16317 | and, saddest of all, that lovely and sorrowing empress, whose harmless life could hardly have excited the animosity of a demon? |
16317 | and,"Would He want to?" |
16317 | caricatured? |
16317 | defended? |
16317 | exaggerated? |
16317 | is not your voice broken? |
16317 | losing its spiritual power? |
16317 | or described impartially? |
16317 | reliable and unprejudiced? |
16317 | ridiculed? |
16317 | that brave and chivalrous king of Italy who only lived for his people? |
16317 | that enlightened and magnanimous citizen whom France still mourns? |
16317 | what, weep you, when you but behold Our CÃ ¦ sar''s vesture wounded? |
16317 | your chin double? |
16317 | your wind short? |
16317 | your wit single? |
45365 | Brother,ced Parson, a braking the paws,"how did yu like divine sarvice to- day?" |
45365 | Giv the devil hiz due,reads wel enuff in a proverb, but mi friend what will bekum ov you and me if this arrangement iz carried out? |
45365 | What will it proffit a man, if he gain the whole wurld, and loze his own soul? 45365 10th-- Hav yu ever committed suiside, and if so, how did it seem to affect yu? 45365 1st-- Are yu mail or femail? 45365 2d-- Are yu subjec tu fits, and if so, do yu hav more than one at a time? 45365 3d-- What is yure precise fiteing weight? 45365 4th-- Did yu ever have enny ancestors, and if so, how much? 45365 6th-- Du yu ever hav enny nite mares? 45365 7th-- Are you married and single, or are yu a Bachelor? 45365 8th-- Do yu beleave in a futer state? 45365 9th-- What are yure private sentiments about a rush ov rats tu the head; can it be did successfully? 45365 After Joseph''s bretheren had beat him out ov hiz cut ov menny cullers, what did tha dew nex? 45365 Are Greenbacks a lawful tender? 45365 Brandee and gin, for instance, which will yu hav? 45365 Could the arth be peopled? 45365 Did he ever git up in the morning awful dri and turf it 3 miles befoar brekfast tu git a drink, and find that the man kep a tempranse hous? 45365 Did he ever hav the jumpin teethake, and be made tu tend baby while hiz wife was over tu Perkinses tu a teasquall? 45365 Did he ever reap lodged oats down hill in a hot da, and hav all hiz gallus buttons bust oph at once? 45365 Did he ever undertaik tu milk a kicking hefer with a bushy tail, in fli time, out in the lot? 45365 Did yu ever visit enny boddy who resided in the subburbs? 45365 How menny ov the countless millions, who hav gone forth from the pearly gate ov the garden hav ever entered agin? 45365 How much opera musick dew you suppose it wud taik tu make a man cry? 45365 I often hear affekshunate husbands kall their wifesMi Duck,"i wunder if this ai n''t a sli delusion tew their big bills? |
45365 | IS DISPOSING OV THINGS FOR CHARITABEL PURPOSES BI"LOT"A SIN? |
45365 | Kan yu rekolek the horrid fear that seized upon yu, and froze yu fast tu the arth, az the monster foamed in rage around yu? |
45365 | Mi dearly beloved christian friend, did yu ever visit enny body? |
45365 | So is cutting oph a dog''s tale tew keep it from gitting stepped on, a sin, but it do nt hurt the dog for ketching rats, duz it? |
45365 | So it is a sin tew dew a sin, that good may cum out ov it, but the good that comes out ov it ai nt a sin, is it? |
45365 | The bible asks us,"what will it proffitt a man, if he gain the whole world and loze hiz own soul?" |
45365 | What a sarkasm it is tew a ded man''s memory, tew ask"how much munny he left?" |
45365 | What do i care about the rendering, if i do n''t git a piece ov the pie? |
45365 | Who can rate its speed? |
45365 | Who has not listened tew its preshious falsehoods? |
45365 | Who kan annylize its meanness? |
45365 | Who kan tell its whereabouts? |
45365 | Would n''t it be fun tew cee one ov these opera singers undertake tu rok a baby tu sleep? |
45365 | Yu kan find them almost ennywhere, on the korner ov the streets, reddy tew say,"mi dear fellow how are yu?" |
45365 | Yure landguage iz a leetle too florid; did you ever travel in Florida? |
45365 | [ Illustration: Josh Billings having stopped to kiss the baby once more, arrives at the depot just too late to catch the Express train(?) |
45365 | and the rest ov the-- nabors? |
45365 | and who that kan shoot flieing, will not help tew bring down the base bird? |
45365 | and who will not, with me, pronounse it a renegade, the common enemy ov humanitee? |
45365 | could enny boddy be made tew work when thare waz nothing to hope for and nothing tew want? |
45365 | could sittys be built? |
45365 | could the forest be chopped down? |
45365 | could the oseans be crossed? |
45365 | if this is put thru, what will bekum ov yu, mi friend? |
30691 | ''How are you feeling now, Green?'' 30691 A slave of a pile of flesh that you must feed and protect from the agonies that attack it on every side? |
30691 | A what? |
30691 | About the crown which probably is still lying on the altar there? |
30691 | Ah, I am to be sacrificed, eh? 30691 Aimu? |
30691 | Am I not your nephew? 30691 Am I still asleep?" |
30691 | And do you think the Duca and all the caciques will go with the apes? |
30691 | And now,he shot out, eyeing the young man through narrowed lids,"will you please state the purpose of this visit?" |
30691 | And what will happen to me, and to the girls, if I decline? |
30691 | And what,Kirby asked exultantly,"does the Duca say?" |
30691 | And yet, is it? 30691 And yet,"she went on for him,"you do not believe he would have conceded what he has, unless he intends to make trouble?" |
30691 | And you ca n''t find out what we must rescue Naida_ from_? |
30691 | And you do not know what the cylinder is? 30691 And you say you have no close relatives, no ties of any sort to interfere with work that is dangerous-- and something else?" |
30691 | And-- and nothing has happened to you? |
30691 | And-- and we can do nothing? |
30691 | Any possible hope? |
30691 | Are we down- hearted? |
30691 | Are we really in such a contraption? |
30691 | Are you able to run? |
30691 | Are you all right? |
30691 | Are you asking_ me_, to my face, whether I will listen to terms which you offer as self- styled victor of a battle with my caciques? |
30691 | But Naida, whatever is there about this fragment of gold to startle you as it does? |
30691 | But am I to be deprived of my retreat, left here like a common dog amongst other dogs, while these accursed fiends starve slowly to death? 30691 But do you mean to say that you and I are no more than a mosquito, a malaria protozoan, or even one of those trees in the jungle?" |
30691 | But do you not remember that I said I had_ not_ come here because you summoned me? |
30691 | But how can I find this jungle village without a guide? |
30691 | But tell me, Aña, how did you get here? |
30691 | But there is no food in the tower, is there? |
30691 | But what could I have been thinking about except how you looked when we came together in that gloomy place, and walked forward, side by side? 30691 But which direction did they take?" |
30691 | But who are your parents, and how did you get among the Ungapuks? |
30691 | But who could have done it? |
30691 | But why did n''t you kill him, as you killed the others? 30691 But why do you think you can be of assistance to me?" |
30691 | But why,he asked in whispers of his fellow- prisoner,"--why this open hatred of us? |
30691 | But, what is it? |
30691 | But,said Karl, thinking aloud rather than meaning to interrupt,"what has all this to do with me? |
30691 | But_ why_? |
30691 | Ca n''t you stay by me until time to land? 30691 Can you find the entrance?" |
30691 | Can you tell where or how he will strike at us? |
30691 | Can you withstand shock? |
30691 | Did you find out anything? |
30691 | Did you plan this monstrous thing? |
30691 | Did you see what happened to the divers yesterday? |
30691 | Do n''t you see? |
30691 | Do we_ see_? |
30691 | Do you know where the villages of the ape- people are? |
30691 | Do you mean me to understand that you can reduce a living body to its basic elements and then rebuild these elements into a remade man? |
30691 | Do you mean the one where they used to smuggle aliens? 30691 Do you mean to tell me you know so little of your world as that? |
30691 | Do you mind if I take it for a moment? |
30691 | Do you realize what it means to our cause that it should have been returned to us in this way? |
30691 | Do you see what he has there? |
30691 | Do you speak of Sir Basil Addington? |
30691 | Do you think-- do you suppose--? |
30691 | Do you want to die? |
30691 | Does anyone think we ought to try the tunnels now? |
30691 | Does that help? |
30691 | Eighty fathoms? 30691 Has Captain Starley told that story to anyone else yet?" |
30691 | Has he the triangular brand? |
30691 | Has no one learned to use these weapons? |
30691 | Have you any idea of what all this means? |
30691 | Have you got any puff balls? |
30691 | Holy One,exclaimed a new priest in answer to the urge to fight,"what can we do against the golden haired fiend? |
30691 | How can I call you? |
30691 | How could you tell? |
30691 | How long can you remain under water in it? |
30691 | How much did you say they had? |
30691 | How much farther,he asked in a voice which became sharp,"until we reach the headquarters of these caciques?" |
30691 | How''ll you know he''s there at the time? |
30691 | I suppose that they are weapons of the sort you used against the ape- men this morning? |
30691 | I suppose,he said,"that anyone who was responsible for the return of the cylinder to its rightful owners, would be held in some respect?" |
30691 | If we both went, who would work the air to let us back in? 30691 Is it Naida you are called?" |
30691 | Is it time to tell him yet, Naida? |
30691 | Is n''t it a shame, Hale,she moaned,"that the fire burned all the animals and insects, the machinery, and even your notes?" |
30691 | Is that all they do to you? |
30691 | Is there anyone else who cares to fight? |
30691 | It''s gone? |
30691 | Made you? 30691 Might it not have been stolen before the vessel sank?" |
30691 | More nonsense,said Sykes;"and probably correct.... Well, what are we to do?--sit tight and give them as little information as we can? |
30691 | My father? |
30691 | Naida, do you mean to tell me that Quetzalcoatl was not simply a mythical monster, but an actual, living serpent which is alive_ now_? |
30691 | Naida,he exclaimed,"do you know what those are?" |
30691 | Naida? |
30691 | Nini, will you go? |
30691 | No? |
30691 | No? |
30691 | Now what do you think about that? |
30691 | Now what in the hell ever got into his crazy head? |
30691 | Now? |
30691 | Oh, you wonder, eh? |
30691 | On-- on the day of our union? |
30691 | Or do we take it when it comes and fight with what we''ve got as long as we can? 30691 Quartz or glass?--what are they made of? |
30691 | Quartz? |
30691 | Rocket car? 30691 Saranoff?" |
30691 | See those floodlights fastened to the cliff so that their beams will sweep across the mouth of the tunnel when they are lighted? |
30691 | Sir Basil Addington? |
30691 | So? 30691 Some miracle of power that will drive a fleet through space as they have done, to battle with the enemy on his own ground--"Could he help? |
30691 | Startling, is n''t it? 30691 Still,"asked General Clinton coldly,"for what purpose do you wish to be relieved? |
30691 | Tell me,he said to her:"do you yourself believe that this Serpent has the powers of a God?" |
30691 | That? |
30691 | The Young Labor party? 30691 The trochosphere? |
30691 | Then where am I, and who are you? |
30691 | There is to be no more fighting? |
30691 | Think so? 30691 This vessel?" |
30691 | To live-- and be a slave of_ this_? |
30691 | Uncle Rudolph? |
30691 | Under what conditions am I to leave? |
30691 | Was this steel door part of your work? |
30691 | We''re here,he said,"but how can we get up?" |
30691 | Well,he asked,"how about to- morrow, and the next day, and the next? |
30691 | Well? |
30691 | What about that creature we saw in the cave, Doctor? 30691 What are those big bundles fastened to the lower limbs?" |
30691 | What are you thinking about? |
30691 | What caused that? |
30691 | What depth are we? |
30691 | What did you change? |
30691 | What do you mean? |
30691 | What do you want? |
30691 | What does this mean? |
30691 | What is it, Doctor? |
30691 | What is it, Hale? |
30691 | What is it, Ivana? 30691 What is it?" |
30691 | What is that? |
30691 | What is this, Naida? |
30691 | What is your object in going down, if I may ask? |
30691 | What shall we do with him, Aña? |
30691 | What was it, then? |
30691 | What''s that? 30691 What''s the trouble, a flood of new counterfeits?" |
30691 | What''s this? 30691 What, then, do you suggest that we do next?" |
30691 | What,asked Kirby,"is this need which made one of you cut my rope, so that I should come here?" |
30691 | When do you think he will make a move to start trouble? |
30691 | When will you have us start? |
30691 | Whence came it? |
30691 | Where did they get it? |
30691 | Where did you get this thing which you call''a fragment of gold''? |
30691 | Where have you been hiding and why have n''t you reported the fact of your rescue to the proper authorities? 30691 Where have you been these twenty- three years, Peter Van Dorn?" |
30691 | Where is Aña? |
30691 | Where is Sir Basil? |
30691 | Where is he? |
30691 | Where to? |
30691 | Who are you, Aña? |
30691 | Who are you? |
30691 | Who have you lived with, I mean? |
30691 | Who is it? |
30691 | Who was the leader? |
30691 | Why all the dirty looks? 30691 Why did n''t you examine it closer?" |
30691 | Why did you lie? |
30691 | Why is n''t it? |
30691 | Why not starve them out, O Holy One? |
30691 | Why not? |
30691 | Why not? |
30691 | Why not? |
30691 | Why not? |
30691 | Why? |
30691 | Why? |
30691 | Will you finish telling me,he asked of Naida,"about the task I am to perform for you here?" |
30691 | Wo n''t that be rather risky for the cutter? |
30691 | Would n''t you like to know? 30691 Would you like to see how life springs from a wedding of matter, energy, and consciousness?" |
30691 | Yes, but do you believe the Serpent is God? |
30691 | Yes; do n''t you? 30691 Yes?" |
30691 | Yes? |
30691 | You are very strong, are you not? |
30691 | You do n''t think I overlooked that, do you? 30691 You do n''t think they''re going to stay here, do you?" |
30691 | You mean I am to lead a revolt,he asked,"against these same caciques whom we are going now to face?" |
30691 | You mean I''m under arrest? |
30691 | You mean we are out in the open-- traveling in space-- to the Moon perhaps? |
30691 | You said the_ Arethusa_? 30691 You say I can see atoms?" |
30691 | You understand? |
30691 | You''ve been kept completely ignorant? |
30691 | Your son? |
30691 | Your turn for what, Aña? |
30691 | _ What?_Still kneeling half in fun, half in sincere reverence, Naida held out the precious, potent cylinder of gold. |
30691 | _ What_ is it, Naida? |
30691 | ''What''s the matter with you? |
30691 | ***** How many had they brought down? |
30691 | ***** Professor Sykes''eyes showed his appreciation of a spirit that could still dare to hope, but he asked dejectedly:"Escape? |
30691 | *****"But suppose your lifting cable should break?" |
30691 | A landing would be easy, for had not the voice instructed him in the use of the gravity- energy? |
30691 | Always to live amongst the wearers of the purple? |
30691 | Am I not really cursed as you''ve maintained? |
30691 | And then, I wonder if it is safe to let him go, hating me? |
30691 | And what is life? |
30691 | And who the devil are you?" |
30691 | And why?" |
30691 | Anything come of it?" |
30691 | Are we going to allow it?" |
30691 | Are you afraid your sea serpent will get us?'' |
30691 | Are you following me?" |
30691 | Are you going to put out a quarterly? |
30691 | Are you kidding me?" |
30691 | Are you ready?" |
30691 | Are you with us?" |
30691 | At last he said:"And what of you and I, Sir Basil? |
30691 | At last the young man cried out:"How did you breed these freaks?" |
30691 | Bird?" |
30691 | But do you mean that you never knew your sacred cylinder was so close to you all these years?" |
30691 | But first--""What?" |
30691 | But how is the Zar to be overcome? |
30691 | But was there an exception? |
30691 | But what did it matter? |
30691 | But what did it matter? |
30691 | But what did it matter? |
30691 | But what happens until that time comes? |
30691 | But where to?" |
30691 | But who were these people of the valley? |
30691 | But why should it not seem so, at this distance within the earth? |
30691 | But, who the devil is Winslow?" |
30691 | But-- Well, are both of_ you_ all right? |
30691 | But-- but-- Oh my God, Boynton, do you mean that they''ve got it?--that it will drive us through space?" |
30691 | Ca n''t you see the horror of it as nature works? |
30691 | Can I help you?" |
30691 | Can you leave the globe while it is under water?" |
30691 | Did my messenger tell you why we are here and demand your presence?" |
30691 | Did this station send where he was hoping? |
30691 | Do n''t you think your author ought to brush up on his astronomy? |
30691 | Do you consent to listen to Naida''s and my terms? |
30691 | Do you intend to print an Annual or Quarterly, or do think you will ever enlarge the size of this magazine? |
30691 | Do you realize this is your_ wedding_ day, and that you''re acting as if there was nothing to be done?" |
30691 | Do you understand me? |
30691 | Do you understand? |
30691 | Do you want to see Aña now?" |
30691 | Does a woman destroy a dress when she rips it up to make it over?" |
30691 | Even if the jungle is terrible, were you not born with courage? |
30691 | Fifteen? |
30691 | Had the face been real or a dream? |
30691 | Have n''t you guessed by now what I am getting ready to do?" |
30691 | Have you been making love to Aña again, after my warning to you?" |
30691 | Have you never read anything? |
30691 | Have_ you_ been eating it?" |
30691 | He a king? |
30691 | Hopeless? |
30691 | How could Cor speak English? |
30691 | How did they get here?" |
30691 | How do you think a white woman could appear in a tribe of Indians who live in the jungle, many weeks''journey from what you call civilization?" |
30691 | How high could they ascend?_ From one of the planes he saw the world below; the ships were near their ceiling; this was the limit of their climb. |
30691 | How much could he comprehend? |
30691 | How will we use it for travelling through space?" |
30691 | How will you apply it? |
30691 | I suppose you could find the entrance which was sealed up?" |
30691 | In Heaven''s name, how many were there? |
30691 | In the first place, must you make your covers as lurid and as contradictory to good design as they are? |
30691 | Is he dead?" |
30691 | Is there_ anything_ we can do?" |
30691 | Just what does that mean?" |
30691 | Large thought, eh, sweetheart?" |
30691 | Last question of all: had the beautiful girl''s face he believed he had seen just once, been real or an hallucination? |
30691 | May we not, then, go to the temple? |
30691 | Mitchell?'' |
30691 | Moon men?" |
30691 | My birthright-- where is it?" |
30691 | Naida, is this high priest we''re waiting for, the one who proposed sacrifice of some of you to the apes?" |
30691 | No life could survive these vibrations of destruction? |
30691 | Oh, what are they planning? |
30691 | Oh, what does it mean?" |
30691 | Once he asked:"If this man had died naturally, could you have brought him back to life?" |
30691 | Or was it his own fault? |
30691 | Pretty cocky, are n''t you? |
30691 | Radium? |
30691 | See that jupati tree by the rock disappear?" |
30691 | See, Unani Assu? |
30691 | Shall we go on?--make a break for it?" |
30691 | Shall we, too, be caught in this wholesale destruction?" |
30691 | Sixteen? |
30691 | Suddenly he wheeled on Hale and asked sharply,"How are your nerves, young man?" |
30691 | Suddenly the scientist threw up his hand and cried:"You see? |
30691 | Suicide? |
30691 | Tell me, may I hope that it will be so-- to- morrow?" |
30691 | The Serpent comes out of his chasm and--""What chasm?" |
30691 | The news broadcasts, the thought exchangers-- don''t you follow them at all?" |
30691 | Then what? |
30691 | Then--"But what the devil is it all about?" |
30691 | Through every corner of the earth where life lurks, they would reach?" |
30691 | To Sir Basil he said:"But if all life disappears from the earth, what shall we do for food-- you, Aña, and I?" |
30691 | To be responsible for the welfare of half the world? |
30691 | Understand? |
30691 | Was he in another world? |
30691 | Was there one little thing that he could do to apply their knowledge to practical ends? |
30691 | Was this the station that had communicated with the ship that had hovered above their flying field in that far- off land? |
30691 | Was this, as he believed, a signal to come not only to the edge of the orifice,_ but to lower himself down into its depths_? |
30691 | What are they going to do to her?" |
30691 | What can I do for you?" |
30691 | What do you intend to do?" |
30691 | What do you mean?" |
30691 | What do you think of that?" |
30691 | What does she say? |
30691 | What hope for them here? |
30691 | What is food? |
30691 | What is it you wish of Aimu? |
30691 | What is it you wish of the Ungapuks?" |
30691 | What is the length of their day? |
30691 | What is your answer?" |
30691 | What kind of man was this that Boynton had sent him? |
30691 | What more do you want?" |
30691 | What next? |
30691 | What of their deadliness?_ And again he was seated in a plane, and he was firing tiny bullets from a tiny gun. |
30691 | What possible animus can they have against the earth or its people?" |
30691 | What possible crime could he have committed? |
30691 | What power had he to vision the idea- pictures in the other''s mind? |
30691 | What was there about the putrid yet gorgeous perfume that had made the stallion go off his nut, so to speak? |
30691 | Where is Naida? |
30691 | Who had made the beautiful footprints beside him, when he had slept at last after his arrival here? |
30691 | Who had taken them? |
30691 | Who knew how much of such feeling was read by these keen- eyed observers? |
30691 | Who says civilization is going down, when the future holds men like that? |
30691 | Who''s my father?" |
30691 | Why ca n''t they make their stories logical? |
30691 | Why ca n''t they think of something original? |
30691 | Why did he let you go, knowing that you would give the alarm?" |
30691 | Why does the government of this Zar want me?" |
30691 | Why else should I have sent for you?" |
30691 | Why had eleven Mexican bandits refused to advance even to within decent rifle range of the canyon''s mouth? |
30691 | Why had someone scratched a line in the earth from him directly to the distant orifice of the geyser? |
30691 | Why labor day after day at the oxygen generators to give them the fresh air they breathe?" |
30691 | Why not Venus or Mercury? |
30691 | Why not eat his food?" |
30691 | Why will it be that?" |
30691 | Why work out our lives down here so they can live in the lap of luxury over our heads? |
30691 | Why-- why, do you know what you are offering us? |
30691 | Why?" |
30691 | Will you love me as I have learned to love you during this single day in Paradise?" |
30691 | Will you sit over there by Aña and wait? |
30691 | Will you, Naida? |
30691 | Will you, please?" |
30691 | Wo n''t it hatch into another terror of the sea like the thing that destroyed the ship?" |
30691 | Wo n''t you tell me your name?" |
30691 | Would it reach? |
30691 | Would there be anyone to hear? |
30691 | You can? |
30691 | You do n''t mean it, do you?" |
30691 | You do not believe it was Quetzalcoatl''s pleasure over the great diamond which made him cease preying on your people?" |
30691 | You have no cause to love him, have you?" |
30691 | You''ve got us here as prisoners-- now what do you expect us to do? |
30691 | Zar Peter? |
30691 | _ And did they fight with gas? |
30691 | _ But on the ground below-- what fortifications? |
30691 | _ Now_ have I told you enough?" |
30691 | _ What of Earth''s armies and their means of defense?_ Vaguely he sensed the demand, and without conscious volition he responded. |
30691 | he exclaimed,"Mac radioed us from Venus; is there anything impossible after that?" |
46707 | Did he? |
46707 | Having no spade, partner? |
46707 | What have I done? |
46707 | What''s the good of being wounded when the flask''s empty? |
46707 | ( Double sharp work, what?) |
46707 | A friend arrives on horseback, and indicates,"Coming to the meet in those?" |
46707 | Could it be possible? |
46707 | Enter Orderly Officer:"Any complaints?" |
46707 | He repeats:"Will you marry me?" |
46707 | Her answer:--"Once already I''ve asked you is it a Prop.? |
46707 | Her reply:--"Is this a definitive offer?" |
46707 | II.--SHOULD THEY HAVE GONE? |
46707 | III.--WAS THE PRICE TOO HIGH? |
46707 | Is not his monumental work the text- book for all encyclopædists of the Areopagus?... |
46707 | Medicine Man, with sacrificial knife uplifted, addresses her:"Will you marry me?" |
46707 | Might Sir William Treloar be described as a"Carpet Knight"? |
46707 | Quids or quod? |
46707 | Sancho sizes him up as a keen sahib, and enquires"Quien sabe?" |
46707 | THREE PROBLEM PLAYS I.--SHOULD SHE HAVE WORN THEM? |
46707 | They divide up into search parties, chanting"Where is the pen of the gardener''s aunt?" |
46707 | Tomahawks young Chief for asking"How much?" |
46707 | What is a hundred pounds? |
46707 | What is six months in gaol? |
46707 | What was his reward? |
46707 | When will the day go? |
46707 | if only there were an answer, it would lead to the next question,"Where is my Chardenal?" |
33385 | And how did you manage on the twelfth? |
33385 | And how many hours a day did you do lessons? |
33385 | And washing? |
33385 | And what did the child say? |
33385 | And you have no better way of expressing your joy at my return than by abusing me? |
33385 | Are you sure of all you say, husband? |
33385 | But whom,says he,"shall I find, that will lead these four hundred men to that spot against the battalions of the enemy?" |
33385 | By- the- by, what became of the baby? |
33385 | Can Olagus have weapons on board and want to attack us? |
33385 | Come, it''s pleased so far,thought Alice, and she went on:"Would you tell me, please, which way I ought to walk from here?" |
33385 | Come, will this warm you? |
33385 | Day of the Preparation of Peace? |
33385 | Did you say pig, or fig? |
33385 | Do you know why, husband? |
33385 | Do you play croquet with the Queen to- day? |
33385 | Here, here,she said,"who is to talk, you or I? |
33385 | His horsemen hard behind us ride; Should they our steps discover, Then who will cheer my bonny bride When they have slain her lover? |
33385 | His name? |
33385 | How do you know I''m mad? |
33385 | How was that? |
33385 | How, friend? |
33385 | Hypocrisy? |
33385 | If I do n''t take this child away with me,thought Alice,"they''re sure to kill it in a day or two: would n''t it be murder to leave it behind?" |
33385 | If I were to show her to you,replied Don Quixote,"what merit would you have in confessing a truth so manifest? |
33385 | If seven maids with seven mops Swept it for half a year, Do you suppose,the Walrus said,"That they could get it clear?" |
33385 | Monsieur,said Thuriot, rising into the moral- sublime,"what mean_ you_? |
33385 | Now who be ye, would cross Lochgyle, This dark and stormy water? |
33385 | Perhaps they have pardoned her? |
33385 | She has arrived? |
33385 | She is then a relative of Signor Vicario? |
33385 | That is true,said Andres;"but this master of mine-- of what work is he the son, when he refuses me the wages of my sweat and labor?" |
33385 | The night is fine,the Walrus said:"Do you admire the view?" |
33385 | Then the eleventh day must have been a holiday? |
33385 | Then why did n''t you come? |
33385 | Well, who doubts it? |
33385 | What did you think had become of me? |
33385 | What does the lieutenant think, Pelle? |
33385 | What giants? |
33385 | What have you been doing all this time? |
33385 | What is Dapple? |
33385 | What is it? |
33385 | What sort of people live about here? |
33385 | What tempted you, then? |
33385 | What was that? |
33385 | What was_ that_ like? |
33385 | Why is she so late? |
33385 | Why so? |
33385 | Why, what is that? |
33385 | With extras? |
33385 | You know what to beautify is, I suppose? |
33385 | _ Que voulez- vous?_said De Launay, turning pale at the sight, with an air of reproach, almost of menace. |
33385 | ***** And again, hast thou valued Patience, Courage, Perseverance, Openness to light; readiness to own thyself mistaken, to do better next time? |
33385 | ***** Why dwell on what follows? |
33385 | --"And the child''s father, what did he do?" |
33385 | --"And what did the child say?" |
33385 | --"Why, my lord, will not your Excellency gratify me by buying them?" |
33385 | --''If I stay on earth,''said the child,''I must then live without them?'' |
33385 | A man unfit for Revolutions? |
33385 | A_ great_ man? |
33385 | Again, what Cookery does the Greenlander use, beyond stowing- up his whale- blubber, as a marmot, in the like case, might do? |
33385 | Ah, who can calm my grief; who, pray, shall still my neighbor''s? |
33385 | Alas, yes;--but as Cato said of the statue: So many statues in that Forum of yours, may it not be better if they ask, Where is Cato''s statue?" |
33385 | Alice did n''t think that proved it at all; however, she went on,"And how do you know that you''re mad?" |
33385 | Alice did not feel encouraged to ask any more questions about it, so she turned to the Mock- Turtle and said,"What else had you to learn?" |
33385 | Alice was just beginning to think to herself,"Now, what am I to do with this creature when I get it home?" |
33385 | And if_ true_, was it not then the very thing to do? |
33385 | And indeed may we not say that intellect altogether expresses itself in this power of discerning what an object is? |
33385 | And then the''honor''? |
33385 | And we call it"dissimulation,"all this? |
33385 | And where is the bosom- friend, dearer than all? |
33385 | And with what greeting do you comfort me? |
33385 | And worthy Doctor Guillotin, whom we hoped to behold one other time? |
33385 | And yet withal this hypochondria, what was it but the very greatness of the man? |
33385 | Another, half ashamed at being seen there, asked,"Who is the victim?" |
33385 | Apparently she will to Paris on some errand? |
33385 | Are these the pompous tidings ye proclaim, Lights of the world, and demigods of Fame? |
33385 | Are they accepted? |
33385 | Are you frightened, you Crown slaves?" |
33385 | Are you ignorant,"says he,"of the ill intentions of the people of whom I am speaking?" |
33385 | But if all whom the Lord predestines to death are naturally liable to sentence of death, of what injustice, pray, do they complain? |
33385 | But now, if Mirabeau is the greatest, who of these Six Hundred may be the meanest? |
33385 | But now, intrinsically, is not all this the inevitable fortune, not of a false man in such times, but simply of a superior man? |
33385 | But of what crime convicted? |
33385 | But what was to follow when the ground was cleared? |
33385 | But where is the iron- bound prisoner? |
33385 | But who at any hour, Can measure miseries with his tears or cries? |
33385 | But who dare speak a word? |
33385 | But with what justice condemned? |
33385 | But would it be a kindness always, is it a duty always or often, to disturb them in that? |
33385 | By what signs, do you ask, can they be recognized? |
33385 | CATULLUS( 84- 54 B.C.?) |
33385 | Camille Desmoulins? |
33385 | Can Wisdom lend, with all her heavenly power, The pledge of Joy''s anticipated hour? |
33385 | Can a Tartar be said to cook, when he only readies his steak by riding on it? |
33385 | Could you not lend me six or eight?" |
33385 | Did some rich man tyrannically use you? |
33385 | Dim, formless from this distance, yet authentically there, thou noticest the Deputies from Nantes? |
33385 | Do you know him? |
33385 | Do you remember what I vowed that night by the Oternnest?" |
33385 | Do you think I can listen all day to such stuff? |
33385 | Do you think you are fit to touch the bed of a man like me? |
33385 | Dost thou also love, O Goddess? |
33385 | Fast descending as thou art, Say, hath mortal invocation Spells to touch thy stony heart? |
33385 | For this hath Science searched, on weary wing, By shore and sea, each mute and living thing? |
33385 | For why, pray, should it be made a charge against the heavenly Judge, that he was not ignorant of what was to happen? |
33385 | From of old was there not in his life a weight of meaning, a terror and a splendor as of Heaven itself? |
33385 | From what dark source could he have received the inspiration that dictated the command? |
33385 | Has anything strange occurred? |
33385 | Has not each man a soul? |
33385 | Hast thou considered how each man''s heart is so tremulously responsive to the hearts of all men? |
33385 | Hast thou looked on the Potter''s wheel,--one of the venerablest objects; old as the Prophet Ezekiel and far older? |
33385 | Hast thou noted how omnipotent is the very sound of many men? |
33385 | Have you not read the''Rights of Man,''by Tom Paine? |
33385 | He asked,"Who is he?" |
33385 | He is gone, then, and has not seen us? |
33385 | He sent them word I had not gone( We know it to be true); If she should push the matter on, What would become of you? |
33385 | He with the thick black locks, will it be? |
33385 | Her Sunne- like beauty shines so fayre, Her Spring can never fade; Who then can blame the life that strives To harbour in her shade? |
33385 | Her business is with Marat, then? |
33385 | His scorn, his grief are as transcendent as his love;--as indeed, what are they but the_ inverse_ or_ converse_ of his love? |
33385 | His very money, where is it to come from? |
33385 | How came he not to study his words a little, before flinging them out to the public? |
33385 | How could I be so tricked? |
33385 | How much does one of_ us_ foresee of his own life? |
33385 | How their shriek of indignation palsies the strong soul; their howl of contumely withers with unfelt pangs? |
33385 | I also saw the child caress the priest who talked to him, and the priest--""Who is the priest?" |
33385 | I-- IRISH"From what dragon''s teeth, and when sown, sprang forth this warlike crop?" |
33385 | Increased Security and pleasurable Heat soon followed: but what of these? |
33385 | Into the twilight dun, Blue moth and dragon- fly Adventuring alone,-- Shall be more brave than I? |
33385 | Is it even of business, a matter to be done? |
33385 | Is there any one here who did not see his face? |
33385 | Is there anything in what I say, or am I talking to no purpose?" |
33385 | Is there no hand on high to shield the brave? |
33385 | Is this your triumph-- this your proud applause, Children of Truth, and champions of her cause? |
33385 | It is asked of your lordship, señor governor, what are the judges to do with this man? |
33385 | KNIFE- GRINDER Story? |
33385 | Keduyf and Kadvan-- are they dead? |
33385 | Knowledge? |
33385 | Launched with Iberia''s pilot from the steep, To worlds unknown, and isles beyond the deep? |
33385 | Let me see; how stands the account? |
33385 | Man is called a Laughing Animal: but do not the apes also laugh, or attempt to do it: and is the manliest man the greatest and oftenest laugher? |
33385 | Many take off their hats, saluting reverently; for what heart but must be touched? |
33385 | May not a modern Riquetti_ un_chain so much, and set it drifting-- which also shall be seen? |
33385 | Might we hope, still with the old irrefragable transcendentalism? |
33385 | Mirabeau''s ambition to be Prime Minister, how shall we blame it, if he were"the only man in France that could have done any good there"? |
33385 | Nay, is it not rather the very murkiness, and atmospheric suffocation, that_ brings_ the lightning and the light? |
33385 | Never again shall my brothers embrace me? |
33385 | No sooner did he set eyes upon me than he cried,"O Benvenuto, what are you about here?" |
33385 | Now that we have intelligence of the lady Dulcinea being disenchanted, are you taking this line? |
33385 | Now what are the Traitors doing at Caen? |
33385 | O Reader, knowest thou that hard word? |
33385 | O Spinola- Santerre, hast thou the mixture_ ready_? |
33385 | O star- eyed Science, hast thou wandered there, To waft us home the message of despair? |
33385 | Of what man that ever wound himself through such a coil of things will you say so much? |
33385 | On the whole, however, has not this unfortunate clergy also drifted in the Time- stream, far from its native latitude? |
33385 | Or roguish lawyer, made you lose your little All in a lawsuit? |
33385 | Or round the cope her living chariot driven, And wheeled in triumph through the signs of Heaven? |
33385 | Or the attorney? |
33385 | Pythagorean Marquis Valadi, inflamed with"violent motions all night at the Palais Royal"? |
33385 | Questions now any one what be this tale''s life- lesson? |
33385 | SONG Would you know what''s soft? |
33385 | Say, mounts he the ocean wave, banished, forlorn, Like a limb from his country cast bleeding and torn? |
33385 | Say, rushed the bold eagle exultingly forth, From his home in the dark rolling clouds of the north? |
33385 | Shall we be trotting home again?" |
33385 | THE INQUIRY[1] Amongst the myrtles as I walked, Love and my sighs together talked; Tell me( said I in deep distress) Where I may find my shepherdess? |
33385 | Take Queen Meave, for instance: how do we arrive at her place and story, so early in the centuries? |
33385 | Tell me, Knife- grinder, how you came to grind knives? |
33385 | That_ he_ stood there as the strongest soul of England, the undisputed Hero of all England,--what of this? |
33385 | The Darwinian answers in this way Carlyle''s problem, how it is to come to pass that the stupidity of the masses comes to blunder into a better order? |
33385 | The National Assembly were all different without that one; nay, he might say, with the old Despot:--"The National Assembly? |
33385 | The child looked at him with sad eyes, and asked,''But Mamma?'' |
33385 | The eye, too, it looks out in a kind of_ surprise_, a kind of inquiry-- Why the world was of such a sort? |
33385 | The first ground handful of Nitre, Sulphur, and Charcoal drove Monk Schwartz''s pestle through the ceiling: what will the last do? |
33385 | The light which now rose upon them,--how could a human soul, by any means at all, get better light? |
33385 | The man from whom you take his Life, to him can the whole combined world do_ more_? |
33385 | The master was an old Turtle-- we used to call him Tortoise--""Why did you call him Tortoise, if he was n''t one?" |
33385 | The new Evangel, as the old had been, was it to be born in the Destruction of a World? |
33385 | The old to heal up rents, the young to remove rubbish:--which latter is it not, indeed, the task here? |
33385 | The other replied,"What do you think? |
33385 | The sorcerer turned to me and said,"Hear you what they have replied-- that in the space of one month you will be where she is?" |
33385 | The world- wide soul, wrapt- up in its thoughts, in its sorrows;--what could paradings and ribbons in the hat, do for it? |
33385 | Then he turned to me and said,"Benvenuto, if one gave you the opportunity, should you have the heart to fly?" |
33385 | Then how will those who refuse to admit that any are reprobated by God, explain the following words of Christ? |
33385 | There are some people who stick their noses everywhere and who-- Now do you want to know what the priest said? |
33385 | This I call a noble true purpose; is it not, in its own dialect, the noblest that could enter into the heart of Statesman or man? |
33385 | Thought, true labor of any kind, highest virtue itself, is it not the daughter of Pain? |
33385 | V What new unkindly kind of human pain Had Love not only doled for me to dree But eke on me was wholly execute? |
33385 | VIII For what excuses lone with self I sought, When my suave Love forfended me to find Fault in the Thing belovèd and so lovèd? |
33385 | Was it his blame? |
33385 | Was it not_ true_, God''s truth? |
33385 | Was it some squire? |
33385 | Was it the squire, for killing of his game? |
33385 | Was man ordained the slave of man to toil, Yoked with the brutes, and fettered to the soil, Weighed in a tyrant''s balance with his gold? |
33385 | Was not such a Parliament worth being a member of? |
33385 | Was not the purpose so formed like to be precisely the best, wisest, the one to be followed without hesitation any more? |
33385 | Were they not indubitable awful facts, the whole heart of man taking them for practically true, all Nature everywhere confirming them? |
33385 | Were we days long or hours long in riding, when, rolled in a grisly peace, An isle lay level before us, with dripping hazel and oak? |
33385 | What boots it, vamping rotten leather on these terms? |
33385 | What cellar or what cranny can escape it? |
33385 | What could gilt carriages do for this man? |
33385 | What did the Persian more for loyalty whose gallant hand his face and nostrils shred? |
33385 | What do I murmur thus? |
33385 | What further or better belief can be said to exist in these Twelve Hundred? |
33385 | What have Cascajo, and the brooches and the proverbs and the airs, to do with what I say? |
33385 | What is Florence, Can della Scala, and the World and Life altogether? |
33385 | What is the bigot''s torch, the tyrant''s chain? |
33385 | What mercies or what sins of men are you talking of?" |
33385 | What potent spirit guides the raptured eye To pierce the shades of dim futurity? |
33385 | What say you to that, my friends? |
33385 | What shall De Launay do? |
33385 | What temper he is in? |
33385 | What to do? |
33385 | What was their root error? |
33385 | What we want to get at is the_ thought_ the man had, if he had any; why should he twist it into jingle, if he_ could_ speak it out plainly? |
33385 | What would become of the Earth did she cease to revolve? |
33385 | Where is my cabin door, fast by the wildwood? |
33385 | Where is the mother that looked on my childhood? |
33385 | Where is thy home, and whither art thou fled? |
33385 | Where then is the escape? |
33385 | Whereto so long a speech? |
33385 | Which of these Six Hundred individuals, in plain white cravat, that have come up to regenerate France, might one guess would become their_ king_? |
33385 | Who announces the ages of the moon[ if not I]? |
33385 | Who can wonder that the popular hatred is inflamed against it, when credit is given to those most iniquitous accusations? |
33385 | Who is it who throws light into the meeting on the mountain[ if not I]? |
33385 | Who teaches the place where couches the sun[ if not I]? |
33385 | Who the squat individual was? |
33385 | Who then shall grant me, to relieve my weight Of sorrow, flowing tears and infinite sighs Equal those miseries my Sprite o''erpower? |
33385 | Who this figure with inflamed eyes, with speech rapid and curt, might be? |
33385 | Why bleeds old England''s band, By the fire of Danish land, That smites the very hand Stretched to save? |
33385 | Why ceased not here the strife, O ye brave? |
33385 | Why do those cliffs of shadowy tint appear More sweet than all the landscape smiling near? |
33385 | Why flames the far summit? |
33385 | Why is the Welsh tongue still alive and vigorous, and the Irish(_ pace_ Dr. Douglas Hyde) moribund? |
33385 | Why shoot to the blast Those embers, like stars from the firmament cast? |
33385 | Why should they in caviling lose their labor? |
33385 | Why should they refuse to admit with regard to one man that which against their will they admit with regard to the whole human race? |
33385 | With the_ hure_, as himself calls it, or black_ boar''s- head_, fit to be"shaken"as a senatorial portent? |
33385 | You grant that?" |
33385 | Your Cromwell, what good could it do him to be"noticed"by noisy crowds of people? |
33385 | [_ He goes and looks and returns.__ Cherubin_-- Dost thou see more now Than what there was just now? |
33385 | _ Cherubin_-- Seth, what is thine errand, That thou comest so far? |
33385 | _ Was_ it not such? |
33385 | a friend is met, who questions him in wonder:--"How possible it was his steed had brought him thither?" |
33385 | and how in one instant he was in heaven in the company of the angels?" |
33385 | and how the poor condemned creature walked with courage? |
33385 | answer coolly,"Friends, will you see better there?" |
33385 | but could you tell me which of those men killed him for me?" |
33385 | did ye weep for its fall? |
33385 | ere Freedom found a grave, Why slept the sword, omnipotent to save? |
33385 | his questioner cried,"even when_ the bridge_ is broken? |
33385 | home of my delight, Is this heap my ruin, Where grows the thistle, the heather, and the wild grass? |
33385 | how could my sleep so grip me? |
33385 | how fall? |
33385 | how showed ye here, brute beasts or noble Knights? |
33385 | laugh''st thou, Lochiel, my vision to scorn? |
33385 | long abandoned by pleasure, Why did it dote on a fast fading treasure? |
33385 | my lord, what can prevent this coming to the ears of the Duchess?" |
33385 | now, just as we are on the point of becoming shepherds, to pass our lives singing, like princes, are you thinking of turning hermit? |
33385 | or Covetous parson, for his tithes distraining? |
33385 | or parson of the parish? |
33385 | put in a third,"then it is the mother of the little boy who was executed yesterday with Signor Pusterla?" |
33385 | question him, talk to him, he knows everything, and--""But what did he say to the child?" |
33385 | resumed the first speaker;"did they behead a child?" |
33385 | said Sancho,"did I not tell your Worship to mind what you were about, for they were only windmills? |
33385 | through the fast- flashing lightning of war, What steed to the desert flies frantic and far? |
33385 | where thy rod, That smote the foes of Zion and of God; That crushed proud Ammon, when his iron car Was yoked in wrath, and thundered from afar? |
33385 | where? |
33385 | whither are you going? |
33385 | whither lead ye me With this weak heart that still must toil and tire To tame( as tame it should) your vain Desire? |
33385 | wilt thou never replace me In a mansion of peace, where no perils can chase me? |
20352 | A sinecure is it? |
20352 | ARE you guilty, or not guilty? |
20352 | Am I,said he, indignantly,"to be teased by the barking of this_ jackal_ while I am attacking the royal_ tiger_ of Bengal?" |
20352 | An''is that my bawbee? |
20352 | An''sure now,said Pat,"what are_ you_ put there for but to find that out?" |
20352 | An''whaur come ye frae yersel? |
20352 | And did he continue in the_ grocery line_? |
20352 | And did you ask it for a subscription? |
20352 | And now, sir,turning to the other,"what have you to say?" |
20352 | And pray, master,says Pope, with a sneer,"what is a_ note of interrogation_?" |
20352 | And shall the instrument,said the Earl, coolly,"run as usual,_ Our trusty and well- beloved cousin and counsellor_?" |
20352 | And what shall I be? |
20352 | And why not fourscore and eight? |
20352 | And why not? |
20352 | And your grandfather? |
20352 | Are they High Church or Low Church, sir? |
20352 | BOBBY, what does your father do for a living? |
20352 | Both,replied Mr. Twiss,"but what_ does it all go to prove_?" |
20352 | But hast thou felt in thy pocket? |
20352 | But how if your friends see it? |
20352 | But,said lady D----, with a stately air,"do you know who I am?" |
20352 | Ca n''t you answer definitely how big it was? |
20352 | Ca n''t you compare it to some other object? |
20352 | Ca n''t you give the jury some idea of the stone? |
20352 | Ca n''t you leave all the_ uneasiness_ to your creditors? |
20352 | DID any of you ever see an elephant''s skin? |
20352 | DID you ever see Mr. Murdock return oats? |
20352 | DID you not on going down find a_ party_ in your kitchen? |
20352 | DO you believe in the apostolical succession? |
20352 | DO you know what made my voice so melodious? |
20352 | Did he kick the bucket, doctor? |
20352 | Did n''t yours_ ring_? |
20352 | Did you fire at me, sir? |
20352 | Did you let Garrick see it? |
20352 | Did you tell your master,said the lawyer,"that I was not running away?" |
20352 | Difficult, do you call it, sir? |
20352 | Do you know who I am, sir, that you pass me in that unmannerly way? 20352 Do you know, sir, that this bird has one very remarkable property-- he will swallow iron?" |
20352 | Do you mean in the_ Poultry_? |
20352 | Do you remember my Baroness in_ Ask no Questions_? |
20352 | Do you sleep well? |
20352 | Do you think so? |
20352 | Do you,said Fanny, t''other day,"In earnest love me as you say; Or are those tender words applied Alike to fifty girls beside?" |
20352 | Evening? 20352 For what, you scoundrel? |
20352 | For what? |
20352 | Frank,said he, one day,"tell me how many loins you could eat?" |
20352 | HOW are you this morning? |
20352 | HOW does your new- purchased horse_ answer_? |
20352 | HOW long is this loch? |
20352 | Have I not,he exclaimed,"dared you to marry a player?" |
20352 | His lordship wants to know what you will take? |
20352 | How am I to blame, general? |
20352 | How are you now, sir? |
20352 | How came you to be so exact, my friend? |
20352 | How can I tell,was the reply,"till I have_ heard the evidence_?" |
20352 | How did you dare, sir, ask twelve yards of cloth, to make me what your neighbor says he can do for seven? |
20352 | How is this? |
20352 | How long have you been in Cambridge? |
20352 | How should I understand,replied the narrator,"what he said? |
20352 | How so, pray? |
20352 | How so? |
20352 | How,said he,"could I ever get my poor puffed legs into those abominable iron boots?" |
20352 | How-- how-- how? |
20352 | How? |
20352 | How? |
20352 | I SUPPOSE,said a quack, while feeling the pulse of his patient,"that you think me a_ humbug_?" |
20352 | I have seen the time,said another,"when it made you lean,"--"When? |
20352 | I hope, sir, I did not weary your people by the_ length_ of my sermon to- day? |
20352 | I say, young man,cried the rustic,"did you see a_ tailor_ on the road?" |
20352 | IS my wife out of spirits? |
20352 | IS there anything the matter with you? |
20352 | Is it not enough that one should be sorry for what_ neither of you can help_? |
20352 | Is the House up? |
20352 | Just look at Mitford,said a by- stander to Horne Tooke;"what on earth is he crying for?" |
20352 | Keep farther off, ca n''t you? |
20352 | Loy- a- bed, does thee? |
20352 | MY dear, what makes you always yawn? |
20352 | Mr.----, what is the proper female companion of this John Dory? |
20352 | Must I use copal or mastic? |
20352 | My dear fellow,said he,"what are you about? |
20352 | My lord, a rebellion has broken out.--"Where? |
20352 | No, sir,said Foote,"pray,_ do you_?" |
20352 | No,says the other:"Pray, sir,_ did you_?" |
20352 | Now then, my lads, what is it? |
20352 | Oi say, Bullyed, does thee know a man named Adam Green? |
20352 | On what_ ground_ did he refuse them? |
20352 | Ou, vera gude,answered Will;"but gin anybody asks if I got a dram_ after''t_, what will I say?" |
20352 | PRAY, Mr. Abernethy, what is the cure for gout? |
20352 | PRAY, does it always rain in this hanged place, Enough to drive one mad, heaven knows? |
20352 | PRAY, my lord,asked a fashionable lady of Lord Kenyon,"what do you think my son had better do in order to succeed in the law?" |
20352 | PRAY, sir,said Lady Wallace to David Hume,"I am often asked what age I am; what answer should I make?" |
20352 | Pray, Mr.----, you belong to a very honest profession? |
20352 | Pray, Sir Robert,said one of his friends,"is that good Latin?" |
20352 | Pray, gentlemen,says he,"are you_ Fox_ hunting, or_ Hare_ hunting this morning?" |
20352 | Pray, have I not seen you here before? |
20352 | Pray, sir, do you_ believe_ in a_ cook_? |
20352 | Pray,said Quin, looking first at the gentleman''s plate and then at the dish,"_ which_ is the pudding?" |
20352 | Prithee, what is''t? |
20352 | SIR,said a barber to an attorney who was passing his door,"will you tell me if this is a good half- sovereign?" |
20352 | Say you so? |
20352 | Sir Isaac,said the king,"are you a judge of horses?" |
20352 | Sir,said a gentleman present,"do you descend to salute a slave?" |
20352 | Suppose, Mr. Kemble,said Mrs. Esten;"suppose we become food for fishes, which of us two do you think they will eat first?" |
20352 | Suppose,said he,"I lean against this milestone?" |
20352 | Sure, and have n''t I_ given_ ye the loaf for the whiskey? |
20352 | TOM,said a colonel to one of his men,"how can so good and brave a soldier as you get drunk so often?" |
20352 | That''s good,replied Tom,"but it better would be With a trifling erratum."--"What?" |
20352 | Thrue, and why should I? 20352 Upon what subject?" |
20352 | WELL, Will,said an Earl one day to Will Speir, seeing the latter finishing his dinner,"have you had a good dinner to- day?" |
20352 | WELL, neighbor, what''s the news this morning? |
20352 | WELL, sir,asked a noisy disputant,"do n''t you think that I have_ mauled_ my antagonist to some purpose?" |
20352 | WHAT is light? |
20352 | WHAT is the difference,asked Archbishop Whately of a young clergyman he was examining,"between a form and a ceremony? |
20352 | WHAT plan,said an actor to another,"shall I adopt to fill the house at my benefit?" |
20352 | WHAT''S the matter? |
20352 | WHY do n''t you take off your hat? |
20352 | WHY, pray, of late do Europe''s kings No jester to their courts admit? |
20352 | WOULD you think it? |
20352 | Was it a large stone? |
20352 | Was it near the_ vertebra_? |
20352 | Weel, hoo the deil do ye ken_ whether this be the road or no_? |
20352 | Well, Jerrold,said the driver of a very fine pair of grays,"what do you think of my grays?" |
20352 | Well, Mr.----,said Sir Walter,"how do you like your book?" |
20352 | Well, and what then? |
20352 | Well, my friend, has your wife followed my advice? |
20352 | Well, sir, you seem to be very merry there; but do you know what I am going to say now? |
20352 | Well,said Jerrold, who had contributed on former occasions,"how much does---- want this time?" |
20352 | What are you about? |
20352 | What are you laughing at, friend,said Curran,"what are you laughing at? |
20352 | What are_ you_ doing? |
20352 | What do you think of this, then? |
20352 | What fate? |
20352 | What is this? |
20352 | What is to be conceived the organ of drunkenness? |
20352 | What sort of a morning is it, John? |
20352 | What sort of people are you, up at Cumnock? |
20352 | What then? 20352 What was its size?" |
20352 | What''s he on? |
20352 | What''s that? 20352 What''s this?" |
20352 | What''s to be dune, John? |
20352 | What''s your name? |
20352 | What''s your name? |
20352 | Where is he? |
20352 | Where were you hurt? |
20352 | Where? |
20352 | Whose field was that I crossed? |
20352 | Why do you mention his spit? |
20352 | Why in such haste, dear Tom, to we d? 20352 Why, did n''t you go there_ to star_?" |
20352 | Why, do you_ bury_ your attorneys here? |
20352 | Why, how do you manage? |
20352 | Why, sir,said the fellow,"you take him off every day, and why may not I?" |
20352 | Why, sir,says the poor fellow,"wo n''t you give me something?" |
20352 | Why, what did I say of him? |
20352 | Why,said the gentleman,"did you not say you were a poor scholar?" |
20352 | Why? 20352 Why?" |
20352 | With all my heart,said the gentleman;"but if we should not be travelling to the same place, how will you get your coat?" |
20352 | Yes, to be sure we do: how else? |
20352 | You are a builder, I believe? |
20352 | You must have heard the bell, boys; why did you not come? |
20352 | You see_ that_, I calculate,said he nasally, pointing to the object just mentioned;"and now where would_ you_ be if the gallows had its due?" |
20352 | Zounds, sir,said Colly,"ca n''t you live upon your salary? |
20352 | _ Quid est charitas_? |
20352 | ''Why to the ladies''cabin?'' |
20352 | ( What is charity?) |
20352 | ( What is faith?) |
20352 | ( What is hope?) |
20352 | --"A place? |
20352 | --"A what?" |
20352 | --"An''what d''ye no ken?" |
20352 | --"And fatted pullets?" |
20352 | --"And how many legs of mutton?" |
20352 | --"And in the evening?" |
20352 | --"And larks?" |
20352 | --"And pigeons?" |
20352 | --"And pray, sir, what does that mean?" |
20352 | --"And what is his name?" |
20352 | --"And what may it be?" |
20352 | --"And your forefathers?" |
20352 | --"And your great- grandfather?" |
20352 | --"Any mullet in the market?" |
20352 | --"Are you?" |
20352 | --"Are_ you_ a gentleman?" |
20352 | --"Ay, but suppose they should come back?" |
20352 | --"But did you never see him drunk?" |
20352 | --"But what are you waiting for?" |
20352 | --"Can anybody whistle it?" |
20352 | --"Colonel,"replied he,"how can you expect all the_ virtues_ that adorn the human character for_ sixpence_ a- day?" |
20352 | --"Cousin,"said the king,"how shall I punish him? |
20352 | --"Did ye,"said John;"wull ye haud my horse, sir?" |
20352 | --"Did you run him long?" |
20352 | --"Did you?" |
20352 | --"Do they so?" |
20352 | --"Do ye ken,"said Will,"whaur I''m gaun?" |
20352 | --"Do you want to hae ony appointed?" |
20352 | --"Does your lordship mean,"answered Lord Bradford,"a live sheep or a dead sheep?" |
20352 | --"He did, sir, but--"--"But what? |
20352 | --"How black was he, my son?" |
20352 | --"How does he employ himself?" |
20352 | --"How is it possible,"said Rigby,"that such people as these can cure agues?" |
20352 | --"How so?" |
20352 | --"How then do you dispose of your goods?" |
20352 | --"How''s that, sir?" |
20352 | --"How, then,"said the questioner,"dare you go to sea, since all your ancestors perished there? |
20352 | --"I am sorry for it,"said Foote,"pray_ at what game_?" |
20352 | --"I''m very proud you think so,"said the other, rubbing his hands with satisfaction;"and pray, what are the things that pleased you so much?" |
20352 | --"Is Tom there?" |
20352 | --"Is it not the same thing?" |
20352 | --"Master of this parish,"observed the peer,"how can that be?" |
20352 | --"Master,"replied the sailor,"do me the favor of telling me where your father died?" |
20352 | --"May I ask, sir,"replied Curran,"how many acres make a_ wise- acre_?" |
20352 | --"My lord,"said Garrick,"what is the use of an address if it does not come home to the_ business_ and_ bosoms_ of the audience?" |
20352 | --"No,"replied the baron;"whom did_ he rob_?" |
20352 | --"Not a bit,"said the other old lady,"dinna ye ken the Breetish aye say their prayers before ga''in into battle?" |
20352 | --"O, we never do that in London."--"No?" |
20352 | --"Oh, John, I remember you well; and how is your wife? |
20352 | --"Pray, sir, can you tell me, has the doctor many patients?" |
20352 | --"Quite right; can you give me an example?" |
20352 | --"So then you_ did_ kill him?" |
20352 | --"Stop; are you deaf?" |
20352 | --"Suppose I do; what of that? |
20352 | --"The bowels of an animal, I suppose?" |
20352 | --"Then what are both your names?" |
20352 | --"Then where will_ the master_ go in?" |
20352 | --"Then, sir, will you be so good in future as to write_ drunk_ when you make_ free_?" |
20352 | --"Very likely,"remarked his lordship;"but is any one fool enough to_ employ you_ in that capacity?" |
20352 | --"Voight for my King,"answered Hodge,"why, has he_ fawn out_ wi''ony body?" |
20352 | --"Was it a near or a distant relative?" |
20352 | --"Weel, he was an auld faithfu''servant, and ye wad nae doot gie him the offices o''the Church?" |
20352 | --"Well, sir,"replied the farmer,"what of that? |
20352 | --"Well, sir,"said the farmer,"what of that? |
20352 | --"Well, then,"suggested the attorney, after some consideration,"suppose you say,''I_ lend_, until the last day?''" |
20352 | --"Well, where are you?" |
20352 | --"Well,"replied the Bishop,"and what is that to you?" |
20352 | --"What are you doing?" |
20352 | --"What are you?" |
20352 | --"What dispute?" |
20352 | --"What do I want with the font?" |
20352 | --"What do you want a ha''porth of nails for?" |
20352 | --"What for?" |
20352 | --"What has happened, man?" |
20352 | --"What is it you say?" |
20352 | --"What is that?" |
20352 | --"What is the reason of that?" |
20352 | --"What on earth can that signify to you?" |
20352 | --"What right have I to her?" |
20352 | --"Who are they, my lord?" |
20352 | --"Why am I to quit more than you?" |
20352 | --"Why did you part with your hat? |
20352 | --"Why not,"replied the other,"do you think Providence intended all the_ good things_ for fools?" |
20352 | --"Why, general?" |
20352 | --"Why, my dear?" |
20352 | --"Why, yes, David,"rejoined the wit;"what could I do better? |
20352 | --"Why, zounds, man,"replied the comedian,"did n''t I_ give_ you the_ hint_?" |
20352 | --"Will_ you_ make one of the few?" |
20352 | --"Yes, all the shopkeepers are selling off, ai n''t they?" |
20352 | --"Yes, mother,"rejoined her son;"but how would you like to have him take out all the soft for his half? |
20352 | --"Yes,"replied Dr. Glover;"but do n''t you think she is much finer upon the stage, when she is adorned by art?" |
20352 | --"Your coat, my dear fellow,"said Brummell:"what coat?" |
20352 | --"_Upon whose_?" |
20352 | --"_You_ are?" |
20352 | ----?" |
20352 | A BOASTING fellow was asked,"Pray, sir, what may your business be?" |
20352 | A FELLOW on the quay, thinking to_ quiz_ a poor Irishman, asked him,"How do the potatoes eat now, Pat?" |
20352 | A GENTLEMAN asked a friend, in a very knowing manner,"Pray, did you ever see a_ cat- fish_?" |
20352 | A GENTLEMAN going to take water at Whitehall stairs, cried out, as he came near the place,"Who can swim?" |
20352 | A GENTLEMAN having his hair cut, was asked by the garrulous operator"how he would have it done?" |
20352 | A JUDGE, joking a young barrister, said,"If you and I were turned into a horse and an ass, which would you prefer to be?" |
20352 | A KNAVISH attorney asking a very worthy gentleman what was honesty,"What is that to you?" |
20352 | A LADY having put to Canning the silly question,"Why have they made the spaces in the iron gate at Spring Gardens so narrow?" |
20352 | A LADY the other day meeting a girl who had lately left her service, inquired,"Well, Mary, where do you live now?" |
20352 | A LEARNED barrister, quoting Latin verses to a brother"wig,"who did not appear to understand them, added,"Do n''t you know the lines? |
20352 | A LUNATIC in Bedlam was asked how he came there? |
20352 | A MAN having been capitally convicted at the Old Bailey, was, as usual, asked what he had to say why judgment of death should not pass against him? |
20352 | A MAN, who pretended to have seen a ghost, was asked what the ghost said to him? |
20352 | A MASTER of a ship called out,"Who is below?" |
20352 | A MATHEMATICIAN being asked by a wag,"If a pig weighs 200 pounds, how much will a great boar(_ bore_?) |
20352 | A MEAN fellow, thinking to get an opinion of his health_ gratis_, asked a medical acquaintance what he should take for such a complaint? |
20352 | A NAMESAKE of Charles Fox having been hung at Tyburn, the latter inquired of George Selwyn whether he had attended the execution? |
20352 | A PERSON addicted to lying, relating a story to another, which made him stare,"Did you never hear that before?" |
20352 | A RECRUITING serjeant addressing an honest country bumpkin with,--"Come, my lad, thou''lt fight for thy King, wo n''t thou?" |
20352 | A SAILOR meeting an old acquaintance, whom the world had frowned upon a little, asked him where he lived? |
20352 | A SAILOR was asked,"Where did your father die?" |
20352 | A SCHOOLBOY going into the village without leave, his master called after him,"Where are you going, sir?" |
20352 | A SCOTCH clergyman preaching a drowsy sermon, asked,"What is_ the price_ of earthly pleasure?" |
20352 | A SCOTCH lady, who was discomposed by the introduction of gas, asked with much earnestness,"What''s to become o''the_ puir whales_?" |
20352 | A SPANISH Archbishop having a dispute with an opulent duke, who said with scorn,"What are you? |
20352 | A TRAVELLER coming up to an inn door, said:"Pray, friend, are you the master of this house?" |
20352 | A YOUNG lawyer who had been"admitted"about a year, was asked by a friend,"How do you like your new profession?" |
20352 | A YOUNG man met a rival who was somewhat advanced in years, and, wishing to annoy him, inquired how old he was? |
20352 | A friend coming along, and observing the jug, quietly remarked:"That''s an awful careless way to leave that liquor!"--"Why?" |
20352 | A writer of plays having once made a glass under her directions, was asked by the lady,"Pray, sir, is it_ As you like it_?" |
20352 | AN Irish post- boy having driven a gentleman a long stage during torrents of rain, was asked if he was not very wet? |
20352 | AN old sportsman, who, at the age of eighty- three, was met by a friend riding very fast, and was asked what he was in pursuit of? |
20352 | ASK you why gold and velvet bind The temples of that cringing thief? |
20352 | After a long time the lad returned, and was asked by the faint and hungry gentleman,"Are you the lad who took away my plate for this beef?" |
20352 | After waiting a little he opened the door and walked in, saying, with an authoritative voice,"I should like to know who is the head of this house?" |
20352 | Ai n''t_ he_ a liar, I should like to know?" |
20352 | And then addressing his Merry Andrew,"Andrew,"said he,"do we come here_ for want_?" |
20352 | And, pray, are you addicted to the_ failing_ usually attributed to travellers?" |
20352 | Are they not_ fellows_?" |
20352 | As Greville was selected to sit up with Captain Asgill,"And what,"inquired Smith,"did you say to comfort him?" |
20352 | At length a wag asked aloud:"Have you heard of poor L----''s sad affair? |
20352 | At length he put a poser--"And pray, sir, how are turnips t''year?" |
20352 | BROWN and Smith were met by an overdressed individual,"Do you know that chap, Smith?" |
20352 | Being answered,"We are now in the reign of Queen Elizabeth,""Dear Sir Grey,"said he,"why not let me sleep a_ century or two_ more?" |
20352 | Being one day found by the Bishop in a very serious humor,"What is the matter with you, Tom?" |
20352 | But then his condition; how can I introduce him?" |
20352 | But wherefore"degrading?" |
20352 | But would you know the cause? |
20352 | But, perceiving the threat gave Wilkes no alarm, he added,"Surely you do n''t mean to say you could stand here one hour after I did so?" |
20352 | CMXLVII.--WHY ARE WOMEN BEARDLESS? |
20352 | CRIES Sylvia to a Reverend Dean,"What reason can be given, Since marriage is a holy thing, That there are none in Heaven?" |
20352 | Call that kindness?" |
20352 | Churchill( General C----, a natural son of the Marlborough family) asked Pulteney the other day,"Well, Mr. Pulteney, will you break me, too?" |
20352 | Come, now, what is it?" |
20352 | Could not Lord S----, by virtue of this liability, contrive to get rid of a part of his stupidity?" |
20352 | Counsel:"How high did you say he was?" |
20352 | Counsel:"How old was he?" |
20352 | Curran?" |
20352 | D''ye think that his kitchen''s so bad as all that, That nothing within it will ever get fat?" |
20352 | DCCCLXXX.--WHOSE? |
20352 | DCCCXXXIX.--WHERE IS THE AUDIENCE? |
20352 | DCVIII.--WHO''S THE FOOL? |
20352 | DCXCI.--WHAT''S IN A SYLLABLE? |
20352 | Did I say sixteen_ feet_?" |
20352 | Disputing concerning the execution of Charles I.,--"By what laws,"said his opponent,"was he put to death?" |
20352 | Do n''t you think it hurt him more than the other breaking would? |
20352 | Do you think I''m dry eneuch noo?" |
20352 | Do you think I''m dry? |
20352 | Does n''t the place afford every convenience that_ a pig can require_?" |
20352 | ERSKINE, examining a bumptious fellow, asked him, if he were not a rider? |
20352 | EXAMINING a country squire who disputed a collier''s bill, Curran asked,"Did he not give you the coals, friend?" |
20352 | FRANKLIN was once asked,"What is the use of your discovery of atmospheric electricity?" |
20352 | GEORGE the First was always reckoned Vile,--but viler, George the Second; And what mortal ever heard Any good of George the Third? |
20352 | Have you done so, sir?" |
20352 | Highly enraged,"Sir,"said he to the farmer,"do you know that I have been at two universities, and at two colleges in each university?" |
20352 | Highly enraged,"Sir,"says he to the farmer,"do you know, sir, that I have been at the two universities, and at two colleges in each university?" |
20352 | His father meeting Baron O''Grady next day, said,"My lord, have you heard of my son''s robbery?" |
20352 | His friend observed,"Do you know that I suspect our ship is in_ jeopardy_?" |
20352 | His master having sent him down stairs for two bottles of wine, he said to him,"Well, John, have you_ shook them_?" |
20352 | How much art thou sorry, friend? |
20352 | I mean-- ah!--is he missing? |
20352 | I never was afraid in my life"; and looking the lieutenant full in the face, he added,"Pray, how does a man feel, sir, when he is afraid? |
20352 | I never was afraid in my life"; and looking the lieutenant full in the face, he added,"Pray, how does a man feel, sir, when he is afraid? |
20352 | I want to go to the East End, and it rains in torrents; what am I to do for an umbrella?"--"Do?" |
20352 | IF Farren, cleverest of men, Should go to the right about, What part of town will he be then? |
20352 | IS that dace or perch? |
20352 | In a week she made her last call and her speech was lengthened to three words,"Well,--your fee?" |
20352 | In the middle of the anthem the organ stopped; the organist cried out in a passion,"Why do n''t you blow?" |
20352 | Instantly leaving his companion, Hook went up to the stranger and said,"I beg your pardon sir, but pray may I ask,--_are you anybody in particular_?" |
20352 | Is it so strange a thing to find A toad beneath a strawberry leaf? |
20352 | Is this your name and handwriting?" |
20352 | Justice Maule:"Pray, was it_ a wren''s_ stomach?" |
20352 | LISETTE has lost her wanton wiles-- What secret care consumes her youth, And circumscribes her smiles? |
20352 | LOVE the sea? |
20352 | MATHEWS being invited by D''Egville to dine one day with him at Brighton, D''Egville inquired what was Mathews''s favorite dish? |
20352 | MCCCIII.--"WHAT''S A HAT WITHOUT A HEAD?" |
20352 | MCCCLXXXIX.--WHAT''S MY THOUGHT LIKE? |
20352 | MCCCXLII.--WHAT IS AN ARCHDEACON? |
20352 | MCCLXXXIII.--WHAT''S IN A NAME? |
20352 | MEETING a negro on the road, a traveller said,"You have lost some of your friends, I see?" |
20352 | MXCI.--SHOULD NOT SILENCE GIVE CONSENT? |
20352 | MXCVII.--A BED OF-- WHERE? |
20352 | Milton answered,"If your Highness think my loss of sight a_ judgment_ upon me, what do you think of your father''s losing his head?" |
20352 | Moore, provoked by the accident, rebuked the man, and added,"I suppose you have broken all the plates?" |
20352 | Mr. C---- the worse of drink?" |
20352 | Mr. Justice Maule:"Oh, you never cared for anything but women and horseflesh? |
20352 | Mr.----, what became of you? |
20352 | My name''s John----; I have had the honor to be before your lordship for stealing sheep?" |
20352 | Need we add that the jury retired to consider their verdict? |
20352 | Next day he met his friend walking, and stopping him, desired to know,"Whether he had succeeded?" |
20352 | Now, what do n''t you know?" |
20352 | Now, what makes the ocean get angry?" |
20352 | O mi de armis tres, Imi nadis tres, Cantu disco ver Meas alo ver? |
20352 | ONE asked his friend, why he married so_ little_ a wife? |
20352 | ONE night Erskine was hastening out of the House of Commons, when he was stopped by a member going in, who accosted him,"Who''s up, Erskine?" |
20352 | ONE of Sir Boyle Roche''s children asked him one day,"Who was the father of George III.?" |
20352 | Of late he''s grown brimful of pride and pelf; No wonder that he do n''t remember_ me_; Why so? |
20352 | On Scott endeavoring to conceal the authorship, the old dame protested,"D''ye think, sir, I dinna ken my_ ain_ groats in ither folk''s kail?" |
20352 | On a similar occasion, Sir Hercules Langreish, on being asked,"Have you finished all that port( three bottles) without assistance?" |
20352 | On his return to town, Harry Woodward asked him if he had not been paying the last compliment to his friend Holland? |
20352 | On this Jekyll wrote the following epigram:--"Sir Arthur, Sir Arthur, why, what do you mean, By saying the Chancellor''s_ lion_ is_ lean_? |
20352 | On which the king said to the Bishop of Winchester,"Well, my lord, and what say you?" |
20352 | On your oath, witness, was n''t your payment_ slack_?" |
20352 | One day an elderly gentleman of the foggy school blundered into the wrong shop:"Dr. X---- in?" |
20352 | One day his Majesty met the doctor in the Mall, and said to him,"Doctor, what have I done to you that you are always quarrelling with me?" |
20352 | One of his parishioners, in great agitation, exclaimed,"Why, my dear sir, you have never told us one word of this before; what shall we do?" |
20352 | One of the fellows of the college passing, stepped up to the student and asked him ironically,"If he should assist him?" |
20352 | Pray, Mr. Richardson, will you do me the favor to come, and give me_ your real opinion of it_?" |
20352 | Pray, madam,_ what is your mistress_? |
20352 | Pray, sir, when do you mean to pay us?" |
20352 | QUIN was one day lamenting that he grew old, when a shallow impertinent young fellow said to him,"What would you give to be as young as I am?" |
20352 | Robert;"what objection have you to it?" |
20352 | SAID Bluster to Whimple,"You juvenile fool, Get out of my way, do you hear?" |
20352 | SAY, why erroneous vent your spite? |
20352 | SAYS Kemble to Lewis,"Pray what is your play?" |
20352 | SCHOOLMISTRESS( pointing to the first letter of the alphabet):"Come, now, what is that?" |
20352 | SHERIDAN was once asked by a gentleman:"How is it that your name has not an O prefixed to it? |
20352 | SOME ONE being asked if a certain authoress, whom he had long known, was not"a_ little_ tiresome?" |
20352 | Said Whimple,"A fool did you say? |
20352 | Scarlett regarded him attentively for a few moments, and then said:"And a very fine, well- dressed_ ham_ you are, sir?" |
20352 | Serjeant Davy, wanting to display his wit, said to him, sternly,"And pray, sir, how do you make out that you are worth 3,000l.?" |
20352 | Shall I send him to the Tower?" |
20352 | Shall I tell you how? |
20352 | Some time afterwards she got married, and her late mistress meeting her, asked her,"Well, Mary, have you rested your bones yet?" |
20352 | Some women were scolding Selwyn for going to see the execution, and asked him how he could be such a barbarian to see the head cut off? |
20352 | Soon after, two country fellows going across a churchyard, and hearing the bell toll, one asked the other who it was for? |
20352 | THAT idiot W---- coming out of the Opera one night, called out,"Where is my fellow?" |
20352 | THE first time Jerrold saw a celebrated song- writer, the latter said to him:--"Youngster, have you sufficient confidence in me to lend me a guinea?" |
20352 | THE following dialogue was lately heard at an assize:--Counsel:"What was the height of the horse?" |
20352 | TO wonder now at Balaam''s ass were weak; Is there a night that asses do not speak? |
20352 | TO wonder now at Balaam''s ass, is weak; Is there a day that asses do not speak? |
20352 | Tenant replied,"But lordsake, laird, will no the world see_ him_?" |
20352 | The Chancellor, with a good- humored grin, observed,"If you_ lie_ on both sides, whom will you have me believe?" |
20352 | The Duke, naturally astonished at his conduct, said,"I suppose you know who I am?" |
20352 | The bargain concluded, and the money paid, the gentleman said,"Now, my friend, I have bought your horse, what are his faults?" |
20352 | The baron meeting Foote complained of this usage, and asked what he should do? |
20352 | The chaplain, a little vexed at Barrow''s laconic answer, continued,--"_ Quid est spes_?" |
20352 | The counsel for the Crown, in examining the witness, observed with ill- timed indelicacy,"He was washing_ bowels_?" |
20352 | The dean starting, called out,"_ What''s the matter_?" |
20352 | The fellow popped out his head from behind the organ, and said,"Shall it be_ we_ then?" |
20352 | The lady stared, then laughed, and asked,"What do you mean by''maids of honor?''" |
20352 | The lawyer ungraciously put the question,"Doctor, these are members of your flock; may I ask, do you look upon them as white sheep or as black sheep?" |
20352 | The magistrate asked him how he could be so hardened a villain? |
20352 | The man pointed at, inquired,"_ At which end_, my lord?" |
20352 | The manager wiped the perspiration from his brow and said,"Will he_ return_ do you think?" |
20352 | The master of the dog asked him why he had not rather struck the dog with the butt- end of his weapon? |
20352 | The minister, too eager to be scrutinizing, took a long, deep pinch, and then said,"Whaur did you get it?" |
20352 | The other answered with much cordiality:"That I will do, with all my heart, my lord; does not your lordship remember me? |
20352 | The other replied,"But canna the French say their prayers as weel?" |
20352 | The philosopher answered the question by another,"What is the_ use_ of a new- born infant?" |
20352 | The physician felt his pulse, and said,"Do you eat well?" |
20352 | The poet approached the knight,"Will you, Sir Philip,--will your kindness excuse my addressing to you a single question?" |
20352 | The watchman asked,"Who are you, sir?" |
20352 | The wife exclaimed, her temper gone,"Is home so dull and dreary?" |
20352 | This had a great effect, until the opposite lawyer asked the child,"What made him cry?" |
20352 | This last word restored Foote''s fancy, and, repeating it with some surprise, he asked,"And what will they get there? |
20352 | To Dr. Blomfield accordingly the messenger went, and repeated the question,"What is an archdeacon?" |
20352 | To this observation one of the gentlemen present boldly replied:"And, please your majesty,_ whose fault is that_?" |
20352 | Upon surveying herself in the glass, she exclaimed,"Where in the name of wonder, doctor, did I get_ such a nose_ as this?" |
20352 | WHAT two ideas are more inseparable than Beer and Britannia? |
20352 | WHEN Dr. H. and Sergeant A. were walking arm- in- arm, a wag said to a friend,"These two are just equal to one highwayman."--"Why?" |
20352 | WHEN Mr. Naylor''s father married his second wife, Naylor said,"Father, they say you are to be married to- day; are you?" |
20352 | WHO seeks to please all men each way, And not himself offend, He may begin his work to- day, But who knows when he''ll end? |
20352 | WHY scorn red hair? |
20352 | WHY should we explain, that the times are so bad, Pursuing a querulous strain? |
20352 | Was he alive or dead? |
20352 | Was it caught in a drag? |
20352 | What can I do?" |
20352 | What d''ye buy?" |
20352 | What taste, eh?" |
20352 | When Erin gives up all the rights that she had, What_ right has she left to complain_? |
20352 | When she had finished;"And now,"said the Dean,"will you be so kind as to help me to a piece of that_ D-- umpling_?" |
20352 | When the young lady and four lovers were out again, she says to the captain,"What am I to do with them now, they are so wet?" |
20352 | When, after some difficulty, his majesty was made to comprehend the system, he exclaimed,"Is any man well in England, that can afford to be ill? |
20352 | Where did you find it?" |
20352 | Which is the greater knave, ye wits explain, A rogue in_ spirit_, or a rogue in_ grain_? |
20352 | Who was right; you or I?" |
20352 | Whom have you made so happy by your charity this time?" |
20352 | Whose dog are you?" |
20352 | Why do you ask that?" |
20352 | Would you believe it? |
20352 | YE politicians, tell me, pray, Why thus with woe and care rent? |
20352 | You finish your gravestones as far as''In the memory of,''and then wait, I suppose, to see who wants a monument next?" |
20352 | You throw them aside, do n''t you?" |
20352 | Your son, George Stanley, is he dead? |
20352 | _ A speck on a front tooth._ DCCXXIII.--WHAT''S GOING ON? |
20352 | _ Hamlet_ asks him,"Will you play upon this pipe?" |
20352 | _ Q._ Mr. John Tomkins, I believe? |
20352 | _ Q._ You are a stock- broker? |
20352 | _ Quest._ WHY is a pump like Viscount Castlereagh? |
20352 | _ Sir G.R._--"Why should Honesty fly to some safer retreat, From attorneys and barges, od rot''em? |
20352 | _ Volumes_, did I say? |
20352 | _ What_ is more honorable?" |
20352 | _ Where''s the wonder now_?" |
20352 | an''his majesty never paid the turnpike, an''how''s that?" |
20352 | and thou? |
20352 | and thou?" |
20352 | architect or builder, builder or architect, they are much the same, I suppose?" |
20352 | are you selling off?" |
20352 | can you add to this couple''s distress in the last act?" |
20352 | cried the Fair on his left--"to what use? |
20352 | cries she,"must I suffer because the old knave Without leaving a will, is laid snug in the grave?" |
20352 | do n''t you recollect me?" |
20352 | do n''t you see, I_ did n''t take_ the loaf, man alive?" |
20352 | echoed the guest;"pray is he any relation to the poet?" |
20352 | exclaimed Howe,"what do you mean by that, sir? |
20352 | exclaimed Howe,"what do you mean by that, sir? |
20352 | exclaimed Lord Hermand, in great indignation;"if he could do such a thing when he was drunk, what might he not have done when he was_ sober_?" |
20352 | exclaimed the Highland chieftain,"but how can a man_ write grammar_ with a pen like this?" |
20352 | exclaimed the farmer, with amazement;"what becomes of him?" |
20352 | fat''s come o''the auld Pyet?" |
20352 | have you not allied yourself to about the worst performer in my company?" |
20352 | how does she trot?" |
20352 | inquired a colonel of marines,"do you compare an empty bottle to a member of our branch of the service?" |
20352 | interposed one of the ladies;"and did he cut his throat?" |
20352 | ir ye_ a''up an''awa_?" |
20352 | jabbering bodies, wha could_ understan''_ them?" |
20352 | madam,"said he,"would you have me to imitate a man who_ eats like a beast, and drinks like a fish_?" |
20352 | master,"replied the sailor,"how, then, dare you_ go to bed_, since all your ancestors died in it?" |
20352 | never mind that,"said the buyer,"I will contrive to catch him at any time, I will engage; but what is the other?" |
20352 | not offend? |
20352 | perhaps you will state wherein this great difference consists?" |
20352 | rejoins the collier,"why could she not take th''_ ould_ ones?" |
20352 | replied the actor;"and do you reckon as nothing the honor of being able to_ say so_?" |
20352 | replied the other;"then I presume you are a cutter of_ bungs_?" |
20352 | said Bannister;"why, what can fire and water produce but a_ hiss_?" |
20352 | said he,"what are you ruminating on?" |
20352 | said the gratified poet,"anything more?" |
20352 | said the lady,"did n''t they_ kill you_?" |
20352 | said the master of the house,"do n''t you like the beer?" |
20352 | said the other, much surprised;"how do you manage, then?" |
20352 | surely it can not be so much?" |
20352 | they eat very well, my jewel, would you like to taste the_ stalk_?" |
20352 | was the first question:"where is my guardian angel?" |
20352 | weigh?" |
20352 | what is that?" |
20352 | what would your lordship have me be?--a lord?" |
20352 | what''s that Walsingham has been saying to you?" |
20352 | when I never got into your chair?" |
20352 | where?" |
20352 | why ai n''t you going to_ sing, guv''ner_?" |
20352 | why so, Jack, why so? |
20352 | why, do n''t you see my gouty shoe?" |
20352 | why, my dear fellow, you do n''t mean to say that you have really got the gout? |
20352 | you amaze me, I never heard of it till now,--pray what place?" |
20352 | your title and revenues are only for your life,"answered by asking,"And for how_ many lives_ does your Grace hold yours?" |
33016 | ''Clumsy''? |
33016 | ''Yet''? |
33016 | About Nida Mane, sir? 33016 After Dan Kelly? |
33016 | All here? |
33016 | And fly a plane for Saranoff? |
33016 | And now, how soon can you go? 33016 And you, Ivan Saranoff?" |
33016 | Are there any local conditions unfavorable to flying? |
33016 | Are you affected, Captain? |
33016 | Are you all right, Carnes? |
33016 | Are you all right, Howard? |
33016 | Are you all right? |
33016 | Are you all right? |
33016 | Are you going on the expedition? |
33016 | Are you hit bad? |
33016 | Asmo and Camol, will you help me? 33016 But,"Abbot had objected further,"if so, why have n''t they come up to visit or conquer us? |
33016 | By morning you expect it will have traveled forty or fifty miles in all directions? |
33016 | Ca n''t something be done? |
33016 | Ca n''t they see the field and the plane? 33016 Can either of you pound a key-- code, I mean?" |
33016 | Can we see you, Van? |
33016 | Can you get word for me at once to Thig? |
33016 | Can you hear me up on the boat? |
33016 | Can you work the radio door controls? |
33016 | Carnes, is n''t this the darnedest thing we''ve ever been through? 33016 Check this, will you, Walt?" |
33016 | Chet,she demanded,"are n''t you going to warn him? |
33016 | Coming, Nida? |
33016 | Did you get it, Diane? 33016 Did you kill him, Doctor?" |
33016 | Did you learn Saranoff''s plans? |
33016 | Did you think I would put you_ all_ out of the ship? 33016 Do n''t you want to go?" |
33016 | Do you have any faint idea of what a job this is? 33016 Do you know Romehl?" |
33016 | Dr. Bird,thought the king,"can you communicate with me easily?" |
33016 | Eh, yes? 33016 Error?" |
33016 | Fake an S. O. S. Do n''t you see? 33016 Has Captain Ilgen Mr. Lane Mollon''s leave to stay?" |
33016 | Has Hanac brought our evening food yet? |
33016 | Has anything been accomplished? |
33016 | Have I your leave to stay, Mich''l Ares? |
33016 | Have a heart, will you? |
33016 | Heave in the riot- ray, will you, old fellow? |
33016 | Herr Bullard, iss it not-- yess? |
33016 | Herr Harkness, you have filed claims on it; who am I to dispute with the great Herr Harkness? 33016 How about conscripting a little labor?" |
33016 | How can I? |
33016 | How did it get a name like that? |
33016 | How did it leak out? 33016 How do you know where we''re going?" |
33016 | How far? |
33016 | How long are the days and nights? |
33016 | If our savage ancestors lived on the inhospitable outer shell of the earth,he shouted,"is that a reason for our taking that retrograde step? |
33016 | In my head? |
33016 | Inspector Dolan,said Dr. Bird sharply,"why did n''t you tell me those things?" |
33016 | Is it nearly time? |
33016 | Is the guard room occupied, sir? |
33016 | Ivan Saranoff, what means this? |
33016 | Leave you,he said,"in one place? |
33016 | Listen, Bill-- I never lied to you, did I? |
33016 | Mean to tell me you''ve been there? 33016 No, Doctor, what is it?" |
33016 | Normal? |
33016 | Notice those short tubes mounted on light wheels over against the walls? 33016 Now what dirty work are they up to?" |
33016 | Now what? |
33016 | Operate? 33016 Perhaps you do n''t know, Captain,"Mich''l suggested smoothly,"that it is not wise to disregard the orders of the Provisional President''s son?" |
33016 | Put you_ all_ on one island? |
33016 | She made good her escape then? |
33016 | She there now? |
33016 | Sir, what are your orders? |
33016 | So you know this? |
33016 | So, my friends, you would run away and leave me, would you? |
33016 | So? |
33016 | Spare the time? 33016 Sure, but what''s it all about?" |
33016 | Talk? 33016 The flying conditions were good?" |
33016 | Then what means this? |
33016 | Then why have they taken up with Saranoff? |
33016 | They did n''t? |
33016 | Think they''ll get over the river, Van? |
33016 | This your girl that got away from you? 33016 Treachery, eh?" |
33016 | Well, Carnesy, old dear,said Dr. Bird,"have you been lonesome?" |
33016 | Well? |
33016 | What about Nida Mane? 33016 What about your work?" |
33016 | What are we going to do, Doctor? |
33016 | What are you doing, Garland? |
33016 | What can a mental cripple like you do with blind allies like them? |
33016 | What can be the matter? |
33016 | What do they want of pilots underground? |
33016 | What do you intend to do with us? |
33016 | What do you mean-- moon flowers? |
33016 | What do you mean-- no use? 33016 What do you mean? |
33016 | What good would that do? |
33016 | What is he going to do to us? |
33016 | What is it, dear? |
33016 | What is it? |
33016 | What is the matter, sir? |
33016 | What say, Kratz? |
33016 | What seems to be the matter, Captain? |
33016 | What the dickens? |
33016 | What was it that you said?--that Harkness and I would be staying here? 33016 What you going to do there?" |
33016 | What you would have given for this last night, eh? 33016 What''s the big idea?" |
33016 | What''s the dope? 33016 What''s the idea, Van?" |
33016 | What''s the matter, Doctor? |
33016 | What? |
33016 | When? 33016 Where are we? |
33016 | Where is Garland? |
33016 | Where is Nida? 33016 Where is he?" |
33016 | Where is it? |
33016 | Where is she? |
33016 | Where is the ship; where have you hidden it? 33016 Where''s the fire?" |
33016 | Who are we to question the judgment of our all- knowing masters? |
33016 | Who could it be? |
33016 | Who said so? |
33016 | Who''s that? |
33016 | Why do n''t you tell them? |
33016 | Why in thunder are we back here? |
33016 | Why is he so sure he can get me in the morning? 33016 Why not?" |
33016 | Why not? |
33016 | Why? |
33016 | Why? |
33016 | Why? |
33016 | Would you call it a hoax or the real thing? |
33016 | Would you mind repeating what you just said, Van? |
33016 | Yeah, that''s the question: what can we do? |
33016 | Yeah? 33016 Yes, Your Majesty, but may I ask that you alter the vibration period of my comrade, Mr. Carnes? |
33016 | Yes, and meanwhile the thing is overwhelming us at what rate? |
33016 | Yes, but what''s all the rush? 33016 Yes?" |
33016 | Yes? |
33016 | You are going on the expedition, and Romehl is not? |
33016 | You are going to maroon us on an island? |
33016 | You are going to put the three of us off in some lost corner of this world? |
33016 | You can fly it for sure, Max? |
33016 | You can see it just as well in daylight? |
33016 | You have met Senator Mollon? |
33016 | You have n''t forgotten, Mich''l, this is the day of the Referendum? |
33016 | You mean--? |
33016 | You men willing? |
33016 | You say you bring the stuff here with a light ray? |
33016 | You trying to put one over on me? |
33016 | You will do-- what? |
33016 | You will take us back? |
33016 | You''ll want me at the tabulating section? |
33016 | You''re a cheerful sort of soul, are n''t you? |
33016 | You''re sure you could n''t move? 33016 You, too?" |
33016 | _ Eh, What?_Dear Editor: Just got my June issue of our good mag, Astounding Stories, and I think that it is great. |
33016 | ***** What danger could there be in this well- guarded world? |
33016 | *****"Iss there air?" |
33016 | *****"What is the cube root of 378?" |
33016 | A hawk-- was it not? |
33016 | A question, Mr. Cummings: Shades of Polter and Tugh!--why must you always have a deformed character in your stories? |
33016 | And do you know how fast we are going? |
33016 | And if so, who? |
33016 | And now what?" |
33016 | And then...."Then-- what? |
33016 | And we see them, or I see the other fellow as he appeared when my time caught up with his? |
33016 | And what causes gushers? |
33016 | And what was the Sun like? |
33016 | And why have n''t we ever found any trace of them?" |
33016 | And you have n''t answered my other questions: when do we go back?" |
33016 | And you say there are more?" |
33016 | Are n''t they real?" |
33016 | Are you willing to see that brain destroyed? |
33016 | Bill, Bart, what can we do?" |
33016 | Boldly he asked him:"Where is Mr. Mollon? |
33016 | But did he plan to leave them all or only two? |
33016 | But do n''t you realize what this thing means-- this ungodly growth that''s started?" |
33016 | But there is a real point of doubt: Would the personality accompany the brain in transplantation? |
33016 | But was it their two friends after all? |
33016 | But what could they do? |
33016 | But what will happen to them all when the automatic machinery fails?" |
33016 | But where''s the ship? |
33016 | But who in the devil are you? |
33016 | But why? |
33016 | But, why get excited? |
33016 | Ca n''t you get their thoughts?" |
33016 | Can you tell us now?" |
33016 | Carnes?" |
33016 | Chet had been too intent upon the newscast to heed an opening door at his back....*****"How about it, Chet?" |
33016 | Could it be that the one chance in a million had actually happened, and that a grapple from the boat above had actually found him? |
33016 | Could these suits contain human beings? |
33016 | D''you speak English? |
33016 | Danny Kelly? |
33016 | Did he dare take it? |
33016 | Did n''t I tell you?" |
33016 | Did not the king give me full power while he was away?" |
33016 | Did you notice one thing? |
33016 | Did you notice this?" |
33016 | Did you think you would just hop over to the Dark Moon? |
33016 | Did you understand any of their talk?" |
33016 | Do they appeal to your dramatic sense? |
33016 | Do you know the Moon''s speed as it approaches? |
33016 | Do you know we will shoot another two hundred thousand miles straight out before I can check this ship? |
33016 | Do you mean to cooperate with me or not?" |
33016 | Doctor, what were those things? |
33016 | Eh, what? |
33016 | For Chet Bullard, time ceased to have meaning; what were seconds-- or centuries-- as he stared at that glowing rim? |
33016 | For that matter, what had become of Harkness? |
33016 | Get me? |
33016 | Get me?" |
33016 | Got a line on him?" |
33016 | Got an ax or anything?" |
33016 | Got one with a radio?" |
33016 | Got''em loaded down, eh?" |
33016 | Had Walt learned of some plan of Schwartzmann''s? |
33016 | Had he not taken many such tests on earth and passed them easily? |
33016 | Had the serpents frightened him back?" |
33016 | Had you thought that there''s a lot of room to get lost in out here?" |
33016 | Had you thought what you will look like when that fool pilot rams into it head on? |
33016 | Have you any ideas?" |
33016 | Have you doped out something?" |
33016 | Have you ever noticed that almost every critic of Science Fiction is either a teacher or a female? |
33016 | Have you realized, Chet, that we own that world-- you and Diane and I? |
33016 | He killed Mollon?" |
33016 | Hear the rays?" |
33016 | Hear?" |
33016 | Hear?" |
33016 | Her tinkling, silvery voice was troubled as she asked:"Have I your leave to stay, Mich''l Ares?" |
33016 | His head!--what had happened to his head?... |
33016 | His nurse came into the room with extra chairs; Chet waited till she was gone before he repeated:"Now what? |
33016 | How about an occasional short story? |
33016 | How about yourself?" |
33016 | How could the murder of Major Atwood be mentioned in the records of New York? |
33016 | How did you make out to- day?" |
33016 | How near were these enemies of his, he wondered? |
33016 | How on earth did you do it?" |
33016 | How soon will you be ready to start back? |
33016 | How''s the side where they got you with the spear?--and how are you? |
33016 | I see that the edges of the paper are now smooth, but still the leaves stick out beyond one another, so what good does that do? |
33016 | If a hard- boiled newspaper man would not believe the story, who could? |
33016 | If not, would not the synthetic"Extra Man"be a human being minus personality? |
33016 | If there is any amount of time separating two things, those two things are invisible to each other, are they not? |
33016 | If this is the case, how then can a rocket- propelled space ship go across this void? |
33016 | If we could get into the Sun again-- wouldn''t you want that?" |
33016 | In that case, what became of the bodies? |
33016 | Is it all right with you?" |
33016 | Is n''t he afraid I''ll leave the island? |
33016 | Is n''t it possible that he has, at some time in his explorations, come into contact with these fellows and made friends with them?" |
33016 | Is that right? |
33016 | It was Harkness-- Walt Harkness-- from whom he had snatched the controls.... To fly to the Dark Moon, of course-- What nonsense was that?... |
33016 | It was foolish, eh, to reduce the power? |
33016 | It was useless to run away last night-- not?" |
33016 | Know how much that stone''s worth?" |
33016 | Like the great vita- lights that were prescribed by law and evaded by everyone, except possibly the technies? |
33016 | Make it snappy, will you?" |
33016 | Might not these jealousies flame into huge wars when translated to the world above? |
33016 | Must we mention his story? |
33016 | Nida, you''ll admit I''m taking no unfair advantage of him?" |
33016 | Now what is going to happen?" |
33016 | Or why did n''t you let Diane and me back up your yarn? |
33016 | Or would that power be denied him? |
33016 | Refused me a loan this morning, did n''t you? |
33016 | Say nothing about any trouble-- understand?" |
33016 | So he pointed at her and asked,"Milli?" |
33016 | Some little plan like that in your mind?" |
33016 | Some work in connection with the Referendum? |
33016 | Sure you can spare the time to go out there now?" |
33016 | Tell me-- where?" |
33016 | The Midget From the Island A COMPLETE NOVELETTE_ By H. G. Winter_[ Illustration:_"For God''s sake, Hagendorff, what''s come over you? |
33016 | The best story you ever published? |
33016 | The black lens at the end of Mich''l''s needle- ray pressed hard, and Lane said naturally:"You have her in custody?" |
33016 | The ship, you will return it safely to the place where it was?" |
33016 | Then is it not possible that each individual is existing in a different time realm? |
33016 | Then what? |
33016 | Then what?" |
33016 | Then why did n''t he keep on when he was started? |
33016 | Think I had it up my sleeve? |
33016 | This would afford a parallel; for if she realized that there were two languages in the world, might there not be three? |
33016 | Three strides took Hagendorff opposite him; and from above the thunderous voice rumbled:"What were your sensations?" |
33016 | To the moon?" |
33016 | True, the brain is the control room; but--? |
33016 | Was her patient about to recover consciousness? |
33016 | What could he do? |
33016 | What did he say?" |
33016 | What did you do with them?" |
33016 | What do you mean?" |
33016 | What does the title say? |
33016 | What had happened? |
33016 | What happened to our neighboring nation of Atlantica only a short 15,000 years ago? |
33016 | What has happened?" |
33016 | What is it this time?" |
33016 | What is it?" |
33016 | What is it?" |
33016 | What must one do to vote? |
33016 | What trouble could this man Schwartzmann threaten that a word to the Peace Enforcement Commission would not quell? |
33016 | What were they doing out there in the watery- blue midnight? |
33016 | What will happen when those technies also deteriorate, and lose the will to work? |
33016 | What will you do if you do land? |
33016 | What will you do when you open the ports and the--?" |
33016 | What would happen when the present overloaded machinery should break down; wear out? |
33016 | What would it do to your machine?" |
33016 | What''ll we do?" |
33016 | What''s it all about?" |
33016 | What''s the idea? |
33016 | What''s the use of talking to you? |
33016 | What''s wrong? |
33016 | When are you going to start putting it on the stands twice a month? |
33016 | When do we go back?" |
33016 | Where are we? |
33016 | Where are you staying?" |
33016 | Where could he go to elude the inescapable patrols? |
33016 | Where next? |
33016 | Where you going?" |
33016 | Where''d you come from?" |
33016 | Where''s this laboratory of yours?" |
33016 | Where''s your first aid kit?" |
33016 | Who am I to answer? |
33016 | Who shall it be?" |
33016 | Who was this man, Schwartzmann, that dared dream of violating their possessions? |
33016 | Who''s your chief?" |
33016 | Why could n''t he remember?... |
33016 | Why could not one see events in which he participated? |
33016 | Why did n''t you show them the ship? |
33016 | Why had Hagendorff tricked him? |
33016 | Why had n''t he first made appropriate inquiries of his guard? |
33016 | Why had n''t the officials published the entire story as Van told it over the Secret Service radio? |
33016 | Why have I done it, you wonder? |
33016 | Why in the devil are they dropping them so near?" |
33016 | Why not give us more interplanetary illustrations of space ships and the like as in"Brigands of the Moon"? |
33016 | Why not omit to close any further gates behind him? |
33016 | Why should the cage appear as a mist at first? |
33016 | Why struggle? |
33016 | Will it destroy the space- serpents? |
33016 | Will you willingly submit your brains to the searching of this instrument?" |
33016 | Would Mr. Vanderventer be so kind as to fly over there and destroy it before any lives were lost? |
33016 | Would the ship be there? |
33016 | Yes; and did you think I was going to stand by and see all the credit go to you? |
33016 | You little fool-- you think you can get free? |
33016 | You mean it''ll keep on growing?" |
33016 | You never saw Van licked yet, did you?" |
33016 | You were helpless?" |
33016 | You''re sure this is from the moon?" |
33016 | Your injury-- how soon will you be well enough?" |
33016 | _ Ach!_ This machine, it will startle the world of science; it will make its inventor famous-- not? |
33016 | _ What Price Smoothness?_ Dear Editor: I have just finished the June issue of Astounding Stories. |
33016 | asked Carnes,"did your light fail?" |
33016 | exclaimed Abbot,"when you have less than a day to live?" |
33016 | he asked himself in a half- spoken thought,"--how far have we come?" |
33016 | he screamed,"you would kill us all? |
4352 | And if it is unique of its kind, by what sign do we know it to be genuine? |
4352 | And what is, in this case, the distinction between the comic and the ugly? |
4352 | And why does one laugh at a negro? |
4352 | BURIED him, without knowing whether he was dead or not? |
4352 | Begotten of real life and akin to art, should it not also have something of its own to tell us about art and life? |
4352 | But is it a mere absurdity,--an absurdity of an indefinite kind? |
4352 | But what is that force which divides and subdivides the branches of a tree into smaller boughs and its roots into radicles? |
4352 | But why is it we laugh at this mechanical arrangement? |
4352 | But, then, how will the comic poet set to work to prevent our feelings being moved? |
4352 | Can it then fail to throw light for us on the way that human imagination works, and more particularly social, collective, and popular imagination? |
4352 | Do we find this kind of rigidity in language also? |
4352 | Does it not seem as though we found this same extraordinary confusion in many a comic scene? |
4352 | Does not this mean that a black face, in our imagination, is one daubed over with ink or soot? |
4352 | He came to life again? |
4352 | He disappeared, then? |
4352 | How can we detect what they have in common with one another, unless we first determine the general relationship between the witty and the comic? |
4352 | How is it to penetrate within? |
4352 | How many human actions would stand a similar test? |
4352 | How, indeed, could the same man have been Macbeth, Hamlet, Othello, King Lear, and many others? |
4352 | How, then, does a misunderstanding on this point arise? |
4352 | In the same play too we find the following edifying conversation between two company- promoters:"Is this a very honourable thing we are doing? |
4352 | Is an immediate proof of this desired? |
4352 | Is he dead, then? |
4352 | Is it not perchance this idea that comedy is trying to suggest to us when holding up a profession to ridicule? |
4352 | Is it not, then, the case that the hunchback suggests the appearance of a person who holds himself badly? |
4352 | Is n''t that a brother of yours? |
4352 | Is not this the idea here suggested when we are led to materialise, so to speak, the sympathy we postulate as existing between father and daughter? |
4352 | Is there a name for this inversion of common sense? |
4352 | Might not certain vices have the same relation to character that the rigidity of a fixed idea has to intellect? |
4352 | Need we call to mind all the forms in which this same combination appears? |
4352 | Now, is this logic peculiar to Don Quixote? |
4352 | Now, where was the mystery? |
4352 | Should we not see many of them suddenly pass from grave to gay, on isolating them from the accompanying music of sentiment? |
4352 | The neighbour retorts,"What do you mean by putting your terrace under my pipe?" |
4352 | These unfortunate shareholders, you see, we are taking the money out of their very pockets...."--"Well, out of what do you expect us to take it?" |
4352 | Was it done in malice or in friendliness? |
4352 | We, for our part, make a distinction between a goat and a sheep; but can we tell one goat from another, one sheep from another? |
4352 | What are these directions? |
4352 | What are these elements? |
4352 | What are these necessities? |
4352 | What bond of secret relationship can there be between the physical defect and the moral infirmity? |
4352 | What do YOU think? |
4352 | What does laughter mean? |
4352 | What fairy wove that veil? |
4352 | What is a comic physiognomy? |
4352 | What is it that makes it laughable? |
4352 | What is the basal element in the laughable? |
4352 | What is the object of art? |
4352 | What is the object of such contradictions except to help us to put our finger on the obliviousness of the characters to their own actions? |
4352 | What is there comic about a rubicund nose? |
4352 | What is this reality? |
4352 | What, now, is the particular point on which their attention will have to be concentrated, and what will here be the function of intelligence? |
4352 | What, then, are the faults capable of becoming ludicrous, and in what circumstances do we regard them as being too serious to be laughed at? |
4352 | What, then, is requisite to transform all this into a comedy? |
4352 | Where did the comic come from in this case? |
4352 | Where does a ridiculous expression of the face come from? |
4352 | Where does this progressive continuity come from? |
4352 | Where lies the comic element in this sentence, taken from a funeral speech and quoted by a German philosopher:"He was virtuous and plump"? |
4352 | Who are the actors in these scenes? |
4352 | Why do we laugh at a head of hair which has changed from dark to blond? |
4352 | Why do we laugh at a public speaker who sneezes just at the most pathetic moment of his speech? |
4352 | Why is it there is something comic in the repetition of a word on the stage? |
4352 | Why will it be accepted? |
4352 | Why? |
4352 | Why? |
4352 | With whom has the wit to deal? |
39707 | ''Hair cut, sir? |
39707 | And is the other all right? |
39707 | Are you still there, Billy? 39707 Dessay you''d rather''ave a gentleman settin''a- side of you?" |
39707 | Excuse me, mum, but do you believe in woman''s rights? |
39707 | Have you heard the news, my dear fellow? |
39707 | I say, guv''nor,''ang on to this''ere strap a minute, will yer, while I get a light?] |
39707 | In what vein? |
39707 | Is this right for Paddington? |
39707 | Was I with him?] |
39707 | Wot''s the matter with''i m, Willum? 39707 Ye----"_ Hairdresser._"Much off, sir?" |
39707 | Yes, sir, since they''re begun poisoning the beer, we_ must_ drink_ something_, must n''t we?] |
39707 | You mean about the position of the Bank of England? 39707 You surely do not wish to refuse me?" |
39707 | _ That_, Maria? 39707 ''Aven''t I told ye that three times already? 39707 ( after singeing)._Shampoo, sir? |
39707 | (_ Aside._)"She_ do n''t_ want_ much_, do she, mate?"] |
39707 | (_ To Old Gent._)"Where are yer for, sir?" |
39707 | ***** A QUESTION FOR LLOYD''S.--Are sub- editors underwriters? |
39707 | ***** POEM ON A PUBLIC- HOUSE Of this establishment how can we speak? |
39707 | ***** POETRY AND FINANCE.--Among all the quotations in all the money market and City articles who ever met with a line of verse? |
39707 | ***** SEASONABLE.--What sort of a bath would a resident of Cornhill probably prefer? |
39707 | ***** SOLEMN JEST.--Where should postmen be buried? |
39707 | ***** THE CAPITALISTS(_ A Story of Yesterday for To- morrow and To- day_)"What, Brown, my boy, is that you?" |
39707 | ***** THE INFANT''S GUIDE TO KNOWLEDGE CONCERNING CASH_ Question._ What is cash? |
39707 | ***** THE PROMOTER''S VADE MECUM(_ Subject to Revision after the Vacation_)_ Question._ What is meant by the promotion of a company? |
39707 | ***** WHAT intimate connection is there between the lungs of London and the lights of the metropolis? |
39707 | ***** WHAT is the best thing to do in a hurry? |
39707 | ***** WHY should a chimney- sweeper be a good whist player? |
39707 | *****[ Illustration: A CASE OF MISTAKEN IDENTITY_ Old Gentleman( returning from City festivity)._"Pleashm''n, where''sh M''sht''r Brown live?" |
39707 | *****[ Illustration: A NEGLECTED INDUSTRY"''Ow are yer gettin''on, Bill?" |
39707 | *****[ Illustration: A QUALIFIED GUIDE.--_Befogged Pedestrian._"Could you direct me to the river, please?" |
39707 | *****[ Illustration: A SENSITIVE PLANT.--"What, back in town already, old chappie?" |
39707 | *****[ Illustration: A SKETCH IN REGENT STREET.--Puzzle-- On which side are the shop windows?] |
39707 | *****[ Illustration: CONVENIENT.--_Lodger( who has been dining)._"D''you have any''bjecks''n t''my''shcaping up into my rooms shec''nd floor? |
39707 | *****[ Illustration: FRIGHTFUL LEVITY.--_Bus- Driver._"Hullo, gov''nour; got any room?" |
39707 | *****[ Illustration: HYDE PARK, MAY 1_ Country Cousin._"What is the meaning of this, policeman?" |
39707 | *****[ Illustration: MELTING MOMENTS(_ Temperature 95Â ° in the Shade._)_ Friend._"How does this weather suit you, old chap?" |
39707 | *****[ Illustration: PROOF POSITIVE_ Old Lady._"Do they sell good''sperrits''at this''ouse, mister?" |
39707 | *****[ Illustration: UNCONSCIONABLE_ Head of the Firm._"Want a holiday!? |
39707 | *****[ Illustration:"''Ad any breakfus''''s mornin''?" |
39707 | *****[ Illustration:"Shave, or hair cut, sir?" |
39707 | *****[ Illustration:_ Country Cousin._"Do you stop at the Cecil?" |
39707 | *****[ Illustration:_ Indignant Cabby._"Shockin''bad''orse,''ave I? |
39707 | *****[ Illustration:_ Inquisitive Guardian._"By the way, have you any children?" |
39707 | *****[ Illustration:_ Irate Bus Driver._"You would n''t do that for me, would yer?"] |
39707 | *****_ Q._ WHAT is the best sort of cigar to smoke in a hansom? |
39707 | --What o''clock is it? |
39707 | 12?" |
39707 | A._"May I give you a friction?" |
39707 | A._"Your moustaches curled?" |
39707 | And the other?" |
39707 | And wot''s this hextra tuppence for?--to buy a new''un with, eh?"] |
39707 | Anything in the papers? |
39707 | Are you prepared to go the whole hog or none? |
39707 | B. C. girl is going to serve us? |
39707 | Bu''--where do I live?"!] |
39707 | But what I mean is, should we not know for what purpose we are going to expend the half million? |
39707 | Can he run anyone in, and make them move on if found loitering on his beat? |
39707 | Can they make a sweep clean? |
39707 | Caretakin''?" |
39707 | Carn''t yer look out wher''yer a- comin''?" |
39707 | Did n''t you see me''old up my''and?" |
39707 | Do you know anything whatever about the business it is proposed you should superintend? |
39707 | Do you think this was the constable in question? |
39707 | Eh, gentlemen? |
39707 | Five pound shares, eh? |
39707 | Fresh mornin'', ai n''t it?" |
39707 | G._ Why do you put them on, coachman? |
39707 | Griddleton._ What are those square things, coachman, you put over the poor horse''s eyes? |
39707 | He was asked why? |
39707 | I should recommend our wash."_ Customer._"May I ask if that invigorating liquid is what_ you_ have been in the habit of using?" |
39707 | I suppose we may put down the capital at fifty thousand? |
39707 | If yer do n''t believe it''s gold,_ jump on it_?"] |
39707 | Is England exclusively devoted to Bacchus, and is temperance a heresy? |
39707 | Is he a special? |
39707 | Is he dressed like other constables? |
39707 | Is he not thinking of our old acquaintance, the do- do? |
39707 | Is his beat all round the Tower? |
39707 | Is it hurt?" |
39707 | Is not my fortune ample too? |
39707 | Is there anything else anyone can suggest? |
39707 | Must I not, therefore, be possessed, To feel that dread, of devils blue? |
39707 | Qui est cet homme- là ?" |
39707 | Shall I write"Company"with a big C? |
39707 | Thash allri, but wersh my_ feet?_"]*****[ Illustration:_ Employer_(_ who simply_ WON''T_ take any excuse for unpunctuality_). |
39707 | The"love of the turtle?" |
39707 | The_ tapis_ alluded to is, of course, Gob''lin? |
39707 | Then the same solicitors as our last? |
39707 | This is your''ouse-- get out-- be careful, sir--''ere''s the step?" |
39707 | Time: Five o''clock.__ Friend._ Any news? |
39707 | What are you waiting about here for?" |
39707 | What is his number? |
39707 | What, refuse these beautiful grouse? |
39707 | Who would look at a paltry fifty? |
39707 | Why am I doin''this? |
39707 | Why did you call that man at the bar"the Microbe"? |
39707 | Wilt thou not be with riches blest? |
39707 | Wot are yer doin''''ere? |
39707 | [_ Dead silence._]*****[ Illustration: FOGGY WEATHER.--"Has Mr. Smith been here?" |
39707 | [_ He''ll give them a little notice next time._]*****[ Illustration:_ First Workman._"Wot''s it say, Bill, on that old sun- dial?" |
39707 | [_ Tableau._]*****[ Illustration:_ Gilded Johnny._"How long will it take your bally cab to get to Victoria?" |
39707 | _ Blondin?_"]*****[ Illustration: SKETCHED IN OXFORD STREET]***** INSCRIPTION TO BE PLACED OVER THE STOCK EXCHANGE.--"_Bear_ and for-_bear_." |
39707 | _ Bus- Driver._"What''s yer fare?" |
39707 | _ Employer._"Who was she?" |
39707 | _ Fourth Mem._ Ought n''t we to have some object in view? |
39707 | _ Freddy._"And do they have a new Lord Mayor every year, mummie?" |
39707 | _ Freddy._"Then what do they do with the old Lord Mayors when they''ve done with''em?"] |
39707 | _ Great Smith Street._--Which of the Smiths is this? |
39707 | _ Guardian._"But-- er-- surely I know a son of yours?" |
39707 | _ Hairdresser._"Have you tried our tonic lotion?" |
39707 | _ Idol Lane._--Where are the Missionaries? |
39707 | _ Johnny._"Ah!--how much have you got?"] |
39707 | _ Love Lane._--What sort of love? |
39707 | _ Man with tools._"''Ow''s that?" |
39707 | _ Manager._"How much do you require?" |
39707 | _ Other dittos._ Hey? |
39707 | _ Promoter._ And I think, before taking up finance, you have devoted a long life to the service of your country? |
39707 | _ Promoter._ And no doubt you are the soul of honour? |
39707 | _ Promoter._ And there is no particular reason why you should dabble in Stock Exchange matters? |
39707 | _ Q._ And what does promotion do for the promoter? |
39707 | _ Q._ But the destination of the cash scarcely affects the promoter? |
39707 | _ Q._ Can a banking account be put to any particular service in the promotion of a company? |
39707 | _ Q._ Can it obtain the good- will of the Press? |
39707 | _ Q._ Can money be obtained in any other way? |
39707 | _ Q._ Can you give me an instance of credit? |
39707 | _ Q._ Can you give me your impression of the theory of bimetallism? |
39707 | _ Q._ Can you tell me what is credit? |
39707 | _ Q._ How are these suggestions obtained? |
39707 | _ Q._ How is this end accomplished? |
39707 | _ Q._ How much of his profits does he sometimes have to disgorge? |
39707 | _ Q._ Is it not sometimes called"the root of all evil"? |
39707 | _ Q._ Is it possible to live without cash? |
39707 | _ Q._ Of what does a prospectus consist? |
39707 | _ Q._ Of what is a front page composed? |
39707 | _ Q._ What is bimetallism? |
39707 | _ Q._ What is the best way of securing gold? |
39707 | _ Q._ What is the modern way of securing funds, on the same principles, but with smaller risk? |
39707 | _ Q._ Why do you say"temporary"? |
39707 | _ Q._ Would it be right to describe such a transaction as"much to his credit"? |
39707 | _ Q._ You mean, then, that this prosperity is like the companies promoted,"limited"? |
39707 | _ Robinson._"Well, old chap, how did you sleep last night?" |
39707 | _ Slightly Sober Individual._"_ Pavement!_ Who do you take me for? |
39707 | _''Ave_ yer got such a thing as a bit o''bread about yer, me lord?"] |
39707 | eh? |
39707 | one of the_ force de tour_, empowered to use a_ tour de force_? |
39707 | what? |
39707 | when shall I return to thee? |
39707 | why, my friend, is a joint stock Concern like, yet unlike, a clock? |
30532 | A cripple? 30532 All right, is it?" |
30532 | Am I in on it? |
30532 | An earthquake, Carnes? |
30532 | And so Tina''s cage follows us-- as you hoped? |
30532 | And space is an empty void? 30532 And the effect will be?" |
30532 | And what will you do? |
30532 | And you''ve saved Diane?... 30532 Any luck, Carnes?" |
30532 | Are you all right down there? |
30532 | Are you crazy, Harkness? 30532 Are you hurt? |
30532 | Are you stopping now, Migul? |
30532 | Are you trying to leave me out? |
30532 | But is n''t it frightfully dangerous to carry in that form? |
30532 | But,I persisted,"suppose we tried to stop the cage?" |
30532 | By whom? |
30532 | By whom? |
30532 | Can you do it, Doctor? |
30532 | Chet, old man-- can''t you speak? 30532 Comfortable, Captain Bolton?" |
30532 | Could we bury a charge of explosive and blow it up? |
30532 | Did it speak to you like that, Mary? |
30532 | Did n''t think you could get away with it, did you? |
30532 | Did not you know it? |
30532 | Did you know that? |
30532 | Did you persuade the President to leave? |
30532 | Do n''t you know me, dear? |
30532 | Ever? |
30532 | George, shall we? |
30532 | Gone where? |
30532 | Has anything happened since you telephoned me? |
30532 | Have you any more of those lead clothes that I can wear? 30532 Have you found your means of combating him?" |
30532 | Herr Harkness? |
30532 | How about power? |
30532 | How did I get here? |
30532 | How do they propel themselves? |
30532 | How is it that the water does n''t fill the room? |
30532 | How''d you like that? |
30532 | I only hope he is garbed in the rebel white and blue-- eh, Tony? 30532 Is it a navy ship or the one we''re after?" |
30532 | Is it possible that you do not know? 30532 It will be pleasant to have him dead, eh, Migul?" |
30532 | Just where do you think you''re going? |
30532 | Lucky? |
30532 | Made it, did you? |
30532 | Meaning? |
30532 | Migul took you from 1935? |
30532 | More generosity? |
30532 | My God, Eric, how did you do it? |
30532 | My little Mistress Atwood, did you think because Tugh vanished that year the war began that you were done with him? 30532 Neat, is n''t it? |
30532 | Needs me? 30532 Nor my friend here?" |
30532 | Nothing between us and the Dark Moon? |
30532 | Nothing? |
30532 | Now where? |
30532 | Oh, you got here at last, did you? 30532 Once you locate it, how will you fight it?" |
30532 | Remember how my father was laughed at when he dared to vision the commerce of to- day? 30532 Ruth, will this fit your Uncle''s projectile?" |
30532 | Scared, Americansky? 30532 See that air- liner just diving into it? |
30532 | Sick? 30532 Sick?" |
30532 | So you have no master, Migul? |
30532 | So? |
30532 | Solved? |
30532 | Something else? |
30532 | Sure thing, but what''s the big idea? |
30532 | The cathode ray? 30532 Then how will you reach him to crush him? |
30532 | Then what did happen? |
30532 | Then, if friendly rivalry is impossible, would you consider, could there not be arranged-- a merger of our interests? 30532 There were things that ran-- men-- apes-- what were they?" |
30532 | This means we are entombed?--buried here? 30532 To 1777?" |
30532 | To meet heaven knows what dangers? 30532 To the same night from when you captured her?" |
30532 | To what Time are you taking us, then? |
30532 | To when have we reached? |
30532 | Up to you? 30532 Wait a few minutes, will you?" |
30532 | We are such stuff as dreams are made of....Do you in my Time of 1935 and thereabouts, have difficulty realizing such a statement? |
30532 | We''re beneath the surface, are n''t we? |
30532 | Well, as you doubtless know, you are most unwelcome.... You are watching the dials, Migul? |
30532 | Well, what is it now? 30532 Well?" |
30532 | What are you trying to tell me? |
30532 | What caused it? 30532 What did you find out last night?" |
30532 | What did you say about the cathode ray, Doctor? |
30532 | What do you make of these, Lassen? |
30532 | What do you mean? |
30532 | What does that lead to? |
30532 | What for? |
30532 | What happened up above? |
30532 | What is his name? |
30532 | What is it? |
30532 | What is it? |
30532 | What is it? |
30532 | What is your discharge rate? |
30532 | What next, Doctuh, suh? |
30532 | What on earth is this stuff, Doctor? |
30532 | What reply shall I make? |
30532 | What shall we do? |
30532 | What the dickens? |
30532 | What the hell are you dreaming about, Renaud? 30532 What was it?" |
30532 | What''s all this? 30532 What''s back of it all?" |
30532 | What''s that, Larry? 30532 What''s the matter, Doctor?" |
30532 | What''s the trouble, Carnes? |
30532 | What''s up, Doctor? |
30532 | What''s your name? |
30532 | What? |
30532 | When was Migul here, do you think? |
30532 | When will people learn that there is not, and in the nature of things never can be, a disintegrating ray? |
30532 | When? |
30532 | Where are you taking us? |
30532 | Where did you go when you left me in 1935? |
30532 | Where do you expect him to strike next? |
30532 | Who are you, anyway? |
30532 | Who did it? 30532 Why Washington?" |
30532 | Why be a fool? 30532 Why did n''t I think of that possibility before?" |
30532 | Why so? 30532 Why?" |
30532 | Why? |
30532 | Would you like to hear about it? |
30532 | Yes, but how is that going to help us? |
30532 | Yes? |
30532 | You are going to leave me-- us-- there? |
30532 | You had to see the end of the hunt-- be in at the death? |
30532 | You knew they were there? |
30532 | You mean you can not? 30532 You plan to take us, then, to what Time?" |
30532 | You saw something? |
30532 | You speak of Mademoiselle Vernier so familiarly? |
30532 | You will not harm him? |
30532 | You wish it very much, George Rankin? |
30532 | You would go alone? |
30532 | You''re all right, Mary? |
30532 | You''re going down? |
30532 | You''re going to pass yourself off as this man? 30532 Your rank?" |
30532 | _ Oh, have you not? 30532 ***** It spoke:You will know me again? |
30532 | *****"I presume that you can hear me as well?" |
30532 | *****"Once you locate him, how do you propose to attack him?" |
30532 | *****"Where do you suppose he will attack next, Doctor?" |
30532 | ; poor stories-- where are they? |
30532 | A coincidence? |
30532 | A door which could be opened to make adjustments of the mechanisms within? |
30532 | A man--""From 1935? |
30532 | A very wise man once said that"Variety is the spice of life,"so why not take a hint, some of you would- be brickbat pitchers, and pipe down? |
30532 | A whirlpool of what? |
30532 | Again I asked the Robot,"Who commands you?" |
30532 | And Chet was there, and the ship.... What had Chet said? |
30532 | And Chet-- Chet was up there at some hitherto untouched height, battling with-- what? |
30532 | And have you seen her? |
30532 | And now that you have had your first birthday, when are you going to start a quarterly? |
30532 | And the humans of the forest-- were there none of them here? |
30532 | And what was within it? |
30532 | And when are you going to have a sequel to"The Gray Plague,"by L. A. Eshbach which appeared in the November issue? |
30532 | And why had she been captured? |
30532 | Are you crazy? |
30532 | Are you seeing anything?" |
30532 | Behind, and above him, towering straight up-- my God!--what was it? |
30532 | Boxed in on all sides by such a barrier, how was I to get out word of the menace? |
30532 | Bruce, have you developed that new and infinitely powerful explosive you were working on?" |
30532 | But as it is the usual custom to do so here goes: Excellent stories-- all of the first five volumes; good stories-- who''s interested? |
30532 | But did she not know what this meant? |
30532 | But how? |
30532 | But that implies Time? |
30532 | But this Tugh-- was he armed? |
30532 | But what were they saying? |
30532 | But what would that life be? |
30532 | But where was Chet? |
30532 | But why, and how, scientifically do we progress along the Time- scroll? |
30532 | But why? |
30532 | But-- do you-- need me?" |
30532 | Can you do it as if something had happened to the shell?" |
30532 | Chet''s voice came sharp and clear:"Rescue switch-- ready?" |
30532 | Could I not leave the cage and do things in 1920 at the same time in my boyhood I was doing other things? |
30532 | Crazy dreams, Warrington? |
30532 | Diane?" |
30532 | Did a rock move? |
30532 | Did he not have to work and slave hour after hour, day after day and month after month to perfect it? |
30532 | Did they stop there?" |
30532 | Did you bring a car as I told you?" |
30532 | Did you ever run into anything like it?" |
30532 | Do you know how much energy is contained in matter? |
30532 | Do you think Charleston an especially dangerous place for him to be?" |
30532 | Do you understand?" |
30532 | Do you understand?" |
30532 | Do you understand?" |
30532 | Edwin C. Magnuson asks you what you print there: only letters praising your magazine to the skies? |
30532 | Exactly where was it, I wonder?" |
30532 | Finally, how could the atmosphere support a denser substance like the Heaviside Layer? |
30532 | Followed? |
30532 | Had I hit it? |
30532 | Had Jim hit me too hard? |
30532 | Had her clear, smiling eyes seen what occurred? |
30532 | Had it become aware of my thoughts? |
30532 | Had it heard my words? |
30532 | Had it to do with the Dark Moon? |
30532 | Had she some enemy? |
30532 | Had some human master set these controls? |
30532 | Had the ape- men been drawn there through curiosity at seeing their ship float down? |
30532 | Had there been any damage? |
30532 | Had they been set into some combination to give this monster its orders? |
30532 | Had they felt the shock? |
30532 | Had this peculiar formation of the ocean bed anything to do with the problem at hand? |
30532 | Have they found another gold- bricking officer to mess up my clean beds?" |
30532 | Have you been down in the hole, Carnes?" |
30532 | Have you set in motion every agency that the government has?" |
30532 | He tried to speak-- but what words could express the tumult of emotions that arose within him? |
30532 | How could I hope to surprise it? |
30532 | How did the power get to them? |
30532 | How did you do it?" |
30532 | How did you get here? |
30532 | How do you feel now?" |
30532 | How in hell_ did_ you get here?" |
30532 | How was it to be combatted even if our forces knew of the danger? |
30532 | How would you like to be melted away, piece by little piece, till you''re like that in there?" |
30532 | I managed,"Should I speak, and demand the meaning of this? |
30532 | I murmured,"He-- it-- that thing sitting there-- is that the one which captured you and brought you to 1935?" |
30532 | I said,"Have you a name?" |
30532 | I was inside the lines, but was my deception successful? |
30532 | I wonder if that were His purpose.... How, scientifically, do we progress along the Time- scroll? |
30532 | Ice coming down from the Poles? |
30532 | If he is n''t using a ray of some sort, what on earth is he using?" |
30532 | If the grim effect of the baleful green rays was universal in its extent, what then of old Emil Crawford and his niece, Ruth Lawton? |
30532 | If they know so much why do n''t they start a magazine and put all other publications out of business? |
30532 | Is it Tugh who controls you?" |
30532 | Is it understood?" |
30532 | Is that all clear?" |
30532 | Is that it?" |
30532 | Is that not true?" |
30532 | Is there any chance of our getting a story by Fred MacIsaac, Theodore Roscoe, or Erle Stanley Gardner? |
30532 | Is this perchance an explanation of why the pages of history are so thronged with tales of ghosts? |
30532 | Is this, perchance, what we call the phenomena of the supernatural? |
30532 | It looked like-- but no: how could water stand straight up like that, for hundreds of feet? |
30532 | It might have been policy to play him-- but what was the use? |
30532 | Mary said quaveringly:"What are you going to do?" |
30532 | Meanwhile, would you like to do a little more flying?" |
30532 | Mechanisms? |
30532 | Mr. Shea, ca n''t you see that the publication of first- class stories, as in this magazine, is the best possible way to popularize Science Fiction? |
30532 | Necessity knows no law.... What are the defenses around New York?" |
30532 | Oh, no: did I not promise differently? |
30532 | Or beasts?... |
30532 | Or do you simply prefer inferior stuff? |
30532 | Or had my face relaxed with the shock of the blow? |
30532 | Or has he read the chapter which Benjamin Franklin added to the Bible? |
30532 | Or if not that, how about publishing"our"magazine twice a month? |
30532 | Or was this girl, who laughed so lightly, playing with him? |
30532 | Or were my thoughts intangible vibrations registering upon some infinitely sensitive mechanism within that metal head? |
30532 | Refuse, and--""Yes?" |
30532 | She said firmly:"You will not hurt me?" |
30532 | Stop us now? |
30532 | Tell me-- you see how interested I am in your plans?--what did you say of the Dark Moon?" |
30532 | That voice-- where had I heard it before? |
30532 | The Robot said,"Is it clearing? |
30532 | The Thing that lay on the floor within-- could it ever have been a man? |
30532 | The axis of the Earth changing perhaps? |
30532 | The first of the great Glacial periods? |
30532 | The first test had been passed; would the other be as successful? |
30532 | The idea seemed tremendously amusing-- or was it that the simple rite indicated more than he could bear to know? |
30532 | The next shift waiting to go down? |
30532 | The paper and the page size of the magazine are okay, but why not smooth edges? |
30532 | The results were not fatal-- who said"unfortunately?" |
30532 | The room was swaying in long undulations, or was it my head? |
30532 | The thing reiterated,"Is that not true?" |
30532 | Then what had frightened them? |
30532 | There is metal, we know, that conducts an electric current in only one direction: why not a gas that will do the same with light?" |
30532 | Through refraction of light?... |
30532 | Time had passed; or had it? |
30532 | Tugh was in the room behind us, and I turned to him and asked:"What are you going to do?" |
30532 | Was I dreaming? |
30532 | Was I seeing things? |
30532 | Was it acting for the cripple Tugh? |
30532 | Was that to be the_ New York''s_ fate? |
30532 | Was the splotch of color-- that mottling of crimson and copper and gray-- a part of the metallic mass? |
30532 | Was there hope there? |
30532 | Was there life? |
30532 | Was this the reason for the silence? |
30532 | Was this true? |
30532 | Was this valley, so peaceful in its sunlit stillness, a place of death, from which all living things kept clear? |
30532 | We were loose: a sudden rush-- Dared I chance it? |
30532 | Well, why does n''t he? |
30532 | Were they controls? |
30532 | Were thoughts lurking in that metal skull? |
30532 | What I want to know is, why are so many mossbacks throwing brickbats? |
30532 | What animals, with the smaller stamp of modernity, were pressing here for supremacy? |
30532 | What are the defenses within fifty miles of New York?" |
30532 | What are you going to do about it?" |
30532 | What are you going to do?" |
30532 | What catastrophe did this herald? |
30532 | What could be their purpose? |
30532 | What could it be?--great ships out of space?--an invasion? |
30532 | What could that mean? |
30532 | What could warrant such disruption of the traffic of the world? |
30532 | What devil''s work was this that barred them from the safety of the ship? |
30532 | What did this mean? |
30532 | What do you mean?" |
30532 | What does it look like to you?" |
30532 | What does it matter if some of the stories are not on the scientific chalk line? |
30532 | What had happened there? |
30532 | What had happened? |
30532 | What happened?" |
30532 | What have you got here?" |
30532 | What in Heaven''s name does it all mean?" |
30532 | What is it?" |
30532 | What is my idea of an automaton? |
30532 | What is your name?" |
30532 | What is your program?" |
30532 | What mechanisms could make this thing think? |
30532 | What more do you want?" |
30532 | What must happen to the foreign body which had been introduced into the hole that is no longer a hole?" |
30532 | What of Chet? |
30532 | What of astronomy? |
30532 | What of his arrows and their detonite tips? |
30532 | What other horror had driven them in screaming terror to that fearful spring out into the open where they must have known danger awaited? |
30532 | What shall we do now?" |
30532 | What strange animals were here, roaming these dark primeval glades? |
30532 | What strange mechanisms were in there? |
30532 | What was happening behind that screen? |
30532 | What was in that head? |
30532 | What was the number of my cave? |
30532 | What weapons might be beneath that cloak? |
30532 | What were the sheets?--fabric as old- fashioned as the room, or were they cellulex? |
30532 | What would they find? |
30532 | What would you? |
30532 | What''s a meal more or less when you think of that?" |
30532 | What''s all our power for?" |
30532 | What''s his trouble?" |
30532 | What''s that?" |
30532 | What''s the story?" |
30532 | What, to me, was the life of this unknown Harl compared to the safety of Mary Atwood? |
30532 | What? |
30532 | When the final check- up came would there be two reports for one cave, none for another? |
30532 | Who can say, up to 1935, how many Time- traveling humans have come briefly back? |
30532 | Who is in this other cage which follows us?" |
30532 | Who''s going to stop us now?" |
30532 | Why ca n''t we see it from Earth? |
30532 | Why did it not make its presence known through interference? |
30532 | Why hours? |
30532 | Why is it dark?... |
30532 | Why not minutes?... |
30532 | Why not put out Astounding Stories twice a month, or make it a weekly? |
30532 | Why the long delay? |
30532 | Why was this matter not visible through telescopes? |
30532 | Why write those upon the scroll? |
30532 | Why, then, did He create ugliness and evil? |
30532 | Why? |
30532 | Will not? |
30532 | Williams, are those projectors all loaded?" |
30532 | Would he kill me if I crossed him?... |
30532 | Would he sense who I was? |
30532 | Would the guard before that building require a pass- word? |
30532 | Would the guard see him, or had he taken to shelter? |
30532 | Would the other cage come? |
30532 | Would they break through our defenses at last? |
30532 | Would you go back and deliver yourself into his hands-- because of me?" |
30532 | Writhing? |
30532 | Yet why must they be that? |
30532 | You do n''t believe me? |
30532 | You do n''t expect to drill down ahead of him?" |
30532 | You have ropes, of course?" |
30532 | You know what to do if Harl dares to follow and stop simultaneously?" |
30532 | You see this? |
30532 | You understand?" |
30532 | Your orders do not make it possible?" |
30532 | _ The vulnerable points!_ Where were they? |
30532 | gasped Bullard,"earthquake?--explosion? |
30532 | he asked,"--and you came up to warn me?" |
30532 | or occasional brickbats? |
27889 | If it is not,he replied,"when will it be?" |
27889 | Pray, what is that? |
27889 | Shall I beat the bush and another take the bird? |
27889 | We are by nature all as one, all alike, if you see us naked; let us wear theirs and they our clothes, and what is the difference? |
27889 | What muscles are those? |
27889 | Why, then,said some one to him,"do not you die?" |
27889 | ''T is insensible, then? |
27889 | --an echo answers,"Where? |
27889 | 1, 20._ What find you better or more honourable than age? |
27889 | 1._ Can one desire too much of a good thing? |
27889 | 1._ Condemn the fault, and not the actor of it? |
27889 | 1._ Has this fellow no feeling of his business? |
27889 | 1._ Is it so nominated in the bond? |
27889 | 1._ Is she not more than painting can express, Or youthful poets fancy when they love? |
27889 | 1._ Is she not passing fair? |
27889 | 1._ Is this a dagger which I see before me, The handle toward my hand? |
27889 | 1._ Is this that haughty gallant, gay Lothario? |
27889 | 1._ Shall I never see a bachelor of threescore again? |
27889 | 1._ She was a wight, if ever such wight were,--_ Des._ To do what? |
27889 | 1._ Think you I am no stronger than my sex, Being so father''d and so husbanded? |
27889 | 1._ What seest thou else In the dark backward and abysm of time? |
27889 | 1._ What, will the line stretch out to the crack of doom? |
27889 | 1._ Why may not that be the skull of a lawyer? |
27889 | 1._ Why should a man, whose blood is warm within, Sit like his grandsire cut in alabaster? |
27889 | 1._ Yet who would have thought the old man to have had so much blood in him? |
27889 | 1.__ Cornelia._ What flowers are these? |
27889 | 10._ Seest thou a man diligent in his business? |
27889 | 11._ Can a man take fire in his bosom, and his clothes not be burned? |
27889 | 11._ Canst thou bind the sweet influences of Pleiades, or loose the bands of Orion? |
27889 | 12._ Is it not lawful for me to do what I will with mine own? |
27889 | 13._ Is there no balm in Gilead? |
27889 | 14._ For a man can lose neither the past nor the future; for how can one take from him that which is not his? |
27889 | 16._ How long halt ye between two opinions? |
27889 | 17._ Do you seek Alcides''equal? |
27889 | 1773._ Was ever poet so trusted before? |
27889 | 18._ The Lord opened the mouth of the ass, and she said unto Balaam, What have I done unto thee, that thou hast smitten me these three times? |
27889 | 2, 8._(_ 675._) What now if the sky were to fall? |
27889 | 2._ A simple child That lightly draws its breath, And feels its life in every limb, What should it know of death? |
27889 | 2._ Are you good men and true? |
27889 | 2._ Can the Ethiopian change his skin, or the leopard his spots? |
27889 | 2._ Condemn you me for that the duke did love me? |
27889 | 2._ Didst thou never hear That things ill got had ever bad success? |
27889 | 2._ Do you think I am easier to be played on than a pipe? |
27889 | 2._ For where is any author in the world Teaches such beauty as a woman''s eye? |
27889 | 2._ In law, what plea so tainted and corrupt But being season''d with a gracious voice Obscures the show of evil? |
27889 | 2._ Is not old wine wholesomest, old pippins toothsomest, old wood burns brightest, old linen wash whitest? |
27889 | 2._ Is not this a lamentable thing, that of the skin of an innocent lamb should be made parchment? |
27889 | 2._ No scandal about Queen Elizabeth, I hope? |
27889 | 2._ Tell me where is fancy bred, Or in the heart or in the head? |
27889 | 2._ Think''st thou existence doth depend on time? |
27889 | 2._ Use every man after his desert, and who should''scape whipping? |
27889 | 2._ Was ever book containing such vile matter So fairly bound? |
27889 | 2._ Was ever woman in this humour wooed? |
27889 | 2._ What imports the nomination of this gentleman? |
27889 | 2._ What precious drops are those Which silently each other''s track pursue, Bright as young diamonds in their infant dew? |
27889 | 2._ What''s Hecuba to him, or he to Hecuba, That he should weep for her? |
27889 | 2._ Who is here so base that would be a bondman? |
27889 | 2._ You are not like Cerberus, three gentlemen at once, are you? |
27889 | 2._ Your fathers, where are they? |
27889 | 2._"Darest thou, Cassius, now Leap in with me into this angry flood, And swim to yonder point?" |
27889 | 2._[105- 4] What''s in a name? |
27889 | 2._[120- 1] Will all great Neptune''s ocean wash this blood Clean from my hand? |
27889 | 2.__ Cel._ Not a word? |
27889 | 2.__ Clo._ What is the opinion of Pythagoras concerning wild fowl? |
27889 | 2.__ Falstaff._ What wind blew you hither, Pistol? |
27889 | 2.__ Ham._ Do you see yonder cloud that''s almost in shape of a camel? |
27889 | 2.__ Ham._ His beard was grizzled,--no? |
27889 | 2.__ Ham._ Is this a prologue, or the posy of a ring? |
27889 | 2.__ Pol._ What do you read, my lord? |
27889 | 2.__ Serv._ Where dwellest thou? |
27889 | 20._ Am I my brother''s keeper? |
27889 | 20._ Doth perfect beauty stand in need of praise at all? |
27889 | 22._ If they do these things in a green tree, what shall be done in the dry? |
27889 | 22._ Who is this that darkeneth counsel by words without knowledge? |
27889 | 23._ What is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? |
27889 | 25._ Canst thou draw out leviathan with an hook? |
27889 | 254(? |
27889 | 28._ A wounded spirit who can bear? |
27889 | 28._ Hath not the potter power over the clay, of the same lump to make one vessel unto honour, and another unto dishonour? |
27889 | 3._ For when did friendship take A breed for barren metal of his friend? |
27889 | 3._ Have you summoned your wits from wool- gathering? |
27889 | 3._ Hear you this Triton of the minnows? |
27889 | 3._ I said, an elder soldier, not a better: Did I say"better"? |
27889 | 3._ Is it a world to hide virtues in? |
27889 | 3._ Is there no respect of place, parsons, nor time in you? |
27889 | 3._ O, who can hold a fire in his hand By thinking on the frosty Caucasus? |
27889 | 3._ Shall I not take mine ease in mine inn? |
27889 | 3._ Shall quips and sentences and these paper bullets of the brain awe a man from the career of his humour? |
27889 | 3._ Should I have answer''d Caius Cassius so? |
27889 | 3._ Sits the wind in that corner? |
27889 | 3._ Stands Scotland where it did? |
27889 | 3._ Under which king, Bezonian? |
27889 | 3._ What are these So wither''d and so wild in their attire, That look not like the inhabitants o''the earth, And yet are on''t? |
27889 | 3._ What, all my pretty chickens and their dam At one fell swoop? |
27889 | 3._ Wherefore are these things hid? |
27889 | 3._ Who can not give good counsel? |
27889 | 3._[120- 2] Who can be wise, amazed, temperate and furious, Loyal and neutral, in a moment? |
27889 | 3.__ 2 Watch._ How if a''will not stand? |
27889 | 3.__ Brutus._ Then I shall see thee again? |
27889 | 3.__ Iago._ What, are you hurt, lieutenant? |
27889 | 3.__ Sir To._ Dost thou think, because thou art virtuous, there shall be no more cakes and ale? |
27889 | 31._ Canst thou guide Arcturus with his sons? |
27889 | 32._ Hath not thy heart within thee burned At evening''s calm and holy hour? |
27889 | 4._ Call you that backing of your friends? |
27889 | 4._ Can such things be, And overcome us like a summer''s cloud, Without our special wonder? |
27889 | 4._ How is''t with you, That you do bend your eye on vacancy? |
27889 | 4._ What act That roars so loud, and thunders in the index? |
27889 | 4._ What doth gravity out of his bed at midnight? |
27889 | 4._ Who ever loved that loved not at first sight? |
27889 | 4.__ Duke._ And what''s her history? |
27889 | 4.__ Macb._ What is the night? |
27889 | 40._ Is thy servant a dog, that he should do this great thing? |
27889 | 46(?)-120(?) |
27889 | 5._ Art thou there, truepenny? |
27889 | 5._ For who hath despised the day of small things? |
27889 | 5._ Indeed, what is there that does not appear marvellous when it comes to our knowledge for the first time? |
27889 | 5._ Seest thou a man wise in his own conceit? |
27889 | 5._ What the devil did he want in that galley? |
27889 | 5._ What will not woman, gentle woman dare, When strong affection stirs her spirit up? |
27889 | 5._ Where''s my serpent of old Nile? |
27889 | 5.__ 1 W._ When shall we three meet again In thunder, lightning, or in rain? |
27889 | 50._ Did not our heart burn within us while he talked with us? |
27889 | 52._ O death, where is thy sting? |
27889 | 570(?)-490(?) |
27889 | 59._ Why is it that we entertain the belief that for every purpose odd numbers are the most effectual? |
27889 | 6._ Must I hold a candle to my shames? |
27889 | 6._ Why doth one man''s yawning make another yawn? |
27889 | 7._ You have the Pyrrhic dance as yet, Where is the Pyrrhic phalanx gone? |
27889 | 7.__ Macb._ If we should fail? |
27889 | 8._ Or what man is there of you, whom if his son ask bread, will he give him a stone? |
27889 | 809._ Who knows but life be that which men call death,[699- 3] And death what men call life? |
27889 | 9._ Can there any good thing come out of Nazareth? |
27889 | 9._ Is Saul also among the prophets? |
27889 | 9._ Is there anything whereof it may be said, See, this is new? |
27889 | 9._ Watchman, what of the night? |
27889 | 9._ Why should the Devil have all the good tunes? |
27889 | A Tragedy._ But whither am I strayed? |
27889 | A better buckler I can soon regain; But who can get another life again? |
27889 | A woman asked the coachman,"Are you full inside?" |
27889 | ANNE CRAWFORD( 1734- 1801):_ Kathleen Mavourneen._ Who can refute a sneer? |
27889 | Ah, who can tell how hard it is to climb The steep where Fame''s proud temple shines afar? |
27889 | Ah, who shall lead us thither? |
27889 | Am I not a man and a brother? |
27889 | And echo answered,"Where are they?" |
27889 | And happy always was it for that son Whose father for his hoarding went to hell? |
27889 | And is there love In heavenly spirits to these Creatures bace? |
27889 | And that which was prov''d true before Prove false again? |
27889 | And the prophets, do they live forever? |
27889 | And who gave thee that jolly red nose? |
27889 | And why does thy nose look so blue? |
27889 | Antagoras replied,"Do you think, O king, that Agamemnon, when he did such exploits, was a peeping in his army to see who boiled congers?" |
27889 | Apology for Raimond Sebond._ When I play with my cat, who knows whether I do not make her more sport than she makes me? |
27889 | Art thou not, fatal vision, sensible To feeling as to sight? |
27889 | As a bankrupt thief turns thief- taker in despair, so an unsuccessful author turns critic.--SHELLEY:_ Fragments of Adonais._ You know who critics are? |
27889 | Be she fairer than the day, Or the flowery meads in May, If she be not so to me, What care I how fair she be? |
27889 | Book i. Stanza 1._"But what good came of it at last?" |
27889 | Bright jewels of the mine, The wealth of seas, the spoils of war? |
27889 | Burned at Smithfield, Feb. 14, 1554._[687- 2]***** And shall Trelawny die? |
27889 | But if you chance to be placed in some superior station, will you presently set yourself up for a tyrant? |
27889 | But will it not live with the living? |
27889 | Ca n''t I another''s face commend, And to her virtues be a friend, But instantly your forehead lowers, As if_ her_ merit lessen''d_ yours_? |
27889 | Can honour set to a leg? |
27889 | Can honour''s voice provoke the silent dust, Or flatt''ry soothe the dull cold ear of death? |
27889 | Can imagination boast, Amid its gay creation, hues like hers? |
27889 | Canto i. Stanza 1._ Where the virgins are soft as the roses they twine, And all save the spirit of man is divine? |
27889 | Canto i. Stanza 1._ Who hath not proved how feebly words essay To fix one spark of beauty''s heavenly ray? |
27889 | Canto i. Stanza 17._ But, oh ye lords of ladies intellectual, Inform us truly,--have they not henpeck''d you all? |
27889 | Canto i. Stanza 216._ What is the end of fame? |
27889 | Canto iii._"What is good for a bootless bene?" |
27889 | Canto v. Stanza 16._ And dar''st thou then To beard the lion in his den, The Douglas in his hall? |
27889 | Canto v. Stanza 30._ Where, where was Roderick then? |
27889 | Costs it more pain that this ye call A"great event"should come to pass From that? |
27889 | Could not the grave forget thee, and lay low Some less majestic, less beloved head? |
27889 | Cui Bono?_ In the name of the Prophet-- figs. |
27889 | Dear son of memory, great heir of fame, What need''st thou such weak witness of thy name? |
27889 | Dialogue i.__ Lord M._ What religion is he of? |
27889 | Did Shakespeare? |
27889 | Do your joys with age diminish? |
27889 | Doth he feel it? |
27889 | Doth he hear it? |
27889 | Drinking._ Fill all the glasses there, for why Should every creature drink but I? |
27889 | Edinburgh Review, 1828._ How does the poet speak to men with power, but by being still more a man than they? |
27889 | Else whence this pleasing hope, this fond desire, This longing after immortality? |
27889 | Fast asleep? |
27889 | Fond hope of many nations, art thou dead? |
27889 | HARRIET W. SEWALL( 1819- 1889):_ Why thus longing?_ Do n''t you remember sweet Alice, Ben Bolt? |
27889 | HARRIET W. SEWALL( 1819- 1889):_ Why thus longing?_ Do n''t you remember sweet Alice, Ben Bolt? |
27889 | Hark, in thine ear: change places; and, handy- dandy, which is the justice, which is the thief? |
27889 | Hast any philosophy in thee, shepherd? |
27889 | Hath he not always treasures, always friends, The good great man? |
27889 | Hath not a Jew eyes? |
27889 | Hath not a Jew hands, organs, dimensions, senses, affections, passions? |
27889 | Hath thy toil O''er books consum''d the midnight oil? |
27889 | Heaven sends us good meat, but the Devil sends cooks? |
27889 | Honour hath no skill in surgery, then? |
27889 | How a good yoke of bullocks at Stamford fair? |
27889 | How begot, how nourished? |
27889 | How can ye chant, ye little birds, And I sae weary fu''o''care? |
27889 | How would you be, If He, which is the top of judgment, should But judge you as you are? |
27889 | I can not play alone: The summer comes with flower and bee,-- Where is my brother gone? |
27889 | I love it, I love it, and who shall dare To chide me for loving that old arm- chair? |
27889 | III._ What gentle ghost, besprent with April dew, Hails me so solemnly to yonder yew? |
27889 | In parts superior what advantage lies? |
27889 | Is it for that the winds, slipping the smooth oil, have no force, nor cause any waves? |
27889 | Is it not man that keeps and serves me? |
27889 | Is there no physician there? |
27889 | Is this the great poet whose works so content us? |
27889 | JAMES G. PERCIVAL( 1795- 1856):_ To Seneca Lake._ What fairy- like music steals over the sea, Entrancing our senses with charmed melody? |
27889 | JOSEPH E. CARPENTER( 1813-----):_ What are the wild Waves saying?_ Well, General, we have not had many dead cavalrymen lying about lately. |
27889 | Last line._ I am his Highness''dog at Kew; Pray tell me, sir, whose dog are you? |
27889 | Let her and Falsehood grapple: who ever knew Truth put to the worse in a free and open encounter? |
27889 | Life let us cherish, while yet the taper glows, And the fresh flow''ret pluck ere it close; Why are we fond of toil and care? |
27889 | Line 1._ Is there no bright reversion in the sky For those who greatly think, or bravely die? |
27889 | Line 1003._ He''s gone, and who knows how he may report Thy words by adding fuel to the flame? |
27889 | Line 1073._ Why comes temptation, but for man to meet And master and make crouch beneath his foot, And so be pedestaled in triumph? |
27889 | Line 13._ Say first, of God above or man below, What can we reason but from what we know? |
27889 | Line 139._ Why has not man a microscopic eye? |
27889 | Line 197._ What needs my Shakespeare for his honour''d bones,-- The labour of an age in piled stones? |
27889 | Line 203._ What can ennoble sots or slaves or cowards? |
27889 | Line 207._ Who but must laugh, if such a man there be? |
27889 | Line 213._ Was I deceiv''d, or did a sable cloud Turn forth her silver lining on the night? |
27889 | Line 217._ Ask where''s the North? |
27889 | Line 221._ Can any mortal mixture of earth''s mould Breathe such divine enchanting ravishment? |
27889 | Line 254._ Truths would you teach, or save a sinking land? |
27889 | Line 257._ Why should not conscience have vacation As well as other courts o''th''nation? |
27889 | Line 270._ Who shall decide when doctors disagree, And soundest casuists doubt, like you and me? |
27889 | Line 282._ Among unequals what society Can sort, what harmony, or true delight? |
27889 | Line 283._ But who can paint Like Nature? |
27889 | Line 293._ What boots it at one gate to make defence, And at another to let in the foe? |
27889 | Line 309._ For what is worth in anything But so much money as''t will bring? |
27889 | Line 316._ Must helpless man, in ignorance sedate, Roll darkling down the torrent of his fate? |
27889 | Line 317._ He that imposes an oath makes it, Not he that for convenience takes it; Then how can any man be said To break an oath he never made? |
27889 | Line 379._ O little booke, thou art so unconning, How darst thou put thy- self in prees for drede? |
27889 | Line 379._ Say, shall my little bark attendant sail, Pursue the triumph and partake the gale? |
27889 | Line 463._ And would''st thou evil for his good repay? |
27889 | Line 47._ Falsely luxurious, will not man awake? |
27889 | Line 472._ Who hath not own''d, with rapture- smitten frame, The power of grace, the magic of a name? |
27889 | Line 51._ What is it but a map of busy life, Its fluctuations, and its vast concerns? |
27889 | Line 55._ Which way shall I fly Infinite wrath and infinite despair? |
27889 | Line 65._ What though the field be lost? |
27889 | Line 666._ Whence and what art thou, execrable shape? |
27889 | Line 687._ What makes all doctrines plain and clear? |
27889 | Line 775._ Must I thus leave thee, Paradise?--thus leave Thee, native soil, these happy walks and shades? |
27889 | Line 873._ But how carve way i''the life that lies before, If bent on groaning ever for the past? |
27889 | Line 88._ Ever charming, ever new, When will the landscape tire the view? |
27889 | March, 1775._ Is life so dear or peace so sweet as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? |
27889 | Mark you His absolute"shall"? |
27889 | Methought I saw the footsteps of a throne.--WORDSWORTH:_ Sonnet._[ 26- 2] If she be not so to me, What care I how fair she be? |
27889 | Must in death your daylight finish? |
27889 | Need I say She was enchanted by the wicked spells Of Gebir, whom with lust of power inflamed The western winds have landed on our coast? |
27889 | Nemo est nisi ipse( Do you seek Alcides''equal? |
27889 | No feat which, done, would make time break, And let us pent- up creatures through Into eternity, our due? |
27889 | No forcing earth teach heaven''s employ? |
27889 | Not one now, to mock your own grinning? |
27889 | Now, in the names of all the gods at once, Upon what meat doth this our Cæsar feed, That he is grown so great? |
27889 | O grave, where is thy victory? |
27889 | Of the Art of Conversation._ What if he has borrowed the matter and spoiled the form, as it oft falls out? |
27889 | Of two such lessons, why forget The nobler and the manlier one? |
27889 | Oh when shall it dawn on the night of the grave? |
27889 | Oh why should the spirit of mortal be proud? |
27889 | Or cloy the hungry edge of appetite By bare imagination of a feast? |
27889 | Or if I would delight my private hours With music or with poem, where so soon As in our native language can I find That solace? |
27889 | Or make pale my cheeks with care,''Cause another''s rosy are? |
27889 | Or that his hallow''d relics should be hid Under a star- y- pointing pyramid? |
27889 | Or wallow naked in December snow By thinking on fantastic summer''s heat? |
27889 | Or whence this secret dread and inward horror Of falling into naught? |
27889 | PRIOR:_ Upon a passage in the Scaligerana._[ 180- 2] What beckoning ghost along the moonlight shade Invites my steps, and points to yonder glade? |
27889 | Pay every debt, as if God wrote the bill? |
27889 | Perhaps it was right to dissemble your love, But-- why did you kick me down stairs? |
27889 | Prelude to Part First._ And what is so rare as a day in June? |
27889 | Prithee, why so pale? |
27889 | Prithee, why so pale? |
27889 | Question ix._ Why does pouring oil on the sea make it clear and calm? |
27889 | Quite chap- fallen? |
27889 | ROBERT HAWKER( 1753- 1827):_ Benediction._ Roy''s wife of Aldivalloch, Wat ye how she cheated me, As I came o''er the braes of Balloch? |
27889 | Said he,"How are we fallen among them more than they among us?" |
27889 | Said one to Iphicrates,"What are ye afraid of?" |
27889 | Shall I bid her goe and spare not? |
27889 | Shall I, wasting in despair, Die because a woman''s fair? |
27889 | She coldly said, her long- lasht eyes abased,_ Is this the mighty ocean? |
27889 | Shikspur? |
27889 | Should auld acquaintance be forgot, And days o''lang syne? |
27889 | Since no man has aught of what he leaves, what is''t to leave betimes? |
27889 | Sister Anne, do you see any one coming? |
27889 | St. 12._ And is there care in Heaven? |
27889 | St. 43._ Who will not mercie unto others show, How can he mercy ever hope to have? |
27889 | Stanza 1._ And after all, what is a lie? |
27889 | Stanza 1._ Art thou a friend to Roderick? |
27889 | Stanza 1._ But what am I? |
27889 | Stanza 10._ Can storied urn, or animated bust, Back to its mansion call the fleeting breath? |
27889 | Stanza 100._ And who( in time) knows whither we may vent The treasure of our tongue? |
27889 | Stanza 11._ Where''s the coward that would not dare To fight for such a land? |
27889 | Stanza 145._ Scion of chiefs and monarchs, where art thou? |
27889 | Stanza 2._ Where is it now, the glory and the dream? |
27889 | Stanza 4._ But how can he expect that others should Build for him, sow for him, and at his call Love him, who for himself will take no heed at all? |
27889 | Stanza 55._ Forever, Fortune, wilt thou prove An unrelenting foe to love; And when we meet a mutual heart, Come in between and bid us part? |
27889 | Stanza 8._ And what is friendship but a name, A charm that lulls to sleep, A shade that follows wealth or fame, And leaves the wretch to weep? |
27889 | Streaming eyes and breaking hearts; Or all the same as if he had not been? |
27889 | Tell( for you can) what is it to be wise? |
27889 | The Rat- catcher and Cats._ Is there no hope? |
27889 | The Shepherd and the Philosopher._ Whence is thy learning? |
27889 | The Shepherd and the Philosopher._ Where yet was ever found a mother Who''d give her booby for another? |
27889 | The references are to the text of Umpfenbach._[702- 1]) Do not they bring it to pass by knowing that they know nothing at all? |
27889 | This Goldsmith''s fine feast, who has written fine books? |
27889 | To that dry drudgery at the desk''s dead wood? |
27889 | To the inquiry of"What religion?" |
27889 | To what strange shores This gain of our best glory shall be sent T''enrich unknowing nations with our stores? |
27889 | Treason doth never prosper: what''s the reason? |
27889 | Was ever woman in this humour won? |
27889 | Was man made a wheel- work to wind up, And be discharged, and straight wound up anew? |
27889 | Was she not fair? |
27889 | Was she not fruitful?" |
27889 | Was thy dream then a shadowy lie? |
27889 | Was your youth of pleasure wasteful? |
27889 | Washing._ FOOTNOTES:[ 20- 1]_ Falstaff._ What wind blew you hither, Pistol? |
27889 | What art can wash her guilt away? |
27889 | What cat''s averse to fish? |
27889 | What female heart can gold despise? |
27889 | What if I doe? |
27889 | What is honour? |
27889 | What is in that word honour; what is that honour? |
27889 | What is it? |
27889 | What is matter? |
27889 | What need a vermeil- tinctur''d lip for that, Love- darting eyes, or tresses like the morn? |
27889 | What news on the Rialto? |
27889 | What shall I do to be forever known, And make the age to come my own? |
27889 | What shall I render to my God For all his gifts to me? |
27889 | What will Mrs. Grundy say? |
27889 | What worlds in the yet unformed Occident May come refin''d with th''accents that are ours? |
27889 | What would the world do without tea?--how did it exist? |
27889 | What would you have, O man? |
27889 | What''s not devoured by Time''s devouring hand? |
27889 | When Adam dolve, and Eve span, Who was then the gentleman? |
27889 | When cowards mock the patriot''s fate, Who hangs his head for shame? |
27889 | Where are the snows of last year? |
27889 | Where be his quiddities now, his quillets, his cases, his tenures, and his tricks? |
27889 | Where be your gibes now; your gambols, your songs? |
27889 | Where breathes the foe but falls before us, With Freedom''s soil beneath our feet, And Freedom''s banner streaming o''er us? |
27889 | Where left you Chrononhotonthologos? |
27889 | Where''s Troy, and where''s the Maypole in the Strand? |
27889 | While Cato gives his little senate laws, What bosom beats not in his country''s cause? |
27889 | Who blushes at the name? |
27889 | Who breaks a butterfly upon a wheel? |
27889 | Who fears to speak of Ninety- eight? |
27889 | Who hath it? |
27889 | Who in widow weeds appears, Laden with unhonoured years, Noosing with care a bursting purse, Baited with many a deadly curse? |
27889 | Who would not weep, if Atticus were he? |
27889 | Who wrote it? |
27889 | Whose heart hath ne''er within him burn''d[488- 1] As home his footsteps he hath turn''d From wandering on a foreign strand? |
27889 | Why all this toil and trouble? |
27889 | Why ar''n''t they all contented like me? |
27889 | Why choose the rankling thorn to wear? |
27889 | Why do n''t the men propose? |
27889 | Why flash those sparks of fury from your eyes? |
27889 | Why is thy countenance sad, and why are thine eyes red with weeping? |
27889 | Why may not imagination trace the noble dust of Alexander, till we find it stopping a bung- hole? |
27889 | Why should I hurt thee? |
27889 | Why shrinks the soul Back on herself, and startles at destruction? |
27889 | Why wish we warfare? |
27889 | Why"small"? |
27889 | Why, man of morals, tell me why? |
27889 | Why? |
27889 | Will, when looking well ca n''t move her, Looking ill prevail? |
27889 | With these dark words begins my tale; And their meaning is, Whence can comfort spring When prayer is of no avail? |
27889 | Ye are the salt of the earth: but if the salt have lost his savour, wherewith shall it be salted? |
27889 | Yea, but how if honour prick me off when I come on,--how then? |
27889 | Yet who would tread again the scene He trod through life before? |
27889 | You have the letters Cadmus gave,-- Think ye he meant them for a slave? |
27889 | [ 171- 2] Is not old wine wholesomest, old pippins toothsomest, old wood burns brightest, old linen wash whitest? |
27889 | [ 26- 2]_ Poem._ If she seem not chaste to me, What care I how chaste she be? |
27889 | [ 292- 1]_ Introduction to Polite Conversation._ Do you think I was born in a wood to be afraid of an owl? |
27889 | [ 318- 1] Why may not a goose say thus? |
27889 | [ 352- 1]_ The Double Falsehood._ FOOTNOTES:[ 352- 1] Quæris Alcidæ parem? |
27889 | [ 360- 1]_ Maxims prefixed to Poor Richard''s Almanac, 1757._ Dost thou love life? |
27889 | [ 405- 1]_ King Cophetua and the Beggar- maid._"What is thy name, faire maid?" |
27889 | [ 405- 2]_ King Cophetua and the Beggar- maid._ And how should I know your true love From many another one? |
27889 | [ 406- 4]_ Sir Launcelot du Lake._ Shall I bid her goe? |
27889 | [ 449- 2]_ I hae a Wife o''my Ain._ Should auld acquaintance be forgot, And never brought to mind? |
27889 | [ 560- 1] What is mind? |
27889 | [ 598- 1]_ Good Bye._ For what are they all in their high conceit, When man in the bush with God may meet? |
27889 | [ 709- 2]_ Maxim 262._ What is left when honour is lost? |
27889 | [ 717- 1] Why does pouring oil on the sea make it clear and calm? |
27889 | [ 718- 4] How many things, too, are looked upon as quite impossible until they have been actually effected? |
27889 | [ 725- 1] The pilot telling Antigonus the enemy outnumbered him in ships, he said,"But how many ships do you reckon my presence to be worth?" |
27889 | [ 725- 5]_ Life of Lysander._ Did you not know, then, that to- day Lucullus sups with Lucullus? |
27889 | [ 741- 1]_ Which are the most crafty, Water or Land Animals? |
27889 | [ 758- 7]"How thick do you judge the planks of our ship to be?" |
27889 | [ 782- 1]_ First Week, Third Day._ For where''s the state beneath the firmament That doth excel the bees for government? |
27889 | _ 2 Clo._ But is this law? |
27889 | _ A Death in the Desert._ What? |
27889 | _ A True Hymn._ Wouldst thou both eat thy cake and have it? |
27889 | _ Advice to a Lady._ What is your sex''s earliest, latest care, Your heart''s supreme ambition? |
27889 | _ After._ Ah, did you once see Shelley plain, And did he stop and speak to you, And did you speak to him again? |
27889 | _ Areopagitica._ Who shall silence all the airs and madrigals that whisper softness in chambers? |
27889 | _ B._ What more? |
27889 | _ Ballad upon a Wedding._ Why so pale and wan, fond lover? |
27889 | _ Beauty._ Wilt thou seal up the avenues of ill? |
27889 | _ Bonny Lesley._ Ye banks and braes o''bonny Doon, How can ye bloom sae fresh and fair? |
27889 | _ Circa_ 720(?) |
27889 | _ Cos._ Pray now, what may be that same bed of honour? |
27889 | _ Eveleen''s Bower._ Shall I ask the brave soldier who fights by my side In the cause of mankind, if our creeds agree? |
27889 | _ Extempore Effusion upon the Death of James Hogg._ Those old credulities, to Nature dear, Shall they no longer bloom upon the stock Of history? |
27889 | _ Faustus._ Was this the face that launch''d a thousand ships, And burnt the topless towers of Ilium? |
27889 | _ Fly not yet._ When did morning ever break, And find such beaming eyes awake? |
27889 | _ For a Very Little Child._[535- 1] Who ran to help me when I fell, And would some pretty story tell, Or kiss the place to make it well? |
27889 | _ From the Persian._ What constitutes a state? |
27889 | _ Guy of Gisborne._ Have you not heard these many years ago Jeptha was judge of Israel? |
27889 | _ Ham._ Or like a whale? |
27889 | _ Hot._ Why, so can I, or so can any man; But will they come when you do call for them? |
27889 | _ How shall I woo?_ A friendship that like love is warm; A love like friendship, steady. |
27889 | _ In a Balcony._ Was there nought better than to enjoy? |
27889 | _ Judges v. 27._ Is not the gleaning of the grapes of Ephraim better than the vintage of Abi- ezer? |
27889 | _ Kitty._ Shikspur? |
27889 | _ Landing of the Pilgrim Fathers._ What sought they thus afar? |
27889 | _ Letter, Jan. 28, 1821._ What say you to such a supper with such a woman? |
27889 | _ Life of Coriolanus._ A Roman divorced from his wife, being highly blamed by his friends, who demanded,"Was she not chaste? |
27889 | _ Lines by a Clerk._ Where go the poet''s lines? |
27889 | _ Morning._ Why should we faint and fear to live alone, Since all alone, so Heaven has willed, we die? |
27889 | _ Of Man''s Progress in Virtue._ What is bigger than an elephant? |
27889 | _ Old England is our Home._"Will you walk into my parlour?" |
27889 | _ On his Blindness._ What neat repast shall feast us, light and choice, Of Attic taste? |
27889 | _ Poem._ If she undervalue me, What care I how fair she be? |
27889 | _ Political Precepts._ Leo Byzantius said,"What would you do, if you saw my wife, who scarce reaches up to my knees? |
27889 | _ Poor Jack._ Did you ever hear of Captain Wattle? |
27889 | _ Ruth._ When he is forsaken, Wither''d and shaken, What can an old man do but die? |
27889 | _ Sacrifice._ For what avail the plough or sail, Or land or life, if freedom fail? |
27889 | _ Stanzas._ Hear ye not the hum Of mighty workings? |
27889 | _ The Death of the Virtuous._ Child of mortality, whence comest thou? |
27889 | _ The Dying Christian to his Soul._ Tell me, my soul, can this be death? |
27889 | _ The Dying Christian to his Soul._ What beckoning ghost along the moonlight shade Invites my steps, and points to yonder glade? |
27889 | _ The Gardener''s Daughter._ Of love that never found his earthly close, What sequel? |
27889 | _ The Hermit._ But when shall spring visit the mouldering urn? |
27889 | _ The Issues of Life and Death._ Who that hath ever been Could bear to be no more? |
27889 | _ The Last Rose of Summer._ When true hearts lie wither''d And fond ones are flown, Oh, who would inhabit This bleak world alone? |
27889 | _ The Little Cloud._ Friend after friend departs; Who hath not lost a friend? |
27889 | _ The May Queen._ Ah, why Should life all labour be? |
27889 | _ The Rock of Rubies, and the Quarrie of Pearls._ Some asked how pearls did grow, and where? |
27889 | _ The World._ What then remains but that we still should cry For being born, and, being born, to die? |
27889 | _ This Lime- tree Bower my Prison._ Hast thou a charm to stay the morning star In his steep course? |
27889 | _ Tumble- down Dick._ Can any man have a higher notion of the rule of right and the eternal fitness of things? |
27889 | _ Welcome me Home._ Why do n''t the men propose, Mamma? |
27889 | _ What is Prayer?_ Prayer is the burden of a sigh, The falling of a tear, The upward glancing of an eye When none but God is near. |
27889 | _ Which are the most crafty, Water or Land Animals? |
27889 | _ Why do n''t the Men propose?_ She wore a wreath of roses The night that first we met. |
27889 | _ Written the night before his death.--Found in his Bible in the Gate- house at Westminster._ Shall I, like an hermit, dwell On a rock or in a cell? |
27889 | a soldier, and afeard? |
27889 | alive, and so bold, O earth? |
27889 | are you yet living? |
27889 | become of me? |
27889 | can Sporus feel? |
27889 | can a Roman senate long debate Which of the two to choose, slavery or death? |
27889 | can it be That this is all remains of thee? |
27889 | could not one suffice? |
27889 | do n''t ye hear it roar now? |
27889 | has she done this to thee? |
27889 | hast thou wandered there, To waft us home the message of despair? |
27889 | he turned to his friend and said,"Have I not unawares spoken some mischievous thing or other?" |
27889 | how have I frighted thee, That thou no more wilt weigh my eyelids down And steep my senses in forgetfulness? |
27889 | ii._ FOOTNOTES:[ 769- 2] But where is last year''s snow? |
27889 | iii._ When is man strong until he feels alone? |
27889 | iv._ Can we ever have too much of a good thing? |
27889 | iv._ Have you found your life distasteful? |
27889 | iv._ How does the meadow- flower its bloom unfold? |
27889 | iv._ What can they see in the longest kingly line in Europe, save that it runs back to a successful soldier? |
27889 | ix._ Very late in life, when he was studying geometry, some one said to Lacydes,"Is it then a time for you to be learning now?" |
27889 | ix._ Would yee both eat your cake and have your cake? |
27889 | know ye not, Who would be free, themselves must strike the blow? |
27889 | l._ Would you damn your precious soul? |
27889 | line 303._[ 261- 1] One of our poets( which is it?) |
27889 | must one swear to the truth of a song? |
27889 | no: or an arm? |
27889 | no: or take away the grief of a wound? |
27889 | note 8._[ 686- 1] The same proverb existed in German:-- So Adam reutte, und Eva span, Wer war da ein eddelman? |
27889 | once more who would not be a boy? |
27889 | or art thou but A dagger of the mind, a false creation, Proceeding from the heat- oppressed brain? |
27889 | p. 38._ Are these the choice dishes the Doctor has sent us? |
27889 | p. 8._ Live or die, sink or swim.--PEELE:_ Edward I._( 1584?). |
27889 | paragraph 53._ What Heraclitus would not laugh, or what Democritus would not weep? |
27889 | shall I call thee bird, Or but a wandering voice? |
27889 | that parchment, being scribbled o''er, should undo a man? |
27889 | the Western giant smiles, And twirls the spotty globe to find it; This little speck, the British Isles? |
27889 | to the hurried question of despair:"Where is my child?" |
27889 | v._ Shall I show you the muscular training of a philosopher? |
27889 | vi._ Why do you lead me a wild- goose chase? |
27889 | vii._ When the liquor''s out, why clink the cannikin? |
27889 | viii._ Euripides says,-- Who knows but that this life is really death, And whether death is not what men call life? |
27889 | viii._ Have you not heard it said full oft, A woman''s nay doth stand for naught? |
27889 | viii._ Who is so deafe or so blinde as is hee That wilfully will neither heare nor see? |
27889 | what boots the long laborious Quest?_ Of blessed consolations in distress. |
27889 | what light through yonder window breaks? |
27889 | what power divine Shall henceforth wash the river Rhine? |
27889 | what would you have with my wife?" |
27889 | where are the charms That sages have seen in thy face? |
27889 | where is thy blush? |
27889 | where is thy sting? |
27889 | where is thy victory? |
27889 | wherefore art thou Romeo? |
27889 | wherefore welcome won Xerxes, Xantippus, Xavier, Xenophon? |
27889 | why dost thou shiver and shake, Gaffer Grey? |
27889 | why should sorrow O''er that brow a shadow fling? |
27889 | why should they know their fate, Since sorrow never comes too late, And happiness too swiftly flies? |
27889 | will you not bear with your own brother, who has God for his Father, as being a son from the same stock, and of the same high descent? |
27889 | wilt thou the spigot wield? |
27889 | wouldst thou have a serpent sting thee twice? |
27889 | x._ Are we to mark this day with a white or a black stone? |
27889 | x._ To what happy accident[402- 4] is it that we owe so unexpected a visit? |
27889 | xi._ I would have nobody to control me; I would be absolute: and who but I? |
27889 | xi._ Who is worse shod than the shoemaker''s wife? |
27889 | xix._ When lovely woman stoops to folly, And finds too late that men betray, What charm can soothe her melancholy? |
27889 | xlvi._ How shall I be able to rule over others, that have not full power and command of myself? |
27889 | xvi._ What is the first business of one who studies philosophy? |
27889 | xx._ Why, then, do you walk as if you had swallowed a ramrod? |
27889 | xxi._ Who is there whom bright and agreeable children do not attract to play and creep and prattle with them? |
27889 | xxiii._ How does the water Come down at Lodore? |
27889 | your flashes of merriment, that were wo nt to set the table on a roar? |
40320 | And the company? |
40320 | And what did you think of the racing? |
40320 | Going across, I suppose? |
40320 | How long did you say it would take us to get back? |
40320 | I guess you like London? |
40320 | I say, John, do you know your boat leaks? |
40320 | I say, steward, how do you expect anybody to dry their hands on this towel? 40320 Is n''t it?" |
40320 | Is there any danger? |
40320 | Millions of miles, darling? 40320 Now, sir, will you kindly pick out your luggage? |
40320 | Oh, mister, would you find the captain? 40320 Riparian rights? |
40320 | Splendid breeze, is n''t it, Gus? |
40320 | Then do you mean to tell us that you actually reached the North Pole? |
40320 | Well, ladies and genelmen, I s''pose this is what_ you_ calls_ pleasure_, and comes all the way from London for? |
40320 | Why how can that be? |
40320 | Ye- es; but I say, what''s o''clock? 40320 _ First class?_ Now do I_ look it_?"] |
40320 | _ First class?_ Now do I_ look it_?] |
40320 | ''Ow on earth can yer spree without shindy? |
40320 | ''Tis really too hot to bawl, is it not? |
40320 | *****[ Illustration: A CRISIS_ His Better and Stouter Half._"Oh, Charley, if we''re upset, you mean to say you expect me to get into_ this_?" |
40320 | *****[ Illustration: A FLIGHT OF FANCY_ Visitor._"Good morning: tide''s very high this morning, eh?" |
40320 | *****[ Illustration: ABOVE BRIDGE BOAT AGROUND OFF CHISWICK_ Gallant Member of the L.R.C._"Can I put you ashore, mum?"] |
40320 | *****[ Illustration: HOW VERY THOUGHTFUL_ Old Lady._"Are you not afraid of getting drown''d when you have the boat so full?" |
40320 | *****[ Illustration: MOAN, HEARD ON A RAMSGATE BOAT"Why did n''t we go by rail?"] |
40320 | *****[ Illustration: NOT THE FIRST TIME THEY DON''T AGREE TOGETHER_ Wife._"Is n''t it jolly to think we have the whole day before us? |
40320 | *****[ Illustration: NOTES FROM COWES"Call this pleasure? |
40320 | *****[ Illustration: OF MALICE AFORETHOUGHT_ Cheery Official._"All first class''ere, please?" |
40320 | *****[ Illustration: TOO SOLID_ Skipper._"Did ye got the proveesions Angus?" |
40320 | *****[ Illustration: VERY CONSIDERATE_ Steward._"Will either of you, gentlemen, dine on board? |
40320 | *****[ Illustration:"WHAT''S IN A NAME?" |
40320 | -- Eh? |
40320 | 17. Who was"Parallax"? |
40320 | Ah, then, must a maid despair? |
40320 | Ai n''t you glad you''ve got us with you,''Enry?"] |
40320 | And bands discoursing hackneyed strains, And rockets skyward soaring? |
40320 | And take me and my traps acrosst-- will yer?"] |
40320 | And what do you say of the meeting?" |
40320 | And where does fashion lunch and dine_ Al fresco_, bored and boring? |
40320 | And wot''s wet''ash, or porridge, or any other stuff, When at the very best of it there''s''ardly''arf enough? |
40320 | Are only Royal Academicians eligible as"painters"on board? |
40320 | Are you?"] |
40320 | At what time in the day, whether previous or subsequent to dinner, is it necessary to"allow for deviations"? |
40320 | At whose expense is the operation performed? |
40320 | Can I get anything else for you? |
40320 | Can a"first mate''s ordinary certificate"be granted by Doctors''Commons or the Archbishop of Canterbury? |
40320 | Can sailors ever trust"the artificial horizon"? |
40320 | Can you dance a hornpipe? |
40320 | Cheek, eh? |
40320 | Do n''t know what it means; but, after all, what_ does_ that matter? |
40320 | Eh? |
40320 | Explains not breakfast but dinner; first meal at 5.30 P.M. Ca n''t we have_ dà © jeuner_ if I pay for it? |
40320 | Have a cigar? |
40320 | He says,"I say, we''ll keep sailing until quite late this evening, eh? |
40320 | Houseboat like Ark-- all in couples-- Joan of Ark in corner with Darby-- Who is she? |
40320 | How many mates may a sea captain legally possess at any one time? |
40320 | How often do"the red magnetic pole"and"the blue pole"require repainting? |
40320 | I wonder which it is? |
40320 | I''ll allow that in the look of it, the print of it I mean, That all you say is sarved to us; but is it good or clean? |
40320 | If I did n''t jest fetch our two gals, it''s a pity;--and was n''t they loves? |
40320 | If neither, what? |
40320 | If so, under what circumstances? |
40320 | If so, which? |
40320 | In case the needles of the compass get out of order, will pins do as well? |
40320 | In the first place, what is a"lightship"? |
40320 | Is it the duty of the surgeon on board ship to attend the"heeling"? |
40320 | Is n''t it time to turn back?--What d''ye think?"] |
40320 | Is this spelling of his name correct? |
40320 | Is"Azimuth"an idol, or something to eat? |
40320 | Is"Lubber"a term of opprobrium or of endearment? |
40320 | Is"main- brace"a part of rigging, or of sailor''s costume? |
40320 | Is"sextant"the feminine of"sexton"? |
40320 | Like a kind of a sort of-- I do n''t know what, And talk sea- slang, to the world''s surprise? |
40320 | Not wishing to appear ignorant, I ask Bigheart,"Why not make a course S.S. by E.?" |
40320 | Oh why do they shout and make such a rout, When one boat another one chases? |
40320 | Pass the claret- cup, please-- Why do they want to interrupt our luncheon? |
40320 | Punch in the Ocean on the broad of his back, singeth_) I''m afloat, I''m afloat, what matters it where? |
40320 | Punch._"Why, Johnny, what''s the matter?" |
40320 | Rooral quiet, and rest, and refinement? |
40320 | Seems to have been a race about something-- why ca n''t they row quietly? |
40320 | So I said to her, lowly and gently,"Shall I elp you, O fair lovely gal?" |
40320 | Somehow or other they take naturally to the sea-- now, do n''t they? |
40320 | Still, would you mind putting out that cigar? |
40320 | T._(_ to T._)"Feel a little more comfortable, dear? |
40320 | The payshent hangler sets in a punt, Willee ketch kold? |
40320 | Try to act as nautically as possible, and ask skipper at frequent intervals"How does she bear?" |
40320 | Vot can zey do against our submarines?--our leetle Gustave Zêde? |
40320 | Was there any winning? |
40320 | We do n''t wish to offend, But are these first thoughts with the dashing young women Who do n''t dash too much in a spurt off Bourne End? |
40320 | Well, it''s true; But a quill and big sprawl is the fashion, so wot is a feller to do? |
40320 | What makes me gammon my chummiest friends To"try the fun"--which I know''s all rot-- And earn the dead- cut in which all this ends? |
40320 | What makes me learned in cutters and yawls, And time- allowance-- which others must tot--, And awfully nervous in sudden squalls? |
40320 | What makes me qualmish, timorous, pale,( Though rather than own it I''d just be shot) When the_ Fay_ in the wave- crests dips her sail? |
40320 | What makes me rig me in curious guise? |
40320 | What makes me settle my innermost soul On winning a purposeless silver pot, And walk with a( very much) nautical roll? |
40320 | What makes me snooze in a narrow, close bunk, Till the cramp my limbs doth twist and knot, And brave discomfort, and face blue- funk? |
40320 | What makes me sprawl on the deck all day, And at night play"Nap"till I lose a lot, And grub in a catch- who- can sort of a way? |
40320 | What makes me"patter"to skipper and crew In a kibosh style that a child might spot, And tug hard ropes till my knuckles go blue? |
40320 | What makes me, in short, an egregious ass, A bore, a butt, who, not caring a jot For the sea, as a sea- king am seeking to pass? |
40320 | What rule is there as to showing lights on nearing Liverpool? |
40320 | What''s our hour, I wonder? |
40320 | What''s that?" |
40320 | When in doubt, would you consult"the visible horizon,""the sensible horizon,"or"the rational horizon"? |
40320 | Whence derived? |
40320 | Where are regattas? |
40320 | Where are trains Their noisy crowds outpouring? |
40320 | Where build the timid coot and hern, The foot of man ignoring? |
40320 | Where do the stars dramatic shine''Mid satellites adoring? |
40320 | Where do we meet confections sweet And toilets neat? |
40320 | Where does our dear secluded stream Most gaily gleam? |
40320 | Where is the steward? |
40320 | Where is this_ urbs in rure_?--where This Cockney Fair? |
40320 | Where sings the thrush amid the fern? |
40320 | Where sits secure the water vole Beside her hole? |
40320 | Where trills the lark upsoaring? |
40320 | Which? |
40320 | Who ever heard the like? |
40320 | Who sez''Enley ai n''t up to old form, that Society gives it the slip? |
40320 | Who was Kosciusko? |
40320 | Who''s left this here mop hangin''out?" |
40320 | Why did n''t you get out into mid- stream?" |
40320 | Why should the stewards stand? |
40320 | Why should we give up_ meringues_ and sponge- cakes? |
40320 | Why two hours before starting? |
40320 | Will it be more-- than five minutes? |
40320 | Would you like your cigar case now? |
40320 | Would"mean time"always refer to lowering wages or diminishing rations? |
40320 | _ Gale._--Why-- was-- I-- ever-- born? |
40320 | _ He._ But do n''t the servants rather kick at it? |
40320 | _ He._ Will the stores send so far? |
40320 | _ Skipper._"An''what in the woarld will ye be doin''wi''aal that bread?"] |
40320 | _ Uncle._"But I---- What''s to be done?" |
3538 | ''Indeed,''I exclaimed,''are you that Job whom we were taught to revere as the most patient being in the world?'' 3538 All very well,"he thought,"but what does a purchaser have, after all, in the end, but a lot of pictures? |
3538 | And now do you know,smilingly said the poet,"about the Charles River here?" |
3538 | And so you are going to see Phillips Brooks? 3538 And the subject?" |
3538 | And what business is that? |
3538 | And what have you on hand for this evening? |
3538 | And which did you choose? |
3538 | And you have come on just to see us, have you? |
3538 | And you live, where? |
3538 | Anyhow, you have enough in bank to meet the checks you have given me, and a profit besides, have n''t you? |
3538 | Are you sure you are telling the public about it in the right way? |
3538 | Are you talking at me or through me? |
3538 | Before you go back you must come and see me and tell me all the people you have seen; will you? 3538 Beg pardon,"said the clerk,"what book did you say?" |
3538 | Bring me your strongest pair, will you, dear? |
3538 | But how can we keep the authorship really anonymous? |
3538 | But surely you must consider that Rud has done some great work? |
3538 | But then, no one ever wins in an argument, anyway; do you think so? 3538 But you told me the house for this evening was sold out?" |
3538 | But, Mr. Beecher--"You heard me? |
3538 | But, pardon me, has not Miss Greenaway returned? 3538 By whom?" |
3538 | Can there be more? |
3538 | Can you read Dutch? |
3538 | Can you say grace in Dutch? |
3538 | Captain,said Bok, hailing the officer,"you can attend to that, ca n''t you, when the time comes?" |
3538 | Chase it out? |
3538 | Could you be anything else, colonel? |
3538 | Did I say that? |
3538 | Did you make that decision this evening? |
3538 | Do I understand, Mr. Dodgson, that you are not''Lewis Carroll''; that you did not write Alice in Wonderland? |
3538 | Does he, now? |
3538 | Found something? |
3538 | Got any good, strong rain boots? |
3538 | Guess The Eagle can stand it better than this boy; do n''t you think so? |
3538 | Halford, send up for one of my light coats, will you, please? |
3538 | Has the American woman no instinct of patriotism, then? |
3538 | Have you read this department? |
3538 | How about O''Brien? 3538 How do you break in a pipe, then?" |
3538 | How would you advertise it? |
3538 | How? |
3538 | I think we can help this young man; do you not think so, Louisa? |
3538 | In the Netherlands? 3538 Is n''t it beautiful?" |
3538 | Is there any way to turn this spigot off? |
3538 | Is there anything I can do? |
3538 | It''s a great compliment, though, is n''t it, sir? |
3538 | Like to get your notes written out before they get stale? |
3538 | Live in Philadelphia? |
3538 | Long? |
3538 | Look pretty good, do n''t they? |
3538 | Looked hard for it? |
3538 | More than one pair? |
3538 | Must have started early this morning, did n''t you? |
3538 | Name? |
3538 | Never heard of it? |
3538 | No critics? |
3538 | No more than that? |
3538 | No? 3538 No?" |
3538 | Not even Cyrus W. Field or Herbert Hoover? |
3538 | Now, how would you like to see a bear, Curtis? |
3538 | Now, just bring that child into the house and put them on her feet for me, will you? |
3538 | Now, tell me, what good do you think you will get out of it? |
3538 | Now, why did you run away? |
3538 | Oh, what do you care? |
3538 | Perhaps there is some subject which you have long wished to paint rather than any other,asked Bok,"that might fit our purpose admirably?" |
3538 | Really? |
3538 | Should you, indeed? |
3538 | So soon? |
3538 | That''s right,interjected Doctor Patton, with a twinkle in his eyes,"what is heresy, Briggs?" |
3538 | The house? |
3538 | The worst of it is, what am I going to do with her when we move up within a day or two? 3538 Then, why do n''t you write the review?" |
3538 | These are the letters I gave you late yesterday afternoon, are they not? |
3538 | These letters, you mean? |
3538 | They know that? |
3538 | This is Mrs. Stowe, is it not? |
3538 | To me? |
3538 | Want some? |
3538 | Want to play ball, hey? |
3538 | Was it necessary that all twelve should think alike? |
3538 | Wash,said the book- agent,"you ought to buy a copy of this book, do you know it?" |
3538 | Well, my boy, you were n''t in it long, were you? |
3538 | Well, then, would you mind if I gave you a letter for him? 3538 Well, they did, did n''t they?" |
3538 | Well, what did you do then? 3538 Well,"calmly suggested the editor,"why not two of those half- hours a month, or perhaps one?" |
3538 | Well,said the poet,"you see, I am not so busy a man as I was some years ago, and I should n''t like to disappoint a little girl; should you?" |
3538 | Well,was the answer,"is n''t the result worth the effort?" |
3538 | Well,was the cheery greeting,"you could n''t wait until eight for your breakfast, could you? |
3538 | What do you know about that''suit,''as you call it? |
3538 | What does it mean to vote? |
3538 | What is the history of''The Chambered Nautilus''? |
3538 | What is your name? |
3538 | What is your plan to remedy it? |
3538 | What reference? 3538 What subject have you in mind?" |
3538 | What suit? |
3538 | What were you doing when you were twelve? |
3538 | What''s the matter, son? 3538 What?" |
3538 | Where did you pick it up? |
3538 | Which work? |
3538 | Who was it? |
3538 | Why do n''t you go to work? |
3538 | Why in there? |
3538 | Why not send her''Let us, then, be up and doing''? |
3538 | Why? |
3538 | Will you see her? |
3538 | With Plato and his disciples? |
3538 | Would n''t fit? |
3538 | Would you be willing to write it down for me? |
3538 | Yes, wo n''t you, sir? |
3538 | Yes,repeated Bok,"just what is heresy, Doctor?" |
3538 | Yes? |
3538 | You Dutchman, you''d make me work while I''m getting shaved, too? |
3538 | You do not believe, Mr. Beecher,Edward asked later,"in decollete dressing for girls?" |
3538 | You have a coat? |
3538 | You have nothing in mind at all? |
3538 | You have read the books? |
3538 | You like books, you say? |
3538 | You mean for me to be the active head? |
3538 | You mean while I am hunting? |
3538 | You say you are going from me over to see Longfellow? |
3538 | You think him capable of great work, do you not? |
3538 | You''ve noticed that, then? |
3538 | _ Et tu, Brute?_Stockton smilingly replied. |
3538 | ''May I ask your name?'' |
3538 | A fortnight passed, then one day Mr. Beecher asked:"Well, how are the checks coming in?" |
3538 | A moment for breath- taking came, and the boy said:"Are n''t you ever afraid of being shot?" |
3538 | A promise was given that the surgeon should be seen at once, but the boy was asked:"How about you?" |
3538 | After a while he asked:"Well, how do you think it went?" |
3538 | And going to a bookcase behind him he brought out a book, and handing it to the boy, he said, his eyes laughing:"Can you read that?" |
3538 | And have you followed his shameless advice?" |
3538 | And how many foreign- born would take equal pains to ascertain what I was determined to find out? |
3538 | And on every hand the question was being asked:"How is it done? |
3538 | And then:"Is this the first time you have visited Oxford?" |
3538 | Are n''t they wee?" |
3538 | Are they easier of solution than the material problems? |
3538 | Are they not exquisite little things?" |
3538 | Are you going to have me arrested for stopping you?" |
3538 | Are you related to him?" |
3538 | At the mention of the name Carlyle his eyes lifted, and he asked:"Carlyle, did you say, sir, Carlyle?" |
3538 | Beecher?" |
3538 | Beecher?" |
3538 | Beecher?" |
3538 | Bok caught up with the boy, and said:"Found a friend, I see, Buddy?" |
3538 | Bok did so and then offered him a light; the boy continued, all with his wonderful smile:"If you do n''t mind, would you just light it? |
3538 | Bok handed a cigarette to the boy, who then said:"Mind sticking it in my mouth?" |
3538 | But did it prevent my purchase of one? |
3538 | But does not a bottle of liniment go with each ball?" |
3538 | But how about the foreign- born? |
3538 | But how about your acceptance of the idea?" |
3538 | But how and where? |
3538 | But how? |
3538 | But what did I gain? |
3538 | But what is the matter with idealism? |
3538 | But why harbor the original cause? |
3538 | But you have really told me all about it, have n''t you, so why should I read these notices? |
3538 | But, he argued, if he conceded this right to others, why should they not concede to him the privilege of dropping with the blinders off? |
3538 | But, tell me, how in the world did you ever get out of it?" |
3538 | Can you give him that message for me? |
3538 | Chase it out?" |
3538 | Did you know who it was?" |
3538 | Do n''t you see where you have it on me?" |
3538 | Do one- tenth of those who use the phrase so glibly know its true meaning, the part it has played in the world? |
3538 | Doctor Briggs, taken off his guard for a moment, looked blankly at his young questioner, and repeated:"What is heresy?" |
3538 | Doctor Patton made no comment, but, with a smile, he asked Bok:"Johnnie Ward going to play to- day, do you know? |
3538 | Does a serial cook- book sound like nonsense?" |
3538 | Does he know it? |
3538 | Ever examine one?" |
3538 | Ever see him?" |
3538 | Going to the rear of the store, the clerk soon returned, only to inquire:"May I ask you to repeat the name of the author?" |
3538 | Got a cigarette?" |
3538 | Got it here?" |
3538 | Had he within him that peculiar, subtle something that, for the want of a better phrase, we call the editorial instinct? |
3538 | Had n''t I better get busy on another paper for Mr. Burlingame for the next magazine, else he''ll be after me? |
3538 | Have you a book with you?" |
3538 | He conceived the topic"Should America Have a Westminster Abbey?" |
3538 | He felt, as he will always feel, that the boys of America had lost a national leader that might have led them-- where would have been the limit? |
3538 | He had no authority for saying they would; but was Colonel Roosevelt receptive to the idea? |
3538 | He had published a symposium, through his newspaper syndicate, discussing the question,"Should Clergymen Smoke?" |
3538 | Her idea was about as definite as mine or yours as to, Where is Stanley? |
3538 | How about the organization itself? |
3538 | How are you going to do it?" |
3538 | How can we? |
3538 | How can you ask such a question?" |
3538 | How could I chase her out?" |
3538 | How could it have been otherwise with the restricted selection? |
3538 | How could you have taken it?'' |
3538 | How does that strike you?" |
3538 | How far is he, to- day, an American? |
3538 | How good an American has the process of Americanization made me? |
3538 | How is such a high circulation obtained?" |
3538 | How much have you in the bank?" |
3538 | I am all alone to- day, and you must keep me company; will you? |
3538 | I do n''t think I should get a high mark for penmanship if I were at school, do you?" |
3538 | If General Garfield answered him, would not other famous men? |
3538 | If he was, why not go ahead? |
3538 | If not, will you return it to me?" |
3538 | Is it any easier to- day for the foreign citizen to acquire this information when he approaches his first vote? |
3538 | Is it not perhaps like the owner of the bulldog who assured the friend calling on him that it never attacked friends of the family? |
3538 | Is n''t Edward with you?" |
3538 | Is n''t it a beautiful day out?" |
3538 | Is n''t that so, Curtis?" |
3538 | Is not that she?" |
3538 | Is that a bargain?" |
3538 | Is that in the direction of your home?" |
3538 | Is the man who speaks with type less dangerous than he who speaks with his mouth or with a bomb? |
3538 | It was not to me; is it to him? |
3538 | It was the same boy who on his hospital cot the next day said:"Do n''t you think you could do something for the chap next to me, there on my left? |
3538 | Kipling?" |
3538 | Miss Ashmead?" |
3538 | Musing a moment, he said:"You say you are an office boy; what time must you be at your office?" |
3538 | No? |
3538 | Now which is it? |
3538 | Now, suppose I copy these lines once more for the little girl, and give you this copy? |
3538 | Now, what do you think?" |
3538 | One evening, after supper, Mr. Beecher said to his wife:"Mother, what material have we among our papers about our early Indiana days?" |
3538 | Phillips,"said the poet,"how are you? |
3538 | Same with you?" |
3538 | See those little books? |
3538 | So long as we do n''t steal the wood or coal, why should n''t we get it?" |
3538 | So, anxious to have some personal souvenir of the meeting, he said:"Mr. Emerson, will you be so good as to write your name in this book for me?" |
3538 | Stuck?" |
3538 | Suddenly the boy heard Miss Alcott say:"Have you read this new book by Ruskin yet?" |
3538 | Suddenly the boy looked around the room and said:"Where''s your gun, Mr. President? |
3538 | Tell me something about yourself?" |
3538 | The President looked at him curiously for a moment, and then said:"Can you wait a few minutes?" |
3538 | The commandant turned to Bok with a peculiar smile on his face and asked:"Do you know who that man is?" |
3538 | The editorial asked whether the American women were going to allow this? |
3538 | The parson was given a parsonage; why not the teacher a"teacherage"? |
3538 | The report was purposely set afloat that Bok had withdrawn from his position of antagonism(?) |
3538 | Then he looked at Edward and asked:"Do you know just what such charges mean?" |
3538 | Then he thought again for a few moments and said:"How old were you in 1875?" |
3538 | Then, looking at the boy quickly, he said:"Do you collect postage- stamps?" |
3538 | This was a novel thought to Bok: why eliminate encores from any concert? |
3538 | To add interpretations which would convey the right meaning is a something which would require-- what? |
3538 | Was he sure he was right? |
3538 | Well, and how do you like us so far?" |
3538 | What did I say?" |
3538 | What did you do?" |
3538 | What does Bok look like?" |
3538 | What does it mean to you?" |
3538 | What is her name?'' |
3538 | What is the good of a book, I say, if it is too pretty for use? |
3538 | What is your estimate?" |
3538 | What really is idealism? |
3538 | What sentiment, I wonder, shall I send her?" |
3538 | What train are you making back to Philadelphia, by the way?" |
3538 | What was the real thing according to such a boy''s idea? |
3538 | What writer have you in mind? |
3538 | What''s the use of good friends if you do n''t share them? |
3538 | When Philadelphia was reached, he suggested:"Do you know I think it would do me good to go and see Frank in the new play? |
3538 | When all his friends begged Bok to begin proceedings against the New York Evening Sun because of the libellous(?) |
3538 | When breakfast was finished, Doctor Holmes said:"Do you know that I am a full- fledged carpenter? |
3538 | When do I get the ear of the public? |
3538 | When the boys handed him the fourth, one morning, as he was pinning it up over the others, he asked:"When do you get your money from the newspapers?" |
3538 | Where would the human race be were it not for the ideals of men? |
3538 | Who can say that of himself? |
3538 | Who is''Ruth Ashmore''?'' |
3538 | Why do n''t they use the back of each picture, and tell what each did: a little biography? |
3538 | Why not begin a collection of autograph letters? |
3538 | Why should it be different in other cities?" |
3538 | Why should not autograph letters from famous persons be of equal service in his struggle for self- education? |
3538 | Why should not the public have an encore if it desired it, and why should a conductor or a performer object? |
3538 | Why? |
3538 | Why?" |
3538 | Why?" |
3538 | Will you do it?" |
3538 | Wo n''t you write what you want to tell me?" |
3538 | Yes, it is pretty badly marked up now, for a fact, is n''t it? |
3538 | You know and I know that I am a friend of the family; but does the dog know?" |
3538 | You see how I break my letters? |
3538 | You think well of him?" |
3538 | did he?" |
3538 | in Bank H. W. Beecher"Just hand that in at the bank as you go by, will you?" |
47116 | Do you think,asked Walker, with happy equivocation,"that a man''s memory is to last for ever?" |
47116 | How can I feel otherwise,asked Powell,"when I hear your voice?" |
47116 | Prince Bertram? |
47116 | What makes you feel sick? |
47116 | And then there is that other house, Edward Alleyn''s, rebuilding in Golden Lane, and will not the Council look to it? |
47116 | And what does Ned Howard say at rehearsal? |
47116 | At length the pew- opener ventured to ask:"And who was she, sir?" |
47116 | But must he rouse a party to undo him? |
47116 | But what recked the laughing King, when Puritanism was in the dust, and troops of cavaliers were singing,"Up go we?" |
47116 | But who is this jaunty personage, so noisy at a rehearsal of one of his own indifferent plays? |
47116 | Did n''t I give you ten, then fifteen, then twenty shillings a- week, to be sorrowful? |
47116 | Gay, John, 342; his first piece, 329; his"What D''ye Call It?" |
47116 | Had not the glorious Elizabeth stigmatised them as"rogues,"and the sagacious James as"vagabonds?" |
47116 | Herbert Croft, or Seth Ward?--or, Isaac Barrow, of Sodor- and- Man, whose father, the mercer, had lived near the father of Betterton? |
47116 | It was only after awhile that the joke was comprehended, and that the"What d''ye call It?" |
47116 | Know you not that?''" |
47116 | Of the authorship they had no doubt whatever; for, said they, if Voltaire did not write this piece, who_ could_ have written it? |
47116 | Steele mournfully says,"If I were to speak of merit neglected, misapplied, or misunderstood, might I not say that Estcourt has a great capacity? |
47116 | The apparently commonplace remark,"What mean my grieving subjects?" |
47116 | Those shuffling fiddlers who so humbly peer through the low windows into the tavern room, and meekly inquire:"Will you have any music, gentlemen?" |
47116 | What if they be despoiled of a hundred or so a year? |
47116 | Who could this bishop have been who was the old acquaintance of the ex- dancing- master and lieutenant? |
47116 | You ungrateful scoundrel, did n''t I pity you, take you out of a great man''s service, and show you the pleasure of receiving wages? |
47116 | of Edmund Kean''s Richard; the"Qu''en dis- tu?" |
47116 | said the money- taker to his colleague, after the saucy footman had flung by,"who is he?" |
38940 | ''Raphael,''cried I, and extended both hands toward him,''do you recognize me?'' 38940 Are you ready, sir?" |
38940 | Brother,said he,"why do you grieve thus; do you see anything in my life or death which can cause you to feel any shame? |
38940 | I am just going; have me decently buried, and do not let my body be put into the vault until three days after I am dead-- do you understand me? |
38940 | Impossible,said he, lifting his arm:"how could I move my fingers so, if the pulse were gone?" |
38940 | Is there anything else? |
38940 | Say not, alas; but how do you know? |
38940 | Sir,said she,"will you not take your tea?" |
38940 | Too late,he said;"is this your fidelity?" |
38940 | What am I better than my fathers? 38940 What have you to do with that?" |
38940 | When a sick man is given over, and he suffers frightful pains, can a friendly physician refuse to give him opium? |
38940 | Why weep ye? 38940 _ Are the doctors here?_"to his wife who had just asked him if he wanted anything. |
38940 | _ Are we not children, all of us?_TAYLOR( Jeremy, distinguished bishop in the English Church, and author of"Holy Living and Dying." |
38940 | _ Brother Ranney, will you bury me? 38940 _ Can this be considered a calamity? |
38940 | _ Can this last long?_to his physician. |
38940 | _ Did you know Burke?_He referred to Edmund Burke, the celebrated orator, statesman and philosopher. |
38940 | _ Do you hear the music? 38940 _ Earth, dost thou demand me? |
38940 | _ Give me back my youth_,to Taylor who had asked him"Is there anything I can do for you?" |
38940 | _ I am not well, and should like to lie down-- will you call me in ten minutes? 38940 _ I do_,"in response to his sister''s question,"Dost thou commend thy soul to Jesus Christ?" |
38940 | _ I have known thee all the time_,to his niece in response to her question,"Do you know me?" |
38940 | _ I must sleep now._It has been asserted, upon what authority the compiler does not know, that the last words of Byron were,"Shall I sue for mercy?" |
38940 | _ I pray you all pray for me._Some authorities give his last words thus:"And must I then die? |
38940 | _ Is Lawrence come-- is Lawrence come?_He looked anxiously round the room-- said several times,"Is Lawrence come-- is Lawrence come?" |
38940 | _ Is Lawrence come-- is Lawrence come?_He looked anxiously round the room-- said several times,"Is Lawrence come-- is Lawrence come?" |
38940 | _ Is this death?_RABELAIS( François), about 1483- 1553. |
38940 | _ Is this death?_to his physician. |
38940 | _ Know Him? 38940 _ Mais quel diable de mal veux- te que cela me fosse?_"he said, and ate the apricot. |
38940 | _ Must I leave it unfinished?_He referred to his"History of Poland." |
38940 | _ My Lord, why do you not go on? 38940 _ O Florence, what hast thou done to- day?_"He was strangled and burnt by the commissioners of the Pope, May 23, 1498. |
38940 | _ O my poor soul, whither art thou going?_Adrian wrote both in Greek and Latin. |
38940 | _ O, better_,in response to his wife''s question,"How do you feel now?" |
38940 | _ O, my poor soul, what is to become of thee? 38940 _ Oh death, why art thou so long in coming?_"The punishment inflicted upon Damiens for his attack upon the king was horrible. |
38940 | _ Oh, Lord, shall I die at all? 38940 _ Wally, what is this? |
38940 | _ Were you at Sedan?_He asked the question of Dr. Conneau. |
38940 | _ What can it signify?_Said to Miss Perowne, one of his attendants, who offered him some refreshments. |
38940 | _ What is that?_He felt a sudden pain in his head, and, clasping his forehead with both hands, he exclaimed,"What is that?" |
38940 | _ What is that?_He felt a sudden pain in his head, and, clasping his forehead with both hands, he exclaimed,"What is that?" |
38940 | _ Who is near me?_he was told Gutman-- his favorite pupil. |
38940 | _ Whose house is this? 38940 ''Now?'' 38940 ''Whence comes the sunshine?'' 38940 ( Quoi, déjà?) 38940 --And when?" |
38940 | 106 Is not this dying with courage and true greatness? |
38940 | 114 Murder of the Queen had been represented to me, The, 19 Must I leave it unfinished? |
38940 | 123 Are the French beaten? |
38940 | 153 But the consummate and perfect knowledge--, 249 Can this be considered a calamity? |
38940 | 165 Is this death? |
38940 | 189 Deep dream of peace, 142 Did I not say I was writing the Requiem for myself? |
38940 | 189 O, my poor soul, whither art thou going? |
38940 | 199 Are we not children, all of us? |
38940 | 201 Well, my God, I consent with all my heart, 171 Were the Church of Christ what she should be, 53 Were you at Sedan? |
38940 | 202 Did you know Burke? |
38940 | 229 O Florence, what hast thou done to- day? |
38940 | 233 Is this dying? |
38940 | 233 Why weep ye? |
38940 | 25 Anderson, you know that I always wished to die, 199 Are the doctors here? |
38940 | 254 Joy, 200"Justum et tenacem propositi virum,"82 King should die standing, A, 177 Kiss me, Hardy, 207 Know Him? |
38940 | 256 Did you think I should live forever? |
38940 | 270 Do you hear the music? |
38940 | 271 Will no one have pity on me? |
38940 | 274 Why dost thou not strike? |
38940 | 28 Is Lawrence come?--Is Lawrence come? |
38940 | 288 Will you tell the archdeacon? |
38940 | 31 Is there no priest at the château? |
38940 | 39 Very little meat for the mustard, 134 Vex me not with this thing, but give me a simple cross, 55 Vos plaudite, 19 Wally, what is this? |
38940 | 47 Observe how they are swelled, 13 Oh, the insufferable pangs of hell and damnation, 209 Oh death, why art thou so long in coming? |
38940 | 52 What can it signify? |
38940 | 70 What I can not utter with my mouth, 232 What is that? |
38940 | 9 With all my heart: I would fain be reconciled to my stomach, 98 Whose house is this? |
38940 | 92 Is it not true, dear Hammel, that I have some talent after all? |
38940 | 97 Is this death? |
38940 | 98 Dream has been short, The, 247 Dying, dying, 134 Dying man can do nothing easy, A, 102 Earth, dost thou demand me? |
38940 | A certain priest, named Nerotto, asked him,"in what spirit dost thou bear martyrdom?" |
38940 | After standing on the plank for a few seconds the executioner said:"Are you ready, sir?" |
38940 | Alive again? |
38940 | And dost thou prune thy trembling wing, To take thy flight thou know''st not whither? |
38940 | But what are the facts? |
38940 | Can I make men live, whether they will or no? |
38940 | Did you think I should live forever?" |
38940 | Did you think that I could live forever? |
38940 | Died he not in his bed? |
38940 | Do I tremble like a criminal or boast like an Atheist? |
38940 | He arose, turned to the soldiers, and said, his face wearing an expression of superhuman courage:--"Will no one have pity on me? |
38940 | He frequently asked,"Are the French beaten?" |
38940 | He knows best, 289 Well, ladies, if I were one hour in heaven, 186 Well, my friend, what news from the Great Mogul? |
38940 | He started, and said,"Know Him? |
38940 | He whispered as I placed the water to his lips,''Do n''t you remember that passage I once quoted to you from"King John?" |
38940 | Here is the package,"continued Mr. Coyle, producing a letter envelope from his pocket;"what shall I do with it?" |
38940 | His sister, Catherine of Schwartzburg, asked,"Dost thou commend thy soul to Jesus Christ?" |
38940 | How long, O Lord, how long?_"NEWPORT( Francis, once famous as an opponent of Christianity). |
38940 | I am having Paul''s understanding, 237 Amen, 48 An Emperor ought to die standing, 289 And must I then die? |
38940 | I quote Prior''s version:"Poor little, quivering, fluttering thing, Must we no longer live together? |
38940 | I taste death; and who will support my dearest Constanze if you do not stay with her?" |
38940 | Is that you, Dora? |
38940 | Is that your heaven?'' |
38940 | Is this all that I feared when I prayed against a hard death? |
38940 | Is this all that I feared? |
38940 | Is this all? |
38940 | Is this all? |
38940 | Just before this he exclaimed:"Is this dying? |
38940 | Later his father said,"Dudley, do you know the Lord Jesus Christ?" |
38940 | O Lord, be merciful, 122 Oh, Lord, shall I die at all? |
38940 | Others say that his last words were these addressed to the hesitating headsman,"Why dost thou not strike? |
38940 | Peters?" |
38940 | Shall I die at all? |
38940 | Some authorities give his last words thus:"Is it not true, dear Hammel, that I have some talent after all?" |
38940 | The watcher is with me; why tarry the wheels of his chariot?" |
38940 | Then she kneeled down, saying,"Will you take it off before I lay me down?" |
38940 | Then she tied the handkerchief about her eyes, and, feeling for the block, she said,"What shall I do? |
38940 | Thinking that he saw paper lying on the floor, he said:"Why is Schiller''s correspondence permitted to lie here?" |
38940 | Thou and this body were house- mates together; Wilt thou begone now, and whither? |
38940 | To test his consciousness, the Pastor asked,"Who prayed thus?" |
38940 | Well, they can, 318 Can this last long? |
38940 | What company has that, I pray? |
38940 | What doth all my glory profit, but that I have so much the more torment in my death?_"PIUS IX. |
38940 | What street are we in? |
38940 | What street are we in? |
38940 | When he was dying his father said to him,"Dudley, your mother has your hand in hers, can you press it a little that she may know you recognize her?" |
38940 | When this was done, he said:"Now, is my finger upon them?" |
38940 | Where is it? |
38940 | Where is it?" |
38940 | Whither wilt thou go?_"MAZARIN( Hortense Mancini, sister of the celebrated cardinal), 1647- 1699. |
38940 | Why do you thus look at me? |
38940 | Why, then, oh, Lord, if ever, why not now?_"His mother, Monica, was a woman of the most devoted piety. |
38940 | Will not all my riches save me? |
38940 | Will not all my riches save me? |
38940 | Wilt thou break a bruised reed? |
38940 | Wilt thou break a bruised reed?_"So great was his cruelty and so oppressive his tyranny, that his own subjects rose in desperation and slew him. |
38940 | Yet more trouble?" |
38940 | Yet more trouble?_"These words he is reported to have spoken after the executioner had opened his body to extract his heart. |
38940 | [ 4][ 4]_ Enter the KING, SALISBURY, WARWICK, to the CARDINAL in bed.__ King._ How fares my lord? |
38940 | away!--why thus do ye look at me?" |
38940 | bury me? |
38940 | enquired one,"are you not afraid of becoming food for birds of prey and wild beasts?" |
38940 | how deep will be thy sorrow at the news, 68 O, my poor soul, what is to become of thee? |
38940 | is there no bribing death? |
38940 | lower your arms, otherwise you will miss me or only wound me._"Some say his last words were:"Is there no priest at the château?--is there no priest?" |
38940 | said she,"I dare not, lest--""Emma, will you? |
38940 | she exclaimed,"is_ must_ a word to be addressed to princes? |
38940 | where should he die? |
42247 | Any passengers? |
42247 | Do n''t you_ see_ I''m blind? |
42247 | Does the_ thief_ or_ hangman_ take precedence at executions? |
42247 | How do you, then? |
42247 | How long have you been in Cambridge? |
42247 | How many sacraments are there, sir? |
42247 | How so? |
42247 | How was he to dispose of his_ corpus_? |
42247 | Sir, I expect to be obliged; am I not your master? |
42247 | The same as you had on Wednesday? |
42247 | Una quod es semper, quod semper es optima, Princeps, Quam bene conveniunt hæc duo verba tibi? 42247 Very well, I thank you, sir,"said the wag,"how do you do?" |
42247 | What is it? |
42247 | What, sir,said he, addressing the Doctor,"do you mean to apply that word_ discipline_ to the_ officers_ of the army? |
42247 | Who? |
42247 | Who? |
42247 | Yes, sir( said Gurnay;) and am I not your fellow? |
42247 | _ Apropos_, my lord,exclaimed Harvest, during the meal,"whence do you derive your nick- name of_ Jemmy Twitcher_?" |
42247 | _ Decline!_said the astonished orator;"what do you mean? |
42247 | _ Quips, Quirks, and Anecdotes?_"Aye, that''s_ the_ Book! |
42247 | ''That''s a large sum for a philosopher,''observed Dr. Pope;''what would you do with so much?'' |
42247 | ''Why,''said I,''who is so mad as to wish to be governed by force? |
42247 | ( said he) What cryes the University? |
42247 | ***** TELL US WHAT YOU CAN''T DO? |
42247 | ***** WAS OXFORD OR CAMBRIDGE FIRST FOUNDED? |
42247 | After he had wiped his mouth, and begun to compose himself, Bozzy entreated to know what he was giggling about whilst he eat the mutton? |
42247 | An envious scribe one day there saw him, and mocked his calamity by asking,"If it was not easy to write like a madman?" |
42247 | And then, like Philip, I demand the cause? |
42247 | And two Oxonians were of late PLUCKED AT THEIR DIVINITY EXAMINATION, Because one being asked,"Who was the_ Mediator_, between God and man?" |
42247 | At another time, when asked what he would drink? |
42247 | At the name of Dante, Mr. Gray suddenly turned round to him and said,"Right: but have you read Dante, sir?" |
42247 | But what have we here?" |
42247 | But what then? |
42247 | Dean?" |
42247 | Did he_ chalk double_? |
42247 | Didst ever taste champagne? |
42247 | Dr. Parr once asked the professor,"what he thought of the origin of evil?" |
42247 | During one of these morning or evening calls, Dr. B. observing the embryo physician had but few books in his chambers, asked him"Where was his study?" |
42247 | He one day asked his learned college contemporary, Dr. John Taylor, editor of Demosthenes,"why he talked of selling his horse?" |
42247 | Heard ye the din of dinner bray? |
42247 | Is it so? |
42247 | Is the mealy''prentice fled? |
42247 | Meadly, his biographer, relates, that when asked why he had exchanged his living of Dalston for Stanwix? |
42247 | P.?" |
42247 | PAGE Was Oxford or Cambridge first Founded? |
42247 | Some of Dr. Parr''s hearers, struck with a remarkable passage in his sermon, asked him"Whether he had read it from his book?" |
42247 | The Bishop was not a man to''_ bate_ an iota of his due, and stopped them and asked,"If they knew he was the Vice- Chancellor?" |
42247 | The Vice- Chancellor imagining that he actually_ weighed his ale_, said,"They tell me you sell ale by the pound; is that true?" |
42247 | The composer hummed again,--again Prior hissed the singer, who, enraged at the circumstance, demanded"Why he was subject to such indignity?" |
42247 | The next time he met his friend, he addressed him with,"Well, have you succeeded in finding the_ value of nothing_?" |
42247 | The other being questioned as to"why our Saviour sat on the right hand of God?" |
42247 | This the Vice- Chancellor observed, and asked what he meant by it? |
42247 | Unde mihi distichon? |
42247 | Upon this, one of the party exclaimed,"You have told us a great deal of what you can do,_ tell us something you ca n''t do_?" |
42247 | Walking, soon after he was liberated, in the streets of London, during a heavy shower of_ rain_, he was plied with,"A coach, your reverence?" |
42247 | What cryes the boyes? |
42247 | What cryes the town? |
42247 | What would you more? |
42247 | Where was it in the time of Tarquinius Priscus? |
42247 | Where was it?" |
42247 | Which is denied by Dr. Kippis, in the"Biographia Britannica,"and"when Doctors disagree, who shall decide?" |
42247 | Whilst under examination by the Privy Council, the celebrated Duke of Newcastle, then minister, asked him,"If he were not a bishop?" |
42247 | Why are not_ you_ a doctor? |
42247 | Why should we smother a good thing with_ mystifying dashes_, instead of plain English high- sounding names, when the subject is of"honourable men?" |
42247 | Will not the richness and plenty of the diet he wallowed in very well account for this, without supposing any great number of years of imprisonment? |
42247 | Your simile, I own, is new, But how dost make it out? |
42247 | e._ Sir, what is your pleasure?) |
42247 | exclaimed Mr. H.;"Where to?" |
42247 | exclaimed the other,"how so, Doctor?" |
42247 | he exclaimed, in his significant way,"Shall these dry bones live?" |
42247 | heard ye not yon footsteps dread, That shook the hall with thund''ring tread? |
42247 | how am I to know_ the_ Inn?" |
42247 | is it possible? |
42247 | my man, can you tell me the way to----?" |
42247 | or who is such a fool as to expect to be governed by virtue? |
42247 | price ten guineas? |
42247 | said he, as he sucked something he held in both hands;"_ Fish_, as well as flesh, my good woman?" |
42247 | said the ghost,"what art doing below?" |
42247 | think''st thou you essenced cloud, Raised by thy puff, can vie with_ Nature''s_ hue? |
42247 | what every thing? |
42247 | what we? |
29919 | ''Are not two prayers a perfect strength?'' |
29919 | A grave danger? |
29919 | A voice, was it? |
29919 | Afraid of what? |
29919 | All ready, Kay? |
29919 | And what could he do, unless it''s my liver? |
29919 | And you, sir? 29919 And,"he asked;"if they attack-- what then? |
29919 | Any markings? |
29919 | Any new dots and dashes? 29919 Anything to identify it?" |
29919 | Because if we are trapped and caught, of what use is the price we might have gotten? 29919 But is n''t there any help for it?" |
29919 | But the_ Nomad?_he asked. |
29919 | But what? 29919 But why the wild interest in this particular doctor?" |
29919 | But you did see that flash? |
29919 | But-- the quills? |
29919 | Ca n''t you trust me? |
29919 | Carr,the girl whispered, after a time,"where are we going?" |
29919 | Cliff, you''re not badly hurt? |
29919 | Cliff, you''re not hurt? |
29919 | Clouds? |
29919 | Could that flash have been a signal? |
29919 | Did I? 29919 Did n''t he''sic us on''neatly? |
29919 | Did they get you, old man? |
29919 | Did you hear that? |
29919 | Did you see it? |
29919 | Did you see it? |
29919 | Do n''t you know you''ve done a miraculous thing? 29919 Do n''t you remember? |
29919 | Do you know that you are turning a delicate and beautiful romance into a lascivious libel on the human race? |
29919 | Does he know it''s me? |
29919 | Dr. Friedrich von Stein? |
29919 | Find it? |
29919 | Glad you came? |
29919 | Glimpsed the surface?--an island? |
29919 | Hanley''s office? |
29919 | Hello, Lieutenant-- the enemy ship-- where is it now? |
29919 | Hello, old sock,he said,"had a bad dream?" |
29919 | His guards-- the fleet-- what''s happened? |
29919 | How about me? |
29919 | How about yourself? |
29919 | How can there be a sea out there in space? |
29919 | How could you? |
29919 | How do you suppose we''ll make ourselves understood to the people of Europa? |
29919 | How in time are we to find this city of golden domes? |
29919 | How long have we got, Kay? |
29919 | How, Carr? |
29919 | I insisted upon you and Hans-- Gutierrez, what is that? |
29919 | If he is in? |
29919 | Is Venus Signalling? |
29919 | Is he--? |
29919 | Is it so,_ Niña_? 29919 Is it-- some one else?" |
29919 | Is she-- are we safe? |
29919 | Is that it? |
29919 | Is that part of the treatment? |
29919 | It is Mr. and Mrs. Parker, I believe? 29919 Just what?" |
29919 | Lay your foul hands on Ora, will you? 29919 Like your job?" |
29919 | Lyman? 29919 Made plenty of money yourself, did n''t you, Carr?" |
29919 | Many of them? |
29919 | May we see Dr. von Stein? |
29919 | Me? 29919 Meaning--?" |
29919 | My boy,he said,"did you do these?" |
29919 | No internal gravity mechanism on the_ Nomad_? |
29919 | No kick, eh? 29919 Not so bad, Hans? |
29919 | Not the people of Europa? |
29919 | Now why did n''t you tell me that before? 29919 Now would n''t that jar you?" |
29919 | Now, how about it? |
29919 | Oh, are you awake? |
29919 | Oh, is that so? |
29919 | Proctor? 29919 Quite a shop,"he admitted;"but where is the telescope?" |
29919 | Rapaju? |
29919 | Rapaju? |
29919 | Ready for bed? |
29919 | Ready to go up and give merry hell to that other ship if she shows up? |
29919 | Right now? |
29919 | Say, if them Giants comes up here yuh know what us folks is going to do? 29919 See anything?" |
29919 | Shall I cut him loose now from his chair, Commander? |
29919 | So our efforts have been wasted, have they? 29919 So soon? |
29919 | So you think,he said, when there was opportunity,"that you can help me, Dr. von Stein?" |
29919 | Stand up, ca n''t you? |
29919 | Still defiant, eh? 29919 Surely Miss Ora does not intend to come with us?" |
29919 | Tell you? 29919 The Americano?" |
29919 | The Wasp in sight? |
29919 | The captive is safe? 29919 The chief plays with woman''s words, no? |
29919 | They leave that soon? |
29919 | Thinking of Cliff? |
29919 | To-- to stay? |
29919 | Von Stein? |
29919 | Was it the commander, Gutierrez? |
29919 | Was the planet communicating? |
29919 | Well, what''s to prevent it? |
29919 | Well? |
29919 | Well? |
29919 | Well? |
29919 | Well? |
29919 | What are you going to do? |
29919 | What are you talking about? |
29919 | What can I do for you? |
29919 | What can we do with the_ Nomad_? |
29919 | What do you mean by that? |
29919 | What do you mean-- a proposition? |
29919 | What do you think of this stuff? |
29919 | What in thunder is that? |
29919 | What is it, Carr? |
29919 | What is it, sweetheart? |
29919 | What is it? |
29919 | What is that? |
29919 | What is your plan? |
29919 | What sort of a danger? |
29919 | What sort of a reception do you suppose we''ll get? |
29919 | What use would that be against the Earth Giants? 29919 What''s that?" |
29919 | What''s that? |
29919 | What''s this? |
29919 | What''s wrong? |
29919 | What? 29919 When did you first hear this?" |
29919 | Where''ll we land, Detis? |
29919 | Where''s that? |
29919 | Where? |
29919 | Who but the devil was the father of magic? |
29919 | Who? |
29919 | Why come here, with so much to be seen out there? |
29919 | Why not go to see that new doctor? |
29919 | Why not? 29919 Why not?" |
29919 | Why,they asked,"should there be more unprovoked assaults from the people of another planet? |
29919 | Why? |
29919 | Will you give us time to talk it over and think about it? |
29919 | Would I? |
29919 | You all right? |
29919 | You come from New York? |
29919 | You have noticed that copper bowl? |
29919 | You honestly believe them able to do this? |
29919 | You knew that Cordelia Lyman died a short time ago, did n''t you? |
29919 | You know what will happen, Heinrich? |
29919 | You promise you will return me alive? 29919 You saw that bit about the new Chinese disintegrator? |
29919 | You saw through? |
29919 | You''ve been out-- how long? |
29919 | You-- can you raise Great New York on the audiphone, Hendrick? |
29919 | Your stock? |
29919 | _ Comprenez vous Francaise?_..._ Non?_... German, perhaps, or Spanish?... |
29919 | _ Comprenez vous Francaise?_..._ Non?_... German, perhaps, or Spanish?... |
29919 | _ Comprenez vous Francaise?_..._ Non?_... German, perhaps, or Spanish?... |
29919 | _ Sprecken sie Deutsche?__ Usted habla Española?_...He followed with a fusillade of questions in strange and varying tongues. |
29919 | _ Sprecken sie Deutsche?__ Usted habla Española?_...He followed with a fusillade of questions in strange and varying tongues. |
29919 | ***** Fortunate for him that the meteor had not been completely covered by water, he thought-- but was it fortunate? |
29919 | ***** How many of them were there? |
29919 | ***** The logical thing to do, yes-- but how? |
29919 | *****"Beats the rocket motors and bulky fuel of the regular liners a mile, does n''t it? |
29919 | *****"There,"said Lieutenant McGuire,"--doesn''t that elevate your mind? |
29919 | A vampire, if there is such a thing? |
29919 | A witch? |
29919 | All right with you?" |
29919 | All right?" |
29919 | Am I correct?" |
29919 | And alone?" |
29919 | And shall I feel afraid?" |
29919 | And suppose you kill him-- won''t they track you just the same, Hendrick?" |
29919 | And the enemy ship--? |
29919 | And what''s the idea of the private ship? |
29919 | And where do you keep it? |
29919 | And who may say that man is free from the Venerian danger? |
29919 | And why did not our own planes escape?... |
29919 | And, as Ruth remained silent,"Ruth, it is n''t Cliff Hymes, is it? |
29919 | Approaching footsteps? |
29919 | Are the people of Venus trying to communicate? |
29919 | Are we flying-- in the clouds?" |
29919 | Are you game?" |
29919 | Are you game?" |
29919 | Are you, by chance, a psycho- analyst? |
29919 | Both of you, I assume, know something of the radio? |
29919 | But how about the fleet behind them? |
29919 | But how come? |
29919 | But since when are you a navigator, Mado?" |
29919 | But suppose a wandering meteor or a tiny asteroid gets in the way? |
29919 | But that is the more charming, eh? |
29919 | But what agency had done this strange thing? |
29919 | But what are you doing here?" |
29919 | But what could be sweeter for use in one of our regular atomic motors? |
29919 | But what do you mean-- make the fuel?" |
29919 | But what''s wrong with you Carr? |
29919 | But why not give a sequel about the other and more terrible creatures in the earth whom the madman spoke of? |
29919 | But why? |
29919 | But you will take me first to Cape Town, Hendrick? |
29919 | But you will take your share of his ransom, wo n''t you? |
29919 | But your father-- Mado?" |
29919 | But, even if the magazine were enlarged and the price boosted to a quarter, do you really think that we get enough material to devour? |
29919 | But-- but, how did you learn English?" |
29919 | By damn, what is this?" |
29919 | Call Hanley, eh?" |
29919 | Calling you, Gutierrez? |
29919 | Can it be done and still bar his instruments from locating us?" |
29919 | Can you come here a moment, please?" |
29919 | Carry you out through the cool reaches of interplanetary space? |
29919 | Chah-- that would give him a start, would n''t it? |
29919 | Clever of me, do n''t you think, to persuade Hendrick to take us to Cape Town? |
29919 | Come all the way from home in it?" |
29919 | Could I creep in there, surprise De Boer now, and kill him? |
29919 | Could he use it? |
29919 | Could it have meant in any way the launching of a projectile-- a ship-- to travel Earthward through space?" |
29919 | Could that have been the flash of a-- a rocket? |
29919 | De Boer was saying:"But why, Jetta, should I bother with your ideas? |
29919 | Detis? |
29919 | Did Hanley have an invisible flyer out there? |
29919 | Did Mado intend to lead the fleet into the embrace of that dreadful monster they had so fortunately escaped? |
29919 | Did he know he was mortally wounded? |
29919 | Did n''t think I''d go, did you, you stupid old dear?" |
29919 | Did that music have a meaning? |
29919 | Did they have radio? |
29919 | Did they wish only to learn the extent of our knowledge, our culture? |
29919 | Do n''t you think so?" |
29919 | Do you both follow me?" |
29919 | Do you get enough air?" |
29919 | Do you mean to say that someone could do this to me maliciously?" |
29919 | Europa, Ora, Rapaju-- all of it? |
29919 | Ever been on one of the asteroids? |
29919 | Ever seen the Sargasso Sea of the solar system? |
29919 | Ever seen the other side of the Moon-- Uranus-- Neptune-- Planet 9, the farthest out from the sun?" |
29919 | Five feet ahead of me? |
29919 | From Venus? |
29919 | Get it?" |
29919 | Great God, was she safe here? |
29919 | Had De Boer gone into this solid blackness, to lure me? |
29919 | Had they, too, found them suggestive of forts on the frontier of a world, defenses against invasion from out there? |
29919 | Have n''t I promised?" |
29919 | Have the Venusians penetrated their cloak of cloud masses with a visible light? |
29919 | Have you ever heard of the world being saved by one man? |
29919 | Have you, perhaps, an enemy?" |
29919 | Heavy?" |
29919 | Hendrick, listen--""Well, what?" |
29919 | Hendrick-- why not? |
29919 | How about it? |
29919 | How could I have forgotten him? |
29919 | How could I tell you? |
29919 | How did you do it? |
29919 | How did you guess? |
29919 | How does it operate? |
29919 | How far is it?" |
29919 | How meet them? |
29919 | How much more difficult would it be to force anything from him? |
29919 | How shall we celebrate?" |
29919 | How you''ve been and how come you''ve rebelled, too? |
29919 | How''s that for simple?" |
29919 | I had a hunch Ruth would draw one of those numbers...._ How long?_"The swaying masses of gray jelly were very near them. |
29919 | I have no attraction? |
29919 | I must adjust my explanation to-- what shall I say? |
29919 | I wonder, did they mean to wipe him out or were they only scared off?" |
29919 | I''d--""Why this sudden ardor, Kay?" |
29919 | If he could navigate the_ Nomad_ himself, why did n''t he? |
29919 | Is it possible for you to use a better and thinner grade of paper? |
29919 | Is that clear?" |
29919 | Is that satisfactory?" |
29919 | Is their fire to be returned?" |
29919 | Is there life there? |
29919 | It attacked with gas, you say?... |
29919 | Japan? |
29919 | Jetta''s? |
29919 | Just because you are bigger than I am--""Hear that, Jetta? |
29919 | Man, do n''t you realize you''re free? |
29919 | May I expect you? |
29919 | May I reiterate one fact? |
29919 | McGuire?... |
29919 | Men? |
29919 | Mind?" |
29919 | Mr. Editor, do you remember way back when you said we should write in to you to tell you of the stories we want and that you would get them for us? |
29919 | My hollow empty voice echoed back as I softly responded:"Yes?" |
29919 | No trouble?" |
29919 | No-- the commander calling? |
29919 | Not hurt me?" |
29919 | Not using a private space- flier on your business trips, are you?" |
29919 | Now say: have you any suggestions on how I can safely ransom you?" |
29919 | Now tell me: what in the devil have you got in your mind?" |
29919 | Of what significance, of what portent-- who could tell? |
29919 | Oh, the old lady down the street who left her money to found a home for aged spinsters? |
29919 | Or did they know them for what they were? |
29919 | Or ten? |
29919 | Or that this valley was peopled with what could best be described as organized protoplasm? |
29919 | Or twenty? |
29919 | Or was it that the thing radiated energies unknown to science? |
29919 | Parker?" |
29919 | Red Russia? |
29919 | Rescue? |
29919 | Rocks? |
29919 | Safest for us, eh, Hans?" |
29919 | Saved my own, too, did n''t I? |
29919 | See? |
29919 | She walked close to him, holding his arm, and repeated softly:"Are not two prayers a perfect strength? |
29919 | Should America sacrifice a hundred thousand of her boys and girls each year, when human life was cheap in China? |
29919 | Some eruption, perhaps, this we have seen-- an ignition of gasses in the upper air-- who knows? |
29919 | Take it off this infernally hot night? |
29919 | Tell me that, wise one?" |
29919 | Ten thousand? |
29919 | That suit you?" |
29919 | The Venerians had reproduced his knowledge in their brains; why would n''t it be possible for him to reverse the operation? |
29919 | The huge enemy was approaching slowly: was it damaged? |
29919 | The mass of that monstrosity must be terrific, else why had it such a power of attraction for other bodies? |
29919 | Then what? |
29919 | There are two of them, one loud and one faint-- right?" |
29919 | They''ve taken the_ Nomad_?" |
29919 | Thought he had cowed him, did he? |
29919 | To the pilot he ordered:"Say nothing of this-- not a word-- get that? |
29919 | To your knowledge of the higher reaches of scientific thought?" |
29919 | True, he was alive now, thanks to the tiny island, but how long would he remain alive without food or water, and without hope of securing either? |
29919 | Vagabonds need money?" |
29919 | Want to go home?" |
29919 | Wants you himself, does he? |
29919 | Was Gutierrez guarding me here in the corridor? |
29919 | Was it possible that anyone could like those drawings? |
29919 | Was it possible that the psenium emanations would succeed where the Millikan rays, the W- ray had failed? |
29919 | Was it? |
29919 | Was it? |
29919 | Was this death? |
29919 | Was this the end of everything for us? |
29919 | Was this war-- and with whom? |
29919 | We have a hundred men now? |
29919 | Well what? |
29919 | Well, what of it? |
29919 | Well, why not go? |
29919 | Were there more to come? |
29919 | Were they friendly, perhaps?--half- timid and fearful of what they might find? |
29919 | Were those cities, those shadow- splashed areas of gray and rose?... |
29919 | What about it?" |
29919 | What are they looking for? |
29919 | What are you figuring on doing with yourself?" |
29919 | What better chance? |
29919 | What did it mean? |
29919 | What did it mean? |
29919 | What did these new- comers think of them? |
29919 | What difference would it make in half an hour? |
29919 | What do you say?" |
29919 | What do you think of her?" |
29919 | What else was there to do? |
29919 | What for? |
29919 | What had Mado marked for his attention? |
29919 | What had all this to do with Venus? |
29919 | What had happened? |
29919 | What had science to say? |
29919 | What had that other world to gain? |
29919 | What had they to gain? |
29919 | What had this craft to do with the air? |
29919 | What happened? |
29919 | What in the name of Saturn did you do?" |
29919 | What in the world made you think of that?" |
29919 | What is it? |
29919 | What is she? |
29919 | What is this incredible thing you are planning?" |
29919 | What is this mysterious power that enables organic forms to withstand the terrific bombardment of the W- ray?" |
29919 | What is your plan?" |
29919 | What is your trouble?" |
29919 | What possible connection had these half- human things with that boyhood recollection? |
29919 | What time is it?" |
29919 | What was it? |
29919 | What was their object? |
29919 | What was to prevent his strapping this being into the high- backed chair to which he had been secured some time before? |
29919 | What would we have done, if conditions had been reversed?" |
29919 | What would you do to ransom him safely?" |
29919 | What would you have? |
29919 | What''s on your mind, Mac?" |
29919 | When will Edmond Hamilton''s first story be published in Astounding Stories? |
29919 | Where are we now and where bound?" |
29919 | Where are we, Lieutenant McGuire? |
29919 | Where is it-- the thing, I mean?" |
29919 | Where was Mado? |
29919 | Who can tell? |
29919 | Who knows but what those inhuman Venerian brutes may even now be planning some new invasion, may be preparing to renew their attack upon Earth? |
29919 | Who made it? |
29919 | Who mans it? |
29919 | Whoever-- whatever-- was sending that mysterious signal was coming near-- but was that nearness a matter of miles or of thousands of miles? |
29919 | Why bother with the reversal? |
29919 | Why could n''t he be sensible and companionable as they were? |
29919 | Why could n''t they just continue on their way as they had started out? |
29919 | Why could n''t you and Cliff make it destroy life?" |
29919 | Why did he think of potatoes sprouting in a cellar? |
29919 | Why do n''t they break through?" |
29919 | Why do you suppose they are so tenacious of life, Cliff?" |
29919 | Why had n''t he killed him? |
29919 | Why is it that Europa has not been discovered before this; that it''s inhabited, I mean?" |
29919 | Why not build your own Lowland Empire? |
29919 | Why not cut the paper smooth, the way you do in Five Novels Monthly? |
29919 | Why not gather a thousand? |
29919 | Why not get a story by Edgar Rice Burroughs, and some more by Ray Cummings? |
29919 | Why not have a page devoted to the authors? |
29919 | Why not take Betty for a sea trip? |
29919 | Why not, indeed? |
29919 | Why not?" |
29919 | Why not?" |
29919 | Why should we be attacked? |
29919 | Why, when the treasure divided so nicely among three, break it up to enrich a hundred? |
29919 | Why, why did n''t I kill him? |
29919 | Will it work, Cliff? |
29919 | Will you come?" |
29919 | Will you give us your opinion, your impressions?" |
29919 | Wo n''t you? |
29919 | Would Hanley be there? |
29919 | Would I ever see her again? |
29919 | Would Jetta and I succeed? |
29919 | Would Jetta soon, very soon now, be able to do her part? |
29919 | Would the machine work? |
29919 | Would there be more?--could we meet them?--defeat them? |
29919 | Would they send recognizable signals-- words-- or some mathematical sequence to prove their reality? |
29919 | Would you care to?" |
29919 | Yes, Lieutenant.... Over Mount Lawson?... |
29919 | You and I are well matched, eh?" |
29919 | You do care, do n''t you?" |
29919 | You do n''t mean the president of the Pine Hills National Bank?" |
29919 | You get all the breaks, do n''t you?" |
29919 | You had best go back: De Boer, he might be jealous of us, no? |
29919 | You hear it too?" |
29919 | You''re sure you want to?" |
29919 | You, Mr. Parker, and you, Madame, do you understand something of physics, of psychology, of metaphysics?" |
29919 | he said in a thin voice, and he seemed to know now that they were in the air;"I wonder-- I wonder-- if we shall land-- what country? |
29919 | they demanded one of another; would n''t another day do as well as this one? |
36590 | And how may you know that you have reached to philosophy? 36590 And what rôle are you most anxious to play?" |
36590 | And you, are you also a woman? |
36590 | Are you insured? |
36590 | Dirty drab and rose- pink, with their silly cancelling contest--does not that sum up the English drama of the last few years? |
36590 | Have I ever behaved to you in an ungentlemanlike manner? |
36590 | Have I ever kicked you? |
36590 | Have you ever seen me in this before? |
36590 | I suppose,he said,"that you want to become a great actress?" |
36590 | If it were I, what would you do? |
36590 | Is this love or is it not? |
36590 | No, it is not strange, really,--do you remember the kind of work she was engaged upon? |
36590 | Now, sir, if a man who had a heart wanted to marry me in full consciousness of my past, should I have the right to accept him? |
36590 | School mistresses and governesses, shop- girls, dressmakers, cooks, housemaids,--what are your fatigues to those of an actress? |
36590 | Then why be so foolish as to do it? |
36590 | Well, and how did it end? |
36590 | Well, what is it then? |
36590 | What does that matter? |
36590 | What has that got to do with what we are talking about? |
36590 | What is love? |
36590 | What is this? |
36590 | What would the world say if it knew you had allowed your mistress to invite it to dinners and dances under the guise of being your wife? |
36590 | What, then, is a man? |
36590 | Who the devil are you? |
36590 | Will you allow me to ask you,says Charles Courtly in the last scene,"an impertinent question?" |
36590 | You wo n''t? 36590 You would still be of the same opinion even though the man were of your own rank,... were a friend of yours,... were your son?" |
36590 | ( But was the public which applauded_ School_ and_ Society_ sufficiently advanced in its artistic education to enjoy these things?) |
36590 | (_ Sings._)''Who ran to catch me when I fell? |
36590 | *****_ Naomi_:..."Are you fond of reading?" |
36590 | A husband staking his wife at a game of écarté-- is not this melodrama? |
36590 | Ah, then( he resumes), she had turned down the page when he had interrupted her? |
36590 | Analytical or dogmatic, comparative, anecdotical or facetious? |
36590 | And after all, why not? |
36590 | And in truth, does Shakespeare cease to be Shakespeare because in Irving''s hand he is also a mine of gold? |
36590 | And the Future, what of it? |
36590 | And what had she been reading? |
36590 | And what is one to say of the love idyll appended to the historical drama, in spite of history, in spite of the drama itself? |
36590 | And what is one to say of the"Profligate"himself? |
36590 | And what was it they had to offer in place of the old order? |
36590 | And what was this silly novel of hers? |
36590 | And whither is he making? |
36590 | And would such an institution really help to the perfecting of the art? |
36590 | And you, doubtless-- you helped her?" |
36590 | Are they not one of the forces of the national mind, one of the reasons of England''s existence? |
36590 | Are we slaves, we working- men? |
36590 | Are we to believe that the gambling scene in the third act takes place in an aristocratic club? |
36590 | But after all, was it incumbent on the author to give us Tanqueray''s psychology? |
36590 | But are they really historical dramas? |
36590 | But do you let your daughters read the Bible? |
36590 | But even then? |
36590 | But how does he set about it, this reformer? |
36590 | But how to get nature and art to combine together in the same work? |
36590 | But is he so vile as he seems, as at first we are inclined to regard him? |
36590 | But is it true? |
36590 | But is life the dream or is the dream life? |
36590 | But is the resuscitation of Shakespeare productive of nothing but good? |
36590 | But may this not be that for one reason or another their competency, except in the case of some of them, is inferior to their pretensions? |
36590 | But shall we exact from him that he should have a real craving to deceive when he impersonates a hypocrite? |
36590 | But what cares the author of_ The Masqueraders_, whether the incidents be improbable and his situations artificial? |
36590 | But what has become of the English drama that M. Filon has given so many of the following pages to discuss and dissect? |
36590 | But what is an anachronism of this kind compared to that which involves the principal character in one continued topsy- turveydom? |
36590 | But what is it she has to do in the three other pieces? |
36590 | But what prevented the drama from being"English"? |
36590 | But will they ever find the thirty years that they have lost? |
36590 | By what prejudices-- religious, philosophical, æsthetic-- has it been impeded? |
36590 | By what racial affinities was the way for this influence prepared? |
36590 | Can one say the same, however, of the ideas? |
36590 | Can you dance? |
36590 | Did the great British public get a glimmer of Newman''s lofty idea of the continual indwelling miraculous spiritual force of the Church? |
36590 | Did the great British public get a glimmer of William Morris''s lofty idea of making every home in England beautiful? |
36590 | Do you let them read Shakespeare? |
36590 | Do you see?" |
36590 | Does one go to the theatre to see life depicted upon the stage, or, on the contrary, to escape from life and forget it? |
36590 | Does the play bear out the promises of its title? |
36590 | Fool that she was, why did she ever want to be married? |
36590 | For can we doubt that, had this excellent method suggested itself, it would have been instantly adopted? |
36590 | From the superiority of Parisian taste? |
36590 | Had a man any right to be a success in two trades at once? |
36590 | Has he not everything required for the purpose? |
36590 | Has he not run too great a risk in confiding the education of a pure- minded girl to an adulteress? |
36590 | Has it not been accompanied by certain drawbacks which are still evident, and by certain dangers all of which have not been successfully surmounted? |
36590 | Has she been guilty or merely imprudent? |
36590 | Has she ceased to love her husband and to appreciate the sacrifice he has made for her? |
36590 | Has the question ever been better set? |
36590 | Have you ever been married?" |
36590 | Have you got good legs?" |
36590 | He could assure her of it? |
36590 | He used to ask his small boy, whilst walking with him in Belsize Park, what he would answer to such and such a question? |
36590 | His enemies have broken his windows: what does he do? |
36590 | How do people put up with him? |
36590 | How do we find Julius intervening in the interests of his son? |
36590 | How does he set about the management of this? |
36590 | How far has her vengeance carried her? |
36590 | How far has she gone in her search? |
36590 | How had the type of the company- promoter been modified in the course of thirty years? |
36590 | How is it they let him into their houses? |
36590 | How is this genealogical mystery to be solved? |
36590 | How much does Sir George know? |
36590 | How was it she had a light still in her window? |
36590 | How was it that under these conditions Henry Irving''s vocation for the theatre came out? |
36590 | How were they to make an English play out of it? |
36590 | How would he set about enraging his master? |
36590 | How would it be if we were passionately in love with her? |
36590 | How would they take this caricature of themselves? |
36590 | How? |
36590 | I began with the question: Is there a living English drama at the present moment? |
36590 | I wonder what Algiers looks like this morning from the sea? |
36590 | Idealism, or the House of Commons? |
36590 | If the play be theoretically bad, how is it that we listen to it, moved or amused, without a moment of fatigue? |
36590 | If this is not burlesque, what is it? |
36590 | In this strange conflict between laws and manners, upon which side will the drama definitively take up its stand? |
36590 | In what particulars does the English speculator differ from his French compeer? |
36590 | Is Irving to quit the stage without attempting an Ibsen part? |
36590 | Is he absolutely sincere? |
36590 | Is his affection quite so rational as he asserts? |
36590 | Is it better or worse? |
36590 | Is it not curious that the Sagas should have been the common source of Carlyle''s last work, and of the most important poem of William Morris? |
36590 | Is it not one of the rules of his profession to bring down the curtain on a witticism? |
36590 | Is it out of a kind of revenge that he has continued to rail at love ever since? |
36590 | Is it possible that she has learnt all this during the entr''acte, whilst the orchestra got through a waltz? |
36590 | Is the censorship more favourable to manners than it is oppressive to talent? |
36590 | Is the establishment of a national theatre, which should serve at once as a school and a standard, a practicable idea? |
36590 | Is there a dramatic idea underlying_ Becket_,_ Queen Mary_, and_ Harold_? |
36590 | Is_ this_ right? |
36590 | Jones?" |
36590 | Not quite so far, surely?" |
36590 | Now that Ibsen is known in England, what influence does he exert, or will he continue to exert in the future, upon English dramatic literature? |
36590 | Once publication was no longer attended by risk, how could they hold aloof from this new form of success? |
36590 | Or check it with satire and ridicule? |
36590 | Or else you put before me things, ideas, and modes of life of which I know nothing; and how am I to determine their degree of truth and reality?" |
36590 | Or will it be Mr. Haddon Chambers, who is already known in Paris, one of his works,_ The Fatal Card_, having crossed the channel? |
36590 | Or will it turn aside from such things altogether, and aspire to those serene heights of art, to which the noises of the plain can never reach? |
36590 | Otherwise, what would become of the crisis of this"Faultless Third Act"? |
36590 | Ought the English dramatist to accept the collaboration of the actor- manager, and to what extent? |
36590 | Repeat those lines evening after evening till he got addled? |
36590 | Shall this mindless wretch enjoy in his sleep a jewelled gaud while his poor old grandfather is_ thirsty_? |
36590 | Shall we try it?" |
36590 | Sir Philip swallows his laudanum( or is it strychnine?) |
36590 | So she had been reading, eh? |
36590 | Supposing they had a game now? |
36590 | Tanqueray_? |
36590 | That phrase of his--"Who''s this rude gentleman?" |
36590 | Then, when he cries out,"Christians, will you never learn to forgive?" |
36590 | There is something at once virile and moving in this passage, but how many such cases are to be found in this tragedy? |
36590 | These things succeeded in attracting the public, but_ what_ public? |
36590 | This is precisely what Mr. Grundy sets out to show us, but is his representation of it accurate, lifelike, credible? |
36590 | This study, direct from nature-- from the life-- is not without difficulty, even to Englishmen; how much less easy must it be to a Frenchman? |
36590 | To sup instead of dining, does not this in itself suggest a whole conception of life? |
36590 | To the dramatist''s art, or to the ideas which inform his work? |
36590 | To what does it owe its strength? |
36590 | To what is this due? |
36590 | To which of the two does the child belong-- to him who begat but abandoned it, or to him who took pity on it and brought it up? |
36590 | Twenty or twenty- five years ago a manager''s first question of a girl coming to him for an engagement would be--"Can you sing? |
36590 | Up to what point may Shakespeare be imitated with profit? |
36590 | Was there not a law against this kind of pluralism, tacitly agreed upon by critics, and applied by them with remorseless rigour? |
36590 | Was this Jerrold''s fault, or that of a public which insisted upon monster jokes and monster crimes? |
36590 | Were you a horse- soldier or a foot- soldier?" |
36590 | What are the dangers, and what the advantages, inherent in the system which leaves all the great theatres in the hands of actor- managers? |
36590 | What are the rights and the duties of the critic? |
36590 | What business had this old man to start on a new career, and a career requiring all the powers of youth? |
36590 | What had she been doing? |
36590 | What has wax- doll morality to do with them? |
36590 | What induced him to believe that he had developed faculties at an age at which it is more usual to repeat and re- read oneself? |
36590 | What is it intended to do? |
36590 | What is it that makes her stay? |
36590 | What is lacking? |
36590 | What is one to think of Diderot''s paradox about the actors''art, and what do actors think of it themselves? |
36590 | What is the mysterious reason why we can put up with these absurdities and take an interest in them? |
36590 | What is the reason that it hears nothing, or next to nothing, about the English drama? |
36590 | What life is there in the drama that has followed? |
36590 | What mattered it, however, to the writer, who was expected only to praise the pieces and the performers, without being too much of a bore? |
36590 | What part will it play, and what place will it assume, in the renovation of England by the democracy? |
36590 | What prevents her? |
36590 | What sort of criticism was required to this end? |
36590 | What was he to do? |
36590 | What was the social position of actors in former times, and what will it be in the future? |
36590 | What will they do? |
36590 | When will philosophy come to our aid and depose this silly rose- pink wax- doll morality? |
36590 | Whence is this difference? |
36590 | Where does it paint one living English character? |
36590 | Where does it touch one single interest of our present life, one single concern of man''s body, soul, or spirit? |
36590 | Where shall we drive to, mother? |
36590 | Where, then, was the problem? |
36590 | Which of the two is Mr. Jones turning into ridicule? |
36590 | Which of these portraits tells the truth? |
36590 | Who is it that advises her to bring about this scandal? |
36590 | Who then will succeed to the censor? |
36590 | Who will take the lead amongst the younger school of dramatists? |
36590 | Who will write the_ Judahs_,_ The Second Mrs. Tanquerays_ of to- morrow? |
36590 | Who would not be, in the presence of so charming a woman? |
36590 | Whom shall I recognise as an English character, or even as a human type? |
36590 | Why should not such love as this have its drama and its romance, as it has its anguishes, its sacrifices, and its joys? |
36590 | Why should not the spectator also be endowed with the same critical instinct? |
36590 | Why should she not succeed? |
36590 | Why should the drama be logical when life is not? |
36590 | Why should there not be a double irony for the clever, just as there is a_ galimatias double_ for the dull? |
36590 | Why then should he not secure the aid of real music by a musician? |
36590 | Why, when you behold it you love it,--and you will not encourage it?--or only when presented by dead hands? |
36590 | Why? |
36590 | Will it be Mr. Louis N. Parker, Mr. Malcolm Watson, or Mr. J. M. Barrie? |
36590 | Will it be believed that it was from such a standpoint that objection was first raised against the acceptance of Ibsen? |
36590 | Will it help democracy with earnest homilies? |
36590 | Will they be artists or artizans? |
36590 | Will they be respected because of their profession, like the judge, the clergyman, the officer, or only in spite of it? |
36590 | Will they ever be brought to understand? |
36590 | Will they stoop to the conditions of the trade, or rise to the requirements of the art? |
36590 | With whom should one commence? |
36590 | Would you have supposed that there would be material enough in this to furnish forth three hours''entertainment? |
36590 | You can guess what is the first question of Galatea,"Who am I?" |
36590 | _ Crumbs_:"Has your brother no one to speak for him?" |
36590 | _ Crumbs_:"Where shall I find them?" |
36590 | _ Drummle_:"Eh?" |
36590 | _ Galatea_:(_ Horrified, takes Myrine''s hand_)"To wake no more?" |
36590 | _ Jack_(_ bows_):"The fibs or the truth?" |
36590 | _ Naomi_:"And that you were in the Crimea?" |
36590 | _ Naomi_:"At the battle of Inkermann?" |
36590 | _ Naomi_:"Did they pay you much for fighting?" |
36590 | _ Naomi_:"Did you ever read Othello?" |
36590 | _ Naomi_:"Did you fight?" |
36590 | _ Naomi_:"Oh, you must be something?" |
36590 | _ Naomi_:"Then why did n''t you mention it?" |
36590 | _ Naomi_:"Then why did you stay?" |
36590 | _ Naomi_:"Were n''t you frightened?" |
36590 | _ Naomi_:"What are you?" |
36590 | _ Naomi_:"What were you before you were what you are now?" |
36590 | _ Paula_:"Does n''t that define a happy marriage? |
36590 | or that he should be in love with the actress who has to enact a love scene with him? |
36590 | or thirst for blood when he accomplishes a stage murder? |
36590 | who will be censor when the Censorship has been abolished? |
38586 | Because who ever''eard of''Aydn alone? 38586 Do you sell type?" |
38586 | Finen? |
38586 | I say, Bill, you are n''t got such a thing as the price of''arf a pint about you, are yer? 38586 Jack,"said Robins,"which varsity would you rayther go to, Hoxford or''Idleberg?" |
38586 | Oo''s''Icks''? |
38586 | What do you mean by ile? 38586 Yer know that young Germin feller as come ter sty in our''ouse six months agow? |
38586 | _''Ackney?_ Why, that''s just what_ t''other_ medical gent he told me! 38586 _''Aydn._""Why?" |
38586 | & c."_ Bystander._"Why do n''t yer answer''i m back?" |
38586 | ''As yer motor broke down?" |
38586 | ''Ate her.__ Inquirer._ What feel I when she hints at sea- side clothing? |
38586 | ''Ow are yer gettin''on?" |
38586 | ''Ow are yer? |
38586 | ''Ungry? |
38586 | ( A FACT).--_''Arriet( looking at the Java sparrows)._ Wot''s them? |
38586 | ( Are yer fly to the pun?) |
38586 | (_ The artist is rather shy, and has left his model to do the honours of his studio._)"From whom did Mr. M''Gilp paint that head?" |
38586 | )_ What''s that?" |
38586 | ***** A COCKNEY CON.--When may a man really be supposed to be hungry? |
38586 | ***** A COSTERMONGER''S CANT Bill Coster said,"See them two fish? |
38586 | ***** AT SCARBOROUGH.--_''Arriet( pointing to postillions of pony- chaises)._ Why do all them boys wear them jackets? |
38586 | ***** BY OUR COCKNEY When is a yew tree not a yew tree? |
38586 | ***** COCKNEY CONUNDRUM.--Wot lake in Hengland''s got the glassiest buzzum? |
38586 | ***** COCKNEYISM IN THE COUNTRY.--_1st Cockney._ I say, what sort of a''ouse will do for a fowl-''ouse? |
38586 | ***** COCKNEYS AT ALDERSHOT.--_First Cockney._"''Ere,''Arry, where''s the colonel?" |
38586 | ***** CONUNDRUM FOR COCKNEYS.--Which has the greater amount of animal heat, the beaver or the otter? |
38586 | ***** DOUBLE COCKNEY CONUNDRUM FOR THE DERBY DAY.--"What eminent composer would in England have probably been''in the ring''?" |
38586 | ***** EGGING HIM ON.--_Knowing old Gentleman._ Now, sir, talking of eggs, can you tell me where a ship lays to? |
38586 | ***** FOR THE USE OF SCHOOLS.--(_By a Cockney._) Why should not Dr. Watts''poems be read by youth? |
38586 | ***** GOOD PAPER FOR DEAF COCKNEYS.--_The''Earer._***** THE MUSICAL COSTER CRAZE.--_Customer._ Have you a copy of Costa''s_ Eli_? |
38586 | ***** MOTHER WIT.--_First Coster._ I say, Bill, wot''s the meanin''o''Congress? |
38586 | ***** SEASONABLE.--_''Arry''s friend._ What''s the proper dinner for Ash Wednesday? |
38586 | *****"ON A CLIFF BY THE SEA"(_ Whit Monday_) A verse for"''Arry"? |
38586 | *****''ARRY EXAMINED.--_Q._"What is meant by''Higher Education''"? |
38586 | *****[ Illustration: A BI- METALLISTIC DISCUSSION_ Jim._"What''s this''ere''Bi- metallism,''Bill?" |
38586 | *****[ Illustration: EASTER MONDAY_''Arry._"Do you pass any pubs on the way to Broadstairs, cabby?" |
38586 | *****[ Illustration: ERRAND BOYS_ First Boy._"Where are yer goin''to, Bill?" |
38586 | *****[ Illustration: NATURAL HISTORY NOTES_ Country Cousin._"Lor, Bill, ai n''t that a horstrich?" |
38586 | *****[ Illustration: NOT WHAT SHE EXPECTED SCENE--_Canal side, Sunday morning__ Lady._"Do you know where little boys go to who bathe on Sunday?" |
38586 | *****[ Illustration: POLITICS AND GALLANTRY_ First''Arry._"Hay, wot''s this''ere Rosebery a torkin''abaat? |
38586 | *****[ Illustration: POOR LETTER"H""Have you got any_ whole_ strawberry jam?" |
38586 | *****[ Illustration: RUDE INQUIRY_ Street Arabs._"Hoo curls yer''air, gov''nour?"] |
38586 | *****[ Illustration: THE WILD WILD EAST_ First Coster._"Say, Bill,''ow d''yer like my new kickseys? |
38586 | *****[ Illustration:"Bill, can you lend me twopence?" |
38586 | *****[ Illustration:"Comin''up to''Yde Park to''ave a bave,''Arry?" |
38586 | *****[ Illustration:"Did yer order any ile round the corner?" |
38586 | *****[ Illustration:"I say, Bill, oo was this''ere Nelson as everybody wos a talkin''about?" |
38586 | *****[ Illustration:"I say, Bill, wot''s a Prodigal?" |
38586 | *****[ Illustration:"Would you gentlemen like to look at the old church?" |
38586 | *****[ Illustration:_ Coster( to acquaintance, who has been away for some months)._"Wot are yer bin doin''all this time?" |
38586 | *****[ Illustration:_ First Workman._"Why do n''t yer buy yer_ own_ matches,''stead of always cadgin''mine?" |
38586 | *****[ Illustration:_ First"Growler"._"''Ulloah, William, where are yer takin''that little lot?" |
38586 | *****[ Illustration:_ Gorgeous- looking Individual._"Most''strordinary weather, ai n''t it? |
38586 | *****[ Illustration:_ Man Cleaning the Horse._"Naa then lazy, w''y do n''t yer do some work?" |
38586 | *****[ Illustration:_ Toff._"I say, my boy, would you like to drive me to Piccadilly?" |
38586 | *****[ Illustration:_''Arriet._"Wot toime his the next troine fer''Ammersmith?" |
38586 | *****[ Illustration:_''Arry( encountering a shut gate for the first time)._"Wonder which end the thing opens? |
38586 | --"Type, sir? |
38586 | 2''?" |
38586 | A stytion at_ Jack Strors_? |
38586 | A''Appy New Year? |
38586 | Ah, what would them pore fellers give if honly they could come An''live with all their fam''ly in our garret hup the slum? |
38586 | Ai n''t it always a''_ Aydn and abettin_''? |
38586 | Airy.__ Inquirer._ And what''s her goal in every hint and notion? |
38586 | All alone?"] |
38586 | And do n''t it make yer''eart bleed, too, to think of all the care Of mansions in the country and an''ouse in Grosvenor Square? |
38586 | And for two quid a week? |
38586 | Answers she politely? |
38586 | Any kiddy as''as''ad''arf an eddication knows what the plural of''''oss''is, do n''t he? |
38586 | But if there ai n''t no more coppers,''ow about the''buses and the hunderground rileway?" |
38586 | But why do n''t he cure it and make it Quite Well Street?" |
38586 | But why make such a fuss about it in Ireland?" |
38586 | C. H._"Wot are yer goin''ter do?" |
38586 | Call me cad? |
38586 | Carn''t yer manige to run down on Sunday? |
38586 | Carnegie._]''Ere, Lizer, wheer''s yer gratitood? |
38586 | Coffers.__ Inquirer._ Then if I storm, what word breaks sequent stillness? |
38586 | Cut barmaids, billiards, bitter beer and betting? |
38586 | Do n''t it vary the monotony An''Wooster sorce yer vittles, that''s supposin''as yer''ve got any? |
38586 | Do n''t yer see I''m navigatin''the Hark?"] |
38586 | Do you keep dogs like that?" |
38586 | Do you mean oil?" |
38586 | Doin''any business?" |
38586 | Earning.__ Inquirer._ What''s the chief issue of this seaward flowing? |
38586 | Eh? |
38586 | Ever.__ Inquirer._ What is the manner of my buxom Mary? |
38586 | Giving.__ Inquirer._ What is man''s share anent this yearly yearning? |
38586 | Gone mouldy, or moon- struck, or wot? |
38586 | Good fit, eh?" |
38586 | Hollow!__ Inquirer._ What would the sex when it assumes that virtue? |
38586 | How do I know this? |
38586 | How long before I''m free of tradesmen''s pages? |
38586 | Hupper or lower? |
38586 | Hurt you.__ Inquirer._ What''s the result of halting and misgiving? |
38586 | I''m out on the trot for a fortnit; and ai n''t it golumpshusly fine? |
38586 | I''ve sung comic songs on the cliffs after dark, and wot''s fun if that ai n''t? |
38586 | Illness!__ Inquirer._ What feels a man when women''gin to blubber? |
38586 | Is chief.__ Inquirer._ What is this close agreement of_ my_ women? |
38586 | Just wish I''d got a voice; Cut the old den to- morrow, lots of cham., Cabs and diamonds,--ain''t that real jam? |
38586 | Learn languages? |
38586 | Leisure.__ Inquirer._ The second( for a slave to matrimony)? |
38586 | Level_ me_ to the straw- haired Carls and Hermanns? |
38586 | Lightly.__ Inquirer._ How then am I inclined to view the mater? |
38586 | Loathing.__ Inquirer._ Mention of what makes all my family scoffers? |
38586 | Lubber.__ Inquirer._ What is the show of patience that may follow? |
38586 | May I''ave the pleasure?"] |
38586 | Nothing like a crowd for regular sprees, Ai n''t it fine to do a rush, and squeeze? |
38586 | Ocean.__ Inquirer._ How recommends she Ramsgate, shrimpy, sandy? |
38586 | Omen.__ Inquirer._ I fear for me they''ll prove a deal too clever? |
38586 | Roving.__ Inquirer._ What''s the first requisite for taking pleasure? |
38586 | Saint_ All Buns_ would be a good feast, eh, sir? |
38586 | Smithers._"Has Muggles"--(_a rival tradesman_)--"got a haspect? |
38586 | Smithers?" |
38586 | Sparrerkeets? |
38586 | That''s as plain as an''aystack, ai n''t it?" |
38586 | The Speaker or Lord''Igh Chancellor?" |
38586 | The country''s bad enough when it''s_ foine_, yn''t it, miss?"] |
38586 | Toobs on''appy''Amstid? |
38586 | What are they at now? |
38586 | What do_ you_ think? |
38586 | What ever can''ave made the corn turn so black?"] |
38586 | What is it, a waltz or a polka? |
38586 | What the devil should I buy a comb for? |
38586 | What''s that?" |
38586 | What''s up? |
38586 | When is your young man like a fish out of water? |
38586 | Where are we, old pal? |
38586 | Where''s the change out o''that bob I gave yer?" |
38586 | Where''s the_ life_ in long lanes, with no gas- lamps? |
38586 | Which is it to be? |
38586 | Which''ouse? |
38586 | Whichever''s to steer? |
38586 | Who shall say that in the very midst of the metropolis there is not abundant evidence of a truly rural, and a tooral- looral life? |
38586 | Who''s''e?" |
38586 | Why do n''t you sound the H?" |
38586 | Why, if I''ad twopence, wot''ud I be doin''standin''outside a public''ouse?"] |
38586 | Wo n''t the owner raise a tidy riot When he twigs our scraps and broken bottles? |
38586 | Wo n''t yer''ear me? |
38586 | Wonder if old snip would spring another? |
38586 | Wot is''unger? |
38586 | Wot yer gettin''at? |
38586 | Wot''s up? |
38586 | Wot''s''Appiness? |
38586 | Wot''ud yer sy if I told yer as I''d''took the shillin''?" |
38586 | Wot, Liz? |
38586 | Wot? |
38586 | Wy, wheer are we ter go, Liz, Ter git a breath of air? |
38586 | Yer''d like ter see''em come? |
38586 | Yer''d sell yer bloomin''birthright for a pot of''arf- an-''arf? |
38586 | You an''me''s got_ our_ notions of yum- yum, as is n''t fur wide o''the mark, But who''ll give us change for''em, Charlie? |
38586 | You do n''t see any hair on my head, do you?" |
38586 | You go to die out? |
38586 | You''ll promise to give me''am sandwiches always, when we''re married, wo n''t yer?" |
38586 | _ Bill._"_ Horstrich?_''Corse not. |
38586 | _ Cabby._"_ Queen_ Hanne''s Mansions, I suppose you mean, miss?"] |
38586 | _ Cockney._"Why, it ai n''t the fust of Hoctober?"] |
38586 | _ Country Friend._"Well, what of it?" |
38586 | _ Drop in any time you''re passin''!_"]*****''ARRY ON THE MERRY MONTH OF MAY DEAR CHARLIE,''Ow are yer, old Turmuts? |
38586 | _ Farmer''s Wife( who has told the new lad from London to collect eggs)._"Well, Jack, have you got many?" |
38586 | _ First Errand Boy( after the University Boat Race)._ Wot''ave yer got a light blue ribbon in yer button''ole for, Tommy? |
38586 | _ First seaside saddle polisher._"Wot cheer,''Arry? |
38586 | _ Hangelina._"Sy? |
38586 | _ Horsekeeper._"Well, you''ve got to leave''arf a crown on the''orse?"] |
38586 | _ Little''Arry( who has had a"bad day"--to driver of public coach)._"Ever lose any money backin''''orses, coachie?" |
38586 | _ Liza Ann._"Oo er yer callin''Emmer Smith? |
38586 | _ Master._"Rather a''igh''ill we''re comin''to, ai n''t it?" |
38586 | _ Nervous P._"Er-- rather a rough sort of thoroughfare, is n''t it?" |
38586 | _ Nervous Philanthropist( on a slumming excursion)._"Can you tell me if this is Little Erebus Street, my man?" |
38586 | _ Old Farmer Worsell( who is experimenting with unemployed from London)._"Now then, young feller,''ow long are you goin''to be with that''ere milk?" |
38586 | _ Old Lady._"You know the''Royal Oak''? |
38586 | _ Second C. C.( delicately sniffing)._"Indeed, Sir Pompey? |
38586 | _ Second Combatant._"''Ow can I? |
38586 | _ Second''Arry._"Openin''of a new''earer? |
38586 | _ Stout Coster._"Where are ye goin''to, Bill?" |
38586 | _ Sympathetic Friend( to sweeper)._"What''s the use o''arstin''_''i m_, Bill? |
38586 | _ Tom._ What yer calls a sparrerawk? |
38586 | _ Vulgar Parvenu( who is watching the interior decorations of his house)._"Do n''t you think that tapestry''eats the rooms?" |
38586 | _ Waiter._"Yessir-- dry, sir?" |
38586 | _"Self- made"Man( examining school, of which he is a manager)._"Now, boy, what''s the capital of''Olland?" |
38586 | _''Arry._ Wot''s the difference between Nelson and that cove in the chair? |
38586 | _''Arry._"Ai n''t ye comin''to see the''orse run for yer money?" |
38586 | _''Arry._"I s''y-- does one tip the witers''ere?" |
38586 | _''Arry._"Ow much an hour, guv''nor?" |
38586 | _''Arry._"Then wot are we going ter do, Bill?"] |
38586 | _''Arry._"Well,_ do n''t!_"]*****[ Illustration:"I beg your pardon, ma''am, but I think you dropped this?"] |
38586 | _''Enery._"''Ullo, Chawley? |
38586 | _( Tom exhibiting a tern which he has shot)._ I say,''Arry, wot bird''s this''ere? |
38586 | do n''t they goggle and look blue When you land them with a regular"do"? |
38586 | do n''t yer think we might swop misseses just for a few hours? |
38586 | if a chap_ has_ a way with the sex, what the doose can he do? |
38586 | what''s that? |
54146 | Is this right? |
54146 | [? |
40124 | Accept, dear Miss, this_ article_ of mine,( For what''s_ indefinite_, who can_ define_?) 40124 Are you anxious to bewitch? |
40124 | Ba, ba, mouton noir, Avez vous de laine? 40124 Geist und sinn mich beutzen über Vous zu dire das ich sie liebé? |
40124 | If life were never bitter, And love were always sweet, Then who would care to borrow A moral from to- morrow? 40124 Oh why now sprechen Sie Deutsch? |
40124 | To Urn, or not to Urn? 40124 Well, Tom, are you sick again?" |
40124 | Would you see a man that''s slow? 40124 You bid me sing-- can I forget The classic odes of days gone by-- How belle Fifine and jeune Lisette Exclaimed,''Anacreon[ Greek: gerôn ei]?'' |
40124 | ''Art not content,''the maiden said,''To solve the"Fifteen"-one instead?'' |
40124 | ''Etiam si,-- Eh bien?'' |
40124 | ''How do is there?'' |
40124 | ''Is it up?'' |
40124 | ''It come in one''s? |
40124 | ''M''ami,''says he,''I does these jobs In jocum-- get up from your knees, Would you offer outright to requite a knight? |
40124 | ''Man- man,''one galo talkee he;''What for you go topside look- see?'' |
40124 | ''Till at what o''clock its had play one?'' |
40124 | ''What matters it how far we go?'' |
40124 | ''Who have prevailed upon?'' |
40124 | --_Arym._"And must we really part for good, But meet again here where we''ve stood? |
40124 | Abdul Hamid is supposed to question it as to the intentions of the European powers and his own resources:"L''Angleterre? |
40124 | Against such_ atchievements_ what beauty could fence? |
40124 | Aha Mounsieurs, voulez voz intruder par joint tenant? |
40124 | All through a hundred years? |
40124 | And I said,''What is written, sweet sister, At the opposite end of the room?'' |
40124 | And what is Brutus but a croaking owl? |
40124 | And what is Rolla? |
40124 | Another string of play- day rhymes? |
40124 | Blow of the trumpets thine children once blew for thee Break from thine feet and thine bosom the bands? |
40124 | But wives will sometimes have their way, And cause, if possible, a fray; Then who so obstinate as they? |
40124 | Can I decline a nymph so divine? |
40124 | Der Müller may tragen ein Rock Eat schwartz Brod und dem Käsè, Die Gans may be hängen on hoch, But what can it matter to me, sir? |
40124 | Did none attempt, before he fell, To succour one they loved so well? |
40124 | Dost thou ask her crime? |
40124 | Es pro bagaschiis et strumpetis? |
40124 | Et Suleiman? |
40124 | Fayre Syr, how deemest thou of yt? |
40124 | For Beauté miserable was there ever Eques who would not do and die? |
40124 | For thy domum long''st thou nonne? |
40124 | Habes wife et filios bonny? |
40124 | Hand to shake and mouth to kiss, Both he offered ere he spoke; But she said,''What man is this Comes to play a sorry joke?'' |
40124 | Have you heard of the cause? |
40124 | How is it you are in bed yet?'' |
40124 | How many apples have you had?'' |
40124 | How shall I live through all the days? |
40124 | How shall he act? |
40124 | I certainly thought I was jilted; But come thou with me, to the parson we''ll go; Say, wilt thou, my dear?'' |
40124 | I have a saddel--''Say''st thou soe? |
40124 | I''d better turn nun, and coquet with a monk, For with whom can I flirt without aid from my trunk? |
40124 | In nomine Dei, ubi sunt clerici mei jam? |
40124 | In this way:"Is his honor sic? |
40124 | In"Alice in Wonderland,"[4] by the same gentleman, there is this new version of an old nursery ditty:"''Will you walk a little faster?'' |
40124 | Is not her bosom white as snow? |
40124 | Ite igitur ad mansorium nostrum cum baggis et rotulis.--Quid i d est? |
40124 | L''Autriche? |
40124 | La Prusse? |
40124 | Mes Pashas? |
40124 | Mes cuirasses? |
40124 | Mes principautés? |
40124 | My_ case_ is singular, my house is rural, Wilt thou, indeed, consent to make it_ plural_? |
40124 | Not encore? |
40124 | Now when her conduct I survey, And in the scale of justice weigh, Who blames me, if I do inveigh Against her to my dying day? |
40124 | Or till half- price, to save his shilling, wait, And gain his hat again at half- past eight? |
40124 | Pay at the gallery- door Two shillings for what cost, when new, but four? |
40124 | Polkam, jungere, Virgo vis? |
40124 | Quid tu dicis, Musæe? |
40124 | Quæ villa, quod burgum est Logica? |
40124 | Said I,''What is it makes you bad? |
40124 | Say, why these Babel strains from Babel tongues? |
40124 | Socios Afros magis ton- y? |
40124 | Tell me where est now the gloria, Where the honours of Victoria? |
40124 | The brothers Smith reproduced Byron in the familiar"Childe Harold"stanza, both in style and thought:"For what is Hamlet, but a hare in March? |
40124 | The darts or sling, Or strong bowstring, That should us wring, And under bring? |
40124 | The farther off from England the nearer is to France-- Then turn not pale, beloved snail, but come and join the dance? |
40124 | The piper he piped on the hill- top high(_ Butter and eggs and a pound of cheese_); Till the cow said,''I die,''and the goose said,''Why?'' |
40124 | The vocabulary fills about fifty pages, and is followed by a series of"familiar phrases,"of which a few are here given:"Do which is that book? |
40124 | Their ancestors the pious praise, And like to imitate their ways How, then, does our first parent live, What lesson has his life to give? |
40124 | Then softly he whispered,''How could you do so? |
40124 | They are waiting on the shingle-- will you come and join the dance? |
40124 | This is followed by a description of the dissipation which led to these late hours--"singing, dancing, laughing, and playing"--"''What game?'' |
40124 | Ubi est Fledwit? |
40124 | Ubi est Pecus? |
40124 | We went where he dwells-- we entered the cell-- we begged the decree,--"''Where, whenever, when,''twere well Eve be wedded? |
40124 | What are they feared on? |
40124 | What for sing? |
40124 | What heart hath ever matched his flame? |
40124 | What is it ails me that I should sing of her? |
40124 | What is it now I should ask at thine hands? |
40124 | What is it, Queen, that now I should do for thee? |
40124 | What is this tale of straws and bricks? |
40124 | What pleasure say can Sie haben? |
40124 | What should I do? |
40124 | What then is left? |
40124 | What vessel bear the shock? |
40124 | Where shall we our great professor inter, That in peace may rest his bones? |
40124 | Who every way Thee vexe and pay And beare the sway By night and day, To thy dismay In battle array, And every fray? |
40124 | Why should we then forbear to sport? |
40124 | Why speak I thus? |
40124 | Why wilfully wage you this war, is All pity purged out of your breast? |
40124 | Why, heedless of the warning Which my tinkling sound doth give, Do forget, vain frame adorning, Man thou art not born to live?" |
40124 | Will you join in the polka, miss? |
40124 | Will you, wo n''t you, will you, wo n''t you, will you join the dance? |
40124 | Will you, wo n''t you, will you, wo n''t you, will you join the dance? |
40124 | Will you, wo n''t you, will you, wo n''t you, wo n''t you join the dance? |
40124 | Will you, wo n''t you, will you, wo n''t you, wo n''t you join the dance?''" |
40124 | Would you gain of fame a niche? |
40124 | Wyth styrruppes, knyghte, to boote?'' |
40124 | Ye vales, ye streams, ye groves, adieu? |
40124 | You do not mean it? |
40124 | [ 3]"''What do you mean by the reference to Greeley?'' |
40124 | _ Air._--"If I had a donkey vot vouldn''t go, Do you think I''d wallop,"& c."Had I an ass averse to speed, Deem''st thou I''d strike him? |
40124 | _ Est- ce- que- vous pensez_ I will steal it? |
40124 | _ Igno._ Amori? |
40124 | _ Igno._ Inter octo et nina? |
40124 | _ Igno._ Liberalium? |
40124 | _ Igno._ Logica? |
40124 | _ Igno._ Quota est clocka nunc? |
40124 | _ Lover._ But come, thou saucy, pert romancer, Who is as fair as Phoebe? |
40124 | _ Lover._ Has Phoebe not a heavenly brow? |
40124 | _ Lover._ Say what will turn that frisking coney Into the toils of matrimony? |
40124 | _ Lover._ Tell me, fair nymph, if ere you saw So sweet a girl as Phoebe Shaw? |
40124 | _ Shep._ But deer have horns: how must I keep her under? |
40124 | _ Shep._ But if she bang again, still should I bang her? |
40124 | _ Shep._ But what can glad me when she''s laid on bier? |
40124 | _ Shep._ How shall I please her, who ne''er loved before? |
40124 | _ Shep._ If she be wind, what stills her when she blows? |
40124 | _ Shep._ Is there no way to moderate her anger? |
40124 | _ Shep._ Lord, what is she that can so turn and wind? |
40124 | _ Shep._ Say, what can keep her chaste whom I adore? |
40124 | _ Shep._ Then teach me, Echo, how shall I come by her? |
40124 | _ Shep._ What most moves women when we them address? |
40124 | _ Shep._ What must I do when women will be cross? |
40124 | _ Shep._ What must I do when women will be kind? |
40124 | _ Shep._ What must we do our passion to express? |
40124 | _ Shep._ When bought, no question I shall be her dear? |
40124 | _ Shepherd._ Echo, I ween, will in the woods reply, And quaintly answer questions: shall I try? |
40124 | dancez- vous?'' |
40124 | or whither turn? |
40124 | was ever such a pair? |
51719 | And how did little Tim behave? |
51719 | What has ever got your precious father then? |
51719 | Why, where''s our Martha? |
51719 | _ Sweet baby, sleep; what ails my dear? 51719 How can its place ever be supplied? |
51719 | How can such blessedness be possible?" |
51719 | Oh, take the gift, in joy receive; All things are his who will believe: O little flock, what words can tell The bliss of souls Christ loved so well? |
51719 | What ails my darling thus to cry? |
51719 | What thing to thee can mischief do? |
51719 | When she left her own house she certainly had had slippers on; but of what use were they? |
51719 | _ My pretty lamb, forbear to weep; Be still, my dear; sweet baby, sleep._ Thou blessed soul, what canst thou fear? |
49511 | And then,came his voice to me, a bloodcurdling knife of a voice,"and then, how can you explain that I_ understood_ that voice?... |
49511 | May I take the liberty of adding a bit of information for the benefit of collectors of Wells''works? 49511 See?" |
49511 | Sure you want eighteen point seven five? 49511 What did he say? |
49511 | What''s got into you, Norm? |
49511 | What''s the idea of listening to some foreign station? 49511 You see?... |
49511 | ***** So it is that I wonder if I should n''t escape it all-- tossing nights, cold sweats of stark terror, a tortured, fevered brain? |
49511 | --Duane W. Rimel"Are n''t most tales that are weird and fantastic a bit horrifying? |
49511 | --Gertrude Hemken"Just what is a normal mind? |
49511 | --Robert Nelson"As to the virtue of horror stories, one might ask what virtue there is in any yarn? |
49511 | --he was n''t talking to me, he was talking to himself--"do you get that?... |
49511 | ... that''s what it means... do you hear me?" |
49511 | And why do we wish to read a sinister tale of evil or monstrosities? |
49511 | Bob Tucker, Box 260, Bloomington, Ill.*****[ Illustration: Decorative motif] Would n''t you like to know more about your favorite author? |
49511 | But may I ask that some extremely misleading misprints in my letter be corrected? |
49511 | Could you persuade him to write further articles about other famous fantasy writers? |
49511 | Do you want it? |
49511 | He said he''d have me transferred but would I stay one more night until he got a new man? |
49511 | How can it be?... |
49511 | How have you been doing, Forrie? |
49511 | I know something about geology... that was over fifty thousand years ago... do you hear me?" |
49511 | On the other hand, how many people are what you might call''normal''? |
49511 | Ross gave me a withering glance which said without words,"Sure I want it? |
49511 | What in Heaven''s name are you doing? |
49511 | What in thunder is that stuff?" |
49511 | Why in the wide world should he be clacking down something he did n''t understand? |
49511 | _ fifty thousand years ago!_"His voice became low and intense again so that my blood turned to water:"What did he say?... |
49511 | do you see what that means?" |
49511 | how can it be? |
49511 | how_ can_ it be?" |
49511 | how_ can_ it be?" |
49511 | it''s impossible... how_ can_ it be?" |
49511 | release me from this mad dream... save me from the destruction that will overwhelm me... how can it be?... |
49511 | what did I ever do to deserve this?... |
43355 | ''Ow''s that? |
43355 | And have you not observed,he asked,"That all the girls you meet Have either''Hockey elbows''or Ungainly''Cycling feet''? |
43355 | Beg your pardon, miss!--''takin''the liberty-- but--''ow does the game stand now, miss? 43355 But have you never found,"I said,"Some girl without a fault? |
43355 | But then, Emily, what happens if the bowler gets out before the batter? |
43355 | By the way-- a-- are they playing''_ Rugby_''or''_ Association_''?] |
43355 | Centre, sir? |
43355 | Do n''t you even remember''is colour, guv''nor?] |
43355 | Do you play football much, uncle?] |
43355 | Right forward? 43355 Then why are n''t you busy taking the gate- money?"] |
43355 | Well, ai n''t you_ walkin_''over?] |
43355 | Well, nurse? |
43355 | Well, what do you think of it? |
43355 | What did you do? |
43355 | What does this''B''and''C''mean, Dick? |
43355 | What have you got in that bag? |
43355 | Who the dickens is_ he_? |
43355 | Who''s won? |
43355 | why is a ball like that called a''yorker,''sir? |
43355 | (_ A cricket match._)"How''s that, umpire?"] |
43355 | (_ Why not give them a few lessons in the science of book- making?_)_ Mr. |
43355 | ), how would we be for the next match if we were treated like that? |
43355 | ***** A FEW QUESTIONS ON CRICKET_ Q._ What is"fielding"? |
43355 | ***** CRICKET HITS_ By Dumb- Crambo, off his own bat._[ Illustration: PITCHING THE WICKET][ Illustration: A MAIDEN OVER----?] |
43355 | ***** ON THE COURSE.--_Angelina._ What do they mean, dear, by the Outside Ring? |
43355 | ***** PHILOSOPHY AT THE POPPING CREASE"The glorious uncertainty?" |
43355 | ***** PUDDING IT PLAINLY.--Why is a promising cricketer like flour and eggs? |
43355 | ***** SUGGESTION TO PROVINCIAL LAWN- TENNIS CLUB.--Why not give lawn- tennis balls in costume during the winter? |
43355 | ***** THAT FOOT- BALL_ An Athletic Father''s Lament._ What was it made me cricket snub, And force my seven sons to sub- sidize a local"Rugby"Club? |
43355 | ***** TO CRICKETERS.--What would you give a thirsty batsman? |
43355 | ***** VERY RACY.--_Q._ When a parent gives his son the"straight tip"about a race, what vegetable does he recall to one''s mind? |
43355 | ***** WHAT is the companion game to Parlour Croquet? |
43355 | *****[ Illustration: AN ECHO FROM EPSOM.--"Wot''s the matter, Chawley?" |
43355 | *****[ Illustration: AT THE POST.--_First Gentleman Rider._"Who is the swell on the lame horse?" |
43355 | *****[ Illustration: COMFORTING_ Proud Mother._"Did you_ ever_ see anybody so light and slender as dear Algernon, Jack?" |
43355 | *****[ Illustration: CRICKET-- THE PRIDE OF THE VILLAGE"Good match, old fellow?" |
43355 | *****[ Illustration: GOLDEN MEMORIES.--"I wonder why Mr. Poppstein serves with three balls?" |
43355 | *****[ Illustration: THE LIMITATIONS OF FAME.--"And what are you?" |
43355 | *****[ Illustration: THE MOMENTOUS QUESTION_ Eligible Bachelor._"Shall I follow you up, Annie; or leave myself for Lizzie?"] |
43355 | *****[ Illustration: WHAT SHALL WE DO WITH OUR GIRLS? |
43355 | *****[ Illustration:_ Bowler._"How''s that?" |
43355 | *****[ Illustration:_ He._"You''re fond of cricket, then?" |
43355 | *****[ Illustration:_ Smith._"Let me put your name down for this tournament?" |
43355 | --"You know papa has been asked to play in the''Fathers against the Boys''match?" |
43355 | --Why are cricket matches like the backs of cheap chairs? |
43355 | --_ Q._ Where ought ducks''eggs to be most readily found? |
43355 | --_Pall Mall Gazette._] Eh? |
43355 | 1866]*****[ Illustration: AN OBJECTIONABLE OLD MAN.--_Young Ladies._"Going to make a flower- bed here, Smithers? |
43355 | Ai n''t he jolly well the conclusion of it?"] |
43355 | And do not our own_ garçons de collège_ kick a_ confrère_ when he is"down,"and point to the circumstance with a legitimate pride and satisfaction? |
43355 | And if it comes to that, you here, too? |
43355 | And is not he always ready to pillory the cad and the incompetent as further proof of the soundness of his heart? |
43355 | And now, what do you think about the luncheon? |
43355 | And now, what do you think of the cricket? |
43355 | Are all the women in the world Misshapen, lame or halt?" |
43355 | Are we back in the Sixties again? |
43355 | But I say, auntie, do n''t let anybody take my seat, will you?"] |
43355 | But let me explain that it is not the kick to which I object, for is not_ le coup de pied_ the national defence of France? |
43355 | But what are broken bones, my boys, Compared with noble recreation? |
43355 | But why is it called a''yorker''?" |
43355 | But-- er-- he''s rather a scrubby little person, is n''t he?" |
43355 | Can we dare to"pop the question"when they front the"popping- crease"? |
43355 | Did n''t I tell you to force the pace early and come away at the corner?" |
43355 | Do n''t you love Lord''s?" |
43355 | Eh, fetch them all out once more? |
43355 | First Sporting Gent( to second ditto, who has plunged disastrously on his advice)._"Told yer he was a foregorne conclusion for this race, did I? |
43355 | Green?" |
43355 | He iss your only ball? |
43355 | Hoop, Ball, Stick, Cage? |
43355 | How? |
43355 | I am rubbing my eyes-- is it_ then_, or now? |
43355 | I say, Grandpapa,--a-- would you mind just putting on your hat_ a little straighter_? |
43355 | I wonder if my property at Ilford is safe?" |
43355 | In what hand should a cricketer write? |
43355 | Is it lowness of average, batsman,"I cried;"Or a bad''brace of ducks''that has lowered your pride?" |
43355 | Judging from their countenances, which of these two, who have just returned from a race meeting, has"made a bit"?] |
43355 | May I? |
43355 | Miniver?" |
43355 | My fourth and fifth, poor John and Jim, What made the sight of one so dim? |
43355 | Now what''s to be done with him? |
43355 | Our"terrestrial ball"is round,( Is it an idea chimerical?) |
43355 | Pretty stiff and stale, eh, old booties? |
43355 | See that hinnercent babby there? |
43355 | Though with"leg before the wicket"your short innings may be o''er, Will the umpire be as truthful when it''s"petticoat before"? |
43355 | Well, and what more d''yer want? |
43355 | What do I stand to win?"] |
43355 | What in my second, stalwart Jack, Caused some inside machine to crack, And kept him ten months on his back--? |
43355 | What made the other lack a limb? |
43355 | What''s a centenarian, Bill? |
43355 | What? |
43355 | Why come and spoil cricket''s last pages, Our wickets-- and our averages? |
43355 | Why go in a crowd to see some horses race, when you can read all about it in the evening papers? |
43355 | Why should not young ladies be the hares?] |
43355 | Why? |
43355 | Yet, what first drew from me a sigh, When Tom, my eldest, missed a"try,"But got instead a broken thigh? |
43355 | You here? |
43355 | [ Illustration]_ Jones._ Going to Epsom? |
43355 | [_ Emily gives it up!_*****[ Illustration: EATIN''BOY AT LORD''S]***** SMALL BOY CRICKET.--_Father._ Well, and how did you get on? |
43355 | [_ Sighs deeply._]*****[ Illustration: TRIALS OF THE UMPIRE AT A LADIES''DOUBLE_ Lilian and Claribel._"It was out,_ was n''t_ it, Captain Standish?" |
43355 | _ Adeline and Eleanore._"Oh, it_ was n''t_ out, Captain Standish, was it?"] |
43355 | _ Excited Young Lady._"Father, do you know_ who_ he is? |
43355 | _ First Gentleman Rider._"Goes as if he had a caster off, eh?" |
43355 | _ He._"What part of a match do you enjoy the most?" |
43355 | _ Miss Rinkle._"Does that include_ me_?" |
43355 | _ Professional Player._"a''yorker,''sir? |
43355 | _ Q._ How do you stop a ball? |
43355 | _ Q._ How much is game? |
43355 | _ Q._ What do you call"a long slip"? |
43355 | _ Q._ When does a party change sides? |
43355 | _ Second Voice._ Why then should I follow, follow, follow, why then must I follow, follow on? |
43355 | _ Sir Charles._ But will you repay me the money laid out? |
43355 | and wo n''t you repay our trouble, booties, when next we slip you on? |
43355 | booties, booties, you little beauties, what a lot you mean to us, do n''t you? |
43355 | great slogger, pray what are you at, Singing''Willow, wet- willow, wet- willow''? |
43355 | have n''t you heard of him? |
43355 | he said,"what is it?" |
43355 | of what had he too much? |
43355 | old men, that''s not right, is it? |
46497 | ( How, then, did he know they_ were_ his comrades?) |
46497 | (_ a_) What is the nature of the Arthurian tradition itself? |
46497 | (_ b_) What was the popular form assumed by that tradition at the time Chrétien wrote? |
46497 | --that was answered in the affirmative long before Chrétien''s day-- but,''When did Lancelot become her lover? |
46497 | 175_ et seq._ Now how are all these points of contact to be explained? |
46497 | A man( dwarf?) |
46497 | And if that original story was not the fountain- story, what was it? |
46497 | And if we are at a loss for material to adequately criticise the earlier story, what of the later? |
46497 | And what was this germ? |
46497 | Are these relations, then, an invention of Chrétien, or were they already familiar to the public for whom he wrote? |
46497 | But how do these three stand as regards each other? |
46497 | But what would Professor Foerster say? |
46497 | But_ is_ it a''_ Naturgetreue_''description of Ireland at all? |
46497 | Did Wolfram borrow from Ulrich? |
46497 | Hearing that Lanzelet is a prisoner at Plurîs, Gawain, Karjet( Gaheriet? |
46497 | How did latter return for tourney? |
46497 | How then did Lancelot come into the Arthurian cycle? |
46497 | How then did the latter appear upon the scene, and in what light are we to regard the romances dealing with him? |
46497 | How too did Professor Foerster come to ignore the real character of Guinevere''s imprisonment? |
46497 | How was it possible to preserve intact at once Lancelot''s superiority and the purity of the Christian talisman? |
46497 | Is the form in which we possess it practically the original form, or are we to postulate a series of successive redactions? |
46497 | Is there any one living scholar who is perfectly aware of_ all_ the evidence at our disposal for any of the great stories of the cycle? |
46497 | Is this not rather a description of the fabled Irish Paradise which Chrétien and Giraldus alike have borrowed from a source common to both? |
46497 | It may be asked, how did so simple a_ lai_ as we here postulate attain so great a popularity? |
46497 | It sounds as if it might be Celtic, or can he be in any way connected with Maugis, the resourceful cousin of''_ Les quatre fils Aginon_''? |
46497 | L. slays twenty(? |
46497 | L.=_ nor_= 1533=_ give ten names, the latter adds to those mentioned Les Hardi[ le Laid Hardi?] |
46497 | Meanwhile, what of the romance which had given the initial impulse to the formation of the Lancelot story, the_ Tristan_? |
46497 | Meets dwarf, maiden has stolen his brachet; will Y. get it back for him? |
46497 | Now what does Hartmann say? |
46497 | Or could Perceval have been the hero of some other tale, the popularity of which has waned before that of Chrétien''s poem? |
46497 | So much for theory, what now are the facts? |
46497 | The question is, are we to consider it the work of a later writer, or does it represent an early_ Perceval_ romance, worked over for cyclic purposes? |
46497 | The question is, what was the nature of that seed-- what the relation of the original Arthurian legend to the completed Arthurian romance? |
46497 | The question is_ not_,''Did the queen have a lover?'' |
46497 | The_ possibility_ of transmission is as clear as daylight; the question of course is, Would Marie be inclined to take advantage of it? |
46497 | Then ought we not to distinguish between_ romantic_ and_ mythic_? |
46497 | Was it not because the story was unknown to the general public with whom the tale itself counted for more than the skill with which it was told? |
46497 | Was it the greater popularity of_ Merlin_ which displaced him? |
46497 | Was it through the version of the_ Charrette_?'' |
46497 | What are the facts? |
46497 | What claim have they to be admitted to a feast so holy that even King Pelles and his son are excluded? |
46497 | What is the connection between the_ Lanzelet_ and the_ Parzival_ of Wolfram von Eschenbach? |
46497 | What is the origin of his name? |
46497 | What prisoner? |
46497 | When serpent finds it can not slay leopard returns to hall( chamber? |
46497 | Where has he spent the night? |
46497 | Where would these stories, Arthurian and Irish, be most likely to meet and mingle, in Great Britain, or in Armorica? |
46497 | Who are these knights? |
46497 | Who more fitted to become the mother of the Grail Winner than the fair maiden who filled the office of Grail- bearer? |
46497 | Why not challenge a single combat at the court, where there would be a public to see that the rules of such combat were observed? |
46497 | Why then did he not explain them to Godefroy de Leigni, who finished the poem with Chrétien''s approval? |
46497 | Why turn from the geography of_ Erec_ to that of_ Cligés_ and the_ Charrette_, only to revert to his first love in_ Yvain_ and_ Perceval_? |
46497 | Why, for instance, does Meleagant suggest that Guinevere shall be put in charge of a knight and follow him? |
46497 | Will Y. give her the knight''s horse? |
46497 | [ 189] What now are the results we may deduce from this examination of four versions of the Galahad_ Queste_? |
46497 | [ 193] Leaving the question of Malory, what may we hold to be the result of this examination on the problem of the_ Queste_ itself? |
46497 | [ 195] Can we decide what special form of the Perceval_ Queste_ the Galahad variant was intended to supersede? |
36712 | ''But were you not afraid,''I asked,''downstairs?'' 36712 ''How do you mean, killed?'' |
36712 | ''Incident?'' 36712 ''No,''I said, and then I stammered,''Have you?'' |
36712 | ''That she might follow me? 36712 ''What can I have done to her that she follows me so?'' |
36712 | ''What could happen?'' 36712 ''What else? |
36712 | ''What is that?'' 36712 ''What?'' |
36712 | ''Where had I got to? 36712 ''You do n''t mean to say you saw her?'' |
36712 | ''You felt her?'' 36712 ''You remember nothing else?'' |
36712 | Alive? |
36712 | Am bheil thu''dol do Fhionphort? |
36712 | And are not these poor people right? 36712 And can you speak to him here?" |
36712 | And could He give a soul to me? |
36712 | And do you know the future of your friend? |
36712 | And do you love him still, as of old? |
36712 | And for what? |
36712 | And how do you gain the information desired? |
36712 | And how would that thing be done? |
36712 | And is it to one of these that he says,''Thy will be done''? |
36712 | And the evil does not abide? |
36712 | And what has his will to do with that? |
36712 | And what will it be, then, you that are my friend, and sure knowing me as Aulay mac Luais-- Aulay Macneill that never grudges you bit or sup? |
36712 | And where is your witch? 36712 And who are you?" |
36712 | And why is that, mother? |
36712 | And why that... why till this day? |
36712 | And why that? |
36712 | And you are not going there? |
36712 | And you will be alone now, too, I am thinking, Sheen? |
36712 | And you will be knowing what is done? |
36712 | Are a few years, then, as nothing? |
36712 | Are you the friend of Sheen Macarthur? |
36712 | As of old? |
36712 | But what are their ceremonies? 36712 But what is it done for?" |
36712 | Do you know there is a death here, Macallum? |
36712 | Do you think you could learn to say it, too? |
36712 | Even if it separates you from your friend? |
36712 | For a purpose? |
36712 | For loving you? |
36712 | From Tiree... from Coll? |
36712 | From the Long Island... or from Uist... or maybe from Benbecula? |
36712 | Have you never heard of God? |
36712 | How can it separate me from my friend, if the Father is the Self of him? |
36712 | How could our Father help me? |
36712 | How dare you appear before us? 36712 How long do you suppose elapsed between the boy''s murder and his breaking the nursery window?" |
36712 | I am thinking it is a long time since you have been in Iona? |
36712 | I asked,''What has happened?'' 36712 If a man die, shall he live again?" |
36712 | Indeed? 36712 Is it likely,"she resumed,"that a person born under such circumstances is like others-- is what you call sane?" |
36712 | Is it possible you never came across these fossils in European museums? 36712 Is that you, Neil Ross?" |
36712 | It will be a thing often done, is it not? |
36712 | Little old man, sir? 36712 Nothing?" |
36712 | She? |
36712 | Soon he repeated the question,''Lost anything?'' 36712 The One he will re- become?" |
36712 | The corpse- lights? |
36712 | The man Macallum? |
36712 | The village? 36712 Then how will you be getting across to Iona? |
36712 | Then is the Father in heaven really the Self of my friend? |
36712 | There is no harm to it? |
36712 | This a woman''s voice? 36712 To France?" |
36712 | Well, have you more to be saying to me? 36712 Well? |
36712 | Well? |
36712 | Well? |
36712 | What can this be? |
36712 | What curse? |
36712 | What curse? |
36712 | What do you mean by coming here and trying to blackmail me? |
36712 | What do you wish, sir? |
36712 | What does he call Him? |
36712 | What ground have you for saying so, I wonder? |
36712 | What harm could be done by it? 36712 What is the matter with him?" |
36712 | What is your name, for I seem to know you? |
36712 | What laugh? |
36712 | What name? |
36712 | What were you doing there? |
36712 | What will the name of you be, shepherd? |
36712 | What would you do for a silver piece, Neil, my man? |
36712 | Where is your friend and master? |
36712 | Where will you be staying this night? |
36712 | Which way? |
36712 | Who is he,I repeated--"the little old man who played the clavecin?" |
36712 | Who knows? 36712 Why not?" |
36712 | Why not? |
36712 | Why? |
36712 | Will you be remembering that? |
36712 | With the bread... and the water...? |
36712 | Would you kiss a dead man for a crown- piece-- a crown- piece of five good shillings? |
36712 | You are determined to have my reason? |
36712 | You are the man that was the Sin- Eater over there? |
36712 | You live there, do n''t you? |
36712 | You sent in word that you were in Mill Valley last night? |
36712 | You that know who I am will be knowing that I have no kith or kin now on Iona? |
36712 | ''And never heard of him?'' |
36712 | ''But,''he said,''I have the man''s portrait in my house in South Africa, how could you get it?'' |
36712 | ''Do you mean him as died in the Transvaal lately?'' |
36712 | ''Is he dead, then?'' |
36712 | ''Well,''he said,''was he a man like that?'' |
36712 | ''What are ye talkin''about?'' |
36712 | ''What did they call him?'' |
36712 | ''What makes you ask? |
36712 | ''What''s the matter with the room?'' |
36712 | ''What,''I said,''do you know him?'' |
36712 | ''Will you do so?'' |
36712 | ''Yes,''I said,''what about it?'' |
36712 | All you say to me I feel that I have heard before, but where? |
36712 | And again I sunk into visions of Ligeia-- and again,( what marvel that I shudder while I write?) |
36712 | And now, tell me, is it safe that I am? |
36712 | And the chin, with its dimples, as in health, might it not be hers?--but_ had she then grown taller since her malady_? |
36712 | And they say ill of him, do they?" |
36712 | And was he satisfied?" |
36712 | And what do you think?... |
36712 | And what thrill is comparable to that which comes from contact with the supermortal? |
36712 | And with that he laughed, and then his wife that was behind him laughed, and then....""Well, what then?" |
36712 | And you, now? |
36712 | Are we not part and parcel in Thee? |
36712 | Before he knew what he was saying he asked it,"Is she ill?" |
36712 | But do you mean to say that this strange people worshipped Captain Pole also?" |
36712 | But had not Jeanne her visions?" |
36712 | But may I be asking your name?" |
36712 | But what was this? |
36712 | But when? |
36712 | But where is it that I can be sleeping this night, Sheen Macarthur?" |
36712 | But where, what, with whom? |
36712 | But who would have gripped that thing if he were for seeing what I saw? |
36712 | But why did the fear so afflicting to her health and spirits so suddenly leave her, while it was still winter in the mountains? |
36712 | But why is a sensitive necessary? |
36712 | But why should I minutely detail the unspeakable horrors of that night? |
36712 | But you will question on, untiringly, through the nights and days of years:"Who are you? |
36712 | By what name am I to call you, since you will answer to none that I remember? |
36712 | Can evil touch me between this and the sea?" |
36712 | Could a simple"hallucination"have been so widespread and so prevalent? |
36712 | Could it indeed be Rowena at all-- the fair- haired, the blue- eyed Lady Rowena Trevanion of Tremaine? |
36712 | Could it, indeed, be the living Rowena who confronted me? |
36712 | Did not these bushes grow on sacred ground? |
36712 | Do you know any one of that name?'' |
36712 | Do you know him?'' |
36712 | Do you mean we are to watch her performance in complete darkness?" |
36712 | Do you understand?" |
36712 | For a moment I thought he must be walking in his sleep, but he turned to me quite naturally and said in his own boyish voice:"''Lost anything?'' |
36712 | Growth? |
36712 | Had n''t they seen him with a sword on every''quid''they''d ever seen? |
36712 | He takes them away; and are you for thinking God would let the innocent suffer for the guilty? |
36712 | How do we know that the avouching unknown could not have been sold a gold brick? |
36712 | How had I deserved to be so blessed by such confessions? |
36712 | How had I deserved to be so cursed with the removal of my beloved in the hour of her making them? |
36712 | How was she busy, occupied-- not here to give him tea? |
36712 | I am conscious of low openings from time to time-- openings to what? |
36712 | I but indistinctly recall the fact itself-- what wonder that I have utterly forgotten the circumstances which originated or attended it? |
36712 | I fancied that my face showed all too plainly the incredulity I felt, for his darkened, and he muttered,"You not belief, Engelsch? |
36712 | I waited for him, made sure of him, began to feel giddy, and then a man''s voice, deep and clear:"''There is some one there; who is it?'' |
36712 | I would be doing it myself, and that gladly, but the... the... passer- by who....""It is talking of the Sin- Eater you are?" |
36712 | In my excitement I seized her by the arm, saying,"Who was the little old man in the black velvet coat with the ruffles? |
36712 | Is it any money you are having upon you?" |
36712 | Is it from Iona you are?" |
36712 | Is not their sap impregnated with the incense of offerings, and the exhalations of holy anchorites, who once lived and breathed here?" |
36712 | Is the.... Are you ready?" |
36712 | It enabled him to choose the right thing to gratify the personal tastes of each demon, do n''t you see? |
36712 | Many a reader will be disposed to answer the question"why?" |
36712 | May I be so bold as to ask whose son, and of what place?'' |
36712 | Maybe you are for knowing it? |
36712 | No?" |
36712 | Now numbers are asking in addition,"Can we have communication with the dead?" |
36712 | Now, what constitutes a sensitive, and why are they necessary? |
36712 | Once again he appeared, and seemed to say to me,''Why did you do that, E----? |
36712 | Or was it a test of my strength of affection, that I should institute no inquiries upon this point? |
36712 | Or was it rather a caprice of my own-- a wildly romantic offering on the shrine of the most passionate devotion? |
36712 | Say what''s this thou touchest?_ THE TOUCH. |
36712 | Shall these things be undeviatingly so? |
36712 | Shall this conqueror be not once conquered? |
36712 | She was drawing the majority to her way of thinking when, from the corner where the girl sat, a hollow- sounding voice:"And the boy? |
36712 | The bandage lay heavily about the mouth-- but then might it not be the mouth of the breathing Lady of Tremaine? |
36712 | The... the... person... the person takes them away, and....""_ Them?_""For sure, man! |
36712 | Then, before you could say"knife,"the Germans had turned, and we were after them, fighting like ninety...""Where was this?" |
36712 | There is no harm in that, sure?" |
36712 | This only I know beyond doubt-- that you are of the Past; you belong to memory-- but to the memory of what dead suns?" |
36712 | Vainly you ask yourself,"Whose voice? |
36712 | Ward?" |
36712 | Was he not, too, another Judas, to have sold for silver that which was not for the selling? |
36712 | Was it a playful charge on the part of my Ligeia? |
36712 | Was it a special attention, or was it merely casual? |
36712 | Was it not a matter for the knowing that the corpse could hear, and might rise up in the night and clothe itself in a clean white shroud? |
36712 | Was it only a dream, a coincidence?" |
36712 | We asked, thinking that the answer was absurd, as we knew him to be alive and well:"''Are you dead?'' |
36712 | We said:"''Who are you?'' |
36712 | What are you? |
36712 | What could it have been that he had overlooked, left undone, omitted to see to? |
36712 | What do you mean to see me about? |
36712 | What do you want?" |
36712 | What in the world was it, now?" |
36712 | What is He?" |
36712 | What is it you are muttering over against the lips of the dead?" |
36712 | What is the rune that is said for the throwing into the sea of the sins of the dead? |
36712 | What is this weird relation that you bear to me? |
36712 | What was it-- that something more profound than the well of Democritus-- which lay far within the pupils of my beloved? |
36712 | What will the name of your naming be, and of your father, and of his place?" |
36712 | What would she think of him, now? |
36712 | What, then, do we mean by this word"conditions"? |
36712 | What_ was_ it? |
36712 | When I was sitting, he said,''There he is, and I see the letter R. Is it Robert or Richard, do you think?'' |
36712 | Where is he?" |
36712 | Where is he?" |
36712 | Who can tell? |
36712 | Who knoweth the mysteries of the will, with its vigor? |
36712 | Who knoweth the mysteries of the will, with its vigor? |
36712 | Who spoke in those deep manly tones? |
36712 | Who-- who knoweth the mysteries of the will with its vigor? |
36712 | Whose face?" |
36712 | Why had he not sent a tentative, tactful letter, feeling his way a little? |
36712 | Why had he telegraphed the very day after his arrival in England? |
36712 | Why have you come to tell me?" |
36712 | Why in the world had he come? |
36712 | Why is this? |
36712 | Why tremble? |
36712 | Why,_ why_ should I doubt it? |
36712 | Why? |
36712 | Will you be passing this way to anywhere?" |
36712 | Will you have been hearing or seeing anything?" |
36712 | You know, I am not superstitious.... Am I?..." |
36712 | You recall our promise?" |
36712 | You sall not see the clavecin yet? |
36712 | _ Taste this bread, this substance: tell me Is it bread or flesh?_[_ The Senses approach._] THE SMELL. |
36712 | he asked, in a weak voice hoarse with damp and fatigue;"how is it you will be knowing that I have been in Iona at all?" |
36712 | how dare you to stand on this holy ground in boots made of a cow''s sacred skin? |
36712 | tried the shepherd again:"Are you going to Fionnaphort?" |
46427 | --------(_ For a general grave on Vimy Ridge_) You come from England? |
46427 | Ah, what has England done? |
46427 | And in the land they guard so well Is there no silent watch to keep? |
46427 | And pass with the willing and worthy to give Life, that freedom and faith may live? |
46427 | And through the leagues above her She looked, aghast, and said:"What is this living ship that comes Where every ship is dead?" |
46427 | But in what Spartan school of discipline Did you get patience, boy? |
46427 | Dash the bomb on the dome of Paul''s-- Deem ye the fame of the Admiral falls? |
46427 | David 118 What Has England Done? |
46427 | GILBERT MURRAY_ By permission of the Author_ LUSITANIA(_ May 7, 1915_) Who that can strike a blow Now will refrain? |
46427 | Glory sought is Honour lost, How should this be knighthood''s end? |
46427 | Grievous the pain; but, in the day When all the cost is counted o''er, Would it be best that you should say:"We lost no loved ones in the war"? |
46427 | Guns of Metz they grumble,"When?" |
46427 | Hast thou counted up the cost, What to foeman, what to friend? |
46427 | Have you any five- pound notes about you? |
46427 | Have you any of those neat little Treasury one- pound notes? |
46427 | He called out,"Who''s that coming along?" |
46427 | How did you learn to bear this long- drawn pain And not complain? |
46427 | How stem the sweep of the conquering tide? |
46427 | Is she England still? |
46427 | Is this the end of all our woes? |
46427 | JOHN OXENHAM_ By permission of the Author_ WHAT HAS BRITAIN DONE? |
46427 | Know''st thou what is Hatred''s meed? |
46427 | May I say let us keep both eyes? |
46427 | May I tell you, in a simple parable, what I think this war is doing for us? |
46427 | Pry the stone from the chancel floor,-- Dream ye that Shakespeare shall live no more? |
46427 | Restless with throbbing hopes, with thwarted aims, Impulsive as a colt, How do you lie here month by weary month Helpless and not revolt? |
46427 | SIR OWEN SEAMAN EDITH CAVELL(_ October 12, 1915_) Dead? |
46427 | See now, our mother, these are they that clung Once to thy breasts, and are they not well sung?" |
46427 | Shall we not suffer more?" |
46427 | The ghostly vessels trembled From ruined stern to prow; What was this thing of terror That broke their vigil now? |
46427 | The grim_ Titanic_ greeted her--"And who art thou?" |
46427 | WHAT HAS ENGLAND DONE? |
46427 | WHAT OF THE FIGHT? |
46427 | WINSTON CHURCHILL THE DEBT UNPAYABLE What have I given, Bold sailor on the sea, In earth or heaven, That you should die for me? |
46427 | What are they made of? |
46427 | What are they worth? |
46427 | What can I give, O soldier, leal and brave, Long as I live, To pay the life you gave? |
46427 | What harvest might we hope from such a sowing? |
46427 | What has Britain done? |
46427 | What has Britain done? |
46427 | What has Britain done? |
46427 | What has Britain done? |
46427 | What has Britain done? |
46427 | What has England done? |
46427 | What has she done? |
46427 | What is a treaty, says the German Chancellor, but a scrap of paper? |
46427 | What is it to us if the world is mad? |
46427 | What joy can these monotonous days afford Here in a ward? |
46427 | What matter? |
46427 | What noonday from a dawning so complete? |
46427 | What of the fight? |
46427 | What of the fight? |
46427 | What of the men of the furrow, men of the hammer and spade, Men without heart for the soldier, loathing his life and his trade? |
46427 | What the surest gain of Greed? |
46427 | What tithe or part Can I return to thee, O stricken heart, That thou shouldst break for me? |
46427 | What? |
46427 | When the reply was,"General Currie", he said,"Are the Canadians coming down here?" |
46427 | Where else in the whole world can such conditions be paralleled? |
46427 | Where is the giant shot that kills Wordsworth walking the old green hills? |
46427 | Where is the ideal of the Germany of to- day? |
46427 | Who can have any ease Now while they live? |
46427 | Who dies if England live? |
46427 | Who knows? |
46427 | Who stands if freedom fall? |
46427 | Who that can strike a blow Now will refrain? |
46427 | Who that has prayed for peace Now will forgive? |
46427 | Who with the right to go Now will remain? |
46427 | Who with the right to go Now will remain? |
46427 | Who? |
46427 | Why is our honour as a country involved in this war? |
46427 | Why? |
46427 | Winston 16 What of the Fight? |
46427 | With the world in the balance, what shall decide? |
46427 | You ask what she has done? |
46427 | Your feet were bleeding as You walked our pavements-- How_ did_ we miss Your Footprints on our pavements?-- Can there be other folk as blind as we? |
46427 | _ Punishment?_ What punishment could fit so foul a crime? |
46427 | _ Punishment?_ What punishment could fit so foul a crime? |
46427 | she said;"Why dost thou join our ghostly fleet Arrayed in living red? |
46427 | whither have we fled, my son? |
46427 | wilt thou dare to- night Pray that God defend the Right? |
45198 | Did he say''_ Bayonne_''? 45198 Do you happen to know if the 38th Regiment was engaged?" |
45198 | What d''''ee mean by crying stale fish at that rate? |
45198 | What news? |
45198 | ''"Did you know, trumpeter, that, when I came to Plymouth, they put me into a line regiment?" |
45198 | ''"How should it be with me? |
45198 | ''"Troop- Sergeant- Major Thomas Irons, how is it with you?" |
45198 | ''"Trooper Henry Buckingham, how is it with you?" |
45198 | ''"What''s taken yer heye?" |
45198 | ''And now to end this, sir, what do you think happened to that there Mason? |
45198 | ''And the trumpeter just lifted the lids of his eyes, and answered,"How should I not be one with you, drummer Johnny-- Johnny boy? |
45198 | ''And where shall I meet him, Maister William?'' |
45198 | ''Are we to the brink itself?'' |
45198 | ''But what else did he see? |
45198 | ''Can yer read?'' |
45198 | ''Do you want a job?'' |
45198 | ''Hae ye settled wi''him yoursel'', sir? |
45198 | ''Has he ever been hung?'' |
45198 | ''Is it a dyke?'' |
45198 | ''Is it a good yarn?'' |
45198 | ''Is it not all in my song?'' |
45198 | ''It is your name?'' |
45198 | ''Ken ye Sir William Maxwell?'' |
45198 | ''Ken ye o''ony lass that wad tak''up wi''ye, Robin?'' |
45198 | ''Look here,''said he;''I do n''t know who y''are, but do n''t yer like that there pillar?'' |
45198 | ''Now what do yer think he had seen in that telescope? |
45198 | ''Saw ye him never there?'' |
45198 | ''Tell me quickly, what it is? |
45198 | ''Tell me, you, does the earth we stand on seem ever to you to be turning round?'' |
45198 | ''The drummer walked past my father as if he never saw him, and stood by the elbow- chair and said:--''"Trumpeter, trumpeter, are you one with me?" |
45198 | ''The man answered,"How should it be with me? |
45198 | ''The trumpeter looked down on him from the height of six foot two, and asked:"Did they die well?" |
45198 | ''Then why do n''t yer go home? |
45198 | ''Then why do n''t you go and find out for yourself?'' |
45198 | ''Thomas,''said I, pointing to the leaning figure,''who is that queer little chap?'' |
45198 | ''What have we here?'' |
45198 | ''What should he do? |
45198 | ''What sorter job?'' |
45198 | ''What want ye, yochel?'' |
45198 | ''What will he want here?'' |
45198 | ''What''s that obelisk?'' |
45198 | ''What''s your name?'' |
45198 | ''Whither gang ye?'' |
45198 | ''Whose ghosts, Matthew?'' |
45198 | ''Will ye come and help to catch the King''s officer, or will ye not?'' |
45198 | And again, would it be the waters of Dunlogher that would tear themselves for an O''Sullivan? |
45198 | And so, it may be, by next time I write, there will go good news to you, and-- will you then come back, dear Cousin Dick? |
45198 | And wha kens but that auld thrawn Turk, Sir William, may happen on us?'' |
45198 | And what might you be doin''here?" |
45198 | And you,--do I not know, Cousin Dick, what you did? |
45198 | Another wreck, you say? |
45198 | Aye, young Robin of Airyolan, and are you here? |
45198 | Did we ever see sign of them afterward? |
45198 | Did you think aw was goin''to gie my neck to the noose just to put your knife to proper use? |
45198 | Do you mind how, when I passed you comin''in, I laid my hand on yours as it rested on the dresser? |
45198 | For what cause should I go to them? |
45198 | Hae ye settled with the gauger for shackling him by the hill of Physgill?'' |
45198 | Have you hope that-- that--?'' |
45198 | Have you thought that it may be she-- whisper now!--that she may belong to the water?'' |
45198 | He looked at me slowly, beginning at my waistcoat, and answered:''What''s that got to do with you?'' |
45198 | Heard ye no''that the partans are on the sands?'' |
45198 | His head came back to its bearings, and he answered:''What''s what?'' |
45198 | How do I know of it all? |
45198 | How will he speak concerning myself?'' |
45198 | How will they rise at the blessed Resurrection, with all that burden of stone to hold them down? |
45198 | Send up a rocket, if he should find such a thing in the vessel? |
45198 | So you played on your drum when the ship was goin''down? |
45198 | The parson listened, and put a question or two, and then asked,--''"Have you tried to open the lock since that night?" |
45198 | The people aboard the Gull lightship did n''t see him or take any notice; what was that there Mason going to do? |
45198 | Then, with abruptness, he asked:--''What age were you, Owny Hea, when the McSwineys put out your eyes? |
45198 | There''s nothen''to keep yer''ere, I''ope? |
45198 | Try to kedge her off himself? |
45198 | Was n''t that good of him, Tommy? |
45198 | Were you strong enough to remember the sun well?'' |
45198 | What am I to do?'' |
45198 | What did he see? |
45198 | What does the King on his throne say? |
45198 | What is it?'' |
45198 | What was there to find? |
45198 | What''s your name?" |
45198 | When he got aboard he sung out,"Anybody here?" |
45198 | Why do n''t you, and the like of you, level it,--knock the blamed thing into blocks of stone, and build a house with them for a good man to live in? |
45198 | Why do they look for them to be iron like themselves, bearing double burdens as most women do? |
45198 | Why will your lips be so silent? |
45198 | Will this gentleman bind the King of Spain to that?'' |
45198 | Wilt thou not come back to her? |
45198 | Would they be waiting for my kisses to waken them? |
45198 | You had come, dear Cousin Dick, to ask me one thing,--if I loved you? |
45198 | You remember how we saw the coastguards flash their lights here and there, as they searched the sands for me? |
45198 | [ Illustration:_ Old Jim Mason''s the worst- tempered man on the coast._]''Love?'' |
45198 | [ Illustration:_''What''s taken yer heye? |
45198 | and if, should you ever be free to come back, I would be your wife? |
45198 | how one came bundling down the bank, calling,''Who goes there?'' |
42400 | Does it, dear? 42400 Has he? |
42400 | Oh, Edwin, how_ do_ you think of such beautiful things?] |
42400 | Oh, pa dear, what did Geo---- what did young Mr. Brown want? |
42400 | Rejected you, did she? 42400 Well, mum, I had three good characters with her?"] |
42400 | Why do you wear a pink blouse, dear? 42400 Why not_ give them all up_, dear?"] |
42400 | Why,_ can_ he sing? |
42400 | You look very melancholy, George; are you sorry you married me? |
42400 | _ My''eart!_]***** MARRIAGE MEMORIES_ What the Father says._--Which side must I stand on when I give her away? |
42400 | (_ After a pause._)"Did she refuse you too?"] |
42400 | (_ Pointing to his olive branches in the background._)"Them''s ruin enough for me?"] |
42400 | ***** A BAD PRE- EMINENCE.--What is there beats a good wife? |
42400 | ***** A HAPPY HOLIDAY.--_The Bachelor._"So you''re looking after the house while your wife is taking a holiday? |
42400 | ***** ACCOUNTED FOR AT LAST.--Is it not strange that the"best man"at a wedding is not the bridegroom? |
42400 | ***** HOW TO CURE AN IMPRUDENT ATTACHMENT.--_Materfamilias._"What_ is_ to be done, my dear? |
42400 | ***** HOW TO FIX THE HAPPY DAY.--_Q._ When''s the best day for a wedding? |
42400 | ***** OUR VILLAGE INDUSTRIAL COMPETITION.--_Husband( just home from the City)._"My angel!--crying!--whatever''s the matter?" |
42400 | ***** SCIENTIFIC ACCURACY.--"But_ why_ do you want to marry her?" |
42400 | ***** SHE"JESTS AT SCARS,"ETC.--_Aunt._"And how''s Louisa, my dear? |
42400 | ***** SIMPLE.--_Q._ When is a man tied to time? |
42400 | ***** THE DESIRE OF PLEASING.--"May I be married, ma?" |
42400 | ***** THE LUXURY OF LIBERTY.--_Bosom Friend._"Well, dear, now that you are a widow, tell me are you any the happier for it?" |
42400 | ***** THE OLDEST AND THE SHORTEST DRAMA IN THE WORLD.--_He._"Will you?" |
42400 | ***** THINGS ONE WOULD RATHER HAVE LEFT UNSAID.--"Well, but if you ca n''t bear her, whatever made you propose?" |
42400 | *****"SO SELFISH?" |
42400 | *****[ Illustration: APPEARANCES ARE DECEPTIVE_ He._"Who''s that?" |
42400 | *****[ Illustration: BREAKING THE NEWS_ Newly Affianced One._"May I be your new mamma, Tommy?" |
42400 | *****[ Illustration: CAUTION_ Married Sister._"And of course, Laura, you will go to Rome or Florence for your honeymoon?" |
42400 | *****[ Illustration: COLD SYMPATHY_ Friend._"Hullo, old man, what''s the matter?" |
42400 | *****[ Illustration: DECIDEDLY PLEASANT_ Genial Youth._"I say, Gubby, old chap, is this really true about your going to marry my sister Edie?" |
42400 | *****[ Illustration: DIFFERENT ASPECTS_ She._"Is n''t it a pretty view?" |
42400 | *****[ Illustration: EVIDENCE OF AN EYE- WITNESS_ Guest._"Why do you believe in second sight, Major?" |
42400 | *****[ Illustration: HE HAD BEEN KICKED OUT ONCE_ She._"Wot time be you a- coming round to- night, Jock?" |
42400 | *****[ Illustration: INGRATITUDE_ Brown._"Why does n''t Walker stop to speak? |
42400 | *****[ Illustration: OLD FRIENDS_ He._"Do you remember your old school- friend Sophy Smythe?" |
42400 | *****[ Illustration: ONE GOOD TURN DESERVES ANOTHER_ She._"But if you say you ca n''t bear the girl, why_ ever_ did you propose?" |
42400 | *****[ Illustration: THE DIVORCE SHOP_ Private Inquiry Agent._"Want a divorce, sir? |
42400 | *****[ Illustration: Time--3 A.M.]_ Voice from above._"Is that you, John? |
42400 | *****[ Illustration:"Can I go abroad to finish, ma?" |
42400 | *****[ Illustration:"DECEIVERS EVER"_ Goldsmith._"Would you like any name or motto engraved on it, sir?" |
42400 | *****[ Illustration:"FOR THE THIRD TIME OF ASKING"_ Aunt Mary._"You heard the vicar publish the banns between Uncle George and Ellen Thompson?" |
42400 | *****[ Illustration:"FOR THIS RELIEF----?" |
42400 | *****[ Illustration:"IS IT A FAILURE?" |
42400 | *****[ Illustration:"Was he very much cast down after he''d spoken to papa?" |
42400 | *****[ Illustration:"_ Are_ you comin''''ome?" |
42400 | *****[ Illustration:_ Brown._"I say, old man, who''s that very plain elderly lady you were walking with-- now sitting here?" |
42400 | *****[ Illustration:_ Ethel._"Why, what''s the matter, Gertrude?" |
42400 | *****[ Illustration:_ First Young Wife._"Do you find it more economical, dear, to do your own cooking?" |
42400 | *****[ Illustration:_ He._"How would you like to own a-- er-- a little puppy?" |
42400 | *****[ Illustration:_ She._"But, George, suppose papa settles my dowry on me in my own right?" |
42400 | *****[ Illustration:_''Liza._"Wot''s it feel like, bein''in love, Kytie?" |
42400 | --_Husband._"I say, Lizzie, what on earth did you make this mint- sauce of?" |
42400 | AMELIA.--Have you not been rather indiscreet? |
42400 | And have you given up your occupation of washing?" |
42400 | And is it_ invariably_ the case, my love?"] |
42400 | And what has he for sale? |
42400 | And you will do what I ask? |
42400 | Are n''t you pleased?" |
42400 | Brookes?" |
42400 | But why do you ask?" |
42400 | But_ this_ kind of shop? |
42400 | Can you cut your old friends? |
42400 | Can you do what you are told without being told why? |
42400 | Can you keep your temper when you are not listened to? |
42400 | Can you maintain your serenity during a washing- day? |
42400 | Can you stand being contradicted in the face of all reason? |
42400 | Can you wait any given time for breakfast? |
42400 | Do n''t you remember that Spring? |
42400 | Do you know which is more economical, the aitch- bone, or the round? |
42400 | Do you know, my dear, I had an onion yesterday for the first time these fourteen years?" |
42400 | Do you like the_ menu_? |
42400 | Do you see what I have written instead of_"Sweetheart"_? |
42400 | Do you think I''m as big a fool as I look?" |
42400 | Find? |
42400 | Has nowt fur to say?" |
42400 | Have me, dear? |
42400 | He should be further examined thus:-- Can you read or write amid the yells of a nursery? |
42400 | He''s never here now?" |
42400 | How far, young man, will a leg of mutton go in a small family? |
42400 | How is that?" |
42400 | How much a year? |
42400 | How much dearer, now, is silver than Britannia? |
42400 | I always thought he was a woman- hater?" |
42400 | I hope it''s nothing serious?" |
42400 | I hope she''s enjoying the change?" |
42400 | I thought you cared for nobody but me?" |
42400 | I will not ask if thou canst touch The tuneful ivory key? |
42400 | If you could have mine it would be all right, would n''t it?" |
42400 | In a word, young sir, have you the patience of Job? |
42400 | Is Marriage a Failure? |
42400 | Jones?" |
42400 | Jones?" |
42400 | Jones?"] |
42400 | Long?" |
42400 | Now why on earth should you be glad?" |
42400 | Oh, what o''that? |
42400 | Please, what is it for?" |
42400 | Relations? |
42400 | THEIR CONVERSATION_ He._"And what would_ dovey_ do, if lovey were to_ die_?" |
42400 | The skunk_ not_ indigenous, sirs, to our Isle? |
42400 | This problem, which my mind absorbs, A veritable Gordian knot is: How can maids swallow with their orbs? |
42400 | Well,_ then_ I measured the scullery: six feet by ten... that''ll just do, wo n''t it?"] |
42400 | What became of her?" |
42400 | What does your mother say about it?" |
42400 | What good resolutions are you going to make?" |
42400 | What on earth did he marry her for?" |
42400 | What will you say to your wife?" |
42400 | Where is my husband got to? |
42400 | Where is she?" |
42400 | Where shall we go for our wedding trip?--Strasbourg, Turkey, Cayenne, Westphalia, Worcestershire? |
42400 | Where will this end? |
42400 | Where''s the protecting epiglottis? |
42400 | Why_ do n''t_ you come to bed?" |
42400 | Will you kindly forward the letter in question by return, when I will send you a full receipt? |
42400 | You''re very late, are n''t you?" |
42400 | You_ sang_ to him, I suppose?" |
42400 | Yours faithfully, BLITHERS, BLATHERS, BLOTHERS& Co.***** STRANGE BUT TRUE.--When does a husband find his wife out? |
42400 | _ Angelina._"Yes, darling?" |
42400 | _ Aunt Betsy._"And that nice fellow, Goodenough? |
42400 | _ Aunt_-icipations,-- Like_ x_ in equations-- Unknown quantity? |
42400 | _ B._"Who''s the lucky man?" |
42400 | _ Daughter of the House._"But-- why-- who are all those for, then?" |
42400 | _ Eldest Daughter._ Is it really true, mother, that people used to receive pictures just as we do Christmas cards? |
42400 | _ Enter servant with a solitary letter.__ Chorus._ What is it? |
42400 | _ Enter servant with heaps of letters, which are eagerly seized and distributed.__ Chorus._ What are they? |
42400 | _ Gilded Youth._"What do you mean?" |
42400 | _ He._"What mun aw say? |
42400 | _ Her Mother._"What makes you think so, dear?" |
42400 | _ Jock._"What time does y''r old man put''is slippers on?"] |
42400 | _ Jones._"Did you ever see a volcano in course of eruption?" |
42400 | _ Maud._"Did he? |
42400 | _ Seventeen._"_ Is_ marriage a failure? |
42400 | _ What the Clergyman says._--Have you got the ring? |
42400 | _ What_''ave I stole?" |
42400 | _ Young Wife._"Oh, I do n''t mind that, because there''s a telephone there, and I can talk to you through it, ca n''t I?" |
42400 | _ Young Wife._"Where are you going, Reggie dear?" |
42400 | exclaimed the astonished matron,"what put such an idea into your head?" |
4942 | Allow me, sir, the honor;--Then a bow Down to the earth-- Is''t possible to show Meet gratitude for such kind condescension? |
4942 | One? 4942 Shall we fight or shall we fly? |
4942 | 4. Who but the locksmith could have made such music? |
4942 | A thousand guilders? |
4942 | And a day less or more At sea or ashore, We die-- does it matter when? |
4942 | And"Are you ready?" |
4942 | But how little is there of the great and good which can die? |
4942 | Doth God exact day labor, light deny''d, I fondly ask? |
4942 | For some were sunk and many were shattered, and so could fight us no more-- God of battles, was ever a battle like this in the world before? |
4942 | Had they been bold enough then, who can tell but that the traitors had won? |
4942 | Have I not, even as it is, learned much by many of my errors?" |
4942 | He took her soft hand, ere her mother could bar;"Now tread we a measure?" |
4942 | How do I love thee? |
4942 | How do you like to go up in a swing, Up in the air so blue? |
4942 | How was it done? |
4942 | I stay my haste, I make delays, For what avails this eager pace? |
4942 | Is Sparta dead? |
4942 | Is it then so new That you should carol so madly? |
4942 | Is the old Grecian spirit frozen in your veins, that you do crouch and cower like a belabored hound beneath his master''s lash? |
4942 | Is there, for honest poverty, That hangs his head, and a''that? |
4942 | Oh, when will Liberty Once more be here? |
4942 | Outram and Havelock breaking their way through the fell mutineers? |
4942 | Replied the other--"have you never heard, A man may lend his store Of gold or silver ore, But wisdom none can borrow, none can lend?" |
4942 | Shall I not know the world best by trying the wrong of it, and repenting? |
4942 | So daring in love, and so dauntless in war, Have ye e''er heard of gallant like young Lochinvar? |
4942 | Thy shores are empires, changed in all save thee-- Assyria, Greece, Rome, Carthage,--what are they? |
4942 | V. Mine? |
4942 | Was n''t it good for a boy to see Out to Old Aunt Mary''s? |
4942 | We are six ships of the line; can we fight with fifty- three?" |
4942 | Were eyes put into our head, that we might see, or that we might fancy, and plausibly pretend, we had seen? |
4942 | What have they done? |
4942 | What matter if I stand alone? |
4942 | You hope, because you''re old and obese, To find in the furry, civic robe ease? |
4942 | You think that puts the case too sharply? |
4942 | a wayward youth might perhaps answer, incredulously,"no one ever gets wiser by doing wrong? |
4942 | cried I,"whence is it?" |
4942 | cried the Mayor,"what''s that? |
4942 | hear ye yon lion roaring in his den? |
4942 | how did Mozart do it, how Raphael? |
4942 | is it true that was told by the scout? |
4942 | is it you? |
4942 | is it you? |
4942 | thinkest thou that because no one stands near with parchment and blacklead to note thy jargon, it therefore dies and is harmless? |
4942 | was there ever such a knight, in friendship or in war, As our sovereign lord, King Henry, the soldier of Navarre? |
4942 | where is it? |
46088 | ''Ear what? |
46088 | Alone? |
46088 | Am I, sir? |
46088 | And got it wuss? |
46088 | And you? |
46088 | Are there any means,asked the wretched father,"by which you can ever be restored to your own forms again?" |
46088 | Are you satisfied,said Lir,"since you retain your speech and reason, to come and remain with us?" |
46088 | Did n''t yer get into a row when you got back? |
46088 | Did you hear that, Punch? |
46088 | Do you observe that brilliant company, you sons of Lir? |
46088 | Doing what? |
46088 | Father, what is that? |
46088 | Good evening, stranger,said the lime- burner;"whence come you, so late in the day?" |
46088 | How many times have you been here? |
46088 | If the question is a fair one,proceeded Bartram,"where might it be?" |
46088 | Is this yer a d-- d picnic? |
46088 | Not my shirt, sir, I suppose? |
46088 | The man that went in search of the Unpardonable Sin? |
46088 | Was the fellow''s heart made of marble? |
46088 | What are you? |
46088 | What cheer, Kay? |
46088 | What do you want? |
46088 | What is the Unpardonable Sin? |
46088 | What is the matter with you, dear brethren? |
46088 | What more have I to seek? 46088 What yer got in yer cap, Kay?" |
46088 | What''s in your cap, Kay? |
46088 | What''s your name? |
46088 | Where am I to sleep, please, sir? |
46088 | Where did you sleep last night? |
46088 | Where do you mean to go to when you are turned out in the morning? |
46088 | Where''s the beds? 46088 Why dares he, who never had a king in his family, presume to slight the sovereign we have chosen?" |
46088 | Why, who are you? |
46088 | Why, you uncivil scoundrel,cried the fierce doctor,"is that the way you respond to the kindness of your best friends? |
46088 | You are not going, too? |
46088 | ''O,''I ses,''what''s she talkin''about?'' |
46088 | ''What''s she a doin''that for?'' |
46088 | ''Whereabouts is it?'' |
46088 | Ai n''t it, Punch?" |
46088 | As the embers slowly blackened, the Duchess crept closer to Piney, and broke the silence of many hours:"Piney, can you pray?" |
46088 | Besides, though the empress might accept an excuse for the past, would she the less forbear to suspect for the future? |
46088 | But what was to be their final mark, the port of shelter, after so fearful a course of wandering? |
46088 | But where are your other fourteen? |
46088 | But where or how should this notification be made, so as to exclude Russian hearers? |
46088 | But where was the heart? |
46088 | But will not some one set up a stone for my memory at Fort Adams or at Orleans, that my disgrace may not be more than I ought to bear? |
46088 | But, tell me, before we part, was it accident only which led you to my rescue? |
46088 | Coming close to the shore, he asked them, were they the children of Lir? |
46088 | D''ye hear, Daddy? |
46088 | Did n''t Mr. Oakhurst remember Piney? |
46088 | Did she send any word to her old father, or say when she was coming back?" |
46088 | Did you never hear of Ethan Brand?" |
46088 | Did you observe, Mr. Editor, with what alacrity I jumped in? |
46088 | For he asked, perfectly unconsciously,--"Pray, what has become of Texas? |
46088 | Graff?" |
46088 | Have you seen Captain Back''s curious account of Sir Thomas Roe''s Welcome?" |
46088 | I could n''t possibly eat it; what then was to be done with it? |
46088 | I stayed there a goodish bit, and walked about the garden with her, and what d''ye think? |
46088 | Is age a requisite? |
46088 | Is detailed grammatical and idiomatic correctness indispensable? |
46088 | Is perfection of plot or unity of design necessary? |
46088 | It''s the first night of skilley, do n''t you know, under the new Act?" |
46088 | Next came the question of time,_ When_ should the flight commence? |
46088 | Once or twice he came in and said mildly,"Now then, my men, why do n''t you stick to it?" |
46088 | Only, where shall I begin?'' |
46088 | Shall I have the honor of dancing?" |
46088 | She that used to wait on the table at the Temperance House? |
46088 | Should he keep him? |
46088 | Should he let him go? |
46088 | So ses she,''Would you mind callin''there and takin''a message to my little gal as is in there deaf and dumb?'' |
46088 | Tell me, my wandering brethren, tell, Where roam you o''er the billow? |
46088 | That was n''t all, neither; when I come away, ses he,''How about your breakfus?'' |
46088 | The Kalmucks, on the contrary, were always obliged to run: was it_ from_ their enemies as creatures whom they feared? |
46088 | The cup was worth ten quid(? |
46088 | The czarina''s_ pardon_ they might obtain; but could they ever hope to recover her_ confidence_? |
46088 | Then,''Where was Vicksburg?'' |
46088 | Was their misery to perish without fruit? |
46088 | Well, and so you have found the Unpardonable Sin?" |
46088 | Well, one day a woman as was in the house ses to me, ses she,''Do n''t you go past the Deaf and Dumb School as you goes home?'' |
46088 | Were they to lose the whole journey of two thousand miles? |
46088 | What had he seen? |
46088 | What made you so late?" |
46088 | What more to achieve?" |
46088 | What was a man to do? |
46088 | What, then, if he were called to account by the Department for violating the order of 1807? |
46088 | Wherefore? |
46088 | Who''ll let me turn in with him for half my toke( bread)?" |
46088 | You blessed, truth- telling old person, where''s the beds?" |
46088 | You have not cut up any of the old ones, I hope?'' |
46088 | cried his friends; to which the sweet voice replied,"Who''ll give me a part of his doss( bed)? |
46088 | do you remember the mysteries we boys used to invent about his room, in the old Intrepid days? |
46088 | not pitched yet?" |
46088 | or had you acquired any knowledge of the plot by which I was decoyed into this snare?" |
46088 | sternly replied Ethan Brand,"what need have I of the devil? |
46088 | then you are Ethan Brand himself?" |
46088 | who is it?" |
46088 | you''ll all be in it?" |
5428 | Ask him who lives, what is life? |
5428 | But wherefore should a man be benevolent and just? |
5428 | Does it reason, imagine, apprehend, without those ideas which sensation alone can communicate? |
5428 | Does it see, hear, feel, before its combination with those organs on which sensation depends? |
5428 | First, it is inquired,''Wherefore should a man be benevolent and just?'' |
5428 | For what are we? |
5428 | From what other cause has it arisen that the discoveries which should have lightened, have added a weight to the curse imposed on Adam? |
5428 | Have we existed before birth? |
5428 | How can a corpse see or feel? |
5428 | In what manner can this concession be made an argument for its imperishability? |
5428 | Is birth the commencement, is death the conclusion of our being? |
5428 | It is inquired, for what reason a human being should engage in procuring the happiness, or refrain from producing the pain of another? |
5428 | Thou demandest what is love? |
5428 | What are the revolutions of the globe which we inhabit, and the operations of the elements of which it is composed, compared with life? |
5428 | What follows from the admission? |
5428 | What intercourse can two heaps of putrid clay and crumbling bones hold together? |
5428 | What is birth and death? |
5428 | What is life? |
5428 | What is the cause of life? |
5428 | What is the connexion of sleeping and of waking? |
5428 | What is the universe of stars, and suns, of which this inhabited earth is one, and their motions, and their destiny, compared with life? |
5428 | When a reason is required to prove the necessity of adopting any system of conduct, what is it that the objector demands? |
5428 | Whence do we come? |
5428 | Wherefore should he curb these propensities? |
5428 | and whither do we go? |
5428 | ask him who adores, what is God? |
5428 | that is, how was it produced, or what agencies distinct from life have acted or act upon life? |
47118 | Am I to play Posthumus? 47118 Do you know what I am going to say?" |
47118 | How long, sir,said Kean to Elliston, the manager,"how long am I to play with that--_Jesuit_, Young?" |
47118 | How ought I to look when I see the Ghost? |
47118 | Mrs. Siddons,says Campbell,"omitted Mrs. Crawford''s scream, in the far- famed question,''Was he alive?''" |
47118 | Plausible, am I? |
47118 | Well,said the Duke, having listened to the complaint,"what is it you now want?" |
47118 | What can that be? |
47118 | What now? |
47118 | Who is that shabby little man? |
47118 | Who the devil is she? |
47118 | Who? 47118 _ Jerry Blackacre_, I suppose, sir?" |
47118 | _ Manly_, I believe, sir? |
47118 | ''s favourite actor, and almost personal friend, once play the Hunchback Richard? |
47118 | A similar effect was once produced by Charles Kemble, by transposing, unconsciously, two letters in the phrase,"Shall I lay perjury upon my soul?" |
47118 | Among the offensive queries put by the former to the Duke, was--"Who is that fine- looking fellow at the head of the table?" |
47118 | And is not improbability as great a sin in the richest as it is in the poorest dramatic genius?" |
47118 | As he left the house he whispered,''Have I not pleased the Yankee- doodles?'' |
47118 | But--"what do you think in a house crowded was the first thing I saw? |
47118 | Ford?" |
47118 | Kean, in 1824, writing to Mr. Vizell(?) |
47118 | Macklin looked vacantly at her, and, in an imbecile tone of voice, remarked,"I had forgotten; who plays Shylock?" |
47118 | Mr. Crawfurd, too, asked me if I did not think her the best actress I ever saw? |
47118 | Nevertheless, those who never worked, as well as those who were over- worked, needed amusement; and what was to be done? |
47118 | She may have borne her professional habits into private life and"stabbed the potatoes,"or awed a draper''s assistant by asking,"Will it wash?" |
47118 | Shylock leant over his crutched stick, with both hands; and, looking askance at Bassanio, said:"Three thousand ducats?" |
47118 | The character was"totally without archness,"said Young;"how_ could_ such a countenance be arch?" |
47118 | The house re- opened on the 4th of October, with the"Beggar''s Opera,"and"Is he a Prince?" |
47118 | The latter smiled; and Kean asked him_ wherefore_? |
47118 | The next words Castalio should have uttered were,"What have I done? |
47118 | Thinking of Miss Tidswell, he used to say--"If she was n''t my mother, why was she kind to me?" |
47118 | What could he mean?" |
47118 | Where is this young Isabella? |
47118 | Whereupon Venus looked fondly on him and asked, in a stage whisper, if he loved sugar- plumbs?--and what sort? |
47118 | Who was this unnamed artist? |
47118 | Why not? |
47118 | and also take as a compliment Sheridan''s assurance that he had"entirely_ executed_ his design?" |
47118 | and did not Kemble play Charles Surface? |
47118 | and making of it,"Shall I lay surgery upon my poll? |
47118 | and would be prepared to answer,"Is the day so young?" |
47118 | and would n''t he like some of the best quality when the piece was over? |
47118 | exclaimed Mrs. Kean;"will you write his life? |
47118 | paused, bethought himself, and then added:"Well?" |
47118 | replies the author,''they_ have_ found it out, have they?''" |
47118 | said he;''what are they hissing now?'' |
47118 | said the latter;"well; oh!--look? |
47118 | to whom? |
47118 | what light from yonder window breaks? |
47118 | why not try a new actor? |
33624 | Ah, why,cries to his counselor keen A Nero of our present day,"Why was not born within_ my_ State A man so great?" |
33624 | And that? 33624 And this?" |
33624 | And when the ghost has vanished, who is it that stands before us? 33624 But have you ever spoken to her? |
33624 | But how about dusting the books and pictures? |
33624 | But what are dukes and viscounts to The happiness of all my crew? 33624 But what shall I do?" |
33624 | But who knows where your handkerchief is? |
33624 | But why did n''t you give them to me one at a time instead of all at once? |
33624 | But Ílya Ílyitch, little father[ bátiushka], what arrangements shall I make? |
33624 | Called you? 33624 Do n''t you know that moths breed in dust?" |
33624 | Eh-- eh-- eh-- that''s too short notice: to- morrow? 33624 Had n''t you better eat something, Afanasy Ivan''itch?" |
33624 | Hast thou been there already, little dear? |
33624 | Have your legs quite given out, that you ca n''t stand a minute? 33624 How can he be dead-- our witness, our intercessor, our mediator with God? |
33624 | How do you demonstrate that? |
33624 | How is it that other people do n''t have moths and bugs? |
33624 | How,cried I,"is that all you are to have for your two shillings? |
33624 | I do n''t know; perhaps it would be well, Pulkheria Ivan''na: by the way, what is there to eat? |
33624 | I sometimes go to the theatre or go out to dine: you might--"Do house- cleaning at night? |
33624 | Is it Mahomet,said he to Omar and the multitude,"or the God of Mahomet, whom you worship? |
33624 | Is it all ready for my bath? |
33624 | Is my bath ready? |
33624 | It is where you put it; how should I know anything about it? |
33624 | It must mean Italy,said Wilhelm:"where didst thou get the little song?" |
33624 | Know''st thou the hill, the bridge that hangs on cloud? 33624 My son, why thus to my arm dost cling?" |
33624 | O holy father,Alice said,"''twould grieve you, would it not, To discover that I was a most disreputable lot? |
33624 | Of course you have; but still you stay at home all the time: how can one begin to clean up when you are right here? 33624 Oh, massa, why you go away? |
33624 | Or perhaps you could eat some kisel? |
33624 | Ready? 33624 Says he,''Dear James, to murder me Were a foolish thing to do, For do n''t you see that you ca n''t cook_ me_, While I can-- and will-- cook_ you_?'' |
33624 | Shall I go and tell them to bring you some curd dumplings with berries, which I had set aside for you? |
33624 | That is what I expect,returned she;"but I think, my dear, we ought to appear there as decently as possible, for who knows what may happen?" |
33624 | The books and pictures? 33624 The house is not mine; how can we help being driven out of the place if they resort to force? |
33624 | Then only the cook and me was left, And the delicate question,''Which Of us two goes to the kettle?'' 33624 Then why dost thou go with him, sweet daughter of Juda?" |
33624 | Thursday only-- why? 33624 Was she not old?" |
33624 | Was there ever poet so trusted? |
33624 | Well now, Sophy, my child,said I,"and what sort of a husband are you to have?" |
33624 | Well then, what is this? |
33624 | Well then,said the latter finally,"suppose we grant you all this, what will you explain by it?" |
33624 | Well, is that anything to boast about? 33624 Well, my girls, how have you sped? |
33624 | Well, what did he say? |
33624 | Well, what of that? 33624 Well, why should n''t we put them off till to- morrow now?" |
33624 | What accounts? 33624 What ails thee, Mignon?" |
33624 | What appointment? |
33624 | What are you doing, Sister? |
33624 | What are you talking about? |
33624 | What could I do, Assar? 33624 What did he say? |
33624 | What do you mean--''ready''? |
33624 | What do you want? |
33624 | What is it you want? |
33624 | What is that you say? 33624 What is that?" |
33624 | What is the cause, alas,quod she,"My fader, that ye shulden be Dede and destruied in suche a wise?" |
33624 | What is the matter with you, Pulkheria Ivanovna? 33624 What is there?" |
33624 | What kind of a man am I? |
33624 | What letter? 33624 What shall we have to eat now, Afanasy Ivan''itch,--some wheat and suet cakes, or some patties with poppy- seeds, or some salted mushrooms?" |
33624 | What shall you do? 33624 What time is it?" |
33624 | Where are you going? 33624 Where are you going?" |
33624 | Where do they make any litter? 33624 Where is the handkerchief? |
33624 | Where, where are my children? |
33624 | Where,cried I,"where are my little ones?" |
33624 | Who is her master? |
33624 | Why are other people''s houses clean? |
33624 | Why did n''t you tell me it was ready? 33624 Why did you not get up?" |
33624 | Why do you object to my remaining on my knees? |
33624 | Why not compress them into one? |
33624 | Why, am I to blame that there are bugs on the wall? |
33624 | Will he be dead before night? |
33624 | You called me, did n''t you? |
33624 | You have nothing to say to me, and why should I waste my time standing here? |
33624 | You will save him, will you not? |
33624 | You will take care of it, will you? 33624 _"O father, dear father, and dost thou not hear What the elfin- king whispers so low in mine ear?" |
33624 | _O father, dear father, and dost thou not mark The elf- king''s daughters move by in the dark?" |
33624 | ''Tis there Our way runs: O my father, wilt thou go?" |
33624 | --"Father, dost thou not see the elfin- king? |
33624 | A LIFE''S WANDERING ANONYMOUS Know ye the flowery fields of the Cappadocian nation? |
33624 | A NAMELESS GRAVE PAULUS SILENTIARIUS My name, my country, what are they to thee? |
33624 | A prince by birth, rejoicing to be called to punish the usurper of his crown? |
33624 | A young hero panting for vengeance? |
33624 | After waiting a while, he sent for Pulkheria Ivanovna or went in search of her himself, and said,"What is there for me to eat, Pulkheria Ivan''na?" |
33624 | Ah, who will give us back the past? |
33624 | Alexander of Macedon was a hero, no doubt; but why smash the chairs? |
33624 | An Inspector? |
33624 | And has the Prince of Brazil''s religion been considered evidence of his connection with the enemy? |
33624 | And rise not, on us shining Friendly, the everlasting stars? |
33624 | And then he said to the third doughter,"How much lovest thou me?" |
33624 | And what shall we say of to- day as it flies? |
33624 | And why? |
33624 | And, glowing, young, and good, Most ignorantly thanked The slumberer above there? |
33624 | Anton Anton''itch, why is this? |
33624 | Arches not there the sky above us? |
33624 | As he was leaving the ward:--"Well?" |
33624 | Believest thou in God? |
33624 | Brush out all the corners every day?" |
33624 | But I suppose we are to have no more from that quarter?" |
33624 | But can your Ladyship favor me with a sight of them?" |
33624 | But how about the dust and the cobwebs on the walls?" |
33624 | But if the Catholic religion be this evidence of repugnance, is Protestantism the proof of affection to the Crown and government of England? |
33624 | But now old Age, with his stealing steps, Hath clawed me with his crutch: I stumbled over the door of a grave; Why leave they open such? |
33624 | But now when should we be able to do it? |
33624 | But tell me, should not the poet have furnished the insane maiden with another sort of songs? |
33624 | But who can set a guard to watch over kind words?" |
33624 | Ca n''t you do your best for your master?" |
33624 | Can Honor''s voice provoke the silent dust, Or Flattery soothe the dull, cold ear of Death? |
33624 | Can it be that I am not up yet nor had my bath? |
33624 | Can storied urn or animated bust Back to its mansion call the fleeting breath? |
33624 | Can you joy in bustling daytime,-- Day, when none can get his will? |
33624 | Carlyle''s Translation"Have you never,"said Jarno, taking him aside,"read one of Shakespeare''s plays?" |
33624 | Clearer and freer, who shall doubt? |
33624 | Could not one select some fragments out of melancholy ballads for this purpose? |
33624 | Did the faith of Denmark prevent the attack on Copenhagen? |
33624 | Do n''t you see I am worried? |
33624 | Do n''t you see I have entirely changed?" |
33624 | Do n''t you see? |
33624 | Do n''t you see?" |
33624 | Do we not understand from the very first what the mind of the good soft- hearted girl was busied with? |
33624 | Do you hear?" |
33624 | Do you speak like that to a gentleman of my station? |
33624 | Do you think I am secured? |
33624 | Do you think her pretty? |
33624 | Dost thou ask me How the vessel I reached? |
33624 | Dost thou believe that he is a great God?" |
33624 | Doth she entice him as well to the arbor? |
33624 | Dreamedst thou ever I should grow weary of living, And fly to the desert, Since not all our Pretty dream buds ripen? |
33624 | E''er understood by such as thou? |
33624 | FAUST AND MEPHISTOPHELES FAUST Canst thou, poor Devil, give me whatsoever? |
33624 | FAUST How so? |
33624 | FAUST Must we? |
33624 | FAUST Shall I outlive this misery? |
33624 | FAUST The same thing, in all places, All hearts that beat beneath the heavenly day-- Each in its language-- say; Then why not I in mine as well? |
33624 | Fond impious man, thinkest thou yon sanguine cloud, Raised by thy breath, has quenched the orb of day? |
33624 | For what? |
33624 | From whom did you win them? |
33624 | GESTA ROMANORUM What are the''Gesta Romanorum''? |
33624 | Has any one been despoiled of his goods? |
33624 | Hast thou not all thyself accomplished, Holy- glowing heart? |
33624 | Hast thou the miseries lightened Of the down- trodden? |
33624 | Hast thou the tears ever banished From the afflicted? |
33624 | Have I aspersed the reputation of a Mussulman? |
33624 | Have I not to manhood been molded By omnipotent Time, And by Fate everlasting, My lords and thine? |
33624 | Have we not already newspapers for every hour of the day? |
33624 | Have you ever looked at her? |
33624 | He contented himself with asking:--"Have you found it yet?" |
33624 | He follows? |
33624 | He says,"What would you have? |
33624 | Heard ye the din of battle bray, Lance to lance, and horse to horse? |
33624 | How can he be pacified?" |
33624 | How comes it that thou dost not shrink from me?-- Say, dost thou know, my friend, whom thou mak''st free? |
33624 | How do_ you_ feel, Anton Anton''itch? |
33624 | How does it concern me? |
33624 | How long since this shop opened? |
33624 | How so? |
33624 | How was this? |
33624 | How would this minute suit? |
33624 | I delay to free her? |
33624 | I dread, once again to see her? |
33624 | I have reveled; who is uninitiated in revels? |
33624 | I hope you''ll say there''s nothing low- lived there? |
33624 | I tell every one frankly that I take bribes; but what sort of bribes? |
33624 | I was in love once; who has not been? |
33624 | If past, then why? |
33624 | If we ask,--for this, after all, is the capital question of criticism,--What has Goethe done to make us better? |
33624 | If we attend to the present condition and habits of these classes, do we not find their controversies subsisting in full vigor? |
33624 | In the third line, her tones became deeper and gloomier; the"Know''st thou it then?" |
33624 | In their weakness fallen at length, Hard it is to save them: Who can crush, by native strength, Vices that enslave them? |
33624 | In what relation stood Goethe to these great forces of the eighteenth century? |
33624 | Is it a border town-- is it, now? |
33624 | Is it from my countenance, my voice, my color, or my words, that you conceive me to be angry? |
33624 | Is the sable warrior fled? |
33624 | Is''t not soon enough when morning chime has rung? |
33624 | It is inquired by what right this is done?" |
33624 | It seemed to be his thought,"What kind of a sleeping- room would that be that had no bugs in it?" |
33624 | Know''st thou it then? |
33624 | Know''st thou it then? |
33624 | Know''st thou the house, its porch with pillars tall? |
33624 | LOVE''S IMMORTALITY STRATO( First Century A.D.) Who may know if a loved one passes the prime, while ever with him and never left alone? |
33624 | Lies not beneath us, firm, the earth? |
33624 | MARGARET Day? |
33624 | MARGARET How is''t with thy religion, pray? |
33624 | MARGARET Kiss me!--canst no longer do it? |
33624 | MARGARET Out yonder? |
33624 | MARGARET What rises up from the threshold here? |
33624 | MARGARET[_ throwing herself before him_] Art thou a man? |
33624 | MARGARET[_ turning to him_] And is it thou? |
33624 | May I ask: Is his religion the evidence of the warmth of his attachment to your alliance? |
33624 | Mirjam, if I go away wilt thou believe, and go on believing, that I go on God''s errand?" |
33624 | My friend, so short a time thou''rt missing, And hast unlearned thy kissing? |
33624 | My satin gown with the red stripes you must not put on me: a corpse needs no clothes; of what use are they to her? |
33624 | NON SINE DOLORE What, then, is Life,--what Death? |
33624 | Nay, I was mad; at whose prompting but a god''s? |
33624 | Now how is he going to get rid of me?" |
33624 | O meadows, wherefore vainly in your radiant garlands laugh ye? |
33624 | Of course it is praiseworthy to be thrifty in domestic affairs, and why should not the janitor be so too? |
33624 | On finishing her song for the second time, she stood silent for a moment, looked keenly at Wilhelm, and asked him,"_ Know''st_ thou the land?" |
33624 | Pandolfo,_ keeper of the gambling- house, comes in, rubbing his eyes sleepily__ Ridolfo_--Master Pandolfo, will you have coffee? |
33624 | Plutarch then replied with deliberate calmness:--"But why, rascal, do I now seem to you to be in anger? |
33624 | Reprinted by permission of Houghton, Mifflin& Co., publishers, Boston THE ELFIN- KING Who rides so late through the midnight blast? |
33624 | Say, are yon boisterous crew going thy comrades to be? |
33624 | See here, what next? |
33624 | Serlo looked at his sister and said,"Did I give thee a false picture of our friend? |
33624 | She turned and followed him; but the warrior on the other side of the brook called out,"What right hast thou to lead this maiden away?" |
33624 | Shortly after, he asked:--"What o''clock is it?" |
33624 | So it liked to this emperour to knowe which of his doughters loved him best; and then he said to the eldest doughter,"How much lovest thou me?" |
33624 | THE HARPER''S SONGS From''Wilhelm Meister''s Apprenticeship''"What notes are those without the wall, Across the portal sounding? |
33624 | THE SONNET What is a sonnet? |
33624 | Tell me, Livy, has the fortune- teller given thee a penny- worth?" |
33624 | Tell me, my dear, do n''t you think I did for my children there?" |
33624 | Tell me, what is it you want?" |
33624 | The All- enfolding, The All- upholding, Folds and upholds he not Thee, me, Himself? |
33624 | The Catholics are alone excepted; and for what reason? |
33624 | The King answered quickly,"What is that?" |
33624 | The King''s adviser looked at Assar and asked,"Hast thou offered up sacrifice to our gods?" |
33624 | The anguish of the dungeon, and the chain? |
33624 | The captive linnet which enthrall? |
33624 | The holy woman come to the door and asked what she would? |
33624 | The padre said,"Whatever have you been and gone and done?" |
33624 | The rooms do glitter, glitters bright the hall, And marble statues stand, and look each one: What''s this, poor child, to thee they''ve done? |
33624 | The swarm, that in thy noontide beam were born? |
33624 | The wives and daughters wear little short skirts, and when they walk they all lift up their legs like ducks-- where do they get any dirt? |
33624 | Then Pulkheria Ivanovna inquired,"Why do you groan, Afanasy Ivan''itch?" |
33624 | Then after a short pause:--"Have you noticed that the physiognomy of the great men of to- day is so rarely in keeping with their intellect? |
33624 | Then he came to the second, and said to her,"Doughter, how muche lovest thou me?" |
33624 | Then he said to Assar,"Thou saidst once that the God of Israel was a mighty God; could not_ he_ cure me of my disease?" |
33624 | Then spake he,"What were thy will I did thereto?" |
33624 | Then spake the Questioner: If''t were only this, Ah, who could face the abyss That plunges steep athwart each human breath? |
33624 | There''s an old story has the same refrain; Who bade them so construe it? |
33624 | Thou, surely, certainly? |
33624 | To- morrow( who can say?) |
33624 | Virtue, my dear Lady Blarney, virtue is worth any price; but where is that to be found?" |
33624 | Was it not a quaint expression to use? |
33624 | Was it not given to thee and me? |
33624 | Was it possible beauty like this to see, and not feel it? |
33624 | Well, why are you standing there? |
33624 | What art can wash her guilt away? |
33624 | What did you do with it?" |
33624 | What does he want in this holy spot? |
33624 | What good for us, this endlessly creating?-- What is created then annihilating? |
33624 | What have I done to thee? |
33624 | What have double meanings and lascivious insipidities to do in the mouth of such a noble- minded person?" |
33624 | What idle progeny succeed To chase the rolling circle''s speed, Or urge the flying ball? |
33624 | What is a sonnet? |
33624 | What is his employment? |
33624 | What is the use of wings if there is no air in which one can soar? |
33624 | What is this which engages the student of the metaphysic cell, who had gone through the four Faculties, and is now once again grown old? |
33624 | What is this? |
33624 | What more is needed?" |
33624 | What possesses you men? |
33624 | What says the Decalogue? |
33624 | What says the penal law? |
33624 | What then? |
33624 | What, whether proud or bare my pedigree? |
33624 | When hath no human face Turned earthward in despair, For that some horrid sin had stamped its image there? |
33624 | When hath not some great orb flashed into space The terror of its doom? |
33624 | When he did speak it was to ask,"Grant, how many wolves do you think there are in that pack?" |
33624 | Where now is all my pain? |
33624 | Where, on the earth''s green sod, Where, where in all the universe of God, Hath strife forever ceased? |
33624 | Wherefore so late didst thou remove the bandage, O Amor, Which thou hadst placed o''er mine eyes,--wherefore remove it so late? |
33624 | Whither should I flee? |
33624 | Who can it be so early?" |
33624 | Who dare express Him? |
33624 | Who does not know Heine,--or rather, who does not believe that he knows him? |
33624 | Who has done me this ill? |
33624 | Who helped me When I braved the Titans''insolence? |
33624 | Who may not satisfy to- day who satisfied yesterday? |
33624 | Who rescued me from death, From slavery? |
33624 | Whom befool not eye and lip, Breath and voice enchanting? |
33624 | Whose the foot that may not slip On the surface slanting? |
33624 | Why did the ways part so widely for Rousseau and for Goethe? |
33624 | Why do n''t you trust in God? |
33624 | Why do you bother me with it? |
33624 | Why have you not got the carpenter to mend it? |
33624 | Why is my heart so anxious, on thy breast? |
33624 | Why is the Inspector coming hither? |
33624 | Why read a page so twisted? |
33624 | Why should I fly? |
33624 | Why should not they do something as well as we? |
33624 | Why this rapture and unrest? |
33624 | Why, in fact, is the Inspector coming to us? |
33624 | Will you come and dine with me? |
33624 | Wilt be my father? |
33624 | Worked not those heavenly charms e''en on a mind dull as thine? |
33624 | Would thy father and thy brothers flee to the wilds of the mountains?" |
33624 | Would you recognize Lamartine if you saw him? |
33624 | You are calmer now, are you not? |
33624 | You are not ill?" |
33624 | You as my master talk strange and melancholy words, but how do dust and cobwebs concern you?" |
33624 | You will have him prayed for at once, wo n''t you?" |
33624 | You will take all my books, do you hear? |
33624 | You wonder why I have killed myself, do n''t you? |
33624 | [_ Aloud._] And how much has he lost? |
33624 | [_ Exit Trappolo._] Say, Ridolfo, what do you know of that dancer over there? |
33624 | [_ She springs to her feet: the fetters fall off._ Where is he? |
33624 | [_ Starts out._]_ Ridolfo_--And the coffee-- shall I charge it? |
33624 | [_ Takes out his eye- glass and looks._]_ Ridolfo_--What do you say? |
33624 | _ Chief_--How do I feel? |
33624 | _ Chief_--What''s got hold of him? |
33624 | _ Chief_[_ sighs_]--Why? |
33624 | _ Enter_ Postmaster_ Chief_---Well, how do you feel, Ivan Kusmitch? |
33624 | _ Fudge!_"My dear creature,"replied our peeress,"do you think I carry such things about me? |
33624 | _ Judge_--What do you mean by faults, Anton Anton''itch? |
33624 | _ Marzio_--Cheated me? |
33624 | _ Marzio_--Early? |
33624 | _ Marzio_--Has no one appeared here at your café yet? |
33624 | _ Marzio_--Have you seen Signor Eugenio? |
33624 | _ Marzio_--What''s the news, Ridolfo? |
33624 | _ Marzio_--What? |
33624 | _ Pandolfo_--Oh well, what does it matter? |
33624 | _ Postmaster_--How do I feel? |
33624 | _ Ridolfo_--And has Signor Eugenio been playing this past night? |
33624 | _ Ridolfo_--And how does it go? |
33624 | _ Ridolfo_--And whom else? |
33624 | _ Ridolfo_--Are they playing yet in the shop? |
33624 | _ Ridolfo_--Have you amused yourself playing too? |
33624 | _ Ridolfo_--I attend to my shop: if she has a back door, what is it to me? |
33624 | _ Ridolfo_--So early? |
33624 | _ Ridolfo_--What do you mean by that? |
33624 | _ Ridolfo_--What game? |
33624 | _ Ridolfo_--Where did you buy that watch? |
33624 | _ Ridolfo_--With whom is he playing? |
33624 | _ Superintendent_--And why? |
33624 | _ Superintendent_--What am I to do with him? |
33624 | _ Trappolo_--And it does n''t harm Signor Eugenio to make his affairs public? |
33624 | _ Trappolo_--Shan''t I warm over yesterday''s supply? |
33624 | _"Wilt thou go, bonny boy, wilt thou go with me? |
33624 | and art thou not mine?" |
33624 | and if he satisfy, what should befall him not to satisfy to- morrow? |
33624 | and that?" |
33624 | and what art thou? |
33624 | could not all Reprieve the tottering mansion from its fall? |
33624 | cried I, rushing through the flames, and bursting the door of the chamber in which they were confined;"where are my little ones?" |
33624 | cried he, raising her up and clasping her fast,--"my child, what ails thee?" |
33624 | cried he;"what ails thee?" |
33624 | cried she,"thou wilt not forsake me? |
33624 | he asked in innocent surprise:"was it I who invented them?" |
33624 | must no one write in the Italian language who has not been born in Tuscany?" |
33624 | said Ayesha, with the insolence of a blooming beauty:"has not God given you a better in her place?" |
33624 | she cried,"if thou art unhappy, what will become of Mignon?" |
33624 | to say? |
33624 | unto thee such power Over me could give? |
33624 | was n''t it lying there just now? |
33624 | what hast thou done? |
33624 | what is it now?" |
33624 | what money?" |
33624 | what solemn scenes on Snowdon''s height Descending slow their glittering skirts unroll? |
33624 | who would care to die From out these fields and hills, and this familiar sky; These firm, sure hands that compass us, this dear humanity? |
33624 | why should they know their fate, Since sorrow never comes too late, And happiness too swiftly flies? |
34237 | And did the little lawless lad, That has made you sick and made you sad, Sail with the''Gray Swan''s''crew? |
34237 | And has he betroth''d another love, And has he quite forgotten me, To whom he plighted his love and troth, When from prison I did him free? 34237 And has he never written line, Nor sent you word, nor made you sign, To say he was alive?" |
34237 | And is mine one? |
34237 | And so your lad is gone? |
34237 | And where are they? 34237 Burn the fleet and ruin France? |
34237 | But what are dukes and viscounts to The happiness of all my crew? 34237 But what good came of it at last?" |
34237 | But when won the coming battle, What of profit springs therefrom? 34237 But, my good mother, do you know All this was twenty years ago? |
34237 | Canst hear,said one,"the breakers roar? |
34237 | Do you admire the view? 34237 Gone with the''Swan''?" |
34237 | Hae a''the weans been gude? |
34237 | How many are you, then,said I,"If they two are in heaven?" |
34237 | How many? 34237 I send him the ring from my finger, The garland off my hair, I send him the heart that''s in my breast; What would my love have mair? |
34237 | If seven maids with seven mops Swept it for half a year, Do you suppose,the Walrus said,"That they could get it clear?" |
34237 | Is this, is this your joy? 34237 Let me of my heart take counsel: War is not of life the sum; Who shall stay and reap the harvest When the autumn days shall come?" |
34237 | Must I thank you then,said the king,"Sir Lark, For flying so high and hating the dark? |
34237 | Now cheare up, Sire Abbot, did you never hear yet, That a fool he may learne a wise man witt? 34237 Now tell me, dear son Florentine, O tell, and tell me true; Tell me this day, without delay, What sall I do for you?" |
34237 | Now whence come ye, young man,she said,"To put me into fear? |
34237 | Now who be ye, would cross Lochgyle This dark and stormy water? |
34237 | O father I see a gleaming light; O say, what may it be? |
34237 | O haud your tongue, my lady fair, Lat a''your folly be; Mind ye not o''your turtle- doo Ye coax''d from aff the tree? |
34237 | O how can I carry a letter to her, Or how should I her know? 34237 O wha are ye, young man?" |
34237 | O wha is this has done this deed, And tauld the king o''me, To send us out, at this time of the year, To sail upon the sea? 34237 O where will I get a gude sailor, To tak''my helm in hand, Till I get up to the tall top- mast, To see if I can spy land?" |
34237 | Oh, came you from the isles of Greece Or from the banks of Seine? 34237 Oh, found you that ring by sea or on land, Or got you that ring off a dead man''s hand?" |
34237 | Oh, where shall I find a little foot- page That would win both hose and shoon, And will bring to me the Singing Leaves If they grow under the moon? |
34237 | Poor man, what wouldst thou have of me? |
34237 | She sends you the ring frae her white finger, The garland frae her hair; She sends you the heart within her breast; And what would you have mair? 34237 Sisters and brothers, little Maid, How many may you be?" |
34237 | The other day? |
34237 | What good child is this,the angel said,"That, with happy heart, beside her bed Prays so lovingly?" |
34237 | What if,''mid the cannons''thunder, Whistling shot and bursting bomb, When my brothers fall around me, Should my heart grow cold and numb? |
34237 | What little lad? 34237 What news, thou auld beggar man?" |
34237 | What shall I say, brave Adm''r''l, say, If we sight not but seas at dawn? |
34237 | What''s your boy''s name, good wife, And in what good ship sailed he? |
34237 | Which is the true, and which the false? |
34237 | Which is the true? |
34237 | Who planted this old apple tree? |
34237 | Why so severe? |
34237 | You hope, because you''re old and obese,To find in the furry civic robe ease? |
34237 | Your little lad, your Elihu? |
34237 | __ Going A- Nutting_ No clouds are in the morning sky, The vapors hug the stream,-- Who says that life and love can die In all this northern gleam? 34237 __ Jock of Hazeldean_"Why weep ye by the tide, ladie? |
34237 | __ Nikolina_ O tell me, little children, have you seen her-- The tiny maid from Norway, Nikolina? 34237 ( Was it only a moon ago? 34237 --And did she stand With her anchor clutching hold of the sand For a month, and never stir?" |
34237 | 292 How they Brought the Good News from Ghent to Aix, 464 How''s My Boy? |
34237 | A Lieutenant? |
34237 | A Mate-- first, second, third? |
34237 | An English apple orchard in the spring? |
34237 | And are ye sure he''s weel? |
34237 | And caught their subtle odors in the spring? |
34237 | And didst thou visit him no more? |
34237 | And loved so well a high behavior, In man or maid, that thou from speech refrained, Nobility more nobly to repay? |
34237 | And what is so rare as a day in June? |
34237 | And what shoulder, and what art Could twist the sinews of thy heart? |
34237 | And when thy heart began to beat, What dread hand form''d thy dread feet? |
34237 | And where the land she travels from? |
34237 | And where the land she travels from? |
34237 | And why should I speak low, sailor, About my own boy John? |
34237 | And will I hear him speak? |
34237 | And will I hear him speak? |
34237 | And will I see his face again? |
34237 | And,"What mockery or malice have we here?" |
34237 | Are you a beast of field and tree Or just a stronger child than me? |
34237 | Are you bought by English gold? |
34237 | Are you cowards, fools, or rogues? |
34237 | Are you wishing Jolly fishing? |
34237 | At rich men''s tables eaten bread and pulse? |
34237 | Away went Gilpin-- who but he? |
34237 | Beneath the apple blossoms in the spring? |
34237 | Brave Adm''r''l, speak; what shall I say?" |
34237 | Bright jewels of the mine? |
34237 | But if the lad still live, And come back home, think you you can Forgive him?" |
34237 | But no such word Was ever spoke or heard; For up stood, for out stepped, for in struck amid all these--A Captain? |
34237 | But were there ever any Writhed not at passed joy? |
34237 | But why do ye talk o''suchlike things? |
34237 | By_ Andrew Marvell_ 272 Where Lies the Land? |
34237 | By_ Leigh Hunt_ 460 How''s My Boy? |
34237 | By_ Robert Burns_ 239 Who Is Silvia? |
34237 | CLOUGH, ARTHUR HUGH[ 1819- 1861]:_ Where Lies the Land?_ 273. |
34237 | Can Honour''s voice provoke the silent dust, Or Flatt''ry soothe the dull cold ear of death? |
34237 | Can storied urn or animated bust Back to its mansion call the fleeting breath? |
34237 | Can such delights be in the street, And open fields, and we not see''t? |
34237 | Canst thou no longer tarry in the North, Here, where our roof so well hath screened thy nest? |
34237 | Children dear, was it yesterday We heard the sweet bells over the bay? |
34237 | Children dear, was it yesterday( Call yet once) that she went away? |
34237 | Children dear, was it yesterday? |
34237 | Children dear, was it yesterday? |
34237 | Children dear, were we long alone? |
34237 | Chime, ye dappled darlings, Through the sleet and snow, Who can override you? |
34237 | Consider The lilies, that do neither spin nor toil, Yet are most fair-- What profits all this care, And all this coil? |
34237 | DOBELL, SYDNEY[ 1824- 1874]:_ The Procession of the Flowers_, 67;_ How''s My Boy?_ 462. |
34237 | Dead? |
34237 | Declare to us, bright star, if we shall seek Him in the morning''s blushing cheek, Or search the beds of spices through, To find him out? |
34237 | Did I say all? |
34237 | Did I say alone? |
34237 | Did he push, when he was uncurled, A golden foot or a fairy horn Through his dim water- world? |
34237 | Did he stand at the diamond door Of his house in a rainbow frill? |
34237 | Did he who made the lamb make thee? |
34237 | Do you hear? |
34237 | Doth he not claim a broader span For the soul''s love of home than this? |
34237 | Doth not the yearning spirit scorn In such scant borders to be spanned? |
34237 | Each flower has wept and bowed toward the east, Above an hour since, yet you not drest, Nay, not so much as out of bed? |
34237 | Fear ye foes who kill for hire? |
34237 | Gems of the mountain and pearls of the ocean, Myrrh from the forest, or gold from the mine? |
34237 | Has no man seen The king?" |
34237 | Have you felt the wool of the beaver? |
34237 | Have you marked but the fall of the snow, Before the soil hath smutched it? |
34237 | Have you no traditions-- none, Of the court of Solomon? |
34237 | Have you nothing for me?" |
34237 | Have you plucked the apple blossoms in the spring? |
34237 | Have you walked beneath the blossoms in the spring? |
34237 | He said with trembling lip,--"What little lad? |
34237 | High on the sea- cliff ledges The white gulls are trooping and crying; Here among rooks and roses, Why is the sea- gull flying? |
34237 | Hope ye mercy still? |
34237 | How''s my boy-- my boy? |
34237 | How''s my boy-- my boy? |
34237 | How''s my boy-- my boy? |
34237 | How''s my boy-- my boy? |
34237 | How''s my boy-- my boy? |
34237 | I do not fear for thee, though wroth The tempest rushes through the sky; For are we not God''s children both, Thou, little sandpiper, and I? |
34237 | I grant, to man we lend our pains, And aid him to correct the plains; But doth not he divide the care, Through all the labours of the year? |
34237 | I hear the church- bells ring; O say, what may it be?" |
34237 | I hear the sound of guns; O say, what may it be?" |
34237 | I say, how''s my John? |
34237 | I''m not their mother-- How''s my boy-- my boy? |
34237 | INTERLEAVES_ For Home and Country__"Such is the patriot''s boast, where''er we roam? |
34237 | INTERLEAVES_ On the Wing_ Our"little brothers of the air,"have you named them all without a gun, as Emerson asks in"Forbearance"? |
34237 | If Colin''s weel, and weel content, I hae nae mair to crave; And gin I live to keep him sae, I''m blest aboon the lave: And will I see his face again? |
34237 | If''twas wrong, the wrong is mine; Besides, he may lie in the brine; And could he write from the grave? |
34237 | In the caverns where we lay, Through the surf and through the swell, The far- off sound of a silver bell? |
34237 | In the spring? |
34237 | In the spring? |
34237 | In the spring? |
34237 | In what distant deeps or skies Burnt the ardor of thine eyes? |
34237 | Is any man so daring As dig one up in spite? |
34237 | Is it alone where freedom is, Where God is God and man is man? |
34237 | Is it love the lying''s for? |
34237 | Is it my fancy, or do young eyes brighten, rosy cheeks dimple, lips part a little when he approaches? |
34237 | Is it through envy of the maple- leaf, Whose blushes mock the crimson of thy breast, Thou wilt not stay? |
34237 | Is it where he by chance is born? |
34237 | Is she kind as she is fair? |
34237 | Is this a time to think o''wark? |
34237 | Just as he said this, what should hap At the chamber door, but a gentle tap? |
34237 | Let his baleful breath shed blight and death On herb and flower and tree; And brooks and ponds in crystal bonds Bind fast, but what care we? |
34237 | Lies he the lily- banks among? |
34237 | Loved the wood- rose, and left it on its stalk? |
34237 | My boy John-- He that went to sea-- What care I for the ship, sailor? |
34237 | My door was bolted right secure, And what way cam''ye here?" |
34237 | No memorial how you went With Prince Hiram''s armament? |
34237 | Not a neighbor Passing, nod or answer will refuse To her whisper,"Is there from the fishers any news?" |
34237 | Not one short day? |
34237 | O you that are so strong and cold, O blower, are you young or old? |
34237 | Oh, when its aged branches throw Thin shadows on the ground below, Shall fraud and force and iron will Oppress the weak and helpless still? |
34237 | On what wings dare he aspire-- What the hand dare seize the fire? |
34237 | Or at the casement seen her stand? |
34237 | Or have smelt o''the bud of the brier? |
34237 | Or have tasted the bag of the bee? |
34237 | Or off some tree in forests free That fringe the western main?" |
34237 | Or swan''s down ever? |
34237 | Or that sic a fair maid Should die for my sake? |
34237 | Or the nard i''the fire? |
34237 | Or wakes the tired mother, whose infant is weeping, To cuddle and croon it to rest? |
34237 | Our President dead? |
34237 | Our money, how went it? |
34237 | Out upon the wharfs they came, Knight and burgher, lord and dame, And round the prow they read her name,_ The Lady of Shalott._ Who is this? |
34237 | Perished?--who was it said Our Leader had passed away? |
34237 | Reach the mooring? |
34237 | Said the King to his daughters three;"For I to Vanity Fair am boun'', Now say what shall they be?" |
34237 | Say, have kings more wholesome fare Than we citizens of air? |
34237 | Say, heart, is there aught like this In a world that is full of bliss? |
34237 | Say, shall we yield Him, in costly devotion, Odors of Edom and offerings divine? |
34237 | Say, whence is the voice that when anger is burning, Bids the whirl of the tempest to cease? |
34237 | Say, whose is the skill that paints valley and hill, Like a picture so fair to the sight? |
34237 | Say, with richer crimson glows The kingly mantle than the rose? |
34237 | Seek''st thou the plashy brink Of weedy lake, or marge of river wide, Or where the rocky billows rise and sink On the chafed ocean- side? |
34237 | Shall haughty man my back bestride? |
34237 | Shall the sharp spur provoke my side? |
34237 | Shall then our nobler jaws submit To foam and champ the galling bit? |
34237 | Shall we be trotting home again?" |
34237 | Shall we our servitude retain, Because our sires have borne the chain? |
34237 | She wrote to Glenlogie, To tell him her mind:"My love is laid on you, Oh, will you prove kind?" |
34237 | Since you will not like everything in the book equally well, may we advise you how to use it? |
34237 | So daring in love, and so dauntless in war, Have ye e''er heard of gallant like young Lochinvar? |
34237 | Some natural sorrow, loss or pain, That has been, and may be again? |
34237 | That flecks the green meadow with sunshine and shadow, Till the little lambs leap with delight? |
34237 | That stirs the vexed soul with an aching-- a yearning For the brotherly hand- grip of peace? |
34237 | The Calender, amazed to see His neighbour in such trim, Laid down his pipe, flew to the gate, And thus accosted him:--"What news? |
34237 | The bonniest bairn in a''the warl''Ye ken whaur the ferlie lives? |
34237 | The sailor''s eyes Stood open with a great surprise:"The other day? |
34237 | The summer days were long, yet all too brief The happy season thou hast been our guest: Whither away? |
34237 | Then she cried to the quadruped, greatly amazed:"Why your passion toward_ me_ do you hurtle? |
34237 | Then she went to Lord Beichan''s gate, And she tirl''d gently at the pin, And ask''d--"Is this Lord Beichan''s hall, And is that noble lord within?" |
34237 | Then the oldest monk came forward, In Irish tongue spake he:"Thou wearest the holy Augustine''s dress, And who hath given it to thee?" |
34237 | Then the pilots of the place put out brisk and leapt on board;"Why, what hope or chance have ships like these to pass?" |
34237 | Then up spake a Scottish maiden, With her ear unto the ground:"Dinna ye hear it?--dinna ye hear it? |
34237 | There were men with hoary hair Amidst that pilgrim band: Why had they come to wither there, Away from their childhood''s land? |
34237 | They sayde,"And why should this thing be, What danger lowers by land or sea? |
34237 | This is the song of the Yellowthroat, Fluttering gaily beside you; Hear how each voluble note Offers to guide you: Which way, sir? |
34237 | This is the song the Brown Thrush flings, Out of his thicket of roses; Hark how it warbles and rings, Mark how it closes: Luck, luck, What luck? |
34237 | This so far is pure pleasure, but why not, as another step, find something difficult, something you instinctively draw back from? |
34237 | Thy shores are empires, changed in all save thee-- Assyria, Greece, Rome, Carthage, what are they? |
34237 | Tiger, tiger, burning bright In the forests of the night, What immortal hand or eye Dare frame thy fearful symmetry? |
34237 | To the hunter good What''s the gully deep, or the roaring flood? |
34237 | To what warm shelter canst thou fly? |
34237 | Unarmed, faced danger with a heart of trust? |
34237 | Waking or asleep, Thou of death must deem Things more true and deep Than we mortals dream, Or how could thy notes flow in such a crystal stream? |
34237 | Warbler, why speed thy southern flight? |
34237 | Was there a man dismayed? |
34237 | Went the hermit to a brother Sitting in his rocky cell:"Thou an olive tree possessest; How is this, my brother, tell? |
34237 | Wha can fill a coward''s grave? |
34237 | Wha sae base as be a slave? |
34237 | Wha will be a traitor knave? |
34237 | What care I for the men, sailor? |
34237 | What cat''s averse to fish? |
34237 | What does he but soften Heart alike and pen? |
34237 | What dread grasp Dare its deadly terrors clasp? |
34237 | What fields, or waves, or mountains? |
34237 | What have I to forgive?" |
34237 | What if conquest, subjugation, Even greater ills become?" |
34237 | What immortal hand or eye Could frame thy fearful symmetry? |
34237 | What is it? |
34237 | What is she, That all our swains commend her? |
34237 | What is the voice I hear On the winds of the western sea? |
34237 | What little lad, do you say? |
34237 | What love of thine own kind? |
34237 | What matters the reef, or the rain, or the squall? |
34237 | What objects are the fountains Of thy happy strain? |
34237 | What plant we in this apple tree? |
34237 | What plant we in this apple tree? |
34237 | What plant we in this apple tree? |
34237 | What remains not here compiled? |
34237 | What shall the tasks of mercy be, Amid the toils, the strifes, the tears, Of those who live when length of years Is wasting this apple tree? |
34237 | What shapes of sky or plain? |
34237 | What sought they thus afar? |
34237 | What the anvil? |
34237 | What the hammer, what the chain, In what furnace was thy brain? |
34237 | What the magic that charms the glad babe in her arms, Till it cooes with the voice of the dove? |
34237 | What thou art we know not; What is most like thee? |
34237 | What though in solemn silence, all Move round this dark, terrestrial ball? |
34237 | What though nor real voice nor sound Amidst their radiant orbs be found? |
34237 | What was done? |
34237 | What wilt thou exchange for it?'' |
34237 | What would you have him do?" |
34237 | What''s the mercy despots feel? |
34237 | What''s the soft Southwester? |
34237 | When Colin''s at the door? |
34237 | When can their glory fade? |
34237 | When did music come this way? |
34237 | When the stars threw down their spears, And watered heaven with their tears, Did he smile his work to see? |
34237 | Whence the music that fills all our being-- that thrills Around us, beneath, and above? |
34237 | Where are the flowers, the fair young flowers, that lately sprang and stood In brighter light and softer airs, a beauteous sisterhood? |
34237 | Where is there a girl who would not make a low curtsey to Shakespeare''s Silvia, Milton''s Sabrina, Wordsworth''s Lucy, or Mrs. Browning''s Elizabeth? |
34237 | Where lies the land to which the ship would go? |
34237 | Where, on thy dewy wing, Where art thou journeying? |
34237 | Whispered the king,"Shall I know when Before_ his_ throne I stand?" |
34237 | Whither away, Bluebird, Whither away? |
34237 | Whither away, Swallow, Whither away? |
34237 | Whither away? |
34237 | Whither away? |
34237 | Who avert the murderous blade? |
34237 | Who could be less than modest in his presence? |
34237 | Who could but wish to bring the whole world under his spell? |
34237 | Who gave you the name of Old Glory-- say, who-- Who gave you the name of Old Glory? |
34237 | Who misses, or who wins the prize? |
34237 | Who saileth here so bold?" |
34237 | Who will shield the captive knight? |
34237 | Who will shield the fearless heart? |
34237 | Whose heart hath ne''er within him burned, As home his footsteps he hath turned, From wandering on a foreign strand? |
34237 | Why should I speak low, sailor? |
34237 | Why weep ye by the tide? |
34237 | Will ye give it up to slaves? |
34237 | Will ye look for greener graves? |
34237 | Will ye to your homes retire? |
34237 | Will you not add to this garden of girls others whom you would like to see blooming beside them? |
34237 | Wilt thou-- as if thou human wert-- go forth And wanton far from them who love thee best? |
34237 | X FOR HOME AND COUNTRY_ The First, Best Country_ But where to find the happiest spot below, Who can direct, when all pretend to know? |
34237 | XIII STORY POEMS: ROMANCE AND REALITY_ The Singing Leaves_ I"What fairings will ye that I bring?" |
34237 | You come back from sea And not know my John? |
34237 | _ A Song of Love_ Say, what is the spell, when her fledglings are cheeping, That lures the bird home to her nest? |
34237 | _ A Visit From the Sea_[15] Far from the loud sea- beaches, Where he goes fishing and crying, Here in the inland garden, Why is the sea- gull flying? |
34237 | _ Border Ballad_ March, march, Ettrick and Teviotdale; Why the de''il dinna ye march forward in order? |
34237 | _ Forbearance_ Hast thou named all the birds without a gun? |
34237 | _ How''s My Boy?_ Ho, sailor of the sea! |
34237 | _ Hynde Horn_"Oh, it''s Hynde Horn fair, and it''s Hynde Horn free; Oh, where were you born, and in what countrie?" |
34237 | _ Little Bell_ Piped the blackbird on the beechwood spray:"Pretty maid, slow wandering this way, What''s your name?" |
34237 | _ Minstrels and Maids_ Outlanders, whence come ye last? |
34237 | _ So Sweet Is She_ Have you seen but a bright lily grow, Before rude hands have touched it? |
34237 | _ Stanzas on Freedom_ Is true Freedom but to break Fetters for our own dear sake, And, with leathern hearts, forget That we owe mankind a debt? |
34237 | _ The Cataract of Lodore_"How does the Water Come down at Lodore?" |
34237 | _ The Fatherland_ Where is the true man''s fatherland? |
34237 | _ The Flight of the Birds_ Whither away, Robin, Whither away? |
34237 | _ The Knight''s Tomb_ Where is the grave of Sir Arthur O''Kellyn? |
34237 | _ The Mermaid_ I Who would be A mermaid fair, Singing alone, Combing her hair Under the sea, In a golden curl With a comb of pearl, On a throne? |
34237 | _ The Merman_ I Who would be A merman bold, Sitting alone, Singing alone Under the sea, With a crown of gold, On a throne? |
34237 | _ The Priest and the Mulberry Tree_ Did you hear of the curate who mounted his mare, And merrily trotted along to the fair? |
34237 | _ The Sailor''s Wife_ And are ye sure the news is true? |
34237 | _ The Star Song_ Tell us, thou clear and heavenly tongue, Where is the Babe but lately sprung? |
34237 | _ The Tax- Gatherer_"And pray, who are you?" |
34237 | _ The snow in the street and the wind on the door._ Through what green seas and great have ye past? |
34237 | _ The"Gray Swan"_"Oh, tell me, sailor, tell me true, Is my little lad, my Elihu, A- sailing with your ship?" |
34237 | _ We Are Seven_------A simple child, That lightly draws its breath, And feels its life in every limb, What should it know of death? |
34237 | _ Where Lies the Land?_ Where lies the land to which the ship would go? |
34237 | _ Where Lies the Land?_ Where lies the land to which the ship would go? |
34237 | _ Who Is Silvia?_ Who is Silvia? |
34237 | _ Who Is Silvia?_ Who is Silvia? |
34237 | ah, why, Thou too, whose song first told us of the Spring? |
34237 | cried the Mayor,"d''ye think I''ll brook"Being worse treated than a Cook? |
34237 | cried the Mayor,"what''s that?" |
34237 | cries Hervé Riel:"Are you mad, you Malouins? |
34237 | is it true? |
34237 | is it weed, or fish, or floating hair-- A tress o''golden hair, A drownèd maiden''s hair Above the nets at sea? |
34237 | let us a voyage take; Why sit we here at ease? |
34237 | lovely voices of the sky Which hymned the Saviour''s birth, Are ye not singing still on high, Ye that sang,"Peace on earth"? |
34237 | or Mistress Mary quite contrary How does your garden grow? |
34237 | quoth he--"What''s your name? |
34237 | she said,"What country come ye frae?" |
34237 | straight he saith;"Where is my wife, Elizabeth?" |
34237 | the''Swan''?" |
34237 | what ignorance of pain? |
34237 | what news? |
34237 | what ship?" |
34237 | what to do? |
34237 | what would you have?" |
34237 | where is now that boasted valour flown, That in the tented field so late was shown? |
34237 | whither wander you? |
34237 | who knows what the Clover thinks? |
34237 | who loves not me?" |
34237 | your tidings tell, Tell me you must and shall-- Say why bare- headed you are come, Or why you come at all?" |
47117 | Are you going to make a scholar of him? |
47117 | Did I tell you about Mr. Garrick, that the town are horn- mad after? |
47117 | Has Warwickshire, sir,said Foote,"the advantage of having produced you as well as Shakspeare?" |
47117 | Have you not heard,she wrote to Garrick, in June 1776,"of your poor Pivy? |
47117 | How so? |
47117 | How were you pleased? |
47117 | Is not this tea stronger than usual, madam? 47117 Now what do you think? |
47117 | Who could believe,says Voltaire,"that love could have been introduced into such a story? |
47117 | Who should act genteel comedy, perfectly,asks Walpole,"but people of fashion that have sense? |
47117 | Who upon earth,he says,"has written such perfect comedies? |
47117 | Why do not they give these parts to Porter? 47117 Why, dear lady?" |
47117 | Why,said ever- ready James,"what would you have me be?--A lord?" |
47117 | [ 116] And Mrs. Garrick? 47117 And now what of this George''s successor as anauditor?" |
47117 | At Mrs. Crawford''s"Is he alive?" |
47117 | But did he deserve it? |
47117 | Can you not see the pair in that first floor in Russell Street? |
47117 | Did I ever attack your head?" |
47117 | Do n''t you want to ask me how I liked him? |
47117 | Express the just? |
47117 | He dies: and with him sense and taste retreat; For, who can now conceive the Poet''s fire? |
47117 | He had failed in tragedy, and was pronounced unfit for comedy; and he asked, almost despairingly,"What the deuce then_ am_ I fit for?" |
47117 | He was in that closing season when a fop condoled with him on growing old, and asked what the actor would give to be as young as_ he_ was? |
47117 | How are Wilks and the inimitable She photographed for posterity? |
47117 | How is a man, for instance, to demonstrate his virtue in the public assembly? |
47117 | In such wise went her money; but whither has the blood of Oldfield gone? |
47117 | In the second scene of the second act he should have asked his daughter,"Sylvia, how old were you when your mother_ died_?" |
47117 | Is he a lover? |
47117 | Is it, indeed, forbidden to show us the kingdom of heaven by a parable? |
47117 | Kynaston had fallen suddenly ill, and who could learn and play the part of Lord Touchwood in a few hours? |
47117 | Like sturgeon, or like brawn, shall I Bound in a precious pickle lie, Which I can never taste? |
47117 | Lord Chesterfield saw a couple of chairmen helping a heavy gentleman into a sedan, and he asked his servant if he knew who that stout gentleman was? |
47117 | Mr. Quin,"said he, unhesitatingly,"what shall I do for a little ready money, till Saturday arrives?" |
47117 | She wore spectacles? |
47117 | Sir Francis Delaval, one of the rich amateur actors of his time, touched by her calamity,"made her a present of-- what do you think?" |
47117 | Sylvia laughed, and being put out of her cue, could only stammer"What, sir?" |
47117 | The absurdity of this must have been evident to Garrick, who immediately replied,"My dear friend, have you quite left off writing for the stage?" |
47117 | The fervid transport? |
47117 | Thence the well- known epigram:--"''Well, what''s to- night?'' |
47117 | Urged by my duty, I have ventur''d here; But how for Douglas can I shed the tear? |
47117 | Was it from fear that Garrick declined to play Jaffier to Quin''s Pierre? |
47117 | What are the small or the great faults of this actor of"all the Falstaffs,"when we find his virtues so practical and lively? |
47117 | What do they in the North, When they should serve their sovereign in the West?" |
47117 | What would kind- hearted people have? |
47117 | What_ was_ to be done? |
47117 | When about to retire she wrote to Garrick, with some obliviousness as to dates:--"What signifies 52? |
47117 | When real griefs the burden''d bosom press, Can it raise sighs feign''d sorrows to express? |
47117 | When the play was over, Cibber asked her, in his familiar way,"Nancy, how did you like your new husband?" |
47117 | Whereon Garrick asked,"Should he dress at you in the play, how can you be alarmed at it, or take it ill? |
47117 | Who could or would dare to face a public whose sides were still shaking with laughter at Dogget''s irresistible performance of this character? |
47117 | Who drove you?" |
47117 | Whom did this mysterious Diana marry? |
47117 | Woffington?" |
47117 | cried the more confused justice;"I mean, how old were you when your mother_ was born_?" |
47117 | he exclaimed,"do you mean to say that we have not been playing Shakspeare all this while?" |
47117 | in woollen? |
47117 | on that night was as grand as her"Are you a man?" |
47117 | one to whom they all owed so much, and from whom he, Burke, had learned many a grace of oratory? |
47117 | or the soft desire?" |
47117 | said Warburton,"by what law?" |
47117 | the great? |
47117 | the natural? |
47117 | was as much superior in significance to that of Mrs. Siddons, as the"Was he alive?" |
47117 | what next?" |
47117 | whereon Quin retorted with,"And have you been cured of it?" |
47117 | you are there, are you? |
50082 | But angels would n''t have spears, would they? |
50082 | Did the Eighteenth Century need that lesson? |
50082 | Did you ever hear a cat moving about? |
50082 | Do you like it? |
50082 | Do you suppose he''d jump right at the deer and the lambs? |
50082 | Do you think the sources of the plot should be thoroughly mastered? |
50082 | He must have known that somehow everything was right, do n''t you think? 50082 How would you teach''Macbeth''?" |
50082 | In the night? 50082 Oh, is that all?" |
50082 | So the angels,I went on,"could n''t keep back their tears; but what did God do?" |
50082 | Well,I said,"do n''t you see that this is just what the man who wrote the poem meant? |
50082 | Were you really? 50082 What did God know?" |
50082 | What do you suppose it was written for? |
50082 | What does a tiger look like? |
50082 | Why, how do they look to you? |
50082 | Why,said the boy,"do you know that? |
50082 | Wilt thou talk of such things while a terrible storm of thunder and lightning is raging within a few miles of us? |
50082 | ***** What can not you and I perform upon The unguarded Duncan? |
50082 | A real, truly tiger, all loose? |
50082 | A teacher may say to a pupil:"Suppose you had known Silas Marner, what would you have thought of him?" |
50082 | And what shoulder and what art Could twist the sinews of thy heart? |
50082 | And, when thy heart began to beat, What dread hand formed thy dread feet? |
50082 | But would you therefore put the wretched cookery- book on a higher level of estimation than the divine poem? |
50082 | Ca n''t you appreciate that mankind has not been keeping poems from generation to generation without finding out if they really are useless? |
50082 | Could a sunbeam make a noise?" |
50082 | Did he catch her?" |
50082 | Did he see a tiger in the night under a bush? |
50082 | Did he who made the lamb make thee? |
50082 | Did n''t you ever see one?" |
50082 | Did you ever see a keeper stir them up?" |
50082 | Did you have to learn it at school when you were little like me?" |
50082 | Did you think that?" |
50082 | Do n''t you suppose you or I would think they were pretty big fires if we saw them, and knew there was a tiger behind them?" |
50082 | Do the children thrill? |
50082 | Do you suppose Bruno''d run?" |
50082 | Do you suppose he''d sharpen his claws the way Muff does on the leather chairs?" |
50082 | He should be able from personal experience to appreciate the force of the remarks of De Quincey: What is it that we mean by literature? |
50082 | If you came upon one in the forest in the dark, what do you think would be the first thing that would tell you a tiger was near?" |
50082 | In what distant deeps or skies Burnt the fire of thine eyes? |
50082 | In what furnace was thy brain? |
50082 | On what wings dare he aspire? |
50082 | The boy reflected a moment, and then, with a frank look, asked:"Did the fire in a tiger''s eyes really come out of the stars?" |
50082 | The question then becomes:"Suppose you had in some way found out about him all that the novel tells, what would you have felt?" |
50082 | The student who in his nursery days started out with the instinctive question in regard to the fairy- tale:"Is it true?" |
50082 | The"outline"from which those are quoted goes on to give the following questions: Of what literary spirit is"Evangeline"the expression? |
50082 | Then in a manner as natural and easy as I could make it I asked:"Did you ever see a tiger?" |
50082 | What do you learn from a cookery- book? |
50082 | What do you learn from"Paradise Lost"? |
50082 | What is the author''s thought- habit as shown in the poem? |
50082 | What is the place of this poem in the development of verse? |
50082 | What the anvil? |
50082 | What the hammer? |
50082 | What the hand dare seize the fire? |
50082 | What would they see?" |
50082 | When the stars threw down their spears, And watered heaven with their tears, Did he smile His work to see? |
50082 | and"Do we still need it?" |
50082 | and"Is it wrong?" |
50082 | what dread grasp Dare its deadly terrors clasp? |
50082 | what the chain? |
34865 | Ah, but if you should n''t have any little girl? |
34865 | Ah-- an''what deed he say, mon? |
34865 | Ai n''t I wicked, mamma? |
34865 | And did you brook the outrage? |
34865 | And how did He look? |
34865 | And how did you like her? |
34865 | And how is Congress divided? |
34865 | And how many brothers? |
34865 | And then what do you do? |
34865 | And what do you get my little man? |
34865 | And what is a monitor? |
34865 | And where did you get your money to pay for it? |
34865 | And where is your home, dear? |
34865 | And who preached for you? |
34865 | And why do n''t you give''em back, hey? |
34865 | And why not, pray? |
34865 | And why not? |
34865 | And why not? |
34865 | And why not? |
34865 | And would you not like to be born again, my little man? |
34865 | Ay, ay,said the delighted papa;"ay, ay, he''s a chip of the old block, ai n''t you, sonny?" |
34865 | Be you a Democrat or a Republican? |
34865 | Bless me-- what is it? |
34865 | But I say pa, if He did want to, could He do it? |
34865 | But how do you know He hears you? |
34865 | But will mamma be there too? |
34865 | But, Thomas,said the missionary,"I hope you prayed for yourself?" |
34865 | But, mamma-- won''t it be tedious for the good God to listen all the time to the same prayer? 34865 Can He make a two- year old colt in two minutes?" |
34865 | Certainly, my dear; but they would n''t last long-- and what then? |
34865 | Did n''t you tell me, ma, that I was always to_ take her part_? |
34865 | Do n''t you know? 34865 Do n''t you see, Johnny, that the baby wants to kiss you?" |
34865 | Do you go to the Sabbath- school? |
34865 | Do you, indeed, mamma? |
34865 | Duz oo? 34865 Emma,"said one of them,"would n''t it be awful if somebody should up and shoot our school- mistress?" |
34865 | Father,said a young theologian of about five, just entering upon the ministry,"father, does God tell you what to preach?" |
34865 | Forever and ever? |
34865 | George,said a minister to one of the little boys, who looked as if butter would n''t melt in his mouth,"where is your sister Minnie?" |
34865 | Georgie,said the teacher, with great seriousness,"did n''t you know it was good for nothing?" |
34865 | God!--when? |
34865 | Grandpa,said he,"whom do all these woods and fields belong to?" |
34865 | How came your shirt turned inside out, then? |
34865 | How did you fall--_backward_? |
34865 | How helping him? |
34865 | How many sisters did you say, my dear? |
34865 | How old are you, my dear? |
34865 | How would you like to have it cut, my little man? |
34865 | I say, my fine fellow, where''s this road go to? |
34865 | If you know the Collect, Fanny,said the teacher,"why do n''t you repeat it?" |
34865 | In the closet? |
34865 | In the drawers of my desk? |
34865 | Is he in my hat? |
34865 | Is he in my pocket? |
34865 | Is he in this carriage? |
34865 | Is it still raining, my dear? |
34865 | Is n''t there something burning here? |
34865 | Johnny,said the teacher,"why did n''t you wash your face?" |
34865 | Mamma, how does God born people black? |
34865 | Mary, my love,said she,"do n''t you know that God loves the little flies?" |
34865 | Mother,said he,"did God make that man?" |
34865 | Mother,said the little one,"do n''t you think, if he lived nearer to God, he would n''t have to pray so loud?" |
34865 | No, Willie-- you know what I said-- you would n''t have me tell a lie, would you? |
34865 | Nothing, my boy-- how can you see nothing? |
34865 | Now, boys, when I walk through the streets, and I speak to some people, and not to others, what is the reason? |
34865 | O yes, I remember; and what then? |
34865 | Oh, I see; how long has she had''em? |
34865 | Papa,said a small urchin with a mischievous eye--"I say, papa, ought the master to flog a fellar for what he did n''t do?" |
34865 | Papa,said he,"do Dod see everything?" |
34865 | Put you out? |
34865 | Sammy,said a young mother to her darling,"Sammy dear, do you understand the difference between body and soul?" |
34865 | Shall mother try to make it clear to him? |
34865 | Then what makes you scratch it out? |
34865 | Then why did you put it into the box? |
34865 | Then, Ma, how would the little angels know I belonged to the best society? |
34865 | There now, Willie,said the youngest,"you see that, do n''t you? |
34865 | They are not, my son; but why do you ask? |
34865 | Wal!--how should I know the day was goin''to be so long? |
34865 | Well Susie, how do you like your school? |
34865 | Well, Tommy,said the teacher,"what precious stone have you found?" |
34865 | Well, ai n''t I a sabbath- breaker, for bein''born a- Sunday? 34865 Well, good people do n''t die on Sunday, do they?" |
34865 | Well, ma, what is it? |
34865 | Well, mother, and if I should, would I stand any better chance of getting it then, if I should eat it now? |
34865 | Well, my boy, whom does this tree belong to? |
34865 | Well, my lad, you''ve been to meeting, hey? |
34865 | Well, my little soldier, what have you to say? |
34865 | Well, no, my boy-- that depends upon circumstances; but why do you ask? |
34865 | Well, then, the colt would n''t be two years old, would he? |
34865 | Well, what is it? |
34865 | Well, where are you? |
34865 | Well,said the teacher,"what say you, Sallie? |
34865 | Well-- ain''t there enough to last, till you could get another husband? |
34865 | Well-- ain''t we got flour and sugar, and other things in the store- room? |
34865 | Well-- and how did you pray? |
34865 | What are you afeard of? |
34865 | What did you use to do, mamma, before you was married? |
34865 | What house is that? |
34865 | What is it? |
34865 | What made you cry, then, my boy? |
34865 | What on earth were you going to do with the milk? |
34865 | What!--is she dead? |
34865 | What''s that? |
34865 | What''s them, gam''ma? |
34865 | What, pull it up before you have planted it? 34865 When I am dead, sister Mary, I''ll come back to see you, and you must save all the crumbs and feed me-- won''t ye, sister Mary?" |
34865 | Where is Bethlehem? |
34865 | Where would you look for it? |
34865 | Who first knew that Christ was born? |
34865 | Who told him? |
34865 | Why did n''t you let fly, sonny? |
34865 | Why not, my boy? |
34865 | Why, Bobby,said his mother,"where_ did_ you pick up such words?" |
34865 | Why, Jim,said a neighbor, who was hurrying by,"when did you learn to smoke?" |
34865 | Why, dear? |
34865 | Why, do n''t you see? 34865 Why, gran''pa will be there, wo n''t he?" |
34865 | Why, how can that be? 34865 Why, ma-- what for? |
34865 | Why, mamma,said he, with a mischievous giggle, as if he understood the joke, and_ meant_ it,"What''s the use of a horse afore he''s_ broke_?" |
34865 | Why, what ails the child? |
34865 | Why, what makes you ask such a question, Bobby? |
34865 | Why, what''s the matter, Bobby? |
34865 | Yes indeed,was the reply;"but then, would n''t it be nice not to have any school?" |
34865 | Yes, mamma, and so we''ll have the raspberry- pie now, that''s put away for to- morrow-- shan''t we, mamma? |
34865 | You can''t,--why not, pray? |
34865 | You did n''t wipe it all over, then? |
34865 | _ Then who made Chloe?_Did not that child reason? |
34865 | _ Then who made Chloe?_Did not that child reason? |
34865 | _ You_, mamma-- and who is you? |
34865 | ''Well,''said I to myself,''what did he mean by that? |
34865 | --or ever lines worthier of the text? |
34865 | A Catherine or a Peter, a Bacon, a Galileo, or a Bentham, a Napoleon or a Voltaire, clambering up our knees after sugar- plums? |
34865 | A clergyman asked some children why we say Our Father_ who art in Heaven_, since God is everywhere? |
34865 | A diplomatist in embryo, a chess- player, a merchant, a lawyer? |
34865 | A legal question put to a witness on the stand, legally answered-- hey? |
34865 | A little boy once asked a godly minister,"Do you think my father will go to heaven?" |
34865 | A pious woman heard a child, as she thought, say-- and the child, too, of godly parents--"Dam it to hell-- who buys?" |
34865 | A very plausible conjecture, was it not, for a region where so many live and die of the same ailment? |
34865 | A youthful visitor, full of compassion for the poor thing, asked her brother_ if that gal had fits_? |
34865 | After all, now, was not that a capital reason?--was it not the truth? |
34865 | After looking very thoughtful for a few moments, she asked,"Can you say the Lord''s Prayer backward?" |
34865 | After propounding every conceivable question at the breakfast- table one day, he clenched the whole with,"Is God in this sugar- bowl?" |
34865 | After the ceremony was over, one of them whispered to its mother,"You do n''t mind it, mamma, do you,''cause he baptized us in his night- gown?" |
34865 | Ai n''t we got a good house to live in?" |
34865 | Am I wrong? |
34865 | And even that child-- why do you laugh at her?--didn''t she tell the truth? |
34865 | And now tell me what you have learned to- day?" |
34865 | And what more would you have? |
34865 | And when she looked up, what do you think she saw? |
34865 | And where did he get it? |
34865 | And who is there who would not shrink from being prayed for to his face anywhere, after such a fashion? |
34865 | And why not, pray? |
34865 | And why not-- if mother had failed to enlighten her upon the subject of infant baptism? |
34865 | And why not? |
34865 | And why not? |
34865 | And why? |
34865 | Another little woman, being asked by her Sunday- school teacher,"What did the Israelites do after passing through the Red Sea?" |
34865 | Another, on being refused admission to the church, upon the ground that she was too young, asked if she was too young to sin and be sorry for it? |
34865 | Another, when told that God was everywhere, asked,"In this room?" |
34865 | Are you not afraid to go to sleep in the dark, without asking God to take care of you, and watch over you till morning?" |
34865 | At last, after pondering the question awhile, he said,"Mother, are little children that starve to death happy after they die?" |
34865 | But how should he know the difference between whitewash and lather, a big brush and a little one? |
34865 | But what became of the Earl? |
34865 | But, if it were otherwise, how would they ever learn their a b_ abs_ in this world? |
34865 | CHILDREN-- WHAT ARE THEY GOOD FOR? |
34865 | Can this be true? |
34865 | Charlie hesitated awhile, and then, as if it had come to him all at once, broke out with,"What are you loafing round here for, doin''nothing? |
34865 | Cuvier laboring to distinguish a horse- fly from a blue- bottle, or dissecting a spider with a rusty nail? |
34865 | Did n''t I tell the darned thing she''d lose me?" |
34865 | Did n''t that mother laugh a little to herself, think you? |
34865 | Did not he always stop till you got by,--and then did n''t he always begin again? |
34865 | Does heaven keep open Sunday?" |
34865 | Duz oo love Dod?" |
34865 | For a moment I was thunder- struck-- where could he have got such an idea? |
34865 | Had n''t these boys the law on their side? |
34865 | Had n''t these little mischiefs lived to some purpose? |
34865 | Had not this child pretty decided notions of what is meant by the song of a"bumble bee,"and the sting? |
34865 | Had she not been a believer, she would have kicked Neddy at once, without asking leave-- would she not? |
34865 | Her father checked her, somewhat sharply, saying,''Why is it that you always talk so much?'' |
34865 | Her little girl seemed puzzled; but, after thinking awhile, said,"Well, mamma, then who cooks wash- days? |
34865 | How are they divided?" |
34865 | How many are there who would like being widows, without going through the form of marriage? |
34865 | I have heard nothing to- day of the forget- me- not which troubled her so the first week, have you?" |
34865 | I shall be yest like ee yobber kitten, sant I?" |
34865 | I.--CHILDREN-- WHAT ARE THEY GOOD FOR? |
34865 | If it be true that"just as the twig is bent the tree''s inclined,"how much have you to answer for? |
34865 | If it be true, that the greater the truth the greater the libel, might not Miss Sallie be indicted? |
34865 | If"Men are but children of a larger growth,"then_ what are children_? |
34865 | If"the child is father of the man,"what is to become of such children? |
34865 | It did n''t strike neighbor Smith''s poor little baby a- purpose, did he? |
34865 | It was a mere accident, was n''t it, dear?" |
34865 | La Place trying to multiply his own apples, or to subtract his playfellow''s gingerbread? |
34865 | Little mischiefs, at the best, I have said-- are they not? |
34865 | Not long ago he was talking with them about the origin of Christmas:--"Where was Christ born?" |
34865 | Not so bad-- hey? |
34865 | Of course the child had been dreaming-- so I urged the inquiry a little further:"Did you see God?" |
34865 | One day he said,"Well, Frank, and so you tumbled out of bed again?" |
34865 | Or dew- drops? |
34865 | Out of all patience with her one night, her bedfellow said to her,--"Will you hold your tongue, Lucinda, and let me go to sleep?" |
34865 | Stock- brokers and Theologians? |
34865 | That child was a better grammarian than Lindley Murray; and her wealth, in what was it unlike the hoarded and useless wealth of millions? |
34865 | The first words of a little boy who had just been fished up at New London lately, were--"_Be I dead, though?_"No. |
34865 | The grateful little creature looked her full in the face, and whispered,''_ Are you God''s wife?_''"No. |
34865 | The text was,"Why stand ye here all the day idle? |
34865 | Then why not pursue the study for yourself? |
34865 | Troublesome comforts are they at best, these Little Plagues; and yet, how on earth should we get along without them? |
34865 | Up jumped a little boy with,"Please, ma''am, did he give milk?" |
34865 | Was her sincerity to be doubted? |
34865 | Was it not as if her whole character had been revealed to him, on her way upward, as by a flash from the empyrean? |
34865 | Was n''t she smart?--or"just as cunnin''as she_ could_ be?" |
34865 | Was not the inference honest and fair, granting the premises? |
34865 | Was not this a revelation? |
34865 | Was the poor thing a little pharisee in her indignation, without knowing it? |
34865 | Was there ever a better reason, with the poor boy''s understanding of the great mystery? |
34865 | Was there ever anything more childlike and beautiful than"Mamma, God knows all the rest?" |
34865 | Well and so-- when she came to herself, where do you think she was? |
34865 | Well, what does our boy do? |
34865 | Were not these miniature men? |
34865 | What are these boys here for?''" |
34865 | What better definition would you have? |
34865 | What child of four years of age was ever capable of such an act, without a long course of preparation? |
34865 | What he tried to say was,"Damsons to sell-- who buys?" |
34865 | What if I say over the fable I''ve just learnt at school?" |
34865 | What is it I do with my eyes?" |
34865 | What is it that makes the sea, salt?" |
34865 | What is it?" |
34865 | What knew that child of irreverence? |
34865 | What more can the best of them do? |
34865 | What more have they ever done? |
34865 | What other soul had he any idea of after mamma was done with him? |
34865 | What should we say to find ourselves romping with Messalina, Swedenborg, and Madame de Stael? |
34865 | What wonder that she did n''t always know her head from her heels? |
34865 | What would be more likely? |
34865 | What would be our feelings to see a fair child start up before us a maniac or a murderer, armed to the teeth? |
34865 | What would you like best, Charlie? |
34865 | What wouldst thou have?" |
34865 | When I turned out the original of"Children-- What are they good for?" |
34865 | Which other world did she mean, think you? |
34865 | Who will venture to say that the poor child did not understand the meaning? |
34865 | Who would not sympathize with such a child, under such circumstances, even though both were at an infant prayer- meeting? |
34865 | Why did n''t you wait till I grew up, and then marry me?" |
34865 | Will anybody tell me that he did not know what people go to meeting for? |
34865 | Will nobody take the hint? |
34865 | Will you tell me that child did not reason? |
34865 | Wo n''t you take''em with you, gramma, when you go?" |
34865 | Would a longer prayer have been more to the purpose? |
34865 | Would you plant for the skies? |
34865 | [ Illustration: CHILDREN-- WHAT ARE THEY GOOD FOR? |
34865 | _ A Baby Spendthrift._--"I say, Bobby,"said one little youngster to another,"lend me two cents, will yer? |
34865 | _ A Non Sequitur._--"What have you done with your doll, Amy?" |
34865 | _ A Poser._--"Well then-- who took care of the babies?" |
34865 | _ A definition of Pride._--"What is_ pride_, my dear?" |
34865 | _ A very proper Distinction._--A little thing, not quite old enough to understand her catechism, getting puzzled over the question,"Who made you?" |
34865 | _ Admirable Definition._--At one of the ragged schools of Ireland, a clergyman asked,"What is holiness?" |
34865 | _ An embryo Metaphysician._--"What are you going to see, Sherwood?" |
34865 | _ Analogy._--"What the plague is that?" |
34865 | _ And why not?_--"Lottie,"said a little visitor,"what makes your Kitty so cross?" |
34865 | _ Another fair Inference._--"Lottie, dear,"said a little visitor to her playfellow of three,"what makes our Kitty so cross?" |
34865 | _ Children and Fools are said to speak the Truth._--"Be you good?" |
34865 | _ Classification._--"Who makes the laws of our government?" |
34865 | _ Coming to the Point._--"Tilly, my love,"said a young mother to a daughter in her fourth summer,"what would you do without your mother?" |
34865 | _ Definition of Faith._--A child was asked,"What is faith?" |
34865 | _ Does Dr. Jones know it?_"Who that wears a cap would not sympathize with that poor widow? |
34865 | _ Does Dr. Jones know it?_"Who that wears a cap would not sympathize with that poor widow? |
34865 | _ Flat Contradiction._--"What''s that?" |
34865 | _ I despise him._"Did not that child_ feel_? |
34865 | _ Liberty of Speech._--"Chickerin'', is meetin''out?" |
34865 | _ Little Tommy._--"I say, ma, is it true that we are made out of the dust?" |
34865 | _ One of the Upper Ten._--"Ma,"said a little moppet,"if I should die and go to heaven, would I wear my moire antique?" |
34865 | _ Patronage._--"I say, dad-- have you been to the Museum yet?" |
34865 | _ Rather a Paradox._--"What is conscience?" |
34865 | _ School Exercises._--"Well, Maggie, what do they do at school?" |
34865 | _ Second Thoughts._--"O papa, is it wrong to change your mind?" |
34865 | _ Sed quære_, as the lawyers say, Was such a thing ever said by a little child? |
34865 | _ The Tables turned._--"Are you talking to me, sir?" |
34865 | _ Tommy._--"I''ll be hanged if I can believe it;''cause you see, if we was, when we sweat, would n''t we be muddy?" |
34865 | _ Total Depravity._--"Do you say your prayers every day, my little man-- every night and morning?" |
34865 | _ What are children?_ Step to the window with me. |
34865 | a destroyer, or a traitor, a Harry the Eighth, or a Benedict Arnold asleep in our bosom? |
34865 | a little brother, or a little sister?" |
34865 | and is it conceivable that he meant what he said? |
34865 | and such a revelation, too, that even her father must have been astonished? |
34865 | and then, if she could but manage to scare the fishes a little-- a very little-- that would be such glorious fun, too,--wouldn''t it, you? |
34865 | and was not that a capital reason? |
34865 | and were they not close observers, and apt scholars, charmingly trained for the chief business of life in a small neighborhood? |
34865 | and what did he say?" |
34865 | and where did you buy it?" |
34865 | and where do you think she was? |
34865 | and why not, pray?" |
34865 | do n''t they swarm about our supper- tables and Sabbath- schools, just now, like the frogs in Egypt? |
34865 | do people get sick on Sunday?" |
34865 | do you know the meaning of the language you have employed? |
34865 | do you know what the pyro-- pyro-- pyrotechnical remedy is, for a crying baby?" |
34865 | exclaimed the mother, greatly shocked at the child''s hopeless condition;"and why not, pray?" |
34865 | how would I look going to heaven all cut to pieces?" |
34865 | in two minutes, pa?" |
34865 | is that you?" |
34865 | just as much as-- and pray, my little creature, what''s your name?" |
34865 | now under the name of apoplexy, and now under that of the heart disease, or plethora? |
34865 | or only_ Land Speculators_? |
34865 | or playing bo- peep with Murat, Robespierre, and Charlotte Corday? |
34865 | or puss- puss in the corner with George Washington, Jonathan Wild, Shakspeare, Sappho, Jeremy Taylor, Mrs. Clark, Alfieri, and Harriet Wilson? |
34865 | or that,_ as_ a child, he was irreverent, because he would not charge God foolishly, nor hold the Great Workman answerable for such workmanship? |
34865 | or was she only-- like most of us who are loudest in our outcries for the salvation of others-- a little overburdened with self- righteousness? |
34865 | or, in other words,_ do you know your own meaning_? |
34865 | receive the stranger with thankfulness, and adopt him with joy, for his extraordinary resemblance to a lost favorite? |
34865 | said a little chap, the other day, who had been listening to her conversation with a neighboring gossip;"did you say I was born a- Sunday?" |
34865 | said his mother, looking in at the open door,"what_ are_ you doing there?" |
34865 | then who''ll take care of us?" |
34865 | though the young lady were at a boarding- school, and learning the polka, and the waltz, or the schottische? |
34865 | to find a nest of serpents on our pillow? |
34865 | twice!_"and then she happened to look down into the water,--and what do you think she saw there? |
34865 | what are you doing with that boy?" |
34865 | what did you marry my father for? |
34865 | what do you think? |
34865 | what would you think of me? |
34865 | what''s that?" |
34865 | what''s that?" |
34865 | when He''s so good to you, and gives you Aunt Mary and grandpa, and grandma, and ever so many friends to take care of you,--_why_, Sissy?" |
34865 | when it would be such a help to the living, my dear?" |
34865 | where am I now?" |
34865 | who cares for you?" |
34865 | who''s that_ a- bearin''_?" |
34865 | why do n''t you grab the knife, and run?" |
34865 | with the same look, the same voice, and the same outcry, refusing to be comforted? |
34865 | without me?" |
34865 | would n''t you? |
45748 | Ai n''t ye got no teeth of yer own? |
45748 | Am I holding the thing right?] |
45748 | Are you coming with the guns this afternoon, Miss Maud? |
45748 | Call that a good dawg? 45748 Call this rabbit shootin''? |
45748 | Did you? 45748 Do you know Lord Peckham?" |
45748 | Enjoying it, old chap? |
45748 | Good Heavens!--You''re not going to shoot that fox? |
45748 | Grand day, is n''t it? |
45748 | Have you seen that account of our fishing competition in the_ Little Peddlington Gazette_, sir? |
45748 | Have you shot often, uncle? |
45748 | How''s that, John? |
45748 | I say, my boy, seen any birds this way? |
45748 | I say, what do you do with your game? |
45748 | Now I wonder what he''ll take? 45748 Now, Grandison, His Royal Highness will be tired of waiting: why do n''t you send in the beaters?" |
45748 | Now, do n''t you boys know that nobody can catch fish in this stream except with my-- er-- a-- special permit? |
45748 | Take, sir? 45748 Very odd, Robins, that I do n''t hit anything?" |
45748 | Well, old chap, what sort o''sport?] |
45748 | Wha''s catchin''fesh?!] |
45748 | What about the birds? |
45748 | What are yer tryin''ter catch-- mice?] |
45748 | What are you doin''here? 45748 What did you aim at?"] |
45748 | What powder are these loaded with, my boy? |
45748 | What sport? 45748 Why ca n''t you look after your beast of a dog? |
45748 | ''Been fishing? |
45748 | (_ Our sporting French friend, voted dangerous, has been given a beat to himself._)--_Chorus._"Well, Count, what luck?" |
45748 | ***** A POINT OF TRESPASS.--_Irate Owner of this side of water._"Are you aware that you are trespassing in this water, young man?" |
45748 | ***** To WELL- INFORMED PISCATORIALS.--_Query._ What sort of fish is a Nod? |
45748 | ***** WALTON''S LIFE OF HOOKER.--Is this another name for Izaak Walton''s_ Complete Angler_? |
45748 | ***** When is a fisherman like a Hindoo? |
45748 | *****[ Illustration: A BLANK DAY.--"Well, dear, did you get anything?" |
45748 | *****[ Illustration: FROM DEE- SIDE.--_Piscator._"Yes, my boy, ai n''t he a beauty? |
45748 | *****[ Illustration: MISPLACED SYMPATHY.--"Well? |
45748 | *****[ Illustration: MORE ORNAMENTAL THAN USEFUL.--"Just give that bit o''lead a bite atween yer teeth, will yer, matie?" |
45748 | *****[ Illustration: SHOOTING PROSPECTS_ Johnnie Bangs._"I say, old man, do you mind taking these cartridges out? |
45748 | *****[ Illustration: SOMETHING LIKE PRESERVATION.--_Irate Individual._"Are you aware, sir, that you are fishing in preserved water?" |
45748 | *****[ Illustration: THE GENTLE CRAFTSMAN(? |
45748 | *****[ Illustration: WET AND DRY.--_Careful Wife._"Are you very wet, dear?" |
45748 | *****[ Illustration:"So you do n''t think much of my retrievers?" |
45748 | *****[ Illustration:"What bait are yer usin'', Billie?" |
45748 | *****[ Illustration:_ Encouraging Prospect._--_Piscator Juvenis._"Any sport, sir?" |
45748 | *****[ Illustration:_ Fitz._"I say, are_ all_ your beaters out of the wood?" |
45748 | *****[ Illustration:_ Lunatic( suddenly popping his head over wall)._"What are you doing there?" |
45748 | *****[ Illustration:_ Robson._"Do you think fishes can hear?" |
45748 | *****[ Illustration:_ Visitor._"Are there any fish in this river?" |
45748 | --_Keeper._"Why did n''t you fire the other barrel, m''seer-- the other barrel at the last bird?" |
45748 | --_Presbyterian Minister._"Do n''t you know it''s wicked to catch fish on the Sawbath?!" |
45748 | 1._"Had ever a bite, Jim?" |
45748 | And how about the birds? |
45748 | And is all the fish_ pickled_, then? |
45748 | And is that why you''re so thin?"] |
45748 | And mayhap have a sup o''the whisky to spare for somebody else, governor?"] |
45748 | Any sport this morning?" |
45748 | Are they plentiful, Gaskins? |
45748 | Are you fly- fishing, or''eaving the lead?"] |
45748 | B._"What for?" |
45748 | But is n''t it rather dangerous to frighten them so much? |
45748 | By the way"--(_faintly_)--"would-- er-- would_ you_ mind being the_ man_?"] |
45748 | Ca n''t you see he''s standing right in my way?"] |
45748 | Could he take less? |
45748 | Empty yet remains my basket, Cramped and weary grows my fist, Stranger, in despair I ask it, Does the trout in truth exist? |
45748 | F. H. is introduced to distinguished foreigner_)"You hunt much of the fox, monsieur? |
45748 | Fallen in?" |
45748 | For partridges I''ll try no more; Why should I waste in grim despair? |
45748 | From the bank, or a boat, Will I gaze on my float-- What life is so happy as mine? |
45748 | Had ever anybody such bad fortune? |
45748 | Have you caught any fish, Billy?" |
45748 | Have you ever hit a haystack, even?" |
45748 | How am I to act now? |
45748 | How can you bear to spend your time whip-- whip-- whipping at the stream all day long and never a single fish taking the least notice of you?" |
45748 | How do yer think the what''s- a- names''ll bite, if you keep on a splashin''like that?"] |
45748 | How many have you bagged?" |
45748 | I said,"How is it that you muff Your birds, my boy? |
45748 | I said,"Perchance the day''s too hot?" |
45748 | I''ve left them-- I say, old chap, got any flies with you?" |
45748 | Is n''t it fun? |
45748 | Is one able to surprise him Any time from morn to night? |
45748 | Is there any fly can rise him, Any hook can hold him tight? |
45748 | Jiblets?" |
45748 | Lor''bless us, my dear, have you forgotten the day when you hooked me?"] |
45748 | N''est ce pas?"] |
45748 | Tell me, is his belly yellow? |
45748 | The question has been raised, can one swim in them, in case of an accident? |
45748 | They flash from the cover-- what lover Of sport does not thrill as they rise In feathered apparel? |
45748 | Vot more sweet For ze young female- chaser zat Do''ave ze leetle feet? |
45748 | What d''you say, Smithers, eh?" |
45748 | What did you catch?" |
45748 | What''s September to them, without plenty to pot? |
45748 | Where indeed? |
45748 | Where is the fly- book? |
45748 | Which end do I shoot at?"] |
45748 | Whose is that water up there round the bend?" |
45748 | Why do n''t ye go and spread yourself out?" |
45748 | Why do n''t you pick''em up?" |
45748 | Why on earth are you hiding there?" |
45748 | Why wo n''t the line run? |
45748 | Why, I''d like to know how yer proposes to spend the remainder of yer''olidays, eh?"] |
45748 | Why, bless me, where''s the cartridge? |
45748 | Will I put it up for your lordship?"] |
45748 | Would you like to hear the yarn? |
45748 | _ Does_ he look a splendid fellow When you turn him on his back? |
45748 | _ Dripping Angler._"You do n''t suppose this is a perspiration, do you?"] |
45748 | _ Fitz._"Are you sure?" |
45748 | _ Fitz._"Have you_ counted_ them?" |
45748 | _ Is_ he spotted red and black? |
45748 | _ Lunatic._"Caught anything?" |
45748 | _ Lunatic._"How long have you been there?" |
45748 | _ P.J._"Bream?" |
45748 | _ P.J._"Perch?" |
45748 | _ P.J._"What sport, then?" |
45748 | _ Snob._"Ah, sell it, do you? |
45748 | _ Sportsman._"Ever hit it?"] |
45748 | wh''-wh''-why not? |
45748 | what''s that splash? |
45748 | wo n''t they fume, as they look out this morn On these damp furzy swamps, and yon drenched standing corn? |
39592 | A signal? |
39592 | A village, sir? |
39592 | And did any one ever come and claim it? |
39592 | And give some one else the credit? 39592 And is that so?" |
39592 | And now perhaps you will tell me to what I owe your visit? |
39592 | And where will you fetch it from, all you Big Steamers, And where shall I write you when you are away? |
39592 | And who was it that died with my brave son? |
39592 | And you came here the moment you were released on your parole? |
39592 | And you never found out who it belonged to? |
39592 | And you never saw it again? |
39592 | And you think,said Kitty, as hurriedly,"that, by simply sitting here and regarding you in that absurd attitude, I shall fall in----?" |
39592 | And you took it home with you, the dear creature? |
39592 | And you, madame? |
39592 | Any way by which we could identify him? |
39592 | Are you asleep? |
39592 | Ask him who he is, and what he wants? |
39592 | At this hour? 39592 But he wo n''t refuse his consent, wo n''t chuck me out?" |
39592 | But how is it you are so intimately acquainted with the history and characteristics of this lady of lofty rank and goodly oof? |
39592 | But why come to my father, this particular studio, to earn it? |
39592 | Can we come in? |
39592 | Can you give me a penny to buy some sweeties? |
39592 | Did you try? |
39592 | Did you? |
39592 | Do you like the altogether different you asked for? |
39592 | Do you think we should come now? |
39592 | Does that teach you nothing? 39592 Girl,"she said, in her deepest tones,"why have you tricked, deceived me?" |
39592 | Going out to lunch again to- day? |
39592 | Have n''t you got anything to say for yourself? |
39592 | Have they gone? |
39592 | How can we,getting rather cross,"how in the world can we when we have no money?" |
39592 | How do you know? |
39592 | How have you prospered? |
39592 | How was that? |
39592 | I asked you why you are masquerading here? |
39592 | I beg your pardon? |
39592 | I could n''t give it away before all those blacks, or where should I have been the next time I used my false beard and Arab dress? 39592 Indeed?" |
39592 | Is it? |
39592 | Is n''t it ripping, Biddy? |
39592 | Is that you back, Marion? |
39592 | It is permitted to smoke? |
39592 | Just listen to what this young man''s been telling me? 39592 Mademoiselle, what room is that?" |
39592 | Mademoiselle,I cried,"what does the Opera stand for?" |
39592 | Magepa,I said,"if in truth there is to be fighting, why do n''t you move over the river one night with your people and cattle, and get into Natal?" |
39592 | No clue of any kind? |
39592 | No; why should I not doubt your word? |
39592 | Not when I make a noise like a dog? |
39592 | Now, Father? |
39592 | Now, mademoiselle, will you please explain to me how it is that while your neighbours have fled you remain at your château? |
39592 | Of course I know that; but how can you hope to preserve your strength if you eat so little? 39592 Of course; what can the man expect if he trundles her about in this weather? |
39592 | Oh, well, I''m sorry,he said, but without much penitence in his tone;"but the truth should always be told, should n''t it? |
39592 | Oh, well, it means-- of course, you saw when you came in? 39592 Oh, what would that matter?" |
39592 | Oh? |
39592 | Shall we take Jules? 39592 So you accept me?" |
39592 | The lantern then, was not a signal, mademoiselle? |
39592 | Then this young lady does n''t come within the category of undesirables? |
39592 | Then what can I do for you, all you Big Steamers, Oh, what can I do for your comfort and good? |
39592 | They will be quiet and still without persuasion,said papa;"eh, children?" |
39592 | To whom? |
39592 | We are there, I presume, to prevent raiding? |
39592 | Well,said her father, after considering the matter,"what about going out as charwoman? |
39592 | What I want to know is-- What does this mean? |
39592 | What are you doing with them? |
39592 | What became of the child Sinala? |
39592 | What can I do for you in exchange, Mademoiselle? |
39592 | What did he say? |
39592 | What did you do? |
39592 | What do you make of it? |
39592 | What do you make of it? |
39592 | What has happened? |
39592 | What is it? 39592 What is wrong with my collar, Mrs. Batterby? |
39592 | What road did you take? |
39592 | What was he like? |
39592 | What was it about? |
39592 | What''s that? |
39592 | Where are their fathers? |
39592 | Where are you going, Blakeney? |
39592 | Where''s the man? |
39592 | Where? |
39592 | Whom do you expect at this hour, mademoiselle? |
39592 | Whom do you expect? |
39592 | Why not? |
39592 | Why, if you are so eager to show me the contents, did you try to throw it away? |
39592 | Will you speak now? |
39592 | You call it nothing to have found out the secret that has puzzled clever people for thousands and thousands of years? 39592 You do n''t mean to say you think she was really a spy?" |
39592 | You have not come for him? 39592 You have? |
39592 | You mean to say that that was how you did it? 39592 And Ann? 39592 And as I stood shuffling awkwardly from one foot to the other, in great remorse as she had foretold, she added, gently,Will you not go, monsieur?" |
39592 | And leave my people to be killed? |
39592 | And the whispering, commanding voice went on after awhile:"Now, will you allow yourselves to be muffled and bound? |
39592 | And where could he have walked from? |
39592 | Anything more than an organ- grinder who has been rasping my nerves for five minutes? |
39592 | BY JOHN OXENHAM_ Painting by_ EUGENE HASTAIN_ and Drawings by GORDON BROWNE, R.I.__ WHAT can a little chap do For his country and for you? |
39592 | Batterby?" |
39592 | Batterby?" |
39592 | Besides, how was it that none of these messages had been passed into Paris? |
39592 | But how are we going to get him to find his tongue?" |
39592 | But the mother of Eucrates could not at first hide her grief, and her neighbours said among themselves:"Why should she be sorrowful? |
39592 | But what did it hide? |
39592 | But why do you not let your wife know that you have been reading? |
39592 | Could there have been some mistake, I wonder? |
39592 | Could you-- er-- put on something of a scowl? |
39592 | D''ye hear?" |
39592 | Did n''t I tell you? |
39592 | Did you ascertain anything about him before you lost him?" |
39592 | Do you hear, Biddy?" |
39592 | Do you mean to say that I shall have to go to concerts and sing as mamma does?" |
39592 | Do you think she will?" |
39592 | Do you want another? |
39592 | Even though you are young, does it teach you nothing? |
39592 | Had M. Bonnet''s cat five kittens? |
39592 | Had it been a trick-- I ask the ladies-- would there not have been tears? |
39592 | Had the boat ever gone out without him? |
39592 | Have you said all that?" |
39592 | He must be a cunning dog also, one who can run fast, for how comes it that he lives to snarl when so many will never bark again? |
39592 | Her name is Fleur- de- lis; is it not quaint?" |
39592 | His wants were comparatively simple; but, since he could not realise them, why not give up the struggle? |
39592 | How can I meet him? |
39592 | How can I serve monsieur?" |
39592 | How can we be expected to sympathise with you when we know you are off to Perthshire to fish? |
39592 | How did they know? |
39592 | How is it you have been so indiscreet as to remain here? |
39592 | However, as you young people have taken the matter into your own hands----""Just what we have done, have n''t we, Kitty?" |
39592 | I am very pleased with him; he has been doing so well lately: quite distinguished himself; you''ve heard, of course? |
39592 | I resumed my questions:"Your doctor, monsieur, is in the house?" |
39592 | I rode therefore with an easier mind, and the first thing which entered my thoughts was-- what do you think? |
39592 | I suppose, sir, that I should report myself there at once?" |
39592 | If not, why was it still inhabited? |
39592 | Is he dead?" |
39592 | It was humiliating; it is always humiliating to a young man not to be taken seriously, is n''t it? |
39592 | It''s not much to ask----""Oh, is n''t it?" |
39592 | Just then papa spoke up:"How are we going to thank you, sir?" |
39592 | Look here, Miss Kitty-- I beg your pardon, all the Thomsons call you that-- I hope you wo n''t mind my saying that I''ve fallen in love with you?" |
39592 | Macumazahn, will you do me a service? |
39592 | Mrs. Batterby,"exclaimed Matilda in excitement,"do you really believe that?" |
39592 | Now, what happens? |
39592 | Oh, you are not going to take him away?" |
39592 | Or do you conceal your book from your wife lest she should think you are over- exerting yourself? |
39592 | Ought you to get the knife or to give up reading? |
39592 | Perhaps you''d like a drink?" |
39592 | Possibly the little scene plays differently, as thus:"John, are you feeling any easier now?" |
39592 | Say, Magepa, does Cetewayo_ really_ mean to fight, and if so, how? |
39592 | She must not be made anxious on your account? |
39592 | She says, in a low voice:"Are you feeling any easier now, John?" |
39592 | That being the case-- as it certainly is-- what was I to do? |
39592 | The old peasant- woman''s cabin with the broken window? |
39592 | Then I stretched out my hand and said triumphantly:"You will tell me perhaps that the cloak upon your shoulders is a woman''s cloak?" |
39592 | Then what will happen to those who have left him?" |
39592 | War pictures are all the go now, are n''t they? |
39592 | Was n''t he cox? |
39592 | Was this solitary château the undiscovered last station on the underground road through which the news passed into Paris? |
39592 | What answer make to calling voice and beating drum, To sword flash and to pleading prayer of God For right? |
39592 | What answer makes my soul? |
39592 | What are you on this morning, Dad?" |
39592 | What became of the child?" |
39592 | What can I say to him? |
39592 | What could you take for supper?" |
39592 | What did it matter what she said? |
39592 | What do you think about this grand old Spartan code of honour? |
39592 | What is it you wish to do? |
39592 | What more glorious than to follow the example of those who had fought and died for England? |
39592 | What must we do with them?" |
39592 | What shall we do?" |
39592 | What was I to do? |
39592 | What will happen? |
39592 | What wonder, then, that there was a French air about them that attracted purchasers? |
39592 | What would you do in such a case? |
39592 | What''s she celebrated for?" |
39592 | What-- what do you think he''ll say, darling?" |
39592 | When once the advance begins, if there is an advance, who knows what may happen? |
39592 | Where had those words been used before? |
39592 | Who are you, you rascal? |
39592 | Who could he be, this formidable giant coming out of the unknown? |
39592 | Who was it who had used them? |
39592 | Who would be Armand? |
39592 | Whose drum thus throbs persistent? |
39592 | Whose prayer thus pierces Heaven? |
39592 | Whose sword thus gleams fierce death? |
39592 | Whose voice thus penetrates thy peace? |
39592 | Whose? |
39592 | Whose? |
39592 | Whose? |
39592 | Whose? |
39592 | Why did she now sit rocking her head like a child in pain? |
39592 | Why did the lights blaze out upon the snow so late? |
39592 | Why do you keep making noises like that instead of giving me a proper answer?" |
39592 | Why had she so struggled to hinder me from opening them? |
39592 | Will you come up now and see for yourselves, or remain here in safety through the night? |
39592 | Would you mind my kissing her, sir?" |
39592 | You are seconded from the Royal Mallows, I understand?" |
39592 | You can think of nothing? |
39592 | You dare to tell me it was nothing cleverer than that? |
39592 | You do n''t talk Arabic, I suppose?" |
39592 | You do n''t want another? |
39592 | You know as well as I do that you''re not going to make us unhappy? |
39592 | You say there are no papers on him?" |
39592 | [ Illustration: Fleur- de- Lis_ Painted for Princess Mary''s Gift Book by Carlton A. Smith, R.I._]"You will be with us, Father?" |
39592 | [ Illustration:"For my part, I believe it was one of the angels of God"]"Then it followed you?" |
39592 | [ Illustration[ Illustration] WHAT CAN A LITTLE CHAP DO? |
39592 | [ Illustration]"But if anything happened to all you Big Steamers, And suppose you were wrecked up and down the salt sea?" |
39592 | [ Illustration]"Well?" |
39592 | [ Illustration]"Will that waken you, eh?" |
39592 | [ Illustration]"You are Prussian?" |
39592 | [ Illustration]"You, sir, are the wounded officer on parole?" |
39592 | _ Drawings by_ H. M. BROCK, R.I. WHAT CAN A LITTLE CHAP DO? |
39592 | _ What_ is it?" |
39592 | did it miss its nurse? |
39592 | said her ladyship, almost embarrassed,"I did n''t know that you were here: have you been waiting long?" |
39592 | what have you there?" |
39592 | what in the name of---- is happening here?" |
31893 | A confession of his? |
31893 | All well, Alent? 31893 Alone?" |
31893 | Am I not, Larry? |
31893 | And Manape? |
31893 | And if your people there are in trouble, in danger-- you will let me help? |
31893 | And ready-- for everything else? |
31893 | And the one thing we must do? |
31893 | And the one thing? |
31893 | And what are you going to do with us in the meantime? 31893 And who is this?" |
31893 | And why should n''t I be here attending to my own affairs? 31893 Are ye assembled, frogfolk, that ye may hear the decision of your Thinking Ones?" |
31893 | Are you doing any flying? |
31893 | Are you in your right mind? |
31893 | Back? |
31893 | But how? 31893 But how?" |
31893 | But why would he have gone, Tina? |
31893 | But why,I asked soothingly,"should you wish to kill anyone? |
31893 | Ca n''t you see that there are things not even you should do? 31893 Can you climb, Ellen?" |
31893 | Coincidence? 31893 Dearer than the Paste of Strange Dreams?" |
31893 | Did we do that? |
31893 | Did you find Migul and his captives-- the girl from 1777 and the man of 1935? |
31893 | Did you try? |
31893 | Do we go in here, or keep on ahead? |
31893 | Do you know the underground route? |
31893 | Do you mean,I said slowly, trying to understand what he had babbled forth,"that you have come out of the past? |
31893 | Does Lee Bentley love me? |
31893 | Does the Old Wise One learn wisdom at last? |
31893 | Earth year, you mean? |
31893 | Even in this age of yours they have not discovered that secret? |
31893 | Frightened, Tina? |
31893 | From when did you come? |
31893 | Good God, what does it mean, anyway? |
31893 | Have I not? |
31893 | Have n''t you guessed the reason for my interest in your engines of destruction? 31893 Have ye brought the paste of evil to our abode, knowing well the strict proscription of our tribe? |
31893 | Have you discovered there is no use opposing me, Bentley? |
31893 | How are you going to go back to your own period-- your own era? |
31893 | How can a man leave his own age and travel ahead to another? |
31893 | How do you know all this? |
31893 | How have you come to have the cage, Tugh? |
31893 | How, Mary? |
31893 | I wonder how the old man will take it when the world reads that the_ Bengal Queen_ went down with all on board? 31893 I''m sorry,"I commented,"to be an ungracious host, but I am wondering what your plans may be? |
31893 | In here? |
31893 | In our world, Tugh? |
31893 | Interested in them? |
31893 | Is it dark, Tina? 31893 Is it far, Princess? |
31893 | Is it what you wanted? |
31893 | Is that what you call it when you''ve just heard that it committed murder? 31893 Is that what you call searching for Migul?" |
31893 | It would be fearful to be marooned here permanently, would n''t it? 31893 Kind of jumpy, eh? |
31893 | Like any dumb strapper, you''ve got your mind made up, ai n''t you? 31893 May I take you and this friend of yours home, Princess?" |
31893 | Morones? |
31893 | Must we go the way of England, of France, of all Europe? 31893 Mystery?" |
31893 | Nargyll, what did your master do with the visitor? |
31893 | News to you, eh, Morones? 31893 No Robots in or about it? |
31893 | No harm must come to the body of Lee, you understand? 31893 Now, Migul?" |
31893 | Oh, Bentley,he called after a long interval of silence,"do you like the odor of violets? |
31893 | Overhead? |
31893 | Perhaps you can arrange for guides for us? |
31893 | Princess, is it you? |
31893 | Rascally? |
31893 | Ready now? |
31893 | Ready? |
31893 | See this? 31893 Shall we return to the other room?" |
31893 | So Harl made a confession, Princess? |
31893 | So? 31893 Tell me,"he commanded sharply,"what year is this?" |
31893 | That grave? |
31893 | That,she said,"is none--""Of my affair? |
31893 | The savage died in the interest of science? |
31893 | They are ready for the demonstration at the palace? |
31893 | This experiment of yours,said Bentley when the period of silence became unbearable,"--won''t you tell us about it?" |
31893 | Tina, see here-- isn''t there something we can do? |
31893 | Trouble? 31893 Valueless ye call the white sap?" |
31893 | Was Alent at his post in the passage to the Robot caverns? |
31893 | What are you doing here_ now_? |
31893 | What difference does it make-- a few hours or a day? 31893 What do I care about them?" |
31893 | What do you mean by that? |
31893 | What do you mean, this particular one? |
31893 | What do you mean? |
31893 | What do you mean? |
31893 | What do you mean? |
31893 | What do you want to know? |
31893 | What do you want? |
31893 | What do you want? |
31893 | What happened to the factor who was here before you? |
31893 | What is it? |
31893 | What is it? |
31893 | What is that you said? |
31893 | What is this? |
31893 | What matter? |
31893 | What mystery is there about Harl? |
31893 | What of my memories? |
31893 | What shall I do? |
31893 | What''d you do with the bodies? |
31893 | What''s the matter with you? |
31893 | Where are the man and girl whom Migul stole? |
31893 | Where did you leave Harl and the two visitors? |
31893 | Where is Harl''s room? |
31893 | Where is Harl? |
31893 | Where is Morones? |
31893 | Where is he now? 31893 Where?" |
31893 | Which way next? |
31893 | Which way, Tina? 31893 Who invited you?" |
31893 | Who is Paul? |
31893 | Who''ll get me? |
31893 | Who''ll get me? |
31893 | Will you be good enough to answer my question? 31893 Will you not tell us what you are going to do with us?" |
31893 | Will you two be good enough to excuse me? 31893 Would that be satisfactory to Bentley, I wonder?" |
31893 | Yes, sir? |
31893 | You approve of my little plan to dominate the world? |
31893 | You are feeling better? |
31893 | You are not married? |
31893 | You choose to be mysterious, sir? |
31893 | You come from future Time? |
31893 | You did n''t find out where he went? |
31893 | You give me orders? |
31893 | You give me your word of honor as a gentleman not to oppose me? |
31893 | You have not mentioned this affair to anyone, Shiro? |
31893 | You hear him? |
31893 | You mean to say,we asked,"that the pup is now roaming around somewhere in the Twenty- second Century?" |
31893 | You mean your brain is Bentley''s brain, and that Bentley''s body holds the brain of a great ape? |
31893 | You mean,said Ellen huskily,"that Lee Bentley there is really an ape?" |
31893 | You never heard of him again? |
31893 | You realize, of course, that you''re not going back? |
31893 | You think my friends will be rescued? |
31893 | You told them about me? |
31893 | You travel the Universe, I gather, and yet your scientists have not yet learned to move in time? 31893 You understand that no matter what the Apeman does, you must not try to slay him?" |
31893 | You want me to take her away from Bentley and give her to you? |
31893 | You want to come out and go into the front room? |
31893 | You were below just now in the lower passages? |
31893 | You will make no attempt to injure me? |
31893 | You will see that it is not in vain? |
31893 | You would like to see the Apeman?--the creature that looks so much like you that it will be like peering at yourself in the mirror? 31893 You''ll be careful, Tina?" |
31893 | You''re not too tired? |
31893 | _ Bien, mon cher ami_,he told me-- he was as apt to drop into French as Russian or any of a dozen other languages--"a name-- what is it? |
31893 | ***** But what could Bentley do? |
31893 | ***** But who was"Paul?" |
31893 | ***** How could he take the pugnacity out of Apeman without destroying him? |
31893 | ***** How long would Barter wait before making his next move? |
31893 | ***** If Manape were to attempt first aid for Apeman, how would such a sight react upon Ellen Estabrook? |
31893 | ***** Morones''smile might have been a grin of satisfaction, at Olear''s question:"Is that all you''ve bought since the last freighter was here?"'' |
31893 | ***** What was Barter doing now? |
31893 | *****"Coincidence?" |
31893 | *****"You see?" |
31893 | 5--Drayle''s question( page 124)"Have you arranged the elements?" |
31893 | A storm of nature? |
31893 | Also, when our people make an interplanetary flight, would we go with intent to kill? |
31893 | Am I correct?" |
31893 | And again she demanded of Tugh,"I ask you, where is Harl?" |
31893 | And even their leaders, who had sometimes opposed-- were they not kind at heart? |
31893 | And how could he fight? |
31893 | And if he were to enunciate words that Ellen could understand, what then? |
31893 | And if to to- morrow, why not to next year, next century? |
31893 | And that grave behind the cabin, who or what is it?" |
31893 | And the document? |
31893 | And you come shooting off-- trying to make out I stole the''lucene and killed those two fellows, eh? |
31893 | And, armed with the white- ray, once I get into the place-- You see that I am clever, do n''t you?" |
31893 | Are my eyes betraying me, or is this a nightmare from which I shall waken presently? |
31893 | Are those lights ahead at the Power House entrance?" |
31893 | Are you happy and satisfied-- with what your brothers do with women?" |
31893 | As for you, you''ll leave here when I bid you, and not before, understand? |
31893 | Astounding Stories is O. K. Why do we want a lot of deep science with our stories? |
31893 | But how could she believe, even if a way were discovered? |
31893 | But if Manape thought you desired his friendship for Bentley...?" |
31893 | But seriously, do n''t you think that affairs of the heart are very much out of place in"our"type of magazine? |
31893 | But what did he use for anesthesia? |
31893 | But what? |
31893 | But what? |
31893 | But with his gibberish was he actually conversing with them? |
31893 | But would Apeman stand the journey? |
31893 | But would her mind stand up under the awfulness of it? |
31893 | But would not Ellen die of fright at being borne away through the jungle in the arms of an ape? |
31893 | But you and Harl knew that?" |
31893 | But, if he strode toward her now, how would Barter explain that Manape had understood his words? |
31893 | By the way, I wonder who drew the illustration for this story? |
31893 | Ca n''t we send a squad of police after Migul?--go with them-- actually make an effort to find them? |
31893 | Ca n''t you see that, man? |
31893 | Caleb Barter? |
31893 | Could he force those hands to something else? |
31893 | Could he, after all, be a madman? |
31893 | Could n''t abandon this post to the wogglies, could we? |
31893 | Could they cross the Atlantic with their enormous load of armored hull, or must they be transported? |
31893 | Demented, or obsessed with some strange purpose? |
31893 | Did I not invent these dials?" |
31893 | Did he dare try? |
31893 | Did they think now that they would find us passive and unresisting? |
31893 | Did they want to take our cities undamaged? |
31893 | Did you empty them?" |
31893 | Did you ever notice that 75% of all the Readers who say they do not care for science in their stories are women? |
31893 | Do n''t you understand that some things should be left entirely in the hands of God?" |
31893 | Do you believe me to be a child, or a weakling? |
31893 | Do you realize that you are being rather absurd?" |
31893 | Do you suppose we''d all get locked up for experimenting with this sort of thing fictionally? |
31893 | Do you think you can confuse me, turn me from my purpose, with words? |
31893 | Do you want me to tell you a secret? |
31893 | Do you wonder now that I am unnerved?" |
31893 | Do you? |
31893 | Does he despise me for so freely admitting my love? |
31893 | Going to finish me next, I suppose?" |
31893 | Had Barter foreseen all that? |
31893 | Had he walked in his sleep, drawn by some freak of his subconscious mind into the room of Manape? |
31893 | Had they not checked the advance of an irresistible army to give him and his new weapon an opportunity to open the eyes of the people? |
31893 | Has he any feeling about it at all? |
31893 | Has his mind completely gone?" |
31893 | Have you seen the Council about it to- day?" |
31893 | He added earnestly,"Do not you think we waste time? |
31893 | He himself had said that he had prayed to"them"for delay; that in a few weeks he would do-- what?... |
31893 | His ape brain would warn him, but would his human strength avail in case of necessity, in case of attack by another ape, or a four- footed carnivore? |
31893 | How about it, boys? |
31893 | How am I to understand? |
31893 | How better can he learn than by watching our behavior?" |
31893 | How came Bentley in this room? |
31893 | How can I know? |
31893 | How can you do such a horrible thing?" |
31893 | How could Bentley render the travesty unconscious and yet make sure that Apeman did not die? |
31893 | How could he kiss this woman whom he loved with the gross lips of Manape, the great ape? |
31893 | How could he tell her his love when his voice was such as to frighten the very wild beasts of the jungle? |
31893 | How could he tell? |
31893 | How could she know that she was actually in the power of an ape, and that her loved one actually pursued to save her? |
31893 | How long had he held this great ape in captivity? |
31893 | How shall I proceed from this moment on? |
31893 | How shall I procure food for Ellen? |
31893 | How would she react to the horrible thing he had told her? |
31893 | How? |
31893 | I had work to do; why should I neglect it to go scuttling home because someone who feared these swarming rats had begged me to run for cover? |
31893 | I may be master of the world; who knows? |
31893 | I said to myself, why should a man be a helpless stick upon the stream of time? |
31893 | I suppose you''ve long since decided that way, Lee?" |
31893 | I wonder what?" |
31893 | If Manape were to attempt to take Apeman back to Caleb Barter, leading the way for Ellen, would she follow, and what would his action tell her? |
31893 | If Tina did not return, what would he do? |
31893 | If he did, then what would he do next? |
31893 | If he left the apes in the hands of the natives, what then? |
31893 | If the Readers want reprints why does n''t Mr. Clayton publish an annual chock full of reprints for these reprint hounds? |
31893 | If there were anyone in the jungle back of them, why had he or they failed to challenge them? |
31893 | If they went wild through the native village, slaying and laying waste, would Bentley be responsible for loss of life? |
31893 | In other words, why can he not slip back through time to yesterday; or ahead to to- morrow? |
31893 | Is everybody so pleased with your book that you receive nothing but commendatory letters? |
31893 | Is it some weird fever? |
31893 | Is the Power House well guarded by humans?" |
31893 | It would not be easy to be brave, would it? |
31893 | It''s by Jack Williamson: need more be said? |
31893 | Just think, would we, if we received visitors from space, make war on them? |
31893 | Just why do you permit your Authors to inject messy love affairs into otherwise excellent imaginative fiction? |
31893 | Larry here? |
31893 | Larry whispered:"What does this mean, Tina?" |
31893 | Long enough for Apeman to be well of his illness, so that he might observe what havoc an ape''s brain might work with a human body? |
31893 | Long enough for Ellen to accustom herself to life among the apes? |
31893 | Long enough to allow the brain of Bentley to discover what miracles intellect might do with the body of Manape? |
31893 | Now, with your kind permission, I will burst into the little(?) |
31893 | Oh, I know that he was you-- but where would all three of us have been had it not been for the powerful body of Manape, the great ape? |
31893 | Or did violets possess odor? |
31893 | Or had disaster come upon us all?... |
31893 | Or had mankind strangely turned decadent, and rushed back in a hundred years or so to savagery? |
31893 | Or is this too feeble a simile? |
31893 | Or the heart? |
31893 | Or would the cunning of Apeman, denizen of the jungle, warn him against any such? |
31893 | Or would they race for the jungle to escape? |
31893 | Or, rather, as it would have been yesterday had you looked into a mirror?" |
31893 | Perhaps you can lead us to food and water?" |
31893 | Princess? |
31893 | Purposely, I mean?" |
31893 | Say, did n''t they have any dumber strappers around than you? |
31893 | See the blood on his shoulders?" |
31893 | Shall I tell you why?" |
31893 | She whispered to Larry,"I think it is best, do n''t you?" |
31893 | So what are you going to do about it?" |
31893 | Suppose his man''s brain harbored thoughts of vengeance on enemies, and he now possesses the might of the great ape to carry out his vengeance? |
31893 | Suppose they swept over Africa like a cloud of locusts? |
31893 | Suppose you were taken out of the wilds and dropped into a ballroom?" |
31893 | Tell me, why did you drive him off?" |
31893 | That is an order-- understand?" |
31893 | That is my conception of it; is it clear to you?" |
31893 | The men of the fighting planes were marked for death; one read it in their eyes; but who of us was not? |
31893 | The other door? |
31893 | The questions which turned over and over in Bentley''s mind were these: How shall I tell Ellen the truth? |
31893 | The voices were thanking God-- for what? |
31893 | Then what does he do? |
31893 | Then:"Surrender?" |
31893 | There are other ways of... figuring time now?" |
31893 | Thinking then that the travesty in there with her-- with Bentley''s body-- was really Bentley, to what lengths might she not be persuaded in her love? |
31893 | This, I take it, is a ship for navigating space?" |
31893 | Tina gasped,"Where are our visitors-- the young man and the girl?" |
31893 | Tina said to him:"Johns, what is being done?" |
31893 | Tugh has not passed back?" |
31893 | Understand?" |
31893 | Understand?" |
31893 | Was Barter smiling to himself, back there in his awful hermitage, waiting for the working out of his"experiment"? |
31893 | Was he irrational, this exile of Time who had impressed his sinister personality upon so many different eras? |
31893 | Was it her woman''s intuition which told her that Manape was a safe guardian? |
31893 | Was it like this? |
31893 | Was that necessary?" |
31893 | Was the brain the seat of the emotions? |
31893 | Was there any possibility of forcing Barter to perform the operation? |
31893 | Was this mercy?--from such an enemy? |
31893 | We are all unarmed, but what matter? |
31893 | Well, are you proud? |
31893 | Were the air- cruisers with the fleet, or would they come later? |
31893 | Were they feeling their way? |
31893 | What charges of tritonite had the demented man placed in those shells? |
31893 | What did Barter expect Ellen to do? |
31893 | What did Barter expect him to do? |
31893 | What did Barter mean? |
31893 | What did he expect Apeman to do? |
31893 | What did that indicate? |
31893 | What do I care for your records and your histories? |
31893 | What do you mean?" |
31893 | What dreadful thing has so awfully changed Lee? |
31893 | What else could she think? |
31893 | What experiment was he performing? |
31893 | What food should Manape secure for Ellen? |
31893 | What food will Apeman choose for my body to assimilate? |
31893 | What fruits were edible, what poisonous? |
31893 | What had Barter meant? |
31893 | What has happened here? |
31893 | What if Apeman selected, for example, a mate-- from among the hairy she''s? |
31893 | What in the world has come over you?" |
31893 | What is it, Nargyll?" |
31893 | What is the rest of Barter''s experiment? |
31893 | What now was Bentley supposed to do? |
31893 | What part of it had the castaways been witnessing that they had not recognized? |
31893 | What part of you that I can not see is Lee?" |
31893 | What should he do now? |
31893 | What should he do? |
31893 | What was his duty where they were concerned? |
31893 | What was the purpose of it? |
31893 | What was their cruising range? |
31893 | What was this that Barter was saying? |
31893 | What would Apeman do, how would he behave, when the white body of Bentley was well again? |
31893 | What would he see in her beloved eyes when she regained consciousness? |
31893 | What would morning bring to this strange trio? |
31893 | What would she think if an ape began to address her in English, and"Bentley"suddenly held speech with the great apes? |
31893 | What would they do when they were released? |
31893 | What year is this?" |
31893 | What_ did_ Apeman think of his condition, anyway? |
31893 | Where is the soldier who came to visit you?" |
31893 | Where was Barter? |
31893 | Where was he? |
31893 | Where was the ape that had uttered that frightful noise? |
31893 | Where was the scientist? |
31893 | Who are you, what are you, that you should ask me a question the smallest child should know?" |
31893 | Who goes there?" |
31893 | Who is the best? |
31893 | Who was this"Paul"who had"prevailed upon the Red Army"to halt? |
31893 | Why did n''t you wake me up?" |
31893 | Why do n''t you have one? |
31893 | Why had this old man shut himself away from civilization like this? |
31893 | Why in heaven''s name do they buy A. S. if they do n''t like it? |
31893 | Why need he be borne on this slow current at the same speed? |
31893 | Will she believe it? |
31893 | Would Barter try in any way to discover how Bentley would behave in an emergency as leader of the apes? |
31893 | Would Harl return? |
31893 | Would he be in time? |
31893 | Would he not be striving to watch the course of his experiment? |
31893 | Would he wish to know sufficiently to create an emergency? |
31893 | Would his brain be able to direct his mighty arms and his fighting fangs in a battle with the apes of the jungle? |
31893 | Would that body grow well faster when guided by an ape''s brain than when a human brain was in command? |
31893 | Would they bring the red ships? |
31893 | Would they follow him? |
31893 | Would ye not rule the Green Star?" |
31893 | Would you care to look around a bit?" |
31893 | Would you like to know what I have done?" |
31893 | Yet, if you are Lee Bentley, who or what is that?" |
31893 | You and Harl were pursuing that other cage?" |
31893 | You do n''t think Harl would desert us? |
31893 | You do not like my looks? |
31893 | You have been fed? |
31893 | You have the dial set for the proper night and hour?" |
31893 | You have what you came for, you say; why not depart in peace?" |
31893 | You mean then that we three are part of an experiment? |
31893 | You mean-- Caleb Barter? |
31893 | You probably sensed that last evening?" |
31893 | You see, we are due to start in less than an hour, and--""A passenger would be in your way?" |
31893 | You were below, Tugh?" |
31893 | You''ve heard me say that I love Lee Bentley?" |
31893 | You''ve heard that I was a master of trephining? |
31893 | You, Manape, have the brain of Bentley, and Bentley has the brain of a great ape?" |
31893 | [?] |
31893 | ship?" |
41894 | Am I? |
41894 | Am_ I_ that man who lay upon the bed? |
41894 | And how did little Tim behave? |
41894 | And the Union workhouses? |
41894 | And what is that upon your cheek? |
41894 | Are spirits''lives so short? |
41894 | Are there no prisons? |
41894 | Are there no prisons? |
41894 | Are there no workhouses? |
41894 | Are they still in operation? |
41894 | Are you the Spirit, sir, whose coming was foretold to me? |
41894 | But why? |
41894 | Can you-- can you sit down? |
41894 | Cold, is n''t it? |
41894 | Could n''t I take''em all at once and have it over, Jacob? |
41894 | Do you know the poulterer''s, in the next street but one, at the corner? |
41894 | Dreadful apparition, why do you trouble me? |
41894 | Eh? |
41894 | Even if I have grown so much wiser, what then? 41894 Granny,"said Gretchen slowly,"it''s almost Christmas time, is n''t it?" |
41894 | Have I ever sought release? |
41894 | Have never walked forth with the younger members of my family, meaning( for I am very young) my elder brothers born in these later years? |
41894 | Have they no refuge or resource? |
41894 | His blankets? |
41894 | Home, little Fan? |
41894 | How are you? |
41894 | How are you? |
41894 | How can I? 41894 I am in the presence of the Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come?" |
41894 | I hope he did n''t die of anything catching? 41894 I want nothing from you; I ask nothing of you; why can not we be friends?" |
41894 | If he wanted to keep''em after he was dead, a wicked old screw,pursued the woman,"why was n''t he natural in his lifetime? |
41894 | In what, then? |
41894 | Is it good,she said,"or bad?" |
41894 | Is it? |
41894 | Is that so, Spirit? |
41894 | Is that the chance and hope you mentioned, Jacob? |
41894 | Is there a peculiar flavor in what you sprinkle from your torch? |
41894 | Is your master at home, my dear? |
41894 | Knew what, my dear? |
41894 | Long past? |
41894 | Man of the worldly mind,replied the Ghost,"do you believe in me or not?" |
41894 | My dear Mr. Scrooge, are you serious? |
41894 | My dear sir,said Scrooge, quickening his pace, and taking the old gentleman by both his hands,"how do you do? |
41894 | Old Scratch has got his own at last, hey? |
41894 | Or would you know,pursued the Ghost,"the weight and length of the strong coil you bear yourself? |
41894 | Something, I think? |
41894 | Spirit, are they yours? |
41894 | Tell me why? |
41894 | The Treadmill and the Poor Law are in full vigor, then? |
41894 | To whom will our debt be transferred? |
41894 | We are quite ruined? |
41894 | What are you going to do with those? |
41894 | What do you call this? |
41894 | What do you call wasting of it? |
41894 | What do you mean by coming here at this time of day? |
41894 | What do you think, Granny, I''ll get this Christmas? |
41894 | What do you want with me? |
41894 | What else can I be,returned the uncle,"when I live in such a world of fools as this? |
41894 | What evidence would you have of my reality beyond that of your senses? |
41894 | What has ever got your precious father then? |
41894 | What has he done with his money? |
41894 | What idol has displaced you? |
41894 | What is it? |
41894 | What is the matter? |
41894 | What is the matter? |
41894 | What place is this? |
41894 | What right have you to be dismal? 41894 What then?" |
41894 | What was that, mother? |
41894 | What''s to- day, my fine fellow? |
41894 | What''s to- day? |
41894 | What, the one as big as me? |
41894 | When did he die? |
41894 | Where is he, my love? |
41894 | Who and what are you? |
41894 | Who are you? |
41894 | Who was it? |
41894 | Who_ were_ you, then? |
41894 | Whose else''s do you think? |
41894 | Why did you get married? |
41894 | Why do you doubt your senses? |
41894 | Why do you point away? |
41894 | Why not? |
41894 | Why to a poor one most? |
41894 | Why, then, do n''t stand staring as if you was afraid, woman; who''s the wiser? 41894 Why, what was the matter with him?" |
41894 | Why, where''s our Martha? |
41894 | Why? |
41894 | Would it apply to any kind of dinner on this day? |
41894 | You are? |
41894 | You do n''t mean to say you took''em down, rings an all, with him lying there? |
41894 | You recollect the way? |
41894 | You see this toothpick? |
41894 | You travel fast? |
41894 | You wish to be anonymous? |
41894 | You''ll want all day to- morrow, I suppose? |
41894 | ''Poor Robin Crusoe, where have you been, Robin Crusoe?'' |
41894 | Admiration was the universal sentiment, though some objected that the reply to"Is it a bear?" |
41894 | And how, as a rule, are children taught to observe it? |
41894 | And what''s his name, who was put down in his drawers, asleep, at the Gate of Damascus; do n''t you see him? |
41894 | Are not our luxurious palace cars almost fulfilling these early dreams? |
41894 | Are these the shadows of the things that will be, or are they shadows of things that may be only?" |
41894 | Avarice, hard- dealing, griping cares? |
41894 | But why do spirits walk the earth, and why do they come to me?" |
41894 | By and by the little girl said, softly, to her mother,"May we not light the Christmas tree, and let him see how beautiful it looks?" |
41894 | Dilber?" |
41894 | Do we not see the same thing in French literature? |
41894 | Do you know whether they''ve sold the prize turkey that was hanging up there?--not the little prize turkey-- the big one?" |
41894 | Eh?" |
41894 | From what do you suppose the light came? |
41894 | Have I not?" |
41894 | Have you had many brothers, Spirit?" |
41894 | He thought if this man could be raised up now, what would be his foremost thoughts? |
41894 | He went sadly forward, saying to himself,"Is there no one in all this great city who will share the Christmas with me?" |
41894 | How could it be otherwise? |
41894 | I said to the daughter,"Katherine, where did you learn how to talk to baby, and to take care of one so nicely?" |
41894 | If I was to stop half- a- crown for it, you''d think yourself ill used, I''ll be bound?" |
41894 | If the father reads_ nothing_ but the newspapers and the mother_ nothing_ but novels, what then? |
41894 | If this had ever been between us,"said the girl, looking mildly, but with steadiness upon him,"tell me, would you seek me out and try to win me now? |
41894 | Is it a foot or a claw?" |
41894 | Is its pattern strange to_ you_?" |
41894 | Is not the food which you give to your child''s mind of as much importance as that which you give to his body? |
41894 | Is not this doing them a great wrong? |
41894 | Is that so much that he deserves this praise?" |
41894 | Is there anything in the world more lovely than Christmas?" |
41894 | Marley?" |
41894 | Nobody ever stopped him in the street to say, with gladsome looks,"My dear Scrooge, how are you? |
41894 | Not to sea? |
41894 | Now when Jesus was born, behold, Wise Men from the east came to Jerusalem, saying, Where is he that is born King of the Jews? |
41894 | Say that his power lies in words and looks; in things so slight and insignificant that it is impossible to add and count''em up: what then? |
41894 | Scrooge knew he was dead? |
41894 | Scrooge?" |
41894 | Shall heroes and prophets be his counselors, or shall"Peck''s Bad Boy"and the villain of the dime novel teach him how to look at life? |
41894 | Suppose we make up a party and volunteer?" |
41894 | Tell me what man that was whom we saw lying dead?" |
41894 | The Spirit did not tarry here, but bade Scrooge hold his robe, and passing on above the moor, sped-- whither? |
41894 | The astonished children turned in hushed awe to their mother, and said, in a whisper,"Oh, mother, it was the Christ Child, was it not?" |
41894 | The color? |
41894 | We''re not going to pick holes in each other''s coats, I suppose?" |
41894 | Were there no poor homes to which its light would have conducted_ me_?" |
41894 | What are the fairy tales of the Teutonic people, which Grimm has so laboriously collected for us? |
41894 | What are we celebrating?_ Is it not the greatest manifestation of love, unselfish love, that has ever been revealed to man? |
41894 | What are we celebrating?_ Is it not the greatest manifestation of love, unselfish love, that has ever been revealed to man? |
41894 | What do_ you_ say, Topper?" |
41894 | What good had it ever done to him? |
41894 | What kind of toys could come from a people among whom such scenes are accepted as a matter of course? |
41894 | What reason have you to be merry? |
41894 | What reason have you to be morose? |
41894 | What right have you to be merry? |
41894 | What shall I put you down for?" |
41894 | What then? |
41894 | What was merry Christmas to Scrooge? |
41894 | What''s the consequence? |
41894 | When the sneering tone is heard, and the question"Will it pay?" |
41894 | When will you come to see me?" |
41894 | Where had Scrooge heard those words? |
41894 | Who''s next?" |
41894 | Who''s the worse for the loss of a few things like these? |
41894 | Why did he not go on? |
41894 | Why do you delight to torture me?" |
41894 | Why give it as a reason for not coming now?" |
41894 | Will you come and see me?" |
41894 | Will you decide what men shall live, what men shall die? |
41894 | Will you do me that favor?" |
41894 | Will you let me in, Fred?" |
41894 | Will you not speak to me?" |
41894 | Will you then need to ask the question as to which is the truer way of celebrating the holy Christmas time? |
41894 | You went to- day, then, Robert?" |
41894 | You''re not a skater, I suppose?" |
41894 | _ Why do we celebrate Christmas? |
41894 | cried Fred,"who''s that?" |
41894 | exclaimed the Ghost,"would you so soon put out, with worldly hands, the light I give? |
41894 | is the all- important one, do we not see the result of such training? |
51962 | Do you believe that prayer will bring me a yaller Jersey cow? |
51962 | Fond Mother,Braley''s Fork, asks:"What shall I name my little girl baby?" |
51962 | How did you get it here, my man? |
51962 | How long would a couple of bundles last you? |
51962 | That looks well on paper; but what does it really amount to? 51962 Tutor,"Tucson, Ariz., asks"What do you regard as the best method of teaching the alphabet to children?" |
51962 | Well, is n''t that a new twist on the crippled industries of this country? |
51962 | Well, then, do you know President Cleveland, or any of the Cabinet, or the Senate or members of the House? |
51962 | Well, why do n''t you go and tell them about it? 51962 Well, why do you run so much to stock? |
51962 | What are the prospects for farmers in your State? |
51962 | What subject, you mean? |
51962 | Why,I said to the receiving teller,"surely you do n''t require a man to be identified when he deposits money, do you?" |
51962 | ''Who, then, shall be our standard- bearer as we journey onward towards victory? |
51962 | Am I not the man who for years has been a stranger to fear? |
51962 | And what do you s''pose he had selected for a nessey that took the whole forenoon to read?" |
51962 | But what recks Veritas the bold and free? |
51962 | But who is to be the leader? |
51962 | Do you know Queen Victoria?" |
51962 | Do you know any other of the crowned heads?" |
51962 | Do you mean that parents are more fretful when they are teething than any other time? |
51962 | Does he flinch or quail? |
51962 | Has not many a paper built up a name and a libel suit upon what I have written, and yet I am almost unknown? |
51962 | Have n''t I been writing things for the papers ever since papers were published? |
51962 | He is full of cold, hard words and dry definitions, but what does he say of the Mormons and female suffrage, and how to cure the pip? |
51962 | Hear ye yon buffalo roaring in her den? |
51962 | How''s that?" |
51962 | Howje spose?" |
51962 | I am often led to ask, in the language of the poet,"Is the Caucasian played out?" |
51962 | I say this because I know what I am talking about, for am I not old Veritas himself? |
51962 | Is it not possible that this butter is the brother to what we had the month previous, and that it was exchanged for its sister by mistake? |
51962 | It is a larger book than mine and costs more, and has more pictures in it than mine, but is it a work that will make a man lead a different life? |
51962 | Still, what does a man know about the proper costume for woman? |
51962 | The Poland China egg- plant looked up sadly at me and seemed to say:"Pardner, do n''t you think it''s a long time between drinks?" |
51962 | Well has the poet ejaculated,"And what is so rare as a day in June?" |
51962 | Well, what does he do? |
51962 | What could we do with it if we had it? |
51962 | What do we want of liberty anyhow? |
51962 | What does he say of the roller skating rink? |
51962 | What does he say of the tariff? |
51962 | What respectable people do you know?" |
51962 | What shall I credit myself for it? |
51962 | What would the world do without Veritas? |
51962 | When people ask, Who is Veritas? |
51962 | When will people ever learn that the way to have fun with me is to treat me for the time being as an equal? |
51962 | Who is sufficiently obscure to safely make the race? |
51962 | Who is that man? |
51962 | Who will be able to carry our victorious banner from Portland, Me., to Portland, Ore., gayly speaking pieces from the tail- gate of a train? |
51962 | Why do n''t you try diversified farming and rotation of crops?" |
51962 | Why do you blonde your butter? |
51962 | Why does a man frown on a certain costume for his wife and admire it on the first woman he meets? |
51962 | Why does he fight shy of religion and Christianity and talk very freely about the church, but get mad if his wife is an infidel? |
51962 | Why was it, I asked, that matrimony should ever single out the young and fair? |
51962 | Will you kindly bear this in mind while you peruse my pleading letter of introduction, which will accompany Mr. Brindley, Jr.? |
51962 | Would n''t every one say that it was out of place and uncalled for? |
51962 | Would you advise Kansas or Colorado as a good part of the west for that business? |
51962 | and where does he live? |
46609 | ''And what is the fruit? |
46609 | (?) |
46609 | And I answer,--''Though it be, Why should that discomfort me? |
46609 | And how much have they actually done for truth and righteousness in the world? |
46609 | And who has not as''gross, open, and palpable''an idea of''Falstaff''in Eastcheap, as of''Captain Grose''himself, beating up his quarters? |
46609 | Are their hearts less firmly bound, than were their fathers'', to the old faith and the old virtues? |
46609 | Being asked on one occasion, what book he would save for himself if he could save no other? |
46609 | But what care I to whom thy Letters be? |
46609 | But what strange art, what magic can dispose The troubled mind to change its native woes? |
46609 | But who are these? |
46609 | But who the shelter''s forced to give? |
46609 | Can I then Part with such constant pleasures, to embrace Uncertain vanities? |
46609 | Do you see that Hedericus? |
46609 | Does not the passage of Moses and the Israelites into the Holy Land yield incomparably more poetic variety than the voyages of Ulysses or Aeneas? |
46609 | Has their attachment to the Book of Books declined? |
46609 | Have the people degenerated since their adoption of this new manual? |
46609 | Here he expressed a wish that I should read to him, and when I asked from what book, he said--"Need you ask? |
46609 | How many have been determined, in their judgement or their actions, by these books? |
46609 | How many of them sincerely loved truth, honestly sought it, and faithfully, to the best of their knowledge, declared it? |
46609 | How many of them were honestly intent on becoming wise by what they read? |
46609 | How many sincere prayers were addressed by them to the Eternal Wisdom during the perusal? |
46609 | How much do you think we spend altogether on our libraries, public or private, as compared with what we spend on our horses? |
46609 | I remember he alleged many a scripture, but those I valued not; the scriptures, thought I, what are they? |
46609 | If I grant? |
46609 | Is it then right to dream the syrens sing? |
46609 | Louis Elzevir(? |
46609 | One volume more,& c. Since by these single champions what wonders were done, What may not be achieved by our Thirty and One? |
46609 | Or lead us willing from ourselves, to see Others more wretched, more undone than we? |
46609 | Or mount enraptured on the dragon''s wing? |
46609 | Say, doth thy lord my Claribel withhold? |
46609 | Shall he not rather feel a double share Of mortal woe, when doubly armed to bear? |
46609 | Shall he who soars, inspired by loftier views, Life''s little cares and little pains refuse? |
46609 | Should he go on acting upon this theory, which of our shelves is safe? |
46609 | Silent as they are, should all the emotions that went to their creation have utterance, could the world itself contain the various sound? |
46609 | THE WRITER TO HIS BOOK Whither thus hastes my little book so fast? |
46609 | The chain of ornament, which here Your noble prisoners proudly wear? |
46609 | They longed for fame? |
46609 | Upon thy table''s baize so green The last new_ Quarterly_ is seen,-- But where is thy new Magazine, My Murray? |
46609 | W. KING(?) |
46609 | What art so prevalent, what proof so strong, That will convince him his attempt is wrong? |
46609 | What do we, as a nation, care about books? |
46609 | What have we known of them, or shall ever know, whether lairds, lords, or ladies, in comparison with the inspired ploughman? |
46609 | What is the scripture? |
46609 | What position would its expenditure on literature take, as compared with its expenditure on luxurious eating? |
46609 | What thought so wild, what airy dream so light, That will not prompt a theorist to write? |
46609 | What were in each of these claimants that the world should think as they did, the most prevailing motives? |
46609 | What? |
46609 | Where fade away and placidly expire? |
46609 | Whither? |
46609 | Why is it harder, Sirs, than Gordon, Colkitto, or Macdonnel, or Galasp? |
46609 | Why is not Jephthah''s daughter as good a woman as Iphigenia? |
46609 | Why will not the actions of Samson afford as plentiful matter as the labours of Hercules? |
46609 | Why, Montesinos, with these books, and the delight you take in their constant society, what have you to covet or desire? |
46609 | Will lofty courtly wits not aim Still at perfection? |
46609 | Will not our English Athens art defend? |
46609 | Will ye allow me the honourable chain? |
46609 | Will ye into your sacred throng admit The meanest British wit? |
46609 | Will ye to bind me with these mighty names submit Like an Apocrypha with Holy Writ? |
46609 | With fiction then does real joy reside, And is our reason the delusive guide? |
46609 | With what measure of intelligence, and of approval or dissent, did those persons respectively follow the train of thoughts? |
46609 | Ye General Council of the Priests of Fame, Will ye not murmur and disdain That I a place amongst ye claim The humblest Deacon of her train? |
46609 | Yet why should sons of science These puny, rankling reptiles dread? |
46609 | _ Athenian Mercury._--An''answer to correspondents''--the question''Whether''tis lawful to read Romances?'' |
46609 | _ Baxter._--''Richard, Richard, dost thou think we will let thee poison the court? |
46609 | _ Cowley._-- Who now reads Cowley? |
46609 | _ Davies._-- What is the end of Fame? |
46609 | _ Dibdin._--''There are shrewd books, with dangerous frontispieces set to sale; who shall prohibit them? |
46609 | _ Moore._-- For where is any author in the world Teaches such beauty as a woman''s eye? |
46609 | _ Olim e libris_( dare I call it mine?) |
46609 | _ Rabelais._-- Whence is thy learning? |
46609 | _ The Doctor._ THE SCRIPTURES: WHAT ARE THEY? |
46609 | _ de Bury._--''Would it not grieve a man of a good spirit to see Hobson finde more money in the tayles of 12 jades than a scholler in 200 bookes?'' |
46609 | and the friendship of David and Jonathan more worthy celebration than that of Theseus and Pirithous? |
46609 | and_ how_? |
46609 | how can that be? |
46609 | how shall we part, And thou so long seized of my heart? |
46609 | in those cells to stand, With one leaf like a rider''s cloak put up To catch a termer? |
46609 | is there not a laugh? |
46609 | magic verse inscribed on golden gate, And bloody hand that beckons on to fate:--''And who art thou, thou little page, unfold? |
46609 | or lie musty there With rhymes a term set out, or two, before? |
46609 | what though thy viler dust enrolls The frail enclosures of these mighty souls? |
46609 | when will both in friendly beams unite, And pour on erring man resistless light? |
46609 | where was my Leigh Hunt? |
56617 | ABSINTHE_ Linà ©._ Drink? |
56617 | And may: But, how? |
56617 | Are you a man? |
56617 | Art thou so bare, and full of wretchedness, And fear''st to die? |
56617 | Behold her tupp''d? |
56617 | Between who? |
56617 | But wherefore should I go? |
56617 | Do you-- do you-- excuse me-- paint? |
56617 | How now, my lord? |
56617 | How was he dressed? |
56617 | Is not half the battle won when one perfectly physically realises the character to be impersonated? |
56617 | Is''t come to this? |
56617 | Is''t possible, my lord? |
56617 | On what seas do you roam? |
56617 | She speaks, yet she says nothing; what of that? |
56617 | Tell me but this,-- Have you not sometimes seen a handkerchief, Spotted with strawberries in your wife''s hand? |
56617 | To me? |
56617 | Was it wonderful? |
56617 | Well? |
56617 | What are his moral and mental characteristics? |
56617 | What do you read, my lord? |
56617 | What if her eyes were there, they in her head? |
56617 | What is the matter, my lord? |
56617 | What sense had I of her stolen hours of lust? |
56617 | What shall I say? |
56617 | What then? |
56617 | Where''s satisfaction? |
56617 | Who calls so loud? |
56617 | Why, how now, general? |
56617 | Would you, the supervisor grossly gape on? |
56617 | You would be satisfied? |
56617 | [_ Fleury shakes his head and drinks._] You are a poet? |
56617 | false to me? |
56617 | have you a soul or sense? |
56617 | how satisfied, my lord? |
56617 | how then? |
56617 | what light through yonder window breaks? |
56570 | 9 IV WOULD YOU FILM WELL? |
56570 | ARE YOU AWARE, SIR, THAT YOU ARE DEALING WITH_ A LOYAL AMERICAN CITIZEN_?" |
56570 | And naturally the first question to be asked by one who is considering entering this field as a vocation is"What do they pay? |
56570 | And, forsooth, if they draw big salaries, why cavil about the cost of replenishing a wardrobe every now and again? |
56570 | Asks Enrico: SP:"ARE YOU OFFERING ME A BRIBE?" |
56570 | At this Rosalie is greatly cheered up, she looks and says:"Will you, dear?" |
56570 | CHAPTER IV WOULD YOU FILM WELL? |
56570 | Conwell is still more interested, asks Enrico where do I come in? |
56570 | Conwell says: SP:"LOOK HERE, WHAT ABOUT THE GIRL? |
56570 | Enrico goes to her, pinches her cheek and says: SP:"WELL, HAVE YOU MADE UP YOUR MIND TO MARRY CONWELL?" |
56570 | Enrico smiles and says: SP:"SO YOU''D RATHER SEE YOUR FATHER KILLED, WOULD YOU?" |
56570 | Enrico then crosses over to Conwell and says: SP:"ARE YOU SURE WE CAN HANDLE OLD BIRD WHEN WE''RE READY?" |
56570 | HOW ARE WE GOING TO LIVE UNTIL APRIL?" |
56570 | Has my face character, something which makes it not only beautiful, but which portrays the underlying personality? |
56570 | He pulls Enrico''s sleeve and says: SP:"BUT YOU HAVE TO DIE TO GET IT-- DON''T YOU?" |
56570 | He then shakes his head no, turns to grandpa and says:"Father, do you want any insurance?" |
56570 | He turns to Roland and says:"_ I say, old fellow, the place looks rather beastly bare? |
56570 | In analyzing your own face, then, ask yourself the following questions: Are my eyes large? |
56570 | Is it all true? |
56570 | Is my mouth small and are my teeth good? |
56570 | Is my nose straight? |
56570 | Is my skin fine and well kept? |
56570 | Is there money in the movies?" |
56570 | Roland can hardly believe his ears at this and says:"What?" |
56570 | Roland demands of one of the councilors: SP:"WHERE IS THE KING?" |
56570 | Roland looks up to him, then looks at the bills, and says: SP:"HOW DO YOU EXPECT ME TO PAY THESE BILLS ON$ 50.00 A WEEK?" |
56570 | Roland says a very affectionate good- by to Rosalie and says: SP:"MAY I COME TO SEE YOU THIS EVENING?" |
56570 | Roland then picks up the bills, runs through them again and says: SP:"THE QUESTION NOW IS-- HOW ARE WE GOING TO LIVE UNTILAPRIL?" |
56570 | Roland, realizing that he has got to spike this says: SP:"WHY, I TRIED TO SELL INSURANCE OUT THERE ONCE AND WHAT DO YOU THINK HAPPENED?" |
56570 | Rosalie, terrified, says:"Who is it?" |
56570 | She starts to pass him but he takes her by the hand, restrains her and says: SP:"HOW MUCH LONGER ARE YOU GOING TO KEEP ME WAITING?" |
56570 | She turns, looks at him, and says:"Yes?" |
56570 | Should he feel? |
56570 | The Colonel ca n''t see this at all, and says: SP:"IF YOU MARRY NOW, HOW ARE YOU GOING TO SUPPORT HER?" |
56570 | The Countess looks at them in a surprised way and says: SP:"AREN''T THEY ALL TO BE KILLED IN OUR REVOLUTION?" |
56570 | The doctor hurries after her, stops her, and says,"What do you mean?" |
56570 | The question resolves itself into this: Does an actor feel? |
56570 | The station master says: SP:"WHERE ARE YOU GOING?" |
56570 | Then he turns to the people and says: SP:"IS EITHER OF THESE WRETCHES FIT TO RULE THIS BEAUTIFUL COUNTRY?" |
56570 | Tom looks at the couch dubiously, then looks at Roland and says:"Where are you going to sleep to- night?" |
56570 | Tom stops Roland and shows him three cents-- all he has and whispers to him, saying: SP:"HOW DO I PAY THE TAXI?" |
56570 | Tom thinks a moment, finally his face brightens and he says: SP:"IF YOU''VE GOT TO SELL INSURANCE, WHY NOT SELL IT IN BUNKONIA?" |
56570 | WHAT DO I PAY YOU FOR?" |
56570 | WHAT WOULD WE DO WITHOUT THEM?" |
56570 | WHY NOT BRING YOUR FRIEND? |
56570 | WILL YOU?" |
56570 | With more mysterious looks, they get their heads very closely together, and the Countess says: SP:"WHAT''S THE MATTER WITH YOU FOR CONSUL? |
45700 | A-- can you tell me if there is a resident British Minister here? |
45700 | Avez- vous quelquechose à déclarer, madame? |
45700 | Did he tip her? |
45700 | Does anybody ever come to your city now? 45700 Has thy brother bought a boot- jack?" |
45700 | I say, daddy, did you call that man''garçon''? |
45700 | I wonder,says A.,"how they got''em all together and started them jumping?" |
45700 | Is n''t it funny, Archibald, to see so many foreigners about? 45700 Perhaps, after all she_ does_ expect, eh? |
45700 | The_ what?_says my companion. |
45700 | What was that you were telling us about Caracalla just now? |
45700 | Where''s your wife? |
45700 | Why demoralise them, why instil the love of money into their innocent minds? |
45700 | _ Alleroose_ is it? 45700 ''Ave you forgotten all about the black swan? 45700 (_ Noticing disapproval in visitor''s face._)Ah, madame n''en veut pas? |
45700 | (_ Sighs._)[_ Pause._]_ She._"Do you speak English, sir?" |
45700 | *** TO INTENDING TOURISTS.--"Where shall we go?" |
45700 | --_Daily Papers._] MEIN HERR, will you do us the honour to descend from the railway- carriage? |
45700 | --_Standard._] WHAT? |
45700 | A friendly stranger cries,"Is this yours?" |
45700 | And how fares mister your husband, this fine weather?" |
45700 | And these three hundred yards of lace of various makes and ages? |
45700 | Any artists, for instance?" |
45700 | Are ye an Irishman?" |
45700 | Awfully jolly, is n''t it? |
45700 | Awfully stupid things-- squares, eh? |
45700 | But I am giving you a great deal of trouble? |
45700 | But where are the old buildings? |
45700 | But why waste_ pesetas?_ So refrain. |
45700 | But wot''s Lynton roads to the Halps, or the Torrs to that blessed Young Frow? |
45700 | But-- well, and how did you like Italy?" |
45700 | By the way, wonder what became of the"coach"who went out with me? |
45700 | Call that Shakspeare? |
45700 | Comprenny voo? |
45700 | Dayjernay, se voo play?" |
45700 | Did n''t that strike_ you_, Shirtliff?" |
45700 | Hotel Moderno, non è vero?_"And he led the way to the outside, where the Englishman perceived a wide, asphalted street. |
45700 | How about the Baptistery? |
45700 | How about the churches? |
45700 | How can I scan with rapt enthusiasm These Alpine heights, when balanced_ à la_ Blondin, While you survey with bird''s- eye view each chasm? |
45700 | I climb it? |
45700 | I hope I make myself clearly understood? |
45700 | I seem to owe you these, and yet Will money do? |
45700 | I understand the French? |
45700 | Is fine, fine,_ è bella, bella, una via maravigliosa"!_"You do n''t mean to say there is n''t a canal left? |
45700 | Is it asking too great a favour to beg you to lend me the keys of your boxes? |
45700 | Is n''t there anything old? |
45700 | Just come up to the''Curse Hall,''will you?"] |
45700 | Kel ay le nomme du set plass?"] |
45700 | No, mein herr, it is utterly impossible? |
45700 | O''er here in St. Maló The thing''s quite_ comme il faut;_ Why not in higher latitude? |
45700 | Oh, the blue sky and the_ tables d''hôte!_ What more glorious than the ruins of Rome? |
45700 | Or is it, simply, you prefer to go Incognito? |
45700 | Perchance you have a motive, deep, ulterior, In donning head- gear borrowed from banditti? |
45700 | Rather jolly, eh? |
45700 | Sandy, what did he say?" |
45700 | She shall go now, sir, to visit the bridge?" |
45700 | Si nous leaverong the hotel at six o''clock et ung demy, shall nous catcherong le train all right? |
45700 | Switzerland? |
45700 | Tell me where I can get a first dish of_ Tête de veau?__ Smith.__ Tête de veau?_ Let''s see, that''s"calf''s head,"is n''t it? |
45700 | Tell me where I can get a first dish of_ Tête de veau?__ Smith.__ Tête de veau?_ Let''s see, that''s"calf''s head,"is n''t it? |
45700 | Tell me where I can get a first dish of_ Tête de veau?__ Smith.__ Tête de veau?_ Let''s see, that''s"calf''s head,"is n''t it? |
45700 | Tennyson, and that sort of thing, do n''t you know? |
45700 | Though you boast such works of art, Where is that unclouded sky? |
45700 | Vat vil you''av, sare?" |
45700 | Voo parly Français, do n''t you? |
45700 | Wants me to take him round, and as he hears I am studying German, will I interpret for him? |
45700 | What did you suppose it was-- Dundee marmalade? |
45700 | What do_ we_ think? |
45700 | What else is there? |
45700 | What is she trying to make us understand? |
45700 | What is there to see in Barcelona? |
45700 | What is there to see in your city now? |
45700 | What is there to see?" |
45700 | What lovely views you get there, do you not?" |
45700 | What more precious than the pictures of Florence? |
45700 | What more restful than the gondolas of Venice? |
45700 | What price this?" |
45700 | What then must be the difficulty when the question to be answered is where to spend the Easter holidays? |
45700 | What was it? |
45700 | What''d our missuses say? |
45700 | What''s that mean, Tripper,"Pas de Calais"? |
45700 | What''s the meaning of"avis"on those placards? |
45700 | What_ more_ do they want? |
45700 | Where are the gondolas then?" |
45700 | Where are the pictures? |
45700 | Where is Santa Maria Novella? |
45700 | Where to go? |
45700 | Which is the oldest building now standing in Florence? |
45700 | Who says Italy? |
45700 | Why do n''t they learn English? |
45700 | Why do n''t you stay at home?_(_ Official explanation._) Merely questions asked to stimulate pleasant conversation. |
45700 | Why? |
45700 | Would half a gulden---- What?" |
45700 | You do n''t mean to say Giotto''s Tower has gone? |
45700 | You understand French, eh? |
45700 | You were thinking, perhaps, that greater liberty might be given to the framers of the initial contract? |
45700 | You wish to show an intellect superior,( And hide a profile which is not too pretty? |
45700 | You''re not engaged? |
45700 | [ Illustration: AN INNOCENT OFFENDER What is all this about? |
45700 | [ Illustration: CONSEQUENCES OF THE TOWER OF BABEL SCENE--_A table d''hôte abroad.__ He._"Parlez- vous Français, mademoiselle?" |
45700 | [ Illustration: FRENCH AS SHE IS SPOKE"You like Ostende, Monsieur Simpkin?" |
45700 | [ Illustration: L''AXONG D''ALBIONG"Oh-- er-- pardong, Mossoo-- may kelly le shmang kilfoker j''ally poor ally Allycol Militair?" |
45700 | [ Illustration: ON THE RIVIERA_ She._"I wonder what makes the Mediterranean look so blue?" |
45700 | [ Illustration: SUCCESSFUL SANITATION_ Anxious Tourist._"Since your town has been newly drained, I suppose there is less fever here?" |
45700 | [ Illustration:"ASTONISHING THE NATIVES"_ First Alpine Tourist._"I say, Will, are you asleep?" |
45700 | [ Illustration:_ He._"You climed ze Matterhorn? |
45700 | [ OE]ufs à la_ coque_, sare?" |
45700 | [_ Tableau!_][ Illustration:''ARRY IN''OLLAND_''Arry._"I say, Bill, ai n''t he a rum lookin''cove?"] |
45700 | _ After the Holidays_(_ a Retrospect_) What can be worse than packing? |
45700 | _ Angelina._ Yes, is n''t he a perfect love? |
45700 | _ Are you English?_(_ Official interpretation._) The highest praise imaginable. |
45700 | _ Custom- House Officer._"Now, then, got anything contraband about ye?" |
45700 | _ Garçon._"Bien, m''sieu''--Vould you like to see zee_ Times?_"_ London Gent._"Hang the feller! |
45700 | _ He._"Habla usted Español, señorita?" |
45700 | _ He._"Parlate Italiano, signorina?" |
45700 | _ He._"Sprechen Sie Deutsch, Fraülein?" |
45700 | _ Hotel Moderno, gondola._""_ Che cosa, signore?_"asked the porter, apparently confused,"_ gon--, gondo--, non capisco. |
45700 | _ Jambon d''Yorck._ What''s that mean, Mr. T.? |
45700 | _ Kitty._"And are you very wicked now, aunt?"] |
45700 | _ Official._"Christian nom?" |
45700 | _ Official._"Profession?" |
45700 | _ Pittori, scultori, perche?_ But there are voyagers some time. |
45700 | _ Second Tourist._"Asleep? |
45700 | _ Swiss Landlord respondeth_-- Am not I, am not I, say, a merry Swiss boy, When I hie from the mountain away? |
45700 | _ Tourist._ How about statues? |
45700 | _ Tourist._ What? |
45700 | _ Why do you come here? |
45700 | was it not a fine change to cry''Vive l''Empereur''for nearly a whole week, instead of''Vive la République''?" |
45700 | Êtes- vous la diligence? |
51973 | Ai n''t it funny? |
51973 | Have you got any antidote with you? |
51973 | How long ago? |
51973 | There''s no rum in it, is there? |
51973 | Think so? |
51973 | *****"It''s going to be a long, cold winter; do n''t you think so?" |
51973 | A long life, perhaps, for longevity is one of the characteristics of this class of hens; but of what has that life been productive? |
51973 | And what has such a hen to look back upon in her closing hours? |
51973 | And yet, what thanks do I get? |
51973 | Are you going to snap your fingers in disdain at men who admit that they are superior to anybody else? |
51973 | But why should we, here in the West, take readily to all other institutions common to the cultured East and ignore the forefather industry? |
51973 | But would it not do Columbus good to come among us today and look over our free institutions? |
51973 | But, Henry, why will you insist on fighting the young man from Ohio? |
51973 | Could you assist us? |
51973 | Did it ever occur to the average thinking mind that we might squeeze along for weeks without a dog? |
51973 | Do you not think that possibly you have made a mistake and got your ointment and cement formula mixed? |
51973 | Do you think them yourself, or is there some boy in the school that thinks all the thoughts for the rest? |
51973 | Finally she breathed a long sigh and murmured,"Where am I?" |
51973 | Finally the Correjos man ventured:"Do you have to use an antidote to cure the thirst?" |
51973 | Have n''t heard of anybody who has lost a star of the fifteenth magnitude, about thirteen hands high, with light mane and tail, have you?" |
51973 | Have you forgot how I fatted up the old cow and beefed her so that you could go and monkey with youclid and aigebray? |
51973 | Have you forgot how the other boys pulled you through a mill pond and made you tobogin down hill in a salt barrel with brads in it? |
51973 | How can I discover whether he is or is not playing and old, threadbare star on me for a new one? |
51973 | How could you describe the jimjams so graphically?" |
51973 | How do I know that it was there when I bought it? |
51973 | How''s that? |
51973 | I said, did I understand you to say"ropium?" |
51973 | If I did not turn on my own heel when I went away, whose heel would a lonely man like me turn upon? |
51973 | In Denver your friend says:"Will you come with me and shed a tear?" |
51973 | Is it not sad to contemplate? |
51973 | Now, how do I know that he has discovered a brand new star? |
51973 | Now, how would it do to make a collection of the signatures of the presidents and cashiers of national banks of the United States in the above manner? |
51973 | Now, what do you care for an administration which will only gratify those two old parties? |
51973 | Still, what does a man know about the proper costume of a woman? |
51973 | Then why can not the poor gradually taper oft on dogs? |
51973 | These I would ask in all seriousness and in a tone of voice that would melt the stoniest heart:"Why in creation do you do it?" |
51973 | Was it because they were blest with a bluer sky or a more genial sun? |
51973 | What has the drunkard ever done for you, that you should fill his grave for him? |
51973 | What must those precautions be? |
51973 | What shall we do to avoid getting impregnated with the American dog and then saturating our systems with the alien dog of Paris? |
51973 | Who hath woe? |
51973 | Why Haul Your Wheat Through the Sand to Herculaneum, When We Pay the Same Price Here? |
51973 | Why did trade and emigration turn their backs upon Babylon and seek out Minneapolis, St. Paul, Kansas City and Omaha? |
51973 | Why does a man frown on a certain costume for his wife, and admire it on the first woman he meets? |
51973 | Why does he fight shy of religion and Christianity and talk very freely about the church, but get mad if his wife is an infidel? |
51973 | Why should a seanyour in a colledge tromp onto the young chaps that come in there to learn? |
51973 | Why was it, I asked, that matrimony should ever single out the young and fair? |
51973 | Why was it? |
51973 | Will ye give it up to slaves?" |
51973 | You sabbe me? |
51973 | of sixteen aggregated circuses, and eleven congresses of ferocious beasts, fierce and fragrant from their native lair, went by us? |
51973 | who hath sorrow and some more things of that kind? |
50699 | And that is all you do to preserve your teeth, is it? |
50699 | But how did you come to git to be an youmorist? |
50699 | Do you know what a sump is? |
50699 | Do you know where he is? 50699 Do you mean to say that you do not feel facetious all the time, and that you get weary of being an youmorist?" |
50699 | How did Eau Claire county go? |
50699 | Mean? 50699 What do you mean by that?" |
50699 | Where is your boy to- night? |
50699 | --_Omaha Herald._ Will the press of the country please provide us with a few more parents? |
50699 | ARE YOU A MORMON? |
50699 | Am I right?" |
50699 | And what becomes of all this wealth of information-- this mammoth aggregation of costly knowledge? |
50699 | Author of"Bill Nye and Boomerang,""Forty Liars and Other Lies,""Goose- Neck Smith,""How Came Your Eye Out, and Your Nose Not Skun?" |
50699 | Can it be that his hard heart is at last touched with remorse? |
50699 | Can we wonder, as we contemplate her history, that to her the soldier pantaloons of last year, and the bullwhacker''s straw hat of''79, are obnoxious? |
50699 | DECLINE OF AMERICAN HUMOR|DEAR, mellow- voiced, starry- eyed reader, did you ever see something about"the decline of American humor?" |
50699 | Dear reader, did you ever meet this man-- or his wife? |
50699 | Did you ever have a large, angry, and abnormally protuberent boil somewhere on your person where it seemed to be in the way? |
50699 | Did you ever have such a boil as a traveling companion, and then get introduced to people as an youmorist? |
50699 | Does it make a permanent improvement on the minds and thoughts of the listener? |
50699 | How could I walk over a corpse until life was extinct? |
50699 | How long before the safe arrival of the ark, and the losses occasioned by the deluge, will be given to us in dollars and cents? |
50699 | How long will it be before the whole bloody history of the war of the rebellion will be sent to every hamlet in the land? |
50699 | How, did I do wrong in asking her those privileges at the party, I having no introduction to her? |
50699 | I do n''t believe God had it in for''em bekuz they was like other boys, do you? |
50699 | IS DUELING MURDER? |
50699 | Is he at home under your watchful eye, or is he away somewhere nailing the handles on his first little joke? |
50699 | Is it surprising, then, that to this decaying belle of an old family the sparkle of hope is unknown? |
50699 | Science may be all right in its place, but does it make the world better? |
50699 | Shall we portray her as she appears on her return from the great slaughter- house benefit and moral aggregation of digestive mementoes? |
50699 | Shall we then rush in and with ruthless hand shatter this beautiful picture? |
50699 | The health journals may mean well enough; but what are you going to do if you are editing a Democratic paper? |
50699 | The hectic of the dying year saddens and depresses him, for is it not an emblem to him of the death of his race? |
50699 | Then the poet comes to the close of the cowboy''s career in this style:```"Do I repent?" |
50699 | There in the solemn night, robed in? |
50699 | WHAT IS LITERATURE? |
50699 | WHY DO THEY DO IT? |
50699 | What object could he have in coming to me, not knowing who I am, and telling me of their great worth? |
50699 | What''s the reason you do n''t want him in here?" |
50699 | When a man is paid three dollars a week to play a Roman soldier, would you have him play the Greek slave? |
50699 | When she reached the altar, to the question,"Wilt thou take this man?" |
50699 | When wealthy people die why do n''t they endow a cast- iron castle with a draw- bridge to it and call it the youmorists''retreat? |
50699 | Who will be left to mourn at Chipeta''s grave? |
50699 | Why did they allow my chubby little feet to waddle down to the dangerous ground on which the sad- eyed youmorist must forever stand? |
50699 | Why do n''t they do some good with their money instead of fooling it away on those who are comparatively happy?" |
50699 | Why do they do it? |
50699 | Why would he talk that way to me if he did not really feel it? |
50699 | Will the editor of the_ Lancet_ please put our name on his list of subscribers and send the bill to us? |
50699 | Will the editor of the_ Lancet_ please step over to the saloon, opposite the royal palace, and take something at our expense? |
50699 | Will you rise to the proud pinnacle of fame as a pugilist, boys, or will you plug along as a sorrowing, overworked statesman? |
50699 | Would you consider that a large pair of shoes or a large wife should be sought for just because you can get more material for the same price? |
50699 | Would you have me march around three times when my military pants were coming off, and I knew it? |
50699 | You have not? |
50699 | if a man ca n''t endure that and smile, how will he behave when the clothesline falls down and the baby gets a kernel of corn up its nose? |
50699 | |WHAT becomes of our bodies?" |
50699 | |You are an youmorist, are you not?" |
6763 | ''Walked?'' |
6763 | 13 The next points after what we have said above will be these:( 1) What is the poet to aim at, and what is he to avoid, in constructing his Plots? |
6763 | Are they, as our translator takes them,( 1) that man is imitative, and( 2) that people delight in imitations? |
6763 | Is it a''creature''a thousand miles long, or a''picture''a thousand miles long which raises some trouble in Chapter VII? |
6763 | Or are they( 1) that man is imitative and people delight in imitations, and( 2) the instinct for rhythm, as Professor Butcher prefers? |
6763 | Reversals of Fortune of some sort are perhaps usual in any varied plot, but surely not Recognitions? |
6763 | What, for instance, are the''two natural causes''in Chapter IV which have given birth to Poetry? |
6763 | What, indeed, would be the good of the speaker, if things appeared in the required light even apart from anything he says? |
6763 | and( 2) What are the conditions on which the tragic effect depends? |
7018 | It is well said, but who will bell the Cat? |
7018 | Quha may hold that will away? |
7018 | Quha may wooe, but Cost? |
7018 | Quhair stands your great horse? |
7018 | Trot mother, trot father, how should the foal amble? |
48049 | Could you, for example, undertake to play Hero to a Beatrice; Nerissa to a Portia; or Celia to a Rosalind? |
48049 | Is not this an exact description of the Ellen Terry movement which others so ludicrously attempt to imitate? 48049 My supper party?" |
48049 | Oh,_ that''s_ all, is it? |
48049 | Then you did n''t get my telegram last night? |
48049 | What do you know?--what have you studied? |
48049 | What do you mean? |
48049 | What on earth are they doing, Byron? |
48049 | What on earth brings_ you_ here? |
48049 | Why should I? |
48049 | A manly and generous effort, I think? |
48049 | After all, it does not much matter, for who knows what changes have taken place in the old street during the last fifty years? |
48049 | After putting the question"Is it a good part?" |
48049 | And I was happy until, in the early hours of the morning, Sothern said,"By the way, I wonder how your supper party is getting on?" |
48049 | And in response to the inquiry--"But was Lady Macbeth good?" |
48049 | Benvenuta, and the exiled Johnny( not too attentive at school, I hope? |
48049 | But what do I see? |
48049 | Can Ellen Terry have forgotten it? |
48049 | Can I add anything to this? |
48049 | Can anything be prettier than this daintily recorded, and no doubt uncalled for admission? |
48049 | Can not we all enter into the feelings of young virgin- hearted Arthur Pendennis when he first saw the lovely Miss Fotheringay on the boards? |
48049 | Can not we all understand how he followed the woman about and about, and when she was off the stage the house became a blank? |
48049 | Could anything be more superlatively or irresistibly ludicrous than this? |
48049 | Ginger wine? |
48049 | Has any other actress achieved so much? |
48049 | Has it not to many been the scene in which they have first learned what it is to love? |
48049 | Have you seen him( Belvawney) bring a live hen, two hair- brushes, and a pound and a half of fresh butter out of his pocket- handkerchief? |
48049 | He quotes the lines between Imogen and the attendant in the bedchamber scene--"What hour is it?" |
48049 | Here was the first instalment, and who should say when the remainder might not be realised? |
48049 | How could the graceful, gracious, tender- eyed, sweet- voiced, gentle Ellen Terry grasp such a part as this? |
48049 | I wonder if they quite realised how much they would be missed? |
48049 | Is it not to them that we owe the evergreen comedies of Robertson and the refined theatrical school that he founded? |
48049 | Is there any one like her? |
48049 | Is this Imogen, the King''s daughter, the serious, thoughtful Imogen of Shakespeare? |
48049 | It is an attainment-- but who attains? |
48049 | It is easy to see that he is not indifferent to her charms, else why is he so affected by her quips and cranks? |
48049 | It will be feebly done, for what writer could pen a true word picture of such a beneficently radiant creature? |
48049 | Limiting, however, what is to be hoped for her within the bounds indicated, what chance is there not afforded? |
48049 | Sarah Bernhardt, who was loud in her praises of the performance, said to her sister artiste--"How_ can_ you act in this way every night?" |
48049 | Surely few actresses have won such heartfelt and well- merited words of praise as these? |
48049 | Surely she called the spirits to be made bad, because she knew she was not so very bad?" |
48049 | Surely this applies to other pursuits besides the art of acting? |
48049 | Tarts? |
48049 | That is true of the actor, but surely these critics are wrong? |
48049 | The inquirer gazed meditatively upon his plate for some time, and then said,''But, Hamlet_ was_ a foreigner, was n''t he?'' |
48049 | Then, when she asks,"Why do you not give it up?" |
48049 | Was the correct pronunciation of"gout"as here used the same as the dread malady"gout"from which so many of us suffer? |
48049 | We love you with a reckless fervour that thrills us to the very marrow--(_to_ MINNIE) do n''t we, darling? |
48049 | Were they not the pioneers of a new, tasteful, and pure departure in English dramatic art? |
48049 | What does it matter to the audience? |
48049 | What have I in common with tarts? |
48049 | What was Irving going to do with it? |
48049 | When Ellen Terry was asked,"Have you got used to Sir Henry''s title?" |
48049 | Where the eye, however blue, Doth not weary? |
48049 | Where was she to be found? |
48049 | Where''s the face One would meet in every place? |
48049 | Where''s the maid Whose lip mature is ever new? |
48049 | Where''s the voice, however soft, One would hear so very oft? |
48049 | Where, then, did Mr. Dutton Cook''s picturesquely described Duke of York come in? |
48049 | Who cares? |
48049 | Who was to be the heroine of Fechter''s reign at the Lyceum? |
48049 | Who would wantonly put Pegasus in the Pound? |
48049 | Who, having seen it, will ever forget the delicious drollery of his Major Wellington de Boots? |
48049 | Why do I say''he was,''and seem to cast A present favourite into the past? |
48049 | Why should n''t I?" |
48049 | Will you have me, lady? |
48049 | Wretched news, is it not? |
48049 | Yet what can not the imagination do for one? |
48049 | Yet, what was this? |
48049 | You may remember her making a noise years ago, doing a boy at an Inn in the''Courier of Lyons''? |
48049 | _ Ellen Terry''s country retreat at Tenterden, Kent._[_ To face page 80._]"Well, how did the piece go last night?" |
48049 | _ I_ give up my throne to another? |
48049 | _ I_ give up the stage?--renounce its excitement?--its glitter?--its triumphs? |
48049 | and how, when the play was over, the curtain fell upon him like a pall? |
48049 | else why is he so readily converted from his vaunted woman- hatred? |
48049 | he replies with indignation,"Give up the stage? |
48049 | let her loose; Everything is spoilt by use; Where''s the cheek that doth not fade, Too much gazed at? |
48049 | what are you doing here?" |
726 | A man who formed one of its bricks was still alive, and was waving his arm.... What is happening there? |
726 | Has a spy been caught? |
726 | One can not blame him for that; what would one be one''s self? |
726 | Will it do anything for the Anglo- Saxon peoples? |
724 | After all, and in spite of my vaunting title, is the man of letters ever a business man? |
724 | He said, Certainly; but after a glance at the account he smiled and said he supposed I knew how much the sum was? |
724 | How, then, is it to be priced, and how is it to be fairly marketed? |
724 | I answered, Yes; it was eleven pounds nine shillings, was not it? |
724 | Who could prophesy it for another, who guess it for himself? |
724 | Who shall forecast the fall and winter modes? |
48563 | And what does the temperament say? |
48563 | And what is its ambition? |
48563 | Are not confusions and profound contradictions to be looked for in an attempt to build so much out of so little? |
48563 | Are not our senses as human, as"subjective"as our wills? |
48563 | But can our situation be made better by refusing to understand it? |
48563 | But how? |
48563 | But perfect from what point of view, in reference to what ideal? |
48563 | But to rise to what? |
48563 | But where find such a supernatural world? |
48563 | By what effective causal principle could their salvation be thought to necessitate his death, or his death to make possible their salvation? |
48563 | By what revelation learn its nature and be assured of its existence? |
48563 | Can Christianity escape these perils? |
48563 | Can it reform its claims, or can it overwhelm all opposition and take the human heart once more by storm? |
48563 | Come ye to traffic justly Or recklessly like pirates of the deep Rove ye, adventuring your souls, to bring Evil on strangers? |
48563 | Could he say what he understood by the terms, so constantly on his lips, Nature, Law, God, Benefit, or Beauty? |
48563 | Did he know what he meant by Spirit or the"Over- Soul"? |
48563 | Did the deluge come because of man''s wickedness, and will the last day coincide with the dramatic denouement of the Church''s history? |
48563 | Does it not transform the Unknowable into as remote a symbol as does the vainest dream? |
48563 | For what was the object that unfolded itself before the Christian imagination, the vision that converted and regenerated the world? |
48563 | For why should the natural world ever come to be called a world of illusion? |
48563 | From what quarter, then, will it draw the wider views, the deeper harmonies, which it craves? |
48563 | If he was able so constantly to stimulate us to fresh thoughts, was it not because he demolished the labour of long ages of reflection? |
48563 | If they asked for evidence, would they believe anything? |
48563 | If this idea, being human, deserved that such sacrifices should be made for it, have the other notions of the mind no rights? |
48563 | If we renounced mysticism altogether and kept imagination in its place, should we not live in a clearer and safer world, as well as in a truer? |
48563 | In other words, is the spiritual experience of man the explanation of the universe? |
48563 | In what sense, then, are we justified in saying that religion expresses moral ideals? |
48563 | Indeed, what is less docile to us than ourselves? |
48563 | Is it God?" |
48563 | Is it not a doubtful encomium on a religion to say that only by miracle could it come to be believed? |
48563 | Is it the rational outcome of our own lives? |
48563 | Is not the disproportion enormous? |
48563 | Is not the understanding as visionary as the fancy? |
48563 | Is that prospect insufficient for our ambition? |
48563 | Is there no escape from the prison, as the mystic thinks it, of science and history which shall yet not carry us beyond reality? |
48563 | Is there no truth beyond conventional truth, no life behind human existence? |
48563 | Is this experience something normal? |
48563 | Is this inconstancy or only a more delicate and indirect homage? |
48563 | Is this thy body''s end? |
48563 | Now tell me truly, for I need to know, What land is this, what people, from what race Descended? |
48563 | Now, how utter this moral truth imaginatively, how clothe it in an image that might render its absoluteness and its force? |
48563 | Of which of our contemporaries might we not say the same thing? |
48563 | Perfect? |
48563 | Potentially? |
48563 | Shall we say that the triumph of Christianity was a miracle? |
48563 | Shall worms, inheritors of this excess, Eat up thy charge? |
48563 | Should we be surprised at this species of infidelity? |
48563 | Such a pretension would be regarded as madness in the mathematician or the poet; and is not the mystic as miserably a man? |
48563 | To its own? |
48563 | To some more elaborate idea? |
48563 | To some object, like a scientific cosmos or a religious creed, put together by longer and more indirect processes than those of common perception? |
48563 | Was Christianity right in saying that the world was made for man? |
48563 | Was it not the diversity, the momentousness, and the finality of their experience here? |
48563 | Was not the startling effect of much of his writing due to its contradiction to tradition and to common sense? |
48563 | Was the account it adopted of the method and causes of Creation conceivably correct? |
48563 | Was the garden of Eden a historical reality, and were the Hebrew prophecies announcements of the advent of Jesus Christ? |
48563 | Well, this cold clay clod Was man''s heart: Crumble it, and what comes next? |
48563 | What charm or credibility could he find in further promises of glorious kingdoms, flowing with milk and honey? |
48563 | What could the object be except somebody or other? |
48563 | What does a man love in a woman? |
48563 | What is it that a mother loves in her child? |
48563 | What is that but to treat facts as an appearance, and their ideal import as a reality? |
48563 | What is there, he may say, so dreadful in mutability? |
48563 | What literal meaning could there be in saying that one man or one God died for the sake of each and every other individual? |
48563 | What so intolerable in ultimate ignorance? |
48563 | What value, then, we may say, have these various ideals or perceptions, or the conflicts between them? |
48563 | What was it in the actual life of men that made them think of themselves as hanging between eternal bliss and eternal perdition? |
48563 | What, we may ask, is all this tragedy about? |
48563 | Whence comes the value of this unattainable truth? |
48563 | Where, among all these glimpses, is the true object of love? |
48563 | Why did Plato, after banishing the poets, poetize the universe in his prose? |
48563 | Why did it triumph? |
48563 | Why do our practical men make room for religion in the background of their world? |
48563 | Why so large cost, having so short a lease, Dost thou upon thy fading mansion spend? |
48563 | Why thus sit ye grieving, Nor leap on land, nor strike the mast and lay it In your black ship? |
48563 | Why, we may ask, these apparent inconsistencies? |
48563 | Why? |
48563 | and whence sail ye hither The watery ways? |
48563 | what less subject to our correction than the foundations of our own being? |
47675 | ''Who knocks?'' 47675 Am I really obliged,"asks the man,"to wear this tattered cloak? |
47675 | Are we,she asks D''Erfeuil,"only to live for what society may say of us? |
47675 | Did Heaven,he asks,"mean to warn me that tempests must always attend my steps?" |
47675 | Do you not mean to learn Italian? |
47675 | What chance have I of success? |
47675 | Why are great powers a misfortune? 47675 Why,"he cries,"must you people, when you speak of a thing, immediately say,''it is stupid''or''it is clever,''''it is good''or''it is bad''? |
47675 | ''Who is there?'' |
47675 | A Frenchman in_ Corinne_ who calls a learned woman a pedant, receives the reply:"What harm is there in a woman''s knowing Greek?" |
47675 | A vow she has made to God? |
47675 | Am I compelled to swear that Polichinelle has no hump, to believe that Pierrot is an eminently honourable, and Harlequin a particularly serious man? |
47675 | And what is_ Werther_? |
47675 | And what respect for human life were men likely to have in the days when Napoleon yearly made a blood- offering of many thousands to his ambition? |
47675 | And who is_ she_? |
47675 | Are you happy? |
47675 | Are you the man that is always prating about Hercules? |
47675 | But surely art should be for all classes, should unite high and low? |
47675 | But, it may be objected, has he really anything at all in common with Goethe and Rousseau? |
47675 | By the eternal beard of my father, who doubted it? |
47675 | Can I not dispense with these old rags? |
47675 | Did he actually learn anything from them? |
47675 | Do you see what a strange world it is? |
47675 | Do you suppose we lived like brute beasts? |
47675 | Does he love her, or does he only treat her as a man of honour must? |
47675 | Does there float on the whirling torrent which carries us along with it any branch to which we dare refuse to cling?" |
47675 | For virtue? |
47675 | H. And what had you to do attacking them? |
47675 | H. Is it my fault, man, that you have such a narrow- chested imagination? |
47675 | H. That he? |
47675 | H. Vice? |
47675 | H. Where is Wieland? |
47675 | Had they not a past of their own? |
47675 | Have I given what I did not possess? |
47675 | Have you ever seen virtue, Wieland? |
47675 | Have you investigated into the inner significance of the action? |
47675 | Have you traced its causes, divined its inevitability? |
47675 | He feels that his thought and his words are inspired, and where is the boundary between that which is of him and that which is not of him? |
47675 | His name for Frenchmen is_ les vainvifs_ and he asserts that all their actions are dictated by the consideration,_ Qu''en dira- t- on_? |
47675 | How explain the fact that these devout men and women have brought down on themselves a fury of persecution unequalled in the annals of fanaticism? |
47675 | How much in the way of confession may not the remainder of the book contain? |
47675 | How then could a man with a nature like Obermann''s possibly choose a profession? |
47675 | I wonder if God, who created us and our environment, did not die before He finished His work, if the world is not an_ opus posthumum_? |
47675 | I? |
47675 | If I had been a shepherd or a king, what should I have done with my shepherd''s crook or my crown? |
47675 | If I had been a shepherd or a king, what should I have done with my staff or sceptre? |
47675 | If I have no right of decision in the matter of my own death, who has given this right to society? |
47675 | If this be so, if we are intended to imitate each other for ever and ever, why has each one of us been given a soul? |
47675 | In the first place, who is_ he_? |
47675 | Is it absolutely necessary for me either to blacken my face or hide it under this sheep''s mask? |
47675 | Is it possible to fertilise one desert by means of another desert?" |
47675 | Is not his a privileged nature? |
47675 | Is there no help?" |
47675 | Is there, in the dense darkness which surrounds us, any ray of light that we can afford to reject? |
47675 | Is what others think and feel always to be our guiding star? |
47675 | It is the question of the conditions of constancy which is treated of in_ Adolphe_--under what conditions is passion lasting or otherwise? |
47675 | It was her desire to go to America, but that was impossible without a passport, and how was she to procure one? |
47675 | May I not look up into any of their faces, or write on any hand,''I know you, fair mask!''? |
47675 | Oh, if even this desire be a crime, why is it so intimately entwined with every fibre of my being that I can not renounce it and live? |
47675 | Or will he, like Werther, some day cast it from him? |
47675 | Oswald''s principal difficulty in coming to a decision about Corinne is expressed in the words:"Of what use would all that be at home?" |
47675 | Possibly something in your heart rebels against profiting by laws which are the outcome of a Revolution to which you are antagonistic? |
47675 | Speaking of England, Oswald asks Corinne:"How could you leave the home of chastity and morality and make fallen Italy the country of your adoption?" |
47675 | The intelligent, refined Madame Émile de Girardin defended Balzac, answering very justly:"Is it Balzac''s fault that thirty is now the age of love? |
47675 | This was the pantheism which Goethe indicated in the biting epigram:--"Was soll mir euer Hohn Ueber das All und Eine? |
47675 | To the old questions, Why is man born? |
47675 | To what end does it all lead? |
47675 | W. What do you call splendid fellows? |
47675 | What can we make out of a little girl who can do nothing but weep, love, sigh, smile, hope, tremble? |
47675 | What do you mean? |
47675 | What is it that keeps you apart? |
47675 | What kind of life can be based upon a sudden fancy, or upon a lie, or upon a Yes wrung from a woman by fear? |
47675 | What sort of a Hercules is the one you are for ever prating about, and what is it he fights for? |
47675 | What woman could be more beautiful than Celuta? |
47675 | What would you seek in the shades of the forest? |
47675 | What''s the motto again? |
47675 | What, then, is the value of fame? |
47675 | What? |
47675 | Which was"our own religion"? |
47675 | Who else could surround you with the flame which radiates from me even when I do not love? |
47675 | Who, then, are these two characters? |
47675 | Why are we not consulted? |
47675 | Why does he live? |
47675 | Why does he not act? |
47675 | Why have they prevented my being loved? |
47675 | Why is he unhappy? |
47675 | Will he be able to endure life? |
47675 | Will he find in another woman more mind, more soul, more tenderness than in me? |
47675 | You do not know that virtue for which my Hercules does everything, ventures all? |
47675 | You seem to be unhappy, and how, indeed, should philosophy heal the sorrow of your soul? |
47675 | is he faithful, or is he only too proud and too well- bred to show himself ungrateful and indifferent? |
47675 | is not he a prophet hastening through life like a fugitive, a fleeting fire which illuminates, consumes, and vanishes? |
47675 | what hast thou done with thy sister? |
47675 | with so superior an intellect do you not penetrate to what is at the core of everything-- unhappiness?" |
4927 | Am I on earth,he exclaimed,"or am I in Paradise? |
4927 | Am I, then,said Sacripant,"of so little esteem with you that you doubt my power to defend you? |
4927 | And what has Gan been plotting with Marsilius? |
4927 | And what weapon hast thou,said he,"if thy lance fail thee?" |
4927 | Did you hear the horn as I heard it? |
4927 | Do you hear that? |
4927 | How can a fool have such strength? |
4927 | How know you that? |
4927 | How now, cousin,cried Orlando,"have you too gone over to the enemy?" |
4927 | How shall I need them,said Rinaldo,"since I have lost my horse?" |
4927 | Is that the horse they presume to match with Marchevallee, the best steed that ever fed in the vales of Mount Atlas? |
4927 | Is this, then,she said,"the fruit of all my labors? |
4927 | O Bujaforte,said he,"I loved him indeed; but what does his son do here fighting against his friends?" |
4927 | O my friend,said he,"must then the body of our prince be the prey of wolves and ravens? |
4927 | Shall I not believe my own eyes and ears? |
4927 | Suppose they will not trust themselves with me? |
4927 | Tell me, I pray you,he said,"what benefit will accrue to him who shall get the better in this contest? |
4927 | They are already united by mutual vows,she said,"and in the sight of Heaven what more is necessary?" |
4927 | Well,cried the hero,"what news?" |
4927 | What are we to do,said he,"now that daylight has left us?" |
4927 | What is the meaning of this? |
4927 | Who is the loser now? |
4927 | ''What hope for us,''resumed the king,''if he brings with him a greater host than that?'' |
4927 | A prince of the house of Guienne, must he not blush at the cowardly abandonment of the faith of his fathers?" |
4927 | Ah, noble sir,"he added,"tell me, I beseech you, of what country and race you come?" |
4927 | And what is it, pray, that brings you into these parts? |
4927 | And, by the way, pray tell me, are you not that Orlando who makes such a noise in the world? |
4927 | Bradamante, addressing the host, said,"Could you furnish me a guide to conduct me to the castle of this enchanter?" |
4927 | But Alardo said,"Brother, let Bayard live a little longer; who knows what God may do for us?" |
4927 | But how is mythology to be taught to one who does not learn it through the medium of the languages of Greece and Rome? |
4927 | But may not the requisite knowledge of the subject be acquired by reading the ancient poets in translations? |
4927 | But tell me, pilgrim, who is that man who stands beside you?" |
4927 | Crying out,"What are the emperor''s engagements to me?" |
4927 | Death seems his only remedy; but how to die? |
4927 | Do I indeed behold a chevalier of my own country, after fifteen years passed in this desert without seeing the face of a fellow- countryman?" |
4927 | Do you forget the battle of Albracca, and how, in your defence, I fought single- handed against Agrican and all his knights?" |
4927 | Do you prefer to rob me of my ring rather than receive it as a gift? |
4927 | Had I imagined that this hard bark covered a being possessed of feeling, could I have exposed such a beautiful myrtle to the insults of this steed? |
4927 | How could he suspect that falsehood and treason veiled themselves under smiles and the ingenuous air of truth? |
4927 | How could you fly from a single arm and think to escape?" |
4927 | I am a poor man, have you not something to give me?" |
4927 | I value not life compared with honor, and if I did, do you suppose, dear friend, that I could live without you? |
4927 | If you can not defend them against me, how pray will you do so when Orlando challenges them?" |
4927 | Is it treachery to punish affronts like these? |
4927 | Just then came along some country people, who said to one another,"Look, is not that the great horse Bayard that Rinaldo rides? |
4927 | Rinaldo replied,"Are you making sport of me? |
4927 | Rogero exclaimed as he came near,"What cruel hands, what barbarous soul, what fatal chance can have loaded thee with those chains?" |
4927 | Seeing the prince Orlando, one said to the rest,"What bird is this we have caught, without even setting a snare for him?" |
4927 | Shall I for the horse''s life provoke the anger of the king again?" |
4927 | Shall we be told that answers to such queries may be found in notes, or by a reference to the Classical Dictionary? |
4927 | So desperate was he that he took off his armor and his spurs, saying,"What need have I of these, since Bayard is lost?" |
4927 | Struck with the ingratitude which could thus recompense his services, he exclaimed:"Thankless beauty, is this then the reward you make me? |
4927 | The dwarf, approaching Huon, said, in a sweet voice, and in Huon''s own language,"Duke of Guienne, why do you shun me? |
4927 | The king said to Malagigi,"Friend, where did you get that beautiful cup?" |
4927 | The old man took the spurs, and put them into his sack, and said,"Noble sir, have you nothing else you can give me?" |
4927 | The traitor smiled at seeing her thus suspended, and, asking her in mockery,"Are you a good leaper?" |
4927 | Then a third time he said to Rinaldo,"Sir, have you nothing left to give me that I may remember you in my prayers?" |
4927 | Think not to avoid it by shutting your eyes, for how then will you be able to avoid his blows, and make him feel your own? |
4927 | To what new miseries do you doom me? |
4927 | Was it not clear that Providence led him on, and cleared the way for his happy success? |
4927 | Were you ever in love? |
4927 | What advantage have you derived from all your high deserts? |
4927 | What is the good of a gentleman''s poring all day over a book? |
4927 | Who could have believed that you would become the slave of a base enchantress? |
4927 | Why have you thought evil of me? |
4927 | Why tarry the horses of Rinaldo and Ricciardetto? |
4927 | Why, therefore, should either of us perish? |
4927 | Yet what could be done against foes without number? |
4927 | You surround him, and who receives tribute then?" |
4927 | darest thou maintain in arms the lie thou hast uttered?" |
4927 | exclaimed Bradamante,"what can be the cause of this sudden alarm?" |
4927 | exclaimed Rinaldo,"do you make me your sport?" |
4927 | exclaimed he,"how could I, dear Medoro, so forget myself as to consult my own safety without heeding yours?" |
4927 | he exclaimed,"do you dare to insult me at my own table? |
4927 | he exclaimed,"was there ever such a resemblance? |
4927 | how can you foresee his fate when you could not foresee your own? |
4927 | inquired Malagigi;"and what is to come of it?" |
4927 | master, how can I do that? |
4927 | my dear nephew,"exclaimed the Holy Father,"what harder penance could I impose than the Emperor has already done? |
4927 | said the Abbot of Cluny;"slaughter a Saracen prince without first offering him baptism?" |
4927 | said the pilgrim;"is Bayard there?" |
4927 | was this the end to which old quarrels were made up?" |
4927 | what availed it you to possess so many virtues and such fame? |
4927 | why should I fear his rage? |
34224 | And then he-- hum-- did it? |
34224 | And what do you say of him who is hated by all the people of his village? |
34224 | And what is that, princess? |
34224 | And what is your rate of charge for the''_ odor femminino_''? |
34224 | Anything else? |
34224 | Anything else? |
34224 | Are you sure you can control yourself, Miss Verinder? |
34224 | By what right are we enemies, princess? |
34224 | Can you tell me what I ought to think of a certain Samuel Brohl? |
34224 | Do you doubt it? |
34224 | Do you mean to watch him while he sleeps? |
34224 | Do you really mean to say that you do n''t feel any interest in what you are going to do? |
34224 | Do you refuse to give me satisfaction? |
34224 | Does nobody ever kiss you, poor little man? |
34224 | Gabbett, you''ve been out before-- how''s it done? |
34224 | Has my poor salon still the misfortune to be hurtful to you? |
34224 | He there, who looks like an end of thread that has escaped out of a tailor''s needle? |
34224 | Him? 34224 Honored sir, will you do me the favor to view and to make trial of this purse?" |
34224 | How do I know? 34224 How do I know?" |
34224 | How is he now? |
34224 | How the devil am I to sleep,he said,"with_ this_ on my mind?" |
34224 | How used you the Great Seal of England? |
34224 | I suppose the room must be dark, as it was last year? |
34224 | If I refuse to give it up, you will doubtless appeal to my delicacy? |
34224 | Is he nervous? 34224 Is it my lot to die? |
34224 | Is it, Gabbett? |
34224 | Is there any objection, sir,he asked,"to taking Mr. Bruff into this part of the business?" |
34224 | Is there much more? |
34224 | Might I presume to ask,he said,"what my young lady and the medicine chest have got to do with each other?" |
34224 | O Death, canst thou not wait? 34224 Shall it be counsel?" |
34224 | Since therefore it is clear that what is self- moved is eternal, who can deny that this essential characteristic has been imparted to the soul? 34224 That was the last?" |
34224 | Then how used you it? |
34224 | Used it,--yet could not explain where it was? |
34224 | What do you mean, child? |
34224 | What is it, you mite? |
34224 | What is the matter, Sylvia? |
34224 | What satisfaction do I owe you? |
34224 | What shall it profit a man if he gain the whole world and lose his own soul? |
34224 | What was it the lady that kissed us said, Tommy? |
34224 | What would you do without me? |
34224 | When? |
34224 | Where are we to go? 34224 Where''s Cox?" |
34224 | Who knows? |
34224 | Who then, my liege? |
34224 | Why should you disturb him? |
34224 | Why, do you think of selling me your clothing? |
34224 | Why? |
34224 | Will it hurt much, Tommy? |
34224 | Will you swear it? |
34224 | Yea, Godès armès,quoth this riotóur,"Is it such peril with him for to meet? |
34224 | [ 223] The proudest of these riotourès three Answéred again:What, carl,[224] with sorry grace, Why art thou all forwrappèd[225] save thy face? |
34224 | _ Eh bien!_ what is it? |
34224 | ***** Have you ever, Philip, my boy, looked at it in this way? |
34224 | --"Have you ever seen any evidence, my old friend,"said I,"of that?" |
34224 | A pause in the action of the opium? |
34224 | After all that has happened, may I trust to your influence to back me?" |
34224 | After what you have both seen, are you both satisfied so far?" |
34224 | Again, what should you say was the virtue of asses and mules? |
34224 | Ah, What else is like the gondola? |
34224 | And again, what about being with my brother, or leaving him and taking my son? |
34224 | And did you hail the platform wild Where once the Austrian fell Beneath the shaft of Tell? |
34224 | And does n''t he sometimes wonder whether he has gained most or lost most by learning his trade? |
34224 | And even though we shall meet immediately, yet will you write to me anything you can find to say? |
34224 | And he added,"If you are fond of being astonished, monsieur, will you remain still another instant in this den?" |
34224 | And if misfortune continues to persecute us, what will become of our poor boy? |
34224 | And if such be the result, what shall we gain by what is called the progress of society? |
34224 | And is it contended that the major part of this Babel congregation is invested with the right to build up at its pleasure a new government? |
34224 | And it must all happen again in the same way, must n''t it?" |
34224 | And what good is it when we are together and chatter whatever comes to our tongues? |
34224 | And what kind of vine shall we admire? |
34224 | And what said all you more? |
34224 | And what shall I say about my boy Marcus, who ever since his faculties of perception awoke has felt the sharpest pangs of sorrow and misery? |
34224 | And when the malicious devices of their enemies were perfected( for what further could they attempt after their death?) |
34224 | And where the land she travels from? |
34224 | And who may measure the value of this department of public duty? |
34224 | Are not all her visible charms sown thick with what are to him the signs and symbols of hidden decay? |
34224 | Are you sure it will do no harm?" |
34224 | As I kept my eyes more intently fixed upon this spot, Africanus said to me:--"How long, I beg of thee, will thy spirit be chained down to earth? |
34224 | As soon as I had recovered myself I said,"What is this sound, so great and so sweet, which fills my ears?" |
34224 | At civil hospitable men, that fear The gods? |
34224 | At the city gate I was compelled to hear again from the sentinel,"Where has the gentleman left his shadow?" |
34224 | At what do you value this work of art?" |
34224 | Be ye afraid of me that am your friend? |
34224 | But grant that the people of Spanish America are ignorant, and incompetent for free government; to whom is that ignorance to be ascribed? |
34224 | But he is well? |
34224 | But he will win back the constitution? |
34224 | But how much further shall I pursue the unattainable? |
34224 | But nathèless, if I can shape it so, That it departed were among us two, Had I not done a friendès turn to thee?" |
34224 | But surely it is hard to give up one''s children? |
34224 | But then I undertook the management of those games which Cæsar''s heir celebrated for Cæsar''s victory? |
34224 | But what is experience where opium is concerned? |
34224 | But will you therefore also prove false and faithless to your country, or obey the impulses of a just and patriotic indignation? |
34224 | But, it may be asked, May there not be some danger in considering religion in a merely human point of view? |
34224 | By- and- by the watchman came back and said:--"Did n''t that lunatic tell you he was asleep when he first came up here?" |
34224 | Can you show me the key? |
34224 | Can you think of your victims without disquietude and without remorse?" |
34224 | Christ is not risen? |
34224 | Could he not, for example, have prevented the Three Children at the outset from falling into trial? |
34224 | Do I believe in Samuel Brohl? |
34224 | Do idealists trouble their heads with such vile questions?" |
34224 | Do n''t you know how to read?" |
34224 | Do they not sometimes haunt your dreams? |
34224 | Do we mean that he sacrifices what is most properly himself, the principle of piety and virtue? |
34224 | Do you admit that, so far?" |
34224 | Do you see that State which, compelled by me to submit to the Roman people, renews its former wars, and can not endure to remain at peace?" |
34224 | Do you think it will succeed? |
34224 | Does he ever see her beauty at all, or does n''t he simply view her professionally and comment upon her unwholesome condition all to himself? |
34224 | Does our religion shrink from the light? |
34224 | Dost thou see the abundance of resource belonging to God? |
34224 | FRIEND This riddling tale, to what does it belong? |
34224 | Far, far ahead, is all her seamen know; And where the land she travels from? |
34224 | Finally, what more suitable part is there for a good peace- loving man, and a good citizen, than to keep aloof from civil dissensions? |
34224 | For pray what is the pain of laying aside anger against one who hath aggrieved thee? |
34224 | For what is it which upsets thy mind, and why art thou sorrowful and dejected? |
34224 | For what notoriety that lives in the mouths of men, or what glory that is worthy of being sought after, art thou able to secure? |
34224 | From time to time she said,"Where is my portrait? |
34224 | Hast not heard the king''s command? |
34224 | Hast thou for cooking a turn, little Lady Clarissa? |
34224 | Hath he not always treasures, always friends, The good great man? |
34224 | Have we not lost all Picenum? |
34224 | Have ye no mannès heart, and have a beard? |
34224 | He fixed on Antoinette a fascinating glance which said,"What matter my name, my lies, and the rest? |
34224 | He said to Camille,"Where and when? |
34224 | He was answered,"While you do not know life, how can you know about death?" |
34224 | His face lighted, and he confronted the ragged candidate with this question:--"Where lieth the Great Seal? |
34224 | His hand trembled as he held the candle, and he whispered anxiously,"Are you sure, miss, it''s the right drawer?" |
34224 | How am I to describe him? |
34224 | How are we to live?" |
34224 | How durst ye say for shame unto your love, That anything might maken you afeard? |
34224 | How long will it be before anything happens?" |
34224 | How then must I act, since either alternative will involve the greatest difficulty, the greatest mental anxiety? |
34224 | How through the open door you rushed, across the court- yard flew; How sprawling in your terror on the wine- press beam you lay? |
34224 | I have asked whether Henry the Eighth was an amiable character? |
34224 | I said to him in conclusion,"Will you be good enough to show me to bed?" |
34224 | I wonder whether I am afraid too? |
34224 | If one more burden has now been laid upon you, could any addition be made to your pain? |
34224 | In summer, when the woodland rings, He asks"What mean these noises?" |
34224 | In the fields are birds[ so called]; many take the name[?] |
34224 | Indeed, and keeps to employ her talent How many, pray? |
34224 | Is He not risen? |
34224 | Is he not risen, and shall we not rise? |
34224 | Is it his face that has recommended him? |
34224 | Is it necessary to mention that I gave way? |
34224 | Is it not manifest that these are the things which constitute the virtue of the horse, not the others? |
34224 | Is it not to the execrable system of Spain, which she seeks again to establish and to perpetuate? |
34224 | Is it possible then for me, who wanted all to be left uninjured, not to feel indignation that he by whom this was secured is dead? |
34224 | Is that the deputy come to wake him to the torment of living? |
34224 | Is there any one of these things that has not been taken away before it was given? |
34224 | Is this because I like him, or because I am afraid of him? |
34224 | Is''t history? |
34224 | It is my duty as a citizen to desire the preservation of the constitution? |
34224 | Just then the night watchman happened in, and was about to happen out again, when he noticed Ealer and exclaimed:--"Who is at the wheel, sir?" |
34224 | Lady Sophie''s so good to the sick, so firm and so gentle: Is there a nobler sphere than of hospital nurse and matron? |
34224 | Lo Cato, which that was so wise a man, Said he not thus? |
34224 | Lo Croesus, which that was of Lydia king, Met[356] he not that he sat upon a tree, Which signified he should anhangèd be? |
34224 | Mademoiselle de Moriaz replied,"Do you not see that there is no sunshine?" |
34224 | May I hope that you will be near town when I am there, so that I may as usual avail myself in everything of your advice and means of assistance? |
34224 | Moreover, even those who speak of us, for how long a time will they speak? |
34224 | Mr. Swinburne comments upon this aspect of his career in a jocular couplet--"What brought good Wilkie''s genius nigh perdition? |
34224 | My genial spirits fail; And what can these avail, To lift the smothering weight from off my breast? |
34224 | No-- But lies and molders low? |
34224 | Now singeth, sir, for saintè Charity, Let see, can ye your father counterfeit?" |
34224 | Now what was there at the present time that could attach her very strongly to life? |
34224 | Nymphs bred high On tops of hills, or in the founts of floods, In herby marshes, or in leavy woods? |
34224 | Oh, mem,"with a sudden crimsoning of the little face,"may I fetch Billy?" |
34224 | Or are they high- spoke men I now am near? |
34224 | Or it is for her sake, I suppose, that you are grieving? |
34224 | Or rather say at once, within what space Of time this wild disastrous change took place? |
34224 | Or what if e''en, as runs a tale, the Ten Saw, heard, and touched, again and yet again? |
34224 | Or what kind of virtue do we predicate of an olive? |
34224 | PHANTOM OR FACT? |
34224 | People gathered by the Wu flag[?]." |
34224 | Perhaps he has been made the victim of some political persecution? |
34224 | Perhaps he is in correspondence with his government? |
34224 | Place-- titles-- salary-- a gilded chain-- Or throne of corses which his sword has slain? |
34224 | Say that I now follow this; then whither? |
34224 | See ye that oak? |
34224 | Seest thou not into what a holy place thou hast come? |
34224 | Shall I leave them together? |
34224 | Shall we say that their outside trappings contribute anything to their own proper virtue? |
34224 | Such griefs with such men well agree, But wherefore, wherefore fall on me? |
34224 | Suddenly he heard a harsh voice saying to Madame de Lorcy,"Where is Count Larinski? |
34224 | THE LATEST DECALOGUE Thou shalt have one God only: who Would be at the expense of two? |
34224 | THE UNKNOWN COURSE Where lies the land to which the ship would go? |
34224 | That I allow; but is anything worse than this? |
34224 | The Master said,"While you are not able to serve men, how can you serve their spirits?" |
34224 | The account is closed, and what have you, what has she, to charge of injustice against Fate? |
34224 | The king turned to Tom, and said kindly:--"My poor boy, how was it that you could remember where I hid the Seal, when I could not remember it myself?" |
34224 | The prospect of a wedded life with a husband chosen from our young men of rank? |
34224 | The terms were bad? |
34224 | The wiser part are everywhere silent; and who would revile a whole nation for the sake of the loud ones? |
34224 | The younger[ are] the passive multitude[?] |
34224 | Then what on earth is the good of writing? |
34224 | Then why, my soul, dost thou complain-- Why drooping seek the dark recess? |
34224 | They look into each other''s famine- sharpened faces, and wonder"Who next?" |
34224 | Tom Canty turned upon him and said sharply:--"Why dost thou hesitate? |
34224 | Tsze Kung asked, saying,"What do you say of a man who is loved by all the people of his village?" |
34224 | Turning toward M. Langis, he cried,"Will you now do me the honor of fighting with me?" |
34224 | Unless you object, Mr. Jennings, to my importing_ that_ amount of common- sense into the proceedings?" |
34224 | Was it for yourselves only that you nobly fought? |
34224 | Was it possible that the sedative action of the opium was making itself felt already? |
34224 | Was it round?--and thick?--and had it letters and devices graved upon it?--Yes? |
34224 | Was some constitutional peculiarity in him feeling the influence in some new way? |
34224 | We will only ask, which of us is in a position to put his theory to the test first?" |
34224 | Were we to fail, on the very brink of success? |
34224 | What are they? |
34224 | What did we dream, what wake we to discover? |
34224 | What difficulty is there in being delivered from envy and ill- will? |
34224 | What does the lovely flush in a beauty''s cheek mean to a doctor but a"break"that ripples above some deadly disease? |
34224 | What fatigue is it not to swear? |
34224 | What harm had they done you, those poor Cossacks? |
34224 | What have we gained by the war? |
34224 | What hurries to the gaming tables the man of prosperous fortune and ample resources? |
34224 | What if the women, ere the dawn was gray, Saw one or more great angels, as they say( Angels, or Him himself)? |
34224 | What is an ideal world? |
34224 | What is it that makes me unable to blame them or to ridicule them in_ him_? |
34224 | What is our situation now? |
34224 | What is the charm which attaches the statesman to an office which almost weighs him down with labor and an appalling responsibility? |
34224 | What labor is it to pray, and to ask for a thousand good things from God, who is ready to give? |
34224 | What labor is it, not to speak evil of any one? |
34224 | What needeth it to sermon of it more? |
34224 | What place indeed will be safe for me, supposing I now find the sea calm enough, before I have actually joined him? |
34224 | What pleasures, then, of the body can be compared with the privileges of authority? |
34224 | What preparations have been made to warrant such a hope? |
34224 | What reason is there why you should allow the private grief which has befallen you to distress you so terribly? |
34224 | What sea is ever calm? |
34224 | What should I more unto this talè sayn? |
34224 | What sort of a character had he?" |
34224 | What strange disguise hast now put on To_ make believe_ that thou art gone? |
34224 | What suffering is it not to utter shameful words, nor to revile, nor to insult another? |
34224 | What talk is this about my Cid-- him of Bivar I mean? |
34224 | What tell''st thou now about? |
34224 | What terms ought not to have been accepted sooner than abandon our country? |
34224 | What then is the virtue of a horse? |
34224 | What then is the virtue of man? |
34224 | What trouble is it to love one''s neighbor? |
34224 | What was I to make of this singular proposition to sell my own shadow? |
34224 | What wouldst thou have a good great man obtain? |
34224 | What, however, is so agreeable to nature as for an old man to die? |
34224 | When asked what we were to gain by war, he answered,"What are we not to lose by peace? |
34224 | When will the ceremony take place?" |
34224 | When? |
34224 | Whence learnt you that heroic measure? |
34224 | Where is it situated? |
34224 | Where is that native simple heart, Devote to Virtue, Fancy, Art? |
34224 | Where learnt you that heroic measure? |
34224 | Where learnt you that heroic measure? |
34224 | Where lies the land to which the ship would go? |
34224 | Which of them need be rinsed? |
34224 | Who are the people that are to tear up the whole fabric of human society, whenever and as often as caprice or passion may prompt them? |
34224 | Who are you, to dare compare yourself with Count Larinski?... |
34224 | Who could tell? |
34224 | Who in the farthest remaining regions of the rising and the setting sun, or on the confines of the north and the south, will hear thy name? |
34224 | Who knows? |
34224 | Who would not lie, to be loved by you?" |
34224 | Who would now sit down to read a work professedly theological? |
34224 | Whom?" |
34224 | Why did I meet you? |
34224 | Why has the first rank among sports been given to the chase? |
34224 | Why livest thou so long in so great age?" |
34224 | Why lose I time in these things? |
34224 | Why shall I not hasten to go to you?" |
34224 | Why should I not as well eke tell you all The portraitúre, that was upon the wall Within the temple of mighty Mars the red? |
34224 | Why so? |
34224 | Why stand ye looking up to heaven, where him ye ne''er may see, Neither ascending hence, nor returning hither again? |
34224 | Why then dost thou fear temporal things which pass away like the stream of a river? |
34224 | Why, goddess, why, to us denied, Lay''st thou thy ancient lyre aside? |
34224 | Will Christianity be the less true for appearing the more beautiful? |
34224 | Will you have my smelling- bottle?" |
34224 | Will you not silent keep that mouth where truth was never found? |
34224 | Will you think better of it, and try your teeth in my fat neck? |
34224 | Would he go back now, as I believed he had gone back then, to his bed- chamber? |
34224 | Would he leave the room? |
34224 | Would he show us what he had done with the Diamond when he had returned to his own room? |
34224 | Would his next proceeding be the same as the proceeding of last year? |
34224 | Would the monster find opportunity to rush at him, and braving the blood- stained axe, kill him by main force? |
34224 | Would you follow it in poetry? |
34224 | Would you have us always open to the reproach of enveloping our tenets in sacred obscurity, lest their falsehood should be detected? |
34224 | Wouldst thou not submit both to do and to suffer all things, whatsoever he who promised these things commanded? |
34224 | Yet the solution must be found; for what can one do? |
34224 | You are a craven at the core,--tall, handsome, as you stand; How dare you talk as now you talk, you tongue without a hand?... |
34224 | You have forgotten it?" |
34224 | You have nothing more to sell me?" |
34224 | You, young girl, who have had such advantages, learnt so quickly, Can you not teach? |
34224 | [ 245] What shall we do? |
34224 | _ Ere_ I was old? |
34224 | a pause in the action of the brain? |
34224 | and can ye be aghast of swevenès[296]? |
34224 | and which need not? |
34224 | and whither and for what? |
34224 | and whither back, or why? |
34224 | each a space Of some few yards before his face; Does that the whole wide plan explain? |
34224 | especially when Archias has employed all his genius with the utmost zeal in celebrating the glory and renown of the Roman people? |
34224 | fit for me to bear To wash at flood the weeds I can not wear Before re- purified? |
34224 | good friend, have not you then enough of your own shadow? |
34224 | have we not abandoned the whole of our treasure, public and private, to the foe? |
34224 | have we not left open the road to the capital? |
34224 | his extraordinary power, his loving- kindness and care? |
34224 | is he out of temper? |
34224 | is it not the power of carrying burdens with contentment, and accomplishing journeys with ease, and having hoofs like rock? |
34224 | is it to have large boughs and great luxuriance of leaves, or to exhibit an abundance of its proper fruit dispersed over all parts of the tree? |
34224 | one which abounds in leaves and branches, or one which is laden with fruit? |
34224 | or Aspiration? |
34224 | or Resolve?) |
34224 | or an idle song? |
34224 | or dwell injurious mortals here, Unjust and churlish? |
34224 | or that our minds could bear being kept so constantly on the stretch if we did not relax them by that same study? |
34224 | or what shall it avail a nation to save the whole of a miserable trade and lose its liberties? |
34224 | or would he sleep, and be himself a victim? |
34224 | since this is life, as I hear Africanus say, why do I tarry upon earth? |
34224 | the heart is prone to fall away, Her high and cherished visions to forget; And if thou takest, how wilt thou repay So vast, so dread a debt?" |
34224 | the lion scare have you forgotten too? |
34224 | to what use? |
34224 | vision? |
34224 | was the like ever seen? |
34224 | were those identical great men, whose virtues have been recorded in books, accomplished in all that learning which you are extolling so highly?" |
34224 | what consolation for the soul? |
34224 | what do you see? |
34224 | what fruition? |
34224 | what honeyed draught holds nothing but the sweet? |
34224 | what hope? |
34224 | what is there in man''s life that can be called long? |
34224 | what say you more? |
34224 | what shall we to him say?" |
34224 | when shall my bonès be at rest? |
34224 | whether Mr. Murderer and Mrs. Murderess Manning were not both unusually stout people? |
34224 | whether Pope Alexander the Sixth was a good man? |
34224 | who wend[236] To- day, that we should have so fair a grace? |
34224 | why could I not see you without recognizing in you the dream of my whole life? |
34224 | why these brinie teeres? |
34224 | why will ye gon? |
34224 | why wylt thou goe, Wythoute thye lovynge wyfe? |
34224 | with eyes so fair, What was thy delighted measure? |
34224 | you admit then that Samuel Brohl has a word of honor-- that when he has sworn he can be believed?" |
34224 | you at last acknowledge that your fainting fit was comedy?" |
47455 | Cash? |
47455 | Did you compose it unaided? |
47455 | Had n''t we better think it over? |
47455 | Is that logical? |
47455 | Is there any future to it? |
47455 | Is---- in? |
47455 | Well, my dear,said John Milton Edwards, miserably uncertain and turning to appeal to his wife,"which shall it be-- to write or not to write?" |
47455 | What will you pay? |
47455 | Why do n''t you write up your experiences as an author? |
47455 | Why not? |
47455 | Why should n''t it? |
47455 | Why? |
47455 | You want to be helpful, eh? 47455 You''re going to write it for him, are n''t you?" |
47455 | ''What''s the matter?'' |
47455 | ''Why,''bubbles the stranger,''do n''t you remember when you were in Ogden, Utah, in nineteen- two? |
47455 | ***** What is a great love of books? |
47455 | After a score of years of hard work did he find himself progressing in any but a financial direction? |
47455 | Am I a Jasper that you seek thus to inveigle me into purchasing a gold- brick? |
47455 | And can you say"I am holier than thou"to the conscientious writer who turns out his 20,000 or 25,000 words a week along these ethical lines? |
47455 | And is it too fair a hope that the reader of fiction will here find something to his taste? |
47455 | And oh, why cheat the Indians Out of all their land? |
47455 | And was Edwards''prescience doing subliminal stunts when he wrote the story? |
47455 | And where did Sager go when he left Arizona? |
47455 | Are the book rights of these your property? |
47455 | But funny things----? |
47455 | But is it less vicious than the novel that sells for five cents? |
47455 | But is the game worth the candle? |
47455 | Ca n''t you devise some other termination-- something with more''go?'' |
47455 | Can you tell me if he is still living, and where? |
47455 | Did Sager have a daughter? |
47455 | Did you ever walk through the ante- room of a big publishing house on the day checks are signed and given out? |
47455 | Do n''t you think so? |
47455 | Do you get me? |
47455 | Do you like it?" |
47455 | ETHICS OF THE NICKEL NOVEL Is the nickel novel easy to write? |
47455 | Eliminating book and dramatic rights from the equation, and what remained? |
47455 | Even so; yet which of these magazines is doing more to make the world really livable? |
47455 | Forgetting the past and facing the future with eyes fixed at a higher angle, how was he to proceed with his"little gift of words?" |
47455 | He wrote in to ask what had become of the remaining$ 90? |
47455 | How much does Progress owe the typewriter? |
47455 | How much does civilization owe the telephone, the night- letter, the fast mail and two- cent postage? |
47455 | How will$ 75 be for it? |
47455 | I am wondering whether you have heard much about your story''There and Back?'' |
47455 | If an author ever suffers an editor''s contempt, what must the editor suffer on being caught red- handed in such a way as this? |
47455 | If not, can you get Mr. Munsey to give them to you? |
47455 | If not, will some psychologist kindly rise and explain how a bit of fiction could be responsible for so much real tragedy? |
47455 | If so, about how long would it take you to write 40,000 words? |
47455 | In this little world, so crowded with sorrow and tragedy, what is it worth to have had a share in making life pleasant for a stranger? |
47455 | Is THAT the kind of an incident you want? |
47455 | Is he careful to count the letters and spaces in his story title and figure to place the title in the exact middle of the page? |
47455 | Is it because of their interest in their writers? |
47455 | Is it necessary to dwell upon the importance of a carbon copy of every story offered through the mails, or entrusted to the express companies? |
47455 | Is it pleasant for an author to see his cherished Western idea worked out with painted white men for Indians and painted buttes for a background? |
47455 | Is this easy? |
47455 | Is_ this_ game worth the candle? |
47455 | It is related that the actress, who was probably as excited as Ade, answered,"What''s the difference?" |
47455 | John Peter, should this ever meet your eyes will you please communicate further with the author of"A Study in Red?" |
47455 | Let it be"typist,"after the English fashion; and instead of saying"the typist typewrote the letter,"why not say she"typed"it? |
47455 | May I know it? |
47455 | May n''t we have you? |
47455 | Mr. Howells asked:"Did you write this poem yourself?" |
47455 | Now, if I told that editor what an ass he had made of himself, would he ever buy another manuscript of me again? |
47455 | Now, pray, what is one to think of this? |
47455 | O. K.? |
47455 | Or did his father really die by giving up his pony to the"beautiful young white girl?" |
47455 | Or is that just a part of the story? |
47455 | Pretty good, eh? |
47455 | Query: Were the reporters of the country romancing? |
47455 | Query: Will the mill grind out as good a grist if it grinds continuously? |
47455 | Remember the crowd at the depot to see you get off the train? |
47455 | Sleek.--We''ve got you at last, eh? |
47455 | The quality of mind possessed by the scholarly editor and the street boys who read''Bowery Billy''must be somewhat the same-- eh? |
47455 | This doctrine, I am afraid, is at present carried much too far; for why should writing differ so much from other arts? |
47455 | To draw the matter still finer, is either form of fiction vicious? |
47455 | WHAT SHALL WE DO WITH IT? |
47455 | Was the purely commercial aim, although held to with a strong sense of moral responsibility, the correct aim? |
47455 | We''ll be taking a few chances, but what of that? |
47455 | Were the nickel novels and the popular paper- backs to rise in judgment against him? |
47455 | What affairs had Edwards to settle? |
47455 | What are the feelings of an author when he opens his first book for the first time? |
47455 | What if the Happy Idea does not come when I am ready for it? |
47455 | What shall these men do with their"little gift"but keep it grinding, merciless though the grind may be? |
47455 | What should he do with it? |
47455 | What was the very lowest figure Edwards would take for it? |
47455 | What was there in the work he had done which made it impossible to put"John Milton Edwards"on the title page of his most ambitious effort? |
47455 | Where should they go? |
47455 | Where, he asked himself, was he to place his material in the meantime? |
47455 | Who can measure the debt? |
47455 | Who have been the patrons of the Factory for these twenty- two years, and what have been the returns? |
47455 | Why a nickel library and not a"yellow"newspaper? |
47455 | Why in blazes ca n''t people think up something new?''" |
47455 | Why not have the underscore raised to the position of a hyphen and so have a dash that_ is_ a dash? |
47455 | Why not turn the marked paragraphs into verse, with strong influence on story? |
47455 | Why should Edwards write one when he already had on hand the mystery story unsuccessfully entered in the old_ Chicago Daily News_ contest? |
47455 | Why should n''t the dollar book show a higher grade of craftmanship? |
47455 | Will you pardon my display of interest? |
47455 | Yet, what was the result? |
33027 | And Miss Pole? |
33027 | And Mrs. Forrester, of course? |
33027 | And hast thou found a lover Where clover and violets blow? 33027 And if he asks news of-- Mademoiselle Gypsy?" |
33027 | And if you do not succeed? 33027 And pray, sir, what does that mean?" |
33027 | And what do you think of them? |
33027 | And who asks the author to introduce all this philosophy? |
33027 | And you are David Marshall''s daughter? |
33027 | And you have written to him? |
33027 | And your father is well? 33027 Are n''t they famously good?" |
33027 | Asters? |
33027 | At any rate, you know where the Oratory is? |
33027 | Bringas? 33027 But am I to look at my watch? |
33027 | But how could I work upon a business like this, when there was no trace, no mark, no sign, no conviction,--nothing, nothing? |
33027 | But tell us, then, what the book is about? |
33027 | But the choir of the Oratory? 33027 But then, patron,"continued Fanferlot, working out the idea,"you have made the little girl confess, although Madame Alexandre failed? |
33027 | Can you account for this? |
33027 | Could n''t you have transplanted it? |
33027 | Dear Christians,he said,"how is it in our days with''peace on earth''? |
33027 | Did you ever have a private secretary? |
33027 | Did you not say it was midnight? |
33027 | Die? 33027 Dine with us to- morrow?" |
33027 | Do you hear how the French spirit spreads and increases in power? 33027 Do you hear that, pastor?" |
33027 | Do you hear, pastor? |
33027 | Do you know him? |
33027 | Do you know how to drive a carriage and take care of a horse? |
33027 | Do you like my posies? |
33027 | Do you look like him-- like your father? |
33027 | Do you mean, then, that you are not going to send us forward at all? |
33027 | Do you see, father? |
33027 | Do you think I shall fly, then? |
33027 | Do you? 33027 Do?" |
33027 | Earthly fame,he said.--"But which of two is better for you,--the Master, or the servant? |
33027 | Excuse me, but what brings you here? |
33027 | Had Spain, perchance, a''constitution''when she was the foremost nation in the world? |
33027 | Had you appointed a meeting? |
33027 | Has he told you to do so? 33027 Has magic been at work here?" |
33027 | Have you read,asked Boulmier,"the notice of Courajod?" |
33027 | Have you read,said Boulmier,"the article by Tamisey de Larroque in the Revue des Questions Historiques?" |
33027 | Have you seen any numbers of''The Pickwick Papers''? |
33027 | Have you seen him again since that night? |
33027 | Her former occupation considered, could Miss Matty excuse the liberty? |
33027 | How can they say that nature Has nothing made in vain; Why then, beneath the water, Should hideous rocks remain? 33027 How does it strike you?" |
33027 | How does that strike your inland eyes? |
33027 | How long is it to last? |
33027 | How was The Rambler published, ma''am? |
33027 | Humble- minded? 33027 I''ll have Miss Peters-- but do n''t you find it a little warm here? |
33027 | I''m going down to the south side: would you like to go? |
33027 | Is my aunt at home? |
33027 | Is n''t it a gem? |
33027 | Is n''t it just too quaintly ugly for anything? |
33027 | Is not the master ashamed to let his poor apprentice push him along like that? |
33027 | Is that all? |
33027 | Is that your coat there? |
33027 | Jimmy? 33027 Make yourself easy, patron: now, where shall I report?" |
33027 | May I beg you to come as near half- past six to my little dwelling as possible, Miss Matilda? 33027 Me?" |
33027 | Miss Marshall? |
33027 | Mrs. Jamieson is coming, I think you said? |
33027 | No, but--? 33027 No, sir,"said Foote quickly:"do you?" |
33027 | No? |
33027 | O patron,he stammered,"you know that too? |
33027 | Of course he does not believe in God? |
33027 | Oh came you by yon water- side? 33027 Oh, must he die?" |
33027 | Or will it be a gold one, with diamonds around the edge? |
33027 | Really-- David Marshall''s daughter? |
33027 | Sacristan,--he? 33027 See here,"said Mrs. Bates, suddenly,"are you the woman who read about the''Decadence of the Renaissance Forms''at the last Fortnightly?" |
33027 | Shall I,says he,"of tender age, In this important care engage? |
33027 | The merchant robbed of pleasure Sees tempests in despair; But what''s the loss of treasure, To losing of my dear? 33027 The wall- paper?" |
33027 | Then-- but is it already midnight?... |
33027 | This man-- has he written to you? |
33027 | Three men-- don''t you see them? 33027 Twelve months are gone and over, And nine long tedious days; Why didst thou, venturous lover, Why didst thou trust the seas? |
33027 | Vile? |
33027 | Wait, wait,she said;"André will soon return, and I will tell him that I have need of-- How much did you lose?" |
33027 | Was it a large amount? |
33027 | Well, if it should be so,said Foote,"what reason have they to complain of so short a journey?" |
33027 | What are these tears about? |
33027 | What are you, unknown creature? 33027 What do you fear?" |
33027 | What do you suppose happened to me last winter? |
33027 | What do you think? 33027 What do you want with me? |
33027 | What does a woman of fifty- five want to be taking music lessons for? |
33027 | What for? 33027 What has the theatre to do with moralizing? |
33027 | What have you done? |
33027 | What is it? |
33027 | What is this? 33027 What time is it?" |
33027 | What,she said,"Prosper a thief?" |
33027 | When? |
33027 | Where is the archbishop? |
33027 | Where is the thingamajig, anyway? |
33027 | Where the deuce,says Foote,"can it be gone to?" |
33027 | Where? |
33027 | Where? |
33027 | Who cares? 33027 Why do n''t you sleep?" |
33027 | Why not? 33027 Why not?" |
33027 | Why, am I not good? 33027 Why, do you bury your attorneys here?" |
33027 | Why, patron, you ask me that-- an old rider of the Bouthor Circus? |
33027 | Why, what is the matter with you? |
33027 | Would n''t you like to see the rest of the rooms before you go up? |
33027 | Yes, to be sure we do; how else? |
33027 | Yes,replied Gélis,"it is full of things....""Have you read,"said Boulmier,"the''Tableau des Abbayes Bénédictines en 1600,''by Sylvestre Bonnard?" |
33027 | You are posted on these things, then? |
33027 | You have been studying the case, master? |
33027 | You have read the new novel''Virginia,''that the people have waited so long for? |
33027 | You here, my man? |
33027 | You know the stairs called the Cáceres Staircase? |
33027 | You want proof? 33027 You will lay the realm under interdict, then, and excommunicate the whole of us?" |
33027 | ''Why so?'' |
33027 | ***** Now who this merry roundel Hath sung with such renown? |
33027 | --"O Lord, what shall I do?" |
33027 | --"What, Lloyd with an L?" |
33027 | --"Who are they?" |
33027 | --_Froebel._] FROISSART( 1337- 1410?) |
33027 | A deep feeling of the universal brotherhood of man,--what is it but a true sense of our close filial union with God? |
33027 | A voice cried,"Where is the traitor? |
33027 | Ah, was it not Bedewed with tears? |
33027 | All my decorations, then-- you think them corrupt and degraded?" |
33027 | Am I not your mother? |
33027 | Am I sure that I have not myself already suffered this great loss? |
33027 | And after all, of what use is this pride of appearance, for which so much is risked, so much is suffered? |
33027 | And again, were idleness, willfulness, selfishness, etc., etc., natural dispositions? |
33027 | And could you perhaps lend me your stick for a moment?" |
33027 | And finally--""Well, what-- finally?" |
33027 | And have we now forgotten that powerful Friend? |
33027 | And how is he, anyway? |
33027 | And how shall I then sweetly sing That thus am marréd with mourning? |
33027 | And how stands the case in France? |
33027 | And if a sparrow can not fall to the ground without his notice, is it probable that an empire can rise without his aid? |
33027 | And if they go from home, their reason is equally cogent:"What does it signify how we dress here, where nobody knows us?" |
33027 | And in this comprehension is there not involved a certain degree of comprehension of all things else? |
33027 | And when the French King saw these four knights return again, he tarried till they came to him and said,"Sirs, what tidings?" |
33027 | And why will you forsake the Master for the servant, the Lord for the slave?" |
33027 | And yet-- does it not strike you, too, that this scene is not altogether bad?" |
33027 | And you are living in the same old place? |
33027 | Answer me-- when did you receive letters from that man?" |
33027 | Are we? |
33027 | Are you ready in the case of the cow? |
33027 | Bringas? |
33027 | But come, child, not to lose time, have you carefully conned those instructions I gave you? |
33027 | But do not the Abbé de la Roche and the Abbé Morellet visit her?" |
33027 | But in what respects will this answer to the lawyer himself? |
33027 | But shall I let M. Patrigent see that I suspect another than the banker or the cashier?" |
33027 | But was it so? |
33027 | But what good would it do? |
33027 | But what will fame be to an ephemera who no longer exists? |
33027 | But when a person has no soul at all, how, I pray you, can such attuning be then possible? |
33027 | But where shall I find allies and helpers if not in women, who as mothers and teachers may put my idea in execution? |
33027 | But wherefore such pride In your swift airy ride? |
33027 | But why should I mention_ me_, when you have so much higher a promise in the Commandments, that such conduct will recommend you to the favor of God? |
33027 | But why such haste? |
33027 | But with what had it been made? |
33027 | Can I such matchless sleight withstand? |
33027 | Can any behold,''Mid the housings of gold In the stables of kings, dyes half so splendid As those on the brindled hide of yon wild animal blended? |
33027 | Can history or sight a traitor be? |
33027 | Can this slow bungler cheat your sight? |
33027 | Can thy good deeds in former times Outweigh the balance of thy crimes? |
33027 | Can we answer for that before our Lord and God?" |
33027 | Copyright 1895, by D. Appleton& Co. What shall we learn from our yearning look into the heart of the flower and the eye of the child? |
33027 | Dares he with me dispute the prize? |
33027 | Did he make a real contribution to historical knowledge? |
33027 | Did not the memory of me haunt you and deprive your nights of sleep? |
33027 | Did they approve of his purpose? |
33027 | Did they deem the enterprise within his power? |
33027 | Do you care anything for Louis Quinze?" |
33027 | Do you imagine that it was chance which gave me the secret word and opened the box?" |
33027 | Do you know the''Java March''?" |
33027 | Do you know what a calash is? |
33027 | Do you know, is it too late?" |
33027 | Do you lack confidence in me? |
33027 | Do you remember that mark which you observed on the side of the copper? |
33027 | Do you see how wholly these''freedom politics,''as they are called, are held up and impregnated with this godless spirit of revolt? |
33027 | Do you see that, pastor? |
33027 | Do you see the spirit of revolt, pastor? |
33027 | Do you think a heavy beard and a blouse sufficient to evade detection? |
33027 | Do you understand?" |
33027 | Do you wish me to prove that you have told everything to the examining magistrate, as was your duty? |
33027 | EMANUEL VON GEIBEL 1815- 1884 6248 See''st Thou the Sea? |
33027 | FROM''WHAT D''YE CALL IT?'' |
33027 | Fitzurse went on,"We bring you the commands of the King beyond the sea; will you hear us in public or in private?" |
33027 | For God''s sake, what is this?" |
33027 | For by love''s heat must love be governed? |
33027 | For what will become of me, if you avoid and reject me? |
33027 | HOW TO BE A LAWYER From''The Lame Lover''_ Enter_ Jack_ Serjeant_--So, Jack, anybody at chambers to- day? |
33027 | Has n''t your father ever spoken of me? |
33027 | Have I ever reproached you?" |
33027 | Have I not from my side, from which runs out my soul, Made a spring gush to slake men''s thirst? |
33027 | Have n''t you given me your last jewel?" |
33027 | Have we not read worse books than that?''" |
33027 | Have you also the secret word?" |
33027 | Have you any red- silk umbrellas in London? |
33027 | Have you lost your senses?" |
33027 | Have you made one progressive step since you began this case? |
33027 | Have you not been forced to deny my birth? |
33027 | He produced a tragi- comi- pastoral farce called''What D''ye Call It?'' |
33027 | He turned politely to a solitary wanderer who was passing that way:"Would you kindly tell me in what part of the town we are? |
33027 | How am I to find out when a quarter of an hour has passed?" |
33027 | How are we to mark them off one from the other? |
33027 | How can people who are so clever and capable in practical things ever be such insolent tom- fools in social things? |
33027 | How can such miserable sinners as we are, entertain so much pride as to conceit that every offense against our imagined honor merits death? |
33027 | How come he to thy hands? |
33027 | How could a fleet be raised, how could the sailors be gathered together, how could they be taught, within a year''s space, to cope with such an enemy? |
33027 | How could any young man capable of bearing arms, Froebel says, become a teacher of children whose Fatherland he had refused to defend? |
33027 | How did it come about? |
33027 | How far did you follow the empty cab?" |
33027 | How is it that parents are so blind and deaf, when they profess to be so eager to work for the welfare, the health, and peace of their children? |
33027 | How many points are the great object of practice? |
33027 | How much does it please me to have two great big formal beds of gladiolus and foliage in the front yard, one on each side of the steps? |
33027 | How shall we ever be able to pay them? |
33027 | How then do we define the nation which is, if there is no special reason to the contrary, to fix the limits of a government? |
33027 | I really took you for a gentleman who--""Well, sir,"said the other,"and am I not a gentleman?" |
33027 | I suppose you know your way to the fountain?" |
33027 | If I woo my lady- love, Will she be denying? |
33027 | In the name of God, holy man, were it not better that we never shared a gift so mysterious?" |
33027 | Is he humble- minded, do you mean?" |
33027 | Is it not thus also with our lives? |
33027 | Is not everything in those plays strange, startling, exceptional, wonderful, and surprising? |
33027 | Is not that a matter of every- day occurrence?" |
33027 | Is that the idea?" |
33027 | Is there anything new in the newspapers?" |
33027 | Is this, then, he so famed for sleight? |
33027 | It seems to me that there ought to--""David Marshall?" |
33027 | It was his cast of mind, his point of view; and the questions which alone concern us in any estimate of his work are: Did he do it well? |
33027 | It''s little, but it''s good: there could n''t be anything more like him, could there? |
33027 | JOHN FORD( 1586-?) |
33027 | Lloyd?" |
33027 | Martinmas wind, when wilt thou blaw And shake the green leaves off the tree? |
33027 | Must not such a retrospect unveil the truth? |
33027 | Must not the beauty of the unveiled truth allure him to Divine doing, Divine living? |
33027 | Nothing? |
33027 | O gentle Death, when wilt thou come? |
33027 | O say, why seek ye other lands? |
33027 | Oh wherefore should I busk my head? |
33027 | Or came you by yon meadow green? |
33027 | Or on this big sprawling thing?" |
33027 | Or saw you my sweet Willy?" |
33027 | Or wherefore should I kame my hair? |
33027 | Peggy, what have you brought us?" |
33027 | Pietro had brought Francis up in a princely fashion: why should he not behave as a prince? |
33027 | Poor mother, have I not taken everything from you? |
33027 | Pray what is there in this scene in the least remarkable, or pathetic, or historical?" |
33027 | Pu''d you the rose or lily? |
33027 | Queer about the English, is n''t it? |
33027 | Raoul, frightened, asked if she had gone mad? |
33027 | SEE''ST THOU THE SEA? |
33027 | Say, then, will you attend us to the King''s presence, and there answer for yourself? |
33027 | See''st thou the sea? |
33027 | Shall it be? |
33027 | Shall we never cease to stamp human nature, even in childhood, like coins? |
33027 | She spoke first:--"May I take shelter here?" |
33027 | She stopped him:--"What will you do with the key, Raoul? |
33027 | Should one be silent at such things? |
33027 | Should one look quietly on while this evil spirit eats itself in among the people? |
33027 | So you call this a play, Gabrielito? |
33027 | Society had done nothing for them-- why should they do anything for society? |
33027 | THE SICK MAN AND THE ANGEL From the''Fables''Is there no hope? |
33027 | The daughters, the poor dear angels, they read it and say,''Dear me, is that anything? |
33027 | The men forbid the women to read the book, and the women forbid their daughters--""And so they all read it together?" |
33027 | The question which Freiligrath asks the emigrants in his early poem of that name,--''O say, why seek ye other lands?'' |
33027 | The roofs down there must be those of the Hall of Columns and the outer stairway, are they not? |
33027 | The student of medicine, after glancing at the title of the book that Boulmier held in his hand, exclaimed:--"What!--you read Michelet-- you?" |
33027 | Their dress is very independent of fashion: as they observe,"What does it signify how we dress here at Cranford, where everybody knows us?" |
33027 | Then he recognizes''free thought''; and what then?" |
33027 | Then the King answered quickly and said,"Wherefore? |
33027 | Then the King said,"Is my son dead, or hurt, or on the earth felled?" |
33027 | Then will you swear that you will wait until to- morrow?" |
33027 | Then, my dear child, why not have said so in the first place, without lugging in everybody and everything else you could think of? |
33027 | This is the outward fact; what is the truth which through this fact is dimly hinted to the prophetic mind? |
33027 | This was the cause of numerous punishments: but what to me were_ pensums_? |
33027 | To gain the last end, what are the best means to be used? |
33027 | To learn to comprehend nature in the child,--is not that to comprehend one''s own nature and the nature of mankind? |
33027 | To the poet, bending thoughtful over his lyre, The crowd also said:--Dreamer, of what use art thou? |
33027 | Was Becket a martyr, or was he justly executed as a traitor to his sovereign? |
33027 | Was M. Lecoq really in anger? |
33027 | Was he not set to watch over word and teaching, but not to be a judge in the world''s disputes? |
33027 | Was it not to profane the house of God and the holy office, to drag the struggle and strife of the day into it? |
33027 | Well, is that very remarkable? |
33027 | Well, who would look better in such a role than I, or who has earned a better right to play it? |
33027 | Were they ready themselves to help him to the uttermost to recover his right? |
33027 | Were we no longer actual owners, then? |
33027 | What answer but one was possible? |
33027 | What are its merits and defects? |
33027 | What can happen of any interest in a village inn? |
33027 | What could they do if they were there? |
33027 | What do I care for orchids and American beauties, and all those other expensive things under glass? |
33027 | What does he want with me? |
33027 | What does it all mean? |
33027 | What had she been doing? |
33027 | What has happened to you?" |
33027 | What have you to show?" |
33027 | What is its value? |
33027 | What is the matter with you? |
33027 | What is time to the poet? |
33027 | What madness is this?" |
33027 | What now avails all my toil and labor in amassing honey- dew on this leaf, which I can not live to enjoy? |
33027 | What now? |
33027 | What occasion was there for you to go after these men and exasperate them with your bitter speeches? |
33027 | What seest thou now? |
33027 | What shall I do, dear friend? |
33027 | What then is the use of that word?" |
33027 | What think you of the odd half of a pair of scissors? |
33027 | What widow or what orphan prays To crown thy life with length of days? |
33027 | What would you advise us to?" |
33027 | When, then, did the England in which we still live and move have its beginning? |
33027 | Where and how could M. Lecoq have gathered them? |
33027 | Where and how did these mariners learn their trade? |
33027 | Where are the red men of the rolling plains? |
33027 | Where are we to draw the broad line, if any line is to be drawn, between the present and the past? |
33027 | Where did these ships come from? |
33027 | Where is Thomas Becket?" |
33027 | Who are you, sir?" |
33027 | Who can explain the intimacy of these two men of such different ages? |
33027 | Who knows how long my good resolutions will last? |
33027 | Who knows where my deplorable character may lead me?" |
33027 | Why are you not on your way home?" |
33027 | Why cast out order with no thought of care? |
33027 | Why do you look at me in that way? |
33027 | Why not? |
33027 | Why? |
33027 | Will not these heavy taxes quite ruin the country? |
33027 | Wilt bind the king of the cloudy sands? |
33027 | Would a balance make discovery less easy?" |
33027 | Would not every soul at the Judgment Day be demanded at his hands? |
33027 | You did n''t notice it?" |
33027 | You know then why she left''The Grand- Archange''; why she did not wait for M. Louis de Clameran; and why she bought calico dresses for herself?" |
33027 | You know, of course, that I_ was_ a school- teacher? |
33027 | You?" |
33027 | _ Amethus_-- How did the rivals part? |
33027 | _ Dawbeny_-- Whither speeds his boldness? |
33027 | _ Jack_--But then how comes the note to remain in plaintiff''s possession? |
33027 | _ King Henry_-- Oh, let him range: The player''s on the stage still;''tis his part: He does but act.--What followed? |
33027 | _ King Henry_-- So brave? |
33027 | _ King Henry_-- So? |
33027 | _ King Henry_-- Was ever so much impudence in forgery? |
33027 | _ Serjeant_--And prithee, why so? |
33027 | _ Serjeant_--Praying for an equal partition of plunder? |
33027 | _ Serjeant_--Secondly? |
33027 | _ Serjeant_--The second? |
33027 | _ Serjeant_--What followed upon? |
33027 | _ Serjeant_--What, the affair of the note? |
33027 | _ Serjeant_--Which are they? |
33027 | _ Serjeant_--_Three_ witnesses ready, you say? |
33027 | ai n''t that glory? |
33027 | ai n''t that success? |
33027 | but the dove- cotes?" |
33027 | ca n''t somebody help them?" |
33027 | did he so? |
33027 | for in politics, what can laws do without morals? |
33027 | has he commanded you to do that?" |
33027 | has he counseled you to do that? |
33027 | he cried;"do you know where the key is?" |
33027 | one of my boys humble- minded? |
33027 | or do we imagine we no longer need its assistance? |
33027 | or should one, like a disciple of God, lift up the sword of the Word and the Spirit against this poisonous basilisk? |
33027 | over all leaping, In shame are you sleeping? |
33027 | replied the pale figure,"will you not then look upon me once more? |
33027 | said he;"will you make the King out to be a traitor, then? |
33027 | said the other in amazement;"what becomes of him?" |
33027 | said the other much surprised,"how do you manage?" |
33027 | she said:"why did n''t you come sooner? |
33027 | the French spirit, which has always been one and the same with rationalism and revolution?" |
33027 | the Sick Man whines: Who knows as yet what Heaven designs? |
33027 | thought I,"can you endure this last shock?" |
33027 | to what has my periodical repentance amounted? |
33027 | what''s thy troubled motion To that within my breast? |
33027 | where are we now? |
33027 | why do you look at me in that way? |
33027 | wilt thou bind him fast with a chain? |
33027 | you were to blame To infringe the liberty of houses sacred; Dare we be irreligious? |
36775 | And I should like to know how I''m to go to mother''s without the umbrella? 36775 Anything else beside the portmanteau, sir?" |
36775 | Anything particular in the letter? |
36775 | Are you going to get rid of him? |
36775 | Are you sure he said''buy?'' |
36775 | But, my dear,said I,"what am I to do in my present defenceless state of clothing, if he should take to pecking?" |
36775 | Ca n''t I hear? 36775 Can I speak to you a moment, sir?" |
36775 | Could n''t you get in and hand something out? |
36775 | Do n''t you know I''m the king? |
36775 | Do you admire the view? 36775 Do you believe they would hang_ me_? |
36775 | Do you hear the rain, Mr. Caudle? 36775 Do you know Reggy Vere? |
36775 | Do you know a man Scudamour? 36775 Do you want me to be a foghorn, or a river steam tug?" |
36775 | Eh? |
36775 | Eh? |
36775 | Excuse me, but----"What is it? |
36775 | Go out of the door? |
36775 | Got a greasy face, have I? |
36775 | Have you ever been out before? |
36775 | Have you not dined? |
36775 | Heard from Henry? |
36775 | How about the children? |
36775 | How did he take it? |
36775 | How do you do it, sir? |
36775 | How do you feel? |
36775 | How? 36775 I say, I do n''t think much of telephones, do you?" |
36775 | I say, Joe,cried Mr. Loyd,"are you doing this on purpose? |
36775 | I should like to know how the children are to go to school to- morrow? 36775 If seven maids, with seven mops, Swept it for half a year, Do you suppose,"the Walrus said,"That they could get it clear?" |
36775 | Inasmuch as to how? |
36775 | Is that all? |
36775 | Is that all? |
36775 | Is that_ you_, Charley? |
36775 | It''s all in the day''s work, do n''t you know? |
36775 | Me? |
36775 | No word of Henry''s getting leave of absence? |
36775 | No, because he''s such an artful old fox; he thinks he''ll catch us all!--Eh? |
36775 | Now then,said Honeybee, when the door was fairly shut,"when can we have dinner, and of what will it consist?" |
36775 | Old enough for what? |
36775 | Or a cavalry man''s trumpet, or a bellowing bull? |
36775 | Please sir, can I disturb you for a moment? |
36775 | Simpson, junior, what do you mean by walking in your sleep, sir? |
36775 | Thanks,replied the broker, adding,"I say, old friend is n''t Master Joseph a little hard of hearing?" |
36775 | The question now arises,jerked in Puffin,"who is to be the_ first_ soloist? |
36775 | The treacle we have for our puddings and with our brimstone? |
36775 | To stay with Alexander? |
36775 | Travers? |
36775 | Very good; now what can I do for you, are you going to open stock? |
36775 | We will toss up, and''odd man''goes in and hands out-- eh? |
36775 | Well,say I,"how do you feel?" |
36775 | Were there any apartments to let? |
36775 | What am I to do? |
36775 | What are you doing? |
36775 | What are you doing? |
36775 | What at? |
36775 | What can that be? |
36775 | What can uncle Martin have to write about? |
36775 | What did I tell you, Lil? |
36775 | What did you say so for then? 36775 What do you mean?" |
36775 | What do you want? |
36775 | What do you want? |
36775 | What does it all portend? |
36775 | What for? |
36775 | What has taken him there? |
36775 | What is it? |
36775 | What is? |
36775 | What sort of a place is it? |
36775 | What then? |
36775 | What''s a mockstoker? |
36775 | What''s my fault? |
36775 | What''s the fuss now? |
36775 | What''s the good of a hayrick? |
36775 | What''s the matter? 36775 What''s the matter?" |
36775 | What? |
36775 | Where am I to find''em? 36775 Where am I to get putty?" |
36775 | Who asked you to? |
36775 | Who did you say? |
36775 | Who is it? |
36775 | Who talked about betting? |
36775 | Whom have you in bed with you-- eh? |
36775 | Why do n''t you speak out? |
36775 | Why-- why, hang it, Boston, what''s up-- eh? |
36775 | Why? |
36775 | Will you have our luggage sent up as soon as may be? 36775 Will you,"said he,"get us some food ready as soon as you can? |
36775 | With_ me_, sir? |
36775 | You have no Tower in America? |
36775 | You mean,I said,"that I must keep quiet, and do Nothing?" |
36775 | _ Do_ you? |
36775 | _ Seem to be important, after all?_Important! |
36775 | _ Whose_ mother? |
36775 | ''Enough?'' |
36775 | ''Twas by the chimney corner we were sitting,"Mary,"said I,"have you been always true?" |
36775 | ***** Whatever induced him to do it? |
36775 | All? |
36775 | Am I right in describing it as the parlour- window? |
36775 | And what was that sediment, strongly resembling the sand at Great Yarmouth, at the bottom of the cup? |
36775 | And when they grow up, I wonder who they''ll have to thank for knowing nothing-- who, indeed, but their father? |
36775 | And why? |
36775 | And''sure to do something unlucky,''are you? |
36775 | Anxiety now Takes the place of the row, And people talk low And ask"Shall they go?" |
36775 | Are there, likewise, dogs, love, at the Nag''s Head, and are they trying to bark down the crowing and clucking of the cheerful fowls? |
36775 | As good a dinner as ever I wish to eat;--shall I get a little nap after it? |
36775 | Ask my landlady? |
36775 | At length in a voice that with passion was shaking, it pleased him to speak:--"Does he know whom he treats in this fashion? |
36775 | Billy at once tried the high hand, shouting,"Now then, sleepy, what''s yer game? |
36775 | Bless me, is it you, Jemima? |
36775 | But Betsy was not going to be had by soft sawder, for she promptly rejoined,"Remember our wedding- day, you drunken sot? |
36775 | But duels about what? |
36775 | But was I the challenger or the challenged? |
36775 | But what do you care for that? |
36775 | But what have we to do with them? |
36775 | But what parish? |
36775 | But who Would count_ that_ as unfaithfulness? |
36775 | But why freeze your marrow-- Your feelings why harrow? |
36775 | By the way, sir, how comes it you are awake?" |
36775 | Can it be-- I ca n''t believe it-- actually ten o''clock? |
36775 | Can the Nag''s Head accommodate us? |
36775 | Can we have a large bed- room, a small bed- room, a dressing- room and a sitting- room?" |
36775 | Could I have stolen it? |
36775 | Could the doctor keep his anger so long bottled up-- even to catch the rest of us-- without bursting? |
36775 | Could we spend it better at home? |
36775 | D''you see The plain gold circlet that is shining here?" |
36775 | Did I ask him for her hand? |
36775 | Did I say Nothing? |
36775 | Did he refuse it? |
36775 | Did not even the spotted and skittish horses which drew the chariot repeatedly turn round to gaze upon his vermilioned features? |
36775 | Did you e''er behold aught like his cheek? |
36775 | Did you ever sip warm catsup sweetened with borax? |
36775 | Do we gain anything by the change? |
36775 | Do we grudge our money for such a purpose? |
36775 | Do you hear it, I say? |
36775 | Do you hear it, against the windows? |
36775 | Do you hear the rain, Mr. Caudle? |
36775 | Do you think I do n''t know what that is? |
36775 | Do you? |
36775 | Do you? |
36775 | Do you? |
36775 | Do you?" |
36775 | Does the waggoner crack his whip or fire a pistol to encourage his horses? |
36775 | Does the water boil, Jemima? |
36775 | Eight o''clock already, is it? |
36775 | F. I. L. E. Do you hear that?" |
36775 | Give myself a drop of tonic? |
36775 | Had the loaf been varnished? |
36775 | Hast prepared the eggs, the bacon, and the matutinal tea? |
36775 | Hath not a supe eyes,''ands, horgans, somethin''else, and passions? |
36775 | Have you brought my boots, Jemima? |
36775 | Have you gone mad?" |
36775 | He is a very popular man, this chairman; for is he not the Earl of Mount- Stuart, late one of Her Majesty''s Cabinet Ministers? |
36775 | Her white arm how dare you place finger or fist on?'' |
36775 | How about a fried sole and a roast chicken?" |
36775 | How am I to know what happened last night? |
36775 | How can I describe the spending of that evening? |
36775 | How can amateur actors commence at the top Of the Thespian Tree, and avoid coming flop? |
36775 | How could he face them, how avoid? |
36775 | How could he, where there was neither seclusion nor bathing machine? |
36775 | How did I come by this handkerchief? |
36775 | How did it come there? |
36775 | How did it happen? |
36775 | How do I come to have their cards? |
36775 | How many of us? |
36775 | How would it be if they determined that the king should no longer receive any help from the State, but earn his own living? |
36775 | How''s the weather-- pretty fine? |
36775 | I already felt taller by inches-- but what was_ that_ to her nine feet nine? |
36775 | I beckon to him, and ask him at what time the tap closes? |
36775 | I know Simpkins wants to marry a widow, but why give me her portrait? |
36775 | I say, do you hear it? |
36775 | I say, do you hear the rain? |
36775 | I wonder how my business in the City''s getting on?" |
36775 | I wonder too what will happen to Gil when they get home? |
36775 | Is it not an instance of the remarkable foresight of this society, that it purposely abstains from sending out any other than top- boots? |
36775 | Is the dust on the road detonating powder, that goes off with a report at every turn of the heavy wheels? |
36775 | Is there any charitably- disposed person here who can advise me? |
36775 | Is there anything else left to make a noise? |
36775 | Is this going on long? |
36775 | It therefore should be all your aim to spell with ample care; For who, however fond of_ game_, would choose to swallow_ hair_? |
36775 | May I, indeed, put you in my pocket and let you rest there, indolently, for hours together? |
36775 | McEwen explained That he thought the piece gained By his showing his skill-- how could anyone doubt it? |
36775 | Meanwhile where was Puffin? |
36775 | Mercy on us, what a knock? |
36775 | Mind I do nothing? |
36775 | Morpheus, why desert a fellow? |
36775 | My friend says,"Eh?" |
36775 | Need I say that I arose next morning feverish and unrefreshed to go about my daily duties? |
36775 | Nine o''clock? |
36775 | No: and I wo n''t have a cab, where do you think the money''s to come from? |
36775 | No? |
36775 | Now, what does it all mean? |
36775 | Oh, blessed Idleness, after the years of merciless industry that have separated us, are you and I to be brought together again at last? |
36775 | Oh, my weary right hand, are you really to ache no longer with driving the ceaseless pen? |
36775 | Oh, tell me, my child, what you''ve seen-- what you''ve heard?'' |
36775 | Oh-- it"_ would be all_,"eh? |
36775 | One day he wrote to me saying that his nephew was going to Bombay, and would I be so good as to give the youth an introduction to my brother Henry? |
36775 | Quite a chip of the old block, I see; what''s his name?" |
36775 | Rails.? |
36775 | Several of the fellows I knew, of course; but which of them? |
36775 | Shall we be trotting home again?" |
36775 | She heard her dad ask, most distinctly-- and trembled At Dogberry''s words--"Are we here all dissembled?" |
36775 | Snuffers? |
36775 | Stern proof of your courage has not yet begun; D''ye hear, sir, those knocks? |
36775 | Suppose they set the house on fire? |
36775 | Suppose they should do so now? |
36775 | The man turned round and sneered out,--"Oh, you want to rob_ us_ now, do you? |
36775 | The stranger looked in his face and exclaimed,"Good heaven, poor soul, what has brought you to this?" |
36775 | Then elbowing Fanny out of the way, she said to Mrs. Honeybee particularly:"Would you like to see your room?" |
36775 | There''s bigger blokes than me what begun as"supes,"an''see where they''ve got to? |
36775 | There-- do you hear it? |
36775 | They are cheerful, and why should it not be thusly with us?" |
36775 | To PETER an idea occurred,"Suppose we cross the main? |
36775 | Travers,_ you_ will follow, will you not?" |
36775 | Vat is more entrancing dan de charmante smile, de soft voice, de vinking eye of de beautiful lady? |
36775 | Was it the doctor? |
36775 | Was not everybody straining to get a glimpse of him? |
36775 | Well, if you prick us, do n''t us bleed? |
36775 | Well, what if I am only a banner- bearer? |
36775 | Well, who was there? |
36775 | Were you to reject me, there would be an immeasurable void in my life, and who else is capable of filling it?" |
36775 | What can I do? |
36775 | What could I do? |
36775 | What did he call me a"pig"for, the idiot? |
36775 | What do I hear as I listen, prone on the sofa, to the evening gathering of the rustic throng? |
36775 | What do you say? |
36775 | What dreadful follies have I got myself into? |
36775 | What further happened? |
36775 | What good are you? |
36775 | What had the king done to deserve charity? |
36775 | What is''t you''re at? |
36775 | What now? |
36775 | What shall I do? |
36775 | What shall I do? |
36775 | What shall I find? |
36775 | What should he do? |
36775 | What the deuce are ye making such a rumpas for?" |
36775 | What was I to do? |
36775 | What was he to do? |
36775 | What was it? |
36775 | What was to be done now? |
36775 | What were they to do for a king? |
36775 | What would become of me? |
36775 | What would you do? |
36775 | What''s the matter, now, Jemima? |
36775 | What''s this? |
36775 | What''s your game?'' |
36775 | Where are the other fellows?" |
36775 | Where are the pipe and tabour that I have seen in so many pictures; where the simple songs that I have read about in so many poems? |
36775 | Where can I find them? |
36775 | Where should we all have been now but for those warm and fleecy coverings? |
36775 | Where were we to provide a supper and breakfast of this description for him? |
36775 | Who is she? |
36775 | Who knows? |
36775 | Who will follow if I lead?" |
36775 | Whom did I affront? |
36775 | Why does a waggon which makes so little noise in London, make so much noise here? |
36775 | Will half- past seven be too early?" |
36775 | Will mamma be told? |
36775 | Worse and worse? |
36775 | Yet how could I hope for success? |
36775 | You know him?" |
36775 | _ Had_ Charley fallen down in a fit instead of the doctor? |
36775 | _ How I do wag?_ Well, ai n''t it enough to make me? |
36775 | _ How I do wag?_ Well, ai n''t it enough to make me? |
36775 | _ I need n''t be offended?_ All right, old pal; I ai n''t. |
36775 | _ Need n''t I wear''em, then?_ Indeed, Mr. Caudle, I_ shall_ wear''em. |
36775 | _ P''r''aps I''m right?_ Of course I''m right; and I''m in earnest, too! |
36775 | _ They could do without me in the modden drarmer?_ The modden drarmer, my boy, ai n''t actin''! |
36775 | _ What were you to do?_ Why let him go home in the rain, to be sure. |
36775 | _ Why do n''t I get there?_ Cause I ai n''t never had the chance. |
36775 | and if you wrong us, ai n''t we goin''to take it out of you, like I took it out o''Happyus Clordyus?" |
36775 | but now I think of it again, do I, or do I not, hear an incessant hammering over the way? |
36775 | cried the broker,"I mean do you know business?" |
36775 | do you understand work?" |
36775 | how can I get sufficient power out of the English language to let you know what a nuisance that bird was to us? |
36775 | if we larf, do n''t you tickle us? |
36775 | it would be in vain; they would be certain to turn up; and they are not mortal, so what can you expect? |
36775 | little Clara left at home? |
36775 | must you go? |
36775 | or did he put off his reply? |
36775 | or escape for a few hours from the perpetual noises of this retired spot, by taking a drive? |
36775 | or''Death of Robin Hood''?" |
36775 | said Georgina Honeybee one afternoon, just before Good Friday,"_ would n''t_ it be nice to go away for Easter?" |
36775 | shouted Boston,_ sotto voce_--in fact, very much_ sotto voce_--"we will indeed sup at the doctor''s expense to- night, bless him!--eh, boys?" |
36775 | was shouted by all, Why the deuce do n''t they come and acknowledge the call? |
36775 | were there women at the mess? |
36775 | what do you know about it?" |
36775 | what had I done? |
36775 | you_ have heard say as us banner- bearers do n''t act-- was only machines_? |
8163 | For who is better able to direct my hesitation, or to instruct my ignorance? |
8163 | What, let me ask, is a man in and of himself?" |
8163 | While on her way to make the proposal, she met him in the street, and said,"La Fontaine, will you come and live in my house?" |
7804 | How, then, shall we develop the motive, how enlarge the content? |
7804 | Such a motive in studying expression would be a very shallow one, for what would it signify in comparison with the great purposes of living? |
7804 | What is freedom, and how secured? |
7804 | Why is the_ nares anteri_ the ruling center of tone direction? |
7804 | Will it? |
7167 | 23(?) |
7167 | As well ask, Why ought we to be good? |
7167 | He has been studying a question of Constitutional Law: What are the powers of the President of the United States? |
7167 | How Many Times Do I Love Thee, Dear? |
7167 | I own that I am disposed to say grace upon twenty other occasions in the course of the day besides my dinner.... Why have we none for books? |
7167 | It is almost like asking oneself:"Have I got the best out of life?" |
7167 | It is no little tug to leave one''s warm bed-- but once we are out in the crystalline morning air, was n''t it worth it? |
7167 | It may be all very well to skim milk, for the cream lies on the top; but who could skim Lord Byron? |
7167 | SIR RICHARD GRENVILLE, d. 4(?) |
7167 | Saw Ye Bonnie Lesley? |
7167 | We may ask one further question: How shall we read? |
7167 | Well, have you ever kept one, or, to be more accurate, tried to keep one? |
7167 | Who is there who has not been sometimes bored by a good friend who went on talking when you wanted to reflect on what he had already said? |
7167 | Who is there who has not had his patience well nigh exhausted at times by a friend whose enthusiasm for his theme appeared to be quite inexhaustible? |
7167 | Why? |
7167 | have you no poems by heart, no great songs, no verses from the Bible, no speeches from Shakespeare? |
7167 | or, Why do we believe in a God? |
8555 | Tell me, which is the virtue among all the virtues that human malice can not vilify?" |
8555 | What supports me, dost thou ask? |
12144 | ''Are you a sleep- walker, Lucien?'' 12144 ''Did you ever thoroughly look at your ancestors? |
12144 | ''Why do you ask?'' 12144 A man trades here at this corner, with his wife, eh?" |
12144 | After all you have said and declaimed, tell me-- are you going to kill the old woman_ yourself_, or not? |
12144 | After all, what can be the harm of it? 12144 All must be discovered?" |
12144 | Am I, my fine fellow-- am I strange? 12144 And afterwards?" |
12144 | And are you not preparing for defense? |
12144 | And dared you look through my window? 12144 And do you believe that this is the time?" |
12144 | And does your thinking bring you any money? |
12144 | And how about the gravedigger? 12144 And how did you fare, Souirin?" |
12144 | And how did you know that? |
12144 | And if they murder the innocent and unprotected, on whom will the ignominy of their blood fall? |
12144 | And my relations? |
12144 | And one and all of you can boast of having massacred, and plundered, and set on fire? |
12144 | And so you are going? 12144 And the master cut you out with her?" |
12144 | And then? |
12144 | And there were no more telegrams? |
12144 | And this means that I am in your power? 12144 And what do you want to know that for? |
12144 | And what follows from all this? |
12144 | And what is it you wish? |
12144 | And where has he seen me? |
12144 | And where is Marcus Ivanovitch? |
12144 | And who are you? |
12144 | And who is Nicholas? |
12144 | And whom is this distinguished man? |
12144 | And why did you save me from your men? |
12144 | And you call such as these rogues? |
12144 | And you did not desire my death? |
12144 | And you did not once allow yourself to be tempted to back the red? 12144 And you have had an inspiration?" |
12144 | And you knew? 12144 And you really killed all the women in the castle?" |
12144 | And you remember, of course, Mr. Razoumikhin''s chattering? 12144 And you who pierced the magnate with a spike?" |
12144 | And you will permit them? |
12144 | And your muse is----? |
12144 | Are there any Russian novels? 12144 Are they both asleep, or has some one strangled them? |
12144 | Are you all here? |
12144 | Are you going for a walk? 12144 Are you going to give her up, or not?" |
12144 | Are you ill, or are you not? |
12144 | Are you ill? |
12144 | Are you in your senses, leader? 12144 At what hour did you receive this, sir?" |
12144 | At what time? |
12144 | Brandy, sir? |
12144 | Brother, come here; for heaven''s sake, who is this? |
12144 | But how are you going to work it? |
12144 | But how did you find out? 12144 But how is it you know me?" |
12144 | But no, that is not what I should do? 12144 But perhaps he did not think that such an order could apply to me?" |
12144 | But supposing that all this is pure fancy?--a kind of mirage? 12144 But tell me, Edouard Vicentevitch, this new will, has it been written long?" |
12144 | But the passport? 12144 But the safety match? |
12144 | But what are you going to do about it? |
12144 | But what are you talking about? |
12144 | But what can I be thinking of? |
12144 | But what do you think of Hermann? |
12144 | But what is it all for? |
12144 | But what was to be done? 12144 But where did the arms come from?" |
12144 | But where is it-- where is the murdered man? |
12144 | But why are you so pale, why do your hands shake? 12144 But why do they exasperate me?" |
12144 | But why some day? 12144 But why such an elaborate toilette? |
12144 | But why tell me all this now? |
12144 | But why to- day? |
12144 | But why? |
12144 | But you belong to Zaraisk, do n''t you? 12144 But, my dear, what is there charming about her? |
12144 | By all the devils,exclaimed Sölling in anatomical enthusiasm,"where did you find that superb arm? |
12144 | Can I not enter? 12144 Can I not see her?" |
12144 | Can it be so? |
12144 | Can this be the punishment already beginning? 12144 Can you not drop your foreign phrases?" |
12144 | Can you not name me these three winning cards? |
12144 | Come where? |
12144 | Come, get up, why are you sleeping so late? |
12144 | Count, do you like strong sensations? |
12144 | Damned odd coincidence, is n''t it? |
12144 | Dare anyone still say it can? |
12144 | Did any of you look into the window? |
12144 | Did anyone see you on the way here? |
12144 | Did he then speak-- before you? |
12144 | Did nobody see the murderer? |
12144 | Did you find the evening a pleasant one? 12144 Did you get it here?" |
12144 | Did you know Aquilina? |
12144 | Did you know, by- the- by, that I called on you the night before last? |
12144 | Did you really know why? |
12144 | Do I not appear too agitated? 12144 Do I not look too pale?" |
12144 | Do n''t you understand? 12144 Do you consider yourselves all equally deserving of sharing_ the booty_?" |
12144 | Do you know about that? |
12144 | Do you know how my father died? |
12144 | Do you like street music? |
12144 | Do you remember my father? |
12144 | Do you see these tears? |
12144 | Do you see this betrothal ring? 12144 Do you wish me to settle with you?" |
12144 | Do you wish to examine me formally? |
12144 | Does he expect something? |
12144 | Does he, perhaps, think me really innocent? |
12144 | Edouard Vicentevitch? 12144 Eh, open, will you?" |
12144 | Facts? 12144 Fair or foul?" |
12144 | Fancy, Rodia, the discussion last evening turned on the question:''Does crime exist? 12144 From whom have you learned all this?" |
12144 | Go ahead? 12144 Has the landlady sent me this tea?" |
12144 | Have we ever offended you? 12144 Have you any news from my son?" |
12144 | Have you been ill very long? |
12144 | Have you heard the noise? |
12144 | Have you prayed yet? |
12144 | Have you seen a ghost? 12144 Have you taken leave of your senses, or what is it? |
12144 | He was? 12144 His wife?" |
12144 | How a bargain? |
12144 | How a coincidence? 12144 How are you going to make a test?" |
12144 | How can you sleep so long? |
12144 | How could I help catching on? |
12144 | How could such a horrible idea ever enter my head? 12144 How could they? |
12144 | How could you have gone out if you had not been delirious? |
12144 | How did you come here? 12144 How did you get up here?" |
12144 | How do you mean, old? |
12144 | How does this woman come to be here? 12144 How is it that you are not dressed?" |
12144 | How is it that you can not hear me when I ring for you? |
12144 | How much a pound do you want? |
12144 | How much do you earn? |
12144 | How much must we pay? |
12144 | How much? |
12144 | How shall I get you out of the house? |
12144 | How should they be in good shape, when he came here to get a divorce? |
12144 | How so? 12144 How so?" |
12144 | How soon do you want it? |
12144 | I am cold,she said to me,"do you not see? |
12144 | I ask you for the last time: will you tell me the names of your three cards, or will you not? |
12144 | I do not want to harm you; but I could put you in prison and in chains, and what would become of your sweetheart then? |
12144 | I once more repeat the question I have put you: If you think me guilty, why not issue a warrant against me? |
12144 | I will bring you the roll in a minute, but had you not better take some_ shtchi_[5] instead of the sausage? 12144 If I feel so timid now, what will it be when I come to put my plan into execution?" |
12144 | If anyone came in, what would he think? 12144 If that is so, why have you called?" |
12144 | If the letter was not for you, why have you torn it up? |
12144 | Ill? |
12144 | In a couple of days? |
12144 | Interesting? |
12144 | Is he in the Engineers? |
12144 | Is it not very likely that some coming Napoleon did for Alena Ivanovna last week? |
12144 | Is it possible that people can take so little care of themselves? 12144 Is it possible that there''s no one at home?" |
12144 | Is it possible, gentlemen? |
12144 | Is it possible? 12144 Is that an eating house there?" |
12144 | Is that the way to hide anything? 12144 Is there anything you want? |
12144 | Is this his first appearance? |
12144 | It is certainly very enticing; what do you think? |
12144 | It was you,he continued to Lupey,"who struck down the old man?" |
12144 | It would not benefit you? 12144 It''s so well worth while, is n''t it?" |
12144 | Knocked on the head? |
12144 | Lupey, my son, what do you want here? |
12144 | Madam, what is the use of these questions? 12144 Money? |
12144 | More comfortable to die? |
12144 | My enemies have paid you to murder me? |
12144 | My name? 12144 Natasha?" |
12144 | Not to lose precious time, perhaps your excellency would like to look at my wares? 12144 Now, I should like to know, sweet youth, what it signifies to you what I read?" |
12144 | Of course we must go back again; but why then did she make an appointment? 12144 Oh, so that''s what you have been reading?" |
12144 | On what? |
12144 | Open, will you? |
12144 | Or what, or what? 12144 Painters, you say? |
12144 | Perhaps this is the finale, but why does he come upon me like a cat, with muffled tread? 12144 Pinched?" |
12144 | Princess What? 12144 Recollect what?" |
12144 | Shall I be able to hold out? 12144 Shall I put the boot on?" |
12144 | Shall I remain here or go? |
12144 | She is, of course, just as much of a fool as I am; but why do you, who are so intelligent, lie here doing nothing? 12144 So the new will has not been burned yet?" |
12144 | So they''re not at home? 12144 So they''re there, are they?" |
12144 | So this is hydrochloric acid for erasing ink? 12144 So you do not think this? |
12144 | So you wish to make your fortune at one stroke? |
12144 | Some work--"What sort of work? |
12144 | Something for me? |
12144 | Such a custom, I believe, is religiously observed in your profession, is it not? |
12144 | Suppose I slipped into some doorway, in some out- of- the- way street, and waited there a few minutes? 12144 Suppose we do give him the money to- day; does that mean that we give it for good? |
12144 | Suppose we question the porter? |
12144 | Tell me once for all,asked the latter,"tell me one way or other, whether I am in your opinion an object for suspicion? |
12144 | Tell me, doctor, does he expect his son and daughter? |
12144 | That his hands should shake? |
12144 | The Cave? 12144 The baroness? |
12144 | The what? |
12144 | Then we can soon suck his brains? |
12144 | Then you do not know the reason why? |
12144 | Then you think he will come? |
12144 | Then, who-- who is it-- that has committed the murder? |
12144 | There are newspapers here? |
12144 | There''s nothing extraordinary about that----"She first liked you and then preferred Klausoff? |
12144 | These words''in our latitudes,''these excuses for his familiarity, this expression''for short,''what could be the meaning of all this? 12144 They do n''t get on well together?" |
12144 | Things are not in good shape between them? |
12144 | To endure all this from him, and after his death to suffer beggary? 12144 To seal up the papers? |
12144 | To the police? 12144 To unmask? |
12144 | To what purpose? |
12144 | To- morrow? |
12144 | Very much? |
12144 | Very well, I will compel you to unmask? |
12144 | Very well,replied Hermann,"but do you accept my card or not?" |
12144 | Was he not once a lithographer or an engraver, or something of the sort? |
12144 | Was there not,thought he,"some spy, some mysterious myrmidon of the law, ordered to watch him, and, if necessary, to prevent his escape?" |
12144 | Was your name written on your kalpag? |
12144 | We have no blow- pipes nor test- tubes here? |
12144 | Well, I will stay, of course; but what do I gain by it? 12144 Well, and how about the boot?" |
12144 | Well, and what of that? |
12144 | Well, what of that? |
12144 | Well, what then? |
12144 | Well, what''s to be done? 12144 Well, will you listen to that?" |
12144 | Well,he went on, addressing Bodlevski,"will it suit you to have the person pass as Maria Solontseva, widow of a college assessor?" |
12144 | Well? |
12144 | Well? |
12144 | Well? |
12144 | Were you all there? |
12144 | What am I thinking of? |
12144 | What are you going to say? |
12144 | What are you here for? |
12144 | What are you mumbling about, Edouard Vicentevitch? 12144 What blood?" |
12144 | What boot? |
12144 | What can I say? 12144 What can he be driving at now?" |
12144 | What color was his last suit? |
12144 | What do you find interesting in her? |
12144 | What do you mean, Hans? |
12144 | What do you mean, grandmother? |
12144 | What do you think? 12144 What do you want here?" |
12144 | What do you want? 12144 What do you want?" |
12144 | What do you want? |
12144 | What does it mean? |
12144 | What does this mean? |
12144 | What evidence have you of that? |
12144 | What for? 12144 What for?" |
12144 | What for? |
12144 | What good would his strength be, supposing he was asleep? |
12144 | What had happened? 12144 What has happened? |
12144 | What has happened? 12144 What has happened?" |
12144 | What have you lost? |
12144 | What have you to do with my sister,_ batuchka_? |
12144 | What if I killed the old woman and Elizabeth? |
12144 | What is all this? |
12144 | What is going on here? |
12144 | What is going on there? |
12144 | What is he called? |
12144 | What is incomprehensible about it? |
12144 | What is it they are saying about you burning papers all night? |
12144 | What is it to be? |
12144 | What is it you want? 12144 What is it you want?" |
12144 | What is it you want? |
12144 | What is it, Paul? |
12144 | What is it? 12144 What is it?" |
12144 | What is it? |
12144 | What is that noise? |
12144 | What is the cause of this sudden tenderness? 12144 What is the matter with you, my child, are you deaf?" |
12144 | What is the matter with you, my child? 12144 What is the matter with you, my dear?" |
12144 | What is the matter with your master, Yakov? 12144 What is the meaning of such conduct?" |
12144 | What is the need of further tests? 12144 What is there extraordinary in the query? |
12144 | What is there in that? |
12144 | What is there to do? |
12144 | What is this you bring me? |
12144 | What is this? 12144 What is this?" |
12144 | What office? |
12144 | What shall I do now? |
12144 | What sort of papers? |
12144 | What the devil is the matter with you, Simsen? |
12144 | What were you busy at? |
12144 | What were you doing in those rooms? |
12144 | What were you dreaming about that you did n''t open the door for me? |
12144 | What will be the end of it? 12144 What will you give me on this watch, Alena Ivanovna?" |
12144 | What words was he to use? 12144 What, are you off already?" |
12144 | What, what paper? 12144 What? |
12144 | What? 12144 What? |
12144 | Whatever are they all up to? |
12144 | Whatever makes you sleep thus? |
12144 | When did I dig here? |
12144 | When shall I come? |
12144 | Whence comes all this? 12144 Where am I?" |
12144 | Where are they? 12144 Where are your facts? |
12144 | Where are your facts? |
12144 | Where did you go, allow me to ask? |
12144 | Where did you put their bodies? |
12144 | Where have I seen this fellow before? |
12144 | Where is my father? 12144 Where is the blood?" |
12144 | Where is the money? |
12144 | Where is your master? |
12144 | Where were you when you woke up? |
12144 | Where were you? |
12144 | Whither? |
12144 | Who are you getting that passport for? |
12144 | Who are you, anyway, you old hag? 12144 Who are you?" |
12144 | Who can those people be? |
12144 | Who committed the murder? |
12144 | Who dares to say that? |
12144 | Who else could it be? 12144 Who fired on me?" |
12144 | Who fired there? |
12144 | Who has bolted the door then? |
12144 | Who is its captain? 12144 Who is sneaking in here?" |
12144 | Who is the gentleman you wish to introduce to the Countess? |
12144 | Who is the''brother''? |
12144 | Who is this Kallash? 12144 Who killed them?" |
12144 | Who told you? |
12144 | Who''s going to look in, if all their bones are shaking? |
12144 | Whom have I the honor of addressing? |
12144 | Whose house is this? |
12144 | Why are you looking at me thus? |
12144 | Why did I say,''So it seemed?'' |
12144 | Why did n''t you say so before? |
12144 | Why did you come so late? |
12144 | Why did you not hear me, unhappy children? 12144 Why did you not tell me before?" |
12144 | Why do you drivel? 12144 Why do you think that?" |
12144 | Why have gone out at all? 12144 Why have they opened all the doors?" |
12144 | Why impossible? 12144 Why not?" |
12144 | Why should I be alarmed by these trifles when I am contemplating such a desperate deed? |
12144 | Why should I? 12144 Why should he hate me so-- for all my love to him, an old man, who might have been my father?" |
12144 | Why should n''t I be here, if I am all right here? |
12144 | Why stay here? |
12144 | Why that sword at your side, Imre? |
12144 | Why were you so impatient,_ batuchka_? 12144 Why will you not believe in the guilt of Maria Ivanovna? |
12144 | Will that get us out of his power? 12144 Will the funeral service be soon? |
12144 | Will you allow me to take a card? |
12144 | Will you take it or not? 12144 Would not your excellency be so good as to choose one of these bags to make a test? |
12144 | Would not your excellency prefer to be carried to the bed? 12144 Would you like some tea?" |
12144 | Write what? |
12144 | Yes; what are you reading? |
12144 | Yes? 12144 Yesterday,"observed Raskolnikoff,"you had, I fancy, a wish to examine me formally-- with reference to my dealings with-- the victim? |
12144 | You are a student? |
12144 | You are going back? |
12144 | You are waiting, I suppose, to cast lots for the girl? |
12144 | You aren''t-- what''s- its- name? 12144 You did n''t expect to meet me, Natasha?" |
12144 | You did not expect visitors, Rodion Romanovitch? |
12144 | You do n''t think it is worth while? |
12144 | You do n''t understand? 12144 You do not understand? |
12144 | You have been expecting this visit? 12144 You have heard?" |
12144 | You have nothing to say? |
12144 | You knew my daughter was going to run away? |
12144 | You mean that I am a sharper, like you and Bodlevski? 12144 You preferred a little journey to Russia, did n''t you?" |
12144 | You put yourself on my level? 12144 You remember that funny little chap with the crafty eye, his talent for gambling, and his admiration for the girl of''La Prunelle''? |
12144 | You say you love me? |
12144 | You see that house, the second from the corner? 12144 You think so? |
12144 | You went out yesterday? |
12144 | You wish to know why I tell you this? 12144 You wish to pray?" |
12144 | You yourself, dear count, had some trouble about some bonds, if I am not mistaken? |
12144 | You-- Marcus-- Ivanovitch? 12144 You? |
12144 | You? 12144 Yuzitch?" |
12144 | _But how do you know the article was mine? |
12144 | ''Why,''you will ask,''did you not come on that occasion and have my place searched?'' |
12144 | ''With deep regret,''''with heartfelt sorrow,''what did she care? |
12144 | ''Would you rather explain it as magic? |
12144 | A blow of the ax on his sinciput( if again I may be permitted to use your ingenious metaphor)? |
12144 | A hum of talk spread among the guests:"Count Kallash----""Who is he----?" |
12144 | According to law, only the last will is valid?" |
12144 | Acquit him, when the laws of God and man condemn?" |
12144 | After a while the barkeeper said,"And did your-- friend make an appointment?" |
12144 | All traces were gone, and who would think of looking there? |
12144 | Am I at this moment committing myself to any definite statement? |
12144 | Am I capable of_ that_? |
12144 | Am I or am I not candid? |
12144 | Am I right? |
12144 | Am I saying anything I should not? |
12144 | And Koch: was he not below in the silversmith''s for half an hour before he went up to the old woman''s? |
12144 | And for what reason?" |
12144 | And if they were found who would suspect him? |
12144 | And run over to the orderly; why should he sit there, kicking his heels? |
12144 | And the Golden Band? |
12144 | And the announcement?" |
12144 | And the daughter? |
12144 | And the old will, which he made before, has been destroyed?" |
12144 | And what confederate could be more trustworthy than Sergei Antonovitch Kovroff? |
12144 | And what did you gather from it?" |
12144 | And what does Lyeskoff say about them, or Petcherski? |
12144 | And what is it to me whether such a man walk about the place in perfect liberty? |
12144 | And where? |
12144 | And who''s that other mug down there? |
12144 | And why is there blood under the master''s window?" |
12144 | And why should the matter not have happened thus, for instance? |
12144 | And why was he so unjust to her at the last?" |
12144 | And, above all, to go in that secret manner? |
12144 | Are there not proofs enough for you?" |
12144 | Are they all dead?" |
12144 | Are you going to paint it?" |
12144 | Are you ill?" |
12144 | Are you not that Jolanka Bardy whom they call''The Angel''? |
12144 | Are you not yourself reading for the law, Rodion Romanovitch?" |
12144 | Boot, lining, rags, where shall they go?" |
12144 | But do you know anything more tiresome than to work over the same subject a second time? |
12144 | But how did you know that he had pledged anything with Alena Ivanovna?" |
12144 | But how do you like the general idea of my plan?" |
12144 | But if God is against us, who can resist His hand? |
12144 | But perhaps you would like something more substantial before tea, would you?" |
12144 | But the keys? |
12144 | But the story itself? |
12144 | But then, the police? |
12144 | But what are you?" |
12144 | But what can you do? |
12144 | But what did this Hermann, or whatever his name is, tell you?" |
12144 | But what is this form? |
12144 | But what says your heart?" |
12144 | But what was to be done? |
12144 | But when his pains began this morning....""Is it the end? |
12144 | But where are you off to, Chubikoff? |
12144 | But where is he now? |
12144 | But where is the carriage?" |
12144 | But where shall we go?" |
12144 | But where should he go? |
12144 | But who brought you here? |
12144 | But who can know what the bitterness of dependence is so well as the poor companion of an old lady of quality? |
12144 | But who would distinguish them? |
12144 | But why do you grow pale, Rodion Romanovitch? |
12144 | But why should he be disturbed about them? |
12144 | But why should he speak in such covert terms? |
12144 | But why should he take my child away from me? |
12144 | But you will ask me: Supposing you are certain of your proofs? |
12144 | But, I ask you, will he go and accuse us knowing that, as the penalty for his purchase, he will have to accompany us along the Siberian road?" |
12144 | But, perhaps, you do n''t like being called respectable? |
12144 | But, pray, do sit down-- why remain standing? |
12144 | But... still I....""Still you what?" |
12144 | By the way, she must be very old, the Princess Daria Petrovna?" |
12144 | By what means? |
12144 | Can he have been listening?" |
12144 | Can it really be true? |
12144 | Can we feel secure? |
12144 | Can you imagine such a thing? |
12144 | Can_ that_ really be serious? |
12144 | Clever idea, was n''t it? |
12144 | Come, now, make a clean breast of it-- you know you were out of your mind, were you not? |
12144 | Come, why am I taking this walk now? |
12144 | Could I ever be capable of such infamy? |
12144 | Could I not see it?" |
12144 | Could he have left the country altogether? |
12144 | Could you not help us with some clew, some explanation----?" |
12144 | Did I not forbid you? |
12144 | Did I not say yesterday as I went up the stairs how disgusting and mean and low it all was, and did not I run away in terror?" |
12144 | Did Porphyrius give me a kind of wink just now, or was I deceived in some way? |
12144 | Did the old rector have much trouble about it?" |
12144 | Did they awake? |
12144 | Did they rise from the dead? |
12144 | Did you know Aquilina?" |
12144 | Directions? |
12144 | Do honorable women murder their husbands? |
12144 | Do you accept it?" |
12144 | Do you hear? |
12144 | Do you know him?" |
12144 | Do you know that quarters provided by the State are by no means to be despised?" |
12144 | Do you know who she is? |
12144 | Do you know who she looks like?" |
12144 | Do you know who the third person was?" |
12144 | Do you never shut your place?" |
12144 | Do you not hear me or understand what I say? |
12144 | Do you not know me, my son Lupey?" |
12144 | Do you remember, at mother''s, my maid Natasha?" |
12144 | Do you remember, my sisters, the last will of our father, which was thus executed? |
12144 | Do you see it?'' |
12144 | Do you think we would lie to you and stain the honor of the gang for twenty measly rubles?" |
12144 | Do you understand? |
12144 | Do you usually sleep on the bare floor?" |
12144 | Do you want some more tea, Eugraph Kuzmitch?" |
12144 | Do you want to ask anything more?" |
12144 | Does he expect her husband, too? |
12144 | Does one of the Roumin nation seek enemies in women? |
12144 | Everything is relative, I suppose, Rodion Romanovitch?" |
12144 | Farewell, my own beloved bride.... What will she do? |
12144 | For Heaven''s sake, how did your boot get into the garden?" |
12144 | For centuries past have so many honorable men fought in vain to uphold the old tottering constitution, as you call it? |
12144 | For the time being, I have to deal with Mikolka; there are facts which implicate him-- what are facts, after all? |
12144 | For your grandsons? |
12144 | Friends, let us bring this-- What are you looking at? |
12144 | From the moment of being convinced, you ought to----""What is the use of my conviction, after all? |
12144 | Had the devil carried him off bodily? |
12144 | Happily he noticed a sleepy watchman leaning leisurely against a wall, and going up to him he said:"Tell me, where is the Cave?" |
12144 | Have I laid finger on the sentiments which actuate you? |
12144 | Have we no social interests? |
12144 | Have we not something that will suit?" |
12144 | Have you any tobacco? |
12144 | Have you any?" |
12144 | Have you been stupid enough to take them down off their frames, and take away their tickets? |
12144 | Have you ever seen a butterfly close to the candle? |
12144 | Have you forgotten it? |
12144 | Have you lost your voice? |
12144 | He comes to me this morning, and says:''Why is the master so long getting up? |
12144 | He had n''t time to take the second boot off when----""There you go!--and how do you know they strangled him?" |
12144 | He must have something else in view-- what can it be? |
12144 | He pondered for a few moments, then called out,"Jens Larsen, where was it you saw the rector digging?" |
12144 | He stood hesitating a moment:"Had I not better go away?" |
12144 | He suddenly made me a proposal, secretly of course; would I not take some gold dust off his hands? |
12144 | He triumphed openly over his accuser, and laughed at him,"Ca n''t you find anything, you libeler?" |
12144 | Here we have two professions quarreling with one another, and who shall say which is right? |
12144 | His son- in- law, the pedagogue?" |
12144 | His startled manner seemed to ask:"Am I in a lunatic asylum?" |
12144 | His vanity, do n''t you see? |
12144 | How can I hide it?" |
12144 | How can that be? |
12144 | How can you wish to send us both to hell for the sake of a pale girl? |
12144 | How could I know?" |
12144 | How could he come? |
12144 | How could that light- minded woman have so deeply wounded my father?" |
12144 | How dare I tell you? |
12144 | How did you find out that I was here? |
12144 | How do you explain her unwillingness to give us any information? |
12144 | How does that come about,_ batuchka_? |
12144 | How is it possible that all this can not have struck Razoumikhin? |
12144 | How is it you never seem to have money for anything now? |
12144 | How is that? |
12144 | How now, I ask you, could I avoid connecting that with what followed upon it? |
12144 | How old is the baroness?" |
12144 | How shall I tell you? |
12144 | How to finish? |
12144 | How was it that it had not occurred to him that she had come in by way of the door? |
12144 | How will she survive the terrible day? |
12144 | I am to submit to all this?" |
12144 | I assume that the government price is known to your excellency?" |
12144 | I bitterly thought,''When will I go to rest?'' |
12144 | I ca n''t give lessons when I have no boots to go out in? |
12144 | I fancy I can see it from here; it is somewhere in a kitchen garden-- it was a kitchen garden you mentioned to Zametoff, was it not? |
12144 | I have brought up some tea, will you take a cup? |
12144 | I know nothing-- What can I do? |
12144 | I left you in the thick of the fun; who came off best?" |
12144 | I might throw my hatchet away somewhere? |
12144 | I suppose''Novoe Vremya''and''Novosti''will be enough?" |
12144 | I wo n''t detain you long, only the time to smoke a cigarette, if you will allow me?" |
12144 | If God sends us no further enlightenment in this unfortunate affair, what sentence must you give?" |
12144 | If anybody asked"What is the time?" |
12144 | If the porter had asked him:"What do you want?" |
12144 | Immediately:''Who bought the other box?'' |
12144 | In a completely raving state?" |
12144 | In what way?" |
12144 | Is he a soldier or a civilian?" |
12144 | Is he here?" |
12144 | Is he likely to escape into the very heart of our country? |
12144 | Is he worse?" |
12144 | Is it correct, or must another form be drawn up?" |
12144 | Is it dangerous?" |
12144 | Is it my daughter?" |
12144 | Is it not ridiculous?" |
12144 | Is it not so?" |
12144 | Is it possible? |
12144 | Is it possible?" |
12144 | Is it really you, my poor friend?" |
12144 | Is it so?" |
12144 | Is my old master, the Rector of Veilbye, still alive?" |
12144 | Is n''t she like her grandmother, the Princess Daria Petrovna? |
12144 | Is one ruble fifteen kopecks all you mean to give me now?" |
12144 | Is that hidden? |
12144 | Is that the way to hide anything?" |
12144 | Is the doctor here?" |
12144 | Is there not a young girl with golden locks among them?" |
12144 | Is there one among them whom I have allowed to suffer want or ruin, whom I have not assisted in times of need?--or have I ever treated them unjustly? |
12144 | It may be a sort of presentiment of evil; who knows? |
12144 | It may have been in your room, while you were asleep, for there is nothing that he--"Three ladies approaching him with the question:"oubli ou regret?" |
12144 | It seems to me that a man could hardly be more so-- for do I not reveal confidence, and that without the prospect of reward? |
12144 | It was a woman''s arm, then-- what sort of a woman might she have been? |
12144 | It''s a girl''s arm; is n''t it beautiful? |
12144 | Just give me permission----""What are you going on about?" |
12144 | Kirsten Mads''daughter, what is it that you know of this matter in which Morten Bruus accuses your rector? |
12144 | Kovroff agreed completely, but at the same time put the question, if not cards, what plan was available? |
12144 | Let the music sound, and the wine flow; who knows when we will see each other again?" |
12144 | Listen, do n''t you hear the noise it makes? |
12144 | Lizanka,[2] where is my snuffbox?" |
12144 | Lucien-- I did something----''"''Did what?'' |
12144 | Marcus Ivanovitch murdered?" |
12144 | Marcus Ivanovitch? |
12144 | Merciful God, how could I doubt any longer? |
12144 | Mr. Zametoff saw what I had by me, and perhaps he can say whether I was in my right senses yesterday or whether I was delirious? |
12144 | Murdered? |
12144 | Must she die? |
12144 | Must this be the end? |
12144 | My dear old man, wo n''t you intrust this business to me? |
12144 | My name?" |
12144 | Nephew Tamas, you will speak to them?" |
12144 | Nicholas and Psyekoff held him, but who smothered him? |
12144 | Now I have nothing to say against duty and conscience, but let us see, how do we understand them? |
12144 | Now what? |
12144 | Now, I ask you, where was the need of your coming at that time at all? |
12144 | Now, am I candid enough?" |
12144 | Now, what I wanted to ask was: On going upstairs-- was it not between seven and eight you entered the house?" |
12144 | Numa took the hands of the two lovers, and, gazing long and earnestly on their faces, he said, in a voice of deep feeling,"You love one another?" |
12144 | Of course you were here last Saturday evening?" |
12144 | Of what use is it to you? |
12144 | Oh, those arms there? |
12144 | On the stairs he recollected that all the things were in the hole in the wall, and then where was his certificate of birth? |
12144 | One of the workmen now saw him and cried:"What do you want here?" |
12144 | Or as the work of fairies? |
12144 | Or do you believe in ghosts? |
12144 | Or had this strange and inexplicable occurrence robbed him of his sanity, and robbed me of his friendship and his excellent whisky? |
12144 | Or is it, rather, owing to our being too straightforward to mislead one another? |
12144 | Or is the punch wearing off already? |
12144 | Or out of cunning? |
12144 | Or were they not true patriots and heroes? |
12144 | Or... the general''s wife? |
12144 | Otherwise, we----""What do you want with him?" |
12144 | Ought I to give them credit for intentions they have not? |
12144 | Perhaps he was right-- why not? |
12144 | Perhaps you are too hot; shall I open the window?" |
12144 | Petersburg?" |
12144 | Petersburg?" |
12144 | Petersburg?" |
12144 | Princess How?" |
12144 | Princess Which? |
12144 | Question you about what?" |
12144 | Raskolnikoff''s anger grew in consequence; he could hardly help returning the magistrate''s look with an imprudently scornful glance,"Is it true?" |
12144 | Shall I give them to you?" |
12144 | Shall I go and fetch you a roll?" |
12144 | Shall I last so long?" |
12144 | Shall I say the word or not? |
12144 | Shall not one little crime be effaced and atoned for by a thousand good deeds? |
12144 | Shall we enter? |
12144 | She longed to ask her mistress whither they were going, and what for? |
12144 | She sank to her knees, then sprang up again, fell back several steps as if afraid of me, and cried out:"Would you murder my father? |
12144 | She was afraid to lock it, and after all, was it necessary? |
12144 | Should she send his letter back to him, or should she answer him in a cold and decided manner? |
12144 | Since Porphyrius knew next to nothing about me, why on earth should he have spoken with Nicodemus Thomich Zametoff at all? |
12144 | Sit down? |
12144 | So it is a bargain?" |
12144 | So we are fabricating passports? |
12144 | Some third person did the smothering; but who was it?" |
12144 | Someone will hear you, someone may come; and then, what shall we say? |
12144 | Suppose I had misunderstood? |
12144 | Supposing you were to drink some water, dear friend? |
12144 | Suspicious, is n''t it? |
12144 | Tea? |
12144 | Tell me what is the matter? |
12144 | Tell me, dearest one, tell me truly, do you yourself believe your father to be innocent?" |
12144 | Tell me, who is she?" |
12144 | That''s all very well, but how am I to go without my tobacco? |
12144 | That''s you, Dukovski? |
12144 | The Countess remained silent; Hermann continued:"For whom are you preserving your secret? |
12144 | The barkeeper looked at him sharply and suspiciously, and then asked, with a smile:"Who did you say?" |
12144 | The commercial or the nobility?" |
12144 | The keys? |
12144 | The paper? |
12144 | The practice or form will never die out-- I can vouch for that; but what, after all, is the form, I ask once more? |
12144 | The satin of the cushion was there, but where was...? |
12144 | The wooden one? |
12144 | Then he turned to the sunburned man:"What did you give him, General Gardener?" |
12144 | Then what am I questioning? |
12144 | Then why those questions in the office? |
12144 | Then, again, would the cases sink? |
12144 | These two apparently dead men had come back from the cemetery, but how, in what manner, by what means? |
12144 | To denounce themselves? |
12144 | To deprive her, to deprive them both, of everything, all on account of those hated people? |
12144 | To what Government?" |
12144 | Very well, let us say that I am crazy; but how do you explain her confusion when we appeared? |
12144 | Very well, then, how, under such circumstances, could a man help becoming biased? |
12144 | Waiter,"he cried, seizing his cap,"here, how much?" |
12144 | Was her blush a favorable sign? |
12144 | Was it intended for a bribe? |
12144 | Was it not so? |
12144 | Was it not you who had some trouble about forged notes in Paris?" |
12144 | Was it of his grandmother''s words, or of the golden- haired Jolanka that he thought? |
12144 | Was it possible? |
12144 | Was it possible? |
12144 | We burst out into loud laughter at this remarkable answer, but Sölling continued:"Can you imagine it? |
12144 | We have caught three already-- isn''t that so? |
12144 | We have two of them in our hands; but who is the third? |
12144 | Well, what about him?" |
12144 | Well, what do you think? |
12144 | Well, what is the matter with you?" |
12144 | Were they only apparently dead? |
12144 | Were you at B----''s yesterday?" |
12144 | What am I to use as a substitute? |
12144 | What are they seeking here? |
12144 | What are you busy at?" |
12144 | What are you going to do?" |
12144 | What are you up to? |
12144 | What can one do with a few kopecks?" |
12144 | What can you be talking about? |
12144 | What class do you wish to make the person belong to? |
12144 | What did you say?" |
12144 | What directions? |
12144 | What do you demand?" |
12144 | What do you mean, count? |
12144 | What do you mean?" |
12144 | What do you say, dear count?" |
12144 | What do you say?" |
12144 | What do you think of this explanation? |
12144 | What do you think, doctor?" |
12144 | What do you think? |
12144 | What do you think? |
12144 | What do you want?" |
12144 | What does he want?" |
12144 | What fate has brought him here?" |
12144 | What great courage is necessary for that?" |
12144 | What had happened to them? |
12144 | What have you got for me?" |
12144 | What in heaven''s name can they want now? |
12144 | What in proportion is the life of this miserable old woman? |
12144 | What is become of the nation, the heir of so much glory?--the proud Dacians, the descendants of the far- famed legions? |
12144 | What is holding me? |
12144 | What is it?" |
12144 | What is it?" |
12144 | What is that in your hand?" |
12144 | What is the matter with you,_ batuchka_?" |
12144 | What is the name of this bridge? |
12144 | What is the news?" |
12144 | What is the use of concealing? |
12144 | What is written on that sign- board?" |
12144 | What is your excellency good enough to think on that score?" |
12144 | What is your name?" |
12144 | What is your opinion, pray? |
12144 | What is your opinion? |
12144 | What keys? |
12144 | What kind of end? |
12144 | What made you think that Naroumoff was in the Engineers?" |
12144 | What made you think that he was in the Engineers?" |
12144 | What may I be thinking about now? |
12144 | What money? |
12144 | What more can you ask?" |
12144 | What on earth is the matter with you?" |
12144 | What people believe less than ever, they must have believed once, eh?" |
12144 | What quantity of gold does your excellency wish to take?" |
12144 | What shall I do now? |
12144 | What shall I do?" |
12144 | What should we pray for?" |
12144 | What sort of weather is it? |
12144 | What the devil do you want here? |
12144 | What was it my father said when you put this ring upon my finger? |
12144 | What was it? |
12144 | What was it? |
12144 | What was the object of it? |
12144 | What was there so particularly significant in the sound of these footsteps? |
12144 | What were we to do? |
12144 | What would you have me do? |
12144 | When he entered the room he looked so angry and at the same time so upset that I cried out:"What''s the matter, Sölling? |
12144 | When will you learn enough to drop your deductions? |
12144 | Whence came this presentiment? |
12144 | Whence has such a disaster come? |
12144 | Where are they?" |
12144 | Where are you going?" |
12144 | Where are you off to? |
12144 | Where can the old woman have gone? |
12144 | Where can we get so much from? |
12144 | Where could he hide? |
12144 | Where could she put it? |
12144 | Where did I obtain these new clothes from? |
12144 | Where did it come from?" |
12144 | Where did they come from? |
12144 | Where is Klausoff? |
12144 | Where is Olga Vseslavovna?" |
12144 | Where is his body?" |
12144 | Where shall I put it? |
12144 | Where the deuce can she be? |
12144 | Where the devil is that arm? |
12144 | Where was Yakov? |
12144 | Where was it? |
12144 | Where was the box? |
12144 | Where were the keys? |
12144 | Where were you, my good fellow, the night the master was murdered? |
12144 | Where will it be? |
12144 | Where, I ask you, could he go to? |
12144 | Where, he asked himself, had he met this man? |
12144 | Who are you?" |
12144 | Who are you?" |
12144 | Who authorized you to lose all there is for the hope of what may be? |
12144 | Who can it be? |
12144 | Who could have taken it? |
12144 | Who else could it be? |
12144 | Who gives you champagne to drink?" |
12144 | Who had intrusted you with the fate of our country, to tempt the Almighty? |
12144 | Who has told you that you are absolutely right?" |
12144 | Who is its captain?" |
12144 | Who is she?" |
12144 | Who knows what may come over us yet? |
12144 | Who told you?" |
12144 | Whom do you intend to captivate? |
12144 | Why are you all looking at me like that, as if I was the murderer?" |
12144 | Why are you asking that question?" |
12144 | Why did Porphyrius, in speaking of the old woman, simply say''At her place?'' |
12144 | Why did Zametoff observe that I had spoken very sensibly? |
12144 | Why did he go to the bears when he was not sober? |
12144 | Why did the lieutenant question me after my swoon? |
12144 | Why did they call the porter if it were their work? |
12144 | Why do n''t you apply to the porter?" |
12144 | Why do n''t you drink, devil take you? |
12144 | Why do n''t you join in, Simsen? |
12144 | Why in the Neva? |
12144 | Why in the water at all? |
12144 | Why not to- night? |
12144 | Why not? |
12144 | Why should I not do you such a trifling service? |
12144 | Why should I not try my fortune? |
12144 | Why should he pass over her own mother, and intrust her to her half- sister? |
12144 | Why should he wink at me? |
12144 | Why should we waste several weeks, or even months, over something that could be done in a few days?" |
12144 | Why?" |
12144 | Why?" |
12144 | Will you not take a seat?" |
12144 | Would not you?" |
12144 | Would they not rather float? |
12144 | Would they not rather have arrested me, instead of waiting till I should come of my own accord? |
12144 | Would you believe it, Porphyrius? |
12144 | Would you have believed me? |
12144 | Would you like a Russian one?" |
12144 | Would you murder your betrothed bride? |
12144 | Yes, but I am very interesting to you, am I not?" |
12144 | Yes? |
12144 | You agree? |
12144 | You are a cultivated man-- a literary man, are you not?" |
12144 | You are always alone-- is your sister never with you?" |
12144 | You are ill.""Do I seem strange?" |
12144 | You are not afraid?" |
12144 | You catch on?" |
12144 | You do n''t think so, perhaps?" |
12144 | You had sent him, had you not? |
12144 | You have asked the landlady, I suppose? |
12144 | You have come from the examination?" |
12144 | You have n''t a pain in it?" |
12144 | You knew she was going?" |
12144 | You know what it contains? |
12144 | You know what the name of our secret is? |
12144 | You recollect-- you surely recollect?" |
12144 | You remember the day I stood in your room? |
12144 | You used to give lessons, I hear; how is it you do nothing now?" |
12144 | You want to preach me a sermon? |
12144 | You were one of Aquilina''s admirers yourself-- does it follow that you are implicated too?" |
12144 | You would not run there, I suppose?" |
12144 | You''ll eat something, will you not?" |
12144 | Your head is n''t what- do- you- call- it? |
12144 | Yours would not, I suppose? |
12144 | a rich man-- a favorite of the gods, you may say, as Pushkin has it, and what did he come to? |
12144 | am I going mad?" |
12144 | can I not speak with you?" |
12144 | can they be asleep?" |
12144 | cried Nastasia,"but you must be ill then?" |
12144 | cried Simon,"what are you going to do? |
12144 | for you, is it? |
12144 | he continued;"have you not left one alive? |
12144 | how could he have left all those things where they were? |
12144 | is this indeed possible, and must it be?" |
12144 | murmured he in despair,"what is the matter with me? |
12144 | or shall I take it elsewhere? |
12144 | or take a cab? |
12144 | she cried,"but what is it? |
12144 | she hissed fiercely, looking at the girl; and then she added quickly:"Did any of the others know?" |
12144 | suddenly exclaimed the young man,"look!--do you notice how the door resists when we pull it?" |
12144 | the girl laughed,"What kind of wealth is that?" |
12144 | the sick man interrupted him;"she has come? |
12144 | the stone, the stone, you will remember, under which the stolen things are hidden? |
12144 | to send a telegram?" |
12144 | two o''clock already?" |
12144 | was n''t that the reason why she was kneeling before the icons, when we came in, just to take our attention away? |
12144 | what is going on here?" |
12144 | what on earth is wrong with you?" |
12144 | where are my family? |
12144 | where are you running to?" |
12144 | where is my bride?" |
12144 | why add that?)" |
12144 | why did you not take my word?" |
12144 | would you have us use holy water against a shower of stones?" |
12144 | you here?" |
51109 | And how''s my boy, Betty? |
51109 | And what the meed? |
51109 | Did you ever notice what life and power the Holy Scriptures have when well read? 51109 Let me see him once before he dies? |
51109 | My boy John,-- He that went to sea: What care I for the ship, sailor? 51109 Now,"said Wardle,"what say you to an hour on the ice? |
51109 | What''s your boy''s name, good wife? 51109 Why write this book?" |
51109 | You skate, of course, Winkle? |
51109 | And did you hear that cheer on cheer That over all the bells rang clear? |
51109 | And do you tell me of a woman''s tongue, That gives not half so great a blow to the ear As will a chestnut in a farmer''s fire? |
51109 | And in what good ship sailed he?" |
51109 | And is this all that remains of him? |
51109 | And who but teaches, well or ill? |
51109 | And, when they sprang to birth, Who broke the bars And let their radiance out To kindle space, When rang God''s morning shout O''er the glad race? |
51109 | Are not these woods More free from peril than the envious court? |
51109 | Are they all desolate, These silent stars; Hung in their spheres by fate, Which nothing mars? |
51109 | But still I ask, How? |
51109 | But why pause here? |
51109 | Comrades, in what soldier- grave Sleeps the bravest of the brave? |
51109 | Does he shrink to his eyrie, or shiver with dread? |
51109 | Does the glare blind his eye? |
51109 | Flashes of wit, coruscations of imagination, and gay pictures,--what are they? |
51109 | Has the terrible blast On the wing of the sky- king a fear- fetter cast? |
51109 | Hath not a Jew eyes? |
51109 | Have I not heard great ordnance in the field, And heaven''s artillery thunder in the skies? |
51109 | Have I not heard the sea, puffed up with winds, Rage like an angry boar, chafèd with sweat? |
51109 | Have I not in a pitchèd battle heard Loud''larums, neighing steeds, and trumpet''s clang? |
51109 | Have I not in my time heard lions roar? |
51109 | He was much pleased with the handsome globe, and asked,"Who made it?" |
51109 | How is it that these volumes of sound should convey articulate meaning, and carry ideas from my mind into your own? |
51109 | How''s my boy,--my boy?" |
51109 | I say, had you any of these little elegant expenses when you married me? |
51109 | I speak, and you hear; but how? |
51109 | If you prick us, do we not bleed? |
51109 | Is it fixed in nature that the limits of this empire should be Egypt on the one hand, the Hellespont and Euxine on the other? |
51109 | Is it he who sank to rest With his colors round his breast? |
51109 | Is it likely God, with angels singing round him, Hears our weeping, any more?" |
51109 | Is it possible a cur can lend three thousand d[vu]cats?" |
51109 | Is so much ambition praiseworthy, and more criminal? |
51109 | Is that the sea That murmurs so? |
51109 | It is used in expression of doubt, irony, sarcasm; as in"The Merchant of Venice,"act 1, scene 3, Shylock says to Antonio,"Hath a d[vo]g m[vo]ney? |
51109 | Let me hear his voice once more? |
51109 | News of battle!--who hath brought it? |
51109 | Now what cometh? |
51109 | Now, my co- mates and brothers in exile, Hath not old custom made this life more sweet Than that of painted pomp? |
51109 | Or are they guards of God, Shining in prayer, On the same path they''ve trod Since light was there? |
51109 | Or hath empire no natural limit, but is broad as the genius that can devise, and the power that can win? |
51109 | Shall I vainly seek mine own? |
51109 | Shine they for aught but earth, These silent stars? |
51109 | Sleep when he wakes? |
51109 | Tell me, ye who make your pious pilgrimage to the shades of Vernon, is Washington indeed shut up in that cold and narrow house? |
51109 | Tell me, ye who tread the sods of yon sacred height, is Warren dead? |
51109 | That like nor peace nor war? |
51109 | The words issue from my lips, and reach your ears; but what are those words? |
51109 | Then who but is a learner aye? |
51109 | They answer,"Who is God that he should hear us While the rushing of the iron wheels is stirred? |
51109 | Think you a little din can daunt mine ears? |
51109 | Thou hast the form And likeness of thy God: who more? |
51109 | To learn-- what is it but to teach By aspect, manner, silence, word, The while we far and farther reach Within thy treasures, O our Lord? |
51109 | Were not Suez and Armenia more natural limits? |
51109 | What drives the bold blood from his cheek to his heart? |
51109 | What had you to do with the fashion before you married me? |
51109 | What pierceth the king like the point of a dart? |
51109 | When for me the silent oar Parts the Silent River, And I stand upon the shore Of the strange Forever, Shall I miss the loved and known? |
51109 | Wherefore had man his reason, if it were not to direct him? |
51109 | Wherefore should I curse them? |
51109 | Why should a man whose blood is warm within Sit like his grandsire, cut in alabaster? |
51109 | Without menace or call, Who writes with the lightning''s bright hand on the wall? |
51109 | Would it make worse parents or children, husbands or wives, masters or servants, friends or neighbors? |
51109 | _ Bass._--Why dost thou whet thy knife so earnestly? |
51109 | _ Gra._--Can no prayers pierce thee? |
51109 | _ Ham._--Now, mother, what''s the matter? |
51109 | _ Ham._--What''s the matter now? |
51109 | _ Helen._--What''s that you read? |
51109 | _ Queen._--Have you forgot me? |
51109 | _ Queen._--Why, how now, Hamlet? |
51109 | and creep into the jaundice By being peevish? |
51109 | and, if you wrong us, shall we not revenge? |
51109 | away-- soars the fearless and free; What recks he the skies''strife? |
51109 | d''ye think I''ve lost my eyes?" |
51109 | did you hear those bells ring out, The bells ring out, the people shout? |
51109 | did you see him riding down, And riding down, while all the town Came out to see, came out to see, And all the bells rang mad with glee? |
51109 | hath not a Jew hands, organs, dimensions, senses, affections, passions? |
51109 | if you poison us, do we not die? |
51109 | if you tickle us, do we not laugh? |
51109 | or is it weeping? |
51109 | pause ye still? |
51109 | shall I call thee bird, Or but a wandering voice? |
51109 | think you then the undebased soul Can calmly give itself to sleep,--to rest? |
51109 | wherefore his strength, if it be not his protection? |
51109 | would you have me be out of the fashion? |
984 | Address:? |
984 | Ambition: Subjects without guns? |
984 | Ambition:(?). |
984 | Past:(?) |
984 | Publications: Poems, tragedies, and comedies(?). |
984 | Recreation: After 11.45 P. M. Epitaph: When Will There Be Another Like Her? |
5638 | And, by the way, would you mind writing a short narrative of your life, not more than two thousand words? 5638 Have you got your pad with you? |
5638 | How in the world did you guess that? |
5638 | What has that to do with my calling you a damned fool? |
5638 | What is it to be called? |
5638 | What time is it? 5638 What''s that? |
5638 | When you were in New York,he asked,"what papers did you read?" |
5638 | Why not? 5638 Why, for God''s sake, you do n''t mind my calling you a damned fool, do you?" |
5638 | ''Yer mean ter tell me yer do n''t drink?'' |
5638 | Above all, what right had such a person to come miles out to sea and cruise around the yacht, merely to gratify idle curiosity? |
5638 | An ideal about me? |
5638 | And, by the way, had I ever noticed how people were apt to think that blind people were deaf? |
5638 | Are we nearly home? |
5638 | Are you giving them from memory? |
5638 | Are you reading those figures?" |
5638 | As soon as he saw me he stopped short, as if he had seen a ghost, and said,"Say, ai n''t you the damned cuss that I fired off my boat?" |
5638 | But how am I to do this? |
5638 | Did I enjoy good health? |
5638 | Did n''t you read The World?" |
5638 | Do you bear malice?" |
5638 | Do you feel angry? |
5638 | Do you remember any plays?" |
5638 | For God''s sake, is n''t there any end to this story?" |
5638 | Had I a good temper or a good control of a bad one? |
5638 | Had I a sense of humor? |
5638 | Had I read any recent fiction? |
5638 | Had I tact and discretion? |
5638 | Has any one ever told you how I lost my sight? |
5638 | Has n''t he? |
5638 | Has n''t he? |
5638 | Have n''t you got a note of them in your hand? |
5638 | Have you got the clipping with you? |
5638 | He pulled out his watch, and holding it toward me said:"What time is it?" |
5638 | How are they dressed, are they painted, are they wearing jewels, how old are they?" |
5638 | I am blind, I''m an invalid; how am I to know whom I can trust? |
5638 | Ireland?" |
5638 | Is there much more of that?" |
5638 | Is there much more of this?" |
5638 | It took him some time to get over that, but at last he said:''Yer mean ter tell me yer do n''t chew?'' |
5638 | Just make a note: Indianapolis story excellent, insufficient details lynching, who wrote City Hall story? |
5638 | Mr. Pulitzer would say:"Is Mr. So- and- So here? |
5638 | No? |
5638 | No? |
5638 | No? |
5638 | None of these were ever sent through me, but it was a common thing for J. P. to say:"Have you got your writing pad with you? |
5638 | Then he asked,"Has she passed us?" |
5638 | To what magazines and reviews had I contributed? |
5638 | Was I a good horseman, a good sailor, a good talker, a good reader? |
5638 | Was I fond of music, of painting, of the drama? |
5638 | Was I of a nervous disposition? |
5638 | Was the person I was addressing the gentleman who needed the companion? |
5638 | Well, what had I read within the past month? |
5638 | What about all the interviews and correspondence, in which a companionship had been the only thing discussed? |
5638 | What about the advertisement I had answered? |
5638 | What books had I read? |
5638 | What books had I written? |
5638 | What could the totally different thing be of which Mr. Pulitzer spoke? |
5638 | What countries had I visited? |
5638 | What do you mean?" |
5638 | What languages could I speak or read? |
5638 | What positions had I filled since I went out into the world? |
5638 | What right, he asked, had any one to run a motor boat with a machine so noisy that it destroyed the peace of a whole harbor? |
5638 | What was it? |
5638 | What were my means of livelihood? |
5638 | What''s the matter with it?" |
5638 | What''s the matter? |
5638 | What''s this? |
5638 | What''s this? |
5638 | When and where had I been born? |
5638 | When would I get the time?" |
5638 | Where had I been educated? |
5638 | Who were my friends? |
5638 | Who were my parents? |
5638 | Why should I accept you at your own estimate? |
5638 | Would I dine at his villa at Cap Martin? |
5638 | or"Did Thwaites say anything to you about when he expected those cables from New York?" |
5638 | or,"Well, Mr. Ireland, is n''t there ANYTHING interesting in all those papers?" |
5638 | that''s just an affectation; as a matter of fact you think you''ve got a splendid memory, do n''t you? |
5638 | what have I found? |
11949 | ''No? 11949 ''Shall I tell you a fact, sir, about yourself?'' |
11949 | ''The little arrows?'' 11949 ''Ya, ya,''said Henkel, leaning over the table,''but the butterfly? |
11949 | A proof-- have I not given you a proof? |
11949 | A spiritualist? |
11949 | Afraid of ghosts? 11949 Afraid? |
11949 | Ah, may I inquire whether he was particularly rough with afternoon? |
11949 | Ah,chuckled Jemmy,"you''d like to know, would n''t you? |
11949 | Ah? 11949 An infernal machine? |
11949 | And always the same things happened? |
11949 | And can he succeed? |
11949 | And deprive the ghost of house and home? 11949 And do you give me your word?" |
11949 | And for me, most excellent friar? |
11949 | And he is at her house to- night? |
11949 | And he, did he always call on business? |
11949 | And if you catch them they''ll be hung? |
11949 | And now what do you make of it? |
11949 | And on her father, too, and on all her friends? 11949 And shoot? |
11949 | And that is--? |
11949 | And the man who sent her to the work-- his name? |
11949 | And the odor of tobacco? |
11949 | And the story? |
11949 | And the woman-- was she alone when you left her? |
11949 | And then what? |
11949 | And then? |
11949 | And there was n''t any pen? |
11949 | And there was really nowhere else to come but here? |
11949 | And those Englishmen,I inquired,"are they real?" |
11949 | And what are they? |
11949 | And what is it that she has inflicted for months on me? |
11949 | And what made you change? |
11949 | And what will it be now? |
11949 | And who are these gentlemen? |
11949 | And you champion me to that extent? |
11949 | And you decided you would? |
11949 | And you did n''t throw him in, after all? 11949 And you did?" |
11949 | And you have no idea why it was there? |
11949 | And your father- in- law? |
11949 | And your own life? |
11949 | And, Mr. Gordon,she continued, and then hesitated for a moment--"my-- Frederic told me that you-- you said you honored me for--?" |
11949 | Another wife? |
11949 | Any luck yet? |
11949 | Anyone hurt? |
11949 | Are n''t you going to see him personally? 11949 Are they drunk?" |
11949 | Are they not exaggerated? |
11949 | Are you disappointed? 11949 Are you getting old?" |
11949 | Are you going Saturday night? |
11949 | Are you ready? |
11949 | Are you so anxious to get rich? |
11949 | Are you sure she came this way, Cecil? |
11949 | Are you sure you saw a flag, Miss Cullen? |
11949 | Are you thoroughly devoted to Mrs. Close? 11949 Asleep?" |
11949 | Aw, in what respect? |
11949 | Aw, you fancy resistance impossible? |
11949 | Ay, but does he come alone? 11949 Because he chucked your men into the river?" |
11949 | But I daresay his fish will come below the log, so what''s the odds? |
11949 | But how can I give you what I have n''t? |
11949 | But how can you do it? |
11949 | But how could you for an instant suppose that I could say what I did to Lord Ralles? |
11949 | But how the deuce did he know that you had those letters? |
11949 | But how--"How am I going to see him? 11949 But is n''t it dangerous?" |
11949 | But really, Mrs. Magnus,I continued,"you do n''t mean to tell me seriously that you saw him write this?" |
11949 | But suppose our fish venture into his waters, Cecil; what then? 11949 But suppose someone else should be proved to have been really responsible? |
11949 | But that note? |
11949 | But the ashes? |
11949 | But the chair? |
11949 | But the question of tuition? |
11949 | But were you not afraid of being discovered? 11949 But what did you do?" |
11949 | But what has happened since to arouse suspicion? |
11949 | But who can deserve it? |
11949 | But who can it be? 11949 But why should you object to that?" |
11949 | But why? |
11949 | But ze lights? |
11949 | But--"And you are prepared now to make another affidavit to that effect? |
11949 | By George, you do n''t suppose they''ll pursue you? |
11949 | By Jove, Cecil, you''re not afraid to meet him, are you? |
11949 | By Jove, Shaw, are you_ with_ me? |
11949 | By Jove, do you mean it? |
11949 | By my orders? 11949 By the way, did Mrs. Close come alone?" |
11949 | Ca n''t Tompkins and his men keep that man off my land? |
11949 | Ca n''t you go to him and insist that he-- or tell him what I really feel toward him-- or anything, in fact, to shame him? 11949 Ca n''t you think up a scheme? |
11949 | Can I, lyedy? |
11949 | Can they hear us? |
11949 | Can you bring him down here to- night? |
11949 | Can you see that from the floor, Walter? |
11949 | Captain,he said sharply,"who is this person you come here to warn? |
11949 | Cause? |
11949 | Certainly, or how could I write it upon the paper? |
11949 | Confound it, you forget the time--"Mon Dieu, are we to compare ze Hindoo harem wiz ze American feest slugger? |
11949 | Could n''t they? |
11949 | Dark as Egypt, eh? |
11949 | Dem it all, Pen,he chattered,"you''re not at all wet, are you? |
11949 | Depend on you? 11949 Did Dr. Gregory, the X- ray specialist, ever attend Mrs. Close at her home, in her room?" |
11949 | Did Mrs. Close have other callers? |
11949 | Did n''t you pass a better night? |
11949 | Did n''t you see it after all was over? |
11949 | Did she say anything that you remember? |
11949 | Did she say she was going to Shaw''s? |
11949 | Did she tell you about that? |
11949 | Did you enter the room? |
11949 | Did you hear what he was-- what we were saying? |
11949 | Did you knock? |
11949 | Did you see any of the servants, Lester? |
11949 | Did you see the smoke? |
11949 | Did you see who was in the car? |
11949 | Did you tell any one of all this? |
11949 | Did you_ see_ him? |
11949 | Do I chaw terbaccy? |
11949 | Do n''t Western women ever get Eastern gowns? |
11949 | Do n''t you find it very lonely to live out here, away from old friends? |
11949 | Do we stop long? |
11949 | Do you dare me? |
11949 | Do you hear? |
11949 | Do you intend a high- handed interference with the civil authorities? |
11949 | Do you know what my advice to you is, the advice of a man who has seen high play everywhere from Monte Carlo to Shanghai? |
11949 | Do you mean in connection with Mr.--with Jack- the- Giant- Killer? |
11949 | Do you mean to tell us that he threw you great hulking creatures into the river? 11949 Do you mean, Miss Cullen,"I cried hotly,"that he''s been cad enough to force his attentions upon you by threats?" |
11949 | Do you really expect to catch them? |
11949 | Do you really mean that there is no charge? |
11949 | Do you really? |
11949 | Do you recall my vow? 11949 Do you suppose some one has broken in and substituted this Lytton letter for the Thurston letter?" |
11949 | Do you think I am a woman easily imposed upon? |
11949 | Do you think this Albano had anything to do with the letter? |
11949 | Do you want Miss Warren to think that I was only bluffing, after all? 11949 Do you want to go?" |
11949 | Do? 11949 Ees eet Shaw? |
11949 | Eh? |
11949 | Ever been in Danbridge? |
11949 | Five thousand is n''t a bad day''s work, eh? |
11949 | For Heaven''s sake, Kennedy,I gasped as we went down the stairway,"what do you mean by giving him such advice-- you?" |
11949 | For instance,she asked coolly, when she saw that I was speechless,"what does she look like?" |
11949 | For what? |
11949 | Frequent callers-- a Mr. Lawrence, for instance? |
11949 | From nowhere? |
11949 | Given it to her husband? |
11949 | Giving it away? |
11949 | Good Lord, could n''t you rescue him? |
11949 | Good heavens, what are we to do if he comes here with a lot of desperadoes and begins to shoot? |
11949 | Good of me? 11949 Had Miss Lytton any enemies whom you think of, people who were jealous of her professionally or personally?" |
11949 | Has anything come? |
11949 | Have I time to fill a bag? |
11949 | Have there? |
11949 | Have you breakfasted? |
11949 | Have you caught the robbers? |
11949 | Have you not heard it,man cried to man--"the Palazzo Pisani lacks a mistress to- day? |
11949 | Have you seen him? |
11949 | Have you stubbed your toe, little boy? |
11949 | He-- he is dead? |
11949 | He? |
11949 | Henkel was saying,''Dear me, dear me, but why should this have happened?'' 11949 His orders? |
11949 | How about the handwriting? |
11949 | How are you, Lester? |
11949 | How could you time it? |
11949 | How dare you? 11949 How did Mrs. Close receive him?" |
11949 | How did you get it? |
11949 | How did you know I was there? |
11949 | How did you know she had it? |
11949 | How do the scientists account for it? |
11949 | How do you know he did? |
11949 | How do you know the number? |
11949 | How do you know where the line is? 11949 How do you know?" |
11949 | How is the old boy? |
11949 | How long ago? |
11949 | How long are you going to stay here? |
11949 | How much is it, Welply? |
11949 | How the devil do I know? 11949 How will you stop him?" |
11949 | How? |
11949 | How? |
11949 | How? |
11949 | How? |
11949 | I am afraid I do n''t understand? |
11949 | I am sure of it, Captain, and being sure I am putting my life in your hands to- night--"To- night; we are to follow you to the Merceria, then? |
11949 | I cried out,''Is it the fever, Pedro?'' 11949 I do n''t care about myself, Mr. Gordon, but ca n''t you keep her out of it? |
11949 | I hope there is no danger of the train arriving first, is there? |
11949 | I hope there''s nothing wrong? |
11949 | I may keep it? |
11949 | I only-- what place are we stopping at? |
11949 | I really could not have walked to Ridgely to- night, could I? |
11949 | I say what the deuce do you suppose the confounded savage has in mind? |
11949 | I say, Miss Drake, you wo n''t mind talking to me a while after dinner, will you? |
11949 | I suppose so,I said, and then, added,"Why should you be afraid of asking your father?" |
11949 | I suppose we civilians will have to take a back seat now, Miss Cullen? |
11949 | I wonder where I_ am_ to go? |
11949 | In not cutting the wires? |
11949 | In the night? 11949 In writing?" |
11949 | Inspector, can you lend me one of your men for a couple of days? |
11949 | Instantly,I said, rising, and added,"Do n''t you want to see what I say, Miss Cullen?" |
11949 | Is Jim Godfrey there? |
11949 | Is Mr. Bruce here? |
11949 | Is Professor Kennedy here? |
11949 | Is anything the matter? |
11949 | Is he big? |
11949 | Is it really you? |
11949 | Is n''t the housekeeper a long time in coming? |
11949 | Is she a mulatto? 11949 Is she riding?" |
11949 | Is there any place about here that''s a safe hiding spot for a few hours? |
11949 | Is this true, Penelope? |
11949 | Is your name Bruce? |
11949 | It did n''t strike his collar or hair? |
11949 | It is n''t dreadfully immodest, is it, for one to hold converse with her captor? 11949 It was n''t all wrote at once, was it? |
11949 | It was true about the jar of ammonia? |
11949 | Kennedy, how did you ever think of such a thing? |
11949 | Let me say a word before you pull,he called, and then to me he said,"Now will you give up the property?" |
11949 | Locking the door after you? |
11949 | Look a here,growled the sheriff,"who are yer sayin''all this to anyway? |
11949 | Look here, Lester,demanded Godfrey impatiently,"you do n''t mean to say that you believe any such rot?" |
11949 | Man or devil-- who are you? |
11949 | May I come with you and see what you say? |
11949 | May I count on having this note for further examination, of course always at such times and under such conditions as you agree to? |
11949 | Meaning that you refuse to let me ascend? |
11949 | Might I ask,interrupted Kennedy,"what that curious greenish or bluish light from the tube is composed of?" |
11949 | Monsieur has no doubt arranged for the services of an instructor? |
11949 | Mr. Gordon,she said-- and when I looked at her I saw that she was flushing--"what is the matter?" |
11949 | Mr. Lawrence, will you be so kind as to reach behind your chair? 11949 My conversation with Lord Ralles?" |
11949 | No,I answered;"I do n''t see how I can believe it-- and yet, what did she tell it for?" |
11949 | No; how could I? |
11949 | Not right here? |
11949 | Not send you to prison? |
11949 | Not-- not fatally? |
11949 | Nothing else? |
11949 | Now can you recollect just how Mr. Parker acted when he was shot? 11949 Now, Walter, do you think you could stand another dip into that red ink of Albano''s?" |
11949 | Oh, I say, Pen, that''s going out of the way for a little fun, is n''t it? 11949 Oh, by the way, would you mind doing your brother a favor, Miss Drake? |
11949 | Oh, would n''t that be jolly? 11949 Oh, you''re awake, are you?" |
11949 | Oh,I said;"then it was your step I heard in the hall?" |
11949 | Oh? 11949 Old? |
11949 | On this desk? |
11949 | Or left a note of it, perhaps? |
11949 | Or my brothers? |
11949 | Peter Magnus? |
11949 | Pray, how do you know all of this, Penelope? |
11949 | Quite right,he agreed hastily;"the note was queer, though, was n''t is? |
11949 | Really, Miss Cullen,I began; but she interrupted me by saying anxiously--"He ca n''t hurt papa, can he?" |
11949 | Really, it''s quite thrilling, is n''t it? |
11949 | Right? |
11949 | Say, is there a candy- store on this block? |
11949 | See that light over there-- up the mountain? |
11949 | Sha''n''t we run? |
11949 | Shall I tell you-- really? |
11949 | Shaw? 11949 She''s dooced pretty, eh?" |
11949 | Shot him? |
11949 | Should I have done so? |
11949 | Signor Rocca, what means this? |
11949 | Signor Rocca,he said,"do you know of what I am thinking?" |
11949 | So this rock is the dividing line? |
11949 | So you are putting me off your place? 11949 So you think this Parker case is a mess?" |
11949 | So you were in the desk? |
11949 | Soldiers? |
11949 | Some one coming? |
11949 | Sorry to discommode a lady,apologized the sheriff, gallantly,"but if we may just look around a little?" |
11949 | Supposing,she continued,"that it became known that you have those letters? |
11949 | Tell me,he exclaimed,"the Count of Pisa, is he not the woman''s lover?" |
11949 | That was just after I had got off? |
11949 | The money is in that bag? |
11949 | The office was locked, I suppose? |
11949 | The poor devils might have drowned, eh, Bonaparte? |
11949 | The woman''s name, Excellency,he repeated, so soon as his surprise permitted him to speak,"you know her, then?" |
11949 | Then I''m to throw him in whether he says anything or not, sir? |
11949 | Then it is better to keep it a secret? |
11949 | Then perhaps you would like to be left to enjoy the moonlight and your meditations by yourself? |
11949 | Then what happened? |
11949 | Then what is to become of it? |
11949 | Then what is your motive? |
11949 | Then what was it? |
11949 | Then why ca n''t you tell me? |
11949 | Then why did you risk your life,she asked,"if you thought it was useless?" |
11949 | Then why do n''t you come over and get it? 11949 Then you perhaps think that Prescott and Mrs. Martin are in some way connected in this case?" |
11949 | There was no way to slip this letter in among the others since you obtained them? |
11949 | There, Miss Cullen,I asked,"does the East come up to that in gallantry?" |
11949 | They are convicts? |
11949 | They do n''t usually kill anyone, do they? |
11949 | They have sworn it-- you know their names, Captain? |
11949 | This afternoon? |
11949 | This was Mr. Magnus''workroom, I suppose? |
11949 | Threatened what? |
11949 | Time? |
11949 | To England? 11949 To act as ambassador from Cowardice Court?" |
11949 | Walter, did you notice he said not a word of condemnation of Dixon, though the note was before his eyes? 11949 Was it worth the risk?" |
11949 | Was n''t that sufficient? |
11949 | Well, Jameson,he said at length,"do you think this professor fellow is the goods?" |
11949 | Well, Lester,he said,"did you leave the fifty thousand?" |
11949 | Well, well, what''s it all about? |
11949 | Well, where do you think it came from? |
11949 | Well,I said, as calmly as I could,"are you going to stand by me?" |
11949 | Wh- what does it mean? |
11949 | What acid? |
11949 | What am I to do, Kennedy? |
11949 | What are we stopping here for? |
11949 | What are we to think of that? 11949 What are you doing, sir?" |
11949 | What can they do? |
11949 | What color are they? |
11949 | What did Mrs. Parker do when she came to? |
11949 | What did she say as she was going down in the elevator? |
11949 | What do you make of that? |
11949 | What do you mean by pressure being brought? |
11949 | What do you mean? |
11949 | What do you think he''d give for those letters? |
11949 | What do you want me to do? |
11949 | What do you want to do? |
11949 | What does it all mean? |
11949 | What does that mean? |
11949 | What happened after you came back? |
11949 | What happened? |
11949 | What has he done, Cecil dear? |
11949 | What has that to do with the case? |
11949 | What have you to say to me, Penelope? |
11949 | What is it you want of me? |
11949 | What is it, Hodder? |
11949 | What is it? |
11949 | What is it? |
11949 | What kind of a place? |
11949 | What letters? |
11949 | What luck? |
11949 | What made you think that? |
11949 | What other four? |
11949 | What sort of place is it? |
11949 | What the deuce is this coming down the road? |
11949 | What the devil are you doing? |
11949 | What time is it? |
11949 | What use will those letters be after the eighteenth? 11949 What was is about?" |
11949 | What was that? |
11949 | What was that? |
11949 | What will he think? 11949 What will that do?" |
11949 | What would they do with you? |
11949 | What yard? 11949 What''s become of that Shaw fellow?" |
11949 | What''s that? |
11949 | What''s that? |
11949 | What''s the matter, mademoiselle? |
11949 | What''s the matter? |
11949 | What''s the matter? |
11949 | What''s the matter? |
11949 | What''s up, Cecil, with your legs? |
11949 | What''s up? |
11949 | What''s wrong this morning? |
11949 | What''s your hurry? |
11949 | What- a you get- a pay for? 11949 What-- what d''ye mean?" |
11949 | What-- what the devil do you mean, sir? |
11949 | What? |
11949 | What? |
11949 | What? |
11949 | What? |
11949 | What_ do_ you think of me? |
11949 | Whe-- where are we going? |
11949 | When Mr. Close was at home? |
11949 | When did you begin? |
11949 | When? |
11949 | When? |
11949 | Where are we? |
11949 | Where can the poor thing go? 11949 Where did he send it?" |
11949 | Where did you find it, Pen? |
11949 | Where did you say this bullet struck? |
11949 | Where ees she coming to? |
11949 | Where else? 11949 Where is she, Hodder?" |
11949 | Where is the letter? 11949 Where were you sitting when I came up?" |
11949 | Where''s Pen? |
11949 | Which means that you do not know their names, Captain? |
11949 | Who are these men? |
11949 | Who are you, sir? |
11949 | Who are you? |
11949 | Who are you? |
11949 | Who is? 11949 Who pays your wage?" |
11949 | Who sent you, rogue? |
11949 | Who was your pal? |
11949 | Who''ll go down and get me a bottle of ginger ale? |
11949 | Who''s there? |
11949 | Who? |
11949 | Why ca n''t we go over to my rooms at the Marathon and hear the story? |
11949 | Why could n''t I have put it off until morning? |
11949 | Why did n''t he destroy it? |
11949 | Why do n''t you believe the men? |
11949 | Why not give in, Ella, and admit you have been in the wrong? 11949 Why not? |
11949 | Why not? |
11949 | Why not? |
11949 | Why should she want to throw me off the track? |
11949 | Why, Lord Ralles has been-- has been-- oh, he''s threatened that if I wouldn''t-- that--"You mean he--? |
11949 | Why, if Dixon contemplated anything against Miss Lytton, should he preserve this letter from her? |
11949 | Why, whatever are you doing? |
11949 | Why, you do n''t think she did the shooting? |
11949 | Why,answered Jemmy still more impatiently,"I began operations at the same time every night, did n''t I? |
11949 | Why,he ejaculated,"my brother and I each have a double express with us, and do you think we''d sit still in our seats? |
11949 | Why? |
11949 | Why? |
11949 | Widow of Peter? 11949 Will you give me your word of honor that those letters are not concealed in your clothes?" |
11949 | Wo n''t it be safer to run while there is still time? |
11949 | Would it be too much to ask just to see that note that was found in the Boncour bungalow? |
11949 | Would n''t they try to get our money and our watches? |
11949 | Would you taste an unknown drug again to discover the nature of a probable poison? |
11949 | Yer mean that cattle- drive? |
11949 | Yes,agreed the duke;"and what''s a broken leg to a broken heart? |
11949 | Yesterday the chief of Police in a Western city sent a man East to see me about the Price murder-- you know the case? |
11949 | You are sure you can be spared? |
11949 | You dared? 11949 You did n''t hear the shot fired from any particular direction?" |
11949 | You do n''t suppose,she said,"that, after all you have done for us, I could be angry over what was merely a mistake?" |
11949 | You have never seen this Mrs. Martin or her husband? |
11949 | You have not showed this to the police, I presume? |
11949 | You have the records, Whiting? |
11949 | You mean he indicated his wish before he died? |
11949 | You mean it had been lying there unnoticed ever since his death? |
11949 | You mean she did n''t see him write it? |
11949 | You mean that he actually did write it while you were looking over his shoulder? |
11949 | You mean the law? 11949 You mean the novel?" |
11949 | You mean to say you are doing it for nothing? |
11949 | You mean you think somebody is coming out of that house? |
11949 | You mean--? |
11949 | You remember when we were talking on the drive about the raid, O''Connor? 11949 You say you have left your hotel?" |
11949 | You say, Excellency--? |
11949 | You shaw Saw-- I mean you saw Shaw? |
11949 | You taught my friend, Miss Hamilton Warren, to fly, did you not? |
11949 | You were to carry that news to her? |
11949 | You wo n''t mind my coming over here, will you? |
11949 | You''ll take it up to her yourself? |
11949 | You''ll telegraph at once? |
11949 | You''re not unwell, I hope? |
11949 | You''ve-- you''ve turned her out? |
11949 | You-- you do n''t mean it? |
11949 | You? 11949 You_ ran_?" |
11949 | You_ will_ understand, wo n''t you? |
11949 | You_ will_ understand, wo n''t you? |
11949 | Your pitiful cowards want it to be real, do they? 11949 _ Could_? |
11949 | _ Send_ him a warning? |
11949 | _ Trying to write_? |
11949 | ''And what are you taking for the Indies?'' |
11949 | ''And who the devil is Lord Bazelhurst?'' |
11949 | ''The truth as I see it by means of my wonderful invention? |
11949 | ''What did you make that affidavit for? |
11949 | ''What do you mean by that?'' |
11949 | ''What''s wrong?'' |
11949 | ''Who gave these orders?'' |
11949 | --but Mr. Shaw said:''Well, why do n''t you throw me in the river?'' |
11949 | A moment later I heard Godfrey''s voice ask:"Hello? |
11949 | A very talented girl, too-- you remember her in''The Taming of the New Woman''last season? |
11949 | Accident? |
11949 | After a pause, she asked,"How long is he in prison for?" |
11949 | After all, why should she run away from him? |
11949 | Ah, well, what do you say to a stroll down the White Way before I go to my laboratory? |
11949 | All alone, were you?" |
11949 | Am I ejecting an innocent bystander? |
11949 | Am I to go?" |
11949 | Am I walking too fast for you?" |
11949 | And here? |
11949 | And now what is to become of me-- will madame his wife give a recommendation now?" |
11949 | And so what does it come to? |
11949 | And the price they paid you, knave?" |
11949 | And then I added,''You''ll excuse me, but what does Henkel want of you?'' |
11949 | And there are no spooks? |
11949 | And what the dickens do you mean by having a hitch rein, anyway? |
11949 | And where would_ he_ be? |
11949 | And you?" |
11949 | And, if so, how can a complexion be curly?" |
11949 | Anything else?" |
11949 | Are you alone?" |
11949 | Are you crazy?" |
11949 | Are you ready? |
11949 | As he entered the wine- shop he snorted, after the manner of gas- men,"Where''s de leak?" |
11949 | At once? |
11949 | Before I could speak, she asked hurriedly,"How often do you come to Chicago?" |
11949 | Besides, the money would be visible, would n''t it? |
11949 | But ca n''t we shut up this man Kennedy? |
11949 | But did they get anyone this time? |
11949 | But who fired it? |
11949 | But will he think I''ve done this for effect? |
11949 | But, I say, why ca n''t I have the same privilege as these other chaps? |
11949 | But, after all, what''s the rush?" |
11949 | But, come; will you go to Renwood''s with me?" |
11949 | But-- ah, here at the end-- let me read:"''Well, he''s very clever, but he has nothing against me, has he?'' |
11949 | But-- but what was it you said about England?" |
11949 | But--""And you swore falsely before Kimmel that you were not?" |
11949 | By the way, can you arrange for me to go through the room this morning when you go back?" |
11949 | By the way, what has this envelope to do with it?" |
11949 | CHAPTER VIII HOW DID THE SECRET LEAK OUT? |
11949 | Ca n''t you get him in range?" |
11949 | Ca n''t you see the mottoes on the trees-- No Trespassin''?'' |
11949 | Ca n''t you see?" |
11949 | Ca n''t you stop him?" |
11949 | Can you bear something further? |
11949 | Cigarette? |
11949 | Close?" |
11949 | Come and see us off, will you?'' |
11949 | Could anything be more dramatic than his willing penalty for his devotion to medicine?" |
11949 | Could it be possible that she was inventing all of this incredible tale? |
11949 | Could you give a little advice in the case of a friend of mine?" |
11949 | Could you-- er-- could you take his place and show us just how it happened?" |
11949 | Cullen?" |
11949 | Cullen?" |
11949 | D''youse all wanter be blown ter pieces wid dem pipes and cigarettes? |
11949 | Demmit, sir, did n''t I say I was Lord Bazelhurst? |
11949 | Deuced queer, eh? |
11949 | Did he say?" |
11949 | Did you bring it with you?" |
11949 | Dixon?" |
11949 | Do I look pretty good?" |
11949 | Do n''t you know she is the wife of Adolphus Hesse, the most inveterate gambler in stocks in the System? |
11949 | Do n''t you remember the auburn- haired leading lady in the Follies''--the girl who sings that song about''Mary, Mary, quite contrary''? |
11949 | Do n''t you understand?" |
11949 | Do n''t you want it any longer?" |
11949 | Do you call that fair fighting? |
11949 | Do you expect me to break the rule by coming over on to your land to hand it to you?" |
11949 | Do you happen to know any of the shopkeepers on it or near it?" |
11949 | Do you mean to say-- Miss Drake, did your brother instruct him to kill me?" |
11949 | Do you remember the challenge you gave me yesterday? |
11949 | Do you suppose any jury is going to take enough expert testimony to outweigh the tragedy of a beautiful woman? |
11949 | Do you think I can support such means of warfare? |
11949 | Do you think I condone this outrage? |
11949 | Do you think he would let me use his store for a few minutes Saturday night-- of course without any risk to himself?" |
11949 | Do you think the wheel is crooked?" |
11949 | Do? |
11949 | Does he expect me to take him up on your account and have him here?" |
11949 | Ever meet him? |
11949 | Finally I asked--"You are quite comfortable, Miss Cullen?" |
11949 | Fine, is n''t it?" |
11949 | Good Lord, what does it mean? |
11949 | Good Lord, why-- why did you let her go?" |
11949 | Good heavens, what am I to do?" |
11949 | Goodness, what''s that?" |
11949 | Gordon?" |
11949 | Gordon?" |
11949 | Gordon?" |
11949 | Had Godfrey thought of that? |
11949 | Had he tired of the sport? |
11949 | Had the novelty worn off? |
11949 | Hang it all, what right has he to catch our fish?" |
11949 | Hang it all, what''s he like? |
11949 | Hang it all, where is the fellow? |
11949 | Has your friend asked you to plead for him? |
11949 | Haswell?" |
11949 | Have I been dozing? |
11949 | Have I been unnecessarily rough and expeditious?" |
11949 | Have I not heard your oath in Naples when the irons seared your flesh? |
11949 | Have you any plan?" |
11949 | Have you any suggestions to make?" |
11949 | Have you ever heard of him?" |
11949 | Have you not given me mine twice? |
11949 | He dipped a pen into a little bottle, and wrote on a piece of paper:***** What is your opinion about Cross''s Headache Cure? |
11949 | He''s a-- a gentleman, I daresay-- in some respects-- not all, of course, my dear, but--""Gentleman? |
11949 | Hoping he would"catch on,"I shouted to him--"How are your sore spots, Albert?" |
11949 | How are you going to pull off your raid-- is it to be down through the skylight or up from the cellar?" |
11949 | How can I prevent any one from learning my trade secret, leaving me, and making gold on his own account? |
11949 | How could he, except by means of clairvoyance, have known before leaving home that he was not to meet his enemy face to face? |
11949 | How could she have seen him? |
11949 | How dare you to speak to--""What are you two rowing about?" |
11949 | How dare you?" |
11949 | How did you come here? |
11949 | How do we come out? |
11949 | How had he appeared to her? |
11949 | How many legs did Hodder say she''d-- she''d broken?" |
11949 | How many men will you need in the raid? |
11949 | How should I act to get my little Adelina back without harming a hair of her head?" |
11949 | How then was I to explain it? |
11949 | How were we to surmount this last and most formidable barrier? |
11949 | How''s that?" |
11949 | Hullo, who''s that? |
11949 | I ai n''t supposed to do dis wit''out orders, see?" |
11949 | I did n''t escape it, for Madge was saying--"Can you conceive of a man pretending to care for a girl and yet treating her so? |
11949 | I do n''t suppose you know that Magnus had another wife living over in Jersey?" |
11949 | I felt that I was talking nonsense, but what, in Heaven''s name, is a man to say who has just been through an experience like that? |
11949 | I glanced at Fred, whom I found looking at me anxiously, and asked him--"Ca n''t you do better than that?" |
11949 | I looked in Daurillac''s brilliant young face, and I had n''t the courage to say anything but,''Have you plenty of quinine?'' |
11949 | I love a storm, do n''t you?" |
11949 | I nodded, and Miss Cullen said, questioningly,"Me too?" |
11949 | I noticed that it was quite gray, and that his lips twitched as he muttered,''Señor, Señor--''"I said:''Where is the Señor Scott?'' |
11949 | I pay your debts, clothe you, feed you-- house your ungrateful sister-- and what do I get in return? |
11949 | I say, are you sure you can find the Kenwood cottage?" |
11949 | I say, would you mind_ tossing_ it up to me?" |
11949 | I started at Kennedy''s tone and whispered hastily:"What do you mean? |
11949 | I suppose there''s nothing to do but turn over the money?" |
11949 | I think you said eight o''clock?" |
11949 | I want to make good, conspicuously good, at the start-- understand? |
11949 | I was at the door in an instant, and asked--"What''s up?" |
11949 | I''ll step back thirty paces and then you come over and get the watch-- if you''re not afraid of me-- and I''ll promise--""Afraid? |
11949 | If it is the truth, will you believe in me? |
11949 | Intelligent, is n''t it? |
11949 | Is it different from ours?" |
11949 | Is it not so, Captain?" |
11949 | Is it the less real? |
11949 | Is my sister here?" |
11949 | Is n''t he, Barminster? |
11949 | Is n''t it a good hypothesis that she is the red haired woman in the case, the tool of the System in which her husband is so heavily involved? |
11949 | Is n''t it rather odd that a house should be lighted so brilliantly at this hour of night?" |
11949 | Is n''t that an attitude, or are you too drunk to see it?" |
11949 | Is n''t that trespass?" |
11949 | Is she dead?'' |
11949 | Is that all you see? |
11949 | Is that your reason, Signor Falier?" |
11949 | Is this blood on my arm accidental? |
11949 | It is n''t because you feel that you have no home with me?" |
11949 | It is perhaps for sale?" |
11949 | It is some other, then, and not myself?" |
11949 | It is the outward sign of the unity of nature, the--""The means by which you secure the curious telepagrams I have heard of?" |
11949 | It was O''Connor''s turn to look incredulous, but as Kennedy apparently meant exactly what he said, he simply asked,"And will you?" |
11949 | It would be hard to face the master of the house, but-- a stranger? |
11949 | Just as I reached the plank, however, I heard Lord Ralles ask--"Who''s that?" |
11949 | Lester?" |
11949 | Lord Bazelhurst wants war, does he? |
11949 | Lord, Lord, what do such women mean by giving themselves to little rats like Bazelhurst? |
11949 | Madge laughed at my confusion, and asked,"With money?" |
11949 | Magnus?" |
11949 | May I expect the machine to- morrow as arranged?" |
11949 | Misanthrope?" |
11949 | Monsieur can already fly, no doubt?" |
11949 | More cheerful, eh? |
11949 | Mosely, are you heeled?" |
11949 | My God, what''s to become of her?" |
11949 | My companion stopped walking at the steps of 218, and asked,"Has she told you so?" |
11949 | Now that she was here, what was she to do? |
11949 | Now why did you say that?" |
11949 | Now you do n''t want to do it by means of a warrant, do you, sir? |
11949 | Now, Inspector, can you spare the time to go down to Parker''s office and take me over the ground? |
11949 | Now, acknowledge that you would n''t stop work if you could?" |
11949 | Now, then, will you hand over those letters, or will you go to---- inside of ten minutes?" |
11949 | Now, who could that be but Penelope?" |
11949 | Odwell?" |
11949 | Of the Guards, sir, and the Seventy- first? |
11949 | Oh, Harris, ca n''t you settle with him if he asks anything? |
11949 | Oh, I''m so sorry now-- why did I--""You ran away?" |
11949 | Or did hypnosis involve that, too? |
11949 | Or did the fact that it had been inside an invisible object render it permanently invisible? |
11949 | Or does it become invisible when the ghost puts it in his pocket?" |
11949 | Or was it Godfrey who was trying to throw dust in my eyes? |
11949 | Over his shoulder I could see a tangled mass of dark brown curls, and a childish voice lisped:"Why did n''t you come for me, papa? |
11949 | Parker?" |
11949 | Perhaps he like beautiful women--_eh bien?_ That was before the Doctor Gregory treated madame. |
11949 | Remember that? |
11949 | Renwood?" |
11949 | Scott?" |
11949 | Scott?" |
11949 | See that? |
11949 | See that?" |
11949 | See what I mean? |
11949 | See? |
11949 | Shall I listen again when the fire is being made ready, and there is burning coal beneath the bed you will lie upon to- night, Signor Rocca?" |
11949 | Shaw?" |
11949 | Shaw?" |
11949 | Shaw?" |
11949 | She checked her pony as we came opposite Drute, and said,"Can you use money?" |
11949 | She still looked doubtful, and asked,"Then why did papa say just now,''Fortunately''?" |
11949 | She''s a traitor, un''stand me? |
11949 | Single- handed?" |
11949 | Speak, rascal, shall I read you the tale?" |
11949 | Surely you can bend the will of a young girl who is also your daughter?" |
11949 | Surely your X- ray work has n''t knocked you out like this?" |
11949 | THE DEADLY TUBE BY ARTHUR B. REEVE"For Heaven''s sake, Gregory, what is the matter?" |
11949 | Tell me; how did it happen?" |
11949 | That it was only a pretext she proved to me the moment I had relocked the bar, by saying--"Mr. Gordon, may I ask you a question?" |
11949 | That log down there is the dividing line in our river, eh? |
11949 | That would be a little-- well-- indelicate, do n''t you think?" |
11949 | The alternative? |
11949 | The golden butterfly? |
11949 | The money is all right, he says? |
11949 | The old man moved restlessly on the bed, and over my shoulder I could hear him gasp faintly,"Where''s Grace? |
11949 | The other, long and of an official shape, contained-- ah, what do you guess? |
11949 | The point was this: Why, if the ashes from the ghost''s cigar became visible when knocked off, should n''t the smoke become visible when expired? |
11949 | The question that arises here is, Was she murdered or did she commit suicide? |
11949 | Then Tompkins called him a vile name, your lordship-- shall I repeat it, sir?" |
11949 | There seemed no interval before I found myself sitting in the hammock and saying over and over again,''But where''s the little chap? |
11949 | Therefore I think--""Throw me in, would he?" |
11949 | This is Shaw''s way, is n''t it?" |
11949 | This is their way of fighting, is it? |
11949 | Thurston, who was the man whom you saw enter the Boncour bungalow as you left-- the constant visitor?" |
11949 | Twelve? |
11949 | Two? |
11949 | Walter, will you open that door into the main hall?" |
11949 | Was Kennedy going to slit the whole door and let it fall in with a crash? |
11949 | Was Kennedy, who had been engaged by her father to defend her fiancà ©, about to convict him? |
11949 | Was he convinced? |
11949 | Was he laughing at her for a silly coquette? |
11949 | Was it a look of pride that his tall young wife bestowed upon him as he drew himself proudly erect or was it akin to pity? |
11949 | Was it my fancy, or did something like a sigh come from that unseen presence in the chair? |
11949 | Was she not Lady Bazelhurst? |
11949 | We represent the New York_ Star_--""Is n''t it terrible enough that I should suffer so,"she interrupted,"but must the newspapers hound me, too?" |
11949 | Well, hang your stupidity, do n''t you know we''re looking at Shaw''s house this very instant? |
11949 | Well, then, how can we get in?" |
11949 | Well, what do you think? |
11949 | Well, what if I am? |
11949 | Well?" |
11949 | Were we doomed to blindness, too? |
11949 | What cared she for the storm? |
11949 | What could cause such a catastrophe naturally? |
11949 | What did it all mean? |
11949 | What did they say?" |
11949 | What did they show, Whiting?" |
11949 | What difference does that make? |
11949 | What do you find?" |
11949 | What do you say to that, madame?" |
11949 | What do you think of that?" |
11949 | What do you want?" |
11949 | What does m''sieur mean?" |
11949 | What forbids that we arrest her at once? |
11949 | What good will it do me if they catch them and my little Adelina is returned to me dead? |
11949 | What has happened? |
11949 | What horrible thing was it had happened last night? |
11949 | What horror did you perpetrate last night?" |
11949 | What if the real Black Hand is any gang of criminals who choose to use that convenient name to extort money? |
11949 | What is it that it is, then?" |
11949 | What is it, Luigi?" |
11949 | What is it? |
11949 | What is it?" |
11949 | What is the Captain thinking of? |
11949 | What is the case?" |
11949 | What is this 23- 1/2 Prince Street?" |
11949 | What is this popinjay like?" |
11949 | What is, the address of this Albano''s?" |
11949 | What is_ your_ story?" |
11949 | What means this?" |
11949 | What odds if Lord Bazelhurst happened to be a middle- aged, addle- pated ass? |
11949 | What say you?" |
11949 | What time''s he coming, Pen?" |
11949 | What was it that you were going to tell me when Marie came in?" |
11949 | What was it?" |
11949 | What was that, Luigi? |
11949 | What will become of her? |
11949 | What will everyone say when this becomes known?" |
11949 | What will he say? |
11949 | What would that gay throng back of those darkened windows down the street think if they knew what was being prepared for them? |
11949 | What would_ I_ do to him?" |
11949 | What''s the matter with you, Kennedy? |
11949 | What''s the matter, Doctor? |
11949 | What''s there to laugh at, my dear?" |
11949 | What''s this? |
11949 | What, the fellow whom my hands snatched from the rack in the house of the Duke of Naples-- has he no word for me? |
11949 | When are you going to see him?" |
11949 | Where can I find you to- morrow?" |
11949 | Where did you find this?" |
11949 | Where do you expect to go at this hour of night?" |
11949 | Where have these letters been?" |
11949 | Where is he?" |
11949 | Where would you be if it were not for me? |
11949 | Where''s the little French chap?'' |
11949 | Which was it? |
11949 | Who is this friar that he shall have the gift of life or death in Venice?" |
11949 | Who knows?" |
11949 | Who knows?" |
11949 | Whose house is it?" |
11949 | Why did n''t I think of that sooner? |
11949 | Why do n''t you tear it down?" |
11949 | Why do n''t you untie that hitch rein? |
11949 | Why is he not here?" |
11949 | Why should he be permitted to trespass more than any other common lawbreaker? |
11949 | Why, do n''t you know you might have killed yourself, cutting capers on a day like this?" |
11949 | Will a van hold that many comfortably? |
11949 | Will you be here?" |
11949 | Will you help me put it across?" |
11949 | Will you permit me to explain my presence on your land?" |
11949 | Will you put money into my invention? |
11949 | Will you share in becoming fabulously rich?" |
11949 | Wo n''t he think I''m actually throwing myself at his head? |
11949 | Wo n''t you come inside? |
11949 | Wo n''t you tell me the whole story?" |
11949 | Would I see what I could make of it? |
11949 | Would it do our side any harm?" |
11949 | Would you be so kind as to give me a note to her?" |
11949 | Would you do a favor for her?" |
11949 | Would you mind telling me what you know about it if I promise you that I, too, have something to reveal?" |
11949 | Would you recommend it for a nervous headache? |
11949 | Would you still want to press the suit and let the guilty person escape?" |
11949 | You are acquainted with Mendelà © eff''s periodic table?" |
11949 | You are there, are n''t you?" |
11949 | You came?" |
11949 | You did n''t expect him to stay there all night, did you? |
11949 | You have found it?'' |
11949 | You have the money?" |
11949 | You remember recently the so- called''gamblers''war''in which some rivals exploded a bomb on the steps? |
11949 | You remember the big log that lies out in the river up at the bend? |
11949 | You understand me?" |
11949 | You understand that, signorè?" |
11949 | You understand, Captain Falier?" |
11949 | You want me to scrap that three- inch steel door, do you?" |
11949 | You want- a me do your work?" |
11949 | You will, wo n''t you?" |
11949 | You''ll be here when we come back?'' |
11949 | You''ve heard of him, monsieur? |
11949 | You, too?" |
11949 | You_ are_ Lady Bazelhurst?" |
11949 | Your brother wants war, does he? |
11949 | Your father-- will he--""My father? |
11949 | _ Qu''est- ce que tu veux que je te dise?_ I might have paid more heavily for the mad intoxication of that last flight. |
11949 | _ Un faux pas_, at the start? |
11949 | almost shouted Kennedy, his eyes blazing,"that you were never served properly by your wife''s lawyers in that suit?" |
11949 | do you see that? |
11949 | he exclaimed angrily, turning about and about again,"am I losing my eyes? |
11949 | is a tough customer to fight,"I remarked, and asked,"Why did n''t you burn the letters?" |
11949 | is that all?" |
11949 | she asked;"and why do you come to this house?" |
11949 | what is it?" |
45277 | ''T is but a single moment since I left the palace gates, And now the king demands me back; what does it mean, I pray? |
45277 | Am I not unhappy, To march so far to find The traitor, whom I love, And who is so unkind? 45277 And what will you doe wi''your towirs and your ha'', Edward, Edward? |
45277 | And what wul ye leave to your ain mither, deir, Edward, Edward? 45277 And what wul ye leave to your bairns and your wife, Edward, Edward? |
45277 | And whatten penance will ye drie for that, Edward, Edward? 45277 But how can I my home regain Without a single piece of gold?" |
45277 | Cousin, what do you there? |
45277 | Fair maidens here have their abode; Which of the three shall be my bride? |
45277 | Father, what do you here? |
45277 | Good captain, say, in the Holy Land Have you seen my spouse with his brave band? 45277 Hearest thou, wife, hearest thou what says the infant?" |
45277 | Hearken, my wife, hearken, my wife, hearken, Of three deaths, which do you choose? 45277 How can I help my sadness, lad, how can I drop my care? |
45277 | How can that be, my best beloved? 45277 How served she it for you to dine, My heart, my soul, my little son?" |
45277 | In the great court of thy small dwelling, My dear rose, what doest thou? |
45277 | In the great court of thy small dwelling, My dear rose, what doest thou? |
45277 | Is it that makes you look so white, My heart, my soul, my little son? |
45277 | Mother, do you hear his magic call? 45277 My humble slave you must not be, A better fortune is your due; How came your love to fix on me, Who have no heart to give to you?" |
45277 | My lord, I humbly kiss your hands; what is your royal will? |
45277 | O, mother dear, do you not know What''t is that makes me cross? 45277 Oh, tell me, if my coffin new You''ll trim with nails of brass?" |
45277 | Oh, tell me, will you lay me In the graveyard''s grassy glade? |
45277 | Oh, tell me, will you make me A coffin of walnut bright? |
45277 | Oh, tell me, will you mourn me, With three maids to see your tears? |
45277 | Oh, tell me, will you robe me In a shroud of lawn''s fine stitch? |
45277 | Oh, who has slain my lover true, That lies before me on the ground? |
45277 | Son of my womb, consider, with death''s hand on you laid, Have you no debt of honor to pay some noble maid? |
45277 | What do you in a prison cell? |
45277 | What gift to him who returns your spouse? |
45277 | What has she given you to eat, My heart, my soul, my little son? |
45277 | What kind fortune Did you send To my house Your steps to bend? |
45277 | What remedy is there for that? 45277 What reward then, little sailor, Do you demand that I should pay?" |
45277 | What shall be paid, Ilona fair, For thy young gosling The lad killed there? |
45277 | What voice divine is that I hear, That fills the air with melody? 45277 What will you leave your brother brave, My heart, my soul, my little son?" |
45277 | What will you leave your brother fair, My heart, my soul, my little son? |
45277 | What will you leave your father gray, My heart, my soul, my little son? |
45277 | What will you leave your love''s false kin, My heart, my soul, my little son? |
45277 | What will you leave your mother dear, My heart, my soul, my little son? |
45277 | What will you leave your sister bright, My heart, my soul, my little son? |
45277 | What, troubles you, my daughter dear, why do you weep and mourn? |
45277 | Whence comest thou with knitted brows, My heart, my soul, my little son? |
45277 | Where go ye, dear orphans three? |
45277 | Where is your flock? |
45277 | Where is your gayety? |
45277 | Whereaway? |
45277 | Who speaks of the Count Nillo, who dares to breathe his name? 45277 Why are you pale, Rachael, my girl, Beloved child, tell me the truth; Have you been brought to shameful harm By this accursed Christian youth?" |
45277 | Why did your light heart to a sad one grow? |
45277 | Why do you grumble, comrade, that there''s nothing in your purse? 45277 A rude jingle entitled Johnny, fill up the Bowl, gave the popular expression to this feeling:-- Abram Lincoln, what yer''bout? 45277 Abram Lincoln, what yer''bout? 45277 Ah, Jesus, who is dead? 45277 Alas, my faithful shepherd, In what place shall we sleep? 45277 Alas, my faithful shepherd, What if my father knew? 45277 Alas, my faithful shepherd, What shall be our food? 45277 Alas, my faithful shepherd, Whither shall we go? 45277 And again he heard the shepherds pass, And the flocks go wand''ring by, And the soldier asked,Is the sound I hear, The sound of the battle''s roar?" |
45277 | And did thy dreams bring gladness to thy sleep? |
45277 | And did thy sleep bring gladness to the night? |
45277 | And didst thou smile even by graves, despite Thy pity for the dead? |
45277 | And the river with its pebbles, Since I have gone to sleep? |
45277 | And what will you doe wi''your towirs and your ha'', That were sae fair and free, O?" |
45277 | And what wul ye leave to your ain mither, deir, My deir son? |
45277 | And what wul ye leave to your bairns and your wife, When ye gang ovir the sea, O?" |
45277 | And whatten penance will ye drie for that, My deir son? |
45277 | And when the wind in the treetops roared, The soldier asked from the deep, dark grave,"Did the banner flutter then?" |
45277 | And where d''ye think we next did go? |
45277 | Another took my flower from me-- and which one dost thou know? |
45277 | Anxiously he asked her, feeling for her sadness, Are you sick at heart, or sick in your spirit? |
45277 | But only one took naught away, and know''st thou, sister, who? |
45277 | Comes tripping by a village lass: Her skirts are wet with dew, Has she been raking the moistened grass? |
45277 | Could I return and own the scaith I thole frae Ythanside, Would her mild eye bend lythe on me Ance mair on Ythanside? |
45277 | Didst love the beating of thy heart, There close beneath thy bodice, Even though''t were not thy Sunday bodice? |
45277 | Didst thou love thy girdle for its many pearls, The river and the wood, because they lie So close behind the village? |
45277 | Do you choose that I cut off your head? |
45277 | Do you regret the kindly glass, That you give me as I pass? |
45277 | He answers,"I? |
45277 | Hold up your head, up, Shanghai, Shanks, Do n''t shake your knees and blink so, It is no time to dodge the act; Brave comrades, do n''t you think so? |
45277 | How are you, boys? |
45277 | Hunting are you going? |
45277 | I''m dootfu''o''Jeanie; is na she waesome like? |
45277 | In such surroundings, what was the character and career of Thom himself? |
45277 | Is he then happy, The shepherd you know? |
45277 | Is it a heavenly angel, or siren of the sea?" |
45277 | Is it the angels in the sky, Or magic sirens in the sea?" |
45277 | Is not the war-- this_ murder_--for The negro,_ nolens volens?_ For every three now killed of ye There''s just a negro stolen. |
45277 | Is such a woman from God''s hand? |
45277 | Know ye why I am weary, so very weary, That if the grave should say to me,"Lie down Here in my lap and rest"I would bless the grave? |
45277 | Maun I speak to the Provost or honest Town Council? |
45277 | O, wherefore should I brush my head? |
45277 | Oh, love, do you remember, When we lay all night alone, Beneath the ash in the winter- storm, When the oak- wood round did groan? |
45277 | Or do you choose to watch until the morning, And serve as a torch to seven wassailers?" |
45277 | Or the writers, or lawyers, or doctors? |
45277 | Or was it a gleam o''that fause moon fa''in On my poor misguided ee? |
45277 | Or with your silky locks that I sweep the house? |
45277 | Or would she crush my lowly love Beneath a brow o''pride? |
45277 | Poor marine, from whence come you? |
45277 | Pray tell me, Nanon, Where does this road go? |
45277 | Pray tell me, Nanon, Who made you so smart? |
45277 | Said the Sultan,"How came this? |
45277 | Say, brothers, will you meet us, Say, brothers, will you meet us, Say, brothers, will you meet us, As we go marching on? |
45277 | Should I be bound, that may go free? |
45277 | Should I love them that love not me? |
45277 | Since I have gone to sleep?" |
45277 | Sprague to show us the way, And"How many miles to the Junction?" |
45277 | Sprague to show us the way, And"How many miles to the Junction?" |
45277 | Spread thy wing, Scald- Neck, Says she, and screams she; Seest thou the Sea- Kings Borne on the gannet- bath, Going to garner Every bird''s eyrie? |
45277 | The birds will ask me,"To whom singest thou?" |
45277 | The moon look down and ask,"Whom rockest thou?" |
45277 | The mournful bells are ringing; for whose death do they knell? |
45277 | The nightingale then asked him, being a curious gossip, There are many houses at Kerlosquet, to which one are you going? |
45277 | The twelvemonth and a day being up, The dead began to speak:"O, who sits weeping on my grave And will not let me sleep?" |
45277 | Then do I ask of Earth"Is the sleep sweet indeed That in thy lap we sleep?" |
45277 | Then he heareth the lovers laughing pass, And the soldier asks once more:"Are these not the voices of them that love, That love and remember me?" |
45277 | Thy father cometh home, leave the door open-- Loved''st thou strawberries and raspberries, Because they are as red as maidens''lips? |
45277 | To honest life''s relief, How can such seed arise?" |
45277 | Tout mal chaussé, tout mal vetu, Pauvre marin du reviens tu? |
45277 | Want a weapon? |
45277 | Want a weapon? |
45277 | Was it her deed? |
45277 | Was yon a waft o''her wee white han''Wi''a warnin''"wheest"to me? |
45277 | Wha''ll buy my caller herrin''? |
45277 | Wha''ll buy my caller herrin''? |
45277 | Wha''ll buy my caller herrin''? |
45277 | Wha''ll buy my caller herrin''? |
45277 | Wha''ll buy my caller herrin''? |
45277 | Whack row de dow, How are you, Secesh? |
45277 | Whack row de dow, How are you, old Port Royal? |
45277 | What didst thou, mother, when thou wert a maiden?-- I was young.-- Didst thou, like me, hark to the moon''s soft footfalls, Across the sky? |
45277 | What gars its restless wand''ring wish Seek aye to Ythanside, An''hover round yon fairy bush That spreads o''er Ythanside? |
45277 | What hangs upon the breeze? |
45277 | What is there, Nanon, In these valleys green? |
45277 | What looms upon the starboard bow? |
45277 | What matter if you''re_ sandwiched_ in A host of sable fellows, Well flavored men, your kith and kin, As Abe and Sumner tell us? |
45277 | What sweet song do you hear? |
45277 | What troubles you, my fair hostess? |
45277 | What troubles you, my fair hostess? |
45277 | What''s that? |
45277 | When has the stock of Plymouth rock Been melted to compunction? |
45277 | Where is the half you have kept so dear? |
45277 | While thus he spoke in anguish, there came his mother dear,"My darling son, what ails you, why is your soul in fear?" |
45277 | Who gives you enough of gold To pay the heavy ransom''s meed?" |
45277 | Who struck this deadly blow?" |
45277 | Why did you so?" |
45277 | Why does your brand sae drap wi''bluid, And why sae sad gang yee, O?" |
45277 | Why weepest thou, girl?" |
45277 | Will they a''return to their ain dear glen? |
45277 | Will they a''return, our Hieland men? |
45277 | Wilt thou then answer in her stead, and say,"What do the birds, O mother, Since I have gone to sleep? |
45277 | Wind, Wind, thou art sad, art thou kind? |
45277 | With what point device was he bedight?" |
45277 | Would you have me think Of heat you''re afraid? |
45277 | You love him, Nanon, As I adore you? |
45277 | why do n''t you pull? |
33537 | A lifetime almost? |
33537 | Ah, yes, yes, that''s what we want to get at-- who is that mother? 33537 And your name is-- er?" |
33537 | Are you going on? |
33537 | Are you mad, girl? |
33537 | But what are you going to do at night? |
33537 | But what can I do for a horse? |
33537 | But where, in the name of Heaven, did you get your information? |
33537 | But,I objected,"he had been dead many hours before the song came to me?" |
33537 | But,cried Mr. Davenport,"where''s-- w- who''s_ Emilia_?" |
33537 | But_ of_ what? |
33537 | Can you go on there? |
33537 | Can you not see, Father,he said,"these lines are spoken in a frenzy? |
33537 | Could I do those two lines? |
33537 | Cut out? |
33537 | D- d- don''t you know me? |
33537 | Did she now? |
33537 | Die? 33537 Do I think so?" |
33537 | Do I wish it? |
33537 | Do you hear? |
33537 | Do you think so? |
33537 | Do you think so? |
33537 | For me? |
33537 | I to play that child? 33537 If Miss Cushman is not a murderess, pray how can she act_ Lady Macbeth_--who is?" |
33537 | If you were to live with your brother, might not that help to keep you strong? |
33537 | Leading business here? |
33537 | Mother,I called, the door being open between our rooms,"Mother, did you hear me singing just now?" |
33537 | Mother,said I,"is there anything in that paper that will interest me?" |
33537 | Mr. Barrett,I asked,"do you wish me to play_ Marie_ now?" |
33537 | Mr. Gould,he cried( my heart gave a jump at the name; to save my life I could not help glancing back at them),"how dare you pass the stage- door? |
33537 | No benefit for our poor? 33537 No,"she said;"were you?" |
33537 | No? 33537 No?" |
33537 | Now can you tell me who that is a miniature of? |
33537 | Oh,I cried,"can you tell me what it was I sang?" |
33537 | Oh,laughed the first,"I see, you mean that Mrs. Ellsler will claim the leading parts as long as she lives? |
33537 | Paid him? |
33537 | Perhaps you''d have some of the men carry knives,sneered Cazauran,"and then she could be stabbed?" |
33537 | Ready, Miss Morris? |
33537 | Suit the action to the word? |
33537 | Tell me,he went on,"have you ever been annoyed by anyone?" |
33537 | That''s it,he said,"that''s whom it means; but are you sure the word''queen''belongs right there?" |
33537 | The piano? |
33537 | The third what? |
33537 | Then,I asked,"why not extreme emotion acting upon a weak heart?" |
33537 | Three years? 33537 Well,"he smiled,"''just Clara,''have you formed any idea of this_ Marie''s_ character?" |
33537 | Well,she exclaimed, a bit impatiently,"what do you_ want_ to do? |
33537 | What are you going to wear, Miss Morris? |
33537 | What do you mean? |
33537 | What in the world are you thinking of, Miss Clara? |
33537 | What is it? |
33537 | What is it? |
33537 | What is it? |
33537 | What''s that got to do with it? |
33537 | What''s the matter with you? |
33537 | What,I asked, dully,"what is a message?" |
33537 | What? |
33537 | What? |
33537 | Who are you? |
33537 | Who gave it to you? |
33537 | Who is she-- have you seen her-- the wonderful Columbus ballet- girl, who wins tears with tears, real ones, too? |
33537 | Who? |
33537 | Why, what on earth has Clara done? |
33537 | Yes, sir? |
33537 | Yes,I broke in impatiently, and turning to her a pair of reproachful, tear- filled eyes,"yes, but why? |
33537 | You do n''t send your handkerchiefs to the wash, do you? |
33537 | You think her a great, great way from you? |
33537 | You wo n''t forget your promise about doubling the salary? |
33537 | _ Alixe?_I cried. |
33537 | _ Will_ you speak louder? |
33537 | ''er, Miss Morris, what are you going to do there as the curtain falls? |
33537 | ( Yes, what the blankety, blankety, blanknation does bring you here, crummie girl?) |
33537 | A big boy on the corner yelled after me:"S- a- a- y, Sis, where''s the fire?" |
33537 | A cold terror seized upon me-- a terror of what, the public? |
33537 | A governess in a rich purple? |
33537 | A trick? |
33537 | Act it, in cold blood, there, in the gray, lifeless daylight? |
33537 | After a little silence, he said:"You can not sanction this scene, then, Father?" |
33537 | Again I find:"Undoubtedly you are the strongest, the most original, and the youngest leading lady in the profession-- but why take any risk? |
33537 | Again he repeated the words, adding, impatiently:"I ca n''t place that silver foot-- the bow, the lyre, yes; but the foot? |
33537 | And as I resumed my run I said to myself:"What is it that has tried so hard to tell me-- to warn me? |
33537 | And in my own exaggerated, impatient words I found my first hint--"why_ not_ begin to die in the first act?" |
33537 | And swiftly I made answer:"A writing- desk; why?" |
33537 | And those children-- were they not charming? |
33537 | And when he saw my bewilderment, he added:"Do n''t you see? |
33537 | And while I ran away to change, he called after me:"Say,''Jones''s Baby''is n''t on to- night, is it?" |
33537 | And why should I not make a favorable impression? |
33537 | And why should Mr. Daly wish to see me privately? |
33537 | And wigs? |
33537 | Are you afraid even to be seen listening to me?" |
33537 | As I obediently returned to my room, I said, in a troubled voice:"What do you suppose it means, mother?" |
33537 | As I raised my head from kissing my mother a Happy New Year, I remarked:"The streets are in a terrible condition for a great fire-- are they not?" |
33537 | As I signed my name on the salary list I hesitated perceptibly and he laughingly said:"Do n''t you know your own name?" |
33537 | As Mr. Couldock was heard approaching that morning, his daughter quickly whispered to Mrs. Ellsler:"Ask pa how he liked California?" |
33537 | As he said laughingly to a friend, at the end of the first season:"Good work, eh? |
33537 | Baby, are you hurt?" |
33537 | Bad? |
33537 | Between the acts he said to me:"Have you any opinion of_ Marie_, Miss er-- er?" |
33537 | But I only thought of that woman of the dim future, who was to conquer the public-- who was she? |
33537 | But another said, quietly:"Just get a glass of water for her, she has a touch of hysteria-- I wonder who caused it?" |
33537 | But did I not say they were love- birds? |
33537 | But if I had not"_ one_ two threed"in Cincinnati on that grinning old piano, where would the organ- scene have been? |
33537 | But there, just as I start to speak of my third season, I seem to look into a pair of big, mild eyes that say:"Can it be that you mean to pass me by? |
33537 | But what then was to be done for the benefit? |
33537 | But, Clara, you remember that time when money could have saved her? |
33537 | But, oh, what was it that he sang? |
33537 | But-- Mr. Daly? |
33537 | CHAPTER TWENTY- SEVENTH I play"Marie"to Oblige-- Mr. Barrett''s Remarkable Call-- Did I Receive a Message from the Dying or the Dead? |
33537 | Ca n''t you see?" |
33537 | Can I ever forget the thrill I felt when I received my first thousand dollars? |
33537 | Can you keep quiet about this part?" |
33537 | Cold, hard, dictatorial, superior? |
33537 | Could I? |
33537 | Could he be going to ask me to read the part over to him? |
33537 | Daly?" |
33537 | Daly?" |
33537 | Dear Mr. Daly do n''t you see, I should ruin the play?" |
33537 | Did he know then how near Death was to him? |
33537 | Did you never run? |
33537 | Do n''t you know Murdoch is a gentleman?" |
33537 | Do you forget that''twas I who turned the great sensation scene of a play into a side- splitting farce?" |
33537 | Do you suppose you could tie the shoe of Eliza Logan, one of the greatest actresses that ever lived-- but yet not good enough for New York? |
33537 | Early during that first week my friend, John Norton, said to me:"Have you spoken to Mr. Daly about your salary yet?" |
33537 | Everything there pretended to be something else, and at last I said solemnly to Blanche:"Is everything only make- believe in a theatre?" |
33537 | Fisk?" |
33537 | Flowers? |
33537 | Good work, eh? |
33537 | Had I received any note, any message beforehand? |
33537 | Had she met with an accident? |
33537 | Had we any common acquaintance? |
33537 | Hattie opened the door, and then I heard her exclaiming:"Why-- why-- what?" |
33537 | Hattie stammered:"A man, he lied though, said that Wilkes Booth-- but he did lie-- didn''t he?" |
33537 | Have they blown you up for your didoes to- night? |
33537 | Have you been telling that to people?" |
33537 | Have you thought yet how to deliver it?" |
33537 | He added,"About your home, say?" |
33537 | He almost gasped the words:"What does this mean, sir?" |
33537 | He glared angrily at me, and began:"Since when have the ladies of the ballet taken to criticising the work of the stars?" |
33537 | He held the picture of a group of statuary up to me:"This is you on the right; it''s not so dreadful, now, is it?" |
33537 | He laughed a little and nudged his Ellen, then went on:"I mean-- who are your people?" |
33537 | He laughed first, then pulled up sharply, saying:"Perhaps you did not notice that your comment contained a criticism of my judgment, Miss Morris? |
33537 | He laughed rather sheepishly, and said:"Well, you are not stupid, if you are innocent,"then asked:"Are you a stranger here?" |
33537 | He leaned forward, asking, eagerly:"Do you mean that?" |
33537 | He looked up quickly, for I stood all the time, and asked:"What''s that, do n''t speak to you? |
33537 | He make me to ask you right away, very quick, can you play that part of_ Anne_?" |
33537 | He neither bowed nor smiled, but crossly asked:"Is Miss Morris here?" |
33537 | He passed his long, thin fingers wearily across his closed eyes several times, then, as he opened them, he asked, sharply:"Can you obey orders?" |
33537 | He sank down, he wiped his brow, he looked almost stupidly at me, then, very faintly, he said:"You-- haven''t-- heard-- anything?" |
33537 | He smiled indulgently, and said:"It seems so funny-- does it? |
33537 | He stood at the door as I came down- stairs, and as soon as I reached him he asked, sharply:"Do you go home alone of nights?" |
33537 | He stopped, stepped in front of me and asked:"What do you most wish for?" |
33537 | He took my hand and asked:"Miss Morris, have you been putting these slights on me by order?" |
33537 | He used to hail me with:"Where''s my crummie girl? |
33537 | He was down in the orchestra speaking to the leader when I came to the end of the act, and the words:"The mother whom I have insulted? |
33537 | He was furious, he stamped his feet, he turned to the manager:"What''s all this infernal nonsense? |
33537 | He wasted no time over greetings or formalities, but curtly asked:"Can you play_ Anne Sylvester_?" |
33537 | Hot? |
33537 | How about Julia Dean, too? |
33537 | How shall I call that strange influence that dumbly tries to warn, to prepare? |
33537 | How the devil am I to compose that march they want with this room still as the dead? |
33537 | How, I wondered, could they do it? |
33537 | I almost ran in my anxiety to obey orders; my mind was in a state of happy confusion-- what could it all mean? |
33537 | I also apologized, and added:"If you please, sir, does this belong to you? |
33537 | I answered, interrogatively, feeling very hot and uncomfortable,"have I too much on?" |
33537 | I asked it:"Of what am I to die?" |
33537 | I believed myself alone, and when the memory- haunted woman roared out:"Yet, who would have thought the old man to have had so much_ blood_ in him?" |
33537 | I could never afford to waste all that time; but what could I do? |
33537 | I cried,"but you know how very forward_ Juliet_ is in speech? |
33537 | I cried,"do you mean fire?" |
33537 | I exclaimed,"please, do n''t you think that would be rather melodramatic? |
33537 | I had felt myself uncomfortable before, but now? |
33537 | I heard, or thought I heard, the words:"The first shall be last and the last shall be first,"and I called from my bed:"Did you speak to me, mother?" |
33537 | I interrupted,"you are going to cut something out?" |
33537 | I laughed aloud, Bertie barked excitedly, I faced about and went forward almost gayly to meet-- what? |
33537 | I look like a sprinter, do n''t I? |
33537 | I persisted;"what kills me? |
33537 | I question him,''Did you rehearse that business to- day, John?'' |
33537 | I remarked,_ sotto voce_:"Did you expect to find ink in him?" |
33537 | I said, egged on by one of those imps who hover at the elbow of just such women as I am,"ca n''t you see he is a minister''s son? |
33537 | I see-- it''s that--''er--_Aline?__ Justine?_ No, no! |
33537 | I see-- it''s that--''er--_Aline?__ Justine?_ No, no! |
33537 | I suffered most when I had to play some lady of quality, for what, in heaven''s name, had I to dress a lady in? |
33537 | I suppose you were doing it to aggravate me, though?" |
33537 | I suppose, of course, so famous an actress as yourself can faint at command, if need be? |
33537 | I thought you''d want her spoken of most particularly?" |
33537 | I thought,"he is n''t going to do it all over again-- out here, is he?" |
33537 | I told him I wanted a dreadful scar-- then I wanted to veil it always; and he broke in with,"Then why have the scar, if it is to be veiled?" |
33537 | I was surprised, and rather quickly answered:"Well, have I treated him as if he were not a gentleman?" |
33537 | I wonder what the_ danseuse_ of to- day would think of the costume worn by her sister of the"sixties"? |
33537 | I wondered day and night, could I act well enough to please New York? |
33537 | I''m sorry you have to bear the brunt alone, but you will be brave, wo n''t you?" |
33537 | If I was original and strong in the West, why should I wait ten years before venturing into the East? |
33537 | If she could stand while receiving that awful shock about her mother''s shame she would hardly fall afterward, from mere horror of her own thoughts?" |
33537 | In a few moments the call- boy came back again:"Are you ready? |
33537 | In conversation with one of the ladies, I remarked:"As a Western woman, I suppose I have various expressions to unlearn?" |
33537 | In darkness or in light did it ever miss that exact spot? |
33537 | In referring to the article at the theatre one evening, he said, in reproachful tones:"Now was n''t that a truly stupid lie?" |
33537 | Interrupt me? |
33537 | Is not that wail chilling? |
33537 | It chilled me, all my high spirits flattened down suddenly; I turned, and said:"Did_ you_ see, mother?" |
33537 | It seems like taking a mean advantage of a tender heart, I know-- what Bret Harte would call"playing it low down"on it; but what else could I do? |
33537 | It was well Mr. Kean was there to hold it down; but as a troubled voice from within said:"I''m caught somehow-- don''t you see, Charles?" |
33537 | John, are you such a fool you do n''t understand her commercial value? |
33537 | Looking utterly bewildered, he exclaimed:"Why, for God''s sake, Effie, you are not going on for_ Desdemona_, are you?" |
33537 | Lovers? |
33537 | M._"What?" |
33537 | Miles, surprisedly, said:"Why, you have ridden with me twice this week without a sign of fear?" |
33537 | Miss St. Clair groaned, Mr. Barras snuffled loudly, and stammered:"W-- what did you expect, if the others ca n''t study it, how can she?" |
33537 | More sharply, she asked:"Do you hear?--what are you going to do when the theatre closes?" |
33537 | Mother called out presently:"Do you know what time it is? |
33537 | Mr. Daly glanced up, and said, sharply:"What''s that? |
33537 | Mr. Daly''s fingers trembled like aspen leaves, his eyes dilated to perfect blackness, and almost he whispered the words:"Well, child-- well?" |
33537 | Mr. Ellsler finally burst open the door, and there stood_ Louis XI._ in his under- garments, and his clothing-- where? |
33537 | Mr. Navoni was clattering down- stairs and pounding on our door:"What does this mean? |
33537 | Mr. Palmer said:"Nonsense, Cazauran; purple is not appropriate;"and then,"How would blue-- dark blue or brown do?" |
33537 | Mrs. Ellsler, in answer to that rude question, laughed, and said:"Well, I believe the leading woman generally does play_ Desdemona_?" |
33537 | Mrs. Kean asked:"Were both of your parents actors, child?" |
33537 | My bird, what brings you here? |
33537 | My heart sank like lead-- was even the comedy part to be taken from me? |
33537 | My heart seemed to suffocate me-- I thought, stupidly,"Why do n''t I pray?" |
33537 | Next night I did not play at all, but came to look on, and being invited to the dressing- room, Mr. Kean suddenly asked me:"Who are you, child?" |
33537 | No further signal came, what should I do? |
33537 | No matter how small your charge, the question will be, where have you taught? |
33537 | Not hunger, not cold, but the very dust and ashes of life? |
33537 | Now how did I know you were crying?" |
33537 | Now what can_ Miss Multon_ die from? |
33537 | Now you and I will mind the P''s and Q''s of this great city, wo n''t we, my dear? |
33537 | Now you take some money-- you_ have_ some money saved, I suppose?" |
33537 | Now, are you going to tell the people all about when you received it?" |
33537 | Now, how are you going to say it?" |
33537 | Of what? |
33537 | Oh, Lord, who has a small grammar about them? |
33537 | Oh, could I? |
33537 | Oh, well might he ask"How now?" |
33537 | Oh, what has happened to them?" |
33537 | Oh, what shall I do?" |
33537 | On that first night he had said:"Good Lord, Will, what is that girl doing out here in the West? |
33537 | One day he said to me:"Say, you ai n''t cooking up a huge joke on these gas- balloons, are you, Clara? |
33537 | One evening I said:"Mr. Fisk, I''m afraid you have cast too much bread upon the waters; it''s said to be very fattening food when it returns?" |
33537 | Perhaps you have the advantage of them in being all- beautiful within?" |
33537 | Poor? |
33537 | Presently the"old- man"turned and, noticing my eagerness, laughingly said:"Well, what is it, Clara? |
33537 | Run? |
33537 | Salary? |
33537 | Seymour?" |
33537 | Shall I speak for you?" |
33537 | She keeps good time, eh, does n''t she? |
33537 | She looked up hastily:"Drink your coffee, and I''ll----""Is there?" |
33537 | She touched my forehead, asking,"Are you ill? |
33537 | Shook''s bass voice was heard for the first time, as he asked, conclusively:"Whom can we get for_ Armand_ on such short notice?" |
33537 | Should I do this, should I do that? |
33537 | Some women asked, anxiously:"Will that girl cry to- night, do you think?" |
33537 | Such notices as were given of the performance, and what was particularly dwelt upon, think you? |
33537 | Tell her it is urgent-- you understand? |
33537 | Tell me, little woman-- don''t be afraid-- have you been obeying an order?" |
33537 | That young girl, then, is my sister-- the sister whose happiness I have stolen? |
33537 | The ancient fancy- work, perhaps? |
33537 | The curtain fell, and-- why, what, in the name of heaven, was happening to me? |
33537 | The fan forgotten on the mantel- piece? |
33537 | The father said:"Who will trust so young a girl to instruct them? |
33537 | The friend said:"Why, I''m surprised-- I thought Miss Morris suffered from her spine?" |
33537 | The gentleman removed his hat, and coming to the centre of the room held out his hand, saying:"Miss Morris-- you_ are_ Miss Morris?" |
33537 | The little boots and slippers-- you remember Sallie''s instep? |
33537 | The star seemed particularly gentle-- he removed his coat leisurely and said:"You played_ Salanio_ last night?" |
33537 | Then Hank turned to me and asked, suspiciously:"Has he been filling you full of P''s and Q''s?" |
33537 | Then I cheerfully remarked:"I''m looking for Mr. Daly; can you tell me where I am likely to find him?" |
33537 | There was applause-- of course, was not Miss St. Clair there? |
33537 | There was no stove yet, they had not been burned; where then were they? |
33537 | They were:"Yes, as far as theft is concerned, they are safe enough, but in case of fire? |
33537 | This is the end of me, is n''t it? |
33537 | This one had already been refused, when Mr. Roberts suddenly exclaimed:"Who was it made those announcements last night? |
33537 | Two women came in, one said:"Why, what on earth''s the matter? |
33537 | Uncle Dick, behind me, said:"Would you like me to d----n poor Brad''s bones for you, Clara? |
33537 | Unspeakably wounded, I asked, timidly:"But if I work hard and learn to act well, ca n''t I hold a position as well as anyone else?" |
33537 | Very doubtfully, I remarked:"I suppose a smelling- bottle would not be important enough to cross the room for?" |
33537 | Was I not grateful? |
33537 | Was I not happy? |
33537 | Was she ill? |
33537 | Well, Crummy, how are you?" |
33537 | Well, how long have you been at it, Ogden?" |
33537 | Well, now, who can deny that she did all these things? |
33537 | Well, will you let me give you a bit of advice, Ogden?" |
33537 | Well, will you show me the way to Dovey''s by eleven to- morrow?" |
33537 | Well, you do n''t find_ them_ made up, do you? |
33537 | Were they not gorgeous( a lady star had given them to her)? |
33537 | Were you not welcomed----"I broke his speech with laughter, but he would not smile:"Were you not properly treated? |
33537 | What could this mean? |
33537 | What could_ you_ do to make yourself cry seven times a week, for nine or ten months a year? |
33537 | What do you do at the fall of the curtain?" |
33537 | What does it mean? |
33537 | What had he said to me-- word for word, what had he said? |
33537 | What in---- are you scratching her back for?" |
33537 | What need you care, you pleased the audience?" |
33537 | What should_ you_ think about it, girls?" |
33537 | What was it that was trying dumbly to warn her? |
33537 | What was the matter with me, if you please, mum?" |
33537 | What wife? |
33537 | What will Mr. Booth think has become of me, and what, in heaven''s name, do you think of me?" |
33537 | What''s on to- morrow night? |
33537 | What-- is-- there-- left-- for-- me to live for?" |
33537 | What-- what do you call it_ sheol_? |
33537 | What? |
33537 | When anyone praised some wife, he would look up and say:"Wife-- whose wife? |
33537 | When can Lucy get here?" |
33537 | When it strikes does not the rocker always find your ankle- joint? |
33537 | When my husband mournfully asked if"There was not even one hot biscuit to be had?" |
33537 | Where did the money come from that paid for such finery?" |
33537 | Where, I thought, was the manager all this time? |
33537 | Who on earth is she, anyway?" |
33537 | Who shall draw a line and say: here genius ends and madness begins? |
33537 | Who was lacking in courtesy?" |
33537 | Who was the woman who inspired great Shakespeare''s one unnatural scene? |
33537 | Why else did the people pack her houses season after season? |
33537 | Why not let me have all the help my gown can give me? |
33537 | Why, it''s just a little toy play- house-- is it not?" |
33537 | Why, what''s the matter with you? |
33537 | Will you come and be a regular member of the company for the season that begins in September next?" |
33537 | Will you help me?" |
33537 | Will you study Greek or the Rogue''s Vocabulary? |
33537 | With a regretful sigh he went on:"I suppose you know you are a strong attraction?" |
33537 | With trembling hands I clutched my tarlatan skirts and peering down at my tights, I groaned:"Are they twisted, or run down, or what?" |
33537 | With wonderful self- control he asked, as the clothing was being cut from his stricken body:"Is this the end of me; am I going to die, doctor?" |
33537 | Would he write to one or two managers for me, or give me a line of introduction to them? |
33537 | Would she do for a model? |
33537 | Would the other two be as effective? |
33537 | Yes, I know you do n''t need it-- but you''re in love, do n''t you see? |
33537 | You do n''t expect to shed real tears, do you?" |
33537 | You do n''t look for brains in a man''s legs, do you? |
33537 | You doubt that? |
33537 | You know those confounded crooked ones, with three infernal crinkles in the middle to keep them from falling out of the hair? |
33537 | You said:''What''s the matter-- are you nervous?'' |
33537 | You shall have one of my prettiest dresses for the court scene, and I guess you have a white muslin of your own for the garden scene, have not you?" |
33537 | You speak of the matter, and your family exclaim:"What on earth ever brought him to your mind?" |
33537 | You think I exaggerate the matter? |
33537 | You took my hand and, stroking it, gently said,''Is n''t it awful?'' |
33537 | You want me to go on for that? |
33537 | _ Claudine?_ that''s the name of the maid. |
33537 | _ now_ what? |
33537 | a farce yet? |
33537 | afraid to disturb me? |
33537 | and I cried out, aghast:"Purple? |
33537 | and the Asylum needs help so badly!--''er-- a''frenzy''you said, my son? |
33537 | and the pretty warming of one foot? |
33537 | bless my soul, what''s the matter? |
33537 | could such things happen to a star? |
33537 | cried_ Romeo_:"How now, Balthazar?" |
33537 | did I not hold a membership in the library, and were we not both lightning- quick readers? |
33537 | did you see that ascent of stool, chair, and table? |
33537 | do n''t you see that-- that air was his message to you? |
33537 | do n''t you see your words contradict each other?" |
33537 | eh? |
33537 | he answered,"you saw that, did you? |
33537 | he answers:''No, I did n''t rehearse it, it just came to me in the scene, and I could n''t help doing it; but it went all right, did n''t it?'' |
33537 | he asked, with wide- open, wondering eyes,"you will go back to who?" |
33537 | he cried;"where are your splendid spirits? |
33537 | he exclaimed,"Cushman not play_ Lady Macbeth_--for heaven''s sake, why not?" |
33537 | he said,"will you do as I tell you?" |
33537 | how? |
33537 | must it be like that?" |
33537 | next turned on his heel, and called:"Everybody ready for the first act? |
33537 | said I to myself,"what are they gazing at-- they look fairly frightened?" |
33537 | said the policeman, and, sure enough, suddenly the dread word"theatre"was tossed into the air, and everyone was still in a moment, waiting for-- what? |
33537 | say, answer up, now, before it gets hold of you-- what''s your name?" |
33537 | she asked, and I answered with another question:"Mary, were you ever in a great fire?" |
33537 | she cried,"did n''t you see her flaunting herself around the stage last night in silks and laces no honest girl could own? |
33537 | the color of royalty, of pomp, of power? |
33537 | the reins were in the hands of the public, and it would drive me-- where? |
33537 | then, delightedly:"Yes-- yes, you''re quite right, it_ is_ a neat thing-- cut full at the knee, eh? |
33537 | this-- this is not nervousness, is it?" |
33537 | was I to lose my treat, just for lack of a little legal knowledge? |
33537 | well, what of it? |
33537 | what are you thinking of? |
33537 | what did you do it for? |
33537 | what was it?" |
33537 | what''s your name? |
33537 | who cared whether they were becoming or not? |
33537 | who ever saw, who would have wished to see"rare old Bill"in a good humor? |
33537 | whose future I have shattered? |
33537 | why do ye no pull down yer kilties, instead o''kickin''there? |
33537 | why venture into New York, where you may fail? |
33537 | why_ do n''t_ I die?" |
33537 | with a circle of grinning, sardonic faces, ready to be vastly amused over my efforts? |
33537 | would I dare to risk so much-- to spend all my little savings toward the summer vacation for this trip that might end disastrously after all? |
33537 | yer no decent-- do you ken?" |
33537 | you all know whom I mean-- the-- the actor with the_ hungry eyes_?" |
33537 | you do n''t mean_ my_ theatre, do you?" |
33537 | you have been absent and heavy all morning-- what''s the matter?" |
33537 | you,_ you_ have to go on in a farce after playing Shakespeare''s_ Emilia_ with E. L. Davenport? |
4253 | Art thou a saviour? 4253 Bless us,"cried the Mayor,"what''s that?" |
4253 | Is one day more so long to wait? 4253 One? |
4253 | Paid by the world, what dost thou owe Me? |
4253 | What if we break from the Arno bowers, And try if Petraja, cool and green, Cure last night''s fault with this morning''s flowers? |
4253 | Your heart''s queen, you dethrone her? 4253 ''Tis something, nay''tis much: but then, Have you yourself what''s best for men? 4253 --And when that''s told me, what''s remaining? 4253 --I say, should you be such a curmudgeon, If she clung to the perch, as to take it in dudgeon? 4253 --Saith, he knoweth but one thing-- what he knows? 4253 --Saith, it no more means what it proclaims, Than a damsel''s threat to her wanton bird? 4253 100 Say, hast thou lied? |
4253 | 100 Travels Waring East away? |
4253 | 100 Was it not great? |
4253 | 120 XXI Our elder boy has got the clear Great brow; tho''when his brother''s black Full eye shows scorn, it... Gismond here? |
4253 | 180 XXXI What in the midst lay but the Tower itself? |
4253 | 20 Thither our path lies; wind we up the heights: Wait ye the warning? |
4253 | 20 VI"Would ye retrieve the one? |
4253 | 210 You saw Waring? |
4253 | 230 A pilot for you to Triest? |
4253 | 40 Might she have loved me? |
4253 | 40 Or heave his chest, which a band goes round? |
4253 | 40 XI And I,--what I seem to my friend, you see: What I soon shall seem to his love, you guess: What I seem to myself, do you ask of me? |
4253 | 60 VII When sudden... how think ye, the end? |
4253 | 60 XI I? |
4253 | 70 But what, or where? |
4253 | 70 II Say again, what we are? |
4253 | 880 What''s a man''s age? |
4253 | A LIGHT WOMAN I So far as our story approaches the end, Which do you pity the most of us three? |
4253 | Ages ago, a lady there, At the farthest window facing the East Asked,"Who rides by with the royal air?" |
4253 | And have you brought my tercel back? |
4253 | And he bade them fetch Some subtle moulder of brazen shapes--"Can the soul, the will, die out of a man 200 Ere his body find the grave that gapes? |
4253 | And here we are riding, she and I. V Fail I alone, in words and deeds? |
4253 | And when old poets had said their say of it, 230 How taught old painters in their pictures? |
4253 | Are you-- poor, sick, old ere your time-- Nearer one whit your own sublime Than we who never have turned a rhyme? |
4253 | But what? |
4253 | But when the heart suffers a blow, Will the pain pass so soon, do you know?" |
4253 | But who goes gleaning Hedgeside chance- glades, while full- sheaved Stand cornfields by him? |
4253 | Did I say"without friend"? |
4253 | Did I say, all? |
4253 | Did not he magnify the mind, show clear Just what it all meant? |
4253 | Didst ever behold so lithe a chine? |
4253 | Dip your arm o''er the boat- side, elbow- deep, As I do: thus: were death so unlike sleep, Caught this way? |
4253 | Do my fingers dip In a flame which again they throw On the cheek that breaks a- glow? |
4253 | Do you see? |
4253 | Earth being so good, would heaven seem best? |
4253 | Feed, should not he, to heart''s content? |
4253 | Fortù, shall we sail there together And see from the sides 210 Quite new rocks show their faces, new haunts Where the siren abides? |
4253 | Gay he rode, with a friend as gay, Till he threw his head back--"Who is she?" |
4253 | Have you turned two pages? |
4253 | He said,"What''s time? |
4253 | He ventured neck or nothing- heaven''s success Found, or earth''s failure: 110"Wilt thou trust death or not?" |
4253 | Here''s the top- peak; the multitude below Live, for they can, there: This man decided not to Live but Know-- Bury this man there? |
4253 | How can he curse, if his mouth is gagged? |
4253 | I What are we two? |
4253 | I What if the Three should catch at last Thy serenader? |
4253 | I admonished myself,"Is one mocked by an elf, Is one baffled by toad or by rat? |
4253 | I am able yet All I want, to get By a method as strange as new: Dare I trust the same to you? |
4253 | I never was in love; and since Charles proved false, what shall now convince My inmost heart I have a friend? |
4253 | I said,"Is it blessing, is it banning, Do they applaud you or burlesque you-- Those hands and fingers with no flesh on?" |
4253 | II I struck him, he grovelled of course-- For, what was his force? |
4253 | II What else should he be set for, with his staff? |
4253 | III"Poor, who had plenty once, When gifts fell thick as rain: 10 But they give us nought, for the nonce, And now should we give again?" |
4253 | IX And she,--she lies in my hand as tame As a pear late basking over a wall; Just a touch to try and off it came;''Tis mine,--can I let it fall? |
4253 | IX Who knows what''s fit for us? |
4253 | If she wished not the rash deed''s recalment? |
4253 | In Russia? |
4253 | In Vishnu- land what Avatar? |
4253 | In Vishnu- land what Avatar? |
4253 | In a minute can lovers exchange a word? |
4253 | In land- travel or sea- faring?) |
4253 | Insulted by a lazy ribald With idle pipe and vesture piebald? |
4253 | Is there a reason in metre? |
4253 | Job, that''s you? |
4253 | Just as he said this, what should hap At the chamber door but a gentle tap? |
4253 | Last--Ah, there, what should I wish? |
4253 | Leave friends in the lurch? |
4253 | Lie back; could thought of mine improve you? |
4253 | Long he lived nameless: how should spring take note Winter would follow? |
4253 | My dance is finished?" |
4253 | My friend, or the mistress of my friend With her wanton eyes, or me? |
4253 | Now you''ve his curtsey-- and what comes next? |
4253 | O how will your country show next week, When all the vine- boughs 130 Have been stripped of their foliage to pasture The mules and the cows? |
4253 | Oh Waring, what''s to really be? |
4253 | Oh sir, she smiled, no doubt, Whene''er I passed her; but who passed without Much the same smile? |
4253 | Oh, which were best, to roam or rest? |
4253 | Only one minute more to- night with me? |
4253 | Or fruit, tobacco and cigars? |
4253 | Or is the other fate in store, And art thou fitted to adore, To give thy wondrous self away, And take a stronger nature''s sway? |
4253 | Or kick with his feet, now his legs are bound? |
4253 | Or threat with his fist, since his arms are spliced? |
4253 | Or wriggle his neck, with a collar there? |
4253 | Row home? |
4253 | Shall she whose body I embraced A night long, queen it in the day? |
4253 | Shall we sail round and round them, close over The rocks, tho''unseen, That ruffle the grey glassy water To glorious green? |
4253 | She went out''mid hooting and laughter; Clement Marot stayed; I followed after, And asked, as a grace, what it all meant? |
4253 | Some Garrick, say, out shall not he 190 The heart of Hamlet''s mystery pluck? |
4253 | Some, honied of taste like your leman''s tongue: Some, bitter; for why? |
4253 | Telling aught but honest truth to? |
4253 | That God is good and the rest is breath; Why else is the same styled Sharon''s rose? |
4253 | That he wooed and won... how do you call her? |
4253 | The blow a glove gives is but weak: Does the mark yet discolour my cheek? |
4253 | The land''s lap or the water''s breast? |
4253 | They had answered,"And afterward, what else?" |
4253 | This foot once planted on the goal, This glory- garland round my soul, Could I descry such? |
4253 | This man said rather,"Actual life comes next? |
4253 | To- day is not wholly lost, beside, With its hope of my lady''s countenance:"For I ride-- what should I do but ride? |
4253 | Toad or rat vex the king? |
4253 | Truth or joke? |
4253 | Up stumps Solomon-- bustling too? |
4253 | VI What hand and brain went ever paired? |
4253 | VII What does it all mean, poet? |
4253 | VII Who maketh God''s menace an idle word? |
4253 | VIII Whom now is the bishop a- leering at? |
4253 | Was our outrage sore? |
4253 | Were it thrown in the road, would the case assist? |
4253 | What I answered? |
4253 | What act proved all its thought had been? |
4253 | What bad use was that engine for, that wheel, 140 Or brake, not wheel-- that harrow fit to reel Men''s bodies out like silk? |
4253 | What cometh to John of the wicked thumb? |
4253 | What heart alike conceived and dared? |
4253 | What made those holes and rents In the dock''s harsh swarth leaves, bruised as to baulk 70 All hope of greenness? |
4253 | What meant old poets by their strictures? |
4253 | What need to strive with a life awry? |
4253 | What penned them there, with all the plain to choose? |
4253 | What says the body when they spring Some monstrous torture- engine''s whole Strength on it? |
4253 | What should your chamber do? |
4253 | What the price is, who can say? |
4253 | What will but felt the fleshly screen? |
4253 | What wrong have I done to you? |
4253 | What''s he at, quotha? |
4253 | What''s left but-- all of me to take? |
4253 | What''s that poor Agnese doing Where they make the shutters fast? |
4253 | What, save to waylay with his lies, ensnare All travellers who might find him posted there, 10 And ask the road? |
4253 | What, unfilleted, Made alive, and spread Through the void with a rich outburst, Chestnut gold- interspersed? |
4253 | When a man''s busy, why, leisure Strikes him as wonderful pleasure: Faith, and at leisure once is he? |
4253 | Where had I been now if the worst befell? |
4253 | While these wait the trump of doom, How do their spirits pass, I wonder, Nights and days in the narrow room? |
4253 | Who knows but the world may end tonight? |
4253 | Who shall blame, When the slaves enslave, the oppressed ones o''er The oppressor triumph for evermore? |
4253 | Who were the strugglers, what war did they wage, Whose savage trample thus could pad the dank 130 Soil to a plash? |
4253 | Who''d stoop to blame This sort of trifling? |
4253 | Who''s alive? |
4253 | Who''s to blame 30 If your silence kept unbroken? |
4253 | Why not, then, have earlier spoken, Written, bustled? |
4253 | Why''s the Pucci Palace flaring Like a beacon to the blast? |
4253 | Why, all men strive and who succeeds? |
4253 | Will its record stay?" |
4253 | Will the night send a howlet or a bat? |
4253 | Will''t please you rise? |
4253 | Will''t please you sit and look at her? |
4253 | Would you stay me? |
4253 | XI"How? |
4253 | XIV Alive? |
4253 | XVI When the liquor''s out why clink the cannikin? |
4253 | XVIII"We withstood Christ then? |
4253 | XXXII Not see? |
4253 | XXXIII Not hear? |
4253 | You acquiesce, and shall I repine? |
4253 | You hope, because you''re old and obese, To find in the furry civic robe ease? |
4253 | You look away and your lip is curled? |
4253 | You of the virtue( we issue join) How strive you? |
4253 | You threaten us, fellow? |
4253 | You''d say, he despised our bluff old ways? |
4253 | at the last or first? |
4253 | cried the Mayor,"d''ye think I brook Being worse treated than a Cook? |
4253 | did not he throw on God,( He loves the burthen) God''s task to make the heavenly period Perfect the earthen? |
4253 | greedy beyond your years To handsel the bishop''s shaving- shears? |
4253 | have I drawn or no Life to that lip? |
4253 | must we row home? |
4253 | was the hair so first? |
4253 | what atones? |
4253 | what hangman hands 100 Pin to his breast a parchment? |
4253 | you say? |
40063 | And do you know what they are? |
40063 | And to whom? |
40063 | And what is the sea? |
40063 | And what would you do with it? 40063 And who are you?" |
40063 | And your hair is red-- and you are marked with the small- pox-- and what? 40063 Are ye out of your mind, my nurse, my nurse?" |
40063 | Are you tired of your good Black Auster? |
40063 | Axes? 40063 Can I do anything to serve you?" |
40063 | Can you ride? |
40063 | Captain Hedzoff? 40063 Dear Signor Lorenzo, who is this?" |
40063 | Did not thy gentle hand smooth my pillow, and bring me jelly and roast- chicken? |
40063 | Did you ever look at the stars? |
40063 | Didst thou not tend me in my sickness, when all forsook me? |
40063 | Dirty little girl, do n''t you think I am very pretty? |
40063 | Do you know that you are insulting me? |
40063 | Do you think,I said,"that our masters know how bad it is for us?" |
40063 | Do you? |
40063 | Doctor, you came to read the funeral service-- read the marriage service, will you? 40063 Does it begin with a Z?" |
40063 | Drive to the Duchess of B----''s,she said, and then after a pause,"Are you never going to get those horses''heads up, York? |
40063 | Have you decided what to do, John? |
40063 | Have you? |
40063 | His father, King Padella...."His father, King_ who_? |
40063 | How is that, parson? |
40063 | How is this? |
40063 | How? |
40063 | I suppose I had best warm both the young gentlemen''s beds, ma''am? |
40063 | Is it a trade? |
40063 | Is it metaphysics? |
40063 | Is it some language? |
40063 | Is it to be pistols, or swords, Captain? |
40063 | Is not this the hour of the class? 40063 Is that all you wish for? |
40063 | Is that the right thing to do, think you? |
40063 | John, where is his Royal Highness? |
40063 | Lady, do you know the tune? 40063 Master Will?" |
40063 | My noble young Prince, is it my hand must lead thee to death? |
40063 | Nay now, what faith? |
40063 | Of course, Captain,says he,"you are come about that affair with Prince Giglio?" |
40063 | Oh, dear Prince,she said,"how could you speak so haughtily in presence of their Majesties? |
40063 | The great question is,says he,"am I fast or am I slow? |
40063 | Unhappy children,cried Madame de la Tour,"where have you been? |
40063 | Well, dear Giglio? |
40063 | Well, dear Gruffy? |
40063 | What are you two people chattering about there? |
40063 | What do I know about fowls and jellies, that you allude to them in that rude way? |
40063 | What do you mean? |
40063 | What dress shall I put on, mamma? 40063 What is it you are writing, you dear Gruffy?" |
40063 | What scrape?--fly the country? 40063 When will you come and see us?" |
40063 | Where is Bulbo? |
40063 | Which do you think the dear Prince will like best? |
40063 | Who was your mother-- who were your relations, little girl? |
40063 | Who''s there? |
40063 | Why did he not marry the poor Princess? |
40063 | Why did you not tell me so at first? |
40063 | Why were you so cruel to Prince Bulbo, dear Prince? |
40063 | Why, didn''t-- didn''t you send them, Angelica dear? |
40063 | Why, then, what is''t? |
40063 | Will she? |
40063 | Wo n''t you give me a pair of shoes to go out in the snow, mum, if you please, mum? |
40063 | Would they ask this question for her at Dr. Ashley''s, and bring the answer? |
40063 | You are a doctor? |
40063 | You like flowers? |
40063 | You little wretch, who let you in here? |
40063 | _ We_ will fly? |
40063 | --"What shall we do then?" |
40063 | --"Why,"answered Paul,"can not I give you something that belongs to heaven? |
40063 | After what fashion, I pray thee? |
40063 | Am I not Autocrat of Paflagonia? |
40063 | And what in God''s name, is all this pother about? |
40063 | And what more should he desire with either? |
40063 | And what would you say,"he went on,"if I had come up here on purpose to cross yours?" |
40063 | Angelica, wo n''t you have a saveloy?" |
40063 | Angelica? |
40063 | Are there balance here to weigh The flesh? |
40063 | Are we then so near home?--at the foot of our own mountain?" |
40063 | Are you a beast of field and tree, Or just a stronger child than me? |
40063 | Are you acquainted with the difference That holds this present question in the court? |
40063 | Are you answer''d? |
40063 | As for the shoe, what was she to do with one poor little tootsey sandal? |
40063 | As soon as they began to ascend, they heard voices exclaiming--"Is it you, my children?" |
40063 | But why speak of thrones? |
40063 | But you would not have me die like a dog and not see all that is to be seen, and do all that a man can do, let it be good or evil? |
40063 | Ca n''t you see that while you are talking my Bulbo is being hung?" |
40063 | Ca n''t you sit still?" |
40063 | Can a man be more downright or honourable to a woman than I have been? |
40063 | Can no prayer pierce thee? |
40063 | Can you apply a parable?" |
40063 | Can you tell me who was she, Mistress of the flowery wreath, And the anagram beneath-- The mysterious K. E.? |
40063 | Clara, Clara Vere de Vere, If Time be heavy on your hands, Are there no beggars at your gate, Nor any poor about your lands? |
40063 | Come you from old Bellario? |
40063 | Could any thing be more absurd than to wake a patient to administer a sleeping- potion? |
40063 | Did you ever see a squirrel turning in a cage? |
40063 | Do re Mi***** What is this? |
40063 | Do you love him, ay or no?" |
40063 | Do you really fancy you should be more beholden to your correspondent, if he had been damning you all the while for your importunity? |
40063 | Do you remember the day when we crossed over the great stones of the river of the Three Breasts? |
40063 | Do you want me to marry you? |
40063 | Dost thou love me? |
40063 | For what cause do they embitter their own and other people''s lives? |
40063 | Gruffanuff? |
40063 | Ha-- ah-- what''s this? |
40063 | Has God then forsaken us? |
40063 | Have I been such a ninny as to throw away my regard upon_ you_? |
40063 | Have I not blocks, ropes, axes, hangmen-- ha? |
40063 | Have I not sacks to sew up wives withal? |
40063 | Have we not enough in our garden already? |
40063 | Have we not hitherto been happy? |
40063 | He little knows that Miss Betsinda is----"Is-- what? |
40063 | How could it be otherwise? |
40063 | I stand for judgment: answer; shall I have it? |
40063 | If they were continued, what happiness could the French princess have in her wedlock?" |
40063 | In there came old Alice the nurse, Said,"Who was this that went from thee?" |
40063 | Is it mathematics?" |
40063 | Is_ this_ the woman I have been in love with all my life? |
40063 | Madam, on its panes you''ll see The initials K. and E.""An old lantern brought to me? |
40063 | Maybe, this is disagreeable to you?" |
40063 | Now if I were only a fool, should not I be in a pretty way?" |
40063 | O Love, where is thy sympathy, If thus our breasts thou sever? |
40063 | O you that are so strong and cold, O blower, are you young or old? |
40063 | O young lord- lover, what sighs are those, For one that will never be thine? |
40063 | Once when on a sweet night in a balcony where they were standing, Angelica said,"There is the Bear"--"Where?" |
40063 | One of the officers asked him,"If it was true that he had concurred with the Duke of Buckingham in causing his father''s death?" |
40063 | Pray who is it to be hanged?" |
40063 | Prithee, why so mute? |
40063 | Prithee, why so mute? |
40063 | Prithee, why so pale? |
40063 | Prithee, why so pale? |
40063 | Runs not a river by my palace wall? |
40063 | Said Lady Clare,"that ye speak so wild?" |
40063 | Scarcely drawing the rein, Blantyre shouted,"Which way?" |
40063 | Scarcely had she finished, when Margaret exclaimed,"What have we to do with your relations? |
40063 | Shall I try it? |
40063 | She often said to me,"If I were to die, what will become of Virginia without fortune?" |
40063 | She speaks, yet she says nothing: what of that? |
40063 | Tell me by what charm you have thus enchanted me? |
40063 | The Queen? |
40063 | The king put up his flowing hair under a cap; then, turning to the executioner, asked,"Is any of my hair in the way?" |
40063 | The passer- by on the road to the Shaddock Grove, indeed, would sometimes ask the inhabitants of the plain, who lived in the cottages up there? |
40063 | Then Giglio would say,"Betsinda, has the Princess Angelica asked for me to- day?" |
40063 | WHY SO PALE AND WAN? |
40063 | Waking or asleep, Thou of death must deem Things more true and deep Than we mortals dream, Or how could thy notes flow in such a crystal stream? |
40063 | Was not that fine reasoning? |
40063 | What care has_ she_ for line or hook? |
40063 | What do you think of it, sir?" |
40063 | What fields, or waves, or mountains? |
40063 | What has become of that bozzy vagabond?" |
40063 | What if her eyes were there, they in her head? |
40063 | What if my house be troubled with a rat And I be pleased to give ten thousand ducats To have it baned? |
40063 | What ignorance of pain? |
40063 | What love of thine own kind? |
40063 | What need, indeed, had these young people of riches or learning such as ours? |
40063 | What objects are the fountains Of thy happy strain? |
40063 | What shapes of sky or plain? |
40063 | What thou art we know not; What is most like thee? |
40063 | What woman in all Europe, Asia, Africa, and America-- nay, in Australia, only it is not yet discovered-- can presume to be thy equal? |
40063 | What''s Montague? |
40063 | What''s in a name? |
40063 | What, are you answer''d yet? |
40063 | What_ did_ you ever hear of? |
40063 | When Bassompierre asked her,"How about the wooden platters?" |
40063 | When Giglio had done knocking him up and down to the ground, and whilst he went into a corner rubbing himself, what do you think Giglio does? |
40063 | When Prince Bulbo said,"Prince Giglio, may I have the honour of taking a glass of wine with you?" |
40063 | When nature is"so careless of the single life,"why should we coddle ourselves into the fancy that our own is of exceptional importance? |
40063 | When the little housemaid came to him in the morning and evening, Prince Giglio used to say,"Betsinda, Betsinda, how is the Princess Angelica?" |
40063 | When they looked at the stars, what did Giglio know of the heavenly bodies? |
40063 | When will the dancers leave her alone? |
40063 | Where are my spectacles?" |
40063 | Where is he? |
40063 | Which is the merchant here, and which the Jew? |
40063 | Which way had she turned? |
40063 | Whither had they all gone? |
40063 | Whither went all the tourists and pedlars with strange wares? |
40063 | Who avert the murderous blade? |
40063 | Who will shield the captive knight? |
40063 | Who will shield the fearless heart? |
40063 | Who''s that laughing?" |
40063 | Why come you drest like a village maid, That are the flower of the earth?" |
40063 | Why do you go so far, and climb so high, to seek fruits and flowers for me? |
40063 | Why should two hearts in one breast lie, And yet not lodge together? |
40063 | Why so dull and mute, young sinner? |
40063 | Why so pale and wan, fond lover? |
40063 | Why sweat they under burthens? |
40063 | Why then this regret? |
40063 | Why, if this be not education, what is? |
40063 | Will you come home with me, little dirty girl?" |
40063 | Will you show me the way?" |
40063 | Will, when looking well ca n''t move her, Looking ill prevail? |
40063 | Will, when speaking well ca n''t win her, Saying nothing do''t? |
40063 | Worldly Wiseman accosting such an one, and the conversation that should thereupon ensue:--"How now, young fellow, what dost thou here?" |
40063 | Would you not suppose these persons had been whispered, by the Master of the Ceremonies, the promise of some momentous destiny? |
40063 | You stand within his danger, do you not? |
40063 | [_ Juliet appears above at a window._ But, soft, what light through yonder window breaks? |
40063 | [_ Presenting a letter.__ Bass._ Why dost thou whet thy knife so earnestly? |
40063 | _ Bass._ Do all men kill the things they do not love? |
40063 | _ Duke._ Come you from Padua, from Bellario? |
40063 | _ Duke._ How shalt thou hope for mercy, rendering none? |
40063 | _ Duke._ What, is Antonio here? |
40063 | _ Jul._ At what o''clock to- morrow Shall I send to thee? |
40063 | _ Jul._ By whose direction found''st thou out this place? |
40063 | _ Jul._ How camest thou hither, tell me, and wherefore? |
40063 | _ Jul._ My ears have not yet drunk a hundred words Of that tongue''s utterance, yet I know the sound: Art thou not Romeo, and a Montague? |
40063 | _ Jul._ What man art thou that thus bescreen''d in night So stumblest on my counsel? |
40063 | _ Jul._ What satisfaction canst thou have to- night? |
40063 | _ Por._ Art thou contented, Jew? |
40063 | _ Por._ Do you confess the bond? |
40063 | _ Por._ Is he not able to discharge the money? |
40063 | _ Por._ Is your name Shylock? |
40063 | _ Por._ It is not so express''d: but what of that? |
40063 | _ Por._ What mercy can you render him, Antonio? |
40063 | _ Por._ Why doth the Jew pause? |
40063 | _ Por._ You, merchant, have you any thing to say? |
40063 | _ Rom._ My dear? |
40063 | _ Rom._ O, wilt thou leave me so unsatisfied? |
40063 | _ Rom._ What shall I swear by? |
40063 | _ Rom._ Wouldst thou withdraw it? |
40063 | _ Rom._[_ Aside_] Shall I hear more, or shall I speak at this? |
40063 | _ Shy._ An oath, an oath, I have an oath in heaven: Shall I lay perjury upon my soul? |
40063 | _ Shy._ Ay, his breast: So says the bond: doth it not, noble judge? |
40063 | _ Shy._ Hates any man the thing he would not kill? |
40063 | _ Shy._ Is it so nominated in the bond? |
40063 | _ Shy._ Is that the law? |
40063 | _ Shy._ On what compulsion must I? |
40063 | _ Shy._ Shall I not have barely my principal? |
40063 | _ Shy._ What judgment shall I dread, doing no wrong? |
40063 | _ Shy._ What, wouldst thou have a serpent sting thee twice? |
40063 | and another squirrel sitting philosophically over his nuts? |
40063 | and hiding her head in the Countess''shoulder, she faintly whispered,"Ah, Signor, can it be A?" |
40063 | and should''st thou not be plying thy Book with diligence, to the end thou mayest obtain knowledge?" |
40063 | and that this lukewarm bullet on which they play their farces was the bull''s- eye and centre- point of all the universe? |
40063 | answered Virginia,"with that great wicked man? |
40063 | are we men?" |
40063 | did n''t you give me this paper promising marriage?" |
40063 | exclaimed Cromwell, who sat just beneath him, turning suddenly round,"are you mad? |
40063 | for what purpose, love? |
40063 | let their beds Be made as soft as yours, and let their palates Be season''d with such viands? |
40063 | or have you had enough of me for good? |
40063 | or will you take my friendship, as I think best? |
40063 | said Will,"if there are thousands who would like, why should not one of them have my place?" |
40063 | says the Prince,"how have I lived fifteen years in thy company without seeing thy perfections? |
40063 | the pink or the pea- green?" |
40063 | what does this mean? |
40063 | what dost thou say? |
40063 | what is that?" |
40063 | what will her Majesty say?" |
40063 | wherefore art thou Romeo? |
40063 | whither all the brisk barouches with servants in the dicky? |
40063 | whither the water of the stream, ever coursing downward and ever renewed from above? |
9598 | Down the chill street, which winds in gloomiest shade, What marks betray yon solitary maid? 9598 Is this thy mane, my fearless Surtur, That streams against my breast? |
9598 | Are those the Normes that beckon onward As if to Odin''s board, Where by the hands of warriors nightly The sparkling mead is poured? |
9598 | But what avails her beauty? |
9598 | Is this thy neck, that curve of moonlight Which Helva''s hand caressed? |
9598 | Nay, is it not his duty to be merry, by main force if necessary? |
9598 | Were not the good St. Pierre, and Fenelon, and Howard, and Clarkson visionaries also? |
9598 | Were the Puritans themselves the men to cast stones at the Quakers and Baptists? |
9598 | What was John Woolman, to the wise and prudent of his day, but an amiable enthusiast? |
9598 | What, to those of our own, is such an angel of mercy as Dorothea Dix? |
9598 | Who does not feel the power of this simple picture of the old man in the last- mentioned poem? |
9598 | Why, then, should not even the doctor have his fun? |
858 | How is it, Sophronia,we said,"that you distantly resemble a human being instead of giving one the idea of an animated rag- shop? |
858 | You will write to me when you are away, dear, wo n''t you? |
858 | Besides, was not the heroine( now the hero''s wife) the sweetest and the blithest girl in all the village of Deepdale? |
858 | But he does n''t know any others-- at all events, he is not well up in any others-- and she still does not care for him, and what is he to do? |
858 | He said:"I say, J., old man, are you drunk?" |
858 | He says:"Dost see yonder star, sweet?" |
858 | How can any one with a human heart beneath his bosom suggest that people like that should pay for their rest and washing? |
858 | How on earth did this calm, thin, keen- eyed old man in black know that he had a father? |
858 | If he knocks down less than three men with one blow, he fears that he must be ill, and wonders"Why this strange weakness?" |
858 | If we lived in stage- land and were asked to join any financial scheme, our first question would be:"Is the good old man in it?" |
858 | She does n''t like you; how can you expect her to? |
858 | She puts on a yellow cloak and a green hat, and coming in at another door says she is a lady from the country, and does he want a housekeeper? |
858 | She said:"Lord love you, what should I want to go and be a bally idiot like that for?" |
858 | They weaned you on thistles, did n''t they? |
858 | What if he does ruin the hero and rob the heroine and help to murder the good old man? |
858 | Who knows? |
858 | Why can not they make real children who say"dear, dear mamma"and"dear, dear papa?" |
858 | Why do n''t you get a girl of your own? |
858 | Why does n''t a comic man come and set up a grocery store in our neighborhood? |
858 | Why is this? |
858 | Yes, I''m a bit of a spanker, ai n''t I? |
858 | am I? |
858 | got out o''bed the wrong side again? |
858 | how can she help but love him? |
29477 | ''Musha, bad luck to your impidence, you long- tailed blackguard,''says the ranger,''and is it smokin''my pipe you are? 29477 ''_ You licked him?_ Sho! |
29477 | A stranger, ignorant of the trade, Would say, no meaning''s there conveyed; For where''s the middle? 29477 And what made you dry, sir?" |
29477 | Are you sure on''t? |
29477 | Blarm me, whereabouts? |
29477 | Blowed um away, you fool!--how could I ha''blowed um away? |
29477 | Darng your cloomsy carkus,cried the horse- keeper, gathering himself up,"carn''t you git oof ar cooarch aroat knocking o''pipple darn?" |
29477 | Did n''t you know that I was a minister? |
29477 | Did she say anything? |
29477 | Do you mean to say,said Tooler,"that there arn''t nuffin else in the boot?" |
29477 | Eighteen? |
29477 | Gentlemen,then murmured he,"To what unhoped contingency Am I owing for this felicity, A visit thus unexpected?" |
29477 | Had the sufferin''s we had undergone made him delirious? |
29477 | Have you ever heard it before? |
29477 | Here!--where? |
29477 | I wonder, can this be, still shootin''? |
29477 | I''ll bet a pint,said Harry,"you blowed um away?" |
29477 | If you please,said an old lady, who had been standing in the gateway upwards of an hour,"will you be good enow, please, to take care of my darter?" |
29477 | Is she loarded? |
29477 | Is the lady in? |
29477 | Luce, can you swim? |
29477 | Not a patriot? |
29477 | Paddy,said the squire,"perhaps you would favor the gentleman with that story you told me once about a fox?" |
29477 | Sam, be you crazy? |
29477 | See''st thou that carpet, not half done, Which thou, dear Dick, hast well begun? 29477 Sir, begging your pardon for inquiring,"The landlord said with grin admiring,"What wager was it?" |
29477 | The gentlemen,--I mean the two Came yesterday,--are they below? |
29477 | Throw that in my face again, will you? 29477 Tom, do n''t you recollect,"said Will,"The clock at Jersey, near the mill, The very image of this present, With which I won the wager pleasant?" |
29477 | WHICH AM DE MIGHTIEST, DE PEN OR DE SWORD? |
29477 | Was it a drop of rain? 29477 Well, what shall us do wi''th''warment?" |
29477 | Well,I put in,"suppose they do n''t find the owner; who has it?" |
29477 | What do you mean? |
29477 | What is it? |
29477 | What is it? |
29477 | What money? |
29477 | What use are you,cried number two,"to water so much ground? |
29477 | What wonder? 29477 What''s what?" |
29477 | Whatever''s that? |
29477 | When will she come, do you suppose? |
29477 | Where is he? |
29477 | Who saw un? |
29477 | Who? |
29477 | Why, Snyder, what''s the matter with your nose? |
29477 | Why, what ails ye, Sam? |
29477 | Will you give the lady my card, and say that I called? |
29477 | _ That my husband?_ What have you done to him? 29477 _ That my husband?_ What have you done to him? |
29477 | ( C.) When shall I be at peace? |
29477 | ( FANNY_ sits at piano, plays Yankee Doodle, whistling an accompaniment._) What does this mean? |
29477 | ( Have you not read the Rights of Man, by Tom Paine?) |
29477 | ( Oh say they not that angels tread Around the good man''s dying bed?) |
29477 | (_ Aloud._) Master Fred, will you please give me the first line? |
29477 | (_ Coughs._) Doctor, do you think you can give me anything that will relieve this desprit pain I have in my side? |
29477 | (_ Crosses to_ R.)_ Kitty._ Where''s mother, Katy? |
29477 | (_ Enter_ GRAY_ and_ WHITE;_ they get in a corner of the stage, and whisper together._) Now, what conspiracy is hatching? |
29477 | (_ Looks__ at girls._) O, how do you do? |
29477 | (_ Runs across stage and sinks into chair_, R.)_ Miss P._(_ Running to her._) Bless me child, what ails you? |
29477 | (_ Sits on sofa._) How can you, Sadie? |
29477 | (_ They all crowd round_ SISSY,_ take off her bonnet, kiss and hug her._) Is n''t she splendid? |
29477 | (_ Very loud._) Parley voo frongsay? |
29477 | (_ Very slowly._) Parley-- voo-- frongsay-- munseer? |
29477 | --What do you think the parson found, When he got up and stared around? |
29477 | Ai n''t heard a keow moo-- mooing, have yer? |
29477 | Ai n''t they beauties? |
29477 | Ai n''t you got a spark of sense about ye? |
29477 | All ready for the declamation? |
29477 | Am I entombed alive? |
29477 | Am I here a prisoner, And no one in the house? |
29477 | An''did n''t I howld on till the heart o''me was clane broke entirely, and me wastin''that thin you could clutch me wid yer two hands? |
29477 | An''t you all furriners here? |
29477 | An''what has wrot all dis change? |
29477 | An''why do the crowds gather fast in the street? |
29477 | An''why does the long rope hang from the cross- tree? |
29477 | An''wo n''t the wife and childer now be glad? |
29477 | And Friendship, rarest gem of earth; who e''er has found the jewel his? |
29477 | And are ye sure he''s weel? |
29477 | And are ye sure the news is true? |
29477 | And how''s your husband? |
29477 | And shall I hear him speak? |
29477 | And shall I see his face again? |
29477 | And think you, when you kneel, To whom you kneel? |
29477 | And why did you think I should like it? |
29477 | And will I hear him speak? |
29477 | And will I see his face again? |
29477 | Are the others too precious for resting where Robert is taking his rest, With the pictured face of young Annie lying over the rent in his breast? |
29477 | Are you a Christhian, at all, at all? |
29477 | Are you a furriner that all the world calls so p''lite? |
29477 | Are you all ready for the contest? |
29477 | Are you being led in the paths of literature by my fostering hands? |
29477 | Are you being nursed at the fount of learning? |
29477 | Are you going to marry him some day? |
29477 | Art sure Of the point? |
29477 | Aunt Hopkins, where did you get this hateful thing? |
29477 | B----?" |
29477 | But could ye tell by lookin''at the egg What colour it will hatch? |
29477 | But how is this? |
29477 | But how will I find thim? |
29477 | But must I die here-- in my own trap caught? |
29477 | But where is it? |
29477 | But where was I? |
29477 | C._ But where''s the bonnet you sent from Thompson''s? |
29477 | C._ Have the Fastones gone? |
29477 | C._ Is_ that_ your love of a bonnet, Kitty? |
29477 | Ca n''t you listen to rason? |
29477 | Ca n''t you understand your own language? |
29477 | Can I bear this? |
29477 | Can it be that Masons take delight In spending thus the hours of night? |
29477 | Can you really spare it? |
29477 | Canst thou not feel My warm blood o''er my heart congeal? |
29477 | Carest thou for The mountain mist that settles on the peak, When thou art upon it? |
29477 | Colts grew horses, beards turned gray, Deacon and deaconess dropped away, Children and grandchildren,--where were they? |
29477 | Could Cicero so plead? |
29477 | Could Helen look One- half so charming? |
29477 | Could it be a bracelet? |
29477 | Dares thy licentious tongue pollute mine ear With that foul menace? |
29477 | Dat ish all right; I purn my_ own_ nose, do n''t it?" |
29477 | Den, what''s de use ob de swoard? |
29477 | Did I lave for that? |
29477 | Did I wimper when Robert stood up with his gun, And the hero- blood chafed in his forehead, the evening we heard of Bull Run? |
29477 | Did he squirm any? |
29477 | Did n''t he get me into trouble wid my missus, the haythin? |
29477 | Did n''t ye know enough to keep your finger out of his mouth? |
29477 | Did not the angels weep over the scene? |
29477 | Did some rich man tyrannically use you? |
29477 | Did you ever hear of Isaac Watts-- that wrote,"Let dogs delight to bark and bite"--sticking his fingers in a boy''s mouth to get''em bit, like a fool? |
29477 | Did you ever see anything like it, Dora? |
29477 | Did you get it of Thompson? |
29477 | Dident know I ever writ poitry? |
29477 | Die-- die? |
29477 | Diggs?" |
29477 | Do I want money? |
29477 | Do you understand? |
29477 | Do you want to make me homesick? |
29477 | Does he assume the name of king? |
29477 | Does n''t yer git nuffin to eat in de city? |
29477 | Dost thou tremble at The torrent roaring from the deep ravine, Along whose shaking ledge thy track doth lie? |
29477 | Down that way? |
29477 | Drafted? |
29477 | Exit mother, half distraught, Exit father, muttering"bore?" |
29477 | F._ It''s very becoming-- isn''t it, Dora? |
29477 | F._ My dear child, how do you do? |
29477 | F._ None, whatever-- is there, Dora? |
29477 | F._ Nothing to see, nothing to hear, nothing to wear,--is there, Dora? |
29477 | F._ Quite well-- aren''t you, Dora? |
29477 | Fastone, what is the news? |
29477 | Father,"she exclaimed, turning suddenly, while the tears rained down her beautiful cheeks,"father, shall I drink it now?" |
29477 | Five stalwart sons has my neighbour, and never the lot upon one; Are these things Fortune''s caprices, or is it God''s will that is done? |
29477 | For what is life to me? |
29477 | For what pray? |
29477 | Friends? |
29477 | From your lover? |
29477 | G._ My pickles? |
29477 | G._ Yes, Juno, poor Mr. Brown has shuffled off this mortal-- what''s it''s name? |
29477 | G._ You do n''t say so? |
29477 | Give it up? |
29477 | Give me back my wife!_"But has the rumseller been confounded or speechless at these appeals? |
29477 | Going at one dollar? |
29477 | Good morning, Doctor; how do you do? |
29477 | Got your washing out, Juno? |
29477 | Great God, can it be that our President knows what he asks? |
29477 | H._ Did you say right or left? |
29477 | H._ Hey? |
29477 | H._ Hey? |
29477 | H._ Hey? |
29477 | H._ Hey? |
29477 | H._ Over that hill? |
29477 | H._ Who do you call an old wooden head? |
29477 | Hadst thou the same free will and power to stand? |
29477 | Hang out the sign; call every traveler here to me: who''ll buy this brave estate of mine, and set this weary spirit free? |
29477 | Hanks._ Look here, boy; where''s Mr. Simmons''s house? |
29477 | Has, then, the fatal secret reach''d thine ear? |
29477 | Have n''t we done it? |
29477 | Have you disobeyed me? |
29477 | Have you got anything to say against it? |
29477 | He ca n''t? |
29477 | He gave the old mare a awful cut, and says he:"I''d like to know what you want to be so agrevatin''for?" |
29477 | He looked dretful uncomfortable, but when Miss Gowdey hollered out:"Oh, here you be; we have been skairt about you; what is the matter?" |
29477 | He tould me, Would I? |
29477 | He''s a broker-- ain''t he? |
29477 | Heaven is unjust, you must agree; Why all to him? |
29477 | Hen._ Seven? |
29477 | Hen._ Speak, sirs: how was it? |
29477 | Hen._ What, a hundred, man? |
29477 | Hen._ What, fought ye with them all? |
29477 | Hen._ What, four? |
29477 | Hen._ Where is it, Jack? |
29477 | Hen._ Why, how couldst thou know these men in Kendal green, when it was so dark thou couldst not see thy hand? |
29477 | Henry._ What''s the matter? |
29477 | Here''s Wealth, in glittering heaps of gold; who bids? |
29477 | Here''s the monkeys in their cage, Wide awake you are to see''em; Funny, ai n''t it? |
29477 | Here, you fellows, do you know what you came here for? |
29477 | Hev ye turned preacher?" |
29477 | Hey, John? |
29477 | How can I without tears relate The lost and ruined Morey''s fate? |
29477 | How do you suppose I can do anything with you a tousin''round so?" |
29477 | How early were you up? |
29477 | How many times have I got to tell ye how disgraceful and wicked it is for boys to fight? |
29477 | How much for Fame? |
29477 | How often have you hit the mark to- day? |
29477 | How would you Like to have a tail and be''em? |
29477 | How would you fare, Suppose a wolf should cross your path, and you Alone, with but your bow, and only time To fix a single arrow? |
29477 | How''s dat? |
29477 | I am dying of_ ennui_, the world is so quiet; no excitement to move the placid waters of fashionable society-- is there, Dora? |
29477 | I know where to git lots more; and my pa says,''What''s the use of having money, if you do n''t do good with it?'' |
29477 | I riz right up and asked the company, almost wildly,"If they had seen my companion, Josiah?" |
29477 | I says to him in stern tones:"Is this pleasure, Josiah Allen?" |
29477 | I wonder what time it is?" |
29477 | I''ve been all day at that tub; and-- Where''s Miss Pease? |
29477 | If it hadden been for de swoard ob ole Bunker Hill, saar, whaar''d we niggers be to- night, saar? |
29477 | If you plase, what was that last in the letther? |
29477 | If-- if he_ doth_ guess it.... however it ithn''t vewy likely he would-- so what''s the good of thupposing impwobabilities?) |
29477 | In this? |
29477 | Is his bright armory Thick set with spears, and swords, and coats of mail, Of vanquished nations, by his single arm Subdued? |
29477 | Is it Roosia, Proosia, or the Jarmant oceant? |
29477 | Is it ate wid him? |
29477 | Is it howld on, ye say? |
29477 | Is it-- from a cold you-- suffer? |
29477 | Is not your sail the banner Which God hath blest anew, The mantle that de Matha wore, The red, the white, the blue? |
29477 | Is she going all the way?" |
29477 | Is that a silk or a poplin you''ve got on? |
29477 | Is there a conspiracy? |
29477 | Is this a time to think o''wark? |
29477 | Is this the fruit of my teaching? |
29477 | It skairt him awfully, and says he,"What does ail you, Samantha? |
29477 | It tasted so queerly; and what could it be? |
29477 | Johnny, how did it-- ahem-- which licked?" |
29477 | Knelt you when you got up To- day? |
29477 | L._ What are the studies? |
29477 | L._ Will you please speak to her? |
29477 | Lofty._ Will you please call your mistress at once? |
29477 | MR. W. What? |
29477 | MRS. W. I never did such a thing, and you-- MR. W. Yes-- and you think Mary Jane can play, do n''t you? |
29477 | Make haste, lay by your wheel; Is this a time to spin a thread, When Colin''s at the door? |
29477 | Merlatheth candy? |
29477 | Midas, can you swim?" |
29477 | Miss Bobbet and the rest turned to go back, and the minute we were alone he said:"Ca n''t you bring 40 or 50 more wimmen up here? |
29477 | Miss Gray, who taught you that song? |
29477 | Mother, tell me, what''s the man Doing with that pole of his? |
29477 | Mr. Larkins said about as follows:"Mr. Chaarman, what''s de use ob a swoard unless you''s gwyne to waar? |
29477 | Mr. Lewman said:"What''s de use ob de pen''less you knows how to write? |
29477 | Must I the whirlwind reap because My fathers sowed the storm? |
29477 | Must part? |
29477 | Ned, do you know the song? |
29477 | Neow, what harm kin there be in tryin''to find eout what your neighbors have got for dinner? |
29477 | Nice nose, do n''t it?" |
29477 | No thrilling fingers seek its clasp? |
29477 | Now I come under the demon-- demonima--(no,--thop,--what is the word?) |
29477 | Now mark me, Albert Dost thou fear the snow, The ice- field, or the hail flaw? |
29477 | Now, how to account for all the mystery Of this same weird and fantastical history? |
29477 | O then at last relent: Is there no place Left for repentance, none for pardon left? |
29477 | O, Juno, is n''t it most dinner- time? |
29477 | O, ai n''t we having a splendid time, girls? |
29477 | O, broad- armed diver of the deep, whose sports can equal thine? |
29477 | O, my mother thed, if Mith Peath is to home, to give Mith Peath her com-- her com-- to give Mith Peath her com--_ Jenny._ Her compliments? |
29477 | Oh,''tis true there''s a country to save, man, and''tis true there is no appeal, But did God see my boy''s name lying the uppermost one in the wheel? |
29477 | One from her casement gazeth Long o''er the misty sea: He cometh not, pale maiden-- His heart is cold to thee? |
29477 | Or faintest thou at the thunder- clap, when on The hill thou art o''ertaken by the cloud, And it doth burst around thee? |
29477 | Or roguish lawyer, made you lose your little All in a lawsuit? |
29477 | Or shrink, because another sinned, Beneath Thy red, right arm? |
29477 | Or the attorney? |
29477 | Parley voo frongsay? |
29477 | Parley voo frongsay? |
29477 | Pray, is this a uniform you have adopted in your school? |
29477 | Pray, what''s that? |
29477 | Really? |
29477 | Revenge!--O, tell me-- Tell, me but how?--What can a helpless woman? |
29477 | S''pose de store do truss, ai n''t it easier to sen''a boy as to write a order? |
29477 | Say he did write''em, what good was it? |
29477 | Say, Sissy; do you like candy? |
29477 | Says I,"What is the matter, Josiah Allen? |
29477 | See,--where had I got to? |
29477 | She play? |
29477 | Should I turn upon the true prince? |
29477 | Since I gave you all-- Aye, gave my very soul-- can ye do naught For me in this extremity? |
29477 | Snyder brought it to them, and the new- comer exclaimed as he saw him,"Snyder, what''s the matter with your nose?" |
29477 | Some one sings out to him,"Have a glass of beer, Billy?" |
29477 | Sport not with things above thee: But tell me who, of all this numerous host, Expects his death from me? |
29477 | Suffering from a cold? |
29477 | Tell me, Knife- grinder, how you came to grind knives? |
29477 | The mornin''was bright, an''the mists rose on high, An''the lark whistled merrily in the clear sky; But why are the men standin''idle so late? |
29477 | The prechen''? |
29477 | The same fond mother bent at night O''er each fair sleeping brow; She had each folded flower in sight, Where are those dreamers now? |
29477 | Then art thou dead? |
29477 | Then why should man look down on man because of lack of gold? |
29477 | They pulled him out-- speaking of pulling, Miss Tibbet was in to the dentist''s this morning for a new set of teeth, and-- Have you seen my Sis? |
29477 | Think ye my noble father''s glaive Would drink the life- blood of a slave? |
29477 | Those words,--that motion,--are you mad? |
29477 | Thou hadst: whom hast thou then or what to accuse But Heaven''s free love dealt equally to all? |
29477 | Though maybe, if the truth were told,''Tis rather ugly, somewhat old; Yet time it keeps to half a minute; But, if you please, what wonder in it?" |
29477 | To see those sinews, who''d believe Such strength did lodge in them? |
29477 | Too fair to be crippled or scarred? |
29477 | Too tender for parting with sweet hearts? |
29477 | Verner, do I brag, To think I some time may be like my father? |
29477 | Vot gind o''peseness? |
29477 | Wal, I guess I had sat there ten minutes or more, when all of a sudden I thought, Where is Josiah? |
29477 | Want de pump? |
29477 | Want to hear it? |
29477 | Want to hear me? |
29477 | Was it the squire, for killing of his game? |
29477 | Was it the squire? |
29477 | Was that a laugh? |
29477 | Well, have I not the key? |
29477 | What Egyptian drug have you poured into his veins, and turned the ambling fountains of the heart into black and burning pitch? |
29477 | What ails your finger? |
29477 | What are his rights? |
29477 | What are you off here for?" |
29477 | What can I more with Love? |
29477 | What come they to talk of? |
29477 | What did my mother thed? |
29477 | What do you mean? |
29477 | What do you mean? |
29477 | What do you think that old white mare of ours did while I was out plowing last week? |
29477 | What do you think? |
29477 | What do you want? |
29477 | What envious tongue Hath dar''d to taint my name with slander? |
29477 | What hand is that, whose icy press Clings to the dead with death''s own grasp, But meets no answering caress? |
29477 | What have I Done to enlist Heaven''s favor-- to help on Heaven''s cause on earth, in human hearts and homes? |
29477 | What have you done to that once noble brow, which he wore high among his fellows, as if it bore the superscription of the Godhead? |
29477 | What have you for me? |
29477 | What have you selected? |
29477 | What have you there? |
29477 | What if I wuz? |
29477 | What if your wife were that poor boy''s mother, And he only sixteen? |
29477 | What if''twere_ your_ son instead of another? |
29477 | What is it? |
29477 | What made him thus? |
29477 | What means Zaphira? |
29477 | What means that smile? |
29477 | What means this burst of grief? |
29477 | What on airth shall I do? |
29477 | What proud credentials does the boaster bring To prove his claim? |
29477 | What right have I To use the name? |
29477 | What shall I do? |
29477 | What then, you ask me, did befall Mehitable Byrde? |
29477 | What trick, what device, what starting- hole, canst now find out, to hide thee from this open and apparent shame? |
29477 | What victor- king, what general drenched in blood, Claims this high privilege? |
29477 | What was it?--a diamond pin dropped by a former passenger? |
29477 | What will I do with the letther, mam? |
29477 | What will I do? |
29477 | What will Mrs. Lofty say? |
29477 | What will our neighbors think of us? |
29477 | What''s that? |
29477 | What''s the matter with the child? |
29477 | What''s the matter? |
29477 | What''s the use of wasting time in study before it''s needed? |
29477 | What''s to be done? |
29477 | What''s to pay now? |
29477 | What, shall we be merry? |
29477 | What? |
29477 | When Parson Potter read it, he says to me, says he,--What did you stop so soon for?" |
29477 | Whence came they? |
29477 | Where all earth''s myriad harps shall meet In choral praise and prayer, Shall Zion''s harp, of old so sweet, Alone be wanting there? |
29477 | Where am I? |
29477 | Where is the mortal man so bold, So much a wretch, so out of love with life, To dare the weight of this uplifted spear? |
29477 | Where is thy sylvan crook, with garlands hung, Of idle field- flowers? |
29477 | Where ith Mith Peath? |
29477 | Where should she learn the tale of Selim''s death? |
29477 | Where then? |
29477 | Where thy wanton harp, Thou dainty- fingered hero? |
29477 | Where was I? |
29477 | Where''s mother? |
29477 | Which is the man Whom Israel sends to meet my bold defiance? |
29477 | Who did the bloody deeds-- O, tremble, guilt, Where''er thou art!--Look on me; tell me, tyrant, Who slew my blameless son? |
29477 | Who ebber heard of Mr. Hill''s pen? |
29477 | Who knowth? |
29477 | Who says twenty dollars? |
29477 | Who taught you to read in that manner? |
29477 | Who wants''em at one half dollar? |
29477 | Who was it with this time? |
29477 | Who will give two dollars? |
29477 | Who''ll buy the heavy heaps of Care? |
29477 | Who''ll buy the plumeless, dying dove-- a breath of bliss, a storm of pain? |
29477 | Who''s afraid?" |
29477 | Who''s afraid?" |
29477 | Who''s afraid?" |
29477 | Who''s hyar dat''s gwyne to waar? |
29477 | Whom stylest thou king? |
29477 | Why did n''t ye go for his nose, the way Jonathan Edwards, and George Washington, and Daniel Webster used to do, when they was boys? |
29477 | Why did n''t you say so before? |
29477 | Why does a dog waggle hith tail? |
29477 | Why none to me? |
29477 | Why seat him in the poorest pew because his clothes are old? |
29477 | Why should death mark it, and he so young? |
29477 | Why should it? |
29477 | Why, Snyder-- ha!--ha!--what''s the matter with that nose?" |
29477 | Why, did n''t you tell us to take Miss Jones as a model for imitation? |
29477 | Why, have n''t we got musical instruments enough in the house? |
29477 | Why, hear ye, my masters: Was it for me to kill the heir apparent? |
29477 | Will Zaphira Thus meanly sink in woman''s fruitless rage, When she should wake revenge? |
29477 | Will land or gold redeem my son? |
29477 | Will no one hear? |
29477 | Will you not, my husband?" |
29477 | Will you wish to have his blood on your hands When before the great throne you each shall stand, And he only sixteen? |
29477 | Wilt thou not see him, then? |
29477 | With what, pray? |
29477 | Wo n''t anybody give two bits, then, for the lot? |
29477 | Wo n''t that do? |
29477 | Wo n''t you please to let me help you? |
29477 | Wo n''t you promise me, my son?'' |
29477 | Wo n''t you-- for your_ father''s_ sake--_won''t you_ promise to try and remember that? |
29477 | Wonder if he''s fastened tight? |
29477 | Wrote''em? |
29477 | Yeou hain''t seen her? |
29477 | Yet why not? |
29477 | You do n''t mean I''ve got to travel as far as that, do you, in the hot sun? |
29477 | You do n''t mean to say that? |
29477 | You have such a charming taste-- hasn''t she, Dora? |
29477 | You know the point where you must round the cliff? |
29477 | You think she can sit down and jerk more music than a whole orchestra, do n''t you? |
29477 | You''re sure of the track? |
29477 | You, too, with one of these horrid things on your head? |
29477 | You? |
29477 | [_ Awakes._] Darkness? |
29477 | [_ Exit_ R._ Aunt H._ Butcher''s? |
29477 | [_ Exit_, HETTY, L. Mrs. Lofty, how can I find words to express my indignation at the conduct of my pupils? |
29477 | [_ Exit_, L._ Charley._ Well, John, got your piece? |
29477 | _ Bessie._ O, dear, what will become of me? |
29477 | _ Bessie._ Or some splendid gum drops? |
29477 | _ Captain._ O, you understand French, then, is it? |
29477 | _ Captain._ Surely you do not intend to eat a gridiron, do you? |
29477 | _ Captain._ What do you mean, Patrick? |
29477 | _ Captain._ Why, Patrick, what puts the notion of a gridiron into your head? |
29477 | _ Captain._ Yes; but where''s the beefsteak, Patrick? |
29477 | _ Charley._ Why, you have n''t left it till now? |
29477 | _ Could n''t''cause he had ye down?_ That''s a purty story to tell me. |
29477 | _ Dav._ Ha, say''st thou so? |
29477 | _ De pen._ Do I take a swoard now to get me a peck ob sweet taters, a pair ob chickens, a pair ob shoes? |
29477 | _ Enter_ AUNT HOPKINS, R._ Aunt H._ Angelina, what on airth have them air Joneses got for dinner? |
29477 | _ Enter_ CHARLEY_ and_ RALPH, R._ Charley._ What''s the matter, Ray? |
29477 | _ Enter_ JOHN CLOD, L._ Clod._ I say, sonny; yer hain''t seen nothin''of a keow, have yer, here or hereabouts? |
29477 | _ Enter_ KATY DOOLAN, L._ Katy._ If you plase, mam, may I coome in? |
29477 | _ Fal._ Dost thou hear me, Hal? |
29477 | _ Fal._ What''s the matter? |
29477 | _ Fal._ What, upon compulsion? |
29477 | _ Fal._ Where is it? |
29477 | _ Fanny._ What is it? |
29477 | _ Fanny._ What was it? |
29477 | _ Fanny._ Who is she, any way? |
29477 | _ Gol._ Say, where? |
29477 | _ Gray._ Old saying? |
29477 | _ Gray._(_ Aside._) I say, Ned, Brown does n''t know it? |
29477 | _ Gray._(_ Sings._)"''What makes the lamb love Mary so?'' |
29477 | _ Hannah._ My mistress? |
29477 | _ Hannah._ Spare it? |
29477 | _ Hannah._ What of that? |
29477 | _ Hannah._ Whistle? |
29477 | _ He_ confounded? |
29477 | _ Hetty._ Chignons? |
29477 | _ John._ Got my piece? |
29477 | _ John._ What do you mean by that? |
29477 | _ John._ What is it? |
29477 | _ John._ What''s the use? |
29477 | _ John._ Who are you? |
29477 | _ John._ Who do you call a thief? |
29477 | _ Juno._ Does n''t yers, honies? |
29477 | _ Katy._ If you plase, mam, I have a letther; and would you plase rade it for me? |
29477 | _ Katy._ Is it, indade? |
29477 | _ Katy._ Pistol, it is? |
29477 | _ Katy._ Will Cornalius coome wid it? |
29477 | _ Kitty._ Has my new bonnet come yet? |
29477 | _ Lizzie._ Ai n''t it? |
29477 | _ Lizzie._ Four-- great-- red--_ Fanny and Hetty._ What? |
29477 | _ Lizzie._ Scene? |
29477 | _ Lizzie._ What moves the heart of Miss Precise To throw aside all prejudice, And gently whisper, It is nice? |
29477 | _ Lizzie._ Why, is n''t she splendid? |
29477 | _ Miss P._ But tell me, Mrs. Gabble, what is it about the poisoning? |
29477 | _ Miss P._ Girls, what does this mean? |
29477 | _ Miss P._ How, poisoned? |
29477 | _ Miss P._ Mr. Brown dead? |
29477 | _ Miss P._ What does this mean? |
29477 | _ Miss P._ What is that? |
29477 | _ Miss P._ Young ladies, are you pupils of the finest finishing- school in the city? |
29477 | _ Miss P._"Cos?" |
29477 | _ Miss Precise._ And pray, whom are you consigning to a place among the barbarians, young ladies? |
29477 | _ Patrick._ Parley voo frongsay? |
29477 | _ Patrick._ Sure, could n''t we cut it off the pork? |
29477 | _ Patrick._ Then would you lind me the loan of a gridiron, sir and you''ll obleege me? |
29477 | _ Patrick._ Then, would you lind me the loan of a gridiron, if you plase? |
29477 | _ Patrick._ Well, Captain, whereabouts in the wide world_ are_ we? |
29477 | _ Poins._ Come, let''s hear, Jack: What trick hast thou now? |
29477 | _ Ralph._ But why did n''t you take it up before? |
29477 | _ Ralph._ I say, Ray; what''s the proverb about the"thief of time"? |
29477 | _ Sadie and Bessie._ What is that? |
29477 | _ Sadie._ And your pickles were not poisoned? |
29477 | _ Sadie._ Little girl, do n''t you want some red and white peppermints? |
29477 | _ Sadie._ What do you want, little girl? |
29477 | _ Sissy._ Candy? |
29477 | _ Sissy._ Ith it pulled? |
29477 | _ Sissy._ Thay, Juno, who ith them? |
29477 | _ Sissy._ Thweet, Juno? |
29477 | _ Tell._ And in whose name? |
29477 | _ That my husband?_ What have you done to that eye, with which he was wo nt to look erect on heaven, and see in his mirror the image of his God? |
29477 | _ That my husband?_ What have you done to that eye, with which he was wo nt to look erect on heaven, and see in his mirror the image of his God? |
29477 | _ That my husband?_ With what torpedo chill have you touched the sinews of that manly arm? |
29477 | _ That my husband?_ With what torpedo chill have you touched the sinews of that manly arm? |
29477 | _ Tommy bit it?_ Drat the little fool! |
29477 | _ Ver._ When will you use them like your father, boy? |
29477 | _ Was trying to jerk his cheek off, hey?_ Wo n''t you never learn to quit foolin''''round a boy''s mouth with yer fingers? |
29477 | _ Was trying to jerk his cheek off, hey?_ Wo n''t you never learn to quit foolin''''round a boy''s mouth with yer fingers? |
29477 | _ While_ ALBERT_ continues to shoot,_ TELL_ enters and watches him some time, in silence.__ Tell._ That''s scarce a miss that comes so near the mark? |
29477 | _ White._ There''s enough, is n''t there? |
29477 | _ With Tommy Kelly, hey?_ Do n''t you know any better than to fight a boy that weighs twenty pounds more than you do, besides being two years older? |
29477 | _ With Tommy Kelly, hey?_ Do n''t you know any better than to fight a boy that weighs twenty pounds more than you do, besides being two years older? |
29477 | _ You pulled out three or four handfuls of his hair?_ H''m! |
29477 | a pickle? |
29477 | ai n''t that a beauty? |
29477 | an''is it mysel, with five good characters from respectable places, would be herdin''wid the haythens? |
29477 | and Sloper said,"How-- how the dooth should I know?" |
29477 | and how are ye''s onyhow? |
29477 | and how do you know it''s France, Captain dear? |
29477 | and, sirs, would ye plaise To be a tellin''me what might be these? |
29477 | art thou mad? |
29477 | but would n''t dat be scrumptuous?" |
29477 | come, tell us thy reason; what sayest thou to this? |
29477 | do you tell me so? |
29477 | do you understand your mother tongue? |
29477 | do you want to shirk your task? |
29477 | fifty cents? |
29477 | ha!--what''s the matter with that nose?" |
29477 | half a dollar? |
29477 | how can I let you go?" |
29477 | how long? |
29477 | how much for Fame? |
29477 | is not the truth, the truth? |
29477 | is the girl mad? |
29477 | life may be a dream; But if such_ dreams_ are given, While at the portals thus we stand, What are the_ truths_ of Heaven? |
29477 | no one at hand, Or likely soon to be, to hear my cries? |
29477 | one bit? |
29477 | one dollar? |
29477 | or Covetous parson, for his tithes distraining? |
29477 | or parson of the parish? |
29477 | say''st thou, Othman? |
29477 | seventy- five cents? |
29477 | shall we have a play extempore? |
29477 | silent still? |
29477 | silent yet? |
29477 | that child has one of those horrible chignons on her head!--(_Aloud._) Miss Rice, why did you make that selection? |
29477 | thou whoreson, obscene, greasy, tallow- keech,--_ Fal._ What, art thou mad? |
29477 | twenty- five cents? |
29477 | whaar, saar? |
29477 | what come they to see? |
29477 | what means that shiver? |
29477 | what sound was that? |
29477 | what will become of us? |
29477 | what wonder meets my sight? |
29477 | what''s the matter with that nose?" |
29477 | what''s the time? |
29477 | what''s the use of livin'', ef you ca n''t know how other folks live? |
29477 | what''th the matter?" |
29477 | where are they?" |
29477 | where is it? |
29477 | where''s the border? |
29477 | where?" |
29477 | which way shall I fly Infinite wrath and infinite despair? |
29477 | whither are you going? |
29477 | who bids for Friendship-- as it is? |
29477 | who said you would n''t?" |
29477 | who''ll buy this splendid Tear? |
29477 | why that steady gaze and sad? |
29477 | will you lind me the loan of a gridiron? |
29477 | with ray to shine in every sad foreboding breast, save this desponding one of mine-- who bids for man''s last friend, and best? |
29477 | wrote''em? |
29477 | you murtherin''villain,''says he,''you''re worse nor Captain Rock; is it goin''to burn me out you are, you red rogue iv a Ribbonman?" |
29419 | ''Are you a peddler?'' 29419 ''I want to know,''says I;''how on airth did it happen?'' |
29419 | ''My dear,''said we fondly,''did you make this?'' 29419 ''She is all cut to pieces,''says he;''do you know whether she was in your stable, Mr. Hitchcock, last night?'' |
29419 | ''Taint a bit like me? |
29419 | ''Yes, my love, ai n''t it nice?'' 29419 A different story from what I have told, sir?" |
29419 | A fig for your banister,retorted Mrs. Grumly, turning up her nose,"have n''t I a cousin as is a corridor in the navy?" |
29419 | A longish critter, with a short tail? |
29419 | A pook achent, vat podders te school committees till they do vat you vish, shoost to get rid of you? |
29419 | A rabbit? |
29419 | A shenteel shoemaker, vat loves to measure te gals''feet and hankles petter tan to make te shoes? |
29419 | A singin''-master, too lazy to work? |
29419 | Ah, as you know,said he, quitting the pulpit,"why should I take the trouble of telling you?" |
29419 | Already? |
29419 | And I presume the porpusses give it up in despair, do n''t they? |
29419 | And am I always to remain so? |
29419 | And how do you manage when the happy pair are negroes? |
29419 | And how long,said the youth,"has he had this trick?" |
29419 | And pray, Mr. Philosopher,observed the seaman,"where did your father die?" |
29419 | And pray, Sir,said the counsel,"for what reason did you take up your residence in that place?" |
29419 | And shall the instrument,said the earl, coolly,"run as usual--_to our trusty and well- beloved cousin and counsellor?_"AN HIBERNIAN CAPTURE. |
29419 | And sorter jumps when it runs? |
29419 | And was justice done the murderer? |
29419 | And what did you reply? |
29419 | And what, man,said the other,"do you get by this business of yours?" |
29419 | And what,said he to the Dean,"do you think the Prince of Orange has chosen for his motto?" |
29419 | And what? |
29419 | And when will it be ended? |
29419 | And where did your grandfather die? |
29419 | And your grandfather? |
29419 | And your great- grandfather? |
29419 | And your great- grandfather? |
29419 | Are you a horse? |
29419 | Are you confident you were born at Bourges? |
29419 | Are you married? |
29419 | Are you not sorry for it? |
29419 | Are you sure your name is Lessite? |
29419 | Ay-- ahem!--do you? 29419 Aye,"observed Mr. Mingay,"what would they have said to see your feet ornamented with either shoes or stockings?" |
29419 | BEN,said a politician to his companion,"did you know I had declined the office of Alderman?" |
29419 | BUBBY, why do n''t you go home and have your mother sew up that awful hole in your trowsers? |
29419 | But do n''t they join together again when they meet in your wake? |
29419 | But how ith your wife, thir, and the children? |
29419 | But in case your friend is not a candidate,said the solicitor,"might I then count on your assistance?" |
29419 | But what do I want with a coffin? 29419 But what makes it so many different colors?" |
29419 | But will your majesty,continued he,"permit me to ask you a question in my turn? |
29419 | By the by,said the lady,"how came you to tell me such a story about one side of that child''s face being white?" |
29419 | CAN you return my love, dearest Julia? |
29419 | Ca n''t I sell you a trunk? |
29419 | Ca n''t you compare it to something? |
29419 | Ca n''t you have dinner first? |
29419 | Can you remember ever having seen your father and mother? |
29419 | Certainly not, my dear, but why do you ask? |
29419 | DO you want to buy a real lot of butter? |
29419 | DOES the razor take hold well? |
29419 | Did I not order some hock, sir? 29419 Did it take you two hours to perform the operation?" |
29419 | Did you hire out? |
29419 | Did you remain long in New York? |
29419 | Did you say you had followed the enemy of your country over frozen ground, till every footstep was covered with blood? |
29419 | Did your wife drive you off? |
29419 | Did your wife ever treat you badly? |
29419 | Did your wife oppose your leaving her? |
29419 | Dis razor hurt you, Sah? |
29419 | Do n''t you know that_ black_ berries are always_ red_ when they are_ green_? |
29419 | Do n''t you know you should not be out there, my son? |
29419 | Do n''t you see,said Sims,"what is written on the board?" |
29419 | Do they so? |
29419 | Do you know its name? |
29419 | Do you know who I am, Sir? |
29419 | Do you know, Sir, to whom you are talking? |
29419 | Do you still love her? |
29419 | Do you, indeed? |
29419 | Does he? |
29419 | Exactly,said Dick,"and in your limbs too?" |
29419 | Fellow,said he,"how dared you neglect making the gibbet that was ordered for me?" |
29419 | Finish what? |
29419 | For what? |
29419 | For who knows,said she,"but it may bear the same kind of fruit?" |
29419 | Four quarts? |
29419 | GEORGE, what does C A T spell? |
29419 | Got them from Bets, did you? |
29419 | HALLO, boy, did you see a rabbit cross the road there just now? |
29419 | HOW can you call these blackberries, when they are red? |
29419 | Had it long legs behind, and big ears? |
29419 | Have you a marriage certificate? |
29419 | Have you seen the Dardanelles? |
29419 | His lordship wants to know what you will take? |
29419 | Hold your tongue, you dunce; where does the sun rise? |
29419 | How can I drink, when there is no beer in the jug? |
29419 | How could that be,said the captain,"since there are no chimneys in that country?" |
29419 | How dark was it? |
29419 | How do you know I''ve got the delirium tremens? |
29419 | How do you know they are your ducks? |
29419 | How is it,said a man to his neighbour,"Parson----, the laziest man living, writes these interminable sermons?" |
29419 | How knowest thou, old man,cried the Khazee,"where that tree is?" |
29419 | How long did you teach? |
29419 | How long may she take to make the run? |
29419 | How long? 29419 How many children have you?" |
29419 | How many were there? |
29419 | How so? |
29419 | How so? |
29419 | How, Murphy? |
29419 | How,replied Jim, flattered by the remark,"how''s that?" |
29419 | How,said the one,"are you quartered?" |
29419 | How? |
29419 | I RECKON I could n''t drive a trade with you to- day, squire? |
29419 | I do n''t know, my son,replied the parent,"but why do you ask me such a question?" |
29419 | I do n''t understand you; what do you mean? |
29419 | I will,answered the little boy;"but ai n''t it Sunday in the back yard, mother?" |
29419 | I''ll trouble_ you_ for two dollars, Mr. High Sheriff''s representative,says Sassy,"for smokin''in the streets; do you underconstand, my old coon?" |
29419 | IS Mr. Brown a man of means? |
29419 | IS that clock right over there? |
29419 | In the garret, perhaps? |
29419 | In what condition did you leave her? |
29419 | Is not Geneva dull? |
29419 | Is the Bank broke? |
29419 | Is your family provided for? |
29419 | JOHN, what is the past of see? |
29419 | Knotting, Sir,replied she;"pray Mr. Whitefoord, can you knot?" |
29419 | MAMMA,said a promising youth of some four or five years,"if all people are made of dust, ai n''t niggers made of coal- dust?" |
29419 | MAY I help you to some beef? |
29419 | MISTER, I say, I do n''t suppose you do n''t know of nobody who do n''t want to hire nobody to do nothing, do n''t you? |
29419 | MOTHER,said a little fellow the other day,"is there any harm in breaking egg shells?" |
29419 | MR. JENKINS, will it suit you to settle that old account of yours? |
29419 | MY DEAR,said an affectionate wife,"what shall we have for dinner to- day?" |
29419 | Mr. Kelvy, did you witness the affair referred to? |
29419 | My neighbor,said the countryman,"handed me two cents when I left home, to buy a plug of tobacco-- have you got that article?" |
29419 | Never mind, my son, what Bill did; what has the committee met for? |
29419 | No, no, what animal is very fond of milk? |
29419 | No, no; I wish you to tell me whether the attack was at all a preconcerted affair? |
29419 | No, vat vas it? |
29419 | No, what was it? |
29419 | Not I, but you, ma''am-- how''s that? |
29419 | Now what do you want to purchase? |
29419 | Now,said Mrs. Slocum, perceiving that the narration was ended,"now, I should like to know whether the man was killed or not?" |
29419 | Now,said he,"where''s my wig,--where_ is_ my wig?" |
29419 | O Sir,said he,"where are your_ good witnesses_?" |
29419 | Oh now,says he,"how much a yard did you give for that, and that?" |
29419 | Oh, dear, what can the matter be? |
29419 | Oh, you did, eh? |
29419 | Oot awa, my lord, how can you say so of a_ British clergyman_? |
29419 | PA, what is the interest of a kiss? |
29419 | PAPA, ca n''t I go to the zoologerical rooms to see the camomile fight the rhy- no- sir- ee- hoss? |
29419 | PRAY, Sir, what makes you walk so crookedly? |
29419 | Pe ye a Yankee peddler, mit chewelry in your pack, to sheat the gals? |
29419 | Pray madam,said the Doctor,"was it a counterfeit?" |
29419 | Pray, Miss D----,said he,"what time do you prefer?" |
29419 | Pray, what is it? |
29419 | Prenologus, ten, feeling te young folks, heads like so much cabbitch? |
29419 | Right over there? 29419 Right, and why does it rise in the east?" |
29419 | SIR,said a pompous personage who once undertook to bully an editor,"do you know that I take your paper?" |
29419 | SUPPOSE you are lost in a fog,said Lord C---- to his noble relative, the Marchioness,"what are you most likely to be?" |
29419 | Salt, for what? |
29419 | Show, Jake; what reply did they make? |
29419 | So you have returned, Mr. Whitefield, have you? |
29419 | Stranger,says he,"where was you raised?" |
29419 | Super and lotchin, I reckon? |
29419 | TAKE a ticket, Sir, for the Widow and Orphans Fund of the Spike Society? |
29419 | The harp that once through Tara''s halls--"What do you propose to do with it? |
29419 | The_ delirium tremens_--have I? |
29419 | Then he is_ yours_, and you have a treasure in him, Sir? |
29419 | There''s Doll, and Bet, and Moll, and Kate, and--"What is your wife''s name? |
29419 | This is excellent steak,said he,"what did you pay for it?" |
29419 | Vell, ten, vat the mischief can you be? 29419 Vere''s the difference?" |
29419 | Very well,I make response,"where was it?" |
29419 | Votch dat? |
29419 | WELL, Pat, Jimmy did n''t quite kill you with a brickbat, did he? |
29419 | WELL, Robert, how much did your pig weigh? |
29419 | WHAT are you writing such a big hand for, Pat? |
29419 | WHAT do you think of the new sewing machine? |
29419 | WHAT is your name? |
29419 | WHAT makes you spend your time so freely, Jack? |
29419 | WHERE did you get so much money, Isaac? |
29419 | WILL you never learn, my dear, the difference between real and exchangeable value? |
29419 | Wa''al,said the old woman,"I raaly do n''t know; wo n''t you just take the candle and see?" |
29419 | Wall, mister, with this I let out:''Do I_ know_ it?'' 29419 Was it a kinder gray varmint?" |
29419 | Was the man killed? 29419 Was the man killed?" |
29419 | Was your wife good- looking? |
29419 | We rose, and with an unfaltering voice said:Well, Judge, how do you do?" |
29419 | Well, Mary? |
29419 | Well, Pat, where have you been all this time? |
29419 | Well, and how much do you get a chimney? |
29419 | Well, did n''t it kill him? |
29419 | Well, is he coming? |
29419 | Well, sir, how much wine do you suppose they drank last night? |
29419 | Well, sir,said the farmer,"what of that? |
29419 | Well, they are great horse- stealers in your country are not they? |
29419 | Well, what do you think I''ll do to you? |
29419 | Well, what have you to say about it? |
29419 | Well, when does the President fodder? |
29419 | Well,ses I,"go rite strate and tell Sal I wo n''t stand it, I do n''t want''em, and I ai n''t goin''to have''em; dus she think I''m a Turk? |
29419 | Were you traveling on the night this affair took place? |
29419 | What are you down here for? |
29419 | What are your possessions? |
29419 | What country are you from, my lad? |
29419 | What did he say? |
29419 | What did she say to you, when you were in the act of leaving? |
29419 | What did you put in your paper? 29419 What did you run away for?" |
29419 | What did your wife say to you, that induced you to_ slope_? |
29419 | What do you ask me that for? |
29419 | What do you mean by that? |
29419 | What do you mean, sir? |
29419 | What do you want to do with it? |
29419 | What does your mother keep to catch mice? |
29419 | What for? |
29419 | What gymnastiness are you doing here? |
29419 | What in thunder have you been at, you black rascal? |
29419 | What is that to you? |
29419 | What is that? |
29419 | What is the matter, my dear? |
29419 | What is your name? |
29419 | What is your name? |
29419 | What is your occupation? |
29419 | What kind of butter is it? |
29419 | What kind of character can I give you? |
29419 | What kind of weather was it? 29419 What part of the house do you sleep in?" |
29419 | What put that notion into your head, Sally? |
29419 | What right then,asked he,"have you to put up those letters after your name?" |
29419 | What sort of horses have you in America? |
29419 | What then? 29419 What time do they dine in Washington, Colonel?" |
29419 | What trade do you follow? |
29419 | What was there? |
29419 | What will you take? |
29419 | What''s that noise? |
29419 | What, how you call that? |
29419 | What,answered the monarch,"would the king of England say, were I to demand the liberation of the prisoners in Newgate?" |
29419 | What-- so, Sir? |
29419 | When you announced your intention of emigrating, what did she say? |
29419 | Where are you going to? |
29419 | Where are you lodging now? |
29419 | Where did you come from? |
29419 | Where did you last see her? |
29419 | Where did you stop? |
29419 | Where do you expect to make a living? |
29419 | Where does the sun rise? |
29419 | Where does your family live at present? |
29419 | Where is my horse and wagon? |
29419 | Where then? |
29419 | Where was that? |
29419 | Where were you, young man, when you delivered this money? |
29419 | Where, and what? |
29419 | Where,exclaimed he, with great emphasis,"where shall we find a more foolish knave or a more knavish fool than he?" |
29419 | Who goes there? |
29419 | Why did you give it up? |
29419 | Why did you leave their communion, Mr. Dickson? 29419 Why do n''t you heave to for it?" |
29419 | Why is neighbor Smith''s liquor shop like a counterfeit dollar? |
29419 | Why is this? 29419 Why so?" |
29419 | Why, John,says his lordship,"you seem to have got an excellent place; how could you manage this with the character I gave you?" |
29419 | Why, Sir,replied she,"if_ you_ have not_ impudence_ enough to speak them, how can you suppose that_ I_ have?" |
29419 | Why, do n''t you see that cursed big rat? |
29419 | Why, gentlemen,exclaimed the parson,"was Milton in hell when he wrote his_ Paradise Lost_?" |
29419 | Why, how in the world could it cost that much? |
29419 | Why, ma''am? |
29419 | Why, what have I done? |
29419 | Why,exclaimed an Irishman,"would you beat the poor dumb animal for spakin''out?" |
29419 | Why,said the gentleman,"did you not say you were a poor scholar?" |
29419 | Why,said the old man,"this here is one cabbage head, ai n''t it?" |
29419 | Why? |
29419 | Why? |
29419 | Will you take this woman to be your wedded wife? |
29419 | Will you, Madam, be kind enough,said he,"to tell the Court what these words were?" |
29419 | With all my heart,said the gentleman,"but if we should be going different ways, how will you get your great coat?" |
29419 | Wo n''t you try and do better next time? |
29419 | Women,he added,"we know, are rational animals; but would they be less so if they spoke less?" |
29419 | Would the devil beat his wife if he had one? |
29419 | Yes or no? |
29419 | You are very accurate; and how do you happen to know this so very exactly? |
29419 | You claim to have this saddle checked as baggage? |
29419 | You did n''t do it, did you? |
29419 | You dirty fellow,exclaimed the astonished Yankee,"what the mischief are you doing that for?" |
29419 | You dunce, what was it scratched your sister''s face? |
29419 | You have n''t, eh? 29419 You misunderstand me, my friend; I want to know whether he attacked him with any evil intent?" |
29419 | You''ll kick me out of this cabing? |
29419 | You''ll kick_ me_, Mr. Hitchcock, out of this cabing? |
29419 | You, ma''am? |
29419 | _ And the partridges too, Sire?_said the actor. |
29419 | _ You_ declined the office of Alderman? 29419 ''Gunnin''?'' 29419 ''Man alive,''says she,''are you here yet? 29419 ''Pray, ma''am,''said the Southerner,''will you''ave the goodness to lean back in your chair?'' 29419 ''What ails you, Sam,''says she,''that you do n''t hook it?'' 29419 ''What''s that?'' 29419 (_ bear!_) When is music like vegetables? 29419 (_ with a smile_)he belongs to_ you_, as a matter of course, then?" |
29419 | --meaning, of course,"How d''ye do?" |
29419 | A CERTAIN cabinet minister being asked why he did not promote merit? |
29419 | A CLERGYMAN meeting a chimney sweeper, asked whence he came? |
29419 | A COUNTRY parish clerk, being asked how the inscriptions on the tombs in the church- yard were so badly spelled? |
29419 | A FOP in company, wanting his servant, called out:"Where''s that blockhead of mine?" |
29419 | A GENTLEMAN asked a friend, in a somewhat knowing manner,"Pray, sir, did you ever see a cat- fish?" |
29419 | A GENTLEMAN inspecting lodgings to be let, asked the pretty girl who showed them,"And are you, my dear, to be let with the lodgings?" |
29419 | A HUSBAND telegraphed to his wife:"What have you got for breakfast, and how is the baby?" |
29419 | A MAN who was sentenced to be hung was visited by his wife, who said:"My dear, would you like the children to see you executed?" |
29419 | A MATHEMATICIAN being asked by a stout fellow,"If two pigs weigh twenty pounds, how much will a large hog weigh?" |
29419 | A PERSON meeting a friend running through the rain, with an umbrella over him, said,"Where are you running to in such a hurry,_ like a mad mushroom_?" |
29419 | A PERSON who had resided some time on the coast of Africa, was asked if he thought it possible to civilize the natives? |
29419 | A SAILOR being about to set out for India, a citizen asked him:"Where did your father die?" |
29419 | A young minister standing by, blushed to the temples, and said,"O brother, how could you say what was not the fact?" |
29419 | AN Irishman, observing a dandy taking his usual strut in Broadway, stepped up to him and inquired:"How much do you ax for thim houses?" |
29419 | AN Oxford scholar, calling early one morning on another, when in bed, says,"Jack, are you asleep?" |
29419 | AN ignorant rector had occasion to wait on a bishop, who was so incensed at his stupidity that he exclaimed,"What_ blockhead_ gave you a living?" |
29419 | AT a cattle show, recently, a fellow who was making himself ridiculously conspicuous, at last broke forth--"Call these ere prize cattle? |
29419 | After he had been gone some time, the Khazee said to the old man,"He is long-- do you think he has got there yet?" |
29419 | All as ever I got is threeha''pence- farden, and a bag of marbles;(_ to the other_)--you got any capital, Bill? |
29419 | An Irishman asked him if that was the way"he threated a fellow creathur?" |
29419 | An old acquaintance stepped up to the prisoner and said:"Jim, the danger is past; and now, honor bright, did n''t you steal that horse?" |
29419 | And no doubt you are now come from--?" |
29419 | Another member then rose, and thus delivered himself:"Mr. Speaker, did the honourable member speak to the purpose, or not speak to the purpose? |
29419 | Before he had time to seat himself, she said:"Have you seen cousin John? |
29419 | Belongs to YOU, I suppose, Sir?" |
29419 | But no matter, it is a good joke:--"''What do you charge for board?'' |
29419 | But what do folks say?" |
29419 | But what means this sudden lowering of the heavens, and that dark cloud arising from beneath the western horizon? |
29419 | But_ any_ how, Squire, what''ll you give, sposin''I_ do_ try?" |
29419 | Canon biblically replied--"Is thy servant a dog that he should do this thing?" |
29419 | Charley opened the door to go out, when George raised himself on his elbow, and said,"Charley, where are you going?" |
29419 | Cicero replied,"Can your mother tell yours?" |
29419 | Conant:_ Is it your business to take away the dust? |
29419 | Conant:_ The case is proved, and the act says you must be fined 10_l._ Have you got 10_l._ a- piece? |
29419 | Conant:_ You hear the charge, my lads-- what have you to say in defence? |
29419 | Could there have been anything more gallant than that? |
29419 | DURING the examination of a witness, as to the locality of stairs in a house, the counsel asked him,"Which way the stairs ran?" |
29419 | Did I say sixteen_ feet_? |
29419 | Did n''t I see you with my own eyes?" |
29419 | Do n''t you hear distant thunder? |
29419 | Do n''t you say when you come to our house on a night,''Bet, bring me some more ale?''" |
29419 | Do n''t you see those flashes of lightning? |
29419 | Do you give it up? |
29419 | Do you hear it against the windows? |
29419 | Do you hear the rain, Caudle? |
29419 | Do you hear? |
29419 | Do you pray for him?" |
29419 | Do you thill live on the old farm?" |
29419 | Do you_ hear_ it, I say? |
29419 | Does the Court understand from that, that you are married to him?" |
29419 | Dus she think I''m wurth a hundred thousand dollars? |
29419 | Dyer:_ How do you get your living? |
29419 | Dyer:_ Policeman, do you know anything of the prisoner? |
29419 | Dyer:_ What have you to say? |
29419 | Dyer:_ What is the worth of the dog? |
29419 | Fires and furies-- was he alive?" |
29419 | Hain''t I attended devine worship reg''lar? |
29419 | Hain''t I bin a good and dootiful husband to Sal? |
29419 | Hain''t I bought her all the bonnets an frocks she wanted? |
29419 | Hain''t I kep''in doors uv a nite, an quit chawn tobacker and smokin''segars just to please her? |
29419 | Have I ever done enny mean trick, that she should serve me in this way?" |
29419 | Have I ever stole a horse? |
29419 | Have you lost any baggage?" |
29419 | Having descanted at some length upon its merits, the boy remarked,"Mother, I see Luther and the table, but where are the worms?" |
29419 | He first said to the man:"Vell, you vants to be marrit, do you? |
29419 | He said he had nobody to employ him, but added,"Why do n''t you work, massa?" |
29419 | He told the story to Smithers, when the latter said:"Do you know, Diggs, you have committed a very grave offence?" |
29419 | He went home, and the next day being at work in a cabbage patch with his father, he spoke out:"Daddy, what''s the meaning of ditto?" |
29419 | He went to preach a second time, and asked the congregation,"Oh, true believers, do you know what I am going to say to you?" |
29419 | Here the train- hand who overheard the talk, stepped up, and inquired,"Have you lost anything?" |
29419 | Highly enraged,"Sir,"says he to the farmer,"do you know that I have been at two universities, and at two colleges at each university?" |
29419 | How do you do? |
29419 | How do you get your bread? |
29419 | How do you live? |
29419 | How do you support yourself? |
29419 | How do_ you_ do? |
29419 | How long have you been in my service? |
29419 | How old are you? |
29419 | I am sure I''ve let you''ave your own way in most everything?" |
29419 | I believe your Grace and I have now been in every jail in the kingdom?" |
29419 | I found the same waiter, who, so soon as I come in, tell me--"Sir, did you not say that you would go by the coach to- morrow morning?" |
29419 | I go into a saloon, but, before I finish, great noise come into the passage, and I pull the bell''s rope to demand why so great tapage? |
29419 | I never heard of it; what place?" |
29419 | I once took an Englishman with me in a gig up Alabama country, and he says,''What''s this great church yard we are passing through?'' |
29419 | I s''pose if I am challenged, I have the right to choose my weapons?'' |
29419 | I say do you_ hear the rain_? |
29419 | I suppose they have n''t invented bells in America yet?" |
29419 | I suppose you live by going around the docks? |
29419 | I suppose, Sir, you are going to--?" |
29419 | I thought you was off gunnin''an hour ago; who''d a thought you was here?'' |
29419 | I was looking on, and some member said to me,''Crockett, do n''t that monkey favor General Jackson?'' |
29419 | If he did not speak to the purpose, to what purpose did he speak?" |
29419 | If we have laws, and they are not executed, for what purpose were they made?" |
29419 | Is that what you want to know? |
29419 | Is there anything stirring in London?" |
29419 | It is to be presumed that thereafter Jacob''s first inquiry must have been,"Oh now, where did you get such and such goods?" |
29419 | It was Sir Hercules Langrishe, who, being asked, on a similar occasion,"Have you finished all that port( three bottles) without assistance?" |
29419 | It went off well enough, till she came to a rather hard looking specimen of humanity, whom she asked:"What are you in here for?" |
29419 | LORD MANSFIELD examining a witness, asked,"What do you know of the defendant?" |
29419 | MISS Lucy Stone, of Boston, a"woman''s rights"woman, having put the question,"Marriage-- what is it?" |
29419 | Meisther Morgans, you zee ony zour krout dare?" |
29419 | Metellus said to Cicero,"Dare you tell your father''s name?" |
29419 | Next morning, as they were stepping into their carriage, the waiter said to Stothard,"Sir, do you observe these two gentlemen?" |
29419 | Nominated?" |
29419 | Now what do you want to do with it?" |
29419 | Now, does that passage mean that_ every one_ of us has sinned?" |
29419 | Now, if folks enquire again whether you be or not, what shall I tell them I think?" |
29419 | Now, what''s that letter, eh?" |
29419 | Now, why do n''t you hire an Irishman to go up, and den if_ he_ falls and kills himself, dar wo n''t be no loss to nobody?" |
29419 | Oh, you_ do_ hear it, do you? |
29419 | One of them, in the midst of the altercation, asked the other contemptuously,"Do you remember, Sir, when you were my footman?" |
29419 | Ordering him to stop, he asked hastily,"Whence? |
29419 | Perhaps he is_ yours_, Sir?" |
29419 | Pickrel?'' |
29419 | Pray, Captain, does everything else go fast in the new country?" |
29419 | Pray, mister, may I ask your name?" |
29419 | Proceeding in his cross examination, the counsel asked where the affray happened? |
29419 | Rising solemnly, after three loud hems, he spoke as follows:"Mr. Speaker, have we laws, or have we not laws? |
29419 | SOME one asked a lad how it was he was so short for his age? |
29419 | SOON after the settlement of New England, Governor Dudley saw a stout Indian idling in the market- place of Boston, and asked him why he did not work? |
29419 | Said the doctor, nodding his head knowingly,''Have you got a sorrel horse then?'' |
29419 | She hesitated a little, and he repeated:"Vell, vell, do you like him so vell as to be his vife?" |
29419 | Slocum?" |
29419 | Speech was principally contended for; but on this Dr. Johnson observed, that parrots and magpies speak; were they therefore rational? |
29419 | Stepping on deck, he addressed me in English, thus:''Pray, young man, is the captain on board?'' |
29419 | Stock- holders and depositors flocked into the Bank, making the panic, inquiring,"What is the matter?" |
29419 | TALLEYRAND being asked, if a certain authoress, whom he had long since known, but who belonged rather to the last age, was not"a little tiresome?" |
29419 | THE following conversation occurred between a theatrical manager and an aspirant for Thespian honors:"What is your pleasure?" |
29419 | THE late Caleb Whitefoord, seeing a lady knotting fringe for a petticoat, asked her, what she was doing? |
29419 | The Judge inquired if that was the_ sole_ object of the plaintiff, or was it not rather baiting with a_ sprat_ to catch a_ herring_? |
29419 | The child observed,"Father, did you ever learn anything?" |
29419 | The counsel, not yet abashed, asked,"And pray, my witty friend, how far were you from Tom when he knocked down Jack?" |
29419 | The driver was very wroth:"Well, what did you get_ in_ for, if you could not pay? |
29419 | The fellow, popping out his head, said,"Shall it be_ we_ then?" |
29419 | The general asked where he had been? |
29419 | The king having heard of it, one day asked him good humouredly,"Pray, Zaremba, what is your name?" |
29419 | The lieutenant asked where he_ came from_? |
29419 | The organist, enraged, cried out,"Why do n''t you blow?" |
29419 | The poor African immediately exclaimed,"Oh, missus, dat you? |
29419 | The recipient telegraphed back the following startling query:"For Heaven''s sake, how many?" |
29419 | The stranger answered,"Your account is a very extraordinary one; could you have believed it if you had not seen it yourself?" |
29419 | Then I say,"What for all so large concourse?" |
29419 | Then to the woman:"Vell, do you love dis man so better as any man you have ever seen?" |
29419 | There, do you see that animal on the fence?" |
29419 | There-- do you hear it? |
29419 | This had a great effect, till the opposite lawyer asked what made him cry? |
29419 | Thus instructed, our learned advocate boldly asked,"When, Sir, were you last in Gloucester gaol?" |
29419 | To this the passenger demurred, and losing his temper, peremptorily asked:--"Will you check my baggage, sir?" |
29419 | To this, the son made no reply; but turning to his father, asked him,"Is it your will, sir, that I kick this monk down stairs?" |
29419 | Unable longer to restrain his curiosity, he burst out with,"Excuse me, Sir, are you the_ Robinson Crusoe_ so famous in history?" |
29419 | Vell, you lovesh dis voman so goot as any voman you have ever seen?" |
29419 | WHAT IS A SPOON? |
29419 | WHAT is the difference between an attempted homicide, and a hog butchery? |
29419 | WHAT tune is that which ladies never call for? |
29419 | WHEN Horne Tooke was at school, the boys asked him"what his father was?" |
29419 | WHICH travels at the greater speed, heat or cold? |
29419 | WHO is not carried back to good old times as he reads this sketch of Connecticut goin''to meetin''fifty years ago? |
29419 | WHY is a man eating soup with a fork like another kissing his sweetheart? |
29419 | Was it raining at the time?" |
29419 | Was n''t me father a miller?" |
29419 | Was you elected?" |
29419 | Well, because I did n''t want to let the dacent baste see that he carried so big a load so far for sixpence?" |
29419 | Well, thir, how are the old gentleman and lady?" |
29419 | Well, we come at a house of country, ancient with the trees cut like some peacocks, and I demand--"What you call these trees?" |
29419 | What can be the cause of such disfigurement?" |
29419 | What do you always sit on?" |
29419 | What do you follow? |
29419 | What does c- h- a- i- r spell?" |
29419 | What for?" |
29419 | What is your name, fellow?" |
29419 | What next?" |
29419 | What was he to do to escape with his plunder? |
29419 | What were you to do? |
29419 | What will people say?" |
29419 | What''s your business? |
29419 | When is a lady''s neck not a neck? |
29419 | Why do you ask?" |
29419 | Why do you read your speeches to parliament?" |
29419 | Why is a poor horse greater than Napoleon? |
29419 | Why is a thief called a"jail- bird?" |
29419 | Why is it not brought in?" |
29419 | Why is that?" |
29419 | Why should an editor look upon it as ominous when a correspondent signs himself"Nemo?" |
29419 | Why was the elephant the last animal going into Noah''s ark? |
29419 | Will the anecdote raise a laugh? |
29419 | Wishing to give his uncle an idea of his superior knowledge, he tapped him on the shoulder, and pointing to the windlass, asked,"Quid est hoc?" |
29419 | With the utmost suavity the trader says:"I think I can treat you to your liking; how do you want to be treated?" |
29419 | Witness, has not an effort been made to induce you to tell a different story?" |
29419 | Wonderful, is n''t it? |
29419 | You mean to say, that not I but you are a blockhead?" |
29419 | You see, one of those days I''ll be after dying, and when I go to the gate of heaven I''ll rap, and St. Peter will say,''Who''s there?'' |
29419 | You shall excuse my badinage-- eh? |
29419 | _ Captain O''Flinn_: Faith, ma''am, I''ve heard o''that complaint running in families; p''rhaps your mother had not any childer either? |
29419 | _ Cook:_( in astonishment)--"Why, ma''am? |
29419 | _ Do you think there is nobody killed but yourself?_"SEVERAL NEGATIVES. |
29419 | _ Judge_: How do you keep yourself alive? |
29419 | _ Prisoner:_ There, your vership, you hear it''s a waluable dog-- now is it feasible as I should go for to prig a dog wot was a waluable hanimal? |
29419 | _ Prisoner:_(_ affecting a look of astonishment_)--Vot, me_ steal_ a dog? |
29419 | _ Webster:_ Mrs. Greenough, was Mrs. Bogden a neat woman? |
29419 | _ Webster:_ What was that, Ma''am? |
29419 | _ yours_, Sir?" |
29419 | a dentist, preaking te people''s jaws at a dollar a shnag, and running off mit my daughter?" |
29419 | an Irish echo in the_ Boston Post_ inquires,"Would n''t you like to know?" |
29419 | and I''ll say,''I want to come in,''and he''ll say,''Did you behave like a dacent boy in the other world, and pay all the fines and such things?'' |
29419 | and I''ll say,''It''s me, Pat Malone,''and he''ll say,''What do you want?'' |
29419 | and you made no attempt to stop him?" |
29419 | are you not a member of the African Church?" |
29419 | asked a tall Green Mountain boy, as he walked up to the bar of a second- rate hotel in New York--''what do you ask a week for board and lodging?'' |
29419 | asked the agent in surprise;"so much as that?" |
29419 | but Tom put them all in good temper, by asking, with irresistibly quaint humor,"Why should I_ shoot her_? |
29419 | did you kill him?" |
29419 | did you let off that gun?" |
29419 | do you think I am always obliged to find you ears?" |
29419 | eh?" |
29419 | exclaimed Saunders, astonished,"_ hae ye ony vacancies in your corps?_"AN INVITATION. |
29419 | exclaimed the other,"do you mean to insult me? |
29419 | for what?" |
29419 | good old neighbor,"cried Mrs. Popps,"what are you going to do with that great ugly crow?" |
29419 | instead of"Oh now, how much did you pay?" |
29419 | is Silver Tail dead?" |
29419 | is he yours, Sir?" |
29419 | is that all?" |
29419 | or Brigham Young? |
29419 | or a Mormon? |
29419 | rejoined George;"for what?" |
29419 | said the Vicar,"then how do you get on if he do n''t pay?" |
29419 | said the adjutant,"what do you mean?" |
29419 | said the astronomer;"you do n''t think it is going to rain, do you?" |
29419 | said the bantering bachelor,"how comes it you let your mistress ride the better horse?" |
29419 | said the highwayman,"what do you mean by pressing on me so?" |
29419 | said the other,"after declaring your opinion that to lend money on usury, was as bad as_ murder_?" |
29419 | says the Colonel:"but did you hear what Mr. Morgan did when he returned from visiting you?" |
29419 | she exclaimed,"how could you do so when gaming is such a horrid habit? |
29419 | she''ll say,"how so?" |
29419 | that I kin afford thribbles, an clothe an feed an school three children at a time? |
29419 | that I''m Jo''n Jacob Aster, or Mr. Roschile? |
29419 | that''s too much; but I s''pose you''ll allow for the times I am absent from dinner and supper?'' |
29419 | us two fools get married? |
29419 | what do you mean by that?" |
29419 | what does the fellow mean?" |
29419 | what have the cats to do with the school committee?" |
29419 | where''s that?" |
29419 | whither? |
29419 | who is that?" |
29419 | why, what is the matter, Betty?" |
29419 | young man,"exclaimed the Dean,"is this the way you behave yourself? |
29419 | your honour,"said Pat, brightening up,"and is that all? |
46419 | What can I give Him, Poor as I am? 46419 ( FIRST SOLDIER_ goes out._) WICKED JUDGE: Lo, what is in the king''s mind? 46419 ( FIRST_ and_ SECOND SOLDIERS_ return._) FIRST SOLDIER: Alas, alas, who now shall judge our people? 46419 ( MOSES_ pushes his way through the people._) AARON AND OTHERS: O Moses, why hast thou thus dealt with us? 46419 ( SAMUEL_ goes to him reluctantly._) What do they call thee? 46419 ( SAMUEL_ goes to him slowly._) What is this thing the Lord hath spoken to thee? 46419 ( SECOND WOMAN_ makes an imploring and hopeless gesture._) WICKED JUDGE(_ fiercely_): What? 46419 ( SOLDIER_ goes._) HERALD(_ with curiosity_): What is in the king''s mind? 46419 (_ A pause._) What were you doing when one of you stole the other''s child? 46419 (_ Clash of cymbals._) CHILDREN OF ISRAEL: Who is like unto thee, O Lord, among the gods? 46419 (_ Crowns him._)(_ Loud shouting to the left._ PRINCE JONATHAN_ enters running._) JONATHAN: Where is my father? 46419 (_ He listens with strong emotion._) O Lord, Lord, what is this thou dost require of me? 46419 (_ He turns and goes._) SAMARITAN: Will you take him in? 46419 (_ Nods toward them._) ELIAB(_ angrily_): What do you here? 46419 (_ Omit this if there are no candles._)(_ While_ SAMUEL_ puts out the candles_, ELI_ muses._) Follow in my steps? 46419 (_ Seats himself._) ISAAC(_ clinging close to him_): Dost thou love me more than the little lambs? 46419 (_ She advances to him._) Sir-- O Eli-- ELI: Woman, thy voice is known to me-- and yet-- who art thou? 46419 (_ She approaches nearer._) But what is that, floating upon the water? 46419 (_ She kneels and prays silently._)( ELI_ enters and observes her in wonder, for silent prayer was unusual._) ELI: Woman, what ails thee? 46419 (_ She makes a despairing gesture of denial._)( SOLOMON_ claps; the_ SOLDIERS_ enter._) The court of justice was held here this morn? 46419 (_ She presents basket of oranges._) SOLOMON(_ in great delight_): Ha, whose words are those? 46419 (_ She runs to_ SAUL,_ who is reclining on couch._) Father, would''st hear again the shepherd''s psalm? 46419 (_ She seats herself beside ark and munches apple or plies distaff._) Hark, what was that? 46419 (_ The_ IDOLATERS_ start out_, JAPHETH_ following._) NOAH''S WIFE: My son, and dost thou leave me? 46419 (_ The_ JUDGE_ waddles in._) WICKED JUDGE: What''s this? 46419 (_ The_ MOTHER_ moves away_; SISTER_ runs after her._) But, mother, if they discover the babe, what must I do? 46419 (_ The_ SERVANT_ bows and withdraws._) ISAAC: My father? 46419 (_ The_ THIEVES_ gather closely round him._) FIRST THIEF: Master, wilt help three poor and hungry men? 46419 (_ They advance to meet the prophet, bowing low._) JESSE: O Samuel, O mouthpiece of the Lord, Comest thou in peace to Bethlehem? 46419 (_ They stand before him._) And are ye sons of Jesse the Bethlehemite? 46419 (_ Weeps._) NOAH: Where are the lions? 46419 ANGELS(_ sing_): Little children, who are ye, Clad like shepherds? 46419 All look._) DAUGHTER OF PHARAOH: What to do? 46419 Am I not better to thee than ten sons? 46419 Am I not judge in the king, his place? 46419 And art thou he that''s calledThe sweet singer in Israel"? |
46419 | And thou? |
46419 | And what hath thy mother taught to thee? |
46419 | And why art thou come down? |
46419 | And why hast thou not spoken with the others? |
46419 | And why is thy heart so grieved? |
46419 | And with whom hast thou left those few sheep in the wilderness? |
46419 | Are your gods helpless that they can not save? |
46419 | As King Solomon remarks, with rather more wisdom than he usually manifests,"Who can find a virtuous woman?" |
46419 | But he, willing to justify himself, said unto Jesus, And who is my neighbor? |
46419 | CHILDREN OF ISRAEL(_ in distance_): Who is like unto thee, O Lord, among the gods? |
46419 | CHILDREN: Ark- builder, ark- builder, where is your rain? |
46419 | DAUGHTER OF PHARAOH(_ haughtily_): Who art thou to question me? |
46419 | DAVID: What shall I sing? |
46419 | Didst not see something stirring? |
46419 | EGYPTIAN SLAVE: A Hebrew brat? |
46419 | ELI(_ musing_): Follow in my steps? |
46419 | ELI: A man- child? |
46419 | ELI: And what else-- if there be aught beside? |
46419 | ELI: My sons, why will ye tempt the Lord your God? |
46419 | ELI: Samuel? |
46419 | ELI: What meaneth the noise of this tumult? |
46419 | ELIAB(_ triumphantly_): Ah, father, art so ready now to chide me? |
46419 | Eh? |
46419 | Eh? |
46419 | FIRST CHILD: But we have learned a psalm of David thy father, to do thee reverence; may we not say it? |
46419 | FIRST MESSENGER(_ with wild enthusiasm_): Where now are the Philistines? |
46419 | FIRST SOLDIER(_ raises sword and crosses to_ SECOND SOLDIER,_ who holds_ BABY): Is it thy will, O king, I slay this child, or give it to yon woman? |
46419 | FIRST SOLDIER(_ with sword upraised_): Is it thy will, O king, I slay the child, or give it to yon woman? |
46419 | FIRST SOLDIER: Do ye not hear the king? |
46419 | FIRST SOLDIER: Is it true, think you, that he is wiser than all men that have gone before him? |
46419 | FIRST THIEF: If not? |
46419 | FIRST WOMAN: A God in Israel? |
46419 | For who is able to judge this thy so great a people? |
46419 | For who is able to judge this, thy so great a people? |
46419 | For who shall follow after me, O Lord? |
46419 | Gadding about the streets? |
46419 | Good heavens, fellow, why did''st carry him hither, and wake honest people up in the dead of night? |
46419 | Hast thou the means to feed and clothe the child, and-- er-- pay all needful fees? |
46419 | Hath neither woman a witness? |
46419 | Hath not the master paid us yellow gold to guard his merchandise to Jericho? |
46419 | Have we no sticks?--no cudgels? |
46419 | Have ye a champion? |
46419 | Have ye a man to stand before him? |
46419 | He is a babe-- a child-- a-- SAMUEL(_ waves them back and turns to_ JESSE): Are all thy children here? |
46419 | He said unto him, What is written in the law? |
46419 | Hear ye the roaring and the bark? |
46419 | How may we cross? |
46419 | ISAAC: Aye, father, and shall I go with thee? |
46419 | ISAAC: My father, behold the fire and the wood, but where is the lamb for the burnt- offering? |
46419 | Is Goliath a babe, that thou sendest forth an infant against him? |
46419 | Is this thy child? |
46419 | JAPHETH: But, father, art thou sure? |
46419 | JESSE: Where are thy brothers? |
46419 | JESSE: Where hast thou sent him? |
46419 | JESSE: Who tendeth their sheep? |
46419 | Left._)(_ The_ PROPHET SAMUEL_ enters slowly from the right._) ELIAB: My father, who comes there? |
46419 | List to me, For I am a stranger: Why do ye come here to- day? |
46419 | Lo, what shall be the end? |
46419 | MOTHER: Is there no one in sight? |
46419 | Master, what did he mean? |
46419 | Must I give up Isaac to thee, Isaac the joy of mine old age? |
46419 | My lord the king desired me? |
46419 | NOAH''S WIFE(_ mocking_): Why dost thou grieve? |
46419 | NOAH''S WIFE: And must our friends and all our kindred die? |
46419 | NOAH''S WIFE: Nay, how comes it, when The world is drowned that_ we_ be sav- ed then, That we alone be saved of living men? |
46419 | NOAH(_ sternly_): Well? |
46419 | NOAH: How long, O Lord, how long must we Listen to this mockery? |
46419 | NOAH: Where is your mate, good Dragon? |
46419 | Nay,_ there_, through the budding barley? |
46419 | No witnesses? |
46419 | Of land? |
46419 | Or hast thou another son? |
46419 | PHARAOH(_ loudly_): Is their god more than I? |
46419 | PRIEST: What''s this? |
46419 | PROLOGUE: And, behold, a certain lawyer stood up, and tempted him, saying, Master, what shall I do to inherit eternal life? |
46419 | Presently some impish_ CHILDREN_ run in._) FIRST CHILD(_ jeeringly_): Ark- builders, ark- builders, where is your wit? |
46419 | SAMARITAN: Why not? |
46419 | SAMUEL: Thou art Jesse, the Bethlehemite? |
46419 | SAUL: How now, returned so soon? |
46419 | SAUL: Is one among you called by the name of"David,"Or"The sweet singer in Israel"? |
46419 | SECOND CHILD: Ark- builders, ark- builders, when do you flit? |
46419 | SECOND SOLDIER: But-- the babe yonder? |
46419 | SECOND THIEF(_ eagerly_): To join our band? |
46419 | SECOND THIEF: But if not--? |
46419 | SECOND THIEF: Ohà ©, a_ very_ rich man? |
46419 | SECOND WOMAN: And thy mother, Bathsheba, was her heart likewise merry? |
46419 | SECOND WOMAN: She would have grieved had''st thou been stolen from her? |
46419 | SOLOMON(_ turning furiously to_ SECOND WOMAN): Didst thou say this? |
46419 | SOLOMON: Thou canst prove this? |
46419 | SOLOMON: What mother would not? |
46419 | SOLOMON: What then? |
46419 | SOLOMON: Who art thou? |
46419 | SOLOMON: Who art thou? |
46419 | SOLOMON: Why art thou come here to the Hall of Judgment? |
46419 | SOLOMON: Why art thou come-- here to the Hall of Judgment? |
46419 | Shall I lay it among the flags at the river''s brink? |
46419 | Shall it then be this lad, and not my sons, who shall rule Israel? |
46419 | She bade me ask how many there would be Within the ark? |
46419 | Speak, was thy father glad? |
46419 | Sure of what? |
46419 | Surely it stood one day In the stable of Bethlehem? |
46419 | Tell me-- where? |
46419 | The iniquity of the children shall be visited upon the fathers? |
46419 | The king? |
46419 | The old man with so lofty a bearing? |
46419 | The_ SAMARITAN_ binds up his head._) Canst walk as far as the inn yonder? |
46419 | They pause before manger._) FIRST ANGEL: Why is this manger filled with hay, Placed here? |
46419 | Well, who is responsible if not the father? |
46419 | What can I give Him? |
46419 | What can his coming bode of good or evil? |
46419 | What hast thou lost? |
46419 | What more can he have but the kingdom? |
46419 | What''s this? |
46419 | Where are your witnesses? |
46419 | Where is the flood of which they have such fear?" |
46419 | Where is the king? |
46419 | Where now is Moses? |
46419 | Where now is Moses? |
46419 | Where now is Moses? |
46419 | Where the wise men of to- day? |
46419 | Which one of you will fight''gainst this Philistine? |
46419 | Who art thou? |
46419 | Who art thou? |
46419 | Who is Jehovah? |
46419 | Who knows? |
46419 | Who said that? |
46419 | Who shall be judge of Israel, if not my sons? |
46419 | Who would have thought to see such mighty judgment, yea in a beardless youth? |
46419 | Who would have thought to see such mighty wisdom, yea, in a beardless youth? |
46419 | Why walketh he in such fashion? |
46419 | Will he slay yonder woman for bearing lying witness? |
46419 | Will he slay yonder woman for bearing lying witness? |
46419 | [ Illustration: THE PRIEST ELI REBUKES HIS DRUNKEN SONS] PHINEHAS(_ laughs mockingly_): Ah, so? |
46419 | _ She is weeping._) ELKANAH(_ imploringly_): Hannah, why weepest thou? |
46419 | _ They carry big bales of merchandise and advance fearfully._) JEW: Come on, my men, come on; what do ye fear? |
46419 | _ Who_ hath anointed thy head with oil? |
41713 | After all, are not women necessary to your happiness? |
41713 | Am I then to suppose----"_ Hush!--you must n''t wake baby!_"_ Did_ you like little Bowes? |
41713 | And hast thou slain the Jabberwock? 41713 And how many hours a day did you do lessons?" |
41713 | And pray what is that? |
41713 | And what is your wife? |
41713 | Are you sure? |
41713 | Ay, indeed, will he; and what will ye say then? |
41713 | But you like_ me_ now, Rose? |
41713 | Did I not tell you,said the Marquis,"that he is one of the first men of our century?" |
41713 | Do n''t you know? |
41713 | Do n''t you mean''purpose?'' |
41713 | Do tell me, my dear Bailli,said Montrond one day,"have you got three legs or three swords?" |
41713 | Does she know me? |
41713 | Does the boots and shoes? |
41713 | Does your reverence think the pig will be there? |
41713 | For what use? |
41713 | Has the good woman got her faculties about her? |
41713 | How much did they give you? |
41713 | How''s missus, sir? |
41713 | I have an idea in my head----"Have you? |
41713 | I may? |
41713 | I mean, what makes them so shiny? |
41713 | If I were to tell you what would happen to you this day twelve month, and it should come to pass, what would you call me then, my little man? |
41713 | If seven maids, with seven mops, Swept it for half a year, Do you suppose,the Walrus said,"That they could get it clear?" |
41713 | Is life worth living? |
41713 | Is n''t that going a little too far the other way? |
41713 | Is that the contents you are looking at? |
41713 | Like Browning? |
41713 | Lord, madam, did your ladyship never read the History of England? |
41713 | May I? |
41713 | No, my dear; pray, who wrote it? |
41713 | Not Georgium Sidus? |
41713 | Och, to be shure I am, sir,answered the driver;"what''s all the world to a man when his wife''s a widdy?" |
41713 | Of course not,said the Mock Turtle;"why, if a fish came to_ me_, and told me he was going a journey, I should say,''With what porpoise?''" |
41713 | Of course you know the three reasons which take men into society in London? |
41713 | Only five pounds? |
41713 | Perhaps you only learnt to draw your sword? |
41713 | Pourquoi, monsieur? |
41713 | Pray, Mr. Foote, do you ever go to church? |
41713 | Shall I tell thee one thing, Poins? |
41713 | She seems unhappy,said a friend one day; Peter turn''d sharply:"What is that you say? |
41713 | Thank you, ma''am,said I;"but where is yours?" |
41713 | Thank you,said Charles,"but would not several yards of twine be better, and then, you know, I could_ lead_ it home?" |
41713 | The Saxons, my dear,cried the Marchioness;"who were they?" |
41713 | The night is fine,the Walrus said;"Do you admire the view?" |
41713 | Was not---- very disagreeable? |
41713 | Well,quoth Gillon,"and is n''t it here that I make my bread?" |
41713 | Were you born in wedlock? |
41713 | What on earth can that mean? |
41713 | What think you of this--''Old Daddy Longlegs_ wo n''t say his prayers_, Take him by the left leg, and throw him downstairs''? 41713 What, sir, do you mean to say your name is Julius Cæsar?" |
41713 | Where are the boys of my youth? |
41713 | Why, what are_ your_ shoes done with? |
41713 | Why? |
41713 | Why? |
41713 | Will you walk a little faster? |
41713 | Would n''t it, really? |
41713 | You did n''t know I drew? 41713 You''re very kind,"answered Abbot;"but where are you going to?" |
41713 | _ At Christ ChurchMarriage,"play''d before the King, Lest these learn''d mates should want an offering, The King himself did offer-- what, I pray? |
41713 | A brother actor, who had not exactly"taken the house by storm"at his first appearance in London, very stupidly asked Compton:"Was my acting good?" |
41713 | A friend said to him,"What are you staring at, Alvanley?" |
41713 | A gentleman said to her,"Why do you say nineteen? |
41713 | A plain leg of mutton, my Lucy, I prithee get ready at three; Have it smoking and tender and juicy, And what better meat can there be? |
41713 | A whisper, a glance,--"Shall we twirl down the middle?" |
41713 | A young lady decorously brought up should only have two considerations in her choice of a husband: first, is his birth honourable? |
41713 | Ah, why must a bosom so pure and refin''d Thus vibrate, all nerve, at the woes of mankind? |
41713 | And I said,"O gentle pie- man, why so very, very merry? |
41713 | And I said,"What is written, sweet sister, At the opposite end of the room?" |
41713 | And I said,"Why is this thus? |
41713 | And I whispered,"I guess The sweet secret thou keepest, And the dainty distress That thou wistfully weepest; And the question is,''Licence or banns?'' |
41713 | And as I float by, Said I,"Miss, O why? |
41713 | And how was the Devil drest? |
41713 | And it''s flying i''the face o''Providence; for what are the doctors for, if we are n''t to call''em in? |
41713 | And she? |
41713 | And was this new poet Byronic, And clever, and naughty, or how? |
41713 | And why? |
41713 | Anecdote of Phil Stone, the property- man of Drury Lane:--"Will you be so good, sir, as to stand a little backer?" |
41713 | Are you quite sure that Pygmalion is the only person who ever fell in love with his own handiwork? |
41713 | Ask me no more: what answer should I give? |
41713 | At the Polish ball, the Lord Mayor said to Lady Douglas, who squints,"Which do you prefer, my lady, Gog or Magog?" |
41713 | But if he undergo it, Though he know it, What boots him know it? |
41713 | But the pleasure gives way To a savour of sorrow;-- Rose kissed me to- day,--_ Will_ she kiss me to- morrow? |
41713 | But what did he die of?" |
41713 | Can I take any letters for you?" |
41713 | Can Tommy Onslow do no more? |
41713 | Can this be he who feasted, as''twas said, The town at forty sesterces a head? |
41713 | Can you?" |
41713 | Did you never read Shickspur? |
41713 | Do n''t you see a hint of marriage In his sober- sided face, In his rather careless carriage And extremely rapid pace? |
41713 | Do n''t you wish_ this_ was Happy Japan? |
41713 | Do you know why a sane man will whimper and cry, And weep o''er a ribbon or glove? |
41713 | Do you know why the rabbits are caught in the snare, Or the tabby cat''s shot on the tiles? |
41713 | Do you know? |
41713 | Dost thou love, sweet one? |
41713 | Finding them stubborn,"Frankly, now,"said he,"In this opinion do ye all agree; All, every one, without exception?" |
41713 | For how could she be shaved, whate''er the skill, Whose tongue would never let her chin be still? |
41713 | Great theologians, talk not of Trinity: Heretics, plague us no more with your fibs; One question only, Which is the Divinity,-- Willcox or Gibbs? |
41713 | Had the Romans public dinners? |
41713 | Hand to shake and mouth to kiss, Both he offered ere he spoke; And she said--"What man is this Comes to play a sorry joke?" |
41713 | Has she wedded some gigantic shrimper, That sweet mite with whom I loved to play? |
41713 | Have you heard Lord Alvanley''s_ bon mot_ concerning him? |
41713 | He challenged one:"Your name and college?" |
41713 | He dropt a tear on Susan''s bier, He seem''d a most despairing swain; Yet bluer sky brought newer tie, And would he wish her back again? |
41713 | He made such a sad work of speechifying that I asked him whether it was in honour of the Company that he_ floundered_ so?" |
41713 | He was"free to confess"( whence comes this phrase? |
41713 | Hence arises a most touching question:"Where are the girls of my youth?" |
41713 | How brook your rival''s scornful glance, Or partners''titter in the dance? |
41713 | How in the morning dare to meet The quizzers of the park and street? |
41713 | How long must we blacken and choke? |
41713 | How many wives did Mr. Windsor have? |
41713 | I ca n''t with all my pains and skill, Its meaning quite make out?" |
41713 | I have a saddel--"Sayst thou soe? |
41713 | I said,"is he dead?" |
41713 | I want you to come and pass sentence On two or three books with a plot; Of course you know"Janet''s Repentance"? |
41713 | I was speaking[ to Charles Lamb] of my first brief, when he asked,"Did you not exclaim--''Thou great first cause, least understood''?" |
41713 | I''m not o''erburdened with cash, Roast beef is the dinner for me; Then why should I eat_ calipash_, Or why should I eat_ calipee_? |
41713 | I''m sick of the prosers, that house up At drowsy St. Stephen''s-- ain''t you? |
41713 | If he''s not committed treason, Or some wicked action done, Can you see the faintest reason Why a bachelor should run? |
41713 | If it is known a fellow can make skies, Why not make bright blue eyes? |
41713 | If that is not religious persecution, what is?" |
41713 | If you can make a halo or eclipse, Why not two laughing lips? |
41713 | In a trial, where a German and his wife were giving evidence, the former was asked by the counsel,"How old are you?" |
41713 | In his dark eye of blue Why trembles the tear- drop to sympathy due? |
41713 | In what assembly show your face? |
41713 | Is it because the absent rose Has gone to paint her husband''s nose? |
41713 | Is it because the brutes are dumb? |
41713 | Is it purity of conscience, or your one- and- seven sherry?" |
41713 | Is not One Hebrus here-- from Aldershot? |
41713 | Is she girt with babes that whine and whimper, That bright being who was always gay? |
41713 | Is''t English? |
41713 | LORD LYTTON,_ What will he do with it?__ ANATHEMA IN EXCELSIS._ Creed of St. Anathasius? |
41713 | LORD LYTTON,_ What will he do with it?__ ANATHEMA IN EXCELSIS._ Creed of St. Anathasius? |
41713 | Maltby, still looking at the pictures,"And was it?" |
41713 | Mrs.---- looked at it for a little while, and then said,"Eh, now, and what ails him at the lassie?" |
41713 | O why may not I Drift with you?" |
41713 | Oh, how can a modest young man E''er hope for the smallest progression-- The profession''s already so full Of lawyers so full of profession? |
41713 | On one of the country gentlemen saying in Parliament,"We must return to the food of our ancestors,"somebody asked,"What food does he mean?" |
41713 | On which the late bishop whispered to Baron Alderson,"What is Campbell about? |
41713 | One cherub face is wet with grief,-- What ails you, little lad? |
41713 | Our rude forefathers deem''d it two; Can you imagine so absurd A view? |
41713 | Pat; and what do you think will be your feelings on the day of judgment when you meet Mrs. Mahoney, and the pig you stole from her, face to face?" |
41713 | Pennyworth only of beautiful soup? |
41713 | Query, whether churches are not dormitories of the living as well as of the dead? |
41713 | Said the Gryphon,"Do you know why it''s called a whiting?" |
41713 | Shall I tell you how? |
41713 | She thought"Wives and Daughters""_ so_ jolly;""Had I read it?" |
41713 | She, herself, makes her own faces, And each morning wears a new one; Where''s the wonder now? |
41713 | Some of those present asked,"What was the contrary of eating three eggs?" |
41713 | Sweet lady, tell me-- can you make a pudding? |
41713 | Talleyrand asked him,"_ Qui avez vous l''intention de mettre dans le char?_"The answer was,"_ L''Empereur Napoléon, comme de raison_." |
41713 | The moments fly, and when we die Will Philly Thistletop complain? |
41713 | The question is, what did the archbishop find?" |
41713 | The reason, Titus, canst divine? |
41713 | The sympathetic old dame replied with animation,"The Pope of Rome!--Honest marn!--haze he ony family?" |
41713 | Then Blossom cut in, without begging our pardons,"Pa, was it as big as the''Logical Gardens?" |
41713 | They are waiting on the shingle-- will you come and join the dance? |
41713 | Think you to compass it by tracts and tea? |
41713 | This to deny the folly of a dunce it is: Surely a girl as easy as a sunset is? |
41713 | Those eyes-- among thine elder friends Perhaps they pass for blue; No matter-- if a man can see, What more have eyes to do? |
41713 | To Urn, or not to Urn? |
41713 | Turn not from poor pussy in disdain, Whose pride of ancestry may equal thine; For is she not a blood descendant of The ancient Catty line? |
41713 | Turning to the other:"And pray, sir, what might your name be?" |
41713 | Vill''st dou learn de Deutsche Sprache? |
41713 | Walking down St. James''s Street, Lord Chelmsford was accosted by a stranger, who exclaimed,"Mr. Birch, I believe?" |
41713 | Was''t the claret? |
41713 | Werther had a love for Charlotte Such as words could never utter; Would you know how first he met her? |
41713 | What are they?" |
41713 | What can Tommy Onslow do? |
41713 | What cause for judgment so malign? |
41713 | What do they care about a hereafter? |
41713 | What does the second love bring? |
41713 | What is a Frenchman, pray, made of? |
41713 | What is he returning thanks for the Navy for?" |
41713 | What is man''s end? |
41713 | What is the reason of this thusness?" |
41713 | What is the spell that''twixt a saint and sinner The diff''rence makes?--a sermon? |
41713 | What is this? |
41713 | What sort of gun do you shoot with?" |
41713 | What the mischief do you suppose you want with a post- office at Baldwin''s Ranch? |
41713 | When you''re in a pet Why on earth should you regret Blacking some one''s eyes? |
41713 | Where was my sense, once so acute, To dream myself a hopeful suitor? |
41713 | Where''s the use of talking to a woman with babbies? |
41713 | Who can display such varied arts, To suit the taste of saint and sinner, Who go so near to touch their hearts, As thou, my darling dainty dinner? |
41713 | Who cares for fish, Game, or any other dish? |
41713 | Who for such dainties would not stoop? |
41713 | Who knows if what Adam might speak Was mono- or poly- syllabic; Was Gothic, or Gaelic, or Greek, Tartàric, Chinese, or Aràbic? |
41713 | Who would not give all else for two p Ennyworth only of beautiful soup? |
41713 | Who wrote it? |
41713 | Why a cook will put sugar for salt in a pie? |
41713 | Why an ostrich will travel for miles? |
41713 | Why is it that stupid people are always so much more anxious to talk to one, than clever people? |
41713 | Why mourns my Eugene? |
41713 | Why should an author scribble rhymes or articles? |
41713 | Why should he be in a flurry? |
41713 | Why still with scarifying sleeve That woful visage scrub? |
41713 | Why the tigers and lions creep out of their lair? |
41713 | Wilt thou love me, fairest? |
41713 | With styrruppes, knyghte, to boote?" |
41713 | With thy fogs, all so thick and so yellow, The most approved tint for_ ennui_, Oh, when shall a man see thy fellow, November, for_ felo- de- se_? |
41713 | Without black velvet breeches, what is man? |
41713 | You know who the critics are? |
41713 | You see the goodly hair that Galla wears;''Tis certain her own hair: who would have thought it? |
41713 | [ Illustration]"How now, how now, mad wag? |
41713 | _ A KISS._ Rose kissed me to- day,-- Will she kiss me to- morrow? |
41713 | _ A PRACTICAL ANSWER.__ Says Hyam to Moses,"Let''s cut off our noses,"Says Moses to Hyam,"Ma tear, who would buy''em? |
41713 | _ BENEVOLENT NEUTRALITY._ When man and wife at odds fall out, Let Syntax be your tutor;''Twixt masculine and feminine, What should one be but neuter? |
41713 | _ Bon Gaultier Ballads._ What is Truth? |
41713 | _ DISTICH._ What is a first love worth except to prepare for a second? |
41713 | _ Epigrams in Distich._ Lord Braxfield, at whist, exclaimed to a lady with whom he was playing,"What are ye doing, ye damned auld----?" |
41713 | _ Giraud._ Les affaires? |
41713 | _ Glavis_: A what? |
41713 | _ Guesses at Truth._ Juxtaposition, in fine; and what is juxtaposition? |
41713 | _ HOME THEY BROUGHT._ Home they brought her lap- dog dead, Just run over by a fly; Jeames to Buttons, winking, said,"Wo n''t there be a row? |
41713 | _ Kitty_: What is your ladyship so fond of? |
41713 | _ Memoir of Henry Compton._"Pray what is this Permissive Bill, That some folks rave about? |
41713 | _ Miss Prue._ Must I tell a lie, then? |
41713 | _ NURSERY RHYME._ What is an Englishman made of? |
41713 | _ ON A PUBLIC- HOUSE._ Of this establishment how can we speak? |
41713 | _ ON AN INTEMPERATE HUSBAND._ Whence comes it that in Clara''s face The lily only has a place? |
41713 | _ ON DIDACTICS IN POETRY._ Parnassus''peaks still catch the sun; But why-- O lyric brother!-- Why build a Pulpit on the one, A Platform on the other? |
41713 | _ ON DR. TRAPP''S TRANSLATION OF VIRGIL._ Mind but thy preaching, Trapp; translate no further: Is it not written,"Thou shall do no murder"? |
41713 | _ ON LADIES''ACCOMPLISHMENTS._ Your dressing, dancing, gadding, where''s the good in? |
41713 | _ ON ONE WHO SPOKE LITTLE._"I hardly ever ope my lips,"one cries:"Simonides, what think you of my rule?" |
41713 | _ ONE FOR HIM._ Reading the paper Laura sat,"Greenwich_ mean_ time, mamma, what''s that?" |
41713 | _ René._ Qu''est ce que c''est donc que les affaires, Monsieur Giraud? |
41713 | _ Sir Toby._"Does not our life consist of the four elements?" |
41713 | _ THE LATEST DECALOGUE._ Thou shalt have one God only: who Would be at the expense of two? |
41713 | _ TO A YOUNG LADY._ An original something dear maid, you would win me To write, but how shall I begin? |
41713 | _ WHY WIVES MAKE NO WILLS._ Men dying make their wills, why can not wives? |
41713 | _ WINDBAG._ Snow- mantled shadow, would you know The fashions of the world below? |
41713 | _ Who_ is it that sees and hears all we do, and before whom_ even I_ am but as a crushed worm?" |
41713 | do you mean to be hanged?" |
41713 | he ejaculated, making a wry face;"what sort of an oyster do you call this?" |
41713 | love no more? |
41713 | oh, why this altered vow?" |
41713 | secondly, will his death be advantageous? |
41713 | sighs the lover,"Could I but this discover,-- Thy breast so softly moving, Will it ever cease from loving?" |
41713 | what are we sinners doing all our lives? |
41713 | what, in thy Quips and thy Quiddities?" |
41713 | where do you think you''ll go For making such a heap of foolish puns?" |
41713 | where on earth are my fusees?) |
41713 | who has seen the mailèd lobster rise, Clap her broad wings, and, soaring, claim the skies? |
53225 | ''Will the entertainment be consistent?'' |
53225 | Are you going to sell any of your hats? |
53225 | But,I argued,"how could you do that? |
53225 | Consistent? |
53225 | Dear Mr. Grossmith,--Are you inclined to go on the stage for a time? 53225 Did I?" |
53225 | Did you see that Mr.---- is writing his reminiscences? |
53225 | Do n''t you think it rather a pity that he should do so? |
53225 | Do you seriously want me to do that? |
53225 | How much does a Mayor get here? |
53225 | In what way? |
53225 | Is there no change of costumes? 53225 Oh, I say, George, have you got a piece of sticking- plaister?" |
53225 | Oh,said the clerk, a little puzzled,"one of the guests? |
53225 | What first put it into your head to give entertainments? |
53225 | What? |
53225 | Why a pity? |
53225 | _ Gaoler_( interpreting the learned magistrate): What have you got? 53225 ''Can Mr. Grossmith give an entertainment at Aberdeen on Jan.----?'' |
53225 | ''Why not get Courtenay Clarke* to give you a lift, my boy?'' |
53225 | ( To Seymour, the stage manager): Where''s Mr. Grossmith? |
53225 | --"Shall I score the drum parts for you?" |
53225 | :_ And seen it too? |
53225 | :_ I beg your pardon; I fancy you must be well acquainted with that play? |
53225 | :_ Well, if_ you_ do not know it well, I should like to know who does? |
53225 | :_ You''ve heard it often enough? |
53225 | After he finished the song, I said:"I presume you desire me to recommend you to Mr. Carte for the chorus?" |
53225 | Are you afraid of the sea? |
53225 | Are you going to give us any of your little funniments-- eh?" |
53225 | At a quarter to five two ladies arrived, and at five the hostess, addressing me, said:"Would you mind commencing now? |
53225 | At the conclusion of the sketch I said to the lady:"I hope I was not too long?" |
53225 | Burnand promptly replied,"Oh, are you going to_ stick_ here all night?" |
53225 | But the great thing is-- what sort of entertainment do you give?" |
53225 | But the''mystery''is, how is it she is_ not_ telling the cards correctly? |
53225 | Ca n''t you spend a Sunday with me? |
53225 | Carte was so puzzled that he said to Mr. X.:"I thought you had shaved your moustache?" |
53225 | Come and sup after the play next Saturday at Dover Street?" |
53225 | Dear Grossmith,--Are you down in this neighbourhood to- morrow any time? |
53225 | Did n''t you hear me do it? |
53225 | Do n''t they know what to do? |
53225 | Do n''t you require any scenery or footlights?" |
53225 | Do you hear?" |
53225 | Do you know nearly everybody takes me for Mr. Grossmith? |
53225 | Do you understand me? |
53225 | Do you want to try your song? |
53225 | Do you? |
53225 | Everybody dead? |
53225 | Flowers:_ You would n''t have me punish a child like that, would you? |
53225 | Flowers_( thinking this was the usual imputation on the evidence of the police): Then, if you did n''t do it, who did I should like to know? |
53225 | Gilbert_( still politely): Mr. Snooks, do n''t you appreciate the difference between the accent on"counting"and the accent on"house"? |
53225 | Grain?" |
53225 | Grossmith?" |
53225 | Grossmith?" |
53225 | HAMLET(_ sitting up_)-- What? |
53225 | Have you and Mrs. Grossmith any sharp spuds, and would you like to race me in a drill? |
53225 | Have you?" |
53225 | He enquired how mine was going at the Polytechnic? |
53225 | He leered at me and asked,"What for?" |
53225 | How are you? |
53225 | How do I know who you are? |
53225 | How_ can_ you think of all these things? |
53225 | I do n''t say you are one: still, how am I to know you are_ not_ one-- eh? |
53225 | I enquired what? |
53225 | I enquired, as a matter of course, how his new song was going at the Gallery of Illustration? |
53225 | I placed it hastily in my pocket, and was much amused by the lady approaching me shortly afterwards and saying,"Have you got it quite safe?" |
53225 | I said:"Sticks, I believe you died of drink?" |
53225 | I said:"Well, were n''t you bored with all the rot I''ve been talking?" |
53225 | I thought a little, and then said:"Would you kindly explain the question? |
53225 | I wonder if my friend Frank Thornton will be offended if I repeat an oft- told story about him? |
53225 | Is it to be wondered at, that it attacked also the school of the Misses Hay? |
53225 | Lots of people come to me and say,"I hope you wo n''t take me off?" |
53225 | May I ask the favour of your vocal assistance? |
53225 | Mr. Barrington has often come into my room just as I am going on the stage, and chaffingly said,"Why do n''t you make up?" |
53225 | Mr. Grossmith, what are you doing here? |
53225 | Mr. Gunn turned to the man and said:"What nationality are you? |
53225 | My father said,"Topic? |
53225 | My victim, seeing his chance, led the attack:"Anything more to say?" |
53225 | Now ought I to have shaken hands with him? |
53225 | One may well exclaim,"What''s in a name?" |
53225 | Presently he said,"What do you want to change your clothes for?" |
53225 | She departed with the baby, and soothed it with the following pleasant remark about myself:"Was''i m frightened by an ugly man den?" |
53225 | She replied,"Oh dear, no; but did any lady really ask you that question?" |
53225 | Sticks, I wish to ask you a few questions?" |
53225 | Sticks, do not think I mean to be disrespectful; but are you drunk now?" |
53225 | Sticks,"I asked,"is it possible to take too much drink in purgatory?" |
53225 | Sullivan then sang,"My name is John Wellington Wells,"and said,"You can do that?" |
53225 | Surely you have never heard it pronounced in any other way? |
53225 | The Chairman replied:"Do you think so, Mr. Grossmith? |
53225 | The Duke, who is tolerably well- known for his brusque and autocratic manner, addressing her Grace in my presence, said,"Has that fellow arrived yet?" |
53225 | The butler continued reading:"''What will be his terms?''" |
53225 | The butler made a note of the terms, and continued:"''Will the entertainment be consistent?''" |
53225 | The first question was:"Can Mr. Grossmith give an entertainment at Aberdeen on Jan.----?" |
53225 | Two days after, Carte saw him with his moustache on again; but, taking no particular notice, said:"Let me see, have you been to Barraud''s?" |
53225 | What is it?" |
53225 | What topic?" |
53225 | What''ll be the terms?" |
53225 | Who was John King? |
53225 | Why Leamington? |
53225 | Why, that wo n''t do; For who''s to speak the tag? |
53225 | Will you sing now?" |
53225 | X.?" |
53225 | _ Clown_( handing back book): I do not quite follow you? |
53225 | _ Prosecutor:_ Of course I would-- what have I had him brought in here for? |
53225 | _ Prosecutor:_ What for? |
53225 | everybody? |
53225 | how long have I got? |
53225 | what have I got? |
8447 | What may this be? 8447 Am I a lesser or a weaker man than either of ye that Sir Gawain must needs ride with me? 8447 By the Lord who made us, of what art thou afraid? 8447 Did he yet think upon this? 8447 Did the knight who wrought such harm depart from ye unscathed? |
8447 | Does this content ye, my lord king?" |
8447 | Evil was his thought, and he cried:"Vassal, how were ye so bold as to do me this hurt and this shame? |
8447 | Have ye altogether forgot how ye boasted yourself aforetime, even as ye have now done, and then how ye met Perceval, whom ye had scarce sought? |
8447 | Have ye heard Mass, and broken your fast ere ye depart?" |
8447 | He would have me for his love, why should I deny the truth? |
8447 | How came he by his death? |
8447 | How hath this so chanced? |
8447 | Know ye if any within these few days past have carried a knight over the water?" |
8447 | Of what fashion was his steed, and what tokens did he bear?" |
8447 | Quoth Morien:"This castle that standeth here, is there yet any man within?" |
8447 | Quoth Sir Perceval,"Then wherefore delay? |
8447 | Quoth the Moor:"How come ye to speak thus to me? |
8447 | Scarce might he find words; and he cried,"Who hath robbed him of life, mine own dear son, whom I loved above all the world? |
8447 | Sir Gawain, brother, tell me, for fain would I know the truth?" |
8447 | The Moor spake to the twain:"For what do ye take me? |
8447 | Then Morien dismounted, and took Sir Gawain in his arms, and said full oft,"Alas, my comrade, how were ye thus betrayed? |
8447 | Then Sir Gariët asked him:"Sir boatman, what aileth thee? |
8447 | Then Sir Gariët gave courteous greeting to one whom he met, and asked who were this folk, and wherefore they fled thus in haste? |
8447 | Then did he forthwith go to bemoan his comrade, and quoth,"Sir Knight, may ye not be healed? |
8447 | Then quoth the king:"Wit ye well who he was, and how he was hight, who sent ye hither? |
8447 | Though he were black, what was he the worse? |
8447 | What boots it to make long my tale? |
8447 | What boots it to make long my tale? |
8447 | What might Sir Gawain do? |
8447 | What more shall I say hereof? |
8447 | Wherefore should I make my tale over long? |
8447 | Will ye right this maiden of the wrong ye have done her, or fight with me? |
8447 | Wot ye that I be afraid to fight against the twain of ye; or that I have held my hand through fear of death? |
36222 | And did you eat it all? 36222 And her, O my mother, what word Shall I give her, what name?" |
36222 | And what shall I take_ her_, little mother, What gift shall I make_ her_? |
36222 | And where are your bloodhounds, Lord Ronald, my son? 36222 Brave man, the truth, whate''er has happened, say, Am I a widow?" |
36222 | But who would not weep in my place? 36222 Can you wear a lovelier hue than azure?" |
36222 | Caterina,said she,"when would you like best to enjoy your life? |
36222 | Death, whence comest thou? |
36222 | Do you see that high mountain? |
36222 | Does the young mother in child- birth dead Rise in her shroud from her lonely bed, For the sake of the child she has left behind? 36222 Gossip,"said the man, who marvelled at seeing so many lamps,"what is the meaning of all these lights?" |
36222 | Have you seen the Tarasque? |
36222 | How can I be fair and blithe? 36222 How can I get into it?" |
36222 | How would you have me come forth, when there is no strength left in me? |
36222 | I asked myself( he wrote, describing his experiences)"how it was possible that a great nation should exist behind all that vapour?" |
36222 | I gave it to the dog; O lady mother, my heart is very sick: I gave it to the dog; Alas, alas, that I should have to die? |
36222 | In Paradise? |
36222 | Is it not unlucky? |
36222 | Is there no help? |
36222 | Keep it, all the same; who knows what it may be good for? |
36222 | My brother, you? |
36222 | My pretty girls, my doves, is my friend cutting oats with you? |
36222 | My son, where were you yesterday? 36222 O my garden,"sings the Ruthenian,"O my little garden, my garden and my green vine, why bloomest thou in the morning? |
36222 | Then, my mother, what shall I take him? 36222 Thy substance, to whom leavest thou?" |
36222 | To whom leavest thou thy cross and the stones of thy necklace? |
36222 | To whom leavest thou thy son, that he may be well brought up? |
36222 | What ails thee, what ails thee, my mother, that all around one can hear thee wailing? |
36222 | What are you laughing at, Madamo? |
36222 | What can I do? |
36222 | What did you with the dog? 36222 What didst thou do with the bones, my little daughter?" |
36222 | What dost thou wish for thy brother, my little daughter? |
36222 | What dost thou wish for thy father, my little daughter? |
36222 | What dost thou wish for thy nurse, my little daughter? |
36222 | What dost thou wish for thy sister, my little daughter? |
36222 | What dost thou wish for thy step- mother, my little daughter? |
36222 | What gat ye to dinner, Lord Ronald, my son? 36222 What gave they thee to eat, my little daughter?" |
36222 | What happened to the dogs, my little daughter? |
36222 | What is the matter with you? |
36222 | What leave you to your love? 36222 What leave you to your tomb? |
36222 | What must I do? |
36222 | What supper gave she you? 36222 What to your brothers leave? |
36222 | What to your mother leave? 36222 What to your servants leave? |
36222 | What to your sisters leave? 36222 What will become of us?" |
36222 | What will ye leave to your brither, Lord Ronald, my son? 36222 What will ye leave to your sister, Lord Ronald, my son? |
36222 | What will ye leave to your true love, Lord Ronald, my son? 36222 What would ye give to your brother John''s wife?" |
36222 | What would ye give to your brother John? |
36222 | What would ye give to your own true lover? |
36222 | What would ye give to your sister Anne? |
36222 | What''s that? |
36222 | When day dawns, you rejoice,say the Yorubas;"do you not know that the day of death is so much the nearer?" |
36222 | When,asks he,"will be the day whereon to thy mamma I shall say''Madona;''to thy papa''Missier;''and to thee, darling,''Wife''?" |
36222 | Where are you going, all alone, fair girl? |
36222 | Where are you going, my angels, my so very small angels? |
36222 | Where did they take her to? |
36222 | Where did you get this silk? |
36222 | Where gat ye your dinner, Lord Ronald, my son? 36222 Where went the other half? |
36222 | Wherefore the doctor call? 36222 Wherefore the parson call? |
36222 | Who ever heard of taking a live wolf? |
36222 | Who is that youth who passes so often? |
36222 | Who speaks of Count Nella who dare name him, the rebel vassal whom I have exiled? |
36222 | Who will bring her back to me if there be joy or sorrow? |
36222 | Why are you standing there, my dear daughter? 36222 Why call the notary? |
36222 | Why do you weep, swine girl? |
36222 | Workman, why are you always grumbling? |
36222 | Would you weep if I were dead? |
36222 | Yes, I believe in it much; but is it necessary to poetry that the people should credit such absurdities? |
36222 | You say that I am black? |
36222 | ''Why wentest thou away from the sun? |
36222 | ''Woman, is thy husband in the house?'' |
36222 | ), closes with a list of"gifts"of the same character:"But mother, oh mother, say how Shall I speak, and what name call him now?" |
36222 | A child dropped out of heaven, a laurel garland, one under whose feet spring up flowers? |
36222 | A child is told that if he asks his mother, who is standing by the door,"What are you doing there?" |
36222 | A former Dean of Canterbury once asked an old woman, who lived alone without chick or child, whether she said her prayers? |
36222 | A sick Kleft cries to the birds,"Birds, shall I ever be cured? |
36222 | A vein of tender reproach is sprung in that inquiry,"Ca n''ura ri riposu''un vuo rari?" |
36222 | After she had returned home, Caterina said to her mistress,"My fate has made me a present of a skein of silk; what ought I to do with it?" |
36222 | Ah, God in heaven, and Virgin Mary, tell me what I am to do? |
36222 | Ains me dit: Sire Engelé En quel terre avez esté, Qui n''avez rien conquesté Aval la ville? |
36222 | An English traveller had been talking for some while to a woman of Burano, when she asked in all seriousness,"Are you a Roman?" |
36222 | An eighth asks,"Who knows if Rosa will not listen to another lover?" |
36222 | And even if the sailor''s troth can be trusted, is it not his trade"at sea to die"? |
36222 | And in Corfu:"Little swallow, my joyous one, joyous my swallow; thou that comest from the desert, what good things bringest thou? |
36222 | And she asks from door to door, Who may be the child who cries? |
36222 | And the husbandman, who saw that his lamp was going out, said,"And when there is no more oil, Gossip?" |
36222 | And to my mother say straightway, Tell me, where is your son? |
36222 | And where are your bloodhounds, my handsome young man?" |
36222 | Another of the shepherds, who seems to have only just woke up, inquires: What do you say? |
36222 | Are there still churches and golden icons? |
36222 | Are they not made of the same flesh and bone, children alike of St Mark and his State? |
36222 | Are you just?" |
36222 | Are you just?" |
36222 | Are you just?" |
36222 | As soon as he is old enough to understand about such things, he asks his father what he has done with her? |
36222 | At Martano they have a pretty song in praise of some incomparable maid: My Sun, where art thou going? |
36222 | At last Turiddu returns-- but where is Rusidda? |
36222 | Birds, shall I recover my strength?" |
36222 | But an aged dame interposes, for a wonder, with milder counsels; she bids her savage sisters calm their wrath:"Is not Matteo in heaven with the Lord? |
36222 | But what else do we know about it? |
36222 | But what ill can folks say of us if we love each other? |
36222 | But, after all, why should there be all this grief? |
36222 | Canst thou not see that e''en my breath is flown, Thinking of thee while still the days go round? |
36222 | Caterina told her how ill things had gone with her, and her mistress said,"You know, Caterina, when you take the bread up the mountain to- morrow? |
36222 | Cold winds that pass Vex, or is''t the little ass? |
36222 | Could you take me?" |
36222 | Could you, by chance, employ me?" |
36222 | Crane, hast thou not news from our country? |
36222 | Crane, hast thou not news from our country? |
36222 | Crane, hast thou not news from our country? |
36222 | Crane, hast thou not news from our country? |
36222 | Crane, hast thou not news from our country? |
36222 | De quoi puis- je avoir peur? |
36222 | Did he go to Teheran? |
36222 | Did you steal it or borrow it? |
36222 | Do people continue to work at their several trades? |
36222 | Dost thou say not a word when past I go? |
36222 | Doth the earth press, or the black stone weigh on thee heavily? |
36222 | Et ount anetz, mes angis, Mes angis tant petits? |
36222 | Finally the third spoke as follows:''My friends, what are you talking about? |
36222 | Finally, a town youth says that if his country love has but a milk- pail for her dowry, what matters? |
36222 | For love I have no heart; I had it once, and gave it once away; To my first love I gave it on a day... Wouldst thou my love? |
36222 | For the bride elect lies dead; who will now profit by her possessions-- the twelve mattresses, the twenty- four lambs? |
36222 | For the spectators( at a play) desire to feel grieved, and this grief is their joy: whence comes it unless from some strange spiritual malady? |
36222 | For whom are the bells tolling? |
36222 | Fortune, chance( what, after all, shall it be called?) |
36222 | French children still have songs about"le Prince Noir,"and the nurses sang during the siege of Paris: As- tu vu Bismarck A la porte de Chatillon? |
36222 | Guilhem de Beauvoire, who was beyond the sea, said to his page,"Does it not seem as though my wife were singing?" |
36222 | Has Sicily, then, a right to the honour of their invention? |
36222 | He will portray me like a star, I wis; What does it matter if I am not fair? |
36222 | Here the question arises, is not the snail song also derived from some ancient myth? |
36222 | How can I be white and pink, when I have been all this time in my winding- sheet?" |
36222 | How could the apples ripen in the orchard if it were always summer? |
36222 | How could the corn harden in the rick if it were always autumn?" |
36222 | How could the rye ripen in the fields if it were always spring? |
36222 | How is she now? |
36222 | How is she now? |
36222 | How is she now? |
36222 | How is she now? |
36222 | How is she now? |
36222 | How is she now? |
36222 | How think through distance I can faithless grow? |
36222 | How will they be able to live? |
36222 | How, it may be asked, did the poet come by that notion of an Asiatic Eden? |
36222 | I asked a lad, just returned to Venetia from working in Sardinian quarries, if the people there had many songs? |
36222 | I put the question to a troop of English children coming from a wood laden with spoils,"What makes you like primroses?" |
36222 | I saw my Fortune midst the sounding sea Sit weeping on a rocky height and steep, Said I to her,"Fortune, how is''t with thee?" |
36222 | If she lost him where would she find a beloved son like to him? |
36222 | If, after all, by some chance-- who knows? |
36222 | In deshabille the fair one ran, Straightway the door she opened wide:"Tell me, my fair one, if you can, Where does your husband now abide?" |
36222 | In what consists the sympathetic link, sometimes weak and scarcely perceptible, at others visibly strong, between man and nature? |
36222 | Is it force of early association, habit, or fancy? |
36222 | Is it indeed true, that he, the clever- headed, the handy- handed, will leave his Nunziola all alone? |
36222 | Is it necessary? |
36222 | Is it nothing more than the return of a long ago experienced admiration? |
36222 | Is there some truth unperceived behind the apparent fallacy? |
36222 | Is this"Dobra Noc"of strictly popular origin? |
36222 | It reappears in the"Cruel Brother"--which, I suppose, is altogether to be regarded as of the Roland type:"O what would ye leave to your father, dear?" |
36222 | It remains to be asked, why the White Paternoster is called white? |
36222 | It set the child- man asking why? |
36222 | Last but one of these samples stands the following:"Dov''andastú jersera, Figlioul mio ricco, savio e gentil; Dov''andastú jersera?" |
36222 | Little baby girl, who has beaten thee that thine eyes look as if they had been crying? |
36222 | Love''s mouth, sweet mouth, that Florence hath for home, Now tell me where love springs, and how doth come?... |
36222 | Maestro, dissi lui, or mi di''anche: Questa Fortuna di che tu mi tocche, Che è, che i ben del mondo ha sì tra branche? |
36222 | May we come in black? |
36222 | May we come in blue? |
36222 | May we come in red? |
36222 | May we come in white? |
36222 | May we come to the funeral? |
36222 | Mes que dit l''anjou, si vous plaît? |
36222 | Might not the_ Vecchia_ be the husk which must be cast off before the miracle of new birth is accomplished? |
36222 | Monsieur Saint Jean, d''où venez vous? |
36222 | My Sun, that round and round the world dost move, Hast thou seen any beautiful as she? |
36222 | My pretty boy, what can I do? |
36222 | My son beloved, blooming, and gentle bred, What did you with the dog?" |
36222 | My son beloved, blooming, and gentle bred, What leave you to your love?" |
36222 | My son beloved, blooming, and gentle bred, What leave you to your tomb?" |
36222 | My son beloved, blooming, and gentle bred, What supper gave she you?" |
36222 | My son beloved, blooming, and gentle bred, What to your brothers leave?" |
36222 | My son beloved, blooming, and gentle bred, What to your mother leave?" |
36222 | My son beloved, blooming, and gentle bred, What to your servants leave?" |
36222 | My son beloved, blooming, and gentle bred, What to your sisters leave?" |
36222 | My son beloved, blooming, and gentle bred, Where went the other half?" |
36222 | My son beloved, blooming, and gentle bred, Wherefore the doctor call?" |
36222 | My son beloved, blooming, and gentle bred, Wherefore the parson call?" |
36222 | My son beloved, blooming, and gentle bred, Why call the notary?" |
36222 | My son, beloved, blooming, and gentle bred, And did you eat it all?" |
36222 | My son, beloved, blooming, and gentle bred, Where were you yester eve?" |
36222 | Never a man was readier to"dare e''en death"at the behest of his mistress-- Wouldst have me die? |
36222 | Now, what do you think happened? |
36222 | O little bird, who dost from Florence speed Teach me whence loving doth at first proceed? |
36222 | O where hae ye been, my handsome young man?" |
36222 | On my sure faith how shouldst thou not rely? |
36222 | One day did Fortune call me to her side,"What are the things,"she asked,"that thou hast done?" |
36222 | One day she arrived in a city where she saw a lady at a window, who said,"Where go you, all alone, fair girl?" |
36222 | One runs to pluck flowers, a second to gather roses; they twine her a garland, a bridal crown-- will she depart all the same, lying upon her bier? |
36222 | One so bereft cries out,"Dear mother, why didst thou suffer me to see the day? |
36222 | Or again, it may be that her heart is not hers to give: Wouldst thou my love? |
36222 | Or with Orion did you strive-- though him I deem a friend?" |
36222 | Or with the moon or with the stars did you contend in fight? |
36222 | Others,"Hast seen my son?" |
36222 | Our mother, nigh to death, or thy sister Maria? |
36222 | Perhaps the plaintive numbers flow For old, unhappy, far- off things, And battles long ago: Or is it some more humble lay, Familiar matter of to- day? |
36222 | Say, say, little swallow, where hast thou passed? |
36222 | Shall it be called foolish or sublime? |
36222 | Sleep is at the door, and says to me,''Is not there a sweet child here who fain would sleep? |
36222 | So Dante found her, and inquired of his guide who and what she might really be? |
36222 | Speak, father is it true?" |
36222 | Still as the port a sail did safely reach, All shouting hurried forward to the beach:"Father, is''t you? |
36222 | The Romans did not only demand of a military leader that he should have talent, foresight, energy; they asked, was he_ felix_--happy, fortunate? |
36222 | The beautiful lady asked again,"Caterina, when do you wish to enjoy your life in youth or in age?" |
36222 | The best version is one set down from word of mouth in the district of Como, and of this I subjoin a literal rendering:"Where were you yester eve? |
36222 | The first thing in the morning she is greeted thus: Art thou awake, O fairest, dearest, best? |
36222 | The fragment just mentioned speaks of the silver trumpet( the master''s whistle?) |
36222 | The husband asks:"To whom leavest thou thy jewels?" |
36222 | The new bride gives the bridegroom a silk handkerchief, to which allusion is made in a verse running,"What is that handkerchief you are wearing? |
36222 | The other is dight in red, and of her Lord Malmstein asks,"Who is ill, and who is dead?" |
36222 | The plant of love grows where there are young hearts; but how comes it that middle- aged hearts turn inevitably to cast iron? |
36222 | The playfellows bathe Maria''s face with tears: sees she not those who loved her? |
36222 | The priest then asks the woman:"Wilt thou be obedient to him?" |
36222 | The sacrifice is consummated-- but what sacrifice? |
36222 | The small- leafed Sweet Basil complains,"Silent dew, why fallest thou not on me?" |
36222 | The wretched man grew cold with fear; he got quite close to his wife, who asked:"Did you put the water outside the window?" |
36222 | Then said I,"Fortune, thou without a peer, What rule shall tell the measure of thine aid?" |
36222 | Then the daughter is made to ask:"What ails thee, what ails thee, my mother? |
36222 | Then, going straight to the point with the terrible accusative power that lies in children, he said to the father,"What have you done with my mother?" |
36222 | There is, however, another version which goes on:"What will ye leave to your father, Lord Ronald, my son? |
36222 | They ask, What ensign? |
36222 | They ask,"Whence didst them come, O sinful man? |
36222 | This is the Swedish variant:"Where hast thou been so long, my little daughter?" |
36222 | This to believe what soul is able; What do you say? |
36222 | Thou blessed soul, what canst thou fear? |
36222 | To see their God within a stable: This surely seems an idle fable; What do you say? |
36222 | Tuti a la fin no semio patrioti, Cresciu in sti campi, ste cale e cantoni? |
36222 | Two frank young people carry on this dialogue:"Will you come to me, fair maid?" |
36222 | Tækeltuet, Kruep uet dyn hues, Dyn hues dat brennt, Dyn Kinder de flennt: Dyn Fru de ligt in Wäken: Kann''k dy nich mael spräken? |
36222 | V. There where I lay asleep came Fortune in, She came the while I slept and bid me wake,"What dost thou now?" |
36222 | Was it that they saw and copied? |
36222 | Was it that to his positive turn of mind there appeared to be an absence of connection between politics and poetry? |
36222 | Was the wife naked, her sons starving and destitute? |
36222 | Water, from what mountain dost thou come? |
36222 | Water, into what fountain dost thou go? |
36222 | Water, to what garden dost thou go? |
36222 | Water, to what river dost thou go? |
36222 | Water, to what vineyard dost thou go? |
36222 | Water, what plant dost thou water? |
36222 | What ails Hjalmar the Icelander? |
36222 | What ails thee, sepulchre? |
36222 | What booted the protection of an insignificant sectary to him? |
36222 | What dost thou now? |
36222 | What gat ye to dinner, my handsome young man?" |
36222 | What gift shall I make him?" |
36222 | What happened to the Italian Greeks on their surrender to Rome? |
36222 | What seest thou, Ringer, in the close? |
36222 | What seest thou, Ringer, in the close? |
36222 | What thing to thee can mischief do? |
36222 | What though he sinned so much, Or that his parents sinned? |
36222 | What though the sins''long score Was thirteen hundred crimes? |
36222 | What will ye leave to your brither, my handsome young man?" |
36222 | What will ye leave to your father, my handsome young man?" |
36222 | What will ye leave to your sister, my handsome young man?" |
36222 | What will ye leave to your true love, my handsome young man?" |
36222 | What, for example, is the meaning of the play with the snail? |
36222 | When Caterina had gone home, her mistress''fate went to her fate, and said,"Dear sister, why are you not tired of persecuting poor Caterina? |
36222 | When he heard about the difficulty of the Beaucairos he asked,''Why did they not have recourse to St Martha?''" |
36222 | When he is in sorrow he pines for them as for the society of friends:"Why am I not near the hills? |
36222 | When we were young, were not our hearts stirred to their inmost depths by this? |
36222 | Where are your brothers and sisters?" |
36222 | Where do these shepherds speed away? |
36222 | Where gat ye your dinner, my handsome young man?" |
36222 | Where is my father, my beloved father? |
36222 | Where is my mother, my good mother? |
36222 | Where on the former night? |
36222 | Where was the original fount of this lyrical river? |
36222 | While they journey along the birds sing:"See you that lovely girl riding with the dead?" |
36222 | Who can say how much it has done to make society possible, to keep the world on its wheels? |
36222 | Who forgets the coming into Venice in the early morning light of the boats laden with fresh flowers and fruit? |
36222 | Who is that knocking at my door?" |
36222 | Who shall fathom the grim comfort there was in this vivid, this highly intelligible showing forth of the indisputable fact? |
36222 | Who thinks of Robin Hood apart from the greenwood tree? |
36222 | Who will arrange thy pillows, So thou mayst sleep softly? |
36222 | Who will awake thee, my daughter, When day is up? |
36222 | Whom wouldst thou have to avenge thee? |
36222 | Why did he not answer her-- did he lack heart to do so? |
36222 | Why didst thou bring me into the world without obtaining for me by thy prayers a portion of its blessings? |
36222 | Why dost weep, my Babe? |
36222 | Why dost weep? |
36222 | Why fall in love with the morning star? |
36222 | Why have I not the mountains to keep me company?" |
36222 | Why is he so persistently asked to put his horns out? |
36222 | Why is his face so pale? |
36222 | Why is she not content to abide at home? |
36222 | Why is thy foot so bloody? |
36222 | Why should they be present at this letting loose of grief? |
36222 | Why walk alone in the night? |
36222 | Why was I left a wretched orphan? |
36222 | Will no one tell me what she sings? |
36222 | Will she leave them in their sadness? |
36222 | Will you not give one hour''s relief? |
36222 | Wilt thou be her master?" |
36222 | Wilt thou then love forsake? |
36222 | Would you like just to see, Gossip? |
36222 | Wouldst thou learn so speedily, Pain to try, To heave a sigh? |
36222 | a mother asks, and the child is made to answer,"How could I help weeping for my own mamma, who loves me so in her heart?" |
36222 | a young child wrapped in swaddling clothes, a fair child resting beneath his woollen coverlet?''" |
36222 | and a lily gay._"The milk- white steed that brought me here,"_ As the primrose spreads so sweetly._"What would ye give to your mother, dear?" |
36222 | and you think to escape from me?" |
36222 | can it be that you are ill? |
36222 | dost thou remember, O forest, how often I have roamed about thee with my following of young comrades bearing aloft my red banner?" |
36222 | has your wife a daughter old enough to be an abbess?" |
36222 | in youth, or in age?" |
36222 | lytel child, I synge al beforn How xalt thou sufferin the scharp garlong of thorn? |
36222 | lytel child, fayre happis the befalle, How xalt thou sufferin to drynke ezyl and galle? |
36222 | lytel child, gwy wepy Thou so sore, Thou art bothin God and man, gwat woldyst Thou be more? |
36222 | lytel child, myn owyn dere smerte, How xalt thou sufferin the scharp spere to Thi herte? |
36222 | noble lady, I am a poor girl, and willingly would I enter service to earn my bread; could you employ me?" |
36222 | replied her father,"will the valorous King Ardashes have ever treasure enough to offer me in return for the noble damsel of the Alans?" |
36222 | she cries,"and what of that? |
36222 | she said,"companion mine? |
36222 | when shall come to pass that holy day, when the priest will say to me,''Are you content?'' |
36222 | when shall it come to pass?" |
36222 | where hast thou halted?" |
36222 | wherefore dost thou rend thy hair?" |
36222 | white booke leaves, What hast i''th t''other hand? |
36222 | who has made thy face red? |
36222 | why thus so deeply groan and sigh? |
36222 | with how sweet a voice The angel calls us to rejoice; Quick leave your flocks: but tell me, pray, What doth the heavenly angel say?) |
49291 | All men are equal,where? |
49291 | Dare they do it? |
49291 | Great Spirit,he cried"shall the battle be given, And all but their leader be there? |
49291 | What of Adams? |
49291 | What of Sherman? |
49291 | What''s the news? |
49291 | Where is your liquor? |
49291 | Who is speaking? |
49291 | Will they do it? |
49291 | ( Orig: Whese sons you required, and left not any?) |
49291 | ( Orig: almost pefect organism of the body politic?) |
49291 | A grain of this and a scruple of that!-- Know ye the name of the Medical Rat? |
49291 | A nation speaking another tongue? |
49291 | A people inimical to human freedom? |
49291 | A state abandoned to the caprices of despotism? |
49291 | Against whom are these charges brought? |
49291 | Against whom? |
49291 | And by whom are these charges made? |
49291 | And have we come back sulky and sullen from the very field of honor? |
49291 | And is this aggressive system forever to be adventured by her rulers? |
49291 | And who was that enemy? |
49291 | Are we now unable to do this? |
49291 | Both have a right to_ seek_ for"happiness;"But, with such different chances of success, Where''s the_ equality_? |
49291 | But do we realize that Henry Clay is dead? |
49291 | But the cataract''s roar with the thunder now vied;"Oh, what is the meaning of this?" |
49291 | But, is there not one unquestionable answer? |
49291 | But, what is the higher law? |
49291 | Can there be a law, within these United higher than the Constitution of the United States? |
49291 | Deprived of sunshine, chill''d with vapor- blights, Say what are_ their_"inalienable rights,"Social and civil? |
49291 | Did I not say we need elevation? |
49291 | Did you ever see an eclipse? |
49291 | Do we need health, or genius, or learning, or eloquence, or pleasure, or fame, or power? |
49291 | Do we need wealth, or rank, or office? |
49291 | Do you ever think of the mothers many Whose sons you required, and left not any? |
49291 | Do you think of young limbs bruised and crush''d And laughing voices forever hush''d? |
49291 | Does any one of us need to be chaplain, or clerk, or representative, or senator, or speaker, or vice- president? |
49291 | Had Washington never lived, what would have been the result of our revolutionary struggle? |
49291 | Had he died immediately after the close of the war, what would have been the fate of our governmental experiment? |
49291 | Has any foreign ruler been so foolish as to listen with credulity to the tales of impending disunion? |
49291 | Have we lost this spirit? |
49291 | How can we eat what is not eatable? |
49291 | How can we punish what is not punishable? |
49291 | How could such a secret be kept from the foundation of the world till the end of the fifteenth century? |
49291 | How does it come? |
49291 | How does it come? |
49291 | I stand here the noblest being in the whole creation; may I not be master of that creation? |
49291 | If there can be and is such a law-- what is it? |
49291 | If we knew the clouds above us, Held by gentle blessings there, Would we turn away all trembling, In our blind and weak despair? |
49291 | If we knew the silent story, Quivering through the heart of pain, Would our womanhood dare doom them Back to haunts of guilt again? |
49291 | Is he busily engaged on the deck, is he manfully facing the danger, and skillfully suggesting means to avert it? |
49291 | Is such our need? |
49291 | Is there a physician to be found that can restore my soul to health?" |
49291 | Is there any American who wishes to consult European Powers as to the propriety or policy of our territorial expansion? |
49291 | Is there any one who fears a fatal blow from these Powers? |
49291 | Is this a theme not unworthy of the pen and the mind of Webster? |
49291 | It comes by_ trick_ as well as toil, But how is that? |
49291 | Know ye the names of the Reverend Rats? |
49291 | No? |
49291 | Not,"How did it come into the world?" |
49291 | Not,"How is it that I am sick?" |
49291 | Not,"How is it that fire descended from heaven upon Sodom?" |
49291 | Oh, Truth and Justice, and Common- Sense When will you drive this rat- tribe hence? |
49291 | Or, as the law says, how can we think on what is not thinkable? |
49291 | Or, how can we drink what is not drinkable? |
49291 | Our country is prosperous and powerful; but could it have been quite all it has been, and is, and is to be, without Henry Clay? |
49291 | Proving virtue itself a sin, By a comma left out or a colon left in; Of guesses and glosses the autocrats: Know ye the names of the Learned Rats? |
49291 | Queer John has sung, how money goes, But how it comes, who knows? |
49291 | Shall we not leave them a legacy as great as that our fathers left us? |
49291 | Souls of men are on board; wealth of man in the hold; And the storm- wind Euroclydon sweeps to his prey; And who heeds the bird? |
49291 | Speak out, my friends, would you exchange it for the demon''s drink, alcohol?" |
49291 | Strange to tell, he asks:"Can you inform me with what sword I was wounded, and by what Russian I have been thus grievously mauled? |
49291 | Suppose the glistening dew- drops Upon the grass should say:"What can a little dew- drop do? |
49291 | THE ONE GREAT NEED.--_Ibid._ Tell me, oh, tell me, what is it we need? |
49291 | Tell me wherefore down the valley, ye have traced the turnpike''s way Far beyond the cattle- pasture, and the brick- yard with its clay? |
49291 | The money comes-- how did I say? |
49291 | The war- shout has sounded, the stream must be cross''d Why lingers the leader afar? |
49291 | To whom shall we liken him, or with whom shall he be compared? |
49291 | Totally unused to ardent spirits, with my tongue, throat, and palate as raw as beef, what could I do? |
49291 | Victoria''s children laugh in glee!-- Does she remember mine, or me? |
49291 | Weep? |
49291 | What care I for infirmity? |
49291 | What could equal the faith of Abraham, as he tracked his lonely pilgrimage through the plains of Shinar, seeking a land that he knew not of? |
49291 | What did I say in the beginning? |
49291 | What else was so much good blood shed for, on so many more than classical fields of Revolutionary glory? |
49291 | What is it, then, that causes doubt and mystery to attend the ways of men? |
49291 | What of mere mortality could equal the firmness of Moses, as he came down from Sinai, his face all glowing from the presence of his God? |
49291 | What question does he ask? |
49291 | What so mysterious as the dissociation of the native tribes of this continent from the civilized and civilizable races of man? |
49291 | What so propitious as this long colonial training in the school of chartered government? |
49291 | Where is the captain? |
49291 | Where shall we be thirty years hence, if such prosperity attend us? |
49291 | Which one of them all that has not a record marked by some weakness, or marred by some crime? |
49291 | Who can realize that freedom''s champion-- the champion of a civilized world, and of all tongues and kindred and people, has indeed fallen? |
49291 | Who has not heard how gallantly, forty- seven years ago, the young hero, still weak from a wasting fever, led his squadron to battle? |
49291 | Who knows? |
49291 | Who was it that discovered the Fat Boy, and captured the wild and ferocious_ What Is It?_ An American citizen! |
49291 | Who was it that invented the powder that will kill a cockroach, if you put a little on its tail and then tread on it? |
49291 | Who was it that knocked thunder out of the clouds, and took a streak o''greased lightnin''for a tail to his kite? |
49291 | Who was it that, durin''the great and glorious Revolution, by his eloquence quenched the spirit of Toryism? |
49291 | Why has this association of American women been formed? |
49291 | Will any man, unless an utter infidel, deny this? |
49291 | Would we shrink from little shadows, Lying on the dewy grass, While''tis only birds of Eden, Just in mercy flying past? |
49291 | Your question would be:"How can I get rid of the evil?" |
49291 | _ Leges non curant-- verhum sat!_ Know ye the name of the Legal Rat? |
49291 | a cabinet officer? |
49291 | a foreign minister? |
49291 | a member or head of any department? |
49291 | an officer of the army or navy? |
49291 | but,"Are there medicines that will heal me? |
49291 | but,"How am I to escape from it?" |
49291 | but,"How may I, like Lot, escape out of the city to a Zoar?" |
49291 | has it gone from among us? |
49291 | has it gone from among us?) |
49291 | how shall I tell the sequel? |
49291 | of what is called friendship, love? |
49291 | or even a successor in the line of presidents of the United States? |
49291 | tell me wherefore do ye gaze, On the ground that''s being furrow''d for the planting of the maize? |
34409 | For a cavern of cold gray mist is my heart Will not the hemlock boughs be better Over our feet and under our heads Keeping us from the weather? |
34409 | For whom, sweet singer, do your clear tones resound? 34409 Thou desirest the fairest of women for thy bride?" |
34409 | What avails sun''s earth- felt thrill To me? 34409 A last hope,--but dare I venture it? 34409 A little unwillingly, but what is that? 34409 A man? 34409 A quarrel? 34409 A woman? 34409 A woman? 34409 Ah, Anna, art thou here? 34409 All empty?... 34409 All my strength is broken against this madness, which destroys itself.... And the hour presses.... What can I do? 34409 Alone? 34409 Am I King? 34409 Am I not i''the right, old Jephthah? 34409 Am I so powerful, then? 34409 And am I not to see the father again till morning? 34409 And do thy pains and desires all come to an end thus? 34409 And how does he reward us? 34409 And if he brings them? 34409 And if? 34409 And is it not fitting for an unhappy mother to protect the head of her child even with her own shattered arm? 34409 And now? 34409 And that this hand is worthy, too, to raise it? 34409 And that youth who smiling received the sacrificial blow for you-- think you his life so valueless that no one even remembers him as a poor reward? 34409 And the other? 34409 And then? 34409 And then? 34409 And this one-- who is he? 34409 And thou didst open it? 34409 And thy oath, Lady? 34409 And to- night-- which way did he go? 34409 And what was the decision of the people? 34409 And whose concern are you? 34409 And why did the father go up to his tower? 34409 And would not an unfillable gap be left in the ranks of our friends of the imaginative world if Balaustion were blotted out? 34409 And yet thou thinkest of departure? 34409 And your Duke? 34409 Anna, art thou vexed with me? 34409 Are they not fair, thy singing land, thy moonlit house? 34409 Are they really heron''s feathers, from the very bird? 34409 Are you fair? 34409 Are you so sure of it? 34409 Art thou hungry? 34409 Art thou made of stone that thou hast not felt a thrust of pity like a knife, at the mere sight of that pious grace, that spring- like mildness? 34409 Art thou safe? 34409 Art thou still awake, my son? 34409 As a reward of victory? 34409 Ask thyself what it means-- my hand stretched forth shall bless her-- if I have and hold her? 34409 Asleep here on the stones? 34409 Because he needs no praise, wilt thou be dumb? 34409 Because our heads are white? 34409 Believest thou also that miracles still come to pass? 34409 Boston: Houghton, Mifflin& Co.)_ Queries for Discussion_.--Is Miss Guiney''s scholasticism too dominant in her work? 34409 Brother, who is this? 34409 But can I learn to hope again? 34409 But does not a careful comparison with his early work disprove this assertion? 34409 But he stood there before my bed and looked at me,--Hans, what is all that noise? 34409 But if she weaves enchantment, master? 34409 But now the foe hangs at our very heels,--and he, instead of showing fist in need, buries a thorn in our own flesh;-- must I still be silent? 34409 But tell me, dear children, if you knew it, then why did this custom vanish from the land so many years? 34409 But tell me, my dear friend, did he not conquer? 34409 But though it be recognized that good comes of evil, shall evil be encouraged? 34409 But was there not a great feast to- night? 34409 But what thrall? 34409 But when he must say to himself besides: thou hast squandered thy own happiness in shameful dalliance,--to whom then, dare he show his face? 34409 But why? 34409 But yet thou mutterest? 34409 Can you not see his spirit wanders far? 34409 Canst thou not guess their dumb entreaties, not understand their timid longings? 34409 Could beauty, my lord, have better commerce than with honesty? 34409 Danger-- for whom? 34409 Did I not behold, not far from land a blood- red sail a- dazzle against the blue night cloud? 34409 Did I send you ahead to chatter? 34409 Didst thou not call? 34409 Do I not give ye the King ye seek? 34409 Do we not see a living portrait of the two poets in the lyric''So the head aches and the limbs are faint''? 34409 Do ye not know me? 34409 Do you already rue your act? 34409 Do you know me, my lord? 34409 Do you stare at me? 34409 Does Hovey attain greatness by his liveliness and human quality joined to varied and skilful metrical effects? 34409 Does a new misery lie in wait behind the dark disguise of these words? 34409 Does he let the righteous perish and the evil man prosper in the end? 34409 Does he, so to speak, carve cherry- stones oftener than he engraves cameos? 34409 Does her cultured thought and chaste concentrated power of expression lift her above the ranks of the minor poets? 34409 Does his nature, received through inheritance, moulded by circumstance, determine his acts and so his life? 34409 Does it not follow that the spiritual is the central life upon which all else depends? 34409 Does not the boat pass there that yesterday crossed our path on the high seas, whose steersman threatened fight with our dragon? 34409 Does she lack human warmth? 34409 Dost thou ask me? 34409 Dost thou bear them in thy breast? 34409 Dost thou call me fool, boy? 34409 Dost thou court the palsy? 34409 Dost thou forget then where a balsam is prepared to heal thy bruised feet, dost thou forget where a thousand arms reach out to greet their loved one? 34409 Dost thou hate her so? 34409 Dost thou hear thy heart clamor within thee after freedom? 34409 Dost thou mock at us? 34409 Dost thou think I am so besotted as not to know my state? 34409 Dost thou thus seek to shroud dreams of the past? 34409 Dost thou understand? 34409 Eh? 34409 Eh? 34409 For God''s sake, what burns there? 34409 For if the sun breed maggots in a dead dog, being a god kissing carrion-- Have you a daughter? 34409 For the attack? 34409 For what, my lord? 34409 For why else am I thy wife? 34409 Hans, did they shoot much? 34409 Hans-- dost thou know what the Queen says of me? 34409 Hanschen, has thou clean forgot who was the fiercest bloodhound of us all? 34409 Hark, do I hear a horn? 34409 Has he the strength for this redeeming act, and would it break the bonds of the madness that holds him? 34409 Hast called me? 34409 Hast made a fine soft bed? 34409 Hast thou forgot what I promised thee the day thou gavest thyself with hesitation to my service? 34409 Hast thou forgot what else she said? 34409 Hast thou found her worthy to awake thy idle sword to deeds of battle? 34409 Hast thou not known it all long since? 34409 Hast thou not taken our measure, then? 34409 Hast thou seen aright? 34409 Hate her? 34409 Have I been bad, father? 34409 Have I been here too long? 34409 Have I ever yet mingled with the crowd that boldly raise their heads against him? 34409 Have we learned much more to- day? 34409 Have you a favor to be granted, a complaint to make? 34409 Have you never, when asked:Did you ever know of a case of love at first sight?" |
34409 | He asks such poets if they would"Play the fool, Abjuring a superior privilege? |
34409 | He drubs you then? |
34409 | Her figure sways, it fades with the clouds-- was that the sign? |
34409 | Her, in whose golden beauty the loveliness about her pales to a shadow? |
34409 | Her-- from whose soul a mildness like honey drops on mine? |
34409 | Here indeed he is, but with what right? |
34409 | Here, thou strange man, dost thou not know the Queen? |
34409 | Here? |
34409 | Honest, my lord? |
34409 | How can I feel that scar or even the happiness after which I longed, now that those hours are past which knew thy love for me? |
34409 | How comes the bold rascal here? |
34409 | How comest thou here? |
34409 | How dost thou know? |
34409 | How else? |
34409 | How goes it now? |
34409 | How is it? |
34409 | How is the Prince? |
34409 | How long? |
34409 | How many? |
34409 | How say you by that? |
34409 | How shall I--? |
34409 | How strange thou art to- day? |
34409 | How was he before that? |
34409 | How-- what--? |
34409 | I am not, too? |
34409 | I ask not now upon what throne thy father sat, I only ask the weakling: Art thou a man? |
34409 | I ask thee, with whom hast_ thou_ left the Prince? |
34409 | I brought not the heron''s feathers with me? |
34409 | I can not yet forbear to hope that when he-- dost thou hear? |
34409 | I have wrung his neck, I snatch my prize, my salvation...[_ feeling on his head and in his breast with anxious dismay_] where are the feathers? |
34409 | I might lay about me recklessly-- but what am I to dare it? |
34409 | I saw him fall... did he not conquer? |
34409 | I-- call thee?... |
34409 | If I were not,--what then? |
34409 | If not? |
34409 | If so, whence comes it, and what are its laws? |
34409 | If through some chance, quite unforseen, this land should all at once become thine own, entirely thine? |
34409 | If-- what? |
34409 | In the lines"The chains of kind The distant bind; Deed thou doest she must do,"he anticipates( does he not?) |
34409 | In what battle? |
34409 | In whose blood shall I dip this body to make it consecrate? |
34409 | In''Hamlet,''i, 2, 67, the King asks Hamlet:"How is it that the clouds still hang on you?" |
34409 | Is genius a natural product? |
34409 | Is he ashamed of us?--or of himself? |
34409 | Is he asleep somewhere? |
34409 | Is it a corpse? |
34409 | Is it a spirit? |
34409 | Is it cold? |
34409 | Is it intended for a sign to me to turn back in my path? |
34409 | Is it only in such a land as this that we realize the true power of emotion? |
34409 | Is it true, I wonder? |
34409 | Is it well so, dear one? |
34409 | Is it yonder, worlds away, Where the strange and new have birth That Power comes full in play?" |
34409 | Is not Meredith''s conclusion far more true to life? |
34409 | Is not ours preëminently a growing age? |
34409 | Is not this realm, O King, forfeit to him as a reward of victory? |
34409 | Is she thy latest love? |
34409 | Is that the reason? |
34409 | Is that the signal? |
34409 | Is the angry red painted upon thy brow, and yet canst thou endure and not wipe out the insult thou hast received? |
34409 | Is there corn in the sack? |
34409 | Is this body that glows in prideful youth, only a hardly fed up paunch? |
34409 | Is''Taliesin''his best work, or is his best work done in his short pieces? |
34409 | It is dead, then? |
34409 | It was last night the strangers knocked at thy door? |
34409 | It was thou? |
34409 | It was thou? |
34409 | It would be possible? |
34409 | Just like the father.... Wouldst thou strike me? |
34409 | King am I? |
34409 | Know you the song that you should sing? |
34409 | Knowest thou not how well- nigh breathless with its joy my smile says unto thee:"I charm thee not?" |
34409 | Knowest thou not where thy home stands and calls to thee? |
34409 | Look, there is the flock; but where is the shepherd? |
34409 | Man and steed armed? |
34409 | May Anna stay here, too? |
34409 | Meseems... Hans Lorbass-- do I see aright? |
34409 | More pretty words, my friend? |
34409 | Must I blush before thee, because I voiced a cry out of my soul''s longing, which envious time would smother? |
34409 | Must I suck in these complaints that fall drop by drop upon me? |
34409 | Must you, even in the daytime, din your night- song in my ears? |
34409 | My boy, didst thou do well to leave thy bed and run with such haste to thy playfellow? |
34409 | My eyes are heavy and wet with tears Whose eyes besides are heavy so--? |
34409 | My little Hans, my son, why stormest thou so? |
34409 | My lord, where hast thou left the Prince? |
34409 | My lord? |
34409 | My oath? |
34409 | Nay, didst thou not think so? |
34409 | Not even I, my friend? |
34409 | Now for thy life!--What is he thinking of? |
34409 | Now they portend-- what? |
34409 | O.--Is Browning a Legitimate Member of the Victorian School? |
34409 | Oh, stands it so with you, my lords? |
34409 | On the grave- straw? |
34409 | One question more: How come you here? |
34409 | Or are her restraint and good taste the index of deeper feeling? |
34409 | Or does he seem cold and elaborately superficial? |
34409 | Or does his moral choice determine these? |
34409 | Or have you never instanced, as the most persuasive oration you ever heard, Mark Antony''s speech in''Julius Cæsar?'' |
34409 | Or lazily floating in a lotus land with Tennyson, say, among the meadows of the Musketaquid, in canoes with silken cushions? |
34409 | Our Hans? |
34409 | Out of the way? |
34409 | Papa, may I come in? |
34409 | Pity?--how-- wherefore? |
34409 | Please simply when your function is to rule-- By thought incite to deed? |
34409 | Remember the poem''Reverie'':"I know there shall dawn a day--Is it here on homely earth? |
34409 | Say, Hans, is it true that a cruel enemy stands before the gate? |
34409 | Say, mother, will the father come soon? |
34409 | Shall I be free, Maria? |
34409 | Shall I? |
34409 | Shall we not be cold? |
34409 | Since I have been gone-- how long is it? |
34409 | So rests the snow upon the slopes in my childhood''s home.... My home... what is it to me now?... |
34409 | Soon? |
34409 | Speak now, ye who cursed my mourning and my sorrow''s backward glance: do I fulfill your will with shuddering? |
34409 | Speak, as thou knowest me: why does this anger and this curse fall daily and hourly over me? |
34409 | Still thou knowest him, my dear son? |
34409 | Still thou knowest him? |
34409 | Still?... |
34409 | Strike back, defend thyself; that is the way with happy married folk.... Well? |
34409 | Suppose she should come now and vanish again? |
34409 | Tell me, my little Hans, hast been industrious? |
34409 | Tell us, old Hans, what brings thee here? |
34409 | That is amber? |
34409 | That is the tower? |
34409 | That sunny land, those blue, flower- sown havens, whither thy hasting step once fled? |
34409 | That witch- work to distract thee now? |
34409 | The Burial- wife? |
34409 | The King is come? |
34409 | The King, where is he? |
34409 | The Pommeranian? |
34409 | The Prince comes back._] Art thou singed? |
34409 | The Princeling,--why? |
34409 | The angel of destruction broods over us.... Where is thy child? |
34409 | The fire dies down? |
34409 | The main issue between freedom and fatalism lies in just this question: Is a man''s life determined by what he is or by what he does? |
34409 | The other two-- thou knowest them? |
34409 | The what? |
34409 | The wood is full of darkness, is it not? |
34409 | The-- the-- am I the Prince''s keeper? |
34409 | There''s Romeo and Juliet, you know?" |
34409 | There, which one of them drives the other in the corner, now? |
34409 | They crowd in early at your doors,--have I come to a festival? |
34409 | They greet him, great and small, with clapping hands and waving kerchiefs,--why must we stand aloof? |
34409 | Thinkest thou that because I took this path I was sent to thee? |
34409 | Thinkest thou thy son--? |
34409 | Thinkest thou to kindle a new blaze thereon by victory and sin? |
34409 | Thinkest thou?... |
34409 | Those beauteous women, fairest of the fair,--or passing as the fairest,--to bow in whose impious slavery once compassed all thy thoughts? |
34409 | Thou couldst? |
34409 | Thou dost not go along? |
34409 | Thou hadst gladly got us out of the way to dig all by thyself? |
34409 | Thou hast come here,--into this den where lust holds sway? |
34409 | Thou hast the feathers? |
34409 | Thou knowest who alone may carry that? |
34409 | Thou listenest in silence to this unmeasured raving? |
34409 | Thou lookest toward the south,--what seekest thou there? |
34409 | Thou movest in silent resignation, so tense, so... Say, how canst thou? |
34409 | Thou will still--? |
34409 | Thou wouldst announce him? |
34409 | Thou wouldst draw us out then? |
34409 | Thou, Hans, here in my tower, which thou hast so avoided? |
34409 | Thou? |
34409 | Three years ago as everybody knows, you would have murdered our young lord at summons of the Bastard and his fair promises; and now-- what are you? |
34409 | Thy master is here? |
34409 | Thy name is Anna with the golden hair? |
34409 | To a...? |
34409 | To beg their bread? |
34409 | Unharmed? |
34409 | Was it that I should fawn upon you, stroke and caress and flatter you, and die, instead of that one death I owed you, a thousand daily deaths? |
34409 | Was that it? |
34409 | We? |
34409 | Well then, if that should disappear that stands in thy way? |
34409 | Well, did she please thee? |
34409 | Well, my wife? |
34409 | Well, old fellow, what wilt thou in this berth? |
34409 | Well, then? |
34409 | Well, where is the man who cares to try conclusions with our Duke? |
34409 | Well? |
34409 | Well? |
34409 | Well? |
34409 | Well? |
34409 | Well? |
34409 | Well? |
34409 | Wha--? |
34409 | Wha--? |
34409 | What are they? |
34409 | What brings thee here? |
34409 | What can I otherwise? |
34409 | What concern hast thou with me? |
34409 | What do you call this? |
34409 | What do you want? |
34409 | What do you want? |
34409 | What dost thou ask? |
34409 | What dost thou mean? |
34409 | What drivest thou now? |
34409 | What follows then, my lord? |
34409 | What is a woman? |
34409 | What is in thy head? |
34409 | What is it thou grumblest in thy beard? |
34409 | What is it? |
34409 | What is it? |
34409 | What is that, now thou art here? |
34409 | What is that? |
34409 | What is the matter? |
34409 | What is this? |
34409 | What look''st thou at so? |
34409 | What madness has so blurred events for thee? |
34409 | What means the scorn that lurks in your eyes? |
34409 | What not a word? |
34409 | What now? |
34409 | What now? |
34409 | What now? |
34409 | What of the philosophical doctrines to which Browning gives expression in the remaining poems of the group? |
34409 | What offer did he make? |
34409 | What sayest thou? |
34409 | What seek you my children?... |
34409 | What seekest thou, dear one? |
34409 | What shall I do? |
34409 | What shall I say? |
34409 | What shall we say of Edward,"villain and hero in one"? |
34409 | What should I do? |
34409 | What signal? |
34409 | What slipped away, what fell? |
34409 | What stops your mouths? |
34409 | What then? |
34409 | What treasure had he, my lord? |
34409 | What troubles thee, beloved Lady? |
34409 | What use? |
34409 | What wilt thou do? |
34409 | What wilt thou here? |
34409 | What''s that? |
34409 | What''s the matter? |
34409 | What, Anna, art thou eavesdropping? |
34409 | What, Goldhair, thou awake? |
34409 | What, Goldhair, thou? |
34409 | What, Hans? |
34409 | What, stranger, art thou also of princely blood? |
34409 | What, then, is thy desire? |
34409 | What-- Sköll? |
34409 | What-- what?... |
34409 | What? |
34409 | What? |
34409 | What? |
34409 | What?... |
34409 | Where are my--? |
34409 | Where are the feathers? |
34409 | Where are they, master? |
34409 | Where else? |
34409 | Where hast thou stayed so long? |
34409 | Where have the women gone, then,--those wanton flaunting blossoms of his? |
34409 | Where is she hiding, that I may rip that shriveled skin of hers about her ears? |
34409 | Where is the King?... |
34409 | Where is the Prince? |
34409 | Where is the stranger? |
34409 | Where is thy child? |
34409 | Whither now? |
34409 | Whither then? |
34409 | Who art thou, and what wouldst thou here? |
34409 | Who has it now, thou clown? |
34409 | Who hears you, and who feels you? |
34409 | Who is not impressed with the strength and sweep of''Cristina''? |
34409 | Who is that man that speaks with you? |
34409 | Who knows thee not? |
34409 | Who knows? |
34409 | Who speaks of graves? |
34409 | Who speaks of pity, when I myself protect her with my shield? |
34409 | Who stays for me if I will not for him? |
34409 | Who was the devil? |
34409 | Who were they? |
34409 | Who would it have been? |
34409 | Who, then? |
34409 | Who--? |
34409 | Who? |
34409 | Who? |
34409 | Who? |
34409 | Who? |
34409 | Why are you old ones shivering? |
34409 | Why are you silent? |
34409 | Why are you silent? |
34409 | Why didst thou come up the steps? |
34409 | Why do ye stand there so amazed? |
34409 | Why dost thou hesitate? |
34409 | Why dost thou look at me so sternly? |
34409 | Why hast thou when so devil- ridden, not yielded to the strain? |
34409 | Why have you not already struck him down? |
34409 | Why look you so strange? |
34409 | Why should I judge thee, and not rather love? |
34409 | Why shouldst thou look at me so grimly? |
34409 | Why so much pains with one who lay in the dust, whom you so mercifully raised up that everyone might value me as he chose, not as he must? |
34409 | Why stand you there? |
34409 | Why, who was that, that went out in such a hurry? |
34409 | Why? |
34409 | Why? |
34409 | Why? |
34409 | Will fight? |
34409 | Will fight? |
34409 | Will he come before my bed- time? |
34409 | Will he come inside? |
34409 | Will no one speak? |
34409 | Wilt thou come back? |
34409 | Wilt thou mock me? |
34409 | Wilt thou, my little Prince? |
34409 | Wilt thou? |
34409 | With what right shall I plunge this sword into fiery service? |
34409 | Would fate withdraw her gift a second time and leave me no security? |
34409 | Wouldst thou not? |
34409 | Wouldst thou soar? |
34409 | Yes, yes, this morning many a one thinks of his bed.... What, an alarm so early? |
34409 | Yes?... |
34409 | Yet why? |
34409 | You men below there, is there one that wears a sword and armor? |
34409 | [_ Aloud._] Then in the battle-- how shows he there? |
34409 | [_ Aside._] Suppose: if thou wert not,--if in this coming hour I might but strike a blow for my own throne.... Where now? |
34409 | [_ Bursting out._] Then wouldst thou take thy sword in both thy hands and storm exulting on the foe?... |
34409 | [_ Calling._] What wilt thou without there? |
34409 | [_ Caressing her._] Why dost thou shroud thy pretty hair with a grey veil? |
34409 | [_ Runs to him._] What hast thou brought me, Uncle Cölestin? |
34409 | [_ They laugh._] Tell me now, what have you been at so long? |
34409 | _ Duke_[_ whispers_], Sköll, do not forget... where are the others? |
34409 | _ King_ You would mock the man that fled from you? |
34409 | are you honest? |
34409 | till everyone spread sail before him and left him to his work? |
34409 | wilt thou go? |
48245 | Do ye buy rags and bones here? |
48245 | Faith, an''is n''t that the way Oi get my livin''?] |
48245 | Haw, haw, pray will you direct me the shortest way to Baggot Street, haw? |
48245 | Is it batin''? |
48245 | Is it praties, ye mane? |
48245 | Is it throuts? 48245 Long life to yer honour, sure, and did n''t I?" |
48245 | So, Rory,ses he,"''tis a vote ye''ve got now?" |
48245 | What business had you to be listening about? 48245 _"Did ye see the cock- fightin''at Pat Daly''s lasst night?" |
48245 | _Did ye see the''boys''''suffer- r,''this mornin''?" |
48245 | _Why were you late in barracks last night, Private Atkins?" |
48245 | ''_"***** A BROAD HINT.--_English Traveller( to Irish Railway Porter labelling luggage)._"Do n''t you keep a brush for that work, porter?" |
48245 | )_"Waiter, what''s this? |
48245 | ***** CONFESSION IN CONFUSION.--_Priest._"Now, tell me, Doolan, truthfully, how often_ do_ you go to chapel?" |
48245 | ***** GEOGRAPHICAL CATECHISM.--_Q._ What do we now call the Isle of Patmos? |
48245 | ***** REFRESHMENT FOR MAN AND BEAST.--_Traveller in Ireland( who has been into a shebeen)._"But are you not going to bait the horse?" |
48245 | ***** THE SAXON OPPRESSOR.--_Saxon Tourist._"I suppose the English buy all the pigs that you wish to sell?" |
48245 | ***** WHO were the original bogtrotters? |
48245 | *****"LUCUS A NON,"& c.--_Visitor._"How long has your master been away?" |
48245 | *****[ Illustration: AN EVENING''S FISHING( BEHIND THE DISTILLERY AT SLIGO).--_First Factory Lad._"Dom''nick, did ya get e''er a bite at all?" |
48245 | *****[ Illustration: ECONOMY.--_Pat._"And ye say, if I take this one, I''ll save ha''f the fuul? |
48245 | *****[ Illustration: FROM ERIN_ Restaurant Waiter._"Bill, sorr? |
48245 | *****[ Illustration:_ Irate Station- master._"What the divil are ye waitin''for?" |
48245 | *****[ Illustration:_ Lady( looking at new cob)._"How does he go, Patrick?" |
48245 | *****[ Illustration:_ Tourist( who has just given Pat a drink from his flask)._"That''s a drop of good whiskey-- eh, Pat?" |
48245 | *****[ Illustration:_ Tourist._"Have you not got Scotch whiskey?" |
48245 | *****_ Zoological Specialist( gazing at solitary sea- lion in the Dublin Zoo)._ Where''s his mate? |
48245 | --_First Gent( Celt)._"Ye met''m at me brother''s, the mimber, I think?" |
48245 | --_Irish Waiter._"An''will yer''anner have an inside kyar or an outside kyar?" |
48245 | --_Pat( after a sip)._"An''which did ye put in first-- the whisky or the wather?" |
48245 | --_Pat._"What d''ye think of the Home Rule Bill, Murphy?" |
48245 | --_Saxon Tourist( at Irish Railway Station)._"What time does the half- past eleven train start, Paddy?" |
48245 | --_Squire._"Why, Pat, what are you doing, standing by the wall of the public- house? |
48245 | --_Traveller( they had already walked a mile from the station)._"Hi, I say, porter, do you call this''no way at all?'' |
48245 | An''how are ye goin''to use it?" |
48245 | And where''s the_ shtablin''_?"] |
48245 | Annything----"_ Commercial Gent._"No, that will do----"_ Waiter( with calm contempt)._"And do ye expict to foind the loikes o''them things here? |
48245 | Arrah, what will I do?" |
48245 | But they''re asy kep''wet, your honour?" |
48245 | Can I draw it out quick if I want it?" |
48245 | Do n''t you see the mare is running away?" |
48245 | Do you think she''ll be up to the work?" |
48245 | Fair Day__ Porter._"An what the divil are ye doin'', tying that donkey up there?" |
48245 | Give it away, sorr?--Me vote, sorr?" |
48245 | Had n''t your honour better move a little further from the foire?" |
48245 | How can a jintleman dance--(_hic!_)--iv ye do n''t kape thime?"!! |
48245 | I have n''t got a licence----"_ Native._"Is it a licence ye want to kill a fish? |
48245 | I mane him wot had the lot o''good character papers, an''me that niver had a blissid wan?" |
48245 | Inspector._"What''s the meanin''of this, Pat? |
48245 | Is he sick?" |
48245 | Is it Moriarty that''s insulted ye?" |
48245 | Is the petition gone to the masther yet? |
48245 | MR. PUNCH, SIRR,--Why would n''t you"fix"Irish_ tinants_? |
48245 | Malone._"Why, Pat, what''s that ye''ve got? |
48245 | May n''t Oi see me frind aff b''the thrain, sorr?"] |
48245 | Molony._"And is it capital? |
48245 | Moriarty._"Look here, Ada, how much longer, for goodness sake, are ye goin''to be dressin''yourself?" |
48245 | Murphy._"Ah, thin, why would n''t she? |
48245 | Oi cries"D''ye think that Oi''ve waited ontil Oi am gray, An''now Oi''m jist goin''to give it away?" |
48245 | Out, is she? |
48245 | Pat Murphy._"Mix is it? |
48245 | Piggy dear, an''did ye hear The thraitors what they say? |
48245 | Says the Priest,"Why not bate her?" |
48245 | Sure, and did n''t I bate him enough coming along?" |
48245 | Sure, is n''t she used to the ways at home?"] |
48245 | Sure, is n''t that the very wan he''s restin''now against the time he''ll be wantin''ut?"] |
48245 | Sure, what is the matther?" |
48245 | Was it betther he thought he could use it than Oi? |
48245 | We hope the egg- traders wo n''t be"taken up,"too; if so, the trade would be arrested just when it was starting, and where would the profit be then? |
48245 | Were there many there?" |
48245 | Wha''d ye mean!?" |
48245 | Wha''for? |
48245 | What is it makes the ship go along?" |
48245 | What is ut now, is ut a''_ tableau v[e]evant_''ye''re playin''at, or what?" |
48245 | What the deuce are you doing to the old mare?" |
48245 | What''ll Oi do? |
48245 | What''ll ye have, yer honour-- tay or coffee?" |
48245 | What''s the meaning of this?" |
48245 | When do you bait him?" |
48245 | Where did you get the hare?" |
48245 | Who will now say that the old humour is dying out in Erin? |
48245 | Whoy the div''l did n''t he say which Oi was to mix furrst?"] |
48245 | Would you please to leave your name?" |
48245 | [ Illustration: A GOOD LISTENER.--_Reverend Gentleman._"Well, Tim, did you leave the letter at the squire''s?" |
48245 | [ Illustration: A MISUNDERSTANDING.--_His Master._"Did you take those boots of mine to be soled, Larry?" |
48245 | [ Illustration: A REGULAR TURK.--_Adjutant._"Well, sergeant, how''s your prisoner getting on?" |
48245 | [ Illustration: A SAFE WIN(?) |
48245 | [ Illustration: AFTER A SHOOT IN COUNTY CLARE_ Master._"Well, Paddy, what sort of a bag?" |
48245 | [ Illustration: ANOTHER IRISH OBSTRUCTION_ Colonel O''Funk._"I say, my man, what''s on the other side of that rail?" |
48245 | [ Illustration: Colleen with shovel and Priest] D''ye see them black diamonds? |
48245 | [ Illustration: DECIMALS ON DECK_ Irish Mate._"How manny iv ye down ther- re?!" |
48245 | [ Illustration: EXPENDED.--_Guest._"Will you give me a little champagne?" |
48245 | [ Illustration: GRANDILOQUENCE.--_Captain of schooner._"What''a''you got there, Pat?" |
48245 | [ Illustration: HIBERNIAN VERACITY.--_Paterfamilias( with his family in Ireland)._"Have you any West India pickles waiter?" |
48245 | [ Illustration: INS AND OUTS_ Irish Innkeeper( to"Boots,"& c.)._"H''where''s Biddee? |
48245 | [ Illustration: IRISH ARCHITECTURE.--_Angler( in Ireland)._"Hullo, Pat, what are you about now?" |
48245 | [ Illustration: IRISH INGENUITY.--_Saxon Tourist._"What on earth are you lowering the shafts for?" |
48245 | [ Illustration: LEVELLING UP.--_Subaltern( just arrived by rail)._"How much to the barracks?" |
48245 | [ Illustration: Pat with donkey cart talking to the Widdy]*****[ Illustration: INDUCTIVE.--_Officer._"How''s this, Murphy? |
48245 | [ Illustration: RATHER TOO LITERAL.--_Country Gentleman( in a rage)._"Why, what have you been up to, you idiot? |
48245 | [ Illustration: REMINISCENCES OF HEDGE- FIRING_ Itinerant Photographer( from under the cloth)._"Will you keep quiet? |
48245 | [ Illustration: SCENE--_Cottage in West of Ireland during a rainstorm.__ Tourist._"Why do n''t you mend those big holes in the roof?" |
48245 | [ Illustration: SEASONED.--_Lady Tourist._"Are the sheets well aired?" |
48245 | [ Illustration: SUNDAY AT THE ZOO.--"Excuse me, sorr; but can ye direct me to the goin''out intrance?"] |
48245 | [ Illustration: SUPEREROGATION.--_Humanitarian._"Could n''t you manage to put a little more flesh on your poor horses''bones? |
48245 | [ Illustration: THE VERDICT.--_First Irishman( waiting in the corridor-- to his friend, rushing in from the Court)._"What''s Tim got?" |
48245 | [ Illustration: TRUSTWORTHY AUTHORITY_ Host._"Michael, did n''t I tell you to decant the best claret?" |
48245 | [ Illustration:"IRISH"_ Polite Young Man._"Perhaps you feel a draught, madam?" |
48245 | [ Illustration:"IT IS SOMETIMES DANGEROUS TO INQUIRE"_ Old Poet__ Inquisitive Tourist._"And how do you find the crops this year, Murphy?" |
48245 | [ Illustration:"So this is your native place, Pat?" |
48245 | [ Illustration:"Whatever have you been doing with yourself, Murphy? |
48245 | [ Illustration:_ Clerk._"Return?" |
48245 | [ Illustration:_ Dooley._"What''s the matter wid ye anyhow, Mick-- all tattered an''torrun an''bitten an''scratched all over?" |
48245 | [ Illustration:_ Editor of Libellous Rag( who has just received a terrific but well- deserved kick)._"Dud you mane thot?" |
48245 | [ Illustration:_ Father O''Flynn._"And now, Pat Murphy, in this season of Lent, what is it ye''ll do by way of penance?" |
48245 | [ Illustration:_ Fisherman( beginner)._"Do n''t you think, Peter, I''ve improved a good deal since I began?" |
48245 | [ Illustration:_ Irish Dealer._"Ach, begorra, would ye run over the cushtomers? |
48245 | [ Illustration:_ Irish Emigrant( emerging from the steerage, feebly)._"Where''s the sails? |
48245 | [ Illustration:_ Irish Landlord( to his agent, who has been to London as a witness)._"And did ye mix much in society, Murphy?" |
48245 | [ Illustration:_ Irish Maid._"Do you want a good beating, Master Jimmy, or do you not? |
48245 | [ Illustration:_ Paddy._"Where will I catch the express for Dublin?" |
48245 | [ Illustration:_ Tourist._"When does the next train start for Cork, porter?" |
48245 | _ Captain._"Well?" |
48245 | _ Car- driver._"Bedad, surr, what''s the use o''that? |
48245 | _ Chairman( indignantly)._ Are these indecent interruptions to continue? |
48245 | _ Clerk( calmly)._"At what office did you get the order?" |
48245 | _ Colonel O''Funk._"Then, will you take it down, and I''ll clear it?"] |
48245 | _ Engine- driver._"Ca n''t ye see the signals is against me?" |
48245 | _ First Gent._"Did he, thin?! |
48245 | _ Hibernian Waiter._"Shumpane, sor? |
48245 | _ Irish Servant._"Is it the bit o''bhacon thin? |
48245 | _ Moriarty._"An anonymous letter? |
48245 | _ Murphy._"How do I find the crops is it? |
48245 | _ Native Inhabitant._"Baggit Street, yer honor, yis, yer honor, d''see that sthreet just forninst ye? |
48245 | _ Pat._"Is it bate him? |
48245 | _ Pat._"Phwat for ud Oi be wantin''a returrn ticket when Oi''m here already?"] |
48245 | _ Pat._"Wud your honour have me go out an''mend it in all this rain?" |
48245 | _ Paterfamilias._"No hot pickles of any description?" |
48245 | _ Saxon._"And are you the eldest?" |
48245 | _ Squire._"But did the keeper see you?" |
48245 | _ Station- master._"Is it the signals? |
48245 | _ Sub- Commissioner._"Now, Murphy, have you effected any improvement in this farm?" |
48245 | _ The Principal( knowing Pat''s failing)._"What have you got to drink there?" |
48245 | _ Traveller( fiercely)._"Eh? |
48245 | _ Traveller._"What''s the matter with him? |
48245 | _ Voice from Telephone._"Who for?" |
48245 | _ Waiter( satirically)._"Annything ilse, surr?" |
48245 | when he knows me quite well?" |
48245 | will I sit still to be shot at?!!"] |
9850 | And did the Countenance Divine Shine forth upon our clouded hills? |
9850 | And this from Suckling: Why so pale and wan, fond lover? |
9850 | And was Jerusalem builded here Among these dark Satanic mills? |
9850 | And was the holy Lamb of God On England''s pleasant pastures seen? |
9850 | And who shall say that it is less ecstatic or less perfect in the little orison to Saint Ben? |
9850 | Be she fairer than the day, Or the flowery mead in May-- If she think not well of me What care I how fair she be? |
9850 | Blake gives us the answer: And did those feet in ancient time Walk upon England''s mountains green? |
9850 | But could they be more strictly experienced, yet more deeply significant, shaping yet more excellent words? |
9850 | If then from the argument about the lyric that it should"sing,"we dismiss this particular meaning of its adaptability to music, what have we left? |
9850 | If you were to ask twenty intelligent people,"What is the Thames?" |
9850 | In spite of all that has been said Keats takes higher rank as poet than Wither? |
9850 | Is Keats, for example, a better poet than Suckling? |
9850 | Or can one poet, by reason of his poetry, be better than another poet by reason of his? |
9850 | Or make pale my cheeks with care Because another''s rosy are? |
9850 | Prythee, why so mute? |
9850 | Prythee, why so mute? |
9850 | Prythee, why so pale? |
9850 | Prythee, why so pale? |
9850 | Shall I, wasting in despair, Die because a woman''s fair? |
9850 | So; have you done? |
9850 | THE DEGREES OF POETRY The question that necessarily follows these reflections is-- Are there degrees in poetry? |
9850 | The question,"What is poetry?" |
9850 | WHAT IS LYRIC? |
9850 | We have to consider this alone-- the poet has something to say: does he say it in the best words in the best order? |
9850 | What are the qualities by virtue of which this claim is made, and allowed by every competent judge? |
9850 | Why so dull and mute, young sinner? |
9850 | Will it eat me? |
9850 | Will, when looking well ca n''t move her, Looking ill prevail? |
9850 | Will, when speaking well ca n''t win her, Saying nothing do''t? |
9850 | You would more probably say,"What do you know of the Thames?" |
42449 | Am I going to Russia? |
42449 | And you want me to adopt you? |
42449 | Are you a Bolshevik? |
42449 | Are you a Bolshevik? |
42449 | Are you a Bolshevik? |
42449 | Are you going to Russia? |
42449 | Are you going to get married while you are in Europe? |
42449 | Are you going to make pictures over here? |
42449 | Are you going to make pictures while you are there? |
42449 | Are you open for engagements? |
42449 | Are you visiting in London? |
42449 | Can you sleep? |
42449 | Charlie, do n''t you know me? |
42449 | Charlie, do n''t you remember me? |
42449 | Did you bring your make- up? |
42449 | Did you call on Shaw? |
42449 | Do I know Clara Kimball Young? 42449 Do I speak French?" |
42449 | Do you believe in Bolshevism? |
42449 | Do you ever expect to get married? |
42449 | Do you know where we are going? |
42449 | Do you like drama? |
42449 | Do you mind? |
42449 | Do you want to play''Hamlet''? |
42449 | Do you want to play''Hamlet''? |
42449 | Do-- you-- understand? |
42449 | For God''s sake, Carl, what''s wrong? |
42449 | Glass of beer, Charlot? |
42449 | Has it had a fair opportunity? |
42449 | Has my message been delivered? |
42449 | Have you destroyed Mr. Leno''s negative? |
42449 | Here''s where the great events in the history of the world took place? |
42449 | How about a few days in the country? |
42449 | How do we know but what some of you have n''t? |
42449 | How do you do your funny falls? |
42449 | How do you write your poetry? 42449 How do?" |
42449 | How is it you are up so late? |
42449 | I am not a politician? |
42449 | Is Jim Larkin here? |
42449 | Is he-- dead? |
42449 | Is n''t that lady the opera singer? |
42449 | Is she your little girl? |
42449 | Mr. Chaplin, are you a Bolshevik? |
42449 | Mr. Chaplin, do you ever expect to get married? |
42449 | Mr. Chaplin, have you your cane and shoes with you? |
42449 | Mr. Chaplin, why are you going to Europe? |
42449 | Mr. Chaplin, why are you going to Europe? |
42449 | Mr. Chaplin, why are you going to Europe? |
42449 | Mr. Chaplin, why are you going to Europe? |
42449 | Mr. Chaplin, why did you come to Europe? |
42449 | Mr. Lathom, is Mr. Chaplin on board? |
42449 | Oh, do you think Jewish people are clever? |
42449 | Should n''t we go over and make ourselves known? |
42449 | Then why are you going to Europe? |
42449 | Then you are bourgeoisie? |
42449 | To whom? |
42449 | Well, how are you, Charlie? |
42449 | Well, what are you doing-- Who are you? |
42449 | What can I do for you, sir? |
42449 | What do you do with your old canes? |
42449 | What do you do with your old moustaches? |
42449 | What do you do with your old moustaches? |
42449 | What do you do with your old shoes? |
42449 | What do you think of Lenin? |
42449 | What do you think of it? |
42449 | What do you think of the Irish question? |
42449 | What have you got? |
42449 | What holiday? |
42449 | What is their future? 42449 What of Lenin?" |
42449 | What will you have? |
42449 | What''s her name? |
42449 | What, where-- anything particular that I want to see? |
42449 | When will I be back for work? |
42449 | Where can I buy your book of poems, Carl? |
42449 | Where''s my cousin? |
42449 | Who is this guy, an English diplomat? |
42449 | Why did you come over? |
42449 | Why do you want to visit Russia? |
42449 | Why not? |
42449 | Why? |
42449 | Will you accept engagements? |
42449 | Will you appear on Tuesday? |
42449 | Will you dine here? |
42449 | Will you dine with us? |
42449 | Will you join a revue? |
42449 | Will you visit Ireland? |
42449 | You wait there, or do you want me to pay you off? |
42449 | Am I going to get up for lunch or will I have it in my cabin? |
42449 | And so, if you ca n''t send the little fellow to college, wo n''t you take him in the movies with you like you did Jackie Coogan? |
42449 | And why should he be singled out and imposed upon? |
42449 | And why so much of the mother in the picture, and why the meeting of the mother and the father? |
42449 | And wot would''e be a- doin''''ere?" |
42449 | Are most of the people in pictures immoral?" |
42449 | Are n''t English girls charming? |
42449 | Are they trying to draw me out? |
42449 | Are you likely to come to Harrogate? |
42449 | As glad as I am to see them? |
42449 | At the end of the picture there came a messenger from the Minister:"Would I come to his box and be decorated?" |
42449 | But she shrugs her shoulders in an indifferent and tragic manner and says,"What does it matter about life?" |
42449 | But then, would they have believed or understood if I had told them I wanted an emotional holiday? |
42449 | Ca n''t I ever get away from Hollywood? |
42449 | Ca n''t he escape? |
42449 | Can I do them? |
42449 | Can I say anything? |
42449 | Can it be true? |
42449 | Can not you forego to make showing of yourself with charity sometime for devastated France? |
42449 | Can those who go to Washington make it more than a thought? |
42449 | Can you make yourself write? |
42449 | Chaplin?" |
42449 | Could anyone conceive such a creation, such a land of continuous gaiety? |
42449 | Could n''t you try?" |
42449 | Cynical? |
42449 | DEAR CHARLIE,--Have you ever thought of the money to be made in peanuts? |
42449 | DEAR MR. CHAPLIN,--Won''t you please let me have enough money to send little Oscar to college? |
42449 | Did I anticipate working? |
42449 | Did its passing make much difference to the lonely derelict? |
42449 | Do I deserve even a part of it? |
42449 | Do I know Louise Glaum? |
42449 | Do I know any of the old- timers? |
42449 | Do I know her? |
42449 | Do n''t you like leaving England? |
42449 | Do we know where they can get a drink? |
42449 | Do you prepare?" |
42449 | Do you see me by the brook''s side, Catching grayfish''neath the stone, As you did the day you whispered:"Leave the harmless dears alone?" |
42449 | Do you see me in the meadow, Coming from the woodland spring, With a bamboo on my shoulder And a pail slung from a string? |
42449 | Do you see me, all expectant, Lying in an orange grove, While the swee- swees sing above me, Waiting for my elf- eyed love? |
42449 | Do you want to meet Shaw? |
42449 | Does it mean that War will never stride through the world again? |
42449 | Does she"vamp"in real life? |
42449 | Dorothy, writing from Poplar, asks:"Dear Mr. Charlie Chaplin, if you have a pair of old boots at home will you throw them at me for luck?" |
42449 | Finally, with the aid of about everyone in the hotel he manages to ask:--"Do you like France?" |
42449 | Has anything happened?" |
42449 | Have you got them insured?" |
42449 | He asks,"Why?" |
42449 | He declares that the"heaven"scene was entirely unnecessary, and why did I give it so much attention? |
42449 | How am I going to get out without being recognised? |
42449 | How can I approach them? |
42449 | How can they calmly plan with such exactness? |
42449 | How could he get back? |
42449 | How did reporters know I was coming? |
42449 | How do I think up my funny stunts? |
42449 | How do children see so much more than grown- ups? |
42449 | How has she kept hidden? |
42449 | How is it possible to meet people on the same footing? |
42449 | How shall I be received in England? |
42449 | How would I solve the unemployment problem? |
42449 | I am wondering what''s going to happen in London? |
42449 | I ask and keep asking,"Where''s my cousin?" |
42449 | I do n''t know why, but suddenly I feel self- conscious and silly-- Would I care to see Barrie? |
42449 | I read again: Lovely, dainty Spanish Needle, With your yellow flower and white; Dew- decked and softly sleeping; Do you think of me to- night? |
42449 | I wonder if being photographed together constitutes an introduction? |
42449 | I wonder if he gets comfort there? |
42449 | I wonder if the same old barber is still there? |
42449 | I wonder what Los Angeles and Hollywood would say if I paraded there in this costume? |
42449 | I wonder what he is reading? |
42449 | I wonder what will be the answer? |
42449 | Is it a gleam of intelligence coming into the world? |
42449 | Is it prophetic? |
42449 | Is it true that I am going to be knighted? |
42449 | Is the reticence real or is this some wonderful trick of his, this making his guest feel superior? |
42449 | Is this rest? |
42449 | Is this what I came six thousand miles for? |
42449 | Knoblock on the''phone:"Are you there? |
42449 | Lovely, dainty Spanish Needle; Source to me of sweet delight, In your far- off sunny Southland Do you dream of me to- night? |
42449 | Maybe I am only possible"copy"to him? |
42449 | My cousin, Tom Geraghty, Knoblock-- would I spend two or three days in the country and get a rest? |
42449 | Now that the excitement has died down, what are we going to do? |
42449 | Now the problem is how am I going to get out of this? |
42449 | Oh yes, how does it look to- day for crossing? |
42449 | Oh, why did I leave England? |
42449 | Or does he need comfort? |
42449 | Shadowed by the spreading mango Nodding o''er the rippling stream, Tell me, dear plant of my childhood, Do you of the exile dream? |
42449 | Shall I criticise? |
42449 | Shall I openly suggest going out, so I can get away? |
42449 | Should I say something? |
42449 | The little girl asks:"Are they all actors and in the movies? |
42449 | Then Wells whispers,"Do n''t you think the boy is good?" |
42449 | Then from Frenchmen:"Will I visit France?" |
42449 | Then why is he here? |
42449 | There are calls,"What have you done with your moustache?" |
42449 | They were mottoes:"Never Say Die,""Are We Downhearted?" |
42449 | Was its ending a tragic one, dramatic, or had it just passed out naturally? |
42449 | What ambitions? |
42449 | What can I do? |
42449 | What can I say? |
42449 | What does one ask skippers? |
42449 | What have I done? |
42449 | What have I said? |
42449 | What have I to say to the people of Manchester? |
42449 | What if they do n''t turn up? |
42449 | What is it all for? |
42449 | What is it that happens behind these grey walls that kills so completely? |
42449 | What is she doing with it? |
42449 | What is the force that has made it what it is? |
42449 | What is the thing to do? |
42449 | What is there in common between us? |
42449 | What is to become of them? |
42449 | What must I do? |
42449 | What shall I say to Barrie? |
42449 | What sort of a person is she? |
42449 | What sort of a trip shall I have? |
42449 | What will be the outcome? |
42449 | What would Europe look like after the war? |
42449 | What would I say? |
42449 | Where did you get that?" |
42449 | Where is that personality of mine? |
42449 | Where is that vacation that I pictured so vividly? |
42449 | Where''s Carl? |
42449 | Where''s So- and- so? |
42449 | Where''s Tom? |
42449 | Where''s my cousin? |
42449 | Who am I? |
42449 | Who is that old derelict there against the cart? |
42449 | Who would n''t want to do that? |
42449 | Whom shall I meet on board? |
42449 | Why are attempts made to parade such emotions? |
42449 | Why are n''t we appreciated more? |
42449 | Why are parties like that? |
42449 | Why are prisons and graveyards built in such beautiful places? |
42449 | Why are sinners always loved? |
42449 | Why are you so sad? |
42449 | Why ca n''t I be witty? |
42449 | Why did I come? |
42449 | Why did I take the trip? |
42449 | Why did n''t I do this and that? |
42449 | Why did n''t I go here? |
42449 | Why did n''t I think of it sooner? |
42449 | Why did n''t we do this before? |
42449 | Why do I pick out stunts like that? |
42449 | Why do sinners make such wonderful lovers? |
42449 | Why had n''t I given it some thought? |
42449 | Why is she here? |
42449 | Why was I going? |
42449 | Why? |
42449 | Will I meet Bernard Shaw? |
42449 | Will I meet H. G. Wells? |
42449 | Will I sign this? |
42449 | Will the train never start? |
42449 | Will they be glad to see me? |
42449 | Will you pay for the boat, and half the gold is yours? |
42449 | Will you see somebody? |
42449 | Wo n''t you teach me like you taught him? |
42449 | Wonder if I could play that part? |
42449 | Wonder if I look like Doug when I do this? |
42449 | Wonder why a universal language is n''t practicable? |
42449 | Would I appear for such and such charity? |
42449 | Would I give him the first opportunity? |
42449 | Would I kick off the football season or attend some particular Soccer game? |
42449 | Would I mind signing them for the stewards? |
42449 | Would I visit such and such institutions? |
42449 | Would he accept anything? |
42449 | Would we pose together? |
42449 | Would you mind seeing me to a taxi?" |
42449 | You are not going home so early?" |
51959 | And whence comest thou, O beauteous vision, with the Aurora Borealis hair? |
51959 | Can you tell me what to do? 51959 Didst I not tell thee,"said Geraldine,"that thou mustest not converse, but remain quiet? |
51959 | Do you think I would laugh at the bones of the Pilgrim Fathers, where are they? 51959 First-- If one is asked to say grace at the table, and does not wish to do so, or is not familiar with the forms, what should he do? |
51959 | I thereupon ask in all kandor for your valyable advise on these points? |
51959 | In what respect? |
51959 | Third-- Would you kindly add a few general rules of table etiquette, which would be useful to the many admirers of your classic style? |
51959 | Where am I, and whence cometh this burning sensation in my liver? |
51959 | Who will love me all the while? |
51959 | Why are we left to mourn the loss of our wild horses and why are our own hillsides dotted with the locations and prospect holes of the pale face? 51959 Why do the wails of our people echo among the canyons and desolated villages? |
51959 | You''re a fine- haired snoozer from Bitter Creek; ai n''t ye? |
51959 | --Has it been of real benefit to the Territory? |
51959 | --How does it affect education, morals, courts,& c.? |
51959 | --If so, what has it accomplished? |
51959 | --What proportion of the women vote? |
51959 | And he said unto another, How much owest thou my lord? |
51959 | And he took the hired girl by the ear and led her away, and asked her, Whence cometh this unseemly hilarity? |
51959 | Answer-- What massacre? |
51959 | Are we loving him as we should, or are we turning this task over to the hired girl? |
51959 | Are you a victim to rum or other alcoholic stimulants, and if so, at what hour do you usually succumb to the potent enemy? |
51959 | Are you single, and if so what is your excuse? |
51959 | But he was exceedingly sorrowful and he said, What shall I do? |
51959 | But what does she care for a$ 13.00 sunset, or the low, sad wail of the sage- hen far up the canon, as it calls to its mate? |
51959 | But, did I forget myself and swear like a Guinea hen, the way you do? |
51959 | Can he be deceiving me? |
51959 | Dear reader, did you ever go through this thrilling experience? |
51959 | Did I break forth into petulant remarks, and lower myself in the estimation of my neighbors? |
51959 | Did it ever occur to you that he has ways like Charles Francis Adams? |
51959 | Did you ever feel the utter insecurity and maddening uncertainty which it yields? |
51959 | Did you ever have membranous croup, and what did you do for it? |
51959 | Do these things ever occur to you as you throw him over the card table and mop the floor with his remains? |
51959 | Do you eat onions? |
51959 | Do you ever feel the twinges of remorse after you have put an octagonal head on him for not wiping the dishes drier? |
51959 | Do you keep hens, or do you lavish your profanity on those of your neighbors? |
51959 | Do you remember George Washington, and if so to what amount? |
51959 | Do you wish to play the Most Sublime Overseer of the Universe and General Ticket Agent Plenipotentiary for a Chinaman? |
51959 | Have any of your ancestors ever been troubled with ingrowing nails, or blind staggers? |
51959 | Have you sheared your iron- clad rams yet, and if so, what will the clip average do you think?" |
51959 | He came forward, and had a slight attack of delirium tremens, and said: uZe vooly voo a la boomerang?" |
51959 | Hear ye yon lion roaring in his den? |
51959 | How do you think you feel?" |
51959 | I do not speak of it as remarkable at all, for wherever I am, whether at home or abroad, my first thought is, where will I find a sanctuary? |
51959 | I do not think I am unreasonable to want to know who makes my Indian arrows, am I? |
51959 | If it were the last statement I should make on earth I would still say? |
51959 | If not, then these lines are not to you? |
51959 | If yes, state to what extent and under what circumstances? |
51959 | Is he dead? |
51959 | Is it not he who bangeth his intellect ferninst the bock beer, even unto the eleventh hour? |
51959 | Is n''t it scandalous?" |
51959 | It''s none of my business, of course, but could n''t you get a brass band and call it together? |
51959 | Kind reader, do you think the innocent little hog would openly violate a law of the land if he knew of its existence? |
51959 | Never? |
51959 | Now would you please look around and see if there is any cold pie in the house, my very ownest own?" |
51959 | Perhaps when you went away to your work you did not leave him wood and coal and water; does he ever murmur or repine at your neglect? |
51959 | Question by General Adams.--What is your name and occupation, and where do you reside? |
51959 | Question-- Did the account of the White River massacre that you read in the_ Age_ mention the death of Mr. Meeker? |
51959 | Question-- Did you ever hear anything of him after that? |
51959 | Question-- Did you, or did you not hear of a massacre at White River agency, during the fall, and if so, to what extent? |
51959 | Question-- Did you, or did you not, know a man named N. C. Meeker? |
51959 | Question-- Never? |
51959 | Question-- The one at White River? |
51959 | Question-- Were Douglass, Colorow and other Ute chiefs with you at that meeting in Greeley? |
51959 | Question-- Were you, or were you not, present at the massacres? |
51959 | Question-- Where were you on the night that this massacre is said to have occurred? |
51959 | Question-- You say that you were not present at the White River massacre; were you ever engaged in any massacre? |
51959 | So he called unto himself one of his lord''s debtors, and he said, How much owest thou my lord? |
51959 | Supposing then the above to be the correct theory, what can poor erring man do to forward the good work? |
51959 | The great reading public seems to look to me, as much as to say:"What are your views on this great subject which is agitating the public mind?" |
51959 | To lay aside the old hickory bow of the original red man and take up the improved breech- loader? |
51959 | To live contentedly about the agencies, playing poker for the whiskies during the cold and cruel winter? |
51959 | To take kindly to mixed drinks and Sabbath school picnics and temperance lectures and base- ball matches? |
51959 | To what do you attribute the bad odor in which Limberger cheese is held by scientists? |
51959 | Was it the fleeing vision of the absent lover, or had she eaten something that did n''t agree with her? |
51959 | We come upon the earth, battle a little while with its joy? |
51959 | What could any of them have done with the house full of children of the forest who were hankering for a fresh pail of gore for lunch? |
51959 | What did he do it for anyway? |
51959 | What does she care for the purple landscape and the mournful sigh of the new milch cow which is borne to her over the greet divide? |
51959 | What is the chief end of man? |
51959 | What is your fighting weight? |
51959 | What is your opinion of rats? |
51959 | What means has he of knowing that there is a city ordinance against his running about town? |
51959 | What you make then for to bear as well?'' |
51959 | When he got to the door and went in, thirty- seven dogs ran between his legs? |
51959 | When was Limberger cheese first discovered, and by whom? |
51959 | Which side do you lie on during a political campaign? |
51959 | Which side do you lie on while sleeping? |
51959 | Who clamoreth with a loud voice and saith, verily, am not I a bad man? |
51959 | Who ever heard of a codfish going back on his word? |
51959 | Who ever heard of a codfish leaving the Reservation and spreading desolation over the land? |
51959 | Who hath babbling? |
51959 | Who hath redness of eyes? |
51959 | Who hath sorrow? |
51959 | Who hath woe? |
51959 | Who is he that walketh unsteadily and singeth unto himself,"The bright angels are waiting for me?" |
51959 | Who struck Billy Patterson? |
51959 | Who will care for mother now? |
51959 | Who wotteth not even a fractional wot, but setteth his chronometer with the wooden watch of the watchmaker, and by means of a tooth- brush? |
51959 | Why did n''t he have some style about him, and get here on time?" |
51959 | Would you have any scruples in asking the enumerator to join you in wrestling with man''s destroyer at that hour? |
51959 | You are old, horny- handed sons of toil, and practical tillers of the soil; what shall I do?" |
51959 | [ Illustration: 9124] Hono- Lee returned to consciousness, and murmured,"Where am I?" |
51959 | _ Parley voo, e pluri- bus unam, sic semper go braugh!_ Do you understand that?" |
51959 | or burst into wild hilarity over the grave of Noah and his family? |
51959 | |Dear reader, shall I give you a few symptoms of the mining epidemic in Mountain towns? |
46709 | All right to- night, waiter? |
46709 | And I think, sir,continued Grimaldi,"that if it were in your power, you would willingly serve me?" |
46709 | And Jesson? |
46709 | And Williams? |
46709 | And pray what may be the amount? |
46709 | And the Jewish- looking man,--I forget the rascal''s name,--the man who sings Kelly''s songs; what is he? |
46709 | And what am I to do? |
46709 | And what did you want to wake me for? |
46709 | And why was it not done, sir? 46709 And why, pray?" |
46709 | Are there plenty of birds this year? |
46709 | But what has our killing these pigeons to do with cutting away? |
46709 | Did he give you his name, or do you know who he is? |
46709 | Do n''t attempt to touch him without a warrant; or--"Or what? |
46709 | Do n''t you recollect, Mr. Grimaldi, that he would not join the party to Woolwich? |
46709 | Do you know him, sir? |
46709 | Do you want to see him on any particular business? |
46709 | Friends of yours-- hey? |
46709 | Grimaldi, do you mean to take supper every night? |
46709 | Grimaldi,whispered this young nobleman, just as dinner commenced,"did you ever meet Byron before?" |
46709 | Harmer? |
46709 | Have you looked at the box- book? |
46709 | Have you? |
46709 | How do_ you_ do? |
46709 | I beg your pardon, sir, did you, sir? |
46709 | In the name of wonder, Grimaldi,said this agreeable character,"what are you doing here?" |
46709 | Indeed!--is that true? |
46709 | Is Mr. Hughes alone? |
46709 | Is he here now? |
46709 | Is the squire very angry? |
46709 | It''s right, sir, is it? |
46709 | Joe,said Kemble, with great dignity,"what is the matter?" |
46709 | Joe,said Mr. Hughes, gravely,"is this the first meeting you have attended?" |
46709 | Lucas,--Lucas,said Richer;"that is the old man who wears spectacles, is n''t it?" |
46709 | Not paid? |
46709 | Now, then, pit or box, pit or gallery, box or pit? |
46709 | Now, then, what''s the matter? |
46709 | Oh, I really do n''t know, sir,she replied;"there is nothing particular about him, except--""Well, except what?" |
46709 | Pray, may I inquire why you ask the question? |
46709 | Quite right? |
46709 | Soy, my lord? |
46709 | That is not what I meant,said De Cleve:"what I meant was, to ask you what business might have taken you to Gravesend?" |
46709 | The what? |
46709 | Then I expect you wo nt assist me in finding them out? |
46709 | Then you''ll go to- morrow? |
46709 | Then, of course, you have not met him at a dinner- party? |
46709 | Then,asked Miss Kelly,"why not take a farewell benefit? |
46709 | There is one other man whom I have not named-- that fellow Jones; what is he? 46709 To come, then, at once to the point,"said Mr. Harmer,--"do you not know a person of the name of Mackintosh?" |
46709 | Well, Bologna,said Grimaldi, with a triumphant air,"are you satisfied?" |
46709 | Well, Joe,said he,"I hope you have come to say that you feel able to be with us again?" |
46709 | Well, mother,he said,"has anything strange occurred here to- night?" |
46709 | Well, sir,said the patrol,"there they are; can you swear to them all, or to any of them?" |
46709 | Well, then, sir, of course you can tell, whether_ he_ is one of the men who robbed you? |
46709 | Well, will you take it? |
46709 | Well,said Mr. Blamire, after the bustle of entrance had ceased,"what''s the matter, now? |
46709 | What are you talking about? 46709 What can be the matter with him?" |
46709 | What did you expect to find? 46709 What do you call rather early?" |
46709 | What do you mean? |
46709 | What do you mean? |
46709 | What do you mean? |
46709 | What for?--what for? |
46709 | What is it? 46709 What on earth can he want with me? |
46709 | What on earth is the meaning of this? |
46709 | What should you recommend for that purpose? |
46709 | What will you like to order, sir? |
46709 | What will you wager? |
46709 | What''s that? |
46709 | Where are you going to take the box? |
46709 | Where''s your warrant? |
46709 | Where? 46709 Which way?" |
46709 | Who are you looking for, Joe? |
46709 | Who is the lady? |
46709 | Who wants me? |
46709 | Who? |
46709 | Why not? |
46709 | Why, Jack,shouted the other man, starting back with great surprise:"can you speak?" |
46709 | Why, what have you been about, Joe? |
46709 | Why? |
46709 | Will any of us do Joe? |
46709 | Will not, Joe,--eh? |
46709 | Will you listen to me for half a minute? |
46709 | You do n''t surely mean to say that you have apprehended the burglars? |
46709 | You have more money about you; I know you have: come, hand over, will ye? |
46709 | _ Samp._(_ aside_) Is the law on our side if I say ay? 46709 --What''s the matter?" |
46709 | --said one of the men:"what the devil does this mean?" |
46709 | After he had finished his speech, the former quietly said,"Will you favour me by coming here at nine o''clock to- morrow morning, sir?" |
46709 | At the commencement of the season he met Mr. Sheridan, when the following colloquy ensued:--"Well, Joe, still living-- eh?" |
46709 | But, Joe, what will your poor little wife do while you are at the theatre of an evening? |
46709 | Byron looked at him for a moment, and then said, with much seeming surprise--"Why, Mr. Grimaldi, do you not take soy with your tart?" |
46709 | Cross?" |
46709 | Do you mean to say you do not recollect it?" |
46709 | Farmer?" |
46709 | He advanced towards the door as he spoke, and then suddenly turning round, added,"Have you anything else to say to me?" |
46709 | He nodded as Grimaldi entered, and said,"Are you going to Finchley to- night?" |
46709 | He paused for a few seconds, and, looking up in his face, said,"And so you really are Grimaldi, are you?" |
46709 | Here arose a great outcry, mingled with various exclamations of,"Where''s your warrant?" |
46709 | How do you do it?" |
46709 | How is it that I never see you at tea now?" |
46709 | I suppose you left Newcastle the same day you received my letter?" |
46709 | I suppose, now, there are a good many Clowns and Harlequins in London,--eh?" |
46709 | In von more minuet, Sheridan leave his dinner party, enter de room hastily-- stop suddenly, and say,''How dare you, Grim, play me such a trick?'' |
46709 | Is that agreed?" |
46709 | It is an odd circumstance, is it not, that I should be charged with robbing an old friend like you? |
46709 | Just get it altered, will you?" |
46709 | Now, sir, will you come along with me?" |
46709 | Now, what can be plainer, if he is very angry, as I know he will be, then if you are here, he''ll put you in prison? |
46709 | Pray, sir, are you the great Mr. Grimaldi, formerly of Covent Garden Theatre?" |
46709 | Pretty young woman, Joe?" |
46709 | Suppose the money were to be found upon him by the loser, who would believe him, when he declared that he picked it up in the street? |
46709 | The Prince merely laughed: and Sheridan, taking up the crown, offered it to him, adding--"''Will you deign to accept this trifle?'' |
46709 | The audience laughed at its gigantic size, and the pantaloon, looking suspiciously at him, demanded,"Where did you get this box?" |
46709 | The man at the horse''s head looked sharply on, and cried,"Tom, what has he given you?" |
46709 | There were a great many other dishes that you might have had; but you recollect giving a particular order for a Welsh rare- bit, sir?" |
46709 | They were young men of gentlemanly appearance, and upon hearing the words,"Here''s Mr. Grimaldi-- who wants him?" |
46709 | Well mounted, is he not?" |
46709 | What do you keep on knocking for, at this time of night?" |
46709 | What do you propose? |
46709 | What does my father say?" |
46709 | What is the cause of this infernal clamour?" |
46709 | What is the nature of the disorder? |
46709 | What mattered it that the stage was three yards wide, and four deep? |
46709 | What say you?" |
46709 | What was your motive for taking me into the company of these men and women, and why did they want to have me among them?" |
46709 | Where could he be gone to? |
46709 | Where is Joe, sir?" |
46709 | Who is not at home?" |
46709 | Who knows?" |
46709 | Why was it not done? |
46709 | Why, surely you can not have been so imprudent as to have formed an attachment to Joe yourself? |
46709 | Why, what is the matter?" |
46709 | Will that do?" |
46709 | Will you get out?" |
46709 | Will you take a glass of madeira?" |
46709 | Would it not appear much more probable that he had stolen it? |
46709 | You''ll not forget?" |
46709 | You, sir, you are the gentleman who suddenly went into the grave, and forgot to come out again, I think?" |
46709 | a murderer?" |
46709 | and if such a charge were brought against him, by what evidence could he rebut it? |
46709 | and pay outside fare?" |
46709 | cried the Pantaloon:"and pray, who gave it to you?" |
46709 | exclaimed Dubois, rising angrily,"how dare you come here?" |
46709 | exclaimed this person, holding out his hand, in some agitation,"how goes it with you now, old fellow?" |
46709 | father, what for?" |
46709 | have you forget?'' |
46709 | have you forgotten the pickled salmon again?" |
46709 | he shouted out of the window, displaying the brace of pistols and the broadsword to the best advantage;"what''s the matter there?" |
46709 | inquired Lucas;"or what, Mr. Dubois? |
46709 | is that you?" |
46709 | look at the accommodations: what do you suppose they''ll charge for all this? |
46709 | properties?" |
46709 | said the leader of the guard; upon which Grimaldi summoned up courage, and echoing the inquiry, said,"What''s the matter?" |
46709 | said the other,"you have heard of it, then?" |
46709 | what is it called?" |
46709 | without leave, I suppose?" |
46709 | you cruel boy,"said Joe, in a passion of tears,"had n''t you any love for your dear father? |
38579 | A what? |
38579 | Ai n''t you acoming in here, young man? |
38579 | Ai n''t you afraid? |
38579 | Ai n''t you going in? |
38579 | Am dat so? |
38579 | Are they fresh? |
38579 | Are you at the helm? |
38579 | Are you hurt? |
38579 | But why should you act upon a different rule from other men? |
38579 | But you can have it longer if you wish--"Ah, monsieur, sal be ver mooch glad if I can have zat house_ so long as I please_--eh-- monsieur? |
38579 | But,she asked,"how came these names here-- names I never saw before?" |
38579 | Can you hold on five minutes longer, John? |
38579 | Come to what? |
38579 | Den we dot up and prayed dust well as we tould, And Dod answered our prayers: now was n''t He dood? |
38579 | Did you ever try it? |
38579 | Do n''t you hear the governor calling? 38579 Do you consider_ your_ life worth more than other people''s?" |
38579 | Do you hear me, I say? |
38579 | Do you send mail there? |
38579 | Do you think any of your company would have missed you, if you had been killed? |
38579 | Does yer mean ter sen''me away from yer, Mass Cap''n? |
38579 | End is there none? |
38579 | For the Holy War? 38579 God of the flower,"he said, with reverent voice,"The violet lives again, and why not I? |
38579 | Have you any eggs this morning, Uncle Mose? |
38579 | How did this occur? |
38579 | How does she head? |
38579 | How long before we can reach there? |
38579 | How old are you? |
38579 | How so? |
38579 | How''d I get it? |
38579 | I wanted to know if you liked my f''ower? |
38579 | If he wanted a piece of gingerbread, why did n''t he say so? 38579 In,_ in_, ter,_ ter_,_ inter_"--"Then you spell it with an_ I_?" |
38579 | Is it askin''ye are, phwat''s makin''me croiy? |
38579 | Is she comin''? |
38579 | Is that all? |
38579 | Is there any danger? |
38579 | Is there such a place in this country as Cleveland? |
38579 | Is this Heaven? 38579 Is this the woman?" |
38579 | Is your name Mrs. Bacon, dear? |
38579 | Just hold me at first, Sam, will you? |
38579 | Major, your men? |
38579 | Me? 38579 Now,"said Wardle, after a substantial lunch,"what say you to an hour on the ice? |
38579 | Oh, holy father,Alice said,"''twould grieve you, would it not, To discover that I was a most disreputable lot? |
38579 | Oh, my goodness? 38579 Phy, Dinny, me bhoy, ye''re croiyin''yersilf,"He said with a chuckle and grin;"Phwat''s troublin''_ yer_ sowl? |
38579 | Run at the first fire, did you? |
38579 | See? |
38579 | Spell what? |
38579 | Stood your ground, did you? |
38579 | Then it will be two cents, eh? |
38579 | Then it will take twelve cents? |
38579 | Then patriotism and honor are nothing to you? |
38579 | Then you must value it very highly? |
38579 | Well, but have you no regard for your reputation? |
38579 | Well, now, what are you going to do? |
38579 | Well, who asked you to give me anything? |
38579 | Well, why tan''t we p''ay dest as mamma did den, And ask Dod to send him with p''esents aden? |
38579 | Were you in the fight? |
38579 | Whar''s it at, Mass Cap''n? |
38579 | What can an ignorant old woman like her want to hear Dr.---- preach for? 38579 What can you do?" |
38579 | What did you come here for? |
38579 | What for? |
38579 | What have we here? |
38579 | What is it? |
38579 | What satisfaction would dat be to me when de power ob feelin''was gone? |
38579 | What troubles you, child? |
38579 | What''s she doin''? |
38579 | What''s she doin''now? |
38579 | What''s that? |
38579 | When is yer gwine, Mass Cap''n? |
38579 | Where have you come from? |
38579 | Where is she now? |
38579 | Where is your mother? |
38579 | Which way is she lookin''? |
38579 | Who is defending her? |
38579 | Who vash dot? |
38579 | Who vhants to catch''em? |
38579 | Who was she? |
38579 | Why ai n''t they? |
38579 | Why should I bow the proud, imperious knee, To mighty powers no mortal eye can see? |
38579 | Why should I keep der flies oudt? 38579 Why, how ole am de boy?" |
38579 | Why, my_ dear_ sir, what did_ you_ propose to spell it with? |
38579 | Why? |
38579 | Will you give me those boots? 38579 Will you please tell me your first name?" |
38579 | Yes, Tobe, what is it? |
38579 | Yes, my boy: what shall I tell them? |
38579 | Yes, sa, I does; more dan all dis world, more dan a million ob dollars, sa; for what would dat be wuth to a man wid the bref out ob him? 38579 You skate, of course, Winkle?" |
38579 | ''Twas only aid he wanted to help him across the wave, But what are a couple of women with only a man to save? |
38579 | A patient form I seemed ter see, In tidy dress of black, I almost thought I heard the words,"When will my boy come back?" |
38579 | A whiff came through the open door-- Wuz I sleepin''or awake? |
38579 | After lying a few minutes with closed eyes, as if in sleep, he suddenly whispered:"Dinah, whar is you? |
38579 | Ah? |
38579 | Amazed and surprised, Mr. Dinny O''Doyle Said:"Michael, me darlin''bhoy, Phwat''s troublin''yer sowl? |
38579 | An''de chillun-- whar''s de chillun? |
38579 | An''doan''yer see de pearly gates a- openin''to let ole black Jake go frew? |
38579 | An''the ould mother says,"Sure, an''it is; an''have ye the little rid hin?" |
38579 | An''yer''ll be kind to my wife and chilluns for my sake, wo n''t yer?" |
38579 | An''yo''say she has childruns? |
38579 | And do n''t she look just lovely in that picture? |
38579 | And in all chivalrous France was there not a champion to take up the gauntlet in defence of a helpless girl? |
38579 | And truly I think that they may be well called so-- what word strikes so forcibly upon the heart as mother? |
38579 | And we''ve been very happy-- have we not?" |
38579 | And what have we to oppose to them?--Shall we try argument? |
38579 | And what is this? |
38579 | Are fleets and armies necessary to a work of love and reconciliation? |
38579 | Are not my people happy? |
38579 | Are they dead that yet act? |
38579 | Are they dead that yet move upon society, and inspire the people with nobler motives, and more heroic patriotism? |
38579 | Are they dead that yet speak louder than we can speak, and a more universal language? |
38579 | Are you God''s wife?" |
38579 | Are you an angel?" |
38579 | Are you ready to begin?" |
38579 | Art thou the one Who hast so long his vengeance counted dear? |
38579 | Beautiful story, is n''t it? |
38579 | Bess looked at the babies a moment, With their wee heads, yellow and brown, And then to grandma soberly said,"_ Which one are you going to drown_?" |
38579 | Buried him without knowing whether he was dead or not? |
38579 | But soft-- through the ghastly air Whose falling tear was that? |
38579 | But what is the fare to poppy land? |
38579 | But when shall we be stronger? |
38579 | But why pause here? |
38579 | By Bill Nye, 70 How"Old Mose"Counted Eggs, 272 How Shall I Love You? |
38579 | Can gentlemen assign any other possible motive for it? |
38579 | Can you face the just Judge and the souls you have wrecked? |
38579 | De vistles vas plowing, und dem pells vos ringing, und von man shtepped up mit Yawcup und say"Vot vor dem pells pe ringing so mooch?" |
38579 | Did you ever notice what life and power the Holy Scriptures have when well read? |
38579 | Did you ever see a battery take position? |
38579 | Did''st hope to have my knee Bend at thy feet, and with one mighty thrust,"The life thou hatest flee before thee here? |
38579 | Did''st thou think to see A son of Gheva spill upon the dust His noble blood? |
38579 | Do n''t you think you would like to go there?" |
38579 | Do n''t your little boy call you so?" |
38579 | Do you buy all your clothes with missionary money? |
38579 | Do you know you''re destroying both body and soul Of the men whose honor and manhood you''ve stole? |
38579 | Do you murmur a prayer, my brothers, when cozy and safe in bed, For men like these, who are ready to die for a wreck off Mumbles Head? |
38579 | Do you not guess his name? |
38579 | Does it not become a descendant of the Ptolemies and of Cleopatra? |
38579 | Does not your heart beat responsive to mine?" |
38579 | Does the hard accusation arouse you to fright? |
38579 | Eh, monsieur?" |
38579 | Every morning he would question:"Will she come to me to- day?" |
38579 | Fine countenance, has n''t he? |
38579 | For what? |
38579 | Go''st thou to build an early name, Or early in the task to die? |
38579 | HOW SHALL I LOVE YOU? |
38579 | Had she not bled for them? |
38579 | Had she not faithfully done her work? |
38579 | Had she not saved the kingdom? |
38579 | Had you, or have you, any brothers or sisters? |
38579 | Handsome picture, ai n''t it? |
38579 | Has Great Britain any enemy in this quarter of the world, to call for all this accumulation of navies and armies? |
38579 | Have we anything new to offer upon the subject? |
38579 | Have we shown ourselves so unwilling to be reconciled, that force must be called in to win back our love? |
38579 | Have you never looked at yourself in the light Of a thief, nay, worse, a murderer, too? |
38579 | He came to life again? |
38579 | He disappeared, then? |
38579 | He knew that few would ever ask,"What must I do to be saved?" |
38579 | He looked at the silver and bills and gold, And he said:"She gives all this to me? |
38579 | He looks like a man to do that, do n''t he? |
38579 | He''ll be bruised, and so shall I-- How can I from bedposts keep, When I''m walking in my sleep? |
38579 | Her dark eyes lit with the flash of fire, And she said:"You will pity my need most dire? |
38579 | How canst thou then behold the God of Light, Before whose face the sunbeams are as night? |
38579 | How could he be a hypocrite then? |
38579 | How did you happen to meet Burr? |
38579 | How do you account for that? |
38579 | How do you like your house?" |
38579 | How shall I love you? |
38579 | How shall I love you? |
38579 | How''s your son coming on at de school? |
38579 | I am so sorry; will you ever forgive me? |
38579 | I ask gentlemen, sir, what means this martial array, if its purpose be not to force us to submission? |
38579 | I know that I did it myself? |
38579 | I look upon the past and the present, upon my nearer and remoter subjects, and ask, nor fear the answer, Whom have I wronged? |
38579 | I said,--"How do you spell it?" |
38579 | If you were at his funeral, he must have been dead; and, if he was dead, how could he care whether you made a noise or not? |
38579 | Is he not grand?" |
38579 | Is it fixed in nature that the limits of this empire should be Egypt on the one hand, the Hellespont and the Euxine on the other? |
38579 | Is it not a magnificent sight to see that strange soldier and that noble black horse, dashing like a meteor, down the long columns of battle? |
38579 | Is it not an honorable ambition? |
38579 | Is it that insidious smile with which our petition has been lately received? |
38579 | Is it wapin''ye are for a sin?" |
38579 | Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? |
38579 | Is life worth living for its little hour Of empty pleasure, if decay we must?" |
38579 | Is n''t that a brother of yours? |
38579 | Is n''t that gorgeous? |
38579 | Is n''t that voluntary lovely? |
38579 | Is no poppy- syrup nigh? |
38579 | Is there a burden your heart must bear? |
38579 | Is there a thorn in the crown that you wear? |
38579 | Is this the part of wise men, engaged in a great and arduous struggle for liberty? |
38579 | Is_ so_ much ambition praiseworthy, and_ more_ criminal? |
38579 | Lemme have your name, wo n''t you?" |
38579 | Let the ambition be a noble one, and who shall blame it? |
38579 | Nature soon will stupefy-- My nerves relax-- my eyes grow dim-- Who''s that fallen, me or him?" |
38579 | Now is n''t that splendid? |
38579 | Now, Nursey, what makes you remind me? |
38579 | Now, how does that strike you? |
38579 | Now, where was the mystery? |
38579 | Now, will you give them up?" |
38579 | Oh, Mister Breacher, shall I be cast into dat lake if I am vicked, or shust close py or near to-- shust near enough to be comfortable? |
38579 | Oh, yes!--she stood up and recited, what do you think? |
38579 | Or hath empire no natural limit, but is broad as the genius that can devise, and the power that can win? |
38579 | Phwat the mischief''s about ye that bothers me so? |
38579 | Phwat''s the raison ye''ve tears in yer oi?" |
38579 | Phwat''s wrong wid ye now? |
38579 | Phwat''s wrong wid_ ye_ now? |
38579 | Pickwick?" |
38579 | Praising your beauty, eh? |
38579 | SIX LOVE LETTERS"Are there any more of those letters?" |
38579 | Say, do the nigger ladies use hymn- book leaves to do their hair up on and make it frizzy? |
38579 | Sebenty- two, sebenty- free, sebenty- foah, sebenty- five, sebenty- six, sebenty- seben, sebenty- eight, sebenty- nine-- and your mudder? |
38579 | Shall I put fly- screens in the doors?" |
38579 | Shall we gather strength by irresolution and inaction? |
38579 | Shall we resort to entreaty and humble supplication? |
38579 | Smart, was n''t it? |
38579 | So one day Captain Leigh said:--"Tobe, how would you like to go North?" |
38579 | So vot you tinks? |
38579 | Still he stares-- I wonder why; Why are not the sons of earth Blind, like puppies, from their birth? |
38579 | Surprising what some of these men have gone through, ai n''t it? |
38579 | That I think, is-- is-- that''s a-- a-- yes, to be sure, Washington-- you recollect him, of course? |
38579 | That''s a pretty cloak you''ve got, ai n''t it? |
38579 | The lady bent over, and whispered,"Are you happier now, my lad?" |
38579 | The padre said:"Whatever have you been and gone and done?" |
38579 | The passengers rushed forward and inquired of the pilot,"How far are we from Buffalo?" |
38579 | The soldiers were about finishing their examination, when one of them said,"What''s that under the seat of that wagon?" |
38579 | The star in the storm and the strength in the strife; How shall I love you, my sweetheart, my wife? |
38579 | Thine eyes before this trifling labor fall, Canst gaze on him who hath created all? |
38579 | This time the door opened in response:"Well, child, what is it? |
38579 | Thy golden fortunes, tower they now, Or melt the glittering spires in air? |
38579 | To feel once more that fresh, wild thrill I''d give-- but who can live youth over? |
38579 | Und ven I looked around dere shtood dot Villiam R. Shtover mit Leavenworth, Kansas-- und I said pooty quick:"Vot vor dem pells vas ringing? |
38579 | Upward floats the voice of mourning--"Jesus, Master, dost thou care?" |
38579 | Very flattering, was n''t it? |
38579 | Want some gingerbread?" |
38579 | Was n''t it a pity? |
38579 | Was n''t it cruel? |
38579 | Well-- where was I? |
38579 | Were not Suez and Armenia more natural limits? |
38579 | What are a couple of women? |
38579 | What do I see on looking back? |
38579 | What do you do it with?" |
38579 | What do you want to spell it for?" |
38579 | What do_ you_ think? |
38579 | What good would forty heads do her? |
38579 | What is it that gentlemen wish? |
38579 | What is sacrifice to doing good and lifting toward heaven our fellow- men? |
38579 | What is that?" |
38579 | What is the matter? |
38579 | What is the matter? |
38579 | What province have I oppressed, what city pillaged, what region drained with taxes? |
38579 | What shall I do? |
38579 | What sound is that that is borne upon the breeze of the summer night? |
38579 | What terms shall we find which have not already been exhausted? |
38579 | What the mischief makes him cry? |
38579 | What was the date of your birth? |
38579 | What was the matter? |
38579 | What would they have? |
38579 | When I heard the first words I thought I should faint(_ imitating_):"Been out in the lifeboat often? |
38579 | When a person gets to be fifty- three years old----""Fifty- free? |
38579 | When in the world did the coxswain shirk? |
38579 | When it''s rougher than this? |
38579 | Where was that mother now? |
38579 | Where were you born? |
38579 | Who have we next? |
38579 | Who is now fluttering in thy snare? |
38579 | Who is this a picture of on the wall? |
38579 | Who of this crowd to- night shall tread The dance till daylight gleam again? |
38579 | Who sorrow o''er the untimely dead? |
38579 | Who was the rider of the black horse? |
38579 | Who writhe in throes of mortal pain? |
38579 | Whoever achieved anything great in letters, arts, or arms, who was not ambitious? |
38579 | Whom do you consider the most remarkable man you ever met? |
38579 | Whose honor have I wantonly assailed? |
38579 | Whose life have I unjustly taken, or whose estates have I coveted or robbed? |
38579 | Whose rights, though of the weakest and poorest, have I violated? |
38579 | Why stand we here idle? |
38579 | Why, boy, did ye take me in earnest? |
38579 | Why, boy, do ye think ye''ll suffer? |
38579 | Why, how ole am de gal? |
38579 | Why, just suppose it was you? |
38579 | Why, you''ll reform, and what will then become of Father Paul?" |
38579 | Will it be the next week, or the next year? |
38579 | Will it be when we are totally disarmed, and when a British guard shall be stationed in every house? |
38579 | Will you let me ask you certain questions calculated to bring out the salient points of your public and private history?" |
38579 | Would that be an evil? |
38579 | Would you mind telling me what peculiar circumstance it was that made you think Burr was such a remarkable man? |
38579 | Yer''ll nebber forgit how Jake tuk keer of yer an''de chilluns when ole marster gone to de war? |
38579 | You might make her look all mended-- but what do I care for looks? |
38579 | You say he spoke to you, and that he was dead? |
38579 | You will forgive my presumption, will you not, and speak the words that tremble on your lips-- the words that will fill my cup of joy to overflowing?" |
38579 | You will give me steed to fly afar, To my love in the deserts of Khandakar?" |
38579 | _ A._ Why, have you noticed that? |
38579 | _ A._ Why, what makes you think that? |
38579 | _ Q._ But was n''t he dead? |
38579 | _ Q._ How could I think otherwise? |
38579 | _ Q._ What do_ you_ think? |
38579 | _ Q._ When did you begin to write? |
38579 | _ Q._ Why, how could that be, if you are only nineteen now? |
38579 | _ Q._ Why, is he dead, then? |
38579 | _ Question._ How old are you? |
38579 | _ You_ may call it a"drug store,"but does n''t God know? |
38579 | again demanded the woman,"or do you want me to come out there to you with a stick? |
38579 | are you Americans, men, and fly before British soldiers? |
38579 | came another call, short and sharp;"do you hear me?" |
38579 | do you hear your mother?" |
38579 | doan''yer hear de bells ob heaven a- ringing? |
38579 | have ye the pot bilin''?" |
38579 | really, have I? |
38579 | the angel solemnly demanded:"Is there indeed no end, and is this the sorrow that kills you?" |
38579 | think''st thou yon sanguine cloud Raised by thy breath, can quench the orb of day? |
38579 | what do you think of that?" |
38579 | what do you want of a heathen doll?" |
38579 | when ye come from heaven, my little name- sake dear, Did ye see,''mongst the little girls there, a face like this one here? |
38579 | where is the land that each mortal loves best, The land that is dearest and fairest on earth? |
38579 | who caused your stern heart to relent, And the hasty words spoken so soon to repent? |
38579 | whose breath Waves through the mother''s hair? |
51961 | And is there no way of removing these large lumps of paint, so as to give the picture an even appearance? |
51961 | And is there no way that this early marriage may be evaded? |
51961 | And that is all you do to preserve your teeth, is it? |
51961 | And why did you not bring the party with you? 51961 And why is this? |
51961 | And, sir,I asked,"what party do you represent?" |
51961 | But do n''t you advertise to read the past, present and future for fifty cents? |
51961 | But how did you come to git to be an youmorist? |
51961 | But, fellow- citizens, how can we best preserve the blessing of freedom and fork it over unimpaired to our children? 51961 Do you ask me to answer that question personally?" |
51961 | Do you know where he is? 51961 Do you mean my library?" |
51961 | Do you mean to say that you do not feel facetious all the time, and that you get weary of being an youmorist? |
51961 | Do you wish a verbal answer or would you rather have it in writing? |
51961 | Does your horoscope tell a person what to do with raspberry jelly that will not jell? |
51961 | Duke,said I, standing my umbrella up in the corner to show my childlike confidence in him,"how''s your conduct?" |
51961 | Have you any idea, Mr. Ives, where those books are now? |
51961 | He did n''t understand me, apparently, for a gurgling laugh welled up from below, and the party sings back:Hullo, Fatty, is that you? |
51961 | How do you mean in a general way? |
51961 | I ask if you turned over all such books on the date of your assignment? |
51961 | I think I did, but I am not positive as to the date? |
51961 | Mean? 51961 No sir; only in a general way?" |
51961 | No, I do not,"Were they in your office prior to your assignment? |
51961 | So you predict an early marriage, with threatening weather and strong prevailing easterly winds along the Gulf States? |
51961 | Then you are Mr. Vox Populi himself, perhaps? |
51961 | Then you would not advise me to go to Coney Island until the week after next? |
51961 | Well, Mr. Ives, will you state then, in a general way, where those books are now? |
51961 | Well, sir,said the urbane landlord, as he put out the fire at a. distance of twenty feet by emptying his salivary surplus on it,"I need the money?" |
51961 | Well, to the best of your knowledge and belief, did you turn over those books at that time? |
51961 | What do you mean by that? |
51961 | What makes you think you did? |
51961 | What''s the damage? |
51961 | Where is The- Daughter- of- the- Tempest? 51961 Where is Victoria Regina Dei Gracia Sitting Bull? |
51961 | Where is your boy to- night? |
51961 | Who will love me all the while? |
51961 | Why are our resources so great that they almost equal our liabilities? 51961 Would you have been apt to know of it if you had taken them away yourself?" |
51961 | Would you have known about it if any one else had taken them away? |
51961 | --Has it been of real benefit to the territory? |
51961 | --If so, what has it accomplished? |
51961 | --What proportion of the women vote? |
51961 | --how does it affect education, morals, courts, etc.? |
51961 | Ah, my benefactor, my noble deliverer from death, how shall I tell you of my never- ending gratitude? |
51961 | Am I right?" |
51961 | Dear reader, did you ever meet this man-- or his wife? |
51961 | Did Burns soak his system with the flavor and the fragrance of the Scotch heather while riding on an elevated train? |
51961 | Did any poet ever succeed in getting up close to Nature''s great North American heart by studying her habits at a twenty- five dollar german? |
51961 | Did you ever have a large, angry, and abnormally protuberent boil somewhere on your person where it seemed to be in the way? |
51961 | Did you ever have such a boil as a traveling companion, and then get introduced to people as an youmorist? |
51961 | Do you know where they are?" |
51961 | Does it make a permanent improvement on the minds and thoughts of the listener? |
51961 | Have you a distinct idea of a certain position in life which you wish to attain? |
51961 | He came forward, and had a slight attack of delirium tremens, and said:"Ze vooly voo a la boomerang?" |
51961 | He lays that human life here is now so cheap? |
51961 | He was one of the Yeoman of Stratford, and his early record was against him; but where do poets usually come from? |
51961 | Hear ye yon lion roaring in his den? |
51961 | How could I walk over a corpse until life was extinct? |
51961 | How much was Galileo ahead in the long run for going out of his sphere? |
51961 | I do n''t believe God had it in for''em bekuz they was like other boys, do you? |
51961 | If he does not intend to kill some one, why does he carry a deadly weapon? |
51961 | If so, would I appoint a trysting place where we could meet and tryst? |
51961 | If we could write poetry like that, do you think we would plod along the dreary pathway of the journalist? |
51961 | Is he at home under your watchful eye, or is he away somewhere jailing the handles on his first little joke? |
51961 | Is this so? |
51961 | Ives?" |
51961 | La Foy?" |
51961 | Must the one- legged minority continue thus to subserve the interests of the two- legged majority? |
51961 | Oh, sir, can you help me? |
51961 | S. Ives& Co. or not?" |
51961 | Science may be all right in its place, but does it make the world better? |
51961 | Shall we portray her as she appears on her return from the great slaughter- house benefit and moral aggregation of digestive mementos? |
51961 | Shall we then rush in and with ruthless hand shatter this beautiful picture? |
51961 | The health journals may mean well enough; but what are you going to do if you are editing a Democratic paper? |
51961 | Then the poet comes to the close of the cowboy''s career in this style:"Do I repent? |
51961 | What could any of them have done with the house full of children of the forest who were hankering for a fresh pail of gore for lunch? |
51961 | What do you think of a man who would open a school with prayer and then converse freely about the alimentary canal? |
51961 | What would you like to know?" |
51961 | What''s your idea in charging me three dollars for a wad of hominy and a piece of parched pork?" |
51961 | When a man is paid three dollars a week to play a Roman soldier, would you have him play the Greek slave? |
51961 | When wealthy people die why do n''t they endow a cast- iron castle with a draw- bridge to it and call it the youmorists''retreat? |
51961 | Where are Sway- Back Sue and Meek- Eyed Government Socks? |
51961 | Where is Knock- Kneed Chemiloon? |
51961 | Where is The- Wall- Eyed- Maiden- With- the- Peeled- Nose? |
51961 | Why are we to- day a free people, with a surplus in the treasury that nobody can get at? |
51961 | Why did they allow my chubby little feet to waddle down to the dangerous ground on which the sad- eyed youmorist must forever stand? |
51961 | Why do n''t they do some good with their money instead of fooling it away on those who are comparatively happy?" |
51961 | Why do you linger and fritter away the heyday of life, when you might skirmish around and win some laurels? |
51961 | Why is everything done to make it pleasant for the rich man and every inducement held ont for the poor man to accumulate more and more poverty? |
51961 | Why is it that so much is said about the tariff by men who do not support their families? |
51961 | Will you rise to the proud pinnacle of fame as a pugilist, boys, or will you plug along as a sorrowing, overworked statesman? |
51961 | Would I assist him in this great work? |
51961 | Would you have me march around three times when my military pants were coming off, and I knew it? |
51961 | You have not? |
51961 | You hear the mellow trill of my bazoo?" |
51961 | You know the little Swede that used to run extra for Old Hotbox on the emigrant awhile? |
51961 | _ A Trip to Northern Wisconsin-- How Foreign Lumber Is manufactured-- Iron Dogs-- A Sad Accident--? |
51961 | _ Parley voo, e pluribus unum, sic semper go braugh!_ Do you understand_ that?_"But he did n''t understand it, so I had to kill him. |
51961 | ``` Who taught thy simple heart```` Its pent- up, wildly- warring waste``` Of wanton woe to carol forth upon````` The silent air? |
51961 | ```` Who taught thee thus to warble``` In the noontide heat and wrestle with``` Thy deep, corroding grief and joyless woe? |
51961 | |Dear reader, did you ever wrestle with a hen that had a wild, uncontrollable desire to incubate? |
51961 | |What becomes of our bodies?" |
51961 | |Young man, what are you living for? |
47507 | Ai n''t you glad that you met me? 47507 And how did little Tim behave?" |
47507 | And what''s that? |
47507 | Are you afraid? |
47507 | Are you happy, brother, and what can you see up there? |
47507 | Brother, where are you? |
47507 | But can you again find the spot? |
47507 | But what''s the meaning of all this foolery? |
47507 | Can it be possible,said she,"that my poor children whom the monster has swallowed for his supper, are still alive?" |
47507 | Can you lay eggs? |
47507 | Do ye mean it, squire? |
47507 | Do you fancy this is the whole world? |
47507 | How can you be so foolish to believe it? |
47507 | How do you know him? |
47507 | How much may your treasure be? |
47507 | How much? 47507 I am not quite such a simpleton,"screamed the dwarf;"do you not see that the confounded fish is pulling me in?" |
47507 | Idiot,replied the dwarf,"who would go and fetch more people? |
47507 | Is it like--an awe crept into the child''s eyes and voice--"like Jesus?" |
47507 | Margaret, could ye dare to get near and loose his foot? |
47507 | Think you so, my lad? 47507 Vot vos der reason aboud it, of dot lambs und Mary?" |
47507 | We ca n''t understand you? 47507 Well, and what will watching do?" |
47507 | Well, how are you getting on? |
47507 | Well, what can that be? |
47507 | Well, who would believe it? |
47507 | What are you looking at? |
47507 | What did the squire call him, Jep-- a peace- offering? |
47507 | What do you want for that golden apple of yours? |
47507 | What do you want? |
47507 | What else can my heart wish for? |
47507 | What has ever got your precious father, then? |
47507 | What have you been doing, little man? |
47507 | What have you done? |
47507 | What people are these, who are coming this way over the hill? |
47507 | What''s that? |
47507 | What''s this whim? |
47507 | What? 47507 Where are you going?" |
47507 | Where are you then going, dear bear? |
47507 | Where might you come from? |
47507 | Why ca n''t you stay where you are? |
47507 | Why should I be melancholy? |
47507 | Why, I, of course,said the princess.--"And what''s the meaning of it?" |
47507 | You remember Bennie Wilson? 47507 And just because I''m only seven, Should be so teazed, yes, almost_ driven_, Soon as I''ve supped my milk and bread, To that old drowsy, frowsy bed? 47507 And so came the same question:Perhaps it is you who should have had the prince?" |
47507 | And the brown thrush keeps singing,"A nest do you see, And five eggs, hid by me in the juniper- tree? |
47507 | And the tom- cat inquired:"Can you raise your back, or purr, or throw out sparks?" |
47507 | And then? |
47507 | And what does he say, little girl, little boy? |
47507 | And why do you speak so softly? |
47507 | Been to breakfast?" |
47507 | But are there any? |
47507 | But do you think I awoke at three? |
47507 | But how did you come to us, my dear? |
47507 | But long it wo n''t be, Do n''t you know? |
47507 | But the judge said,"Why should I not grant him this last request? |
47507 | But what did he see in the clear stream? |
47507 | Can you not come and see if you can help me?" |
47507 | Children, ay, and children''s children Should behold my babes on high, And my babes should smile forever, Calling others to the sky?" |
47507 | Could he give the darling up? |
47507 | Could he? |
47507 | Did n''t I hear him moving and crushing through the underwood, my canny Thor Lerberg?" |
47507 | Did you ever hear me say what I did n''t mean?" |
47507 | Do n''t you hear? |
47507 | Do n''t you really and truly think so? |
47507 | Do n''t you see? |
47507 | Do n''t you see? |
47507 | Do you think you''ll be coming here often? |
47507 | Do you think, O blue- eyed banditti, Because you have scaled the wall, Such an old mustache as I am Is not a match for you all? |
47507 | Feet, whence did you come, you darling things? |
47507 | Has he been asleep? |
47507 | Has he killed it? |
47507 | Have you not found a warm room, and company that might improve you? |
47507 | He stared at the children with his fiery red eyes, and cried out,"What are you standing there for? |
47507 | How did they all come just to be you? |
47507 | I breathed a song into the air, It fell to earth, I know not where; For who has sight so keen and strong, That it can follow the flight of song? |
47507 | I wonder whether he is a guinea- chick after all? |
47507 | Is it because I''m nobody''s child? |
47507 | Is it likely?" |
47507 | It stopped one of its friends who was going up the tree, and said,"Have you seen my goats this morning? |
47507 | Kiss little Blossom; but dear Father, Need you tell her how I fall?" |
47507 | Nor did he even presume to envy them; for how could it have ever entered his head to wish himself endowed with their loveliness? |
47507 | Now tell me, you''d never have thought That once I was as little as that? |
47507 | Now, are you? |
47507 | On the following morning when the wild ducks rose and saw their new comrade, they said:"What sort of a creature are you?" |
47507 | One day, when passing by a bush, a dwarf popped out of it, and accosted him, saying,"Whither away my merry fellow? |
47507 | Shall I lay me down''neath the angry sky, On the cold, hard pavements, alone, to die? |
47507 | Shall I snatch them up to- night? |
47507 | Shall we always be youthful, and laughing, and gay, Till the last dear companion drops smiling away? |
47507 | Should he dash in and try to save him-- he who had robbed him of Spottie, only to tire of him and cast him off? |
47507 | Snatch them, set them here forever, In the middle of my light? |
47507 | Swallow, shall I have a gold crown?" |
47507 | The answer came;"You''ve a mother, then?" |
47507 | Then he said,"What can it be that rattles about inside me, and feels so heavy? |
47507 | Was this lamb of earth shadowing forth to the minds of the simple children somewhat of the heavenly? |
47507 | Watch them closely, mark them sharply, As across the light they pass,-- Seem they not to have the figures Of a little lad and lass? |
47507 | What does little baby say, In her bed at peep of day? |
47507 | What does little birdie say In her nest at peep of day? |
47507 | What is that eery spark?) |
47507 | What makes your cheek like a warm, white rose? |
47507 | What makes your forehead so smooth and high? |
47507 | What shall I do? |
47507 | What was that? |
47507 | What will it be? |
47507 | What''s that, that gleams so,--eyes? |
47507 | When the dwarf saw what they were doing, he cried out in a great rage,"Is this the way you spoil my beard? |
47507 | When the little man had in a degree recovered from his fright, his little thin cracked voice was heard saying,"Could you not handle me more gently? |
47507 | When they had gone some distance the white bear said:"Are you afraid?" |
47507 | Whence that three- cornered smile of bliss? |
47507 | Where did you come from, baby, dear? |
47507 | Where did you get that little tear? |
47507 | Where did you get the eyes so blue? |
47507 | Where did you get this pretty ear? |
47507 | Where did you get those arms and hands? |
47507 | Where is my old''rithmetic? |
47507 | Who could estimate the length of an hour, amid the excitement of fun and frolics? |
47507 | Would the prints of rosy fingers Vex us then as they do now? |
47507 | Yes, we''re boys,--always playing with tongue or with pen,-- And I sometimes have asked,--Shall we ever be men? |
47507 | Yet, why muse Upon the past with sorrow? |
47507 | You do n''t suppose you are wiser than the tom- cat and our mistress-- to say nothing of myself? |
47507 | You know it? |
47507 | You wo n''t run away then, as he did? |
47507 | [ Illustration: WHICH WILL GET IT?] |
47507 | [ Illustration] Then why do I sell it? |
47507 | [ Illustration]"Frightening myself? |
47507 | and how poor are they? |
47507 | asked Rosy- red;"you will not surely jump into the water?" |
47507 | asked the old woman,"perhaps it was you who should have had him?" |
47507 | at last I said,"Have you no father?" |
47507 | but are you all there?" |
47507 | exclaimed the Turk;"how can such a little creature have such a powerful voice? |
47507 | he cried,"and what do you see down there?" |
47507 | he shouted out to her.--Yes, she would come in.--"Can you wash this shirt clean?" |
47507 | here are already two too many; can you not think of anything better?" |
47507 | is that you?" |
47507 | master Ru, how could ye; and the sheep there feedin''and feedin''? |
47507 | said the dwarf, rudely, at the same time reddening with anger;"and why do you stand there making faces?" |
47507 | said the giant.--"Well, how can I help believing it when you say so?" |
47507 | said the old man,"what did he want there? |
47507 | said the south wind,"is that she? |
47507 | what has brought you here?" |
47507 | what minding do they want, gorging themselves with clover as they are?" |
47507 | what shall I do when the night comes down, In its terrible darkness, all over the town? |
47507 | why does the wind blow upon me so wild? |
47507 | you are laughing, are you?" |
47507 | you ask me again,"Big cabin an''clearin, an''all?" |
34408 | Ah, but who''s to watch you, Dowlas, and see you do it? 34408 Alone, Maggie?" |
34408 | Although it is late, shall we not read a chapter together, as we always do before we go to bed? |
34408 | And are n''t we to have the pipes and tobacco, after coming so far to- night? |
34408 | And what did you answer? |
34408 | And where, O maiden, is thy house? 34408 Are we going to live there?" |
34408 | Are you certain? |
34408 | Ay, and a partic''lar thing happened, did n''t it, Mr. Macey, so as you were likely to remember that marriage? |
34408 | Behold thou,[ then?] 34408 But Arla, are you never, never coming?" |
34408 | But_ you_ knew what was going on well enough, did n''t you, Mr. Macey? 34408 Cold, is it, my darling? |
34408 | Day before yesterday he told you that he loved you? |
34408 | Did ever anybody see the like? |
34408 | Did you not see that she made herself conspicuous by taking such an interest in this outlived Lagerskiöld? |
34408 | Did you notice Arla? |
34408 | Do you know him? |
34408 | Do you love him? |
34408 | Do you think such little boys would dare? 34408 Eh? |
34408 | Father,I murmured, as if in prayer,"what do you mean?" |
34408 | Have you ever lost anything, Kors? |
34408 | If thou art a guide, commanding the conduct of a company, seek for thyself every good aim, so that thy policy may be without error;[?] 34408 If thou art a successful man and thou makest a son by God''s grace[? |
34408 | If thou sittest at meat with a gormandizer and eatest[? 34408 Is it not time to go back, sir?" |
34408 | Is it so? |
34408 | Is it the function of women to captain assassins? 34408 Is mamma in her room?" |
34408 | Is she alone? 34408 It is not possible that you mean-- of course you do n''t mean-- him-- that you just spoke of-- Captain Lagerskiöld?" |
34408 | Kors, my well- beloved,Rika said at last with a sigh, after a long and delicious silence,"do you not remember this room?" |
34408 | No fair bet? |
34408 | O God, where am I? 34408 Oh, is that it? |
34408 | One word more,said Rika, catching hold of Kors''s blouse;"have you no recollection of a little thing which you lost one night on a journey?" |
34408 | Pert? 34408 Poyser is not at home, is he?" |
34408 | Say? 34408 Say? |
34408 | Tell me, my beautiful one, where do such dainty maidens come from? |
34408 | There is no need to hasten, is there, my Rika? |
34408 | To what use is then all the striving and all the prayers? |
34408 | Tut, tut,he said setting down his glass with refreshed irritation;"what''s the smell got to do with it? |
34408 | Was it a red Durham? |
34408 | Well, Mrs. Poyser, how are you after this stormy morning? |
34408 | Well? |
34408 | What do you say to that, eh, Dowlas? |
34408 | What good then does it do to try to protect the children from evil, if just this makes them more of a prey to temptation? |
34408 | What is your name, my flower of Viersel? |
34408 | What then? |
34408 | What will our descendants think of the Parliamentary oratory of our age? |
34408 | What? 34408 Who is he, I wonder?" |
34408 | Who is it that hath led thee? 34408 Why need you remind me of the moment of parting?" |
34408 | Why, Gurli dear, why are n''t you asleep long ago? |
34408 | Will you and the captain please to walk into the parlor? |
34408 | Will you please to take this chair, sir? |
34408 | You are very kind, Madame Verhulst, but we breakfasted late just before starting.... Kors, have our horses been fed? |
34408 | You do not ask my name, Rika? |
34408 | You do not suppose I have been listening? |
34408 | You promise me? 34408 _ Baezine_ Davie, take one of these_ carbonades_? |
34408 | ( Madman or Saint? |
34408 | (?) |
34408 | ), IIId(? |
34408 | ), VIth, Vth, IVth(? |
34408 | Ah, Poyser, how do you do? |
34408 | All wisdom is in the mouth of thy Majesty; The staff[?] |
34408 | Always we two, is that it? |
34408 | And couldst thou ask no other boon Than thy poor bracelet''s price? |
34408 | And deemest thou as those who pore, With agèd eyes, short way before,-- Think''st Beauty vanished from the coast Of matter, and thy darling lost? |
34408 | And even though I am treated like a child here at home, there are others who-- who--""Are you not a child?" |
34408 | And for the matter o''that, if the talk is to be o''the Lammeters,_ you_ know the most upo''that head, eh, Mr. Macey? |
34408 | And now why do you gaze on each other? |
34408 | And she''d a white star on her brow, I''ll bet a penny?" |
34408 | And so why not draw for these times a portrait gallery? |
34408 | And the roof of the Mill-- where was it? |
34408 | And the two little ones who were now sleeping soundly in the nursery? |
34408 | And there''s the fetching and carrying, as''ud be welly half a day''s work for a man an''hoss--_that''s_ to be took out o''the profits, I reckon? |
34408 | And thoughtest thou such guest Would in thy hall take up his rest? |
34408 | And what did he say? |
34408 | And what did you say?" |
34408 | And what through the left- hand window? |
34408 | And why did I ceaselessly repeat to myself, whatever the music, these three unimportant syllables"Mon Repos"? |
34408 | And,''What is it, Guccio?'' |
34408 | Are larks still trilling Their numbers sweet? |
34408 | Are the children asleep?" |
34408 | Are there no girls at Wildonck, or in the town?" |
34408 | Are these all my orders?" |
34408 | Are these things material to our covenant? |
34408 | Are they_ my_ poor? |
34408 | Are you alone? |
34408 | Are you the friend of your friend''s buttons, or of his thought? |
34408 | Argue with him after a season, test[?] |
34408 | Athet- taui( Lisht?) |
34408 | Bata, Bull of the Ennead of the gods, art thou remaining alone, having fled thy village from before the wife of Anpu thy elder brother? |
34408 | Beckon it when to go and come, Self- announced its hour of doom? |
34408 | Behold, a good son that God giveth doeth beyond what he is told for his master; he doeth right, doing heartily[?] |
34408 | Beware of interruption and of answering words with heat[?].... |
34408 | Beware of overbearingness[? |
34408 | But I am not stiff- necked; a man feareth if he knoweth[? |
34408 | But Skrymir sat up, and stroking his cheek, said:--"Are there any birds perched on this tree? |
34408 | But it was not the house,--the house stood firm; drowned up to the first story, but still firm;--or was it broken in at the end towards the Mill? |
34408 | But let my errand first be told: For bracelets sold to thine this day, So much thou owest me in gold; Hast thou the ready cash to pay? |
34408 | But now thou art taught to sing to the flute, To recite[?] |
34408 | But on the representation in 1877 of''Locura o Santidad?'' |
34408 | But shall a wretched beggar desire to attain to my fortune? |
34408 | But shall the heaven rain with arrows? |
34408 | But she said,"Where then is Odin that laid me here alow? |
34408 | But thou art[?] |
34408 | But thou, my votary, weepest thou? |
34408 | But what are the feats that thou and thy fellows deem yourselves skilled in? |
34408 | But what hast thou done with my glove?" |
34408 | But who cares for poor Rika? |
34408 | But who''d have thought it? |
34408 | Can I tell it to him, saying, I took thy children to the nome of Thebes, I killed them, I being alive; I came to Memphis, I being alive still?'' |
34408 | Can you not suggest some girl for him, my sweet Rika? |
34408 | Can you write, read, and cipher?" |
34408 | Canst thou shine now, then darkle, And being latent, feel thyself no less? |
34408 | Canst thou silent lie? |
34408 | Canst thou, thy pride forgot, like nature pass Into the winter night''s extinguished mood? |
34408 | Death is ever before me like as a man desireth to see his house when he hath spent many years in pulling[ the oars?]. |
34408 | Death is ever before me[?] |
34408 | Did ever a ghost give a man a black eye? |
34408 | Did n''t he ask for me?" |
34408 | Did not the incantation run:--"I command thee, charmed plant, to bring me the man who will wound me as I wound thee"? |
34408 | Do I not see it? |
34408 | Do you know when he''s likely to be at liberty?" |
34408 | Do you not see clouds of dust rolling hither from the town? |
34408 | Do you think he will find some fair ones to choose from at Viersel?" |
34408 | Do you want me to tell you? |
34408 | Do your parents live far from here?" |
34408 | Does it not better mold the tone and manners from within than any imitative"fashion"from without? |
34408 | Dost thou ignore that the shadow of God is over me, and he doth not fail in any undertaking of mine? |
34408 | Doth not the heart of thy Majesty cool with these things that thou hast done unto me? |
34408 | Eh, it''s a pity but what Solomon lived in our village, and could give us a tune when he liked, eh, Mr. Macey? |
34408 | FROM''MADMAN OR SAINT?'' |
34408 | For I am thy younger brother in truth; thou art to me as a father; thy wife is to me even as a mother: is it not so? |
34408 | For I had cut for it a broad boat of acacia- wood, sixty cubits long, thirty cubits broad, and built it-- all this[?] |
34408 | For thus the wood- gods murmured in my ear:"Dost love our manners? |
34408 | Guard thyself against opening the lacunæ[?] |
34408 | Had not most of the nation''s gifted men sprung from the ranks of the people? |
34408 | Has a man gained anything who has received a hundred favors and rendered none? |
34408 | Has he gained by borrowing, through indolence or cunning, his neighbor''s wares, or horses, or money? |
34408 | Has he gone back,[96] the good scribe, the learned man, to whom there is no equal?'' |
34408 | Has it not all been a dream, poor impressionable little thing? |
34408 | Hast thou Hlorridi''s hammer hidden?" |
34408 | Hath a matter come to pass in the Residence? |
34408 | Have I ever opened his door, or leaped over his fence? |
34408 | Have we not seen it, felt it? |
34408 | Have you brought a boat?" |
34408 | He consulted me with a feverish"Hey?" |
34408 | He said to his page who was with him,"What is this that goeth behind the man coming along the road?" |
34408 | He spake with his soul, saying:--''Can I go to Koptos and dwell there? |
34408 | He that remembereth a man is kind unto him in the years after the staff[ of power?]." |
34408 | He who was prosperous last year, even in this may be a vagrant.[?]" |
34408 | Hence arose the saying,"If I love you, what is that to you?" |
34408 | Her husband said to her,"Who hath spoken with thee?" |
34408 | Hey? |
34408 | How do I know whether the milk''ull be wanted constant? |
34408 | How fares it with thee, Thor?" |
34408 | How goes it with the Alfar? |
34408 | How shall fate be known?" |
34408 | I acted according to his Majesty''s desire in performing the choosing of the guard[? |
34408 | I alighted on the ground between the gates of reception[? |
34408 | I am well, am I not? |
34408 | I answered with the answer of one terrified,"What is it that my lord hath said? |
34408 | I crossed the river on a raft without a rudder, by the aid of a west wind, and landed at the quay[?] |
34408 | I directed them to the Island of the North, the Gate of I- hetep, the_ Uart_[?] |
34408 | I gave thee sight-- where is it now? |
34408 | I have not been lazy.[?] |
34408 | I have not been very well.... Oh, a mere nothing; a small ailment, a neglected cold.... A slight cold, was it not, Yana? |
34408 | I have not caught fish in their pools.[?] |
34408 | I have not coveted.[?] |
34408 | I have not made bubbles.[?] |
34408 | I saw men of the Sati; and an alien amongst them-- he who is[ now?] |
34408 | I strode around my tent rejoicing and saying:--"How is this done to the servant, whose heart had transgressed to a strange country of babbling tongue? |
34408 | I suppose he dances awfully well, eh?" |
34408 | I would not hearken to him:''Behold, am I not thy mother, is not thy elder brother to thee as a father?'' |
34408 | I''ve been looking at your wife''s beautiful dairy: the best manager in the parish, is she not?" |
34408 | If I return in three days''time; if I repeat then that I love you madly; if I ask you to be my wife, will you refuse me?" |
34408 | If Messer Domeneddio means so well by us as your Frate says he does, Ser Cioni, why should n''t he have sent the French another way to Naples?" |
34408 | If he err and transgress thy way, and refuseth[?] |
34408 | If it happen that I have not a child after two children, is it the law to marry the one with the other of them? |
34408 | If malice and vanity wear the coat of philanthropy, shall that pass? |
34408 | If one of you enters upon the wall there will be no stand against him[ for a moment], the levies[?] |
34408 | Impossible? |
34408 | Is a man to be declared mad because he is resolved to do his duty? |
34408 | Is he going to prepare the groundwork of artistic labor with a view to ethical design, or pure artistic design? |
34408 | Is it really true?" |
34408 | Is mining done by dint of cutting through the snow? |
34408 | Is that right, or do you desire higher cushions? |
34408 | Is the interior of a house the nursery of insurgents? |
34408 | Is there no one else?" |
34408 | Is there perhaps any man who has told you that he loves you? |
34408 | Is there?" |
34408 | Is this the thrilling Nightingale''s beat? |
34408 | It is vain[?] |
34408 | Its onward force too starkly pent In figure, bone, and lineament? |
34408 | Know''st thou what wove yon wood- bird''s nest Of leaves, and feathers from her breast? |
34408 | LORELEI''Tis very late,''tis growing cold; Alone thou ridest through the wold? |
34408 | Macey?" |
34408 | Macey?" |
34408 | Macey?" |
34408 | May I come in?" |
34408 | Mother, where are you? |
34408 | Must I go away again? |
34408 | Must we return home desolate? |
34408 | My soul said unto me:[238]"Lay aside[?] |
34408 | Nail the wild star to its track On the half climbed zodiac? |
34408 | Naneferkaptah said to him,''For what art thou laughing at me?'' |
34408 | Nor see the genius of the whole Ascendant in the private soul? |
34408 | Now when I was judge, his Majesty made me a sole friend and superintendent of the garden of Pharaoh, and I instructed[?] |
34408 | Now when the days were multiplied after these things, he said to the youths,"What is it that ye do here?" |
34408 | Now, in such private solace, in such solitary joys, is there not culture? |
34408 | Of what interest is a soldier''s name to you? |
34408 | Oh come, as late thou cam''st unsought, Or was it but some idle dream? |
34408 | On my saying,"What have I to do with the sacredness of traditions, if I live wholly from within?" |
34408 | One tribe passed me on to another: I departed to Sun[? |
34408 | Or a spoonful of saffron rice? |
34408 | Or how the fish outbuilt her shell, Painting with morn each annual cell? |
34408 | Or how the sacred pine- tree adds To her old leaves new myriads? |
34408 | Or perhaps you will have some more of this chine, which has been specially kept for your visit? |
34408 | Otherwise, if it be that I go to Memphis, the moment that Pharaoh asks me after his children, what shall I say to him? |
34408 | Perhaps she could find a sweetheart for lonely Rika? |
34408 | Pharaoh said to him,''What is it that thou desirest?'' |
34408 | Pharaoh said,"Is it drinking that hath brought thee thus?" |
34408 | Pharaoh said,"Setna, what has befallen thee in this state in which thou art?" |
34408 | Poyser?" |
34408 | Put your face to one of the glass panes in the right- hand window: what do you see? |
34408 | Rebellious thoughts can find no place in her heart; but who that sees her can fail to think it and to say it? |
34408 | Rika, when I return in three days''time, on Monday, will you meet me here?" |
34408 | Rose Naneferkaptah on the couch; he said:"Art thou Setna, before whom this woman has told these misfortunes which thou hast not suffered-- all? |
34408 | Seest thou that lofty gilded spire, Above these tufts of foliage green? |
34408 | Setna said to the old man,"Thou art of the appearance of a man great of age: knowest thou the places of rest in which are Ahura and Merab her child?" |
34408 | Setna said,"Naneferkaptah, is there aught that is disgraceful?" |
34408 | She called out in a loud piercing voice:--"Tom, where are you? |
34408 | She said to him,"How much of the corn that is wanted, is that which is on thy shoulder?" |
34408 | She said to him,"Who then art thou?" |
34408 | Should not the society of my friend be to me poetic, pure, universal, and great as nature itself? |
34408 | Skrymir, awakening, cried out:--"What''s the matter? |
34408 | So, after a few moments''silence, he looked up at her and said mildly,"What dost say?" |
34408 | Sold to mine? |
34408 | Soon, from the window of the attic in the central gable, she heard Tom''s voice:--"Who is it? |
34408 | THE RHODORA ON BEING ASKED, WHENCE IS THE FLOWER? |
34408 | THRYM"How goes it with the Æsir? |
34408 | Taught he not thee-- the man of eld, Whose eyes within his eyes beheld Heaven''s numerous hierarchy span The mystic gulf from God to man? |
34408 | Tell me how you and the Egyptians liked my envoys?" |
34408 | That will make you grow.... What do you say to it?... |
34408 | That''s what you''d like to be doing, is it? |
34408 | The awful question"What is the use of it? |
34408 | The book named, canst thou take it only by strength of a good scribe? |
34408 | The bronze... are worn out, the horses[ oxen?] |
34408 | The deep Heart answered,"Weepest thou? |
34408 | The eating of bread is under the management of God: it is the ignorant that rebelleth[?] |
34408 | The end of justice is that it endureth long; such as a man will say,''It is from_[?] |
34408 | The list following the name of Tafnekht seems to name localities representative of the VIIth(? |
34408 | The more definite question is: How can such a girl realize the great world of ideas? |
34408 | The nature is better than the memory."[?] |
34408 | The prince spake of it, saying,"The son of which of the princes is it?" |
34408 | The remembrance of a man is of his kindliness in the years after the staff[ of power?]. |
34408 | The weak man[?] |
34408 | The youth spake with his elder brother, saying:--"Wherefore earnest thou after me to slay me wrongfully, when thou hadst not heard my mouth speak? |
34408 | Then he looked on his bare bright blade, and he said,"Thou-- what wilt thou do? |
34408 | Then he said to me:--"For what hast thou come hither? |
34408 | Then his Majesty came forth disposed to hate his soldiers, raging at them like a leopard:"Doth it yet remain for you to fight? |
34408 | Then said Thrym, the Thursar''s prince:--"Where hast thou seen brides eat more voraciously? |
34408 | Then the prince of Naharaina was exceeding angry; he said,"Shall I indeed give my daughter to the Egyptian fugitive? |
34408 | Then there came a soft knock at her door; it was opened a little, and a timid voice whispered,"Is mamma alone? |
34408 | Then they slew many men of them, and horses without number, in the charge[?]. |
34408 | Then what pray shall establish the assembly? |
34408 | There are several inns between here and your fort, are there not? |
34408 | There was given to me the house of Neb- mer[? |
34408 | There''s a fine state of things.... What will Begga say? |
34408 | Thereupon she asked me again,"Where then are you wandering so early in the morning?" |
34408 | They are soft as butter.... A slice of ham? |
34408 | They''ll run as fast as geese-- don''t you see they''re web- footed?" |
34408 | Those heavy fragments hurrying down the Ripple,--what had they meant? |
34408 | To be alone wilt thou begin, When worlds of lovers hem thee in? |
34408 | Under her veil he stooped, desirous to salute her, but sprang back along the hall:--"Why are so piercing Freyja''s looks? |
34408 | Verily that which cometh out of the store doth not enter[? |
34408 | Was it not justice? |
34408 | Was it still the kermesse organ which obsessed me, lingering above all other sounds, growing fainter and fainter but never quite dying away? |
34408 | What are you waiting for? |
34408 | What can so quickly magnetize a people into this harmonic mood as music? |
34408 | What can we do, what can we do, Ernest? |
34408 | What did my uncle''s authoritative tone mean in my father''s house, in_ our_ house? |
34408 | What do you know about that? |
34408 | What does it matter whether I live or die? |
34408 | What is that dirge- like murmur that I hear Like the sea breaking on a shingle beach? |
34408 | What is the manner of going to Memphis that I can do, there being no clothes on earth upon me?" |
34408 | What is the reason to be given for this extreme attraction which_ persons_ have for us, but that they are the Age? |
34408 | What is this great wickedness that thou hast said? |
34408 | What is this? |
34408 | What mad race has he been running? |
34408 | What new fatality floats in the air and hangs threateningly above my head? |
34408 | What shall I do to you, you naughty, naughty gell?" |
34408 | What shall so temper and tone down our"fierce democracy"? |
34408 | What sorrow filled the heart of this fair young girl of eighteen summers? |
34408 | What then shall I say to my mother, To whom I come daily Laden with wild- fowl? |
34408 | What was happening to them at the Mill? |
34408 | What was it that filled the ears of the prophets of old but the distant tread of foreign armies, coming to do the work of justice? |
34408 | What were those masses? |
34408 | What would he have us do? |
34408 | What would people say if they met me with you? |
34408 | What''s up now, you grumbling devil?" |
34408 | Where do you come from? |
34408 | Where is mother?" |
34408 | Which is the way home?" |
34408 | Which way did the river lie? |
34408 | While he conducted Nitetis to the carriage, she pressed his arm against her breast and whispered,"Are you satisfied with me, my father?" |
34408 | Who are you to part me from my child? |
34408 | Who began talking of me? |
34408 | Who bought them, I should like to know?" |
34408 | Who can analyze the nameless charm which glances from one and another face and form? |
34408 | Who can say? |
34408 | Who could become acquainted with noble Croesus without loving him? |
34408 | Who could help admiring the excellent qualities of the young heroes, your friends? |
34408 | Who heard the cry? |
34408 | Who is it that hath led thee? |
34408 | Who is it that led thee? |
34408 | Who is like unto thee in these things? |
34408 | Who is thy servant that he should be considered, that words should be spent upon him? |
34408 | Who taught you to scrub a floor, I should like to know? |
34408 | Why are they together? |
34408 | Why are your lips drawn as if with pain? |
34408 | Why art thou come alone to Jötunheim?" |
34408 | Why be visited by him at your own? |
34408 | Why did Yana look at him respectfully but sullenly? |
34408 | Why do my family worry me with their advice? |
34408 | Why do your eyes shine, Ernest? |
34408 | Why go to his house, or know his mother and brother and sisters? |
34408 | Why insist on rash personal relations with your friend? |
34408 | Why should she speak of remorse? |
34408 | Why should the vest on him allure, Which I could not on me endure? |
34408 | Why should we desecrate noble and beautiful souls by intruding on them? |
34408 | Why this week''s separation? |
34408 | Why, the Squire used to invite him to take a glass, only to hear him sing the''Red Rovier''; did n''t he, Mr. Macey? |
34408 | Why?" |
34408 | Will God forget what is ordained for him? |
34408 | Wilt thou freeze love''s tidal flow, Whose streams through Nature circling go? |
34408 | Wilt thou not ope thy heart to know What rainbows teach, and sunsets show? |
34408 | Wilt thou, uncalled, interrogate,-- Talker!--the unreplying Fate? |
34408 | Wo n''t you even wear a scapulary?" |
34408 | Wo n''t you please to sit down, sir?" |
34408 | Would it be well to take advantage of the absence of her master and mistress and consult the fortune- teller? |
34408 | Would rushing life forget her laws, Fate''s glowing revolution pause? |
34408 | You do not love each other like brother and sister, then? |
34408 | You must have been a little rude to him?" |
34408 | You remember when first Mr. Lammeter''s father come into these parts, and took the Warrens?" |
34408 | You were live enough, eh?" |
34408 | [ 131] Tehneh(?) |
34408 | [ 140] Who is it that hath led thee? |
34408 | [ 151] Athet- taui( Lisht?) |
34408 | [ 154] I shall be[ away traveling] three[?] |
34408 | [ 235] Death is ever before me like a road watered[? |
34408 | [ 239] I have not acted perversely[ prevaricated? |
34408 | [ 282] Do not wash the heart[283] of him who agreeth with[?] |
34408 | [ 282] Flatter(?). |
34408 | [ 308] Do what is admirable; cause not thyself to be mocked;[?] |
34408 | [ 30] I wandered across my estate[31][?] |
34408 | [ 37] There I spent a year and a month[?]. |
34408 | [ 44] Meaning"reeds"(?). |
34408 | [ 46] But is there a bull that loveth battle, a courageous bull that loveth to repeat the charge in terrifying him whose strength he hath measured? |
34408 | [ 68] When the land was lightened, and the second day came,[69] there came some to summon me, four men in coming, four men in going,[70] to carry[?] |
34408 | [ 71] Do not, do not, be silent and speechless; tell thy name; is it fear that preventeth thee?" |
34408 | [ Do not repeat scandal[?].] |
34408 | [ I was] chief of the_ debat_[?] |
34408 | [??] |
34408 | [??] |
34408 | [?] |
34408 | [?] |
34408 | [_ Aloud._] What is this? |
34408 | [_ Pause._] Did I not hear Inez-- the child of my heart-- speak of remorse? |
34408 | ], but bread is apportioned; he that is niggardly of face is remorseful;[?] |
34408 | ]; the royal children stood at the platform to greet[?] |
34408 | _ Copy of the acknowledgment of this command._"The servant of the royal house[? |
34408 | _ Edward_--And it would be vile, and criminal, and a source of remorse, to make Inez happy? |
34408 | _ Edward_[_ with scornful vehemence_]--And what is that pallor, what are those tears, and what the tragedies you speak of? |
34408 | _ Ernest_--Well, then, what do you wish? |
34408 | _ Ernest_--What does he desire, Teodora? |
34408 | _ Inez_--And why not? |
34408 | _ Inez_--Do I rightly know myself what I mean? |
34408 | _ Julian_--And he? |
34408 | _ Julian_--Why do they not come to me? |
34408 | _ Julian_--You ask my pardon? |
34408 | _ Julian_[_ to Teodora and Ernest_]--You are afraid, then? |
34408 | _ Julian_[_ watching them with instinctive distrust_]--Ah, would you deceive me to my very face? |
34408 | _ List of their names_:-- The King Usorkon in Per Bast and the territory of Ranefer; The King Auapeth in Tentremu and Taanta[? |
34408 | _ Lorenzo_--What do you mean by those words? |
34408 | _ Teodora_--What do you wish? |
34408 | _ that obtain wealth; never did the greedy_[?] |
34408 | are not these the years of thy life upon earth? |
34408 | art thou awake, Thor? |
34408 | conjured up anything more beautiful? |
34408 | did an acorn fall on my head? |
34408 | do you think I can sleep before I have heard something about the ball? |
34408 | e._, What does Egypt do without the king? |
34408 | e._, he did not impress men( wrongfully?) |
34408 | four[?] |
34408 | how?" |
34408 | in seventeen days, in the third month of harvest,[201] when behold there was no water on the junctions[?] |
34408 | in the neighborhood of Nehat; I reached the island[ or lake] of Seneferu, and spent the day[ resting?] |
34408 | is put upon thy forehead, driving away from thee the beggarly[?] |
34408 | lord of all the gods, Who see him[?] |
34408 | says he, and then he says,''Wilt thou have this woman to thy wedded husband?'' |
34408 | weapons were brandished[? |
34408 | what is it? |
34408 | what is the use of it?" |
34408 | why, traitors? |
4729 | Ah well,said Mr. Hennessy,"who cares?" |
4729 | All over? |
4729 | Am I again''all books, says ye? 4729 An''so th''war is over?" |
4729 | An''what about th''Ph''lippeens? |
4729 | An''where have all these advintures occurred, d''ye say? 4729 An''why not, Hinnissy? |
4729 | Ar- re all th''people West iv th''park shootin''men? |
4729 | But if Hor''ce Greeley was alive today where''d he be? 4729 But if all thim gr- reat powers, as they say thimsilves, was f''r to attack us, d''ye know what I''d do? |
4729 | But whin th''decision is carried to th''pris''ner, th''warden says''Who?'' 4729 But whin?" |
4729 | By th''way,said Mr. Hennessy with an air of polite curiosity,"what relation''s he to th''impror iv Germany? |
4729 | D''ye ra- ally think a man ought to marry on twinty- five dollars? |
4729 | D''ye think a foreign fleet cud capture this counthry? |
4729 | D''ye think people likes th''newspapers iv th''prisint time? |
4729 | D''ye think they''re printed f''r fun? |
4729 | Did he rayform? |
4729 | Has he divided th''profits? |
4729 | Has n''t there annything happened? 4729 How did he do it?" |
4729 | How manny pitchers has he painted? |
4729 | How''s that? |
4729 | I wondher what Tiddy Rosenfelt thinks iv it? |
4729 | Now, what kind iv a man ought a woman to marry? 4729 So it has been done at last, has it?" |
4729 | Well, what wud ye think if ye''d had to intertain a German Prince unawares? 4729 What about?" |
4729 | What d''ye think iv th''man down in Pinnsylvanya who says th''Lord an''him is partners in a coal mine? |
4729 | What did ye say th''gintleman''s name was? |
4729 | What do I think iv him? 4729 What else wud ye have him do? |
4729 | What thribe did ye say they belonged to? 4729 What was it all about, says ye? |
4729 | What was it? |
4729 | What''s beet sugar? |
4729 | What''s he been doin''? |
4729 | What''s it all about? |
4729 | What''s it done f''r th''wurruld? 4729 What''s that?" |
4729 | Where? |
4729 | Who''d ye sind? |
4729 | Who''s Sherlock Holmes? |
4729 | Who''s that? |
4729 | Why do they do it? |
4729 | Why shud annywan want to go to th''North Pole? 4729 Ye go where?" |
4729 | Ye say he see him do it? |
4729 | Ye was niver marrid? |
4729 | ''Ar- re ye still at th''art?'' |
4729 | ''But what ar- re th''immygrants doin''that''s roonous to us?'' |
4729 | ''But what wud ye do with th''offscourin''iv Europe?'' |
4729 | ''Can ye do me?'' |
4729 | ''Did he escape?'' |
4729 | ''Gin''rous?'' |
4729 | ''Good hivins have I f''rgotten somewan?'' |
4729 | ''Has Mitchigan seceded?'' |
4729 | ''How ar- re ye gettin''on with th''Cyanide case, judge?'' |
4729 | ''How does it go?'' |
4729 | ''Is Mars inhabited?'' |
4729 | ''Is that what this is?'' |
4729 | ''Th''future iv th''Columbya river salmon,''''Is white lead good f''r th''complexion?'' |
4729 | ''Thrue f''r ye, Miles Standish,''says I;''but what wud ye do?'' |
4729 | ''What time is it?'' |
4729 | ''What''s it called?'' |
4729 | ''What''s that outlandish chune?'' |
4729 | ''What''s ye''er spishilty?'' |
4729 | ''Who ar- re ye?'' |
4729 | ''Who ar- re ye?'' |
4729 | ''Who will me brave frind have go through with this here austere but hail- fellow inquiry?'' |
4729 | ''Wud ye go back?'' |
4729 | A throlley car? |
4729 | Afther makin''a cinch, is it proper f''r to always kick th''critter in th''stomach or on''y whin ye feel like it? |
4729 | Ai n''t I a good newspaper? |
4729 | Ai n''t it cold enough here?" |
4729 | An''aven if ye get up near th''pole, what''s it good f''r? |
4729 | An''do I object to th''pursuit iv lithrachoor? |
4729 | An''does he get annything f''r it? |
4729 | An''whin ye''d shut th''dure on him, ye''d say:''Well, what d''ye think iv that?''" |
4729 | Ar- re his accounts sthraight? |
4729 | Ar- re those shoes ye have on ye''er feet? |
4729 | Be Mulligan''s Sloppy Weather out iv O''Hannigan''s Diana iv th''Slough? |
4729 | But how do I think about it? |
4729 | But where were they? |
4729 | Cuba vs. Beet Sugar"What''s all this about Cubia an''th''Ph''lippeens?" |
4729 | Cud frindship go farther? |
4729 | D''ye know annything about his parents? |
4729 | D''ye read thim all th''time?'' |
4729 | D''ye think so? |
4729 | D''ye think this is a annyooal incyclopejee?'' |
4729 | D''ye think ye can get home all right? |
4729 | Descinded, but how far? |
4729 | Did he go out iv nights? |
4729 | Did he lave much?'' |
4729 | Did n''t I tell ye he is a killer? |
4729 | Did ye iver go to an Artic exploration letcher? |
4729 | Does Miranda prisint no atthractions to th''young men iv th''neighborhood, does her overskirt dhrag, an''is she poor with th''gas- range? |
4729 | Had Dorsey said annything to him that wud''ve made him despondent? |
4729 | Has n''t anny wan been-- been kilt?" |
4729 | He has fought f''r thim an''what have they done f''r him? |
4729 | He woke up an''rubbed his eyes an''says,''Where am I?'' |
4729 | How ar- re ye, ol''commerade- in- arms? |
4729 | How can such a low blaggard as that insult me? |
4729 | How d''ye make it out, Hinnissy? |
4729 | How long shud a tinderfoot dance befure he is entitled to live? |
4729 | How much have ye got?'' |
4729 | I ast ye, I ast ye, ye fine little boys, is it meet an''proper, nay, is it meat an''dhrink f''r us, to punish him?'' |
4729 | If I cud fly d''ye think I''d want to walk?" |
4729 | If dhrivin''a horse in a cart is a game, why not dhrive a delivery wagon an''carry things around? |
4729 | If''tis fun to wurruk why not do some rale wurruk? |
4729 | If''tis spoort to run an autymobill, why not run a locymotive? |
4729 | Is Malachi near- sighted, peevish, averse to th''suds, an''ca n''t tell whether th''three in th''front yard is blue or green? |
4729 | Is he th''son or th''nevvew?" |
4729 | Is it a law that prevints thim fr''m marryin''thim fresh- faced, clear- eyed daughters iv ol''Albion or is it fear? |
4729 | Is this th''meelin- yum?'' |
4729 | Jus''as th''comp''ny was breakin''up a man whose gaiters creaked rose an''said:''Is n''t there wan more toast?'' |
4729 | Kilt a man is it? |
4729 | Modesty where was thy blush? |
4729 | Money and Matrimony"Can a man marry on twinty- five dollars?" |
4729 | Newspaper Publicity"Was ye iver in th''pa- apers?" |
4729 | No? |
4729 | No? |
4729 | Now what''s made th''change? |
4729 | Reform Administration"Why is it,"asked Mr. Hennessy,"that a rayform administhration always goes to th''bad?" |
4729 | Rights and Privileges of Women"Woman''s rights? |
4729 | Soos?" |
4729 | Swearing Did ye see what th''prisidint said to th''throlley man that bumped him?" |
4729 | Th''Avenin Fluff offers a prize iv four dollars to th''best answer to th''question:"What does th''baby think iv Miss Blim?"'' |
4729 | The End of the War"Why did th''Boers quit fightin''?" |
4729 | The Names of a Week"What''s goin''on this week in th''papers?" |
4729 | The War Game What''s this here war game I''ve been readin''about?" |
4729 | Undher what circumstances shud a Mexican not be shot, and if so, why? |
4729 | Was ayether iv thim seen in th''neighborhood th''night iv th''plant? |
4729 | Was he a dog that dhrank? |
4729 | Was he baffled in love? |
4729 | Was he payin''anny particular attintions to anny iv th''neighbors? |
4729 | Was there a dog on th''car? |
4729 | Was ye exercisin''ye- er joynt intelleck while ye was readin''? |
4729 | Was you?" |
4729 | We get out dizzy an''sick an''lay on th''grass an''gasp:''Where am I? |
4729 | Well, Watson, what d''ye make iv it?" |
4729 | Were they there? |
4729 | What did he say? |
4729 | What does a woman want iv rights whin she has priv''leges? |
4729 | What were th''habits iv Dorsey''s coyote? |
4729 | What''ll I do to make thim me frinds so that''twud be like settin''fire to their own house to attackt me? |
4729 | What''ll they iver grow up to be? |
4729 | Whin do ye begin?'' |
4729 | White House Discipline"Where did ye spind th''New Year''s?" |
4729 | Who am I to say that what wudden''t be manners in a bar- room is not all right in th''Sinit? |
4729 | Who d''ye mane?'' |
4729 | Who is th''United States?'' |
4729 | Who won? |
4729 | Who''s ye''er banker here?'' |
4729 | Why do n''t they thry ivry man before th''supreme coort an''have done with it?" |
4729 | Why is it that th''fair sect wudden''t be seen talkin''to a polisman, but if ye say''Sojer''to thim, they''re all out iv th''window but th''feet? |
4729 | Wo n''t that be nice? |
4729 | Wud ye give him a tin cup that he cud put his name on? |
4729 | Wud ye like a line on me daily routine? |
4729 | Wud ye, Hinnissy? |
4729 | Ye must be achin''all over to go down to th''livry stable an''cast ye''er impeeral ballot f''r Oscaroviski K. Hickinski f''r school thrustee?" |
4729 | Ye wudden''t expict a pathrolman to be promoted to be sergeant f''r kidnapin''an organ- grinder, wud ye? |
4729 | Ye''ve heerd iv Gainsborough? |
4729 | Ye''ve heerd iv Michael Angelo? |
4729 | Ye''ve heerd iv Millet, th''boy that painted th''pitcher give away with th''colored supplimint iv th''Sundah Howl? |
4729 | says he,''what''s that?'' |
44621 | A CASE OF INSUBORDINATION? |
44621 | A RESEARCH PROBLEM: INERT(?) |
44621 | A RESEARCH PROBLEM: INERT(?) |
44621 | A TREE IS A TREE IS A TREE? |
44621 | A TREE IS A TREE IS A TREE? |
44621 | AGAIN? |
44621 | ARE OUR SCHOOLS UP- TO- DATE? |
44621 | ARE POETS PEOPLE? |
44621 | ARE YOU EARNING THE RIGHT TO ASK THEM TO BUY? |
44621 | ARE YOU EARNING THE RIGHT TO ASK THEM TO BUY? |
44621 | ARE YOU EARNING THE RIGHT TO ASK THEM TO BUY? |
44621 | ARE YOU EARNING THE RIGHT TO MANAGE OTHERS? |
44621 | ARE YOU EARNING THE RIGHT TO MANAGE OTHERS? |
44621 | ARE YOU EARNING THE RIGHT TO MANAGE OTHERS? |
44621 | ARE YOU LISTENING? |
44621 | ARE YOU LISTENING? |
44621 | ARE YOU THE ONE? |
44621 | ARE YOU THE ONE? |
44621 | ART: WHAT IS IT? |
44621 | ASSIGNMENT K. Mea Productions, Inc. WHO''S BEEN SLEEPING IN MY BED? |
44621 | American Diabetes Assn., Inc. HOW SURE ARE YOU? |
44621 | CAN YOU HEAR ME? |
44621 | CAR 54, WHERE ARE YOU? |
44621 | COMPANY OF COWARDS? |
44621 | COMPANY OF COWARDS? |
44621 | COMPANY OF COWARDS? |
44621 | FAMILIES AND HISTORY: WHY IS MY NAME ANDERSON? |
44621 | FAMILIES AND HISTORY: WHY IS MY NAME ANDERSON? |
44621 | FAMILIES AND HISTORY: WHY IS MY NAME ANDERSON? |
44621 | FAMILIES AND HISTORY: WHY IS MY NAME ANDERSON? |
44621 | FAMILIES AND TRANSPORTATION: WHAT''S A POCKET FOR? |
44621 | FAMILIES AND TRANSPORTATION: WHAT''S A POCKET FOR? |
44621 | FAMILIES AND TRANSPORTATION: WHAT''S A POCKET FOR? |
44621 | FAMILIES AND TRANSPORTATION: WHAT''S A POCKET FOR? |
44621 | French, Warren G. ARE POETS PEOPLE? |
44621 | Georgia Textile Manufacturers Assn., Inc. WHERE''S THE SAFETY CATCH? |
44621 | Gibraltar Productions, Inc. MAN''S FAVORITE SPORT? |
44621 | HALT, WHO GROWS THERE? |
44621 | HOOK LINE AND WHAT KNOT? |
44621 | HOOK LINE AND WHAT KNOT? |
44621 | HOW BIG? |
44621 | HOW DO I LOVE THEE? |
44621 | HOW DO I LOVE THEE? |
44621 | HOW DO I LOVE THEE? |
44621 | HOW DOES A GARDEN GROW? |
44621 | HOW DOES MY CHILD LEARN TO READ? |
44621 | HOW GOOD IS A GOOD GUY? |
44621 | HOW MANY 1/2''S IS 3/2? |
44621 | HOW MUCH HOMEWORK IS ENOUGH? |
44621 | HOW MUCH LOVING DOES A NORMAL COUPLE NEED? |
44621 | HOW SOFT IS A CLOUD? |
44621 | HOW SOFT IS A CLOUD? |
44621 | HOW SOLID IS ROCK? |
44621 | HOW SOLID IS ROCK? |
44621 | HOW SURE ARE YOU? |
44621 | HOW VAST IS SPACE? |
44621 | HOW VAST IS SPACE? |
44621 | HOW WAS THAT AGAIN? |
44621 | HOW WAS THAT AGAIN? |
44621 | IS PARIS BURNING? |
44621 | IS PARIS BURNING? |
44621 | IS PARIS BURNING? |
44621 | IS PARIS BURNING? |
44621 | IS SMOKING WORTH IT? |
44621 | IS SMOKING WORTH IT? |
44621 | IS THERE A DOCTOR IN THE MOUSE? |
44621 | JOBS FOR MEN: WHERE AM I GOING? |
44621 | JOBS FOR MEN: WHERE AM I GOING? |
44621 | JOBS FOR MEN: WHERE AM I GOING? |
44621 | JOBS FOR MEN: WHERE AM I GOING? |
44621 | JUSTICE FOR ALL? |
44621 | LONELY, OR A LONER? |
44621 | LONELY, OR A LONER? |
44621 | LSD, THE TRIP TO WHERE? |
44621 | LSD, THE TRIP TO WHERE? |
44621 | Lance Productions, Inc. WHAT WILL THEY THINK OF NEXT? |
44621 | Laurel Productions, Inc. MAN''S FAVORITE SPORT? |
44621 | MAN''S FAVORITE SPORT? |
44621 | MARRIAGE: WHAT KIND FOR YOU? |
44621 | ME IN MEDIA? |
44621 | ME IN MEDIA? |
44621 | METROPOLIS-- CREATOR OR DESTROYER? |
44621 | METROPOLIS-- CREATOR OR DESTROYER? |
44621 | METROPOLIS-- CREATOR OR DESTROYER? |
44621 | MY LIFE TO LIVE? |
44621 | Marianne Productions, S.A. IS PARIS BURNING? |
44621 | Menninger Foundation, Topeka, Kan. WHO CARES ABOUT JAMIE? |
44621 | NARCOTICS-- WHY NOT? |
44621 | Nonnenmacher, Nicholas T. PEACE OR COMMUNISM? |
44621 | OR? |
44621 | OR? |
44621 | PEACE OR COMMUNISM? |
44621 | Peeler, Richard E. CERAMICS, WHAT, WHY, HOW? |
44621 | Phillips, Roger M. HOW WAS YOUR EVENING? |
44621 | REDWOODS-- SAVED? |
44621 | REDWOODS-- SAVED? |
44621 | REMEMBER EDDIE SIMPSON? |
44621 | SANTO DOMINGO, WHY ARE WE THERE? |
44621 | SANTO DOMINGO, WHY ARE WE THERE? |
44621 | SHOULD I KNOW MY CHILD''S IQ? |
44621 | SILENT NIGHTS? |
44621 | SILENT NIGHTS? |
44621 | SMOKE, ANYONE? |
44621 | SMOKE, ANYONE? |
44621 | Sib Tower 12, Inc. IS THERE A DOCTOR IN THE MOUSE? |
44621 | THE MAKING OF THE PRESIDENT, 1960. WHO IN''68? |
44621 | Transcontinental Films, Inc. IS PARIS BURNING? |
44621 | WATCHA WATCHIN''? |
44621 | WATCHA WATCHIN''? |
44621 | WHAT ABOUT SEX? |
44621 | WHAT ABOUT SEX? |
44621 | WHAT ABOUT THE''61 CHEVY''S? |
44621 | WHAT ABOUT THE''61 CHEVY''S? |
44621 | WHAT ARE FOSSILS? |
44621 | WHAT ARE FOSSILS? |
44621 | WHAT ARE STARS MADE OF? |
44621 | WHAT ARE TEACHING MACHINES? |
44621 | WHAT ARE THINGS MADE OF? |
44621 | WHAT CAN I CONTRIBUTE? |
44621 | WHAT CAN I CONTRIBUTE? |
44621 | WHAT CAN I CONTRIBUTE? |
44621 | WHAT COLOR ARE YOU? |
44621 | WHAT DID YOU DO IN THE WAR, DADDY? |
44621 | WHAT DID YOU DO IN THE WAR, DADDY? |
44621 | WHAT DIRECTION? |
44621 | WHAT DIRECTION? |
44621 | WHAT DOES HUCKLEBERRY FINN SAY? |
44621 | WHAT DOES OUR FLAG MEAN? |
44621 | WHAT EVER HAPPENED TO BABY JANE? |
44621 | WHAT EVER HAPPENED TO BABY JANE? |
44621 | WHAT EVER HAPPENED TO BABY JANE? |
44621 | WHAT EVER HAPPENED TO BABY JANE? |
44621 | WHAT FINER PURPOSE? |
44621 | WHAT FINER PURPOSE? |
44621 | WHAT FIRST? |
44621 | WHAT FIRST? |
44621 | WHAT HAPPENS NEXT? |
44621 | WHAT HOLDS SATELLITES IN ORBIT? |
44621 | WHAT HOLDS SATELLITES IN ORBIT? |
44621 | WHAT IS A BIRD? |
44621 | WHAT IS A FISH? |
44621 | WHAT IS A FORCE? |
44621 | WHAT IS A GLACIER? |
44621 | WHAT IS A GLACIER? |
44621 | WHAT IS A MAMMAL? |
44621 | WHAT IS A NEIGHBORHOOD? |
44621 | WHAT IS A PAINTING? |
44621 | WHAT IS A PAINTING? |
44621 | WHAT IS A PAINTING? |
44621 | WHAT IS A REPTILE? |
44621 | WHAT IS A VOLCANO? |
44621 | WHAT IS A VOLCANO? |
44621 | WHAT IS ACTIVE AND CREATIVE READING? |
44621 | WHAT IS ACTIVE AND CREATIVE READING? |
44621 | WHAT IS ACTIVE AND CREATIVE READING? |
44621 | WHAT IS ACTIVE AND CREATIVE READING? |
44621 | WHAT IS AN AMPHIBIAN? |
44621 | WHAT IS AN ECLIPSE? |
44621 | WHAT IS AUTOMATION? |
44621 | WHAT IS ECOLOGY? |
44621 | WHAT IS EFFECTIVE READING? |
44621 | WHAT IS EFFECTIVE READING? |
44621 | WHAT IS EFFECTIVE READING? |
44621 | WHAT IS EFFECTIVE READING? |
44621 | WHAT IS ELECTRIC CURRENT? |
44621 | WHAT IS EROSION? |
44621 | WHAT IS EROSION? |
44621 | WHAT IS MEANING? |
44621 | WHAT IS POETRY? |
44621 | WHAT IS RHYTHM? |
44621 | WHAT IS SCIENCE? |
44621 | WHAT IS SPACE? |
44621 | WHAT IS UNIFORM MOTION? |
44621 | WHAT KIND OF GOVERNMENT HAVE WE? |
44621 | WHAT MAKES CLOUDS? |
44621 | WHAT MAKES CLOUDS? |
44621 | WHAT MAKES THE WIND BLOW? |
44621 | WHAT MAKES THE WIND BLOW? |
44621 | WHAT MAKES WEATHER? |
44621 | WHAT ON EARTH? |
44621 | WHAT''S IMPORTANT? |
44621 | WHAT''S IMPORTANT? |
44621 | WHAT''S IN A STORY? |
44621 | WHAT''S IN SIGHT? |
44621 | WHAT''S IN SIGHT? |
44621 | WHAT''S INSIDE THE EARTH? |
44621 | WHAT''S IT GOING TO COST YOU? |
44621 | WHAT''S IT GOING TO COST YOU? |
44621 | WHAT''S LEFT? |
44621 | WHAT''S LEFT? |
44621 | WHAT''S MY LION? |
44621 | WHAT''S NEW PUSSYCAT? |
44621 | WHAT''S NEW PUSSYCAT? |
44621 | WHAT''S NEW PUSSYCAT? |
44621 | WHAT''S SO IMPORTANT ABOUT A WHEEL? |
44621 | WHAT''S SO IMPORTANT ABOUT A WHEEL? |
44621 | WHAT''S SO IMPORTANT ABOUT A WHEEL? |
44621 | WHAT''S THE BIG ATTRACTION? |
44621 | WHAT''S THE DIFFERENCE? |
44621 | WHAT''S THE GOOD OF A TEST? |
44621 | WHAT''S THE GOOD OF A TEST? |
44621 | WHAT''S THE GOOD OF A TEST? |
44621 | WHAT''S UP DOWN UNDER? |
44621 | WHAT''S UP DOWN UNDER? |
44621 | WHERE DOES OUR MEAT COME FROM? |
44621 | WHICH IS WITCH? |
44621 | WHICH IS WITCH? |
44621 | WHICH WAY IS NORTH? |
44621 | WHICH WAY IS PARADISE? |
44621 | WHICH WAY IS PARADISE? |
44621 | WHICH WAY? |
44621 | WHICH WAY? |
44621 | WHO CARES ABOUT JAMIE? |
44621 | WHO DO VOODOO? |
44621 | WHO IN''68? |
44621 | WHO IS DRIVING? |
44621 | WHO IS DRIVING? |
44621 | WHO KILLED ROY BROWN? |
44621 | WHO KILLED ROY BROWN? |
44621 | WHO SCENT YOU? |
44621 | WHO SHALL LIVE? |
44621 | WHO SHALL LIVE? |
44621 | WHO WAS THAT LADY? |
44621 | WHO WAS THAT LADY? |
44621 | WHO WAS THAT LADY? |
44621 | WHO''S AFRAID OF VIRGINIA WOOLF? |
44621 | WHO''S AFRAID OF VIRGINIA WOOLF? |
44621 | WHO''S BEEN SLEEPING IN MY BED? |
44621 | WHO''S BEEN SLEEPING IN MY BED? |
44621 | WHO''S BEEN SLEEPING IN MY BED? |
44621 | WHO''S MINDING THE STORE? |
44621 | WHO''S MINDING THE STORE? |
44621 | WHO''S MINDING THE STORE? |
44621 | WHO, WHAT, WHEN, WHERE, WHY? |
44621 | WHOM SHALL WE FEAR? |
44621 | WHY BRACEROS? |
44621 | WHY BRACEROS? |
44621 | WHY COMMUNICATION SATELLITES? |
44621 | WHY DO WE STILL HAVE MOUNTAINS? |
44621 | WHY DO WE STILL HAVE MOUNTAINS? |
44621 | WHY EAT OUR VEGETABLES? |
44621 | WHY IS IT? |
44621 | WILL WE HAVE YEAR''ROUND SCHOOLS? |
44621 | Whirlpool Corp. HOW MANY MEALS TO THE MOON? |
44621 | YOU CHALLENGE ME TO A WHAT? |
44621 | YOU SAW A WHAT? |
44621 | YOU WANNA KNOW WHAT REALLY GOES ON IN A HOSPITAL? |
44621 | YOU''RE WHAT? |
44621 | YUGOSLAVIA: BRIDGE OR TIGHTROPE? |
6678 | But now you are covered with bunions And spongy and morbid and blue; You bite in the night like an adder-- O say, what has happened to you? |
6678 | Father is a corner druggist-- Why should I abstain? 6678 Oh, father,"she cried in hurt bewilderment,"what kind of place was that?" |
6678 | Well, Jack,he says,"You want some real good gin?" |
6678 | What could I say? 6678 What''s the matter?" |
6678 | ''Tickling Tottie''s Tummy?'' |
6678 | And after all who does make the best censor, or nonsenseor or whatever you choose to call it? |
6678 | And as for religion-- Well, if there''s a God why does n''t He stop this bloody war, or, anyway, where the blazes is He? |
6678 | And do n''t these statements illustrate Our Nation''s progress up to date? |
6678 | And is there no way of escape? |
6678 | And pretty soon there''s all the other laws, And how''re you goin''to keep from think''likewise About a thing like stealin'', and all that? |
6678 | And so, of course, later I did want some, And had to pay that much, and even more; But hell, what can you do? |
6678 | And the policeman just said,''Here, where you going? |
6678 | But did it give old Adam pause, This One and only law there was? |
6678 | But does the nonsenseorship rest content with its achievement? |
6678 | But is not that ideal for the nonsenseorship? |
6678 | But now is he permitted to have his own secret museum of virility? |
6678 | But that prohibition, like all the others, has its side door-- may one say its small- family entrance? |
6678 | But was there not still some remedy which would keep at least part of the edition free from that dreadful word? |
6678 | But what is the situation? |
6678 | Can naïveté go further? |
6678 | Can you believe it? |
6678 | Charles Lamb, a typically English author, wrote a poem beginning"Who first invented work?" |
6678 | Conversation will be wholly instructive, for in fifty years the last generation capable of saying,"Do you remember that night--?" |
6678 | D''you want the whole of England?'' |
6678 | De Gourmont, writing of education, asks:"Is it necessary to cultivate at such pains in the minds of the young, hatred of what is new?" |
6678 | Do n''t the smutty shows always make money? |
6678 | Do not the censors read our books? |
6678 | Does a censor ever have need of any other word but"no"? |
6678 | Does an American feel happy in his work? |
6678 | Does anybody in his senses imagine that Isadora Duncan has been changed, or could be changed, for better or worse? |
6678 | Does n''t the public invariably stampede to the most bedridden plays? |
6678 | Does the act of work give him a satisfaction which is not felt by an Englishman? |
6678 | Here it is in print; is n''t it disgraceful? |
6678 | How does it come Professor Frinck of Cornell is not in jail? |
6678 | How many times I got to tell you? |
6678 | If citizenship is a mere legal figment, by what right do States send their citizens to war? |
6678 | If water was just as good, why did not water remain in the casks? |
6678 | In a hundred years it may be that men will meet around a table and that one will say to the other,"What have you got?" |
6678 | In the darkness I called to them as they went down the gangway into their boat,"What is a wowzer?" |
6678 | Is n''t the pornographic play the most valuable of all theatrical properties?" |
6678 | Is there reasonable assurance that we shall always be able to keep the guiding principles of our national life, the nonsenseorship, a child mind? |
6678 | Leave her alone, you hear? |
6678 | My dainty, fastidious tummy-- O what have you had to endure? |
6678 | No more wars? |
6678 | One comes from the man who can be counted on to say:"They tell me that show at the Eltinge-- What''s it called? |
6678 | People pass with unmoved faces-- Why remark such commonplaces? |
6678 | So I say to myself:''If tellin''lies is all that bloody good in war, what bloody good is tellin''truth in peace?''" |
6678 | Suppose its answer had been"yes"to your righteous question? |
6678 | THE AUTHOR OF"THE MIRRORS OF WASHINGTON"Has anyone ever stopped to think what the nonsenseorship would do to our suppressed desires? |
6678 | That''s what this Prohibition done for him, And what''s it do for me, I''d like to know? |
6678 | This was denied in a great sputter, to which Miss Royden replied,"How about Queen Elizabeth and Queen Victoria?" |
6678 | This, then, is all very well, but what is the end to be? |
6678 | Too late to reset? |
6678 | Very well, what happens? |
6678 | Was it not thoughtful, good and kind For such a man of such a mind To show an interest so grand In his misguided native land? |
6678 | Was it not written,"The child is censor to the man?" |
6678 | Was n''t it still possible to rout out the type at that point, to chisel the word away and leave a blank? |
6678 | Well, some of us, Of course, might get just a wee mite too much Under the belt, but who did that ever hurt? |
6678 | Were they losing control of us? |
6678 | What divination is theirs which makes them so positive? |
6678 | What was it that it had this wonderful quality of always being right? |
6678 | Who are happy over Prohibition? |
6678 | Who gets a long- term lease nowadays? |
6678 | Why the Extremists? |
6678 | Why the Uplift Workers? |
6678 | Why, then, the Reformers? |
6678 | Would anyone exchange a voice like that as a ruler for the wisdom of the world''s ten wisest men? |
6678 | You hear me? |
6678 | You hear that? |
6678 | You think I''ll have my son foolin''around A little snippy rat that''s all stuck- up, And thinks my son''s not good enough for her? |
6678 | You would ask,"Shall we tamely acquiesce while the labor unions import the Russian revolution into our very midst?" |
6678 | You would frame your question thus:"Shall we stand by idly and pusillanimously while our neighbor invades our land and rapes our women?" |
6678 | You would not go to the temple and say,"Shall we reduce wages?" |
6678 | _ What''s that?_ You have known a politician. |
6678 | said to it? |
9542 | And then, best runner of Greece, Whose limbs did duty indeed,--what gift is promised thyself? 9542 Has Persia come,--does Athens ask aid,--may Sparta befriend? |
9542 | Their van will be upon us before the bridge goes down; And if they once may win the bridge, what hope to save the town? |
9542 | What shall I say, brave Admiral, say, If we sight naught but seas at dawn? |
9542 | ***** LEWIS CARROLL ENGLAND, 1832- 1898 A SONG OF LOVE Say, what is the spell, when her fledglings are cheeping, That lures the bird home to her nest? |
9542 | And where is that band who so vauntingly swore That the havoc of war and the battle''s confusion A home and a country should leave us no more? |
9542 | Answer me quick, what help, what hand do you stretch o''er destruction''s brink? |
9542 | Athene, are Spartans a quarry beyond Swing of thy spear? |
9542 | Athens to aid? |
9542 | Away went Gilpin-- who but he? |
9542 | Brave Admiral, say but one good word: What shall we do when hope is gone?" |
9542 | Brave Admiral, speak; what shall I say?" |
9542 | Did Sparta respond? |
9542 | How-- when? |
9542 | I need Thy presence every passing hour; What but Thy grace can foil the tempter''s power? |
9542 | I stay my haste, I make delays, For what avails this eager pace? |
9542 | I stood Quivering,--the limbs of me fretting as fire frets, an inch from dry wood:"Persia has come, Athens asks aid, and still they debate? |
9542 | Night in the fosse? |
9542 | Now who will stand on either hand, and keep the bridge with me?" |
9542 | O my Athens-- Sparta love thee? |
9542 | Or dost thou dread the billows''rage, Or tremble at the gale? |
9542 | Or wakes the tired mother, whose infant is weeping, To cuddle and croon it to rest? |
9542 | Persia has come, we are here, where is She?" |
9542 | Say, whence is the voice that when anger is burning, Bids the whirl of the tempest to cease? |
9542 | Say, whose is the skill that paints valley and hill, Like a picture so fair to the sight? |
9542 | Seek''st thou the plashy brink Of weedy lake, or marge of river wide, Or where the rocking billows rise and sink On the chafed ocean side? |
9542 | So daring in love, and so dauntless in war, Have ye e''er heard of gallant like young Lochinvar? |
9542 | So shalt thou rest, and what if thou withdraw In silence from the living, and no friend Take note of thy departure? |
9542 | Than I what godship to Athens more helpful of old? |
9542 | That flecks the green meadow with sunshine and shadow, Till the little lambs leap with delight? |
9542 | That stirs the vexed soul with an aching-- a yearning For the brotherly hand- grip of peace? |
9542 | The calender, amazed to see His neighbor in such trim, Laid down his pipe, flew to the gate, And thus accosted him:"What news? |
9542 | Was there a man dismayed? |
9542 | Wha can fill a coward''s grave? |
9542 | Wha sae base as be a slave? |
9542 | Wha will be a traitor knave? |
9542 | What matter if I stand alone? |
9542 | What the magic that charms the glad babe in her arms, Till it cooes with the voice of the dove? |
9542 | When can their glory fade? |
9542 | Whence the music that fills all our being-- that thrills Around us, beneath, and above? |
9542 | Where are the flowers, the fair young flowers, that lately sprang and stood In brighter light and softer airs, a beauteous sisterhood? |
9542 | Where is Death''s sting? |
9542 | Where, Grave, thy victory? |
9542 | Wherefore? |
9542 | Who gave you the name of Old Glory-- say, who-- Who gave you the name of Old Glory? |
9542 | Who, like Thyself, my guide and stay can be? |
9542 | Why dost thou weep and wail? |
9542 | Why pale in my presence?" |
9542 | Will no one tell me what she sings? |
9542 | he gracious began:"How is it,--Athens, only in Hellas, holds me aloof? |
9542 | quoth false Sextus;"will not the villain drown? |
9542 | say, does the star- spangled banner yet wave O''er the land of the free, and the home of the brave? |
9542 | what news? |
9542 | what was it I came on, of wonders that are? |
9542 | who knows what the Clover thinks? |
9542 | your tidings tell Tell me you must and shall-- Say why bareheaded you are come, Or why you come at all?" |
62888 | ''May I go over it? |
62888 | ''The_ Marie Joseph_?'' 62888 Ai n''t there nothing to be done with that corpus out there?" |
62888 | And what sort of a breeze is that? |
62888 | Are n''t the books in the captain''s cabin? |
62888 | Are they? |
62888 | Are you ready? |
62888 | Back and over the town? |
62888 | Bombard the town? |
62888 | Broke? |
62888 | But how could it have come aboard? |
62888 | Can you go to the tower to- day? |
62888 | Do I know it, sir? 62888 Do n''t you see? |
62888 | Do you know sea service? |
62888 | Do you know that the captain is very ill? |
62888 | Do you want all my engines to freeze? |
62888 | Do? |
62888 | Expect some weather? |
62888 | Have you served? 62888 How do you like it?" |
62888 | How is cholera to be caught in that fashion? |
62888 | How so? |
62888 | I asked my neighbour:''You are not too cold, are you, Mademoiselle?'' |
62888 | I asked myself,''Why this strange sensation of well- being and of joy?'' 62888 If there''s any of them game to sink the thing, may they do it?" |
62888 | Is cholera to be caught so? |
62888 | Is it possible that this calm can last much longer? |
62888 | No man amongst us is safe, then, now? |
62888 | Now what? |
62888 | Over the town? |
62888 | Ready, gunner? |
62888 | See her? |
62888 | Shall I hook him overboard, sir? |
62888 | Then, after several seconds, he spoke:''Môsieu, are you the owner of this ship?'' |
62888 | What are you going to do? |
62888 | What do you make of it, boatswain? |
62888 | What do you see? |
62888 | What the deuce is wrong with you? |
62888 | What time is it? |
62888 | What''s this? |
62888 | What''s to be done, Archer? |
62888 | What''s up? |
62888 | Where are we? |
62888 | Where do you get your liquor from? |
62888 | Where have you worked up to this time? |
62888 | Why is that? |
62888 | You do n''t mean--? |
62888 | You''re well men, now; keep well, wo n''t you? 62888 Ai n''t this hell''s delight? 62888 And ai n''t he enough to make a disease of the hatmosphere itself, from horizon to horizon? |
62888 | And even then no word of the ship, except as it might be this from Hardenberg:"What is it? |
62888 | And instead of this, our stolid, steady, trusty old boat was-- what shall I say? |
62888 | Are they not going to catch the enemy unawares? |
62888 | At last he came to Aspinwall, and there was to be the end of his failures,--for what could reach him on that rocky island? |
62888 | Because she was there? |
62888 | Because why? |
62888 | But just the same if I were to home now, a- foolin''about Gloucester way in my little dough- dish-- d''ye know what? |
62888 | But to whom? |
62888 | Can they have suspected anything? |
62888 | D''you see that red and white farm?" |
62888 | Do you hear anything? |
62888 | Do you know I can scarcely look over this little cliff without getting giddy?" |
62888 | Do you see any change in the water?" |
62888 | Does one know? |
62888 | Georges said:"Will you excuse me?" |
62888 | Have you sound legs?" |
62888 | Have you testimonials of honourable government service?" |
62888 | He saw everything as it was; everything asked him,"Dost remember?" |
62888 | How could cholera come aboard?" |
62888 | How does it happen that the presence of a woman overwhelms us so? |
62888 | I asked:"''Is that the island of Ré?'' |
62888 | I looked him straight between the eyes as I asked:"Were you asleep? |
62888 | I started and cried,"Is that thing still there?" |
62888 | If a ship had passed nearby us what would the sailors have said? |
62888 | Is it the power of her grace which infolds us? |
62888 | Is it the seduction in her beauty and youth, which intoxicates one like wine? |
62888 | Is that why you saw her so suddenly?" |
62888 | Is that your name? |
62888 | It''s my turn next, ai n''t it?" |
62888 | Might you know anything of physic? |
62888 | Nothin'', hey? |
62888 | Of course, we all said"current"; but why did n''t the log- line trail? |
62888 | Perkins?" |
62888 | She, a little unknown English girl? |
62888 | Skavinski? |
62888 | The Commander puts the telephone to his lips:"Hullo!--is that enough?" |
62888 | The book was Polish,--what did that mean? |
62888 | Then the little English girl began to smile, and murmured:"''So we too are shipwrecked?'' |
62888 | Therefore the following conversation began:"Where are you from?" |
62888 | We joined Strokher, and as I came up the others were asking:"Where? |
62888 | What have you left?" |
62888 | What is it, d''ye know, sir?" |
62888 | What more? |
62888 | What''s a- going to blow us clear whilst_ he_ keeps watch?" |
62888 | What''s the matter?" |
62888 | Where?" |
62888 | Who could have sent the book? |
62888 | Who''s to handle it? |
62888 | Who? |
62888 | Why not then by books which have been handled by cholera- poisoned people, or by the atmosphere of a body dead of the plague?" |
62888 | Why? |
62888 | Would the morning never come? |
62888 | asked Johnson;"are you sick?" |
62888 | who can tell? |
62888 | why? |
52491 | 14 Do you see the Man with the Bald Head in the Second Row? |
52491 | 16 What do we see here? |
52491 | 23 What is this? |
52491 | 38 Are you Cold, children? |
52491 | 39 Is this a New kind of Music? |
52491 | 43 Shades of Napoleon, what have we here? |
52491 | 57 Do you see the Man who has just come in? |
52491 | 6 Is n''t that dog Tiny? |
52491 | 69 Who is this Stately chocolate lady? |
52491 | 77 Is n''t this a cute Little envelope? |
52491 | 78 Who are all these People standing around? |
52491 | 79 Do you Notice the chilly feeling, children? |
52491 | 8 Do you see the Clever Usher? |
52491 | 81 Why is this Man called the Low comedian? |
52491 | 88 Who is the Handsome man in the Beautiful greasy overalls? |
52491 | 89 Can you tell me What that thing is Right in front of the Gallery? |
52491 | 91 Have you noticed the Wires under your seats, children? |
52491 | 96 Did you notice the Check room? |
52491 | Ah, it is,"Foourr, elseven, emniine,"Do you not understand that he is calling the Carriages? |
52491 | And, besides, what''s the use? |
52491 | Are either set of figures correct? |
52491 | Are not his Clothes wonderful? |
52491 | Are there many people as good to their kind as actors and actresses? |
52491 | Are there other People waiting to buy seats? |
52491 | Are there three hundred people on the Stage? |
52491 | Are they for Thursday night? |
52491 | Are they not Good friends? |
52491 | Are they not Lucky to get them back? |
52491 | Are they not Very loving? |
52491 | Are you not glad that it is raining, so that you can Hear him Swear? |
52491 | But are they on the Aisle? |
52491 | But the newspaper man; what About him? |
52491 | But what is that Noise on the stage? |
52491 | But why does she leave her Wraps behind? |
52491 | But why is the Little lady crying? |
52491 | But why the bald spot? |
52491 | But would it not Be a nice thing to Repay him for his Trouble? |
52491 | Can any one tell where He got the Lovely clothes he Wore in the Car? |
52491 | Can you define the Word"perhaps,"children? |
52491 | Can you not Guess? |
52491 | Can you tell Me where the Monologue artist Gets his jokes from? |
52491 | Did he say he got a Hundred Dollars a week? |
52491 | Did the Lady order the Flowers herself? |
52491 | Did you Ever have Bad Dreams? |
52491 | Did you Know that he Owns a Large part of Broadway? |
52491 | Do great singers never Grow old? |
52491 | Do n''t you remember how Clean and white it Looked last night? |
52491 | Do the public Like to be done? |
52491 | Do you Hear the real Fire bells? |
52491 | Do you know What it is? |
52491 | Do you know what those ropes are? |
52491 | Do you notice any Difference? |
52491 | Do you notice his white gloves? |
52491 | Do you see anything with White shirt sleeves Running across the Stage? |
52491 | Does he Know the Soubrette? |
52491 | Does he enjoy the jokes? |
52491 | Does he mean the hamlet where he was Born? |
52491 | Does it mean that the management has been hit? |
52491 | Does it not remind you of the Delirium Tremens? |
52491 | Does she Know any one in the Box? |
52491 | Does she Know him? |
52491 | Does the picture resemble the Actress? |
52491 | Has he got a Ticket? |
52491 | Has n''t she a lovely Shape? |
52491 | Has the Play run a Year? |
52491 | Has the man nothing further in Front? |
52491 | How can he afford such luxuries? |
52491 | How did he Get his Wonderful Musical education? |
52491 | How does the Poor man make a Living? |
52491 | How does the Speculator get the Tickets if the Management do n''t want him to? |
52491 | If any one should lose their Diamonds, and he Were to find them, would He turn them in at the Box office? |
52491 | In the front row? |
52491 | Is a touch a hit? |
52491 | Is he Talking to himself? |
52491 | Is he a Thespian? |
52491 | Is he not Kind? |
52491 | Is he not a good Father to the Poor Hard- working Chorus Girl? |
52491 | Is he not a wonderful Thing? |
52491 | Is it Simply because he is a Calcium man? |
52491 | Is it because he Comes high? |
52491 | Is it because the Lovely heroine is in Distress? |
52491 | Is it not a Pretty Book? |
52491 | Is it not a work of Art? |
52491 | Is it not nice of the Singer to give a farewell tour? |
52491 | Is it not the Man we saw on the Street car that Every one took for an Actor? |
52491 | Is n''t he clever? |
52491 | Is n''t it a lovely arrangement? |
52491 | Is n''t it nice of Them to Come Late, that Many people can see Them? |
52491 | Is n''t it real Mean of the Management to Try and Drive the Nice Speculator out of Business? |
52491 | Is n''t she the Real Thing? |
52491 | Is n''t that nice of Gwendoline? |
52491 | Is n''t that too bad? |
52491 | Is n''t there a lot of Dust up here? |
52491 | Is not his uniform Gorgeous? |
52491 | Is she not a great linguist? |
52491 | Is that a Horse in the lower corner? |
52491 | Is the Fluff chiffon or Organdie? |
52491 | Is the Idol married? |
52491 | Is the comedian Jealous then? |
52491 | Is the language she Uses now, French? |
52491 | Is there anything Doing to- night? |
52491 | It is a pretty building, is it Not? |
52491 | Johnny, do you Remember the Bells on the Cows up country? |
52491 | No? |
52491 | One of the men is Lying; which one is it? |
52491 | Or are these stains of toil? |
52491 | Or the public? |
52491 | Shall we look at the Figures on the outside of the Envelope? |
52491 | She is starving; but Why does she not Pawn her diamond rings? |
52491 | Surely you Did not expect him to Move? |
52491 | Then where do the Flowers come from? |
52491 | There, do you see how it is Done? |
52491 | Was it the Landing stage at Ellis Island? |
52491 | Well? |
52491 | What are his Functions? |
52491 | What are they for? |
52491 | What do you think the Chappie is Good for-- Nothing? |
52491 | What does she do On the Stage? |
52491 | What does that Mean? |
52491 | What else does she Do? |
52491 | What is he Doing here on the Stage at so Early an hour? |
52491 | What is he Saying? |
52491 | What is that he is Saying? |
52491 | What is the name of the Joke? |
52491 | What will he do when the man who Bought the Seats at the box office comes in? |
52491 | What will she Do now? |
52491 | When he pays up will the lady stop Crying? |
52491 | Whose little boy is that Following him? |
52491 | Why did the Lady take the pictures if they do Not look like her? |
52491 | Why do n''t they go To the Police? |
52491 | Why do they Call the place the Flies? |
52491 | Why do they Let him in Free? |
52491 | Why does he Call the leading man"Charlie"? |
52491 | Why does he Do this? |
52491 | Why does he Hurry so? |
52491 | Why does he Not go to work? |
52491 | Why does he have Wads of Bills between his fingers? |
52491 | Why does he use a Megaphone? |
52491 | Why does she Cry? |
52491 | Why does she not Shut the Window? |
52491 | Why does the Manager laugh and say next Tuesday? |
52491 | Why does the man in the White shirt sleeves run off the Stage in such a Hurry? |
52491 | Why has the Lady with Pink hair got on a Green sheet? |
52491 | Why is he So angry about a little Thing? |
52491 | Why, do n''t you know? |
52491 | Will he fire the pretty Lady star? |
52491 | Will he give the Treasurer some of the Dough? |
52491 | Will he go on to a Club after the Show? |
52491 | Will he make the standees, settees? |
52491 | Will he pay for them? |
52491 | Will he say"excuse me"? |
52491 | Will it ever Die? |
52491 | Will she enjoy her Trip to Europe? |
52491 | Will she get her Salary? |
52491 | Will she stay in London long? |
52491 | Will she take the Hat off? |
52491 | Will the Bouncer tell you to Stop? |
52491 | Will the Manager accept the Play? |
52491 | Will the landlady mind that? |
52491 | Will the manager go? |
52491 | Will the ship go? |
52491 | Will they let the Lobster into the Theatre? |
52491 | You would Never think it from his Talk, would you? |
52491 | You would not Like to see the poor man out of a Job, would you? |
28726 | ''A coward?'' 28726 ''And if I do n''t come?'' |
28726 | ''And the work?'' 28726 ''And the work?'' |
28726 | ''And will ye not go after thim?'' 28726 ''And ye need a dollar?'' |
28726 | ''But what''ll become of us?'' 28726 ''But what''s it fur, pard?'' |
28726 | ''Ca n''t drown but once, can you? 28726 ''D''ye know where the patrol- leader lives?'' |
28726 | ''Did you know, trumpeter, that, when I came to Plymouth, they put me into a line regiment?'' 28726 ''Do yez dig yer fun out of the ground like coal?'' |
28726 | ''Do?'' 28726 ''Go?'' |
28726 | ''Have you never heard of the League of the Red- headed Men?'' 28726 ''How do ye know?'' |
28726 | ''How should it be with me? 28726 ''In her?'' |
28726 | ''In your which?'' 28726 ''Is there no seagoin''craft in this harbor?'' |
28726 | ''Land?'' 28726 ''Movin''?'' |
28726 | ''They-- who?'' 28726 ''Troop Sergeant- Major Thomas Irons, how is it with you?'' |
28726 | ''Trooper Henry Buckingham, how it is with you?'' 28726 ''Wall, what do you want, anyway?'' |
28726 | ''Well,''says I seein''that it was poor fortune to be quarrelin''with a slip of a kid,''do yez want the dollar or not?'' 28726 ''Wha- what''s dat you say, boss? |
28726 | ''What are you settin''there for?'' 28726 ''What do you call purely nominal?'' |
28726 | ''What in tunket do we want to drown for? 28726 ''What would be the hours?'' |
28726 | ''What''s the matther with that scut of a skipper?'' 28726 ''What? |
28726 | ''What?'' 28726 ''Where could I find him?'' |
28726 | ''Where you goin''?'' 28726 ''Which way?'' |
28726 | ''Why in time,''says I,''did n''t you mind me and go up the ocean side? 28726 ''Why not?'' |
28726 | ''Why that?'' 28726 ''Why wake me?'' |
28726 | ''Why, pard,''says he,''what''s the matter? 28726 ''Why, what is it, then?'' |
28726 | ''Ye have followed the sea for many years?'' 28726 A misfortune, my friend? |
28726 | Am I so terrible as all that? |
28726 | And I want you to tuck it away in your thinker-- savez? 28726 And am I to be put on the articles?" |
28726 | And can ye put me on some craft bound in, cappen? |
28726 | And did n''t? |
28726 | And has your business been attended to in your absence? |
28726 | And how could you tell that they would make their attempt to- night? |
28726 | And how have you given your word? |
28726 | And now a question for a question: Do you know Lady Vandeleur? |
28726 | And sit in the dark? |
28726 | And the trumpeter just lifted the lids of his eyes, and answered:''How should I not be one with you, drummer Johnny-- Johnny boy? 28726 And what are you doing in here, anyhow? |
28726 | And what did you do then? |
28726 | And what did you see? |
28726 | And what of it? |
28726 | And what, if you please, may be his name? |
28726 | And you could not share them with anybody, could n''t you? 28726 Anything to do with it? |
28726 | Are all the Ocean House boarders weak- minded? |
28726 | Are you sure about that? |
28726 | Are you the missing man o''that crew? |
28726 | As we intered the hotel a tall man, with the mar- rk of aut''ority on him, observed me unifor- rm and addressed me:''What do you know about this?'' 28726 At what time?" |
28726 | Aw, what for? |
28726 | Awful thing, was n''t it? 28726 Beaver asked you and me the same question, you remember?" |
28726 | Bill,says I,"there is n''t any heart disease in your family, is there?" |
28726 | Boys, you were n''t quarreling, were you? |
28726 | But does the Doctor know how it''ll break up the nine? |
28726 | But his story, Abner? |
28726 | But how could you guess what the motive was? |
28726 | But surely you might have done your algebra before ten o''clock? |
28726 | But the things we found, Abner? |
28726 | But why a feint? 28726 But, Curly,"I asked,"did n''t you have any fun? |
28726 | Butcher? |
28726 | Ca n''t you? 28726 Ca n''t you?" |
28726 | Ca n''t you_ ever_ come home without being telephoned for? |
28726 | Clients? |
28726 | D''ye see that light? |
28726 | Dead broke, Scotty? |
28726 | Della,he said to the cook,"do you know what I''d do if you was a crook and I had my ottomatic with me?" |
28726 | Did Shifflet and Twiggs know Bowers? |
28726 | Did not I tell you? |
28726 | Did they tell you that when you stopped the drove? |
28726 | Did you do that to- day at the matinée performance, chevalier? |
28726 | Did you have a doctor look at it? |
28726 | Do n''t you know whom he belongs to? |
28726 | Do not I owe you my life? |
28726 | Do you believe that there was any such person? |
28726 | Do you mean that for me? |
28726 | Do you reckon that there blue trail is smoke from the machine or remarks from the inhabitants thereof? |
28726 | Do you say so? |
28726 | Do you think the faculty will-- will----"Fire me? 28726 Do you think we would hang men on that? |
28726 | Do you want to make me trouble? |
28726 | Does Stevens know you''re here? |
28726 | Does n''t he look after you in vacation- time? |
28726 | Even to putting your head in his mouth? |
28726 | Father,he said,"am I to do the trick to- night? |
28726 | Fine, are n''t they, Scotty? |
28726 | Have you ever observed that his ears are pierced for earrings? |
28726 | Have you never had a curiosity yourself to pass a night in that house? |
28726 | Have you the chisel and the bags? 28726 He has a rich friend, then?" |
28726 | He is still with you, I presume? |
28726 | He is still with you? |
28726 | Hey, who''s on lookout? |
28726 | Hit-- hit which? 28726 Honest?" |
28726 | Honest? |
28726 | How about Stubby? |
28726 | How did he come? |
28726 | How did you know, for example, that I did manual labor? 28726 How far is it to the stockade, kid?" |
28726 | How long is it since the house acquired this sinister character? |
28726 | How many of these plunkers does the devil need to buy your soul? |
28726 | How many? |
28726 | How so? |
28726 | How, sir? |
28726 | I am? 28726 I expect to wark where''er I be; but do I get pay, I''m askin''?" |
28726 | I got to have my turn first, have n''t I? |
28726 | I guess it ai n''t your father''s revolaver, is it? |
28726 | I have n''t showed you how_ I_ do, have I? 28726 I know everything that''s in your yard and in your stable, and there is n''t a thing----""I did n''t say it was in the yard or in the stable, did I?" |
28726 | I said, What''s the matter with your arm? |
28726 | I say, Butcher,said the Big Man, in sudden fear,"you wo n''t go up to Andover and play against us, will you?" |
28726 | I say,he began, according to etiquette,"is that you, Butcher?" |
28726 | I wonder if the chevalier himself would be as safe if he were to make a feint of doing that? |
28726 | I!--what? |
28726 | I''m f''m Forty- second Street-- see? |
28726 | I''m not goin''to keep it, am I? 28726 I?" |
28726 | In what way am I to construe your attitude, sir? |
28726 | Indeed? |
28726 | Is Cappen Bolt in charge o''the_ Anita_ the neo? |
28726 | Is any one doing anything? |
28726 | Is it the lion again? 28726 Is it this old gentleman?" |
28726 | Is that a fact? |
28726 | Is that all? |
28726 | Is there a bar? 28726 Is they just like squids?" |
28726 | Is you sure he''s dead? |
28726 | It is a little off the beaten track, is n''t it? |
28726 | It would n''t? |
28726 | Just a bit? |
28726 | Ma''am? |
28726 | Ma''am? |
28726 | Make a feint of it? 28726 Me?" |
28726 | My lady,said he,"what is an insult? |
28726 | Now it''s better, eh, Big Man? |
28726 | Of me? |
28726 | Oh, I am, am I? |
28726 | Oh, Mr. Cleek, have you any idea, any clue? |
28726 | Oh, did it? |
28726 | Or impress our senses with the belief in such effects-- we never having been_ en rapport_ with the person acting on us? 28726 Really haunted?--and by what-- ghosts?" |
28726 | Really? 28726 Red Chief,"says I to the kid,"would you like to go home?" |
28726 | Sam,says he,"what''s two hundred and fifty dollars, after all? |
28726 | Say, Big Man-- feeling sort of homesick? |
28726 | She is pretty, is she not? |
28726 | She wo n''t? |
28726 | Sir? 28726 Sir?" |
28726 | Sir? |
28726 | So he''s a little homesick, is he? |
28726 | Stranger,said he, in a scared kind of whisper,"what''s them?" |
28726 | Swell, ai n''t it, Chimmy? |
28726 | That feller shore rubbed my hair th''wrong way th''minute he shot his mouth off, with:''Wall, what kin I do for you, young feller?'' |
28726 | The Baron von Steinheid? |
28726 | The drummer walked past my father as if he never saw him, and stood by the elbow- chair and said:''Trumpeter, trumpeter, are you one with me?'' |
28726 | The man answered,''How should it be with me? 28726 The trumpeter looked down on him from the height of six- foot- two, and asked:''Did they die well?'' |
28726 | Then it is only when they are dressed and made up for the performance, eh? 28726 Then what happened?" |
28726 | Then why should you? |
28726 | They are not yours, are they not? |
28726 | They never do, do they? |
28726 | This little fool,she thought,"why should he not become my servant instead of the general''s? |
28726 | To an end? |
28726 | Want to get to New York? |
28726 | Was he the only applicant? |
28726 | Was it your own dog that bit you? |
28726 | Was that you, sir? |
28726 | Was you ever to that Op''ra The-_a_-ter, ol''man? 28726 Watson, I think you know Mr. Jones of Scotland Yard? |
28726 | We looked at each other and he thin says:''Can ye run a gasoline engine?'' 28726 Well, I said I''d show you if you came on over, did n''t I?" |
28726 | Well, I_ am_ goin''to, ai n''t I? |
28726 | Well, Joshua, what''s the matter? |
28726 | Well, Watson,said Holmes, when our visitor had left us,"what do you make of it all?" |
28726 | Well, but China? |
28726 | Well, the snuff, then, and the Freemasonry? |
28726 | Well, then, why do n''t you? |
28726 | Well, why do n''t you_ see_ if I will? 28726 Well, youngster,"he said, gruffly,"had enough? |
28726 | Well,said Ward,"what then?" |
28726 | Well,_ wait_ a minute, ca n''t you? 28726 Well?" |
28726 | Were you quarreling with Penrod? |
28726 | What advantage, Abner? |
28726 | What am I to do? |
28726 | What are you doing here? |
28726 | What are you going to do, then? |
28726 | What did Shifflet and Twiggs say to this story? |
28726 | What did the man pay Twiggs and Shifflet? |
28726 | What did you quit it for, then? |
28726 | What did you see? |
28726 | What do they prove,continued my uncle,"now that the signboards are turned? |
28726 | What do you mean by the right way? |
28726 | What do you mean exactly? |
28726 | What do you think, Watson? 28726 What do you think?" |
28726 | What does he do with his beak? |
28726 | What for? |
28726 | What has happened? 28726 What have you been up to, you boys?" |
28726 | What is he like, this Vincent Spaulding? |
28726 | What is the name of this obliging youth? |
28726 | What is your name? |
28726 | What like? |
28726 | What makes you want to see me? |
28726 | What on earth does this mean? |
28726 | What then? |
28726 | What then? |
28726 | What things? |
28726 | What were you and Sam talking about, Penrod? |
28726 | What were you talking about? |
28726 | What will you do if-- if they fire you? |
28726 | What you doin''? |
28726 | What you getting up so soon for, Sam? |
28726 | What''s de matter, Smoke? |
28726 | What''s he up to now? |
28726 | What''s that in the tickle? |
28726 | What''s the matter with your arm, Penrod? |
28726 | What''s the matter? 28726 What''s the matter?" |
28726 | What''s the score? 28726 What''s the trouble, Bill?" |
28726 | What''s wrong with your face? |
28726 | What''s_ your_ name? |
28726 | What, in God''s name,said he,"is all this?" |
28726 | What?--what? |
28726 | What_ will_ the baseball team do? |
28726 | When did it happen? |
28726 | Where are you going, sir? |
28726 | Where does he live? |
28726 | Where izze? |
28726 | Where''s Butsey? |
28726 | Where''s Jack? |
28726 | Where''s my bag? |
28726 | Where''s your clo''s? |
28726 | Where-- where did it hit you? |
28726 | Which one? |
28726 | Who are you to come flying over my wall and break my_ Gloire de Dijons_? 28726 Who are you?" |
28726 | Who are you? |
28726 | Who the deuce asked you for your opinion? |
28726 | Who was this man? |
28726 | Who''s on lookout here? |
28726 | Who? |
28726 | Whose ghosts, Matthew? |
28726 | Whose gun you playin''with? 28726 Why could n''t you behave until after the Andover game?" |
28726 | Why did you beat the pavement? |
28726 | Why did you pick him? |
28726 | Why do n''t you go on if you''re goin''to? |
28726 | Why do n''t you tell the Doctor that? |
28726 | Why do n''t you- all say something? |
28726 | Why not? |
28726 | Why not? |
28726 | Why not? |
28726 | Why serious? |
28726 | Why should n''t it? 28726 Why''n''t you go ahead?" |
28726 | Why, Curly,I asked,"how''s that?" |
28726 | Why, indeed? 28726 Why, what is wrong with you?" |
28726 | Why, you profane little cuss,said the Butcher, frowning,"who told you to swear?" |
28726 | Why? 28726 Why?" |
28726 | Will the boy do it to- night, then, chevalier? |
28726 | Will you come and see me? |
28726 | Will you have the goodness to look at this document? 28726 Will you look at this, madam?" |
28726 | With a man to help you keep lookout, d''ye see it? |
28726 | With other lessons? |
28726 | With other lessons? |
28726 | With that thing? |
28726 | Would not!--and why? |
28726 | Would they board at the Ocean House if they wan''t weak- minded? 28726 Yes, I do see, chevalier; but I wonder if he would be willing to humor me in something? |
28726 | Yes, but why? |
28726 | Yes, sir? |
28726 | You are n''t going to get sentimental, are you, youngster? |
28726 | You are not at all frightened? |
28726 | You did n''t get caught with it, did you? |
28726 | You do n''t suppose Crazy Opdyke could cover the bag, do you? |
28726 | You do n''t think he''ll run away, do you, Sam? |
28726 | You mean the law? |
28726 | You mean these two blacklegs? |
28726 | You remember yesterday in the Algebra class? |
28726 | You say that all connected with the circus have so little fear of the beast that even attendants sometimes do this foolhardy trick? 28726 You were ill after ten o''clock?" |
28726 | You wo n''t go away and leave me here alone, will you, Sam? |
28726 | You wo n''t mind? |
28726 | You''re sure you were n''t quarreling, Sam? |
28726 | You''ve got a home, have n''t you? |
28726 | You''ve got an uncle somewhere, have n''t you, youngster? |
28726 | You, sir, are that great man? 28726 Your French gold?" |
28726 | ''Ai n''t scared of nothin'', I reckon-- hey?'' |
28726 | ''And how will ye save thim that''s dyin''in deep watthers?'' |
28726 | ''And the pay?'' |
28726 | ''And what are they worth?'' |
28726 | ''Are n''t the brave life- savers even now sitting be the fire waitin''for people to come and be saved? |
28726 | ''Are ye scared at last?'' |
28726 | ''Did he say"Bayonne"? |
28726 | ''Do I get thim for breakfast?'' |
28726 | ''Do you happen to know if the 38th Regiment was engaged?'' |
28726 | ''Do you mean to say you''re reckonin''to save the_ car_?'' |
28726 | ''For the love of mercy, what is that?'' |
28726 | ''Get her under way, why do n''t you?'' |
28726 | ''Go to Setuckit in a automobile?'' |
28726 | ''Hear it?'' |
28726 | ''Is there fifty foot of water underneath us now? |
28726 | ''Movin''? |
28726 | ''Say, pard, you ai n''t goin''to leave me here, are you?'' |
28726 | ''Thin, why not work for it and stop pokin''yer nose down squirrel- holes, where there is neither profit nor wages?'' |
28726 | ''Think I''m a blame fool? |
28726 | ''This is fine, ai n''t it?'' |
28726 | ''Wh- what? |
28726 | ''What are you goin''to do?'' |
28726 | ''What d''ee mean by crying stale fish at that rate?'' |
28726 | ''What else d''you s''pose? |
28726 | ''What is that?'' |
28726 | ''What news?'' |
28726 | ''Where are they?'' |
28726 | ''Where be you?'' |
28726 | ''Who are you to be dictatin''the diet of yer betthers?'' |
28726 | ''Who are you to give orders? |
28726 | ''Why do n''t we go where it''s dry? |
28726 | ''Why do n''t you come West some day? |
28726 | ''Will we drown?'' |
28726 | ''Wud ye mind tellin''the ladies and childher that they can go ashore and get to the hotel?'' |
28726 | ''You a coward? |
28726 | ''You ai n''t goin''to pack yourself twelve mile_ on that shingle_?'' |
28726 | ''You will help save them?'' |
28726 | 4,''"''What, the red- headed man?'' |
28726 | A whale? |
28726 | Abner''s eyes traveled over the speaker with a deliberate scrutiny; then he answered:"Are the roads of Virginia held by arms?" |
28726 | Ai n''t it awful, Sam? |
28726 | Ai n''t we got a good sailin''breeze and the whole bay to stay on top of-- fifty foot of water and more?'' |
28726 | All ready, Mr. Narkom? |
28726 | And as long as it did not hurt anybody else-- what was really the difference? |
28726 | And how, pray, should we live if that were to happen?" |
28726 | And she-- ah, monsieur, why is she always with him? |
28726 | And then, turning again to Lady Vandeleur,"What is this precious fellow''s errand?" |
28726 | And what do they point to if we read them on the way we are going now? |
28726 | And what might you be doin''here?'' |
28726 | And what''s a Brazilian doing in the army of the Kaiser? |
28726 | And when does it happen in their case, during the course of the show, or when there is nobody about but those connected with it?" |
28726 | And yet-- and yet---- Ah, monsieur, how can I fail to feel as I do when this change in the lion came with that man''s coming? |
28726 | And, having been in it, what''s he doing dropping into this line; backing a circus, and traveling with it like a Bohemian?" |
28726 | Another wreck, you say? |
28726 | Are the stars hot? |
28726 | Are there any real Indians in these woods? |
28726 | Are you a married man, Mr. Wilson? |
28726 | Are you nervous? |
28726 | Are you not ashamed to go about the world in such a trim, with honest folk, I dare say, glad to buy your cast- off finery second- hand? |
28726 | As I was turning away, a beer- boy, collecting pewter pots at the neighboring areas, said to me,"Do you want any one at that house, sir?" |
28726 | At first he could see little, the garret was so dark, but a faint voice said from some burlap bags in the corner:"Is dat youse, Chimmy?" |
28726 | At the jigger- shop, Al lifted his eyebrows in well- informed disapproval, saying curtly:"What are you doing here, you Butcher, you?" |
28726 | Aw, do n''t you tell me that li''l nigger''s gone an''croaked?" |
28726 | Billings, where be you?'' |
28726 | But do n''t youse worry, Mister, I''m runnin''the whole biz till Smokey''s to rights again-- see?" |
28726 | But enough; do you comprehend my theory?" |
28726 | But how do you propose to end it?" |
28726 | But the writing?" |
28726 | But what did he hit me for? |
28726 | But what? |
28726 | But who did that? |
28726 | But why ruin a boy''s happiness forever because of a missed recitation? |
28726 | But why should you connect these two persons with this inexplicable thing? |
28726 | But, after all, if he is satisfied, why should I put ideas in his head?" |
28726 | But, of a sudden:"You came here directly after the matinée, I suppose?" |
28726 | But----""Why did you do it?" |
28726 | By and by, Bill sits up and feels behind his ear and says:"Sam, do you know who my favorite Biblical character is?" |
28726 | Ca n''t you watch me a minute?" |
28726 | Can Smokey walk? |
28726 | Can we get to land, do you think?'' |
28726 | Cast off, wo n''t you?'' |
28726 | Cleek?" |
28726 | Could n''t manage to take me round behind the scenes, so to speak, if Mr. Narkom will lend us his motor to hurry us there? |
28726 | Could your patients spare you for a few hours?" |
28726 | Could, eh? |
28726 | D''ye hear?" |
28726 | D''yuh get me? |
28726 | D''yuh get me?'' |
28726 | Dear God, can this be true?" |
28726 | Did you ever pause to ponder over the returns chickens would give on a small investment? |
28726 | Did you prepare your lesson?" |
28726 | Did you?" |
28726 | Do oxen make any noise? |
28726 | Do you feel pale? |
28726 | Do you know the wretch who used you so?" |
28726 | Do you know what was the trouble with the first two periods of the game to- day?" |
28726 | Do you know? |
28726 | Do you like it?" |
28726 | Do you mind?" |
28726 | Do you see any objection, Mr. Hartley, may I ask? |
28726 | Do you see that extra bald place on the back of my head? |
28726 | Do you think I would keep you here if I were not sure to save you? |
28726 | Do you think anybody will pay out money to get a little imp like that back home?" |
28726 | Do you think he can stand a trip?" |
28726 | Do you think the riddle you have brought is beyond my powers?" |
28726 | Do you think, if I take you with me, I may rely on your presence of mind, whatever may happen?" |
28726 | Do you understand? |
28726 | Does he turn a summersault or stick his tail between his ears and go over backward?'' |
28726 | Does the lion never''smile''for any of those?" |
28726 | Does the trees moving make the wind blow? |
28726 | Does your father do so, too?" |
28726 | Doubtless you have heard of that?" |
28726 | Everywhere was the same feeling of dismay; what would become of the baseball nine? |
28726 | For suddenly a new, insidious question jumped into the forefront of his thoughts: Why had he blurted out everything to Mr. Beaver? |
28726 | Get back to the others, and look for me again in two hours''time; and Scarmelli?" |
28726 | Goin''the way we be, it would----''"''Which way do we go?'' |
28726 | Had a good time, did n''t you?" |
28726 | Had this been done in the dark?--must it not have been by a hand human as mine?--must there not have been a human agency all the while in that room? |
28726 | Hartley?" |
28726 | Has he expectations of any kind?" |
28726 | Has it anything to do with the case you have in hand?" |
28726 | Have another round?" |
28726 | Have you a family?'' |
28726 | Have you any idea? |
28726 | Have you got a gun about you, Sam?" |
28726 | Have you got beds to sleep on in this cave? |
28726 | Have you hurt it?" |
28726 | He glanced up at the Butcher, and, being very apprehensive, made bold to ask:"Butcher, I say, what does Cap think?" |
28726 | He said nothing for at least half a minute, then, clearing his throat:"And what then?" |
28726 | He will certainly break it in, and then, in Heaven''s name, what have I to look for but death?" |
28726 | Heard anything definite?" |
28726 | Help me, ca n''t you?'' |
28726 | Holmes?" |
28726 | Homesickness-- the very word was an anomaly: what home had he to go to? |
28726 | How about it, boys? |
28726 | How can I ride to the stockade without a hoss?" |
28726 | How could they hear, in the teeth of that furious wind? |
28726 | How do I know but that your box is full of teaspoons?" |
28726 | How many are there of yez?'' |
28726 | How many does it take to make twelve?" |
28726 | How many lobsters does you want?'' |
28726 | How''d he get picked up, I wonder? |
28726 | How, then, had the Thing, whatever it was, which had so scared him, obtained ingress except through my own chamber? |
28726 | Hush, ca n''t you? |
28726 | I got a right to show you the way I_ do_, first, have n''t I?" |
28726 | I had hoped that that might tempt a clever detective to take up the case; but what is such a sum to such a man as you?" |
28726 | I hope that you have done what I asked you, Jones?" |
28726 | I say, you-- you do n''t ever feel that way, do you-- homesick, I mean?" |
28726 | I strove to speak-- my voice utterly failed me; I could only think to myself:"Is this fear? |
28726 | I thought----''"''What were ye thinkin'', ye scut?'' |
28726 | I want another chance; and do you know why?" |
28726 | I''ll----''"''Swim?'' |
28726 | I''m goin''to show you how I----""_ Watch_ me, ca n''t you?" |
28726 | I''m no a shipped man, d''ye hear?" |
28726 | If Butcher did n''t cover first, how could they ever beat Andover and the Princeton freshmen? |
28726 | Is he the owner of the house?" |
28726 | Is not that the second part of it? |
28726 | Is that Captain Stitt?'' |
28726 | Is that it?" |
28726 | Is the boy killed? |
28726 | Is the chevalier well- to- do? |
28726 | Is there any hope?" |
28726 | Is your business with him private?'' |
28726 | It ai n''t possible that you''re scared? |
28726 | It ca n''t hurt the roof, can it?" |
28726 | It''s my father''s revolaver, ai n''t it?" |
28726 | Landlady, see that we are not disturbed, will you, and that nobody is admitted but the parties I mentioned?" |
28726 | Let me have a_ chance_, ca n''t you?" |
28726 | May I ask you to see to it at once?" |
28726 | Might I beg that you would have the goodness to sit down upon one of those boxes, and not to interfere?" |
28726 | Never rode in an auto afore, did you?'' |
28726 | No one had thought to invite him for a visit; but then, why should any one? |
28726 | No''smile''for your old Tom, is there, Nero, boy, eh? |
28726 | No?" |
28726 | Not dollars?'' |
28726 | Now a straight question: Do you smoke?" |
28726 | Now then, what is it? |
28726 | Now, are you going to be good, or not?" |
28726 | Now, if you know, tell me what did the chevalier mean, what did his wife mean, when they spoke of a dream that might have come true but did n''t? |
28726 | Now, my heroic college chum,''he goes on, callin''me out of my name as usual,''will you be so condescendin''as to indicate how we hit the trail?'' |
28726 | Now, suppose you had started the other way, what then?" |
28726 | Oh, Harry, Harry, can you explain to me what makes you men so violent and unjust? |
28726 | One day a feller-- a stranger in the camp, he was-- come acrost him with his box, and says:"''What might it be that you''ve got in the box?'' |
28726 | One question I think I may surely ask without indiscretion: Is he the master of this house?" |
28726 | Or would you prefer to go direct to the home secretary? |
28726 | Or, if you have not, do you think your fiancée has?" |
28726 | Owe me? |
28726 | Perhaps you think I do n''t know a gentleman when I see one, from a common run- the- hedge like you? |
28726 | Pray what steps did you take when you found the card upon the door?" |
28726 | Really?" |
28726 | Seventy- five hundred what? |
28726 | She loves her husband-- that''s certain-- and she''s a good little woman; and, Scarmelli?" |
28726 | So he said,"Oh, Butcher, is it serious?" |
28726 | So it looks like we could keep it for our revolaver, Penrod, do n''t it? |
28726 | So why bilge at a single dollar?'' |
28726 | So you played on your drum when the ship was goin''down? |
28726 | Sprung a leak, has it?'' |
28726 | Stevens?" |
28726 | The Big Man was immensely relieved; but he added incredulously,"Then you''ll give up football and baseball?" |
28726 | The Commissioner pointed at him and said, abruptly, breaking off his remarks:"By the way, what''s_ your_ name?" |
28726 | The cellar? |
28726 | The four pounds a week was a lure which must draw him, and what was it to them, who were playing for thousands? |
28726 | The parson listened, and put a question or two, and then asked:"''Have you tried to open the lock since that night?'' |
28726 | Then he said, plunging in,"Doctor, is the Butcher-- is Stevens-- are you going to-- expel him?" |
28726 | They would keep on talkin'', and I guess I had to be_ polite_, did n''t I?" |
28726 | Think I''d let seventy- five hundred dollars''wuth of gilt- edged extravagance go to the bottom? |
28726 | This assistant of yours who first called your attention to the advertisement-- how long had he been with you?" |
28726 | Three slow, loud, distinct knocks were now heard at the bed- head; my servant called out:"Is that you, sir?" |
28726 | Was it really so awful? |
28726 | Well, if you ca n''t even do that much, you better watch me while_ I_----""Well,"said Sam reasonably,"why do n''t you go on and do it then?" |
28726 | Well, what''s_ he_ good for?'' |
28726 | What could it be, once more? |
28726 | What could it be? |
28726 | What could it mean? |
28726 | What did you cal''late I was tryin''to save-- the clam- flat? |
28726 | What do you want me to do?'' |
28726 | What had he meant by that? |
28726 | What has he done? |
28726 | What have you done with it?'' |
28726 | What if it laid hold of the punt? |
28726 | What if the squid were alive, after all? |
28726 | What is his errand, madam? |
28726 | What is it?" |
28726 | What is it?'' |
28726 | What is your name?" |
28726 | What kind of a game is it?" |
28726 | What lion-- Nero? |
28726 | What makes your nose so red, Hank? |
28726 | What on earth can I do with the house?" |
28726 | What sheet? |
28726 | What the dickens did you mean just now when you spoke about''the lion''s change''and''the lion''s smile''? |
28726 | What was the matter?" |
28726 | What was this nocturnal expedition, and why should I go armed? |
28726 | What you waitin''for?'' |
28726 | What you?" |
28726 | What''s his little game, I wonder? |
28726 | What''s that? |
28726 | What''s the matter with your old derelict? |
28726 | What''s the score?" |
28726 | What''s wrong?" |
28726 | What''s your name?'' |
28726 | When shall you be able to enter upon your new duties?'' |
28726 | Where are they?'' |
28726 | Where did he bite you?" |
28726 | Where is he? |
28726 | Where is that gasoline engine?'' |
28726 | Where is the bandbox?" |
28726 | Where is the dory? |
28726 | Where were we going, and what were we to do? |
28726 | Where you git''at gun?" |
28726 | Where''s he been? |
28726 | Who are you?" |
28726 | Who would be likely to connect him with the death of a beast- tamer in a circus, who had perished in what would appear an accident of his calling? |
28726 | Who would, after having been promised wealth, education, everything one had confessed that one most desired? |
28726 | Whose launch was that they took?'' |
28726 | Why a''misfortune,''pray? |
28726 | Why are oranges round? |
28726 | Why could you not say at first there was enough for two? |
28726 | Why do n''t you teach''em to come to that brass horn, and save your voice?" |
28726 | Why does it''smile''for no others? |
28726 | Why does she curry favor of him and his rich friend?" |
28726 | Why have you arrested the Señor Sperati? |
28726 | Why is it only they, my father, my brother, they alone?" |
28726 | Why not the actual thing?" |
28726 | Why was he so anxious to be off? |
28726 | Why, Joshua?" |
28726 | Why?" |
28726 | Why?" |
28726 | Wilder ones have come true for other people; why should they not for you?" |
28726 | Will it lock?" |
28726 | Will this way lead me out? |
28726 | Will you be ready to- morrow?'' |
28726 | Will you leave it with me?" |
28726 | Will you, Harry?" |
28726 | Wilson?" |
28726 | Would you mind letting him make the feint you yourself made a few minutes ago? |
28726 | Yes? |
28726 | You ai n''t going to let the chance go, are you?" |
28726 | You can have it when I get through, ca n''t you? |
28726 | You have other demerits?" |
28726 | You know what it is, do n''t you? |
28726 | You want to make a team, do n''t you, while you''re here?" |
28726 | You wo n''t leave me long with him, will you, Sam?" |
28726 | You wo n''t take me back home again, Snake- eye, will you?" |
28726 | You''re a hero, ai n''t you?'' |
28726 | You''re not going to ruin the show, are you, and after all the money I''ve put into it? |
28726 | You-- you do not mean to tell me that he caused that? |
28726 | Young or old?" |
28726 | [ Illustration] XI.--The Lie[K]_ By Hermann Hagedorn_"DID you prepare this lesson, Burton?" |
28726 | _ Why had n''t he just lied?_ That question thrust at the very roots of life, and Dick Harrington knew it. |
28726 | _ Why had n''t he lied?_ The team was due back at Hainesburg, the railroad station for The Towers, at eight- thirty. |
28726 | actually passed unsuspectingly by the door? |
28726 | and bring him along here about 6.45 sharp to- morrow night-- Hear?" |
28726 | and whither have I wandered?" |
28726 | and why are you hurrying him away?" |
28726 | cried he,"where was my head? |
28726 | cursed paleface, do you dare to enter the camp of Red Chief, the terror of the plains?" |
28726 | for what object?" |
28726 | he added, shaking him;"and what may be your business here?" |
28726 | he cried;"I suspect, do you say? |
28726 | said I, rather disappointed;"have you not seen nor heard anything remarkable?" |
28726 | says Bill,"would you like to have a bag of candy and a nice ride?" |
28726 | you believe it is all an imposture? |
32308 | ''And the work?'' 32308 ''And the work?'' |
32308 | ''And what are they worth?'' 32308 ''But my poor woman, if you should tremble?'' |
32308 | ''Have you never heard of the League of the Red- Headed Men?'' 32308 ''What do you call purely nominal?'' |
32308 | ''What would be the hours?'' 32308 ''What, the red- headed man?'' |
32308 | ''Where could I find him?'' 32308 ''Why that?'' |
32308 | ''Why, what is it, then?'' 32308 ''You found him at home, then?'' |
32308 | A pasty and a bottle of wine-- What is that? |
32308 | A spent ball? |
32308 | Ah, now we are getting to it,observed Chicot dolefully;"it is about my conduct, I suppose?" |
32308 | Ah, what is that on your hand, D''Artagnan? 32308 And do you think I shall escape?" |
32308 | And do you understand them? |
32308 | And has your business been attended to in your absence? |
32308 | And have you never tried to understand them? |
32308 | And how could you tell that they would make their attempt to- night? |
32308 | And how many did we crush? |
32308 | And how much is the pension? |
32308 | And now look at that old house over there,pointing to my old home;"how many windows are there in the top story?" |
32308 | And now, my dear Athos,said he,"will you be good enough to tell me where we are bound for?" |
32308 | And sit in the dark? |
32308 | And the guardsman? |
32308 | And then? |
32308 | And there was a good deal of sharp- shooting? |
32308 | And what are we to do when we get there? |
32308 | And what did you do then? |
32308 | And what did you see? |
32308 | And what do you think he said in his deep voice when he got into the room? 32308 And what is it saying-- anything you understand?" |
32308 | And what is the pay? |
32308 | And where, if you please? |
32308 | And whose are they? |
32308 | And you did n''t tremble, Louise? |
32308 | And you had to behold every detail of that operation? |
32308 | And you reply? |
32308 | And you would be pleased to have, instead of this terrace of twenty feet, an inclosure of two acres? |
32308 | And you-- you often pray to God, Sonia? |
32308 | Are any men missing? |
32308 | Are n''t you afraid you''ll stick yourself, Ma''m''selle? 32308 At what hour?" |
32308 | At what time? |
32308 | But Ma''m''selle Adèle, why should I tell you all this? 32308 But how could you guess what the motive was?" |
32308 | But my good Louise, would n''t you have suffered much less last year, when you came so near losing your boy, if you had n''t cared so much for him? |
32308 | But surely, if we were embarking on such an expedition, we ought to have brought our muskets? |
32308 | But tell me, Barty,I whispered--"_have_ you-- have you_ really_ got a-- a--_special friend above_?" |
32308 | But what is it, then? |
32308 | But what is it? |
32308 | But what_ do_ you feel when you feel the north, Barty-- a kind of tingling? |
32308 | But where are you going to eat it? |
32308 | But why did n''t we do that at Parpaillot''s? |
32308 | But you did not mean what you said just now, did you? |
32308 | Did n''t I say so? |
32308 | Did you come here, sir, to see the telegraph? |
32308 | Do n''t you hear something behind us? |
32308 | Do n''t you want my son to go with you? |
32308 | Do you hear me? |
32308 | Do you hear that sighing sound? |
32308 | Do_ you_ understand, Grimaud? |
32308 | Does it require much study to learn the art of telegraphing, sir? |
32308 | Had n''t we better return to the camp? |
32308 | Hardened sinner, are you there? |
32308 | Has anything been forgotten? |
32308 | Has it ever happened to you? |
32308 | Has your husband any Spanish bonds? |
32308 | Have we crushed them all, do you think? |
32308 | Have you ever observed that his ears are pierced for earrings? |
32308 | Have you ever read the passage? |
32308 | Have you never heard it in church? |
32308 | He is still with you, I presume? |
32308 | He is still with you? |
32308 | How can that interest you, since you do not believe? |
32308 | How did he come? |
32308 | How did you know, for example, that I did manual labor? 32308 How do you know?" |
32308 | How far off? |
32308 | How in the world did you keep yourself steady? |
32308 | How long have you been here? |
32308 | How long must you serve to claim the pension? |
32308 | How many charges? |
32308 | How many guns have we got? |
32308 | How many was it we killed? 32308 How many?" |
32308 | How much? |
32308 | I bet it''s the first time you ever made an omelette in a wood- cutter''s hut-- isn''t it, my young lady? |
32308 | I understand, then, you wo n''t go tomorrow to your father''s funeral service? |
32308 | Is it all right? |
32308 | Is it possible that such is really the case? |
32308 | Is it possible that this creature, who still retains a pure mind, should end by becoming deliberately mire- like? 32308 Is it possible,"said Monte Cristo to himself,"that I can have met with a man that has no ambition? |
32308 | Is it true that you captured a bastion? |
32308 | Is that you? 32308 It is a cat''s name, then?" |
32308 | It is a little off the beaten track, is n''t it? |
32308 | Just so; fifteen thousand francs, do you understand? |
32308 | Listen, Varvara Alexievna,he began timidly, in a low voice:"do you know what, Varvara Alexievna?" |
32308 | Mother,retorted Philippe in his quietest tones,"do you not know your own son?" |
32308 | My good fellow,remarked Athos,"do you really think that the enemy''s bullets are those we have most cause to fear?" |
32308 | Not even for fifteen years''wages? 32308 Oh, has it?" |
32308 | Oh, sir, what are you proposing? |
32308 | Shall I come up and help you? |
32308 | Sir, you are tempting me? |
32308 | Tell me, mamma, do naughty children have presents at New- Year''s? |
32308 | The little lady who makes such good omelettes, she is n''t sick, for sure? |
32308 | Then what would happen? |
32308 | To an end? |
32308 | Twenty? |
32308 | Was he the only applicant? |
32308 | Watson, I think you know Mr. Jones, of Scotland Yard? 32308 We shall be wood- cutters, sha n''t we?" |
32308 | We will come some morning and breakfast with them,--shan''t we? 32308 Well, Watson,"said Holmes, when our visitor had left us,"what do you make of it all?" |
32308 | Well, but China? |
32308 | Well, has n''t everybody been too busy ever since to think of stripping the dead bodies? |
32308 | Well, suppose you were to alter a signal, and substitute another? |
32308 | Well, the snuff, then, and the Freemasonry? |
32308 | Well, would you please, sir, march upstairs, where we can get a cab to carry your Highness to the police station? |
32308 | Well,murmured Henri,"are you convinced now?" |
32308 | Well? |
32308 | Well? |
32308 | Were you comfortable there? |
32308 | Were you friends with her? |
32308 | Were you quite free and at your ease, or did any one pay attention to you? |
32308 | What am I to do? |
32308 | What are they doing? |
32308 | What are they? |
32308 | What are they? |
32308 | What are you going to do, then? |
32308 | What bastion was it? |
32308 | What bet? |
32308 | What could I be, what should I be without God? |
32308 | What did D''Artagnan say? |
32308 | What did I say? |
32308 | What did you say, sir? |
32308 | What do you think, Watson? 32308 What do you want more?" |
32308 | What does that matter to you as long as you are paid? |
32308 | What have you discovered? |
32308 | What is all this noise? |
32308 | What is he like, this Vincent Spaulding? |
32308 | What is it, sir? |
32308 | What is it? |
32308 | What is it? |
32308 | What is that you are saying? |
32308 | What is the matter? |
32308 | What is the name of this obliging youth? |
32308 | What on earth are you doing? |
32308 | What on earth does this mean? |
32308 | What then? 32308 What then?" |
32308 | What then? |
32308 | What was? |
32308 | What were you saying to me in that horrid wood, my darling? |
32308 | What''s the matter? |
32308 | What, no fish to be had in a seaport town? |
32308 | What,asked he himself,"could be the meaning of the mysterious interviews of two such idiots as Sonia and Elizabeth? |
32308 | Where are those boys going? |
32308 | Where are we going? |
32308 | Where do you live? 32308 Where does that come from?" |
32308 | Where is mention made of Lazarus? |
32308 | Where is mention made of the resurrection of Lazarus? 32308 Who is Byron?" |
32308 | Who is there? |
32308 | Who lent it you? |
32308 | Whose was that? |
32308 | Why did you beat the pavement? |
32308 | Why did you give me back the handkerchief so awkwardly? |
32308 | Why did you let it fall so awkwardly? |
32308 | Why did you pick him? |
32308 | Why do you like that best? |
32308 | Why not? |
32308 | Why serious? |
32308 | Why, indeed? 32308 Why?" |
32308 | Why? |
32308 | You are fond of gardening? |
32308 | You are gathering your crop, sir? |
32308 | You are thinking about that? 32308 You asked the names of these gentlemen?" |
32308 | You ate it? |
32308 | You do n''t mean to fight a whole regiment? |
32308 | You do? |
32308 | You live badly on your thousand francs? |
32308 | Your French gold? |
32308 | ''And the pay?'' |
32308 | ''Where are you going, Alexandre?'' |
32308 | --"And from myself?" |
32308 | --"From myself alone-- that is, in my own name?" |
32308 | --"How all? |
32308 | ..."What is going on in the town?" |
32308 | After all, does not sorrow wring tears enough from us to make up for the solitary one which joy may call forth? |
32308 | Alexandre Dumas was born at Villers- Cotterets- sur- Aisne, on July 24th, 1803(?). |
32308 | All at once I heard a noise, a running and a tumult; I heard-- did my ears deceive me? |
32308 | And after that, trust my imperfect sense Which calls in question his omnipotence? |
32308 | And does not all this seem like signs of mental derangement?" |
32308 | And have I any right to peep under their cloaks to see what they have n''t got? |
32308 | And how can I serve you as to that? |
32308 | And how did you come to permit such a thing?" |
32308 | And if he can, why all this frantic pain To construe what his clearest words contain, And make a riddle what he made so plain? |
32308 | And in another minute she went on:--"You think I do n''t love you, you and our boy? |
32308 | And pray who will be the most thought of at the end of this grand race after money? |
32308 | And some of them said, Could not this man, which opened the eyes of the blind, have caused that even this man should not have died?" |
32308 | And then what business had_ she_ in_ this_,_ my_ particular dream-- as she herself had asked of me? |
32308 | And what about the boat, if you please? |
32308 | And you really understand none of these signals?" |
32308 | And you? |
32308 | Are his senses vigorous and fine? |
32308 | Are n''t you surprised to hear that it was he who attended_ our_ little boy? |
32308 | Are people to be run into without warning? |
32308 | Are you a married man, Mr. Wilson? |
32308 | Are you ready, Grimaud?" |
32308 | Are you willing to have her come? |
32308 | Are you willing to let me arrange your life for you in the future exactly as I would wish to arrange my own life? |
32308 | At first his Excellency turned away; then he scrutinized me again, and I heard him say to Evstafiy Ivanovitch:--"How''s this? |
32308 | At what hour can I take the first train for Paris? |
32308 | Believest thou this? |
32308 | But after all, if he is satisfied, why should I put ideas in his head?" |
32308 | But the doctor?'' |
32308 | But the writing?" |
32308 | But then what can anybody do with two hundred thousand livres for an income? |
32308 | But we must go on to ask,"What did he laugh at? |
32308 | But what has this to do with earth or with agriculture? |
32308 | But what? |
32308 | But where is this tunnel going to, and what object have the insects in view in ascending this lofty tree? |
32308 | But, sir, once more I beg pardon; perhaps you are an official that I am detaining here?" |
32308 | But_ was_ it a dream? |
32308 | By which base worldlings vilely play their parts, With horrid acts staining Earth''s stately stage? |
32308 | By- the- by, does M. Mauriceau also know of this letter? |
32308 | Can I believe eternal God could lie Disguised in mortal mold and infancy, That the great Maker of the world could die? |
32308 | Can I my reason to my faith compel, And shall my sight and touch and taste rebel? |
32308 | Can people anticipate future destruction with such tranquillity, turning a deaf ear to warnings and forebodings? |
32308 | Can they, who say the Host should be descried By sense, define a body glorified, Impassible, and penetrating parts? |
32308 | Clarkson_--They are fighting? |
32308 | Clarkson_--Were you not really expecting me to- day, madam? |
32308 | Clarkson_--What do you mean? |
32308 | Clarkson_--Why not? |
32308 | Clarkson_--You? |
32308 | Cloud to Paris? |
32308 | Come, it is worth thinking about?" |
32308 | Could he his Godhead veil with flesh and blood And not veil these again to be our food? |
32308 | Could it be that I was dead, that I had died suddenly in my sleep, at the hotel in the Rue de la Michodière? |
32308 | Could your patients spare you for a few hours?" |
32308 | Cover the place with some light thing or other, and Joseph must stay with you to- night; wo n''t you, Joseph? |
32308 | D''Herblay?" |
32308 | Did n''t you see something just in front of us?" |
32308 | Did your father or mother die? |
32308 | Do n''t you know such thoughts are wicked? |
32308 | Do n''t you think I am right? |
32308 | Do people of sound judgment reason as she reasons? |
32308 | Do you go often yourself?" |
32308 | Do you know that tune?" |
32308 | Do you know whether the sentiments between M. Gérard and the duchess were of long standing? |
32308 | Do you mean all the books?" |
32308 | Do you not see that we are opposite Aiguillon House, full of the Cardinal''s creatures? |
32308 | Do you understand?" |
32308 | Does he delight in all that appeals to the sense of hearing-- the voices of nature, and the melody and harmonies of the art of man? |
32308 | Does he see color as well as form? |
32308 | Does she expect a miracle? |
32308 | Even my poor child is learning to forget, and when I say to him most unwillingly,"Baby dear, do you remember how your mother did this or that?" |
32308 | Father, are you not disposed to settle down? |
32308 | For what reason? |
32308 | For you are Mr. Ibbetson, Lady Cray''s architect?" |
32308 | Good life be now my task; my doubts are done; What more could fright my faith than Three in One? |
32308 | Has he like Browning a vigorous pleasure in all strenuous muscular movements; or does he like Shelley live rapturously in the finest nervous thrills? |
32308 | Has my son seen them? |
32308 | Have you a family?'' |
32308 | Have you and my wife known each other long? |
32308 | Have you paid it? |
32308 | He began angrily,"What''s the meaning of this, sir? |
32308 | He laughed heartily, and said to my husband,''Are you not jealous, friend? |
32308 | Holmes?" |
32308 | How can it be otherwise, since they are not permitted to pray in a mosque upon earth? |
32308 | How could I forget?" |
32308 | How do I know that it is not his Eminence who has honored you with the commission to bring him in my head? |
32308 | How does it solve the difficulty? |
32308 | How has he regarded and interpreted the life of man? |
32308 | How in this chorus of laughters, joyous and terrible, is the laughter of Shakespeare distinguishable? |
32308 | How things change, eh? |
32308 | I am pursuing some one, and--""And I suppose that on such occasions you leave your eyes behind you?" |
32308 | I asked him if he had much money? |
32308 | I detest women? |
32308 | I hope that you have done what I asked you, Jones?" |
32308 | I must go aboard, do you hear? |
32308 | I stepped up to him and asked him what he was doing there? |
32308 | I suppose you imagine that because you heard M. De Treville speaking to us rather brusquely to- day, that everybody may treat us in the same way? |
32308 | I will not rake the dunghill of thy crimes, For who would read thy life that reads thy rhymes? |
32308 | Ibbetson?" |
32308 | If I live a century, I''ll not forget his look when he said:--"''Well?'' |
32308 | If the magnitude of the earth be too great for us to attach to it any definite conception, what shall we say of the compass of the solar system? |
32308 | In the conflict of motives, which class of motives with him is likely to predominate? |
32308 | In what mood was he, and was not he occupied in something important? |
32308 | Injury? |
32308 | Is he framed to believe or framed to doubt? |
32308 | Is he of weak or vigorous will? |
32308 | Is he prudent, just, temperate, or the reverse of these? |
32308 | Is his intellect combative or contemplative? |
32308 | Is it here?" |
32308 | Is it possible to speak as she does? |
32308 | Is she in full possession of all her faculties? |
32308 | It seems to me that with our fortune--_ André_--Our fortune? |
32308 | Let Reason then at her own quarry fly; But how can finite grasp infinity? |
32308 | Like our daily bread-- who thinks of that? |
32308 | Look at Aramis, now: mildness and grace embodied; and did anybody ever dream of calling Aramis a coward? |
32308 | Look at this house; what is written on the portico?" |
32308 | May I ask you if you know how I can be of service to him? |
32308 | May she not be mad after all? |
32308 | May we presume to say that at thy birth New joy was sprung in heaven, as well as here on earth? |
32308 | Might I beg that you would have the goodness to sit down upon one of those boxes, and not to interfere?" |
32308 | Mrs. Clarkson goes out._]_ Commissioner_[_ to Dr. Rémonin_]--You are a doctor, monsieur? |
32308 | My dear sir, will you allow me to ask you a question?" |
32308 | Now, are you disposed to be present as my second? |
32308 | Of what use can these dead men be?" |
32308 | Once dead, what does it matter to you? |
32308 | One jewel set off with so many a foil? |
32308 | One may guess what he said to them:--"Why strike the innocent and tender, as if they were execrable? |
32308 | Or were these gems sent to adorn his skin, The cabinet of a richer soul within? |
32308 | Ought I to have condemned you to this sort of life that I had led at Vilsac, and which had been for me so often an intolerable bore? |
32308 | Pray, what have you done to her? |
32308 | Pray, what steps did you take when you found the card upon the door?" |
32308 | Punish a body which he could not please; Bankrupt of life, yet prodigal of ease? |
32308 | Rémonin_--I? |
32308 | SHAKESPEARE''S PORTRAITURE OF WOMEN From''Transcripts and Studies''Of all the daughters of his imagination, which did Shakespeare love the best? |
32308 | Said I not unto thee, that if thou wouldst believe, thou shouldst see the glory of God? |
32308 | Shall our last glance at Shakespeare''s plays show us Florizel at the rustic merry- making, receiving blossoms from the hands of Perdita? |
32308 | She was still afloat; what did he care for the gale and the heavy sea? |
32308 | So many spots, like naeves, our Venus soil? |
32308 | Suddenly she rose, and taking the pan- handle from the old woman, said,"Let me help you make the omelette, will you?" |
32308 | Superior faculties are set aside; Shall their subservient organs be my guide? |
32308 | THE BOWMEN''S SONG From''The White Company''What of the bow? |
32308 | That is justice; and do you think that I object-- I who am to be the loser? |
32308 | That was all he said, but it was enough, was n''t it, my dear,--quite enough to say? |
32308 | That will be very fine, that would be very fine indeed,--only, what are you going to do, Varvara Alexievna?" |
32308 | The darkness and the forest, or her own words? |
32308 | The movement struck Louis, and turning to the Queen he said:"Mother, do you not know your own son, although every one else has denied his King?" |
32308 | The £ 4 a week was a lure which must draw him,--and what was it to them, who were playing for thousands? |
32308 | Then, turning to M. De Busigny, he observed:--"Will you have the kindness, monsieur, to set your watch by mine, or let me set mine by yours?" |
32308 | This assistant of yours who first called your attention to the advertisement-- how long had he been with you?" |
32308 | Twelve?" |
32308 | Under what aspect has this goodly frame of things, in whose midst we are, revealed itself to him? |
32308 | Used you not to read to Elizabeth?" |
32308 | WILLIAM DUNBAR( 1465?-1530?) |
32308 | Was he well? |
32308 | Was he writing, or engaged in meditation? |
32308 | Were all those wonders wrought by power Divine As means or ends of some more deep design? |
32308 | What are his special intellectual powers? |
32308 | What are the emotions which he feels most strongly? |
32308 | What are the laws which chiefly preside over the associations of his ideas? |
32308 | What are you staring at? |
32308 | What are you trying to be,--Lovelace or Don Quixote? |
32308 | What became of this brave man, who at the risk of his life saved the property of a man whose speech had touched him? |
32308 | What can we say to excuse our second fall? |
32308 | What could it be, once more? |
32308 | What could it be? |
32308 | What difference does it make to you? |
32308 | What had frightened her? |
32308 | What have I been doing? |
32308 | What is his feeling for the beautiful, the sublime, the ludicrous? |
32308 | What is his theology, or his philosophy of the universe? |
32308 | What is it? |
32308 | What is it?" |
32308 | What is that cracking noise? |
32308 | What is there to indicate that this letter was addressed to M. Gérard? |
32308 | What of the cord? |
32308 | What of the men? |
32308 | What of the shaft? |
32308 | What was this nocturnal expedition, and why should I go armed? |
32308 | What weight of ancient witness can prevail, If private reason hold the public scale? |
32308 | What will it be? |
32308 | What would be the good of burdening ourselves with anything so useless?" |
32308 | What''s the matter with him?" |
32308 | What, precisely, was he doing? |
32308 | When shall you be able to enter upon your new duties?'' |
32308 | Where were we going, and what were we to do? |
32308 | Where''s that child?" |
32308 | Who says she is not so? |
32308 | Why be enraged with a Protestant, a minister, whose religion, founded on the dogma of free examination, is naturally allied to republican ideas? |
32308 | Why choose we then like bilanders to creep Along the coast, and land in view to keep, When safely we may launch into the deep? |
32308 | Why is it that with all the quantity of love in this world, there are so many unhappy marriages? |
32308 | Why should I have been partner of the light, Who, crost in birth by bad aspéct of stars, Have never since had happy day or night? |
32308 | Why should I?" |
32308 | Why should he? |
32308 | Why was not I a liver in the woods, Or citizen of Thetis''s crystal floods, Than made a man, for love and fortune''s wars? |
32308 | Why was not I born in that golden age When gold was not yet known? |
32308 | Will you be ready to- morrow?'' |
32308 | Will you go up with me?" |
32308 | Will you have a glass of water? |
32308 | Will you kindly accept the commission? |
32308 | Wilson?" |
32308 | Wilson?" |
32308 | Would you like to know in what condition our fortune is? |
32308 | You are a very agreeable person--_ Count_--What in the world is the matter with you? |
32308 | You have come to take me into custody? |
32308 | You have wished to be free, have n''t you? |
32308 | You know her address, do you? |
32308 | You think a great deal of our Vilsac estate? |
32308 | You''ve brought a breathing- tube with you, my son?'' |
32308 | You''ve seen a lamp almost out, when you pour in oil? |
32308 | You, all by yourself, have had this idea of marriage? |
32308 | [_ Exit servant._]_ Clarkson_--And now, madam, do you know why M. de Septmonts wishes to have an interview with me? |
32308 | [_ In saying this De Ryons draws back and crouches down as if expecting to be struck._]_ Madame Leverdet_--So then, you detest women? |
32308 | [_ Joseph bows, and hands the Count a large envelope._] What''s all this? |
32308 | _ André_--A perfectly exact one, only--_ Count_--Only--? |
32308 | _ André_--And you accept? |
32308 | _ André_--Are you under the impression that there comes a time when mortgages wear themselves out? |
32308 | _ André_--Are you willing to accept my scheme? |
32308 | _ André_--So then the place at Vilsac is just so much economy? |
32308 | _ André_--Well? |
32308 | _ André_--Well? |
32308 | _ André_--What? |
32308 | _ André_--Where in the world does that money come from? |
32308 | _ Catherine_--Are you really telling me the truth? |
32308 | _ Catherine_--Did not his letter contain another letter, sealed, which he purposed leaving in your hands? |
32308 | _ Clarkson_--And as you had your suspicions you-- opened it? |
32308 | _ Clarkson_--And how? |
32308 | _ Clarkson_--But as you were ruined, duke, how could you pay this large capital and this large interest? |
32308 | _ Clarkson_--Do you fence well? |
32308 | _ Clarkson_--Duke, do I look like a man to whom to say"leave"in that tone, and who goes? |
32308 | _ Clarkson_--How are you going to do that? |
32308 | _ Clarkson_--Nothing but that? |
32308 | _ Clarkson_--Say the day after to- morrow, then? |
32308 | _ Clarkson_--Well, is that the whole story? |
32308 | _ Clarkson_--What do you say, then? |
32308 | _ Clarkson_--Why did he not take it? |
32308 | _ Clarkson_--You found this letter? |
32308 | _ Clarkson_--You? |
32308 | _ Clarkson_--Your wife''s letter? |
32308 | _ Clarkson_[_ reflectively_]--M. Gérard wanted to marry her, did he? |
32308 | _ Commissioner_--Will you have the goodness to give a certificate of death? |
32308 | _ Count_--Against whom? |
32308 | _ Count_--And how about yourself? |
32308 | _ Count_--André, do you know something? |
32308 | _ Count_--As to what, Joseph? |
32308 | _ Count_--How? |
32308 | _ Count_--What are they? |
32308 | _ Count_--What do you mean by"settle down"? |
32308 | _ Count_--Why did you not say that to me at the time? |
32308 | _ Count_--Why? |
32308 | _ Count_--Will you kindly allow me to get my breath? |
32308 | _ Count_--You are going to forbid--_ André_--Are you out of your senses? |
32308 | _ Count_--Your word on it? |
32308 | _ De Ryons_--And apropos of them? |
32308 | _ De Ryons_--I? |
32308 | _ De Ryons_--The true, the true, the true sum? |
32308 | _ Jean_--The railway director? |
32308 | _ Jean_--Who is that gentleman who has just been speaking? |
32308 | _ Joseph_--May I beg monsieur to say a good word for me to his son? |
32308 | _ Madame Durieu_--Come now, my dear M. De Cayolle, what do you think of what M. Giraud has been telling us? |
32308 | _ Madame Leverdet_--And those who are? |
32308 | _ Madame Leverdet_--And why not, if you please? |
32308 | _ Madame Leverdet_--Are you willing to be married off yet? |
32308 | _ Madame Leverdet_--Do you know how you will end, you incorrigible creature? |
32308 | _ Madame Leverdet_--Meaning by that-- what? |
32308 | _ Madame Leverdet_--Well, and I am-- what? |
32308 | _ Madame Leverdet_--What is one to do in the case of those who are not-- good women? |
32308 | _ Madame Leverdet_--What sort of studies? |
32308 | _ Madame Leverdet_--Will you kindly give me the sum of your observations in general? |
32308 | _ Madame Leverdet_--Without fine distinctions? |
32308 | _ Madame Leverdet_[_ scornfully_]--So you really think you understand women, do you? |
32308 | _ Madame de Rumières_--You mean that the explanation is not decent? |
32308 | _ René de Charsay_--And what is Father Giraud nowadays? |
32308 | _ Septmonts_--And so speaking, you mean--? |
32308 | _ Septmonts_--Do you happen to remember, Mr. Clarkson, that you are talking to_ me_--in this way? |
32308 | _ Septmonts_--Don''t you agree with me, Mr. Clarkson? |
32308 | _ Septmonts_--Mr. Clarkson, did_ she_ tell the servant that you would prefer to hold our conversation here? |
32308 | _ Septmonts_--Yes; but now, Mr. Clarkson, this young gentleman has come back--_ Clarkson_--And is too intimate a friend to your wife? |
32308 | _ Septmonts_--You will fight me, then, you mean? |
32308 | and how do his emotions coalesce with one another? |
32308 | and that, both having died, so near each other, we had begun our eternal after- life in this heavenly fashion? |
32308 | and what was the manner of his laughter?" |
32308 | asked Porthos;"what are they firing at?" |
32308 | cried Athos, stopping suddenly,"what the devil is to be done?" |
32308 | cried Porthos, struggling in his turn,"have you gone mad, that you tumble over people like this?" |
32308 | cried the musketeer, whose face was the color of a shroud;"and you think that is enough apology for nearly knocking me down? |
32308 | cried the old man almost in terror;"so you will not give Petinka anything, so you do not wish to give him anything?" |
32308 | did the Romans eat them?" |
32308 | do you not know these little papers?" |
32308 | do you understand?" |
32308 | exclaimed D''Artagnan;"do n''t you see they are aiming at you?" |
32308 | exclaimed Henri,"what are you talking about now? |
32308 | he muttered to himself.--"And what does God do for you?" |
32308 | is not your correspondent putting himself in motion?" |
32308 | replied Henri,"what do you suppose is the meaning of that?" |
32308 | ruin himself? |
32308 | said Athos,"did n''t you hear what D''Artagnan was saying?" |
32308 | said Chicot,"are you sure I did not send him there quite?" |
32308 | said the gardener;"eat dormice?" |
32308 | they called;"where''s Dyevushkin?" |
32308 | why were we hurried down This lubric and adulterate age,( Nay, added fat pollutions of our own,) To increase the steaming ordures of the stage? |
32308 | you are here, are you? |
32308 | you take it up that way, do you, Master Gascon? |
47718 | But why not? |
47718 | Has he got a_ locum tenens_? |
47718 | How often have I told you I will not? |
47718 | No? 47718 (_ Then, thoughtfully, after a pause._)Are you afraid of being asked to look pleasant?"] |
47718 | ***** AN EXCUSE.--_Mistress._"Another breakage, Jane? |
47718 | ***** AT THE SMITHSON''S DANCE.--_Young Innocent._"I beg your pardon, did I tread on your foot that time?" |
47718 | ***** CUTTING!--_Host._"What bin did you put that Marsala in, Muggles?" |
47718 | ***** DIAGNOSIS.--"Is the rector better to- day, Jarvis?" |
47718 | ***** HAPPY THOUGHT.--_Husband( devoted to spouse and bridge)._ What shall we christen the little dear? |
47718 | ***** SELF- RESPECT.--_Cook( to fellow- servant who has been after a new place)._"Well,''Liza, will it suit?" |
47718 | ***** SWEET SIMPLICITY.--_Visitor._"Jane, has your mistress got a boot- jack?" |
47718 | ***** THE DEAR THINGS.--_He._ You know Jones''s wife, an old schoolfellow of yours; tell me, is she musical? |
47718 | ***** THE FORCE OF HABIT.--_Missus( who is acting as amanuensis to Mary)._"Is there anything more you wish me to say, Mary?" |
47718 | ***** THE GREATEST QUESTION OF THE DAY.--"My dear, what will you have for dinner?" |
47718 | ***** UNCONSCIOUSLY APPROPRIATE.--_Jane._''Allo, Hemma, what are yer a- crying about? |
47718 | ***** WHY, NATURALLY.--"Cook, ought I to write Salvation Army in_ converted commas_?" |
47718 | *****[ Illustration: DOMESTIC ECONOMY.--_Cook._"Wasteful, mum? |
47718 | *****_ Bucolic Boot- boy._"I say, Sarah, wotever be a creematorium?" |
47718 | *****_ Doctor( to Mrs. Perkins, whose husband is ill)._"Has he had any lucid intervals?" |
47718 | *****_ Mistress._"Did Mrs. Brown say anything when you told her I was out?" |
47718 | *****_ Not so Bad as Volodyovski._--_Lady( to applicant for nursemaid''s place)._ What is your name? |
47718 | *****_ Q._ What''s the difference between a fraudulent Bank Director and a Servants''Registry Office? |
47718 | *****_ Visitor._"Do you have any difficulty in getting servants?" |
47718 | --"What reason did he give for wishing to break off the engagement so soon?" |
47718 | --_Mistress( to former Cook)._"Well, Eliza, what are you doing now?" |
47718 | 1.--What has the dealer declared?] |
47718 | 2.--Will dummy go spades?] |
47718 | 3.--Why did she declare hearts?] |
47718 | 4.--What has dummy declared?] |
47718 | 5.--Who doubled no trumps?] |
47718 | After all, why should ceilings be white? |
47718 | Ai n''t you, what?" |
47718 | Am I getting_ stout_? |
47718 | And how many are there in a case?"] |
47718 | And is this the dear little soul? |
47718 | And-- er--(_struck by the novelty_) what sort of paper did you have put_ outside_? |
47718 | Auriol?" |
47718 | Binks?" |
47718 | Borely?" |
47718 | Brown._"Pray, Jane, what on earth is the reason I am kept waiting for my breakfast in this way?" |
47718 | Ca n''t you give me something to remember him by?" |
47718 | Ca n''t you think of something shorter? |
47718 | D''ye think he''ll win? |
47718 | Did n''t ye see me call for trumps? |
47718 | Do I ever break in when you''re talking?" |
47718 | Er-- when could I have a minute with you alone?" |
47718 | Gimlet._"Who is that pretty girl those men are talking to?" |
47718 | Has he any tin? |
47718 | Have n''t you heard? |
47718 | How can you annoy me with such trifles? |
47718 | How ever did you do it?" |
47718 | How shall I like the yoke of marriage? |
47718 | I do n''t believe you''ve ever tasted my own make?" |
47718 | I hope you like your place?" |
47718 | I hope you''ve shown him in, and asked him to sit down?" |
47718 | I s''pose they''re all by the same man, eh?"] |
47718 | I suppose you wo n''t mind that?" |
47718 | Is it_ quite_ too late? |
47718 | Jones._"What is it, my pet?" |
47718 | Just tell me which day you like best?" |
47718 | May I have the pleasure? |
47718 | No_ bread?_ then bring me some_ toast_." |
47718 | Now, can you suggest any other inducement I can offer?" |
47718 | Now_ will_ he keep a carriage? |
47718 | Rickyard?" |
47718 | Ripping idea, is n''t it?"] |
47718 | Shall I get into hot water? |
47718 | Shall I have nerve to make the shot? |
47718 | Shall I put on the_ tiniest_ touch? |
47718 | Shall I risk the match? |
47718 | Shall_ I_ have a chance? |
47718 | Snooks( appearing at door)._"What''s the matter, Mary? |
47718 | So_ you_''ll do some tricks to amuse the children, wo n''t you?"] |
47718 | THE MODERN WOMAN''S VADE MECUM_ Question._ Do you agree with a certain female lecturer, that it is the duty of the fair sex to captivate the other? |
47718 | This is very sudden, is n''t it?" |
47718 | Tomlinson?" |
47718 | UN PAGE D''AMOUR]_ Q._ Then, before marriage, what should be your treatment of man? |
47718 | Was n''t that_ clever_ of him, dear?" |
47718 | Was the village very gay?" |
47718 | What do you advise?" |
47718 | What do you think, besides the joint, of ox- tail- soup, lobster patés, and an entrée-- say, beef?" |
47718 | What''s the matter?" |
47718 | What?"] |
47718 | Where did you get it, my dear? |
47718 | Which way do_ you_ go home?" |
47718 | Will there be a breeze on? |
47718 | Will they have mince- pies? |
47718 | Wo n''t you join?" |
47718 | Wonder if it hurts? |
47718 | Wonder if she rouges much? |
47718 | You can go, of course; but, as you have been with me for nine years, I should like to know the reason?" |
47718 | You understand it, I suppose?" |
47718 | [ Illustration: A BLANK PAGE.--_Sir Patrick._"Then, I presume you know a little about cleaning silver, waiting at table, and so on?" |
47718 | [ Illustration: A CHEERFUL PROSPECT_ General Blaxer._"Ah, partner, do you-- er-- discard from-- er-- strength or weakness?" |
47718 | [ Illustration: A GOOD START.--_New Maid Servant( just arrived)._"May I harsk if my young man''as called yet?"] |
47718 | [ Illustration: A HINT.--_Young Housewife( as the front door bell rings)._"Now, is that the butcher''s boy-- or a visitor?" |
47718 | [ Illustration: BEFORE THE RECEPTION.--_Lady of the House( instructing new page)._"Have you ever been at a party before, Riggles?" |
47718 | [ Illustration: BRIDGE BELOW STAIRS.--"Good gracious, James, whatever is the meaning of this extraordinary hilarity in the kitchen?" |
47718 | [ Illustration: FEBRUARY 14_ Mistress._"So you want me to read this love- letter to you?" |
47718 | [ Illustration: NEW YEAR''S FETE AND GALA.--"Well, Jane, did you have a good time at home? |
47718 | [ Illustration: PRIMUM VIVERE, DEINDE PHILOSOPHARI.--"Is Florrie''s engagement really off, then?" |
47718 | [ Illustration: SANCTA SIMPLICITAS_ Orthodox Old Maid._"But, Rebecca, is your place of worship consecrated?" |
47718 | [ Illustration: THE CONVALESCENT_ New Curate( tenderly)._"My good man, what induced you to send for me?" |
47718 | [ Illustration: THE MEREST ACCIDENT.--_She._"So you failed in your_ vivâ voce_ exam.?" |
47718 | [ Illustration: THE SERVANT QUESTION"Oh, I say,''ave you seen the papers about''shall we do without servants?'' |
47718 | [ Illustration: THINGS ONE WOULD RATHER HAVE LEFT UNSAID.--_Hostess( who has just sung)._"Are you_ quite_ sure you do n''t sing, Captain Lovell?" |
47718 | [ Illustration:"----BUT THOSE UNHEARD ARE SWEETER"SCENE--_A Boarding- house.__ Wife._"Why do you always sit at the piano, David? |
47718 | [ Illustration:"A GHOSTLY VISITANT"_ Mistress( returning)._"Any one to see me, Mary?" |
47718 | [ Illustration:"MERELY MARY ANN"AGAIN.--"Please,''m, the fishmonger says will you have it filtered?"] |
47718 | [ Illustration:_ Applicant( for situation as parlour- maid)._"Should I be expected to hand things at lunch, madam,_ or do you stretch_?"] |
47718 | [ Illustration:_ Employer( to applicant for situation)._"And then I am very particular about my cellars; you understand wine, I presume?" |
47718 | [ Illustration:_ Her Ladyship( who has been away from home for Christmas)._"Well, Blundell, I hope you all had an enjoyable Christmas dinner?" |
47718 | [ Illustration:_ Hostess._"And do you really believe in christian science?" |
47718 | [ Illustration:_ Lady Caller( to old family servant)._"Well, Bridget, did Master Arthur shoot any tigers in India?" |
47718 | [ Illustration:_ Lady Sneerwell._"Have your daughters accomplished much in music?" |
47718 | [ Illustration:_ Mistress( about to engage a new housemaid)._"Have you had any experience?" |
47718 | [ Illustration:_ Mistress._"Well now, what can you cook?" |
47718 | [ Illustration:_ Sentimental Youth( to partner shaken by a passing tremor)._"Oh, I hope you do n''t feel cold?" |
47718 | [ Illustration:_ She( to clumsy steerer)._"Rather like progressive bridge, is n''t it?" |
47718 | [ Illustration:_ Son of the House._"Are n''t you dancing this? |
47718 | [ Illustration:_ Son of the House._"Wo n''t you sing something, Miss Muriel?" |
47718 | _ Am_ I too old a bird to mate? |
47718 | _ Bertram( thinking to be complimentary)._"Which one?"] |
47718 | _ Cook._"Yes,''m-- Fresh, or Austr----?" |
47718 | _ Daughter of the House._"Can you tell that by just looking at her?" |
47718 | _ Deaf Old Gent._"Eh? |
47718 | _ He._ Are Costa Ricas going up or down? |
47718 | _ He._ By Jingo, was that twinge a touch of gout? |
47718 | _ He._ Can I stave off old Snip another quarter? |
47718 | _ He._ Does the grey show-- unless one looks too close? |
47718 | _ He._ Does this moustache mean to come on at all? |
47718 | _ He._ Hoisted? |
47718 | _ He._ I say, how many l''s are there in"girl"? |
47718 | _ He._ I wonder if this"weed"will turn me queer? |
47718 | _ He._ I wonder whether_ She_ will answer right? |
47718 | _ He._ Is it a"pass,"I wonder, or a"pluck"? |
47718 | _ He._ Is my neat middle parting_ really_ thinning? |
47718 | _ He._ Must I allow the vest another inch? |
47718 | _ He._ Must I drop drinking port wine after dinner? |
47718 | _ He._ My dear,_ can_ that last cheque be wholly spent? |
47718 | _ He._ Shall I have"go"to get through this round dance? |
47718 | _ He._ Shall I, I wonder, get my knighthood now? |
47718 | _ He._ Will Lord Fitz- Faddle give that berth to Jack? |
47718 | _ He._ Will Uncle take me to the pantomime? |
47718 | _ He._ Will our chaps at the wickets have a chance? |
47718 | _ He._ Will they blackball me at the Buffers''Club? |
47718 | _ He._"Why?" |
47718 | _ It''s only master!_"]***** EVERYTHING COMES TO THE MAN WHO WAITS.--_Country Rector''s Wife( engaging manservant)._ And can you wait at dinner? |
47718 | _ Master( reads writing on card, then suddenly springing up, exclaims)_ Oh--(_stops the escape of a very strong expletive_)--How long ago? |
47718 | _ Miss J._"But sha n''t I bore you? |
47718 | _ Mistress._"Can you do a_ vol- au- vent_?" |
47718 | _ Mistress._"Let''s see? |
47718 | _ Mistress._"What about_ entrées_?" |
47718 | _ Nurse._"Well, ma''am, I hope as you do n''t expect me to go walking with_ that_ young person? |
47718 | _ Oldest Inhabitant._"What does he say, Betty?" |
47718 | _ Q._ And after the nuptial knot had been tied, what then? |
47718 | _ Q._ And if a woman has literary tastes, what would you advise? |
47718 | _ Q._ What do you think of glasses? |
47718 | _ Q._ What is your opinion about latchkeys, visits to the music- halls, and cigarettes? |
47718 | _ Q._ You do not object, then, to brains in the abstract? |
47718 | _ She( shyly)._"How would_ I_ do?"] |
47718 | _ She._ Could I get on those"sixes"at a pinch? |
47718 | _ She._ Did Lady Linda mean that as a snub? |
47718 | _ She._ Did that sly Fanny hear him call me"dear"? |
47718 | _ She._ Doctor, dear doctor, what_ does_ ail my back? |
47718 | _ She._ I wonder whether_ He_ will"pop"tonight? |
47718 | _ She._ Is Nelly really sweet on_ that_ young Brown? |
47718 | _ She._ Is flirting_ really_ now a sort of sinning? |
47718 | _ She._ Is that a tinge of red about my nose? |
47718 | _ She._ Is the dear fellow right about confession? |
47718 | _ She._ Now shall I get a partner for this dance? |
47718 | _ She._ Shall I, oh shall I, have a chance this season? |
47718 | _ She._ Was it my eyes with which he seemed so struck? |
47718 | _ She._ When_ will_ the major come up to the scratch? |
47718 | _ She._ Will Flora hook the wealthy cotton- spinner? |
47718 | _ She._ Will Lady Jane before those Jones''s bow? |
47718 | _ She._ Will Mamma let me wear my hair in curl? |
47718 | _ She._ Will Papa think dear Percy''s"screw"too small? |
47718 | _ She._ Will he give me or Fan the first round dance? |
47718 | _ She._ Will it be Brighton or the Continent? |
47718 | _ She._ Will my new doll open and shut her eyes? |
47718 | _ She._ Will pretty Master Smith be there this time? |
47718 | _ She._ Will the new curate be engaged or not? |
47718 | _ She._"Is n''t there? |
47718 | _ She._"Oh, were n''t you there?"] |
47718 | _ She._"Why do n''t you do something?" |
47718 | _ She.__ Did_ he mean anything by that warm glance? |
47718 | _ Tomlinson( who is always ready with some pretty speech)._"Have I, really? |
47718 | _ Who_ is it that sees and hears all we do, and before whom_ even I_ am but as a crushed worm?" |
47718 | _ Wife( still more devoted)._ I''ve been thinking-- why not--_Bridget?__ Husband( delighted)._ By all means. |
47718 | _ Wilkins._"Certainly my lady; and afterwards I presoom we may dance with''oom we like?"] |
47718 | and why has n''t he put his address?"] |
47718 | going to leave us, James?" |
46341 | A clown? 46341 And does it not affect the lady''s social and professional standing?" |
46341 | Are all those tickets for to- night? |
46341 | Are yez the man that left the call for the five o''clock train? |
46341 | But how will anyone know we''re going to play? |
46341 | Did n''t you notice his condition? |
46341 | Do n''t you know your own wife''s name? |
46341 | Do you expect to find tomato cans as far down in the bowels of the earth as that? |
46341 | Do you mean she is n''t going to get her divorce? |
46341 | Do? |
46341 | Does that apply to private life in Paris? |
46341 | Governor,said Payne,"if we turn up aboard the ship to- morrow a bit squiffy or with a hold- over, you wo n''t mind, will you?" |
46341 | Governor,said he,"why do n''t you write about this beautiful place in your new book?" |
46341 | Granted,replied Barrymore,"but why censure the lady personally, a foreigner as well? |
46341 | Have you any idea what the price of American beauties is? |
46341 | He''s clever, quite; Whence came he? 46341 How can I write about a place when I ca n''t see?" |
46341 | How did you get them then? |
46341 | How do you know anything about my mental capacity? |
46341 | How long did he cry? |
46341 | How much a dozen? |
46341 | I beg pardon, guv''nor,replied the cabby,"but where is your''ome, sir?" |
46341 | Is he dead? |
46341 | Is that known in Paris? |
46341 | Is that right? |
46341 | Maybe it will,I agreed,"but we have n''t done any wrong, any harm, so why should we worry?" |
46341 | Shall I send you the script to read? |
46341 | Tanked up to the collar button and skate? 46341 Tight?" |
46341 | Well,said Charley,"you like him as an artist, do n''t you?" |
46341 | What do you tell me all this for? 46341 What do you think of Gertrude''s suggestion?" |
46341 | What do_ you_ think of it? |
46341 | What in the world are you doing there, Charley? |
46341 | What is it? |
46341 | What kind of a part is mine? |
46341 | What? |
46341 | Where shall I drive you to now, sir? |
46341 | Who is that chap? |
46341 | Who is this boy? |
46341 | Why did n''t you do this two days ago and save the coal? |
46341 | Why did n''t you say Johnny Jones was coming? 46341 Why do n''t you do it at once?" |
46341 | Why do n''t you go and witness a performance? |
46341 | Why not? |
46341 | Why not? |
46341 | Why, oh why, do beautiful women marry Nat Goodwin? |
46341 | Will that satisfy you and the members of your family? |
46341 | Will you announce us to the public from the stage? |
46341 | Winning? |
46341 | Would we ever meet again? |
46341 | You call that art,asked Lackaye,"a wanton, expounding her amorous successes? |
46341 | You do n''t imagine I''m going to tell every common cabman my private address, do you? |
46341 | You have n''t engaged her for Australia, have you? |
46341 | 127 XXV THE SKATING RINK 131 XXVI NUMBER TWO 134 XXVII A FIGHT WON(?) |
46341 | 283 LXVI ROBERT FORD 284 LXVII MORE PLAYS 286 LXVIII WILLIE COLLIER 288 LXIX HENRY MILLER 290 LXX WHAT''S IN A NAME? |
46341 | A trifler? |
46341 | After that what could a true- born American do? |
46341 | Alone? |
46341 | Also how about the returns from a revival of both? |
46341 | Am I not to be envied? |
46341 | And why not? |
46341 | And why should I take myself seriously when nobody else does? |
46341 | Are all the budding geniuses to be strangled at their birth, their dreams to be made delusions? |
46341 | Are they to have no chance to gratify their ambitions, only the remote possibility of being one of an ensemble? |
46341 | Are we? |
46341 | Are you sure?" |
46341 | As for our contemplated plunge into matrimony Gertrude asked,"Why deny that? |
46341 | As he gave the imitation a friend of mine, seated in the front row, looked over and very audibly asked,"Well, what do you think of that, Nat?" |
46341 | As we stood there I chanced to overhear this remark:"How could you possibly have married such a vulgar little person?" |
46341 | At the end of every act I simply said,"Go on,"and at the finish,"When do we produce that play?" |
46341 | But San Francisco asked,"How can a man be a hero and have red hair?" |
46341 | But Time looks sadly down upon the merry makers and the measured swing of the pendulum of thought and argument questions,"How long will it last?" |
46341 | But after all-- what''s in a name? |
46341 | But do the masses know? |
46341 | By what right has the modern actor forsaken his frock coat for the sock and buskin? |
46341 | Can you imagine anything more ludicrous than these psalm singers making arbitrary laws about the temperature of our food? |
46341 | Cowardly? |
46341 | Did he ever cause a ripple of laughter to equal those ripples set running by delightful Willie Collier? |
46341 | Did he ever hold you enthralled in a spell of reverence, as did Salvini or John McCullough in his address to the Senate in"Othello"? |
46341 | Did the public go to see the players or the play? |
46341 | Do n''t you think I am frightened enough without this information?" |
46341 | Do n''t you think him rather amusing? |
46341 | Does it ever occur to these psalm singers that people do this of their own volition? |
46341 | During the several months before my wife finally won(?) |
46341 | Everybody loved him and who could help it? |
46341 | Finally one of them approached Goodi and pulling off his cap asked,"It''s all right, guv''nor, but what do we get for our time?" |
46341 | HE: Did he talk remarkably well to- night? |
46341 | HE: Does he-- really? |
46341 | HE: In what way? |
46341 | HE: Really? |
46341 | HE: Were those stories he told at dinner supposed to be funny? |
46341 | HOME 240 LVI NUMBER THREE 243 LVII WHEN WE WERE TWENTY- ONE AND OTHER PLAYS 248 LVIII AT JACKWOOD 254 LIX"WHY DO BEAUTIFUL WOMEN MARRY NAT GOODWIN?" |
46341 | Had he built a playhouse, like the man of his hour and time, Edwin Booth? |
46341 | Had he during the last decade created any characters? |
46341 | Had he produced any original plays, made any production, or even leased a theatre, like Mansfield, or Sothern, Irving, or Possart? |
46341 | Has he maintained the dignity of the drama? |
46341 | He continued,"Well, you do drink, do n''t you?" |
46341 | He doubtless ruminated,"I must produce it; but how?" |
46341 | He finished his remarks with,"Do you and your enlightened countrymen consider Mr. Corbett a good actor?" |
46341 | He just looked at me a minute, his black eyes nearly popping out of his head, then indicating the bills and silver in his hand said solemnly,"Me? |
46341 | He listened to their patronizing suggestions as to a consummation of the deal and, pointing to Rob, asked,"Is my pal included in this?" |
46341 | He looked at them for a moment, then turned to one of his companions, saying:"Where is the per- per- picture of our Saviour?" |
46341 | He was standing in the wings and as I came off I said,"What can I do, Mr. Robson? |
46341 | Holy? |
46341 | How long will it last? |
46341 | How many knew the author or Joseph Brooks who presented us? |
46341 | Humor? |
46341 | I said,"Surely, you are not going to make good a promise made in jest?" |
46341 | I shouted,"What''s the matter?" |
46341 | I simply asked,"How did Mr. Warren like me?" |
46341 | I think it was the summer of 1898( but what difference does it make?) |
46341 | I was about to leave friends, family and a woman who was sure to loathe my name when she heard of my act-- and all for what? |
46341 | I wonder how many readers cut out the pictures of those little cherubs,"Alan Dale"and"Vance"Thompson, and paste them in their scrap books? |
46341 | I wonder if people go to see clever George Cohan or George Cohan''s play? |
46341 | I wonder? |
46341 | If the commercial gentlemen who wield the sceptre do but command submission what does it signify who pays the price of admission? |
46341 | If they draw the money, what matter to the booking agent what amount of money has been invested? |
46341 | If we worshipped you down here, what must they be doing for you now? |
46341 | In a word did Mansfield ever make you really laugh or truly sob? |
46341 | Instead of either of them I brought back a manuscript of a comedy called"What Would a Gentleman Do?" |
46341 | Irving quietly looked up and queried,"And was it?" |
46341 | Irving, calmly wiping his glasses, looked at him for a moment and asked,"Why not try one of the Scilly Islands?" |
46341 | Is he still going strong in America?" |
46341 | Is he supposed to be a comic man in your country? |
46341 | Is it a crime to be respectable? |
46341 | Is it a crime to have an honest fireside? |
46341 | Is there anything in that frank, boyish countenance which even suggests a cold blooded, conscienceless murderer? |
46341 | Jefferson, who was very literal, asked,"Is Sol tired?" |
46341 | John Daly, the gambler? |
46341 | Lackaye said,"Where are you going to- night, Sydney?" |
46341 | ME, bet on a prize fight? |
46341 | Never? |
46341 | No art? |
46341 | Now they thoroughly understand the story and wo n''t you please come to- night and tell the story over again?" |
46341 | Now, do n''t you think it''s wise for me to paper the house?" |
46341 | Of course not? |
46341 | Of whom does he remind you, Rob?" |
46341 | Oh why did I not go to Washington? |
46341 | Out of my mouth issued these words:"Wo n''t you please come in, Max?" |
46341 | Possessed of subtlety? |
46341 | Rob asked,"How did he take it?" |
46341 | SHE: By way of anecdotes and funny stories? |
46341 | SHE: Of course; did n''t you hear the guests laugh? |
46341 | Said Jefferson,"What load is he carrying?" |
46341 | Shall I ever again enjoy that pleasure? |
46341 | Shall we be? |
46341 | Shall we join them? |
46341 | The manager looked at him and replied:"My boy, where could I get the thousand?" |
46341 | The owner started after him, but Travers held him back, saying,"Nev- nev- never mind the d- d- dog, wha- wha- what''ll you take for the rat?" |
46341 | The real reason? |
46341 | The star''s wife turned to me and asked,"What is the matter? |
46341 | Then I turned and with all the force at my command snarled,"How now?" |
46341 | Then ensued the following dialogue:-- SHE: Do you think him vulgar? |
46341 | Then some extremely clever reviewer of prize fights comes forth with this headline:--"Why do Beautiful Women Shake Nat Goodwin?" |
46341 | They had no thought of her anguish, her future and as for me-- of what matter my end? |
46341 | Think of it, gentle(?) |
46341 | To gratify his wife''s ambition would I secure her an opening on the stage or put her with some good tutor? |
46341 | To which does he turn? |
46341 | True, the man''s personality always transcends the characterization, but is n''t that true of all great actors? |
46341 | Was he,"The Dean,"anything like what the author intended Bob Acres to be? |
46341 | Was it fair to break up this happy home? |
46341 | Was it her acting or the unwholesome notoriety that preceded us that had opened his discerning eyes? |
46341 | Was this fair to her? |
46341 | Was this fair to the public, to the author, to anyone? |
46341 | Were the others? |
46341 | What are you talking about?" |
46341 | What did they know of me except through the newspapers? |
46341 | What does it matter after all? |
46341 | What edification can that give? |
46341 | What honest actor does not? |
46341 | What is he? |
46341 | What is it? |
46341 | What of it? |
46341 | What will man not do for gold? |
46341 | What will the verdict be? |
46341 | When he had finished, I said,"For the love of heaven, Cazauran, why did you select me to play that gruesome tragedy rôle?" |
46341 | Where began his gentle schooling? |
46341 | Where does he come in? |
46341 | Which star do John and the brilliant men I have mentioned occupy? |
46341 | Which will it be? |
46341 | Who does not find a hazardous game attractive? |
46341 | Who shall say it is not the fault of those who have pointed the finger of scorn at a woman seeking only to do right? |
46341 | Why be fair with anything or anybody? |
46341 | Why ca n''t---- do this?" |
46341 | Why cause the Indiana flowers to cry for a gardener-- for who will sing their praises when dear Jim has gone? |
46341 | Why clog"The Old Swimmin''Hole"with weeds? |
46341 | Why did he concentrate his force upon one sister at that interview and demand obedience? |
46341 | Why did n''t he shut up all the barber shops and revoke the Gillette Safety Razor patent? |
46341 | Why did n''t you put it in the bad eye? |
46341 | Why do we court conflict with Fate when we know Fate is merciless? |
46341 | Why is it so many women are such consummate actresses off the stage and such impossible amateurs on? |
46341 | Why make humanity weep and chill our hearts? |
46341 | Why not kill her and her paramour? |
46341 | Why not? |
46341 | Why should he disguise the fact that he was her friend?" |
46341 | Why, oh why, did my mad passion for fish cakes cause me to tarry at the Metropole? |
46341 | Why? |
46341 | Will history do the little corporal justice? |
46341 | Will the world ever be rid of this form of human parasite? |
46341 | With all her powers, envied by the many, rich in worldly goods-- did those searching liquid orbs denote complete happiness? |
46341 | Wo nt you give me an appointment tomorrow? |
46341 | Would she exchange one for the other? |
46341 | Yet what physiognomist could read in this boyish face such dastardy as Robert Ford delighted in? |
46341 | [ Illustration: COQUELIN_ Would he have gone in vaudeville? |
46341 | _ Chapter LIX_"WHY DO BEAUTIFUL WOMEN MARRY NAT GOODWIN"? |
46341 | _ Chapter LI_ ANTONY(?) |
46341 | _ Chapter LXX_ WHAT''S IN A NAME? |
46341 | _ Chapter XXVII_ A FIGHT WON(?) |
46341 | before allowing him the privilege of taking her hand in marriage? |
46341 | is this really Fletcher?''" |
46341 | or the next day? |
46341 | or the next? |
46341 | them? |
46341 | who is this young man?" |
46341 | whom do you suppose I met in Paris, last week?" |
59813 | A''n''t they one? |
59813 | And these stones? |
59813 | And what did they bring them for? |
59813 | And what is that? |
59813 | And what is the name of the beautiful hill yonder, before us across the water? |
59813 | And what profession does he follow? |
59813 | Are there other stones like these on the plains? |
59813 | Are you Welsh, sir? |
59813 | Ca n''t you tell me whether there are any ruins upon it? |
59813 | Did a wolf ever live there? |
59813 | Do the people of the plain wonder how they came there? |
59813 | Do they not suppose them to have been brought? |
59813 | Do you doubt it? |
59813 | Early here, sir,said the man, who was tall, and dressed in a dark green slop, and had all the appearance of a shepherd;"a traveller, I suppose?" |
59813 | Have you anything to say? |
59813 | How did they bring them? |
59813 | How did they ever come here? |
59813 | How did they ever come here? |
59813 | How did those stones come here? |
59813 | How do you know? |
59813 | I never receive presents; with respect to the stones, I say with yourself, How did they ever come here? |
59813 | I suppose you would not care to have some milk? |
59813 | I wonder whether they are here? |
59813 | Is it deep? |
59813 | Is not this a dull place? |
59813 | May I ask the name of this lake? |
59813 | Plenty of fish in it? |
59813 | These stones? |
59813 | To the right or the left? |
59813 | To- day, sir, and walking? |
59813 | Well? |
59813 | What are they? |
59813 | What are we, then? |
59813 | What do the people of the plain say of them? |
59813 | What do you mean? |
59813 | What do you see above you? |
59813 | What is that? |
59813 | What is the name,said I,"of the great black mountain there on the other side?" |
59813 | What river? |
59813 | What stream is this, I wonder? |
59813 | What was he poisoned with? |
59813 | Where are they now? |
59813 | Where are those barrows and great walls of earth you were speaking of? |
59813 | Where from? |
59813 | Where? |
59813 | Who should have brought them? |
59813 | Who were the British? |
59813 | Why do you suppose so? |
59813 | Why not? |
59813 | Why, they say-- How did they ever come here? |
59813 | Why? |
59813 | Why? |
59813 | Wo n''t you walk in, sir? |
59813 | Yes,said I,"I am a traveller; are these sheep yours?" |
59813 | ( I think they hang there winter and summer on those trees and almost drop fruit as I pass;) What is it I interchange so suddenly with strangers? |
59813 | ( It is a privilege, is it not, to be allowed the forbidden, even if it be the privilege of being run over by the engine?) |
59813 | ( by- the- bye, why did Professor Aytoun leave out this excellent hit in his edition?) |
59813 | A strange place this, sir,"said he, looking at the stones;"ever here before?" |
59813 | After that adventure of my friend with the policeman, you would not have cared, would you, to publish that in the first person? |
59813 | And is not this a walk worth making? |
59813 | And what respectable man, when you overtake him on the way and speak to him, will refuse to hold conversation with you, provided you have an umbrella? |
59813 | Are you going far to- night, sir?" |
59813 | But is it not all written in_ Westward Ho!_ and in the_ Prose Idylls_, in which Kingsley put his most genuine power? |
59813 | But what did it cost? |
59813 | But whither should I bend my course? |
59813 | Can I have dinner, house?" |
59813 | Do many people ascend Snowdon from your house?" |
59813 | Do you come from Caernarvon?" |
59813 | Do you know the talk of those turning eyeballs? |
59813 | Do you say to me, Do not leave me? |
59813 | Do you say, I am already prepared-- I am well beaten and undenied-- adhere to me? |
59813 | Do you say, Venture not?--If you leave me you are lost? |
59813 | Do you see to the left that little plantation on the brow of Foulshiels Hill, with the sunlight lying on its upper corner? |
59813 | Does not this daisy leap to my heart set in its coat of emerald? |
59813 | Else to what end does the world go on, and why was America discovered? |
59813 | For instance, what is the true signification of that immense mass of territory and population known by the name of China to us? |
59813 | Have the past struggles succeeded? |
59813 | Here is adhesiveness, it is not previously fashion''d, it is apropos; Do you know what it is as you pass to be loved by strangers? |
59813 | I give you my love more precious than money, I give you myself before preaching or law; Will you give me yourself? |
59813 | I hallooed again, and a voice cried in Welsh,"What do you want?" |
59813 | I suppose you are acquainted with all the secrets of the hills?" |
59813 | I suppose you live in that house?" |
59813 | I was afraid the people would ask, Where are your Northern Ballads? |
59813 | Is not this wild rose sweet without a comment? |
59813 | Moreover, who doubts that you are a respectable character provided you have an umbrella? |
59813 | Nature? |
59813 | Now, in the event of such interrogations, what could I answer? |
59813 | Only the kernel of every object nourishes; Where is he who tears off the husks for you and me? |
59813 | Or if a footpad asks him for his money, what need he care provided he has an umbrella? |
59813 | Or is it unimportant how many foggy days there are in his life? |
59813 | Or was it nothing on earth but something in heaven? |
59813 | Shall we stick by each other as long as we live? |
59813 | The air was cold, Tom; so it was, there was no denying it; but would it have been more genial in the gig? |
59813 | The quiet lake, and balmy air, The hill, the stream, the tower, the tree, Are they still such as once they were, Or is the dreary change in me? |
59813 | The singer can easily move us to tears or to laughter, but where is he who can excite in us a pure morning joy? |
59813 | Then I would show your honour the fountain of the hopping creatures, where, where----""Were you ever at that Wolf''s crag, that Castell y Cidwm?" |
59813 | These yearnings why are they? |
59813 | What business have I in the woods, if I am thinking of something out of the woods? |
59813 | What gives me to be free to a woman''s and man''s good- will? |
59813 | What has succeeded? |
59813 | What is it that makes it so hard sometimes to determine whither we will walk? |
59813 | What need he fear if a wild bull or a ferocious dog attacks him, provided he has a good umbrella? |
59813 | What on earth persuaded the animal to go on like that? |
59813 | What part of it, if any, has been well spent? |
59813 | What with some driver as I ride on the seat by his side? |
59813 | What with some fisherman drawing his seine by the shore as I walk by and pause? |
59813 | When we walk, we naturally go to the fields and woods: what would become of us if we walked only in the garden or a mall? |
59813 | When were travellers by wheels and hoofs seen with such red- hot cheeks as those? |
59813 | Where are your alliterative translations from Ab Gwilym-- of which you were always talking, and with which you promised to astonish the world? |
59813 | Where is he now? |
59813 | Where is he that undoes stratagems and envelopes for you and me? |
59813 | Where is the literature which gives expression to Nature? |
59813 | Who has not betrayed his master many times since last he heard the note? |
59813 | Who has not seen in imagination, when looking into the sunset sky, the gardens of the Hesperides, and the foundation of all those fables? |
59813 | Who would ever think of a_ side_ of any of the supple cat tribe, as we speak of a_ side_ of beef? |
59813 | Who would exchange this rapid hurry of the blood for yonder stagnant misery, though its pace were twenty miles for one? |
59813 | Why are there men and women that while they are nigh me the sunlight expands my blood? |
59813 | Why are there trees I never walk under but large and melodious thoughts descend upon me? |
59813 | Why when they leave me do my pennants of joy sink flat and lank? |
59813 | Will not man grow to greater perfection intellectually as well as physically under these influences? |
59813 | said I, after I had drunk some of the milk;"are there any near where we are?" |
59813 | said I;"is he a fisherman?" |
59813 | these thoughts in the darkness why are they? |
59813 | to mankind? |
59813 | what gives them to be free to mine? |
59813 | what shall we do to be happy and not be vulgar?" |
59813 | when were they so good- humouredly and merrily bloused? |
59813 | will you come travel with me? |
59813 | your nation? |
59813 | yourself? |
61313 | A third candidate? |
61313 | And that nest of singing- birds with whom I saw you dining,said Jebb,"how did they entertain you?" |
61313 | But,I pursued,"are we not in danger of thinking too much of the social matter? |
61313 | Female writers as well as male? |
61313 | Five successive Nicodemuses,I said,"what do you think of that?" |
61313 | Had they no ideas to exchange on that subject? 61313 I am very glad to have the pleasure of playing a game of billiards with you, Mr. Besant, but why should I consult you about my writings? |
61313 | Only in so far,he went on,"as is strictly consistent with the interests of literature and scholarship-- of course? |
61313 | Outsiders, then,said Mr. Spencer,"a few possible and a multitude of impossible candidates?" |
61313 | Quite a social triumph,the_ Morning Post_ remarks;"a bloodless victory in the campaign of letters"--rather happy, is it not? |
61313 | Seen_ Polyanthus_? |
61313 | Tennyson? 61313 We shall be very old, I am afraid, before we reach letter B,"I remarked,"shall we not?" |
61313 | What else could one have anticipated? 61313 What then,"said the novelist,"is to be the practical service of the English Academy to life and literature?" |
61313 | Whom, then, do you propose,continued Lecky to Besant,"to summon to your consultations?" |
61313 | You are not aware, then,I said,"that a third candidate is before us?" |
61313 | You would fain be kinglier, say, than I am? |
61313 | 69 WHAT IS A GREAT POET? |
61313 | 91 MAKING A NAME IN LITERATURE 113 THE LIMITS OF REALISM IN FICTION 135 IS VERSE IN DANGER? |
61313 | A garden of lilies, golden- headed, white- stalked, behind the trellis of red roses? |
61313 | APPENDICES I TENNYSON-- AND AFTER? |
61313 | After all, this is mere assertion, and what am I that I should pretend to lay down the law? |
61313 | Are they the same to start with? |
61313 | Bryant, Holmes, and Emerson exist, and were never more prominent than to- day; but where are Halleck, Willis, and Dana? |
61313 | But Naiads plunging? |
61313 | But how could it have been more instructive?" |
61313 | But how much of that is literary? |
61313 | But in the meantime why show a front less courageous than that of the history- defying Zadkiel? |
61313 | But the second question was,"Who is your favourite English author?" |
61313 | But what evidence is there to show that an attention to real things does frighten away the novel reader? |
61313 | But when all this is said, what does it amount to? |
61313 | But,"O my Brothers, ye the Workers,"is it not still a little difficult? |
61313 | By whom is it written?" |
61313 | By- the- by, I hope you wear yours on official occasions in Samoa? |
61313 | Contents PAGE THE TYRANNY OF THE NOVEL 1 THE INFLUENCE OF DEMOCRACY ON LITERATURE 33 HAS AMERICA PRODUCED A POET? |
61313 | Could so much have been said in 1592, or in 1692, or in 1792? |
61313 | Did they not dwell on the social advantages it gives to literature? |
61313 | Do you recollect that when the papers discussed us, before our foundation, one thing they said was that there never would be a decent attendance? |
61313 | Hardy, Gardiner-- who could be more unexceptionable? |
61313 | Has America Produced a Poet? |
61313 | Has poetry, in forty years, risen at this ratio in the public estimation? |
61313 | Has the struggle for existence a charm only in its reproductive aspects? |
61313 | Have the stress and turmoil of a successful political career no charm? |
61313 | How do they hear of them in the first instance? |
61313 | How is he to freshen up his oft- repeated course of lectures to suit our jaded appetites? |
61313 | How is the public appetite for this insipidity to be reconciled with the partiality of the same readers for stories by writers of real excellence? |
61313 | How long, then, will the many permit themselves to be brow- beaten by the few? |
61313 | I know you think me rather a Philistine-- but can an Academician be a Philistine? |
61313 | I took for granted it was all right, and when we parted, as he left the Club, he said,"We meet later on this evening, I suppose?" |
61313 | If our sentiment is no longer so rhapsodical, shall we blame the poet? |
61313 | In the first place, what are we to say of Longfellow? |
61313 | In the same way, the only quite obvious answer to the query, How should a literary reputation be formed? |
61313 | In this great throng of resuscitated souls, all of whom have forfeited their copyright, how is the modern poet to exist? |
61313 | Is Tennyson, great as he is, a thousand times greater than Wordsworth? |
61313 | Is Verse in Danger? |
61313 | Is it merely a question of taking pains, of a happy accident-- of luck, in short? |
61313 | Is it to be the Archbishop of Canterbury?" |
61313 | Is there not perhaps in him something of Pagett, M.P., turned inside out? |
61313 | Meredith?" |
61313 | Mr. Stedman has mapped out the heavens with a telescope; what can an observer detect with the naked eye? |
61313 | Novelty, freshness, and excitement are to be sought for at all hazards, and where can they be found? |
61313 | Now, for instance, why do n''t you paint a pretty girl, crossing a rustic bridge, and met by a sportsman?" |
61313 | One hopes that, whoever may be added to our number to- night, the social----eh?" |
61313 | Or is the memory he seems to retain nothing but the shadow of a vision, no more substantial than the"arid rain"of notes from his own flute? |
61313 | Or will some secularist mayor, of strong purpose and an enemy to sentiment, order them to be deserted altogether? |
61313 | Probably Miss Amélie Rives? |
61313 | Satirist after satirist has chirped like a wren from the head of Pope; where are they now? |
61313 | The answer to the question,"Has America produced a Poet?" |
61313 | The man moved uneasily, and added at once:''What do you think about this long- distance ride?'' |
61313 | This is the secret of his abrupt familiar appeal, his"Dare I trust the same to you?" |
61313 | To what use will they put the unprecedented opportunity thrown in their way? |
61313 | Was he the fortunate recipient of an actual visit from nymphs, white and golden goddesses, divinely tender and indulgent? |
61313 | We are not here occupied with the old threadbare question,"What is a poet"? |
61313 | Were they, are they, swans? |
61313 | What are really the characteristics of this amazing and unparalleled poetry of Lanier? |
61313 | What are these novelists going to do? |
61313 | What but an acknowledgment of the crudity of a strong and rapidly developing young nature? |
61313 | What could be more respectable? |
61313 | What destroys the fame of an accepted author? |
61313 | What has become of Mrs. Gore and Mrs. March? |
61313 | What if it should be the prestige of verse that we left behind us in the Abbey? |
61313 | What is a Great Poet? |
61313 | What is the use of this tyranny which they wield, if it does not enable them to treat life broadly and to treat it whole? |
61313 | What of the multitude in higher spheres? |
61313 | What plays are these? |
61313 | What would he, what would I, give for that exquisite ardour, by the light of which all other poetry than Shelley''s seemed dim? |
61313 | What, then, is the form which we may reasonably expect it to take next? |
61313 | When the delights of the eye are removed from the sum of pleasure, what is left? |
61313 | When you enter the gates of Johns Hopkins, the question that is asked is,"What think you of Lanier"? |
61313 | Where are the deliquescents of yesteryear? |
61313 | Where in the France of to- day are the_ Méditations_ and_ Harmonies_ of Lamartine? |
61313 | Where is the great, the terrific, the cloud- compelling Churchill? |
61313 | Where is the once celebrated scene in the"boudoir oblong aux cycloïdes bigarrures"which enlivened_ Le Thé chez Miranda_ of M. Jean Moréas? |
61313 | Where will the people who attended there go now? |
61313 | Who can tell what inheritors of unfulfilled renown may not now be staining their divine lips with the latest of this season''s blackberries? |
61313 | Who shall say that Mr. Freeman was not a better historian than Robertson was? |
61313 | Who should meet me in the vestibule but Seeley? |
61313 | Who wrote_ Emilia Wyndham_, and to what elegant pen did the girls who are now grandmothers owe_ Ellen Middleton_? |
61313 | Who?" |
61313 | Why do the American novelists inveigh against plots? |
61313 | Why do those who have once pleased the public continue to please it, whatever lapses into carelessness and levity they permit themselves? |
61313 | Why does one vapid and lady- like novel speed on its way, while eleven others, apparently just like unto it, sink and disappear? |
61313 | Why is this? |
61313 | Why should there not be novels written for middle- aged persons? |
61313 | Why, then, should not Mr. Stedman''s admirable volume be taken as a complete and satisfactory answer to our editor''s query? |
61313 | Will any one who has anything of importance to communicate be likely in the future to express it through the medium of metrical language? |
61313 | Will they now be better filled? |
61313 | Yet surely there was, surely there is, an animal whiteness among the brown reeds of the lake that shines out yonder? |
61313 | Yet who shall say that these were not great poets in every possible sense of the word? |
61313 | [ 1] What does it mean? |
61313 | _ 1889._ WHAT IS A GREAT POET? |
61313 | _ 1890._ IS VERSE IN DANGER? |
61313 | _ 1891._ HAS AMERICA PRODUCED A POET? |
61313 | _ What likeness may define, and stray not__ From truth''s exactest way,__ A baby''s beauty? |
61313 | her neighbour replied,"do n''t you know he has written so and so, and so and so?" |
61313 | who could more eminently combine the qualities we seek?" |
61313 | yet did he make £ 4,500 by his_ History of Sicily_? |
61313 | you mean for your own Academy,"some one said;"as chaplain in the room of the poor Archbishop of York?" |
6313 | ''A boy has eighty- five turnips and gives his sister thirty''--pretty present for a girl, is n''t it? |
6313 | ''Do, Huldy?'' 6313 ''He ca n''t? |
6313 | ''No; why should they?'' 6313 ''Right out in the open air?'' |
6313 | Are you sick? |
6313 | Devoured who? |
6313 | Does she know who sends them? |
6313 | Forgive you? 6313 Hain''t the editor of the_ Augur_ a widower with a pair of twins?" |
6313 | How would you like to play with him? |
6313 | How_ can_ I, sah? |
6313 | I did n''t know you knew each other, Lottie? |
6313 | I saw Miss Bell the other day, Young Green''s new gig adorning--"What keeps your sister Ann away? |
6313 | Is n''t that splendid, Uncle Teddy? 6313 Lottie''s going to play, too; so will you and Daniel, wo n''t you, uncle? |
6313 | More? |
6313 | My dear Billy, wo n''t you wait a little while to see if you always like her as well as you do now? 6313 Oh,"said Billy, with surprise,"has n''t father got enough stamps to see him through?" |
6313 | Say, will you come and play with me some time? |
6313 | Spend a_ what?_said the gentle and astonished voice of my sister Lu, who, unperceived, had slipped into the room. |
6313 | Then you ca n''t go with us in the morning? |
6313 | Well, Billy Boy Blue, come blow your horn; what haystack have you been under till this time of day? 6313 Well,"says I,"how do they do?" |
6313 | Well,says I,"what do you ax a glass for it?" |
6313 | What think you of it? |
6313 | What will become of him? |
6313 | What''s the matter with you? |
6313 | What''s the matter, my boy? |
6313 | What,says I,"are these the stores where the traders in Hucklers''Row keep?" |
6313 | Where do you guess? |
6313 | Where in thunder,he said, with pallid lips, as he felt all over the bed in frenzied haste,"where in thunder are them infernal bees?" |
6313 | Where will you find a woman, Betsey Bobbet, that hain''t more or less clay? 6313 Which makes the most noise, Betsey Bobbet, a three- inch brook or a ten- footer? |
6313 | Who could tell a story with more wit, who could joke so pleasantly? |
6313 | Who else? 6313 Why did you-- oh, why did you blow Upon my life of snowy sleet, The fiah of love to fiercest glow, Then turn a damphar on the heat? |
6313 | Why, Daniel Lovegrove, my nephew, what does this mean? 6313 Why, ma, do n''t you know what a toadskin is? |
6313 | ''What else be they good for? |
6313 | --What do you look for so? |
6313 | 16 correctly the first time?) |
6313 | Ai n''t they there now on your shelf? |
6313 | Ai n''t you a mind to take these ere biscuits again and give me a glass of cider?" |
6313 | Alimentiveness, 8 Do n''t you see that he has burst off his lowest waistcoat button with feeding-- hey? |
6313 | And China Bloom at best is sorry food? |
6313 | And I met a feller, and says I:"What place is this?" |
6313 | And I see some biscuit lying on the shelf, and says I:"Mister, how much do you ax apiece for them ere biscuits?" |
6313 | Are there any but intimate family friends here this evening?" |
6313 | Are you sick?" |
6313 | At last says I:"Mister, have you got any good cider?" |
6313 | Can you keep a secret?" |
6313 | Can you tell how much money there is in a safe, which also has thick double walls, by kneading its knobs with your fingers? |
6313 | Could it be possible that Billy was caught in that vortex which whirled me down at ten years-- a little boy''s first love? |
6313 | D''you-- Miss Pilgrim?" |
6313 | Did I hear some gentleman say"Doubted"? |
6313 | Did n''t the biscuits that I give you just come to the cider?" |
6313 | Did not O-- buy nuts and gingerbread, when a boy, with the money he stole? |
6313 | Do n''t you see how small Conscientiousness is? |
6313 | Do n''t you think it would be a good plan to learn Billy better before you try to teach him? |
6313 | Do you hesitate? |
6313 | Do you think I am going to pay you for the biscuits, and let you keep them, too? |
6313 | Finally I laid down Dickens and spoke myself:"You do n''t seem well to- night, Daniel?" |
6313 | Finally Mis''Sawin, she says to her,''My dear, did n''t you never think folk would talk about you and the minister?'' |
6313 | Have you had your breakfast and taken care of Orab?" |
6313 | How d''ye do, Miss Pilgrim?" |
6313 | How did you suppose your mother''d feel to see you playing with those ragamuffins?" |
6313 | How old are you?" |
6313 | I took a long breath to recover from my astonishment at this unimaginable revelation, then said:"Is your feeling returned?" |
6313 | I''m a stranger, you know; but is there such a lady here as Mrs. Craggs-- Mrs._ Cromwell_ Craggs? |
6313 | I''m not melancholy on religion, and--""You do n''t tell me you''re in love?" |
6313 | It may be that you would like the walk; allow me the pleasure of accompanying you?" |
6313 | Johnson?" |
6313 | Now, is your digestion awry?" |
6313 | O''Ryan gave his pipe a whiff-"Them tidin''s is thransportin'', But may I ax your saintship if There''s any kind of sportin''?" |
6313 | Old- fashioned, coarse- minded people may perhaps ask,"But if we are not to laugh at''Don Quixote,''at whom are we, please, to laugh?" |
6313 | On him who chooses to jump down cataracts, Why should the sternest moralist be severe? |
6313 | Says I,''Put down that poor little pup; ai n''t you ashamed of yourself, Patsy Grogan? |
6313 | Shall we go and join the plays?" |
6313 | Suppose they should go by some accident, when your father was too old to make any more stamps for himself?" |
6313 | Suppose your parents were to lose all their property, what would become of them without a little son who could make money and keep accounts?" |
6313 | Surely you ca n''t refuse such an invitation from a lady?" |
6313 | Take, do n''t you? |
6313 | The Bible says,"swear not at all,"and I s''pose you know the Commandments about swearin''?'' |
6313 | The inscription is sweet when taken in connection with the portion of sacred history from which the quotation is made:"Is it well with the child? |
6313 | Thou''rt welcome to the town-- but why come here To bleed a brother poet, gaunt like thee? |
6313 | Uncle Teddy, d''ye know it was n''t a dog fight after all? |
6313 | We heave the sigh to human frailty due-- And shall not Sam have his? |
6313 | Whare bowts can George''s ekal be found? |
6313 | What are you laughing at? |
6313 | What brought on this sudden attack? |
6313 | What do you keep laughing so for( to the boarders)? |
6313 | What is there in me to love? |
6313 | What is there in the Rumbullions to start you off on such a bender of bashfulness as this which I here behold?" |
6313 | What more do you want? |
6313 | Where d''you live?" |
6313 | Where do you live?" |
6313 | Where does the boy learn such horrid words?" |
6313 | Who ever came"up to the scratch,"And for so little, jumped so bravely as Sam Patch? |
6313 | Who''s that fat lady on the sofa, that laughs so loud?" |
6313 | Why sing of these? |
6313 | Why_ is n''t_ he like Daniel?" |
6313 | Will you?'' |
6313 | Would it make you happy if I was to learn a hymn for you-- a smashing big hymn-- six verses, long metre, and no grumbling?" |
6313 | Yet they grew divine By their long tumbles; and if we can match Their hierarchy, shall we not entwine One wreath? |
6313 | You have devorhed him, have n''t you, Josiah''s Allen wife?" |
6313 | You''ll forgive me, uncle, for not mentioning her name yet? |
6313 | did n''t Huldy hev a time on''t when the minister began to come out of his study and wanted to ten''''round an''see to things? |
6313 | do I hear thy slender voice complain? |
6313 | he whispered in a choking voice,"can she mean me?" |
6313 | he will be, and sleeps with Don Quixote in the"dull cold marble"of an orthodox sobriety, how shall we make merry our souls? |
6313 | is it not the history of a thousand experiences? |
6313 | is n''t_ she_ a smasher?" |
6313 | rouge makes thee sick? |
6313 | said Billy, with an air of supreme contempt,"Could_ you_ stand such stuff-- say?" |
6313 | says Huldy,''_ is_ it improper for me to be here?'' |
6313 | says Huldy;''where have you put him?'' |
6313 | says I,"do you mean to impose upon me? |
6313 | says I;"what do you mean by that? |
6313 | says she,"what appeals to the tendah feelin''heart of a single female woman more than to see a lonely man who has lost his relict? |
6313 | says the Hoosier,''real genewine, good salt?'' |
6313 | what are_ you_ stopping the way for?" |
6313 | which is the roarer? |
6313 | which is the tearer? |
6313 | you do n''t think I mean he''d support them? |
6320 | ''_ Do n''t_ you like it?'' |
6320 | ''tis here: and what can suns give more? |
6320 | --_Donne._ Who but Donne would have thought that a good man is a telescope? |
6320 | Again, a man might ask out of what commonwealth Plato did banish them? |
6320 | And again, by Tityrus, what blessedness is derived to them that lie lowest from the goodness of them that sit highest? |
6320 | And do they not know that a tragedy is tied to the laws of poesy, and not of history? |
6320 | And doth the lawyer lie, then, when under the names of John a stile and John a noakes, he puts his case? |
6320 | And may not I presume a little further, to show the reasonableness of this word_ vates_? |
6320 | And say that the holy David''s Psalms are a divine poem? |
6320 | And then how will you discern what to follow but by your own discretion, which you had without reading Quintus Curtius? |
6320 | And what could prove more clearly that the old metrical form was dead? |
6320 | And why not so much the better, taking the best of both the other? |
6320 | Are the times so much more reformed now than they were five and twenty years ago? |
6320 | Are we to judge of a given work merely by asking: Is it clearly conceived and consistently carried out? |
6320 | Aristotle writes the Art of Poesy: and why if it should not be written? |
6320 | But if it be so in_ Gorboduc_, how much more in all the rest? |
6320 | But they will say, how then shall we set forth a story, which containeth both many places, and many times? |
6320 | But what need more? |
6320 | But what needeth more in a thing so known to all men? |
6320 | But what, shall the abuse of a thing make the right use odious? |
6320 | But what? |
6320 | But where doth Euripides? |
6320 | But, after all, it may be asked, is a painter like Botticelli-- a secondary painter-- a proper subject for general criticism? |
6320 | Do we not see the skill of physic( the best rampire to our often- assaulted bodies), being abused, teach poison the most violent destroyer? |
6320 | Doth not knowledge of law, whose end is to even and right all things, being abused, grow the crooked fosterer of horrible injuries? |
6320 | Doth not( to go to the highest) God''s word, abused, breed heresy? |
6320 | For see we not valiant Miltiades rot in his fetters? |
6320 | For wants he heat or light? |
6320 | For what else is the awaking his musical instruments? |
6320 | For what is it to make folks gape at a wretched beggar, or a beggarly clown? |
6320 | For who will be taught, if he be not moved with desire to be taught? |
6320 | From what other cause has it arisen that the discoveries which should have lightened have added a weight to the curse imposed on Adam? |
6320 | His notable prosopopeias, when he maketh you, as it were, see God coming in His majesty? |
6320 | Homer has celebrated the anger of Achilles: but was not the hero as mad as the poet? |
6320 | If this were wit, was this a time to be witty, when the poor wretch was in the agony of death? |
6320 | In its most general form, the problem of criticism amounts to this: What is the nature of the standard to be employed in literary judgments? |
6320 | Is it by his own impression, or by the code handed down from previous critics, that in the last resort the critic should be guided? |
6320 | Is it for a few wild speeches, an occasional licence of dialogue? |
6320 | Is it possible to account otherwise for his disparagement of Moliere, or his grudging praise of Wordsworth and of Coleridge? |
6320 | Is it the lyric that most displeaseth, who with his tuned lyre, and well accorded voice, giveth praise, the reward of virtue, to virtuous acts? |
6320 | Is it then the pastoral poem which is misliked? |
6320 | Is not the evidence conclusive? |
6320 | Is the poor pipe disdained, which sometime out of Melibeus''s mouth, can show the misery of people under hard lords, or ravening soldiers? |
6320 | Is, then, the peerage of England anything dishonoured when a peer suffers for his treason? |
6320 | It was when he came to ask, What is the nature of those ideas, and how does the artist or the critic arrive at them? |
6320 | Lodge''s_ Defence of Poetry, Musick, and Stage Plays_, 1579(?). |
6320 | Now, whom shall we find( sith the question standeth for the highest form in the school of learning) to be moderator? |
6320 | Once dead, how can it be, Death should a thing so pleasant seem to thee, That thou should''st come to live it o''er again in me? |
6320 | Plutarch teacheth the use to be gathered of them, and how if they should not be read? |
6320 | Pompey and Cicero slain then, when they would have thought exile a happiness? |
6320 | See we not virtuous Cato driven to kill himself? |
6320 | Sidney''s_ Apologie for Poetrie_, 1580(?). |
6320 | Since''t is my doom, Love''s undershrieve, Why this reprieve? |
6320 | Sulla and Marius dying in their beds? |
6320 | The cruel Severus live prosperously? |
6320 | The excellent Severus miserably murdered? |
6320 | The just Phocion, and the accomplished Socrates, put to death like traitors? |
6320 | The often and free changing of persons? |
6320 | The second is the far more important question, How far is the dramatist bound by conventional restrictions? |
6320 | To sell thyself dost thou intend By candle''s end, And hold the contrast thus in doubt, Life''s taper out? |
6320 | Tully, when he was to drive out Catiline, as it were with a thunderbolt of eloquence, often used that figure of repetition,_ Vivit? |
6320 | Was rhyme a"brutish"form of verse? |
6320 | What are the conventional restrictions that surround the dramatist, and how far are they of binding force? |
6320 | What child is there, that coming to a play, and seeing Thebes written in great letters upon an old door, doth believe that it is Thebes? |
6320 | What flesh, like loving grass, would not covet to meet half- way the stroke of such a delicate mower? |
6320 | What is poetry? |
6320 | What is the detecting of a fault, but the feeling of an incongruity, of a contradiction, which may exist in ourselves as well as in the object? |
6320 | What joy could''st take, or what repose, In countries so unciviliz''d as those? |
6320 | What poet has been so alert to recognize the master- spirits of his own time and his father''s? |
6320 | What poet has felt and avowed a deeper reverence for the great Latins? |
6320 | What sort of a figure would he cut, translated into an epic poem, by the side of Achilles? |
6320 | What would Ovid have done on this occasion? |
6320 | What, then, shall we say? |
6320 | What, then, was Johnson''s method? |
6320 | What, then, was it that drove Burke to a position so markedly at variance with the idealism of his later years? |
6320 | Whence comes that empyrean fire, which irradiates their whole being, and pierces, at least in starry gleams, like a diviner thing, into all hearts? |
6320 | Wherein lies that life; how have they attained that shape and individuality? |
6320 | While in the meantime, two armies fly in, represented with four swords and bucklers, and then what hard heart will not receive it for a pitched field? |
6320 | Who readeth Aneas carrying old Anchises on his back, that wisheth not it were his fortune to perform so excellent an act? |
6320 | Who shall say in which? |
6320 | Who would imagine it possible that in a very few lines so many remote ideas could be brought together? |
6320 | Whom do not the words of Turnus move? |
6320 | Why doth my She Advowson fly Incumbency? |
6320 | Would any man, who is ready to die for love, describe his passion like Narcissus? |
6320 | Would he think of_ inopem me copia fecit_, and a dozen more of such expressions, poured on the neck of one another, and signifying all the same thing? |
6320 | Would their effect be the same if we were not acquainted with the text? |
6320 | Would then the mere superaddition of metre, with or without rhyme, entitle these to the name of poems? |
6320 | Yet who shall say that the facts answer to these expectations? |
6320 | ], which in his youth he learned, and even to his old age serve him for hourly lessons? |
6320 | ]_?_ No perchance it is the comic, whom naughty play- makers and stage- keepers have justly made odious. |
6320 | and His name abused, become blasphemy? |
6320 | and rebel Caesar so advanced, that his name yet after 1600 years, lasteth in the highest honour? |
6320 | and what its practical application? |
6320 | and what so much good doth that teaching bring forth( I speak still of moral doctrine) as that it moveth one to do that which it doth teach? |
6320 | is not easily to be done; but what can not Milbourn bring about? |
6320 | is so nearly the same question with, what is a poet? |
6320 | or a virtuous man in all fortunes, as Aneas in Virgil? |
6320 | or a whole commonwealth, as the way of Sir Thomas More''s Utopia? |
6320 | or rather the vipers, that with their birth kill their parents? |
6320 | or would have store Of both? |
6320 | or, against law of hospitality, to jest at strangers, because they speak not English so well as we do? |
6320 | who can be so strong? |
6320 | who doth not only teach and move to a truth, but teacheth and moveth to the most high and excellent truth? |
6320 | who maketh magnanimity and justice shine, throughout all misty fearfulness and foggy desires? |
6320 | who would be less weak than Calantha? |
63015 | ''Didn''tyez hear me, ye naygur? 63015 ''Do n''t want it, do n''t yez? |
63015 | ''How comes it that he has been able to tell you so much? 63015 ''How long have you been in the service?'' |
63015 | ''How ould are yez, Chink?'' 63015 ''In Japanese? |
63015 | ''Samoory, eh? 63015 ''Well, me big man, what did yez do for a livin''in the ould counthry? |
63015 | ''What business were yez in? 63015 ''What do yez make av it, Sargint? |
63015 | ''What''s your name, Sergeant?'' 63015 ''Who is he, and why is he here?'' |
63015 | ''Who''s your friend, Bill?'' 63015 And by what accident here?" |
63015 | And when are you going again? |
63015 | Are we any happier for perching on chairs around great scaffoldings, and piling the scaffoldings with so many kinds of porcelain and metal? 63015 Are you still ready to play the game?" |
63015 | But are you going to bury the box too? |
63015 | Ca n''t you answer a simple question? |
63015 | Can you help me put it on my back? |
63015 | Do n''t you play piquet? |
63015 | Do you count sweeps? |
63015 | Do you want further action? |
63015 | Does Tom Butler play cards? |
63015 | Dost thou know yonder land beyond the blue water? |
63015 | Fearest thou the dead, my child? |
63015 | For how much? |
63015 | For the usual five hundred, I suppose? |
63015 | Getting blooded, eh? |
63015 | Going aboard, Captain? |
63015 | He has been a traitor to his own country- men,said he;"how can we be sure that he will not prove traitor to us?" |
63015 | How am I to know? 63015 How do I know you''ve got the money?" |
63015 | How do you know from the sound of the anchor that it was this whatever- you- called- him man? |
63015 | How do you know? |
63015 | How long is it since you have been to your country, Shaban? |
63015 | Hundred up-- five pounds a game? |
63015 | Is it good to leave a young woman like that? 63015 Is that right?" |
63015 | Is the boy safe? |
63015 | Is there company in the kiosque or is Madama alone? |
63015 | Maybe you think you can play it? |
63015 | No mother; the dead can do no harm, and what should I fear from my sister? |
63015 | Shall I come too, my Pasha? 63015 Shall we wait, my Pasha?" |
63015 | Thou art not afraid to be alone in this darkness, my child? |
63015 | What are you talking about? |
63015 | What do you know about it? |
63015 | What do you mean, Zümbül Agha? |
63015 | What is that? |
63015 | What time shall I send the whaleboat for you? |
63015 | What woman likes to be followed about? |
63015 | What!--are you quitting because you''re ahead? |
63015 | What''s that? |
63015 | What? |
63015 | Where shall we set the table? |
63015 | Who is he? |
63015 | Who is it? 63015 Who''s for bridge?" |
63015 | Who''s playing this game? |
63015 | Why do n''t you go down too? |
63015 | Why not? |
63015 | Why not? |
63015 | Will you ask Zümbül Agha to come here? |
63015 | With the lurch double, of course, ten pounds? |
63015 | You are noble? |
63015 | You do n''t, eh? 63015 You mean that with eight thousand of my money you''re going to quit?" |
63015 | You mean you wo n''t give me action? |
63015 | You personally guarantee that? |
63015 | You want more? |
63015 | You''ll play, wo n''t you, Peter? |
63015 | Zümbül Agha,he suddenly heard himself harshly saying,"is this your house or mine? |
63015 | A thief? |
63015 | After all, what did he know about her? |
63015 | Am I to stand by and watch dishonour brought upon it simply because you have eaten the poison of a woman?" |
63015 | And just ask Moustafa to bring me a coffee at the fountain, will you? |
63015 | And then he asked:"Are we dining up there, do you know?" |
63015 | Are there no lights in this place?" |
63015 | Are you not afraid?" |
63015 | Besides, what had the black man to do with their private affairs? |
63015 | But after a moment she added:"Will you ask them to turn off the water in the fountain? |
63015 | But after all, what could one do with old Zümbül? |
63015 | But why was I brought into this house? |
63015 | Can you find such a thing without asking anyone?" |
63015 | Did yez wheel the baby waggin and do other light dhry- nursin'', or was ye head push in a laundhry?'' |
63015 | Did you catch that big squall an hour after you left us? |
63015 | Do you count sweeps?" |
63015 | Do you hear? |
63015 | Either you owe me thirty or we quit even?" |
63015 | Had Shaban really meant anything? |
63015 | Has any one--?" |
63015 | Have I not eaten your bread and your father''s for thirty years?" |
63015 | How came you to be a private in the service? |
63015 | How many times have I told you to bring your people here, Shaban? |
63015 | How''s that_ ngari- ngari_? |
63015 | If he meant murder, why did he not draw his blade? |
63015 | Is it as long as that? |
63015 | Is that all right?" |
63015 | Is that right?" |
63015 | Is this a rest cure that the dear Captin is thryin''on us? |
63015 | It was again Zümbül Agha who spoke, turning one question by another:"Did Shaban come with you?" |
63015 | Mac, how''s my credit with the company?" |
63015 | Might it not be the best way out? |
63015 | Nor did he grow less puzzled when the eunuch turned to her and said in another tone:"Now will you give me that key?" |
63015 | Now, will you please tell me how you happened to be up here? |
63015 | Or a bitterness of not being like other men? |
63015 | Or might some tatter of preposterous humanity still work obscurely in him? |
63015 | See?" |
63015 | Their grip upon his lacerated flesh hurt him acutely; but the very pain was welcome, for did it not prove the reality of his deliverers? |
63015 | Was Hà © lène"safe"? |
63015 | Was any other face hidden beside it, mocking him? |
63015 | Was it not quite her natural voice? |
63015 | Was that what Hà © lène had stood looking at so long, he asked himself? |
63015 | Were you ever at the Point? |
63015 | What did ye work at?'' |
63015 | What do you think?" |
63015 | What had she ever really told him, and what had he ever really divined of her? |
63015 | What is your history, anyway?'' |
63015 | What particular sort av a bug is a Samoory, anyhow?'' |
63015 | When he was gone the Pasha turned to Shaban:"This box, Shaban-- you see this box? |
63015 | Where in God''s name did you learn Japanese?'' |
63015 | Where''s a full deck?" |
63015 | Who can trust her? |
63015 | Who else than David Grief can it be? |
63015 | Who was she? |
63015 | Who''ll join me?" |
63015 | Who''s going to take a hand?" |
63015 | Why not twenty- one points out-- if it is n''t too rapid for you?" |
63015 | Why not, the Pasha secretly asked himself? |
63015 | Why should he be, since he possessed without that trouble a goodly share of what men acquire by taking thought? |
63015 | Why was such a man as this serving as a private soldier in the regular army? |
63015 | Will you keep it for me, please? |
63015 | Will you play for two thousand?" |
63015 | Will you play?" |
63015 | Will you tell me of your home, and will you give me some message for those who are dear to you?" |
63015 | Would you get me an overcoat please, Shaban, and a brush of some kind? |
63015 | You up, Jock? |
63015 | Your grandfather, was it?" |
63015 | he said thickly,''what have I done?'' |
63015 | ye murdherin''divil, have ye no sinse of dacincy? |
63015 | ye wud play wid the tools, wud yez?'' |
8422 | - were to become conscious? |
8422 | A much broader issue is at stake: is it the same person? |
8422 | And if property rights to one''s brain and mind were firmly established- how will telepathy( if ever proven) be treated legally? |
8422 | And so, the mystery remains: how can I own the article- but not my brain? |
8422 | And what if he intended to do something, mistakenly did something else and, still, accidentally, achieved what he set out to do? |
8422 | And what is Dan''s role in all this? |
8422 | Another is the preservation of personal identity: are the person who committed the act and the person who is made to pay for it- one and the same? |
8422 | Are these actions and intentions in their classical senses? |
8422 | Are we morally responsible and accountable for the well- being and lives of those who wrong us? |
8422 | But do they have an identity, a self? |
8422 | But is n''t a big part of our self( in the form of the unconscious, full of repressed memories) unavailable to us? |
8422 | But should n''t have the hapless owner availed his precious place to women and children? |
8422 | But what about an entity that is"pure energy", a matrix of fields, a thought, immaterial yet very real, omnipresent and present nowhere? |
8422 | But what constitutes"destruction"or"annihilation"? |
8422 | But what if he intended to do one thing and out came another? |
8422 | Can a MIND be copyrighted or patented? |
8422 | Can anything be, in principle, eternal? |
8422 | Can we eliminate discrimination completely and if it were possible, would it have been desirable? |
8422 | Can we prove that it leads to his brain? |
8422 | Consider this, for instance: What if Dan were the victim of a Multiple Personality Disorder( now known as"Dissociative Identity Disorder")? |
8422 | Do n''t we develop defence mechanisms against repressed memories and fantasies, against unconscious content incongruent with our self- image? |
8422 | Do our moral and legal accountability and responsibility spring from the integrity of our memories? |
8422 | Does John Malkovich OWN his brain? |
8422 | Does this amount to obliteration? |
8422 | Does this mean that we are not morally responsible for others? |
8422 | Does this process of acquisition endow us with property rights? |
8422 | For what is intellectual property but a mere record of the brain''s activities? |
8422 | Has n''t Greenleaf Sr. actually adopted him? |
8422 | How can anyone be responsible for the well- being and lives of other people- if he did not CHOOSE to be so responsible? |
8422 | How can we reconcile this contradiction? |
8422 | If Dan were to be punished for a crime he does n''t have the faintest recollection of committing- would n''t he feel horribly wronged? |
8422 | If no one knows WHAT is the mind- how can it be the subject of laws and rights? |
8422 | If so, does not the discoverer of the portal hold equal rights to John Malkovich''s mind, an integral part thereof? |
8422 | If the answer is in the affirmative, in which sense are they the same, the physical, the mental? |
8422 | If yes, why do we"pull the plug"on them so often? |
8422 | Is it better to live happily in a perfectly detailed delusion- or to survive unhappily but free of its hold? |
8422 | Is it equally safe to say that no one- neither an observer, nor the person himself- can prove( or disprove) the non- existence of his self- identity? |
8422 | Is it still"functioning"? |
8422 | Is n''t it a contradiction in terms to remember the unconscious? |
8422 | Is n''t this act of rebelliousness bound to lead us down the path of apocalypse? |
8422 | Is one''s brain- one''s PROPERTY? |
8422 | Is our brain"acquired"? |
8422 | Is the exercise of judgement the usurpation of divine powers and attributes? |
8422 | Is the murderous Dan the same person as the current Dan? |
8422 | Is the"overlap"only limited and probabilistic? |
8422 | Is there a way to PROVE that one has visited another''s mind? |
8422 | Is this identity automatic? |
8422 | It casts doubt over the meaningfulness of the question with which we ended the exposition:"Who, exactly, then, is Dan?" |
8422 | Moreover, can he prove that the portal leads to HIS mind, that it is HIS mind that is being visited? |
8422 | Once such technology is available- should n''t authorized bodies of inspection have access to the brains of our leaders on a periodic basis? |
8422 | Or is vengeance justified in such a case? |
8422 | Or mind reading? |
8422 | Should Dan be held( morally and, as a result, perhaps legally as well) accountable for Jack''s murder? |
8422 | Should Dan still be held responsible? |
8422 | Should his decisions and actions be constrained by an over- riding code of right and wrong? |
8422 | Should not he have obeyed the captain''s orders(= the marine law)? |
8422 | Should we obey his commandments blindly or should we exercise judgement? |
8422 | Should we succumb to laws that put our lives at risk( fight in a war, sink with a ship)? |
8422 | Should"Joseph"be held responsible for the crime"John"committed? |
8422 | The Director Weir asks: should God be allowed to be immoral or should he be bound by morality and ethics? |
8422 | The basic question is"whose brain is it, anyway"? |
8422 | The brain is natural and life''s pivot- could this be why we can not fully own it? |
8422 | The causal discourse, therefore, is problematic( how can a cause lead to an effect, indistinguishable from itself?). |
8422 | The recording of dreams? |
8422 | The root question is: is there any difference between making decisions and feeling certain of making them( not having made them)? |
8422 | The serious problem is this: WHY should anyone pay in his future for his actions in the past? |
8422 | To put the question in sharper relief: are we morally obliged to save the life and livelihood of someone who greatly wronged us? |
8422 | Was this a morally right decision? |
8422 | What if Dan''s conscious part were to become his unconscious and his unconscious part- his conscious? |
8422 | What if a computer were to refuse to correlate its internal( virtual) reality with the reality of its makers? |
8422 | What if he were to reappear 50 years after he"vanished"? |
8422 | What if he were to reappear for a period of 90 days- only to"vanish"again? |
8422 | What if it were to impose its own reality on us and make it the privileged one? |
8422 | What if one of his"alters"( i.e., one of the multitude of"identities"sharing Dan''s mind and body) committed the crime? |
8422 | What if the alter"John"committed the crime and then"vanished", leaving behind another alter( let us say,"Joseph") in control? |
8422 | What if the brain in vitro( in the above example) could not communicate with us at all? |
8422 | What if"John"were to reappear 10 years after he"vanished"? |
8422 | What if, due to a mishap, the roles were reversed? |
8422 | When we postulate memory- do n''t we already presuppose the existence of a"remembering agent"with an established self- identity? |
8422 | Which child to sentence to death- which one to sentence to life? |
8422 | Who is Dan? |
8422 | Who, exactly, then, is Dan? |
8422 | Why can not we conceive of a world in which acts and outcomes are divorced? |
8422 | Why do I have the right to ruin the article at will- but not to annihilate my brain at whim? |
8422 | Why do we all feel that the owner should have stayed on and faced his inevitable death? |
8422 | Why should we think one basis for discrimination preferable to another? |
8422 | Would it be correct to say that no one can prove that a report about the non- existence of his( or another''s) self- identity is true or false? |
8422 | Would n''t he be justified in feeling so? |
8422 | Would we have rendered the same judgement had the Titanic''s fate been the outcome of accident and accident alone? |
8422 | Would we still say that it is"the same"Dan and that he retains his self- identity? |
8422 | Would we still think it is possessed of a self? |
8422 | subliminal perceptions, beliefs, drives, emotions, desires, etc.)? |
44645 | ''But I know you''l say what''s this to me, I neither sing nor pronounce, any of this Lewd stuff? |
44645 | ''But what need I branch out the Lewdness of those_ Spectacles_, and be particular in Description? |
44645 | ''What business has a Christian at such Places as these? |
44645 | ''Will you not then avoid this Seat of Infection? |
44645 | ''Would a Christian be agreeably Refresh''d? |
44645 | --_What Slippery stuff are Men compos''d of? |
44645 | Afterwards_ Coupler_ being out of Breath in coming up stairs to_ Fashion_, asks him_ why the---- canst thou not lodge upon the Ground- floor_? |
44645 | And answers_ 1st.__ That he knows no such Law constantly observ''d in Comedy by the Antient or Modern Poets._ What then? |
44645 | And are People damn''d only for_ Humane Frailties_? |
44645 | And are People the best Friends where they have the least Reason to be so? |
44645 | And are not all these Signs of the Dislike of what he had done? |
44645 | And are these little Buffoons fit to consult_ de Arduis Regni,& c._ to give Authority to Law, and Rules for publick Life? |
44645 | And are those fit to correct the Church, that are not fit to come into it? |
44645 | And ca n''t they lash the Vice without pointing upon the_ Quality_? |
44645 | And can Constancy proceed from Chance, Choice from Fate, and Virtue from Necessity? |
44645 | And can the Concerns of Time be greater than those of Eternity? |
44645 | And did he grudge us all the Pleasures and Securities of Friendship? |
44645 | And do your Gestures appear airy, and obliged? |
44645 | And does the Dignity of a Religion lessen the Publick Administrations in''t? |
44645 | And does_ Heaven make Sinners happy_ upon these Conditions? |
44645 | And have we as much Reason to believe the Torments of_ Titius_ and_ Prometheus_, as those of the Devils and Damn''d? |
44645 | And here setting aside the point of Conscience, where lies the Decency of falling foul upon this_ Order_? |
44645 | And how often has the best Blood been tainted, with this Infection? |
44645 | And how stands the matter in_ Comedy_? |
44645 | And is any Man so vain as to pretend to know the Extent of Nature, and the Stretch of Possibility, and the Force of the Powers Invisible? |
44645 | And is it not now possess''d of as fair pretences as formerly? |
44645 | And is not this a plain Confession of the Lewdness of the_ Play- House_; And that the better a Man was, the more he was obliged to forbear it?'' |
44645 | And is our Saviours Authority inferiour to that of Princes? |
44645 | And is this a likely Supposition for Sincerity and good Nature? |
44645 | And must he needs come Abroad when he breaths Infection, and leaves the_ Tokens_ upon the Company? |
44645 | And now does this Rudeness go upon any Authorities? |
44645 | And now what Pleasure is there in Misbehaviour and Abuse? |
44645 | And now why so much Exclamation upon this occasion? |
44645 | And pray what was_ Foresight_? |
44645 | And pray where lies the Grievance of all This? |
44645 | And since the Business must be undertaken, why was not the Thought Blanched, the Expression made remote, and the ill Features cast into shadows? |
44645 | And since the mind of Man has a Natural Bent to Extravagance; how is it likely to hold out under Example, and Invitation? |
44645 | And since you make others thus_ Faulty_, how can you be_ Innocent_ your self? |
44645 | And to be a Slave to Nothing? |
44645 | And was Licentiousness and irreligion, alwaies a mark of Honour? |
44645 | And what Company do you think he is lodg''d with? |
44645 | And what can be the Ground of this Confidence, and the Reason of such horrid Presumption? |
44645 | And what can be the Meaning of such a Representation, unless it be to Tincture the Audience, to extinguish Shame, and make Lewdness a Diversion? |
44645 | And what can be the Meaning of this wretched Distribution of Honour? |
44645 | And what hope is there of Health when the_ Patient_ strikes in with the Disease, and flies in the Face of the_ Remedy_? |
44645 | And what if he was born wise? |
44645 | And what was the ground of all this unnatural quarrelling and outrage? |
44645 | And what was this_ Coupler_? |
44645 | And what''s the Reason of this Aversion in your Behaviour? |
44645 | And when the best are thus bad, what are the worst? |
44645 | And where, and by whom is all this Out- rage committed? |
44645 | And who would be at this Expence, when the Purchase is so cheap another way? |
44645 | And why has God given us this solemn warning? |
44645 | And why is a Christian not fit to make a Friend of? |
44645 | And why so? |
44645 | And why so? |
44645 | And, do Princesses use to make their Reports with such fulsom Freedoms? |
44645 | Are not all these horrid Suppositions? |
44645 | Are the Interests and Capacities of Mankind overlook''d? |
44645 | Are the Kingdoms of this World more Glorious than that of the next? |
44645 | Are the Principles of Christianity defective, and the Laws of it Ill contriv''d? |
44645 | Are the_ Poets_ their_ Ordinaries_? |
44645 | Are these the Returns we make Him for his Supernatural Assistance? |
44645 | Are these the_ Tender Things_ Mr._ Dryden_ says the Ladys call on him for? |
44645 | Are they not a flat Contradiction to the_ Bible_, and a Satyr on the Attributes of the Deity? |
44645 | Are we indeed willing to quit the Privilege of our Nature; to surrender our_ Charter_ of Immortality, and throw up the Pretences to another Life? |
44645 | Because he gets by''t: He holds his Tongue; why? |
44645 | Besides, What makes them fly out upon the_ Function_; and rail by wholesale? |
44645 | Besides, what need we any farther Instruction? |
44645 | But how does he prove this Memorable Sentence? |
44645 | But if a man is not entertain''d to what purpose should he go Thither? |
44645 | But on our_ Stage_ how common is it to make a Lord, a Knight, or an Alderman a Cuckold? |
44645 | But pray how do you prove you do n''t repeat them? |
44645 | But supposing the_ Theatres_ of_ Rome_, and_ Athens_ as bad as possible, what Defence is all This? |
44645 | But the Original Design of_ Comedy_ was otherwise: And granting''twas not so, what then? |
44645 | But then why did he let these crude Fancies pass uncorrected in his Friend? |
44645 | But then why was not the Growth of it check''d? |
44645 | But why does the Poet acquaint us with_ Sanchos_ Religion? |
44645 | Ca n''t we refuse the Happiness without affronting the Offer? |
44645 | Can Profaness be such an irresistable Delight? |
44645 | Can Religion retrive us? |
44645 | Can this Stuff be the Inclination of_ Ladies_? |
44645 | Can we argue from_ Heathenism_ to_ Christianity_? |
44645 | Did our Great Master bind us to Disadvantage, and make our Duty our Misfortune? |
44645 | Did this_ Justice_ never hear of such a Thing as Knavery, or had he ever greater reason to guard against it? |
44645 | Do People use to send their Daughters to the_ Stews_ for Discipline? |
44645 | Do n''t the Buffoons take almost all manner of Liberties, and plunge through Thick and Thin, to make a jest? |
44645 | Do the Women leave all the regards to Decency and Conscience behind them when they come to the_ Play- House_? |
44645 | Do''s Honour use to rise upon the Ruines of Conscience? |
44645 | Do''s Ribaldry and Nonsence become the Dignity of their Station, and the Solemnity of their Office? |
44645 | Do''s a_ Blew- Cap_ and a_ Ladle_, become the Sons of_ Jupiter_ and the Objects of Religious Worship? |
44645 | Do''s not_ Aristophanes_ take great Liberties and make Women speak extraordinary Sentences? |
44645 | Does a Profligate Conscience deserve nothing but Commiseration? |
44645 | Does he not set himself at the_ Bar_, arraign his own Practise, and cast the Cause upon the Clemency of the Company? |
44645 | Does the Crime of the Performance make the Spirit of the Satisfaction, and is the Scorn of Christianity the Entertainment of Christians? |
44645 | For can one die of an easier Disease than Diversion? |
44645 | For does not_ Face_ make an Apology before he leaves the_ Stage_? |
44645 | For pray what Satisfactions have they lost? |
44645 | For what''s there to be met with but Lewd Laughing, but Smut, Railing, and Buffoonry? |
44645 | Granting your Plea, what do you get by''t? |
44645 | Has he a mind to discharge his Modesty, and be flesh''d for the_ Practise_? |
44645 | Has it no basis of Truth, nothing to support it, but strength of Fancy, and Poetick Invention? |
44645 | Have they then infallible Proof and Mathematick Evidence for these Discoveries? |
44645 | He Preaches against Sin, why? |
44645 | He tells_ Manly he never attempted to abuse any Person_, The other answers;_ What? |
44645 | Here the Poet stands for_ Abraham_; and the Patron for God Almighty: And where lies the Wit of all this? |
44645 | Here_ Bacchus_ interposes, and crys out, what does he deserve? |
44645 | How can such Customes as these consist with the belief of Providence or Revelation? |
44645 | How can the_ practise_ be the same, where the_ Rule_ is so very different? |
44645 | How do They Rebell upon his Bounty, and attack him with his own Reason? |
44645 | How many Snares are laid for the undermining of Virtue, and with what Triumph is the Victory proclaim''d? |
44645 | How often is Learning, Industry, and Frugality, ridiculed in Comedy? |
44645 | How should you be sensible of your Faults, when your Head is always kept Hot, and as it were intoxicated with Buffooning?'' |
44645 | How they hug a Vitious Character, and how profuse are they in their Liberalities to Lewdness? |
44645 | How_ many_ of the Unwary have these_ Syrens_ devour''d? |
44645 | I can hardly imagin why these Tombs of Antiquity were raked in, and disturb''d? |
44645 | I desire to know what Authority Mr._ Dryden_ has for this extraordinary Representation? |
44645 | I grant he has some profane Passages stand uncorrected, and what wonder is it to see a_ Pagan_ Miscarry? |
44645 | If they are not Fools, why does the_ Poet_ make them so? |
44645 | If they are, where lies the Cunning in over- reaching them? |
44645 | If this be not their Aim why is_ Lewdness_ so much consider''d in Character and Success? |
44645 | If we wo n''t understand to brighten our Humour, and live pleasantly, where''s the harm? |
44645 | If you push that which totters already, whether will it tumble? |
44645 | In confounding Respects, disguising Features, and painting Things out of all Colour and Complexion? |
44645 | In the Decency of the Comparison? |
44645 | In the_ Old Batchelour_,_ Vain- love_ asks_ Belmour_,_ could you be content to go to Heaven_? |
44645 | Indeed, how many Instances have we of others who have apostatiz''d from God, by this Correspondence with the Devil? |
44645 | Is Blasphemy never unseasonable upon the Stage, And does it always bring its excuse along with it? |
44645 | Is Dissolution of Manners such a Peccadillo? |
44645 | Is Ribaldry so very obliging, and_ Atheism_ so Charming a Quality? |
44645 | Is a_ Reading_ upon Vice so Entertaining, and do they love to see the_ Stews Dissected_ before them? |
44645 | Is it not to awaken our Fears, and guard our Happiness; To restrain the Disorders of Appetite, and to keep us within Reason, and Duty? |
44645 | Is it not to give Credit and Countenance to Vice, and to shame young People out of all pretences to Conscience, and Regularity? |
44645 | Is it such a Pleasure to hear the_ Scriptures_ burlesqu''d? |
44645 | Is it such an Entertainment to see Religion worryed by Atheism, and Things the most Solemn and Significant tumbled and tost by Buffoons? |
44645 | Is not plain Honesty much better than Hypocrisy well Dress''d? |
44645 | Is the History of_ Tophet_ no better prov''d than that of_ Styx_? |
44645 | Is the Lake of_ Brimstone_ and that of_ Phlegeton_ alike dreadful? |
44645 | Is the_ Priesthood_ a crime, and the service of God a disadvantage? |
44645 | Is the_ Pulpit_ under the Discipline of the_ Stage_? |
44645 | Is their_ Charter_ inlarg''d, and are they on the same Foot of Freedom with the_ Slaves_ in the_ Saturnalia_? |
44645 | Is there no Distinction between Truth and Fiction, between Majesty and a Pageant? |
44645 | Is there no Diversion without Insulting the God that made us, the Goodness that would save us, and the Power that can damn us? |
44645 | Mischief is the Chief end of Malice, would it be then a Blemish in Ill Nature to change Temper, and relent into Goodness? |
44645 | Must God be treated like an Idol, and the_ Scriptures_ banter''d like_ Homers Elysium_, and_ Hesiods Theogonia_? |
44645 | Must Life be huddled over, Nature left imperfect, and the Humour of the Town not shown? |
44645 | Must all Men be handled alike? |
44645 | Must their Roughness be needs play''d upon Title? |
44645 | Must we add Contempt to Disobedience, and Out- rage to Ingratitude? |
44645 | Must we relate whatever is done, and is every Thing fit for Representation? |
44645 | No, it must be my own, I scorn a Proxy._[124] But_ Dorax_ was a Renegado, what then? |
44645 | Now to what purpose should a Fools Coat be embroider''d? |
44645 | Now who would chuse his standing within an Inch of a Fall; or swim upon the Verge of a Whirlpool? |
44645 | Or does the Place transform their Inclinations, and turn their former Aversions into Pleasure? |
44645 | Or were Their pretences to Sobriety elsewhere nothing but Hypocrisy and Grimace? |
44645 | She Interrupts_ Theodosia_, and cries out:_ why Sister, Sister----will you pray? |
44645 | Suppose you hear any wretches Blaspheme, are you in any Rapture about it? |
44645 | The Chief_ End_ of a Madman it may be is to Fire a House, must we not therefore bind him in his Bed? |
44645 | The Christian_ Almeida_ when_ Sebastian_ was in danger, Raves and Foames like one Possess''d,_ But is there Heaven, for I begin to doubt? |
44645 | The_ Clergy_ may have their Failings sometimes like others, but what then? |
44645 | The_ Play- house_ at_ Athens_ has been hitherto in Order, but are there no Instances to the contrary? |
44645 | The_ Poet_ takes care not to bring these two Lovers upon the_ Stage_ together, for fear they might prove unmanagable? |
44645 | The_ Theaters_ those_ Cages_ of_ Uncleaness_, and publick Schools of Debauchery.----And what''s the Reason of their running to Ruine? |
44645 | There is nothing but a little Whoring, Pimping, Gaming, Profaness_& c_, And who could be so hard hearted to give a Man any Trouble for This? |
44645 | These Giants in Wickedness, how would they ravage with a Stature Proportionable? |
44645 | These Men sure_, take Vertue and Regularity,_ for_ great Enemies,_ why else is their_ Disaffection_ so very_ Remarkable? |
44645 | They that can Swagger in Impotence, and Blaspheme upon a Mole- Hill, what would they do if they had Strength to their Good- Will? |
44645 | Those who at the lowest, were counted the Conquerors of the World, and more than Men both by Birth and Enterprize? |
44645 | To contemn the World? |
44645 | To have our Expectations always in prospect, and be intent on the Glories of Heaven?'' |
44645 | To see him charge up to the Canons Mouth, and defy the Vengeance of Heaven to serve them? |
44645 | To those who are overgrown with Pleasure, and hardned in Ill Custom? |
44645 | To what end can such Horrible stuff as this serve, unless to expose the Notion, and extinguish the Belief of a Deity? |
44645 | To what purpose else does_ Jupiter_ appear in the shape of_ Jehovah_? |
44645 | To what purpose is_ Vice_ thus prefer''d, thus ornamented, and caress''d, unless for Imitation? |
44645 | Was it the Decency of the Thing, and the Propriety of_ Character_, and Behaviour? |
44645 | Was the Priesthood alwaies thought thus insignificant, and do the Antient Poets palt it in this Manner? |
44645 | What Christian can be unconcern''d at such intolerable Abuses? |
44645 | What Conquest can there be without Opposition? |
44645 | What Disappointment of Parents, what Confusion in Families, and What Beggery in Estates have been hence occasion''d? |
44645 | What Offence is it then if we differ from you in the Idea of Satisfaction? |
44645 | What Propriety is there in Misrepresentation? |
44645 | What Soveraign Respect, what Religious Address, what Idolizing Raptures are we pester''d with? |
44645 | What a Confession then is this of an Ill Business; when the very Excellency of it is not without Infamy? |
44645 | What art thou become? |
44645 | What can be a juster Reason for indignation than Insolence and Atheism? |
44645 | What can be more engaging to an_ Audience_, then to see a_ Poet_ thus Atheistically brave? |
44645 | What can the Assistance of the Church signify to those who are more ready to Rally the_ Preacher_, than Practise the_ Sermon_? |
44645 | What can we expect less from those who laugh at the Being of a God, at the Doctrines of Providence, and the Distinctions of Good and Evil? |
44645 | What greater Pleasure can there be, than to scorn being_ Pleas''d_? |
44645 | What is a well Bred Libertine but a well bred Knave? |
44645 | What is it then? |
44645 | What is more Common than Duels and Quarrelling in their_ Characters_ of Figure? |
44645 | What makes him break in upon his own Rules? |
44645 | What must we say of the more foul Representations, of all the Impudence in Language and Gesture? |
44645 | What part of Impudence either in words or practise, is omitted by the Stage? |
44645 | What then made him fall into them? |
44645 | What then must we know nothing? |
44645 | What then? |
44645 | What therefore but the regard to Religion could keep him from the use of this Liberty? |
44645 | What tho''Innocence, yes and Virtue too, shines through some part of it? |
44645 | What tho''the performance may be in some measure pretty and entertaining? |
44645 | What''s Sight good for without Substance? |
44645 | What_ Communion has Light with Darkness? |
44645 | When Sir_ Tun- belly_ ask''d him,_ pray where are your Coaches and Servants my Lord_? |
44645 | Which shot into my Breast now melt and chill me.__ Bolts of Ice?_ Yes most certainly! |
44645 | Who have neither Patience to hear, nor Conscience to take hold of? |
44645 | Who would be vitious when such Terrors hang over his Head? |
44645 | Who would be_ troubled_ with_ Conscience_ if''tis only a_ Bugbear,_ and has nothing_ in''t_ but_ Vision,_ and the_ Spleen? |
44645 | Who would wound himself for Information about Pain, or smell a Stench for the sake of the Discovery? |
44645 | Why are the incommunicable_ Attributes_ burlesqu''d, and Omnipotence applyed to Acts of Infamy? |
44645 | Why are their Favourites Atheistical, and their fine Gentleman debauched? |
44645 | Why ca n''t we have the same Privilege? |
44645 | Why does he entertain himself with Lewd Representations? |
44645 | Why in the mid''st of Temper and Reasoning? |
44645 | Why is all this done unless it be to ridicule the whole, and make one as incredible as the other? |
44645 | Why is their Conduct so gross, so particolour''d, and inconsistent? |
44645 | Why must all the_ Powers_ in Being be Summon''d in to make the News Credible? |
44645 | Why must the Customes of Countries be Cross''d upon, and the Regards of Honour overlook''d? |
44645 | Why must the beaten Road be left? |
44645 | Why should he be fond where he finds nothing, and court that which sleeps upon the Sense? |
44645 | Why then are not these Rules observ''d, in the_ Machines_ of_ Amphitrion_? |
44645 | Why then does Mr._ Dryden_ cross upon Nature and Authority, and go off as he Confesses, from the Plan of_ Plautus_, and_ Moliere_? |
44645 | Why then was the_ Credential_ swallow''d without chewing, why was not_ Hoyden_ lock''d up, and a pause made for farther Enquiry? |
44645 | Why with those who Perjure themselves, with those who Kick their Fathers and Mothers? |
44645 | [ 148] But why then was it made? |
44645 | [ 166] Why then does she fall into it? |
44645 | [ 351] And has our_ Stage_ a particular Privilege? |
44645 | [ 369] What then is the Fall of the Angels a Romance? |
44645 | [ 483] How will They be able to stand the shock of Divine Justice, and what_ Reckoning_ have they_ Reason_ to expect Hereafter? |
44645 | [ 493]''Should a Man have a Stage at Home, would not his Reputation suffer extreamly, and all people count him a notorious Libertine? |
44645 | [ 65] What then? |
44645 | [ 88] Now do''s this paultry Behaviour agree with the Heathen Theology, with the Common Opinion concerning_ Bacchus_ and_ Hercules_? |
44645 | _ And hast thou Provided Necessaries?_ Setter. |
44645 | _ Belinda_ would know of him_ where he got that excellent Talent of Railing_? |
44645 | _ Carlos_ is somewhat angry at this Gingle, and cries,_ what quibling too in your Prosperity_? |
44645 | _ Have you throughly consider''d( says Fondlewife) how detestable, how Heinous, and how crying a Sin the Sin of Adultery is? |
44645 | _ Lov._ By what? |
44645 | _ O I am struck, thy words are Bolts of Ice? |
44645 | _ O all ye Powers is''t possible? |
44645 | _ Shall I trust Heaven With my revenge? |
44645 | _ Then pray Mr._ Adam_ will you make us acquainted with your_ Eve? |
44645 | _ This Fellow makes nothing of Religion, how can we trust him in other matters? |
44645 | _ We ha''cheated the Parson we''el cheat him again, For why should a Blockhead have one in ten? |
44645 | _ What Communion has Light with Darkness, and what concord has Christ with Belial._[505] Call you this Diversion? |
44645 | _ What Jew?_ Sanch. |
44645 | _ Why seek I Truth from thee? |
44645 | _ Why what do you see in his Face to make you doubt of it? |
44645 | _ Will nothing then provoke thee? |
44645 | _ You could not do me a greater----except----the business in hand----have you provided a Habit for Mellifont?_ Saygr. |
44645 | _ have you stich''d the Gownsleeve, that he may be puzled and wast time in putting it on?_ Saygr. |
44645 | _ Æschylus_ begins with a Question,[91] and asks_ Euripides_ what''tis which makes a_ Poet_ admired? |
44645 | have you weighed I say? |
44645 | is a Man that has the Plague proper to make a Sight of? |
44645 | then where''s my satisfaction? |
44645 | was the Man invulnerable or immortal? |
44645 | what leisure have you to Mind St._ Paul_? |
44645 | what, Dead!_[217] And why not? |
48696 | A skull, you say!--very well!--how is it fastened to the limb?--what holds it on? |
48696 | And by your speech, sir, and your dacency, I''ll engage you were in a good way in the poor place, afore you left it? |
48696 | And do you know who you are telling it to this morning? 48696 And how is this to be done?" |
48696 | And says she to me,''Darby Kelleher,''says she,''you''re mighty yollow, God bless you; is it the jandhers you have?'' 48696 And we are all right, as you say, here?" |
48696 | And what cause have you, Jupiter, for such a supposition? |
48696 | And what three things am I to get you? |
48696 | And what,inquired Ralph Cranfield, with a tremor in his voice,--"what may this office be, which is to equal me with kings and potentates?" |
48696 | And where shall we send to you then, madam? |
48696 | And why not to- night? |
48696 | And you really solved it? |
48696 | And you think, then, that your master was really bitten by the beetle, and that the bite made him sick? |
48696 | But how did you proceed? |
48696 | But how do you know he dreams about gold? |
48696 | But how was it possible to effect this? |
48696 | But it does n''t spile the dhrame, I hope? |
48696 | But what, in the name of all that is mysterious, is your''Massa Will''going to do with scythes and spades? |
48696 | By all that''s--"Will you give it? |
48696 | By yourself!--what do you mean? |
48696 | Can that be my old playmate, Faith Egerton? |
48696 | Can you give me the address of Mr. Mason who returned from Europe last May? |
48696 | Child of the Public,I said to myself,"what do you do now?" |
48696 | Child of the Public,said my mourning genius,"are you better than other men?" |
48696 | Come over to look for the work? |
48696 | Could you tell me, itself, wor they odd or even, avic? |
48696 | Did you count how many there was? |
48696 | Did you say it was a_ dead_ limb, Jupiter? |
48696 | Frightenin''what, you big fool? |
48696 | How I know? 48696 How can I tell the maynin''o''your dhrame, if you do n''t know how it kem out exactly?" |
48696 | How can I? |
48696 | How far mus go up, massa? |
48696 | How high up are you? |
48696 | How much fudder is got for go? |
48696 | How will that come about, your reverence? |
48696 | How? 48696 In what way?" |
48696 | Is it Paddy Goold that''s taken ill again? |
48696 | Is it not in the stable? |
48696 | Jupiter,cried he, without heeding me in the least,"do you hear me?" |
48696 | May the d----l run a huntin''wid you for a big omadhaun; why, you born nath''ral, is it that red thing over there you mane? |
48696 | Musha, Shamus, what are you speaking of? |
48696 | Musha, an''is that you, Darby? |
48696 | Musha, your reverence, an''what am I to do on Lunnon Bridge? |
48696 | No, massa, I bring dis here pissel; and here Jupiter handed me a note which ran thus:-- MY DEAR----: Why have I not seen you for so long a time? |
48696 | Now, for the last time, I ask you, will you gi''me the goold? 48696 O, bad luck to that silver collar, Darby; what made you dhrame o''silver at all?" |
48696 | See what? |
48696 | Shamus Dempsey, why have you not gone to London Bridge, and your wife so near the time when she will want what you are to get by going there? 48696 Shamus, what ails you, avick?" |
48696 | Sorrow''s in him,thought Shamus,"have I two heads on me, that I''m such a sight to him? |
48696 | Sure enough, and so you did dhrame o''the three sprigs o''sparemint? |
48696 | Sure, an''it''s not me you''d suspect o''the like? 48696 Sure, that''s what I say to myself often; and why might n''t it be my chance to be the man that it was laid out for to find it?" |
48696 | Tare an ouns, how do I know what that is? |
48696 | The dhrame_ is_ to the good still; but tell me if you dhremt o''three sprigs o''_ spare_mint at the ind iv it? |
48696 | The what? |
48696 | To be sure he does,said Darby,"and why nat? |
48696 | To the respectable boarding- house? |
48696 | Ullaloo, and were you, sir? |
48696 | Very true; but what are they doing here? |
48696 | Was it? |
48696 | Weira then, is it a Leprechaun it is? |
48696 | Well, Jup, perhaps you are right; but to what fortunate circumstance am I to attribute the honor of a visit from you to- day? |
48696 | Well, Jup,said I,"what is the matter now?--how is your master?" |
48696 | Well, granny, but do n''t you think the crows was_ likely_ for goold? |
48696 | Well, now, Jupiter, do exactly as I tell you,--do you hear? |
48696 | Well, then, was it this eye or that through which you dropped the beetle? |
48696 | Well, what of it? |
48696 | Well, with that, I thought I was passin''by Doolins the miller''s, and says he to me,''Will you carry home this sack o''male for me?'' 48696 What about Goold?" |
48696 | What county is that, friend? |
48696 | What de matter now, massa? |
48696 | What de matter, massa? |
48696 | What do you hold me so tight for? |
48696 | What do you mane, you omadhaun? |
48696 | What do you mean by''catch''? |
48696 | What do you see? |
48696 | What do you want, then? |
48696 | What in the name of Heaven shall I do? |
48696 | What is the meaning of all this, Jup? |
48696 | What is your opinion on this subject? |
48696 | What news? |
48696 | What of him? |
48696 | What will become of me? |
48696 | What?--sunrise? |
48696 | Where do these men live? |
48696 | Which way mus go now, Massa Will? |
48696 | Who else would it be? |
48696 | Who have you? |
48696 | Who is this man of thought and care, weary with world wandering, and heavy with disappointed hopes? 48696 Who says agin it?" |
48696 | Who taught you to call such names to your betters, fellow? 48696 Why, granny? |
48696 | Why, what harm? |
48696 | Why, what''s the matter with you? |
48696 | Yes,said she, blushing deeply; then, more gayly,"and what else have you brought me from beyond the sea?" |
48696 | You mean, to punctuate it? |
48696 | _ Out to the end!_here fairly screamed Legrand;"do you say you are out to the end of that limb?" |
48696 | _ Very_ sick, Jupiter!--why did n''t you say so at once? 48696 ''Brother Saladin,''said I,''can you now doubt that some men are born to be fortunate, and others to be unfortunate? 48696 ''Do you not see,''said he,''those soldiers, who are firing at a mark? 48696 ) 4$);806*;48+ 8¶60))85;1$(;:$*8+ 83( 88)5*+;46(;88* 96*? 48696 9 25.: 3"4.?" |
48696 | ; 8)*$(;485);5*+2:*$(;4956* 2(5*--4)8¶8*; 4069285);)6+ 8)4$$;1($9;48081;8:8$1;48+ 85;4)485+ 528806* 81($9;48;(88;4($?34;48)4$;161;:188;$? |
48696 | A hundred or more people had straggled in then, and the preacher, good soul, he took for his text,"Doth not God care for the ravens?" |
48696 | Am I not justly called Murad the Unlucky? |
48696 | An''is n''t what we were spaking about the biggest_ raumaush_[1] undher the sun, sir? |
48696 | And den he keep a syphon all de time--""Keeps a what, Jupiter?" |
48696 | And do you know where I''m going now? |
48696 | And had he found them? |
48696 | And if I did not meet her to- day, when should I meet her? |
48696 | And now, Saladin, have you any objection to seeing the feast of tulips?'' |
48696 | And so, granny, you own to it that there''s a power o''vartue in dhrames?" |
48696 | And why did you insist upon letting fall the bug, instead of a bullet, from the skull?" |
48696 | Are you ready, then, to go on shore?" |
48696 | Arrah, do you think I do n''t know you, you little owld cobbler?" |
48696 | But this discovery gives us three new letters,_ o_,_ u_, and_ g_, represented by$? |
48696 | But where are the_ antennæ_ you spoke of?" |
48696 | But who cares about his pair of ferret- eyes? |
48696 | Can you wonder, gentlemen, that I bewail my evil destiny? |
48696 | Did you ever hear that the sisther you kilt left a bit of a_ gorsoon_ behind her, that one day or other might overhear you? |
48696 | Do you know that Jupiter is quite right about it?" |
48696 | Do you not every day hear of persons who are said to be fortunate or unfortunate? |
48696 | Has anything unpleasant happened since I saw you?" |
48696 | Has n''t he told you what ails him?" |
48696 | Have I said that she was beautiful as heaven? |
48696 | Have you ever heard of any important treasure being unearthed along the coast?" |
48696 | Have you ever treated Miranda for a day and found the charge so low? |
48696 | Have you found it?" |
48696 | How comes it that this opinion should prevail amongst men, if it be not justified by experience?" |
48696 | How dare you use a professional gentleman so rudely?" |
48696 | How is it made?" |
48696 | How is it possible to extort a meaning from all this jargon about''devil''s seats,''''death''s- heads,''and''bishop''s hotels''?" |
48696 | How is it that women always make themselves appear as neat and finished as if there were no conflict, dust, or wrinkle in the world? |
48696 | How many limbs have you passed?" |
48696 | I think the jandhers manes goold?" |
48696 | If I did not see her then, what might befall her, and when might I see her again? |
48696 | If she found her aunt, how should I find her? |
48696 | Is he confined to bed?" |
48696 | Is it any wonder, then, that I prize it? |
48696 | Legrand?" |
48696 | Look here, Jupiter, do you hear me?" |
48696 | May I rest its weight on you?" |
48696 | May I rest its weight on you?" |
48696 | My good fellow, take care; do n''t you know I''m Doctor Mac Finn,--don''t you see I am?" |
48696 | Now was n''t that mighty sharp? |
48696 | O, how often I went through one phase or another of this colloquy:--"Is Mr. Mason in?" |
48696 | Perhaps a couple of blows with a mattock were sufficient, while his coadjutors were busy in the pit; perhaps it required a dozen,--who shall tell?" |
48696 | Straight forninst you, do n''t you see it as plain as a pikestaff?" |
48696 | The calculating Englishman will ask, Did he find the treasure before he married the girl? |
48696 | The clerk looked, and said inquiringly,--"Is it Miss Jones''s trunk which came this afternoon?" |
48696 | The man is surely mad!--but stay!--how long do you propose to be absent?" |
48696 | The two upper black spots look like eyes, eh? |
48696 | Was the skull nailed to the limb with the face outwards, or with the face to the limb?" |
48696 | What are we to make of the skeletons found in the hole?" |
48696 | What could he be dreaming of? |
48696 | What does he complain of?" |
48696 | What harm is it?" |
48696 | What if Fausta fell into trouble? |
48696 | What if I failed her there? |
48696 | What make him dream bout de goole so much, if taint cause he bit by de goole- bug? |
48696 | What new crotchet possessed his excitable brain? |
48696 | What would she say? |
48696 | What would the misthriss say to that, I wondher?" |
48696 | What"business of the highest importance"could_ he_ possibly have to transact? |
48696 | When you left the Bishop''s Hotel, what then?" |
48696 | Why could you not speak the truth of your heart to me with that frankness with which one friend should treat another?'' |
48696 | Why, whom do you take me for?" |
48696 | Will I ever, ever think I have better rights than the Public again?" |
48696 | Will you take his place? |
48696 | You want to freken me, do you? |
48696 | You will, of course, ask,''Where is the connection?'' |
48696 | Your name is Kelleher?" |
48696 | Zounds, what do you mean, you ruffian? |
48696 | ai nt dis here my lef eye for sartin?" |
48696 | asked old Noreen;"what ails you, to make the tears run down in the gray o''the morning?" |
48696 | cried Legrand, apparently much relieved,"what do you mean by telling me such nonsense as that? |
48696 | cried Legrand, highly delighted,"what is it?" |
48696 | de bug, massa? |
48696 | do you know your right hand from your left?" |
48696 | said Darby, in horror,"and is my dhrame spylte by that blackguard collar?" |
48696 | said Legrand,"but it''s so long since I saw you; and how could I foresee that you would pay me a visit this very night of all others? |
48696 | settled to your satisfaction, you will then return home and follow my advice implicitly, as that of your physician?" |
48696 | so you''re a robber, sir; you want to rob me, do you?" |
48696 | that was worse,--where might she not be before twelve hours were over? |
48696 | what I keer for de bug?" |
48696 | what do you mean?" |
48696 | what mus do wid it?" |
48696 | what_ is_ dis here pon de tree?" |
48696 | why did you come here at all, makin''a noise and frightenin''it away?" |
47929 | ''What''s hand- grenades?'' 47929 --and George came up and heard them talking about it----""Heard who talking about it?" |
47929 | --but his father came home and saw it the first thing, and----"Saw the hatchet? |
47929 | And agin the Indians? |
47929 | And that you had slept on the ground with only the sky for a kiver? |
47929 | And that your feet bled in marching over the frozen ground? |
47929 | And the-- the person? |
47929 | Are you trying, sir, to show your contempt for the Court? |
47929 | But why do you ask? |
47929 | Did yer ever saw three balls hangin''over my do''? |
47929 | Did yer say yer''d fought for the Union? |
47929 | Does n''t yo''know my name hain''t Oppenheimer? |
47929 | Flint- picker? |
47929 | Gave who? |
47929 | George did? |
47929 | George who? |
47929 | George''s apple tree? |
47929 | Has n''t he any family in the town? |
47929 | Has n''t the man any friends? |
47929 | Has our landlord----? |
47929 | He said----"His father said? |
47929 | How does that wood burn? |
47929 | How on earth could you ever think of doing such things? |
47929 | How tasteful is your Dress,he cried, in well- feigned Ecstacy;"it can not surely be that your Musical Education has been neglected? |
47929 | How would you like to be companion to a literary man? |
47929 | I? |
47929 | Is it the wife, ye mane? |
47929 | Is n''t that logic? 47929 Is n''t there anybody to look after him?" |
47929 | Is yo''satisfied? |
47929 | Lives here? |
47929 | Margaret Callaghan,_ is_ that thing your husband? |
47929 | Nephew Frederick,said he,"after this treatment, can you ask me if I am going?" |
47929 | No, no, no; said he''d rather lose a thousand apple trees than----"Said he''d rather George would? |
47929 | No? 47929 Nothing?" |
47929 | Oh, George would rather have his father lie? |
47929 | Oh, George? 47929 On whad?" |
47929 | Out there now? |
47929 | Said he cut his father? |
47929 | Said he''d rather have a thousand apple trees? |
47929 | Say,said Stephen,"sweetest sigher; Say, shall Stephen spouseless stay?" |
47929 | So George came up and heard them talking about it, and he----"What did he cut it down for? |
47929 | Sure, mum, he has a family; was n''t he married this blessed mornin''? |
47929 | Thirty years( with a weary sigh), And then he thoughtfully added,"Why?" |
47929 | Vot you vantsh mit your schnapps und lager? 47929 Wal-- no-- I come dasignin''----""To see my Ma? |
47929 | Well, do the goats bunt when you nishiate a fresh candidate? |
47929 | Well, good gracious, Washington, why do n''t you come out and tell me what it is? 47929 Well, one day George''s father----""George who?" |
47929 | Whad yer goin''ter do? |
47929 | Whad yo''doin''dat for? |
47929 | Whad yo''mean? |
47929 | Whar''s de c''lateral? |
47929 | Whar''s de fo''cents? |
47929 | What Margaret? |
47929 | What about-- those taxes? |
47929 | What apple tree? |
47929 | What apple tree? |
47929 | What can you do? |
47929 | What did he tell him? |
47929 | What do you raise your leg for? |
47929 | What do you want? |
47929 | What does this mean? |
47929 | What means all this? |
47929 | What rods? |
47929 | What think you of that? |
47929 | What was they talking about? |
47929 | What''s the price of wood? |
47929 | What, have you raised on_ your_ wood, too? 47929 When? |
47929 | Where did you get on? |
47929 | Who did? |
47929 | Who gave it to him? |
47929 | Who''s he? |
47929 | Who, I? 47929 Whose country?" |
47929 | Whose little hatchet? |
47929 | Why did n''t you get some man to come and attend to the dog? |
47929 | Why do you ask? |
47929 | Why, yes, of course I am; but what set you to thinking of that? |
47929 | Would you rather,said she,"hear it altogether, when you come in, or have it in little bits, head and tail, all of a jumble?" |
47929 | Yes, the wife; where is she? |
47929 | Yes; must be careful with the hatchet----"What hatchet? |
47929 | Yes; told him that he must be careful with the hatchet----"Who must be careful? |
47929 | You are traveling, h''m? |
47929 | You ca n''t mean it: Actually_ living_ out there? |
47929 | You did n''t tell him that? |
47929 | You shall be the gentleman? |
47929 | You want to see my Pa, I s''pose? |
47929 | _ Dat_ ring? |
47929 | _ Nothing_, Washington? 47929 _ Our_ Margaret? |
47929 | ''Is n''t there any man at all about?'' |
47929 | ''Then,''says he,''where''s your master?'' |
47929 | ''What of it?'' |
47929 | ( What would the Bonnie Charlie say, If he could see that crowd to- day?) |
47929 | *****_ Minister_( at baptismal font):"Name, please?" |
47929 | Ai n''t it cute to see a Yankee Take sech everlastin''pains, All to git the Devil''s thankee Helpin''on''em weld their chains? |
47929 | Ai n''t there no way of stoppin''it?'' |
47929 | Ai n''t ye got no sinse at all?" |
47929 | Am I my Aunt Kiziah, or am I your brother Paul? |
47929 | An''says I,''How?'' |
47929 | And King Solomon was n''t feeling right good and he said:"Why could n''t the brat have been twins and stopped this bother?" |
47929 | And everybody said they did n''t know anything about it, and----""Anything about what?" |
47929 | And he said,''Who has cut down my favorite apple tree?''" |
47929 | And his father told him----""Told who?" |
47929 | And his father----""Whose father?" |
47929 | And how is Dolly? |
47929 | And, Nephew Frederick-- h''m!--can you lend me three dollars for the hackman? |
47929 | Are we_ never_ to get to a cheaper country? |
47929 | As a hardship, he ca n''t be beat; and what are the rogues sent to prison for but to suffer punishment? |
47929 | At last he came to a splendid apple tree, his father''s favorite, and cut it down and----""Who cut it down?" |
47929 | But then we would have to leave Rudder Grange for at least three weeks, and how could we do that? |
47929 | But we saw the dog-- is he as savage yet?" |
47929 | Ca n''t you let him in? |
47929 | Can any man or beast be taught to be mechanically polite? |
47929 | Can it be That all that arduous wooing not atones For Saturday shortness of trade dollars three? |
47929 | Come, where have you disappeared to all these years, and are you from there now, or where are you from?" |
47929 | Dear, dear, where have you dropped from? |
47929 | Did I lave fur that? |
47929 | Did n''t I tell ye, Larry, not to be afther ringin''at the owle gintleman''s knocker? |
47929 | Do you have to attend all the sittings?" |
47929 | Do you mean to say that OUR Margaret has married that-- that good- for- nothing, inebriated wretch?" |
47929 | Does the Emperor of Russia attend the conclaves of the Governors of the provinces? |
47929 | Faix an''did n''t he get me into trouble wid my missus, the haythin? |
47929 | For this have we been kept here long, so carefully inurned? |
47929 | GEORGE W. PECK PECK''S BAD BOY"Say, are you a Mason, or a Nodfellow, or anything?" |
47929 | Had_ he_ been sold? |
47929 | Hain''t they made your env''ys wiz? |
47929 | Hain''t they sold your colored seamen? |
47929 | Happy and prosperous in the Far West, was n''t I? |
47929 | He called the gentleman back and said,"Friend, how long have you been we d?" |
47929 | He just catches your eye, and when he says,"Do n''t you think so, sir?" |
47929 | He of the nose nodded eagerly at that, and wrote,"Also you make to be washed my shirt?" |
47929 | He ordered the goat hisself, and we filled the order, do n''t you see? |
47929 | He recommenced more artfully:"Do you know Carrots?" |
47929 | He told him----""George told him?" |
47929 | He told him----""Who told him?" |
47929 | He wrote at once,"How much you pay?" |
47929 | He----""What for?" |
47929 | His----""Who gave him the little hatchet?" |
47929 | How can I come? |
47929 | How could you mix our ashes in one vast, ancestral hash?" |
47929 | How d''ye sell your wood_ this_ time?" |
47929 | I did----''""His father did?" |
47929 | I heard the bell and the pilot''s hail,"What''s_ your_ price for wood?" |
47929 | I saw a light just ahead on the right-- shall we hail?" |
47929 | I suppose you do n''t mind?" |
47929 | I wrote:"You wish employment?" |
47929 | I''ve done enough-- a saint I''ve been-- Wo n''t that atone? |
47929 | I----''""Who could n''t tell a lie?" |
47929 | Is it ate wid him? |
47929 | Is it howld on, ye say? |
47929 | Is it possible? |
47929 | Is n''t that unanswerable?" |
47929 | It was----''""His father could n''t?" |
47929 | JOHN TOWNSEND TROWBRIDGE FRED TROVER''S LITTLE IRON- CLAD Did I never tell you the story? |
47929 | Now, suppose they-- or he-- the man whose brains are out-- goes about with his coffin under his arm, like my worthy uncle? |
47929 | One day George Washington''s father gave him a little hatchet for a----""Gave who a little hatchet?" |
47929 | One day his father----""Whose father?" |
47929 | One day, after he had delivered himself vigorously, Lincoln said to him:"Mr. Chase, are you an Episcopalian?" |
47929 | One morning, meeting by the fence, the neighbor said,"How is it, Mr. Alcott, you are never troubled with bugs, while my vines are crowded with them?" |
47929 | Pa is real fat, but he knew he got hit, and he grunted and said,''What you boys doin''?'' |
47929 | Said he"Wilt open the gate?" |
47929 | Say, did you know they keep a goat in a livery stable so the horses wo n''t get sick? |
47929 | Shall I send it?" |
47929 | Smoke? |
47929 | The matter with him? |
47929 | The other pilot''s voice was again heard on deck--"How much_ have_ you?" |
47929 | There now-- why, you look perfectly natural; ageing a little, just a little, but you''d have known him anywhere, would n''t you, Polly?" |
47929 | This is what the cronies said to each other:"''What is them things, Ike?'' |
47929 | Want to be a postmaster? |
47929 | Want to tackle_ me_ in, du ye? |
47929 | We begin to think it''s natur To take sarse an''not be riled-- Who''d expect to see a tater All on eend at bein''biled? |
47929 | We said:"And he told him that----""Who told him what?" |
47929 | What do you want to be so reserved and distrustful with an old friend like me for? |
47929 | What do you want?" |
47929 | What does a young blade of twenty- two know? |
47929 | What have you been doing with your ancestors''remains? |
47929 | What is a peach? |
47929 | What, indeed, could invest human flesh with such terrors-- what but this? |
47929 | When do they come into your story?" |
47929 | When she came back she said pityingly:"Why, Mamie, have you been here alone all the time? |
47929 | Who could take care of our garden, our poultry, our horse, and cow, and all their complicated belongings? |
47929 | Will you not oblige----?" |
47929 | Wut''s the use o''meetin''-goin''Every Sabbath, wet or dry, Ef it''s right to go a- mowin''Feller- men like oats an''rye? |
47929 | _ Book of Etiquette!_ What is conventionalism without the inborn sense? |
47929 | _ Patient_( excitedly):"I will recover?" |
47929 | _ When did they sleep?_ Wood taken in, the_ Caravan_ again took her place in the middle of the stream, paddling on as usual. |
47929 | _ Wut''ll_ git your dander riz? |
47929 | _ Wut''ll_ make ye act like freemen? |
47929 | going?" |
47929 | or"What is your opinion, sir?" |
47929 | replied the Captain--(captains did swear a little in those days);"what''s the odd_ quarter_ for, I should like to know? |
5659 | ''And why not?'' 5659 And no ladies?" |
5659 | And who is your candidate? |
5659 | And who were these men of taste to- day? |
5659 | And who''ll have you? |
5659 | And you? |
5659 | Are you comfortable, Riekje? |
5659 | Be quiet, bad boy,said Nelle, half in anger, half jokingly;"how can there be any milk under Riekje''s chair?" |
5659 | But where shall I find him at this time of day? |
5659 | But why do you tell me all this? |
5659 | But, my dear friend, what shall I say? 5659 By the way,"he broke in suddenly,"what is her name?" |
5659 | Can he have repented? |
5659 | Can you go to the tower to- day? |
5659 | Did I not tell you so? |
5659 | Do you know sea service? |
5659 | Do you remember the first feast of St. Nicholas, which we kept together, after we were married? |
5659 | Do you understand me? 5659 Do your straw- lined sabots keep your feet warm?" |
5659 | Does she know the two girls? |
5659 | For whom do you want pardon? |
5659 | Good- evening, Madame Puzzel, how are you? 5659 Have you served? |
5659 | Here is Dolf Jeffers,cried the good fellow at that moment,"what do you want?" |
5659 | How can we tell? |
5659 | I did, a week ago; I requested my cousin to call on Mr. Mitrophanis, but--"But what? 5659 If I produced the milk from under Riekje''s chair, would you kiss me, mother?" |
5659 | If she were your sister, or even your daughter, would you not give her to him? |
5659 | Is there not one among you who will save a drowning man? |
5659 | Mr. Plateas, I believe? |
5659 | My dear friend, why did n''t you tell me you were going to walk to- day? 5659 Riekje, I am sad when you are sad: you do not wish to make me unhappy about you this evening?" |
5659 | The murdered Czar? |
5659 | Then all this ado was for Mr. Mitrophanis and his daughters? |
5659 | Well, did I exaggerate when I sang your wife''s praises? |
5659 | Well, is it''yes''or''no''? |
5659 | Well, what is it? |
5659 | Well? |
5659 | Were we not the same in our own kissing days? |
5659 | What are we to do without milk, Dolf? 5659 What are you laughing at? |
5659 | What did you say, and what did she say to you? |
5659 | What do you say, will you stroll on with me? |
5659 | What has happened to me? 5659 What is the matter, Riekje?" |
5659 | What is the name of your husband? |
5659 | What little girl? 5659 What sacrifice? |
5659 | What shall I recite? |
5659 | What''s the matter? 5659 What''s the news?" |
5659 | What''s this? |
5659 | Where did this happen? |
5659 | Where have you worked up to this time? |
5659 | Where is he? |
5659 | Who can raise for me my dead sons? |
5659 | Who can that be? |
5659 | Who could not see straight into the heart of a woman who is in love with her husband, Riekje? |
5659 | Who has died in the town? |
5659 | Whose? |
5659 | Why did n''t you propose for her hand just as soon as you knew she liked you? |
5659 | Why do you sing her praises to me? 5659 Why does he not come back?" |
5659 | Why does he stay away so long when his Riekje is dying? |
5659 | Why have n''t you ever spoken to me about it? |
5659 | Why is that? |
5659 | Why should I be? |
5659 | Why should I have offended him? 5659 Why should n''t I believe that Liakos never had any thought of marrying me off? |
5659 | Why should you think there is any news? |
5659 | Why, did n''t you tell me yesterday that---"Well, what if I did? 5659 Will you kiss me?" |
5659 | With your cousin, perhaps? |
5659 | Wo n''t you come and taste my muscat? |
5659 | Wo n''t you have the kindness to go there? |
5659 | You kissed it, I suppose? |
5659 | You say this, but how can the Czar get here? |
5659 | ''What sweeter source could the happiness of our future have?''" |
5659 | After what had passed between them the day before, he hardly liked to go to the judge and say-- what? |
5659 | And Mr. Liakos added with a show of indifference,"Are there many people out to- day?" |
5659 | And for what purpose did they assemble here? |
5659 | And how had he repaid this debt? |
5659 | And she began to laugh again; then seeing the judge''s expression, she asked,"What put this marriage into your head?" |
5659 | And then, why did n''t Liakos come; what was keeping him so long? |
5659 | And yet, why not? |
5659 | Are you smitten with her, as others have been?" |
5659 | At last he came to Aspinwall, and there was to be the end of his failures,--for what could reach him on that rocky island? |
5659 | But who will believe that you are the Czar? |
5659 | But why did n''t Liakos come? |
5659 | But why did n''t he come now? |
5659 | But why not ask her advice in confidence? |
5659 | Can this be done for love of novelty? |
5659 | Did he not owe his very life to the judge? |
5659 | Do I look like a marrying man?" |
5659 | Do n''t you think that our traditional custom in such cases is very sensible, and that these questions are managed better by intermediaries?" |
5659 | Do you remember, Tobias?" |
5659 | For a moment the professor thought of going to look for his friend; bat where should he go? |
5659 | Has not some one lately died of black- pox in this district?" |
5659 | Have you sound legs?" |
5659 | Have you testimonials of honorable government service?" |
5659 | He did n''t refuse you, surely?" |
5659 | He saw everything as it was; everything asked him,"Dost remember?" |
5659 | His companion did not laugh, but repeated:"What is her name?" |
5659 | His decision to marry the elder daughter of Mr. Mitrophanis was not enough; there were certain steps to take, but what were they? |
5659 | His friend smiled too, but wishing a more exact answer, continued:"At least we two have imitators; how many did you meet and who were they?" |
5659 | How should he behave? |
5659 | I had not seen her for ten days, even at a distance, and you can understand with what emotion just now I--""What is this condition?" |
5659 | I''ve just asked Mr. Mitrophanis for the hand of his elder daughter, and instead of---""You asked him for his daughter''s hand?" |
5659 | If I die, you will love it, Dolf, dear?" |
5659 | If he could get hold of it, and the Archbishop of Kazan would place it on his head, who could deny that he was the anointed Czar? |
5659 | In what was he lacking? |
5659 | Is that your name? |
5659 | Is there anything so very astonishing in that?" |
5659 | It''s your first, is it not, Riekje? |
5659 | Liakos?" |
5659 | Mr. Liakos looked at the professor in astonishment, and although he did not speak, the expression of his face said plainly,"Can you ask?" |
5659 | My Riekje, what is the matter with you?" |
5659 | On my way here, whenever I met with people, they all asked me,''Is it true that the Czar is not dead yet, and that he has escaped from prison?'' |
5659 | Perhaps she is a Princess? |
5659 | Plateas?" |
5659 | Plateas?" |
5659 | Should he apply to his friend? |
5659 | Should he ask the aid of Mr. Liakos''s cousin? |
5659 | Since his mother''s death, Florou had had absolute control over the household; why make her unhappy before it was necessary? |
5659 | Skavinski? |
5659 | Tell me, Riekje, I am your baby, am I not? |
5659 | The book was Polish,--what did that mean? |
5659 | The judge was about to reply when he heard some one coming toward them call out in the darkness:"Liakos, is that you?" |
5659 | The one, too, who dragged away his child by the hand, gesticulated as if to say:"What can I do? |
5659 | The villagers asked their priest in a low voice:"What does he say? |
5659 | Then lowering his voice, he added:"Do you know what she said to me? |
5659 | Then she put her lips to his ear and whispered:"Dolf, my darling Dolf, will you love it?" |
5659 | Therefore the following conversation began:"Where are you from?" |
5659 | They recognized him as the son of Korneliz, and called from the window:"What is the matter? |
5659 | Was it a devil who was again at his heels, when he believed him 300 miles off? |
5659 | Was n''t his friend the very man to become the brother- in- law he so ardently desired? |
5659 | What business had he to get into such a scrape? |
5659 | What could be simpler? |
5659 | What desponding lover has not yearned to pour out his heart to some friend? |
5659 | What did we do? |
5659 | What do you mean-- are you trying to inveigle me into marrying her?" |
5659 | What has happened to you?" |
5659 | What have you been doing all this time?" |
5659 | What is he going to do?" |
5659 | What is it?" |
5659 | What should he say to her? |
5659 | What''s the matter?" |
5659 | Where could he find a better son- in- law? |
5659 | Which of these two ideas was the boldest? |
5659 | Who could have sent the book? |
5659 | Who had a better right to claim such a sacrifice? |
5659 | Who said anything about sacrifice? |
5659 | Who was glad when I came back with all the good things and laid them side by side on the table, while the fire burned brightly in the stove? |
5659 | Who was glad? |
5659 | Who would have this first one? |
5659 | Who''ll be kissed?" |
5659 | Why did n''t he hurry back and end this suspense? |
5659 | Why did you start so late?" |
5659 | Why had n''t the message been a plain"yes"or"no"? |
5659 | Why not go to her even now? |
5659 | You do n''t mean to say you''re in love?" |
5659 | asked Johnson;"are you sick?" |
5659 | or even higher in grade than this? |
5659 | possibly the wife of the Lord Chamberlain? |
5659 | what is two weeks?" |
5659 | who''ll be kissed now, mother? |
48042 | Are you not pleased that your poems are going out to Canton? |
48042 | But what do I represent? 48042 Do you not know,"answered the teacher,"that we are forbidden to do that?" |
48042 | That terrible, incorruptible judge will say to Goethe: A mighty mind was given to thee, didst thou ever employ it to oppose baseness? 48042 Then thou art of the tribe of Asra?" |
48042 | This is Freiligrath? 48042 Whence comes it that ye love thus?" |
48042 | Why do you not give the preference to one of your own people? |
48042 | [ 10][ 10] You know the meaning of these marks? 48042 [ 14][ 14] Dost know the ancient ballad? |
48042 | [ 31][ 31] The three holy kings from the Eastern land Inquired in every city: Where is the road to Bethlehem, Ye boys and maidens pretty? 48042 [ 3][ 3] What means this lonely tear- drop Which dims mine eye to- day? |
48042 | [ 7] 7: Are there not such things as learned Dogs, and horses too, who reckon? 48042 [ 7][ 7] Who was it sang this song? |
48042 | ( Sir THEODORE MARTIN) Why must he weep? |
48042 | --What, where, upon what, with what am I to write? |
48042 | ?, evidently addressed to the King of Prussia:"Du weisst, was das bedeuten will? |
48042 | ?, evidently addressed to the King of Prussia:"Du weisst, was das bedeuten will? |
48042 | A German, and a freeman-- who could have dreamt it? |
48042 | A man once asked Arua ben Hezam of the tribe of Asra:"Is it true that ye love with a tenderness surpassing that of all other men?" |
48042 | A still more striking instance is to be found in the typical poem of the lonely tear:--"Was will die einsame Thräne? |
48042 | Affecting? |
48042 | Als sein Landsmann, das Kamel? |
48042 | Also fragen wir beständig, Bis man uns mit einer Handvoll Erde endlich stopft die Mäuler, Aber ist das eine Antwort? |
48042 | Am I not right? |
48042 | And besides, had not his son Maria Theresa''s promise to fall back on? |
48042 | And even if he does exist, of what use is an eternal God to mortal man? |
48042 | And is Freiligrath no poet? |
48042 | And then he interrupts himself with a question:"But is there a God at all? |
48042 | And what did the child think on the occasion? |
48042 | And when they try, condemn, and execute himself, from his very grave is heard the question: Why? |
48042 | And, first and foremost, why keep silence? |
48042 | Are not apes all good comedians? |
48042 | Are not nightingales good singers? |
48042 | Are they the years of thy life? |
48042 | Are you republicans or thralls? |
48042 | Believe me, the independence you prize so highly is an uncertain possession; will you, can you retain it? |
48042 | But the justification he offers is most peculiar:"What has gambling to do on the stage?" |
48042 | But what, on closer investigation, is the spiritual substance of the poem? |
48042 | But why write thus? |
48042 | Canst work i''the earth so fast?" |
48042 | Dangers? |
48042 | Das also war dein Ziel auf Erden, Dem stürmten deine Lieder zu? |
48042 | Der König sprach:''Du bist wohl ein Schwab? |
48042 | Did not even the work of his old age, the second part of_ Faust_, end with the wish that he could see a free people on free soil? |
48042 | Did the spirit of his works in any single point harmonise with the royal Prussian or the Austrian imperial spirit? |
48042 | Do they tell of thirty- seven victories? |
48042 | Do you know the proper place for my head? |
48042 | Does the Prussian State no longer protect Christianity, morality, marriage? |
48042 | Du wirst sie mir nicht streichen? |
48042 | For how In what Left service long capacity? |
48042 | For spiritual light or priestly superstition? |
48042 | For the time is at hand when the royal cooks will ask each other:"For whom shall we be preparing dinner to- morrow?" |
48042 | For what is the rock on which virtue splits nowadays? |
48042 | Für Fürstenmacht, für Volkesrecht? |
48042 | Für Geisteslicht, für Pfaffendunkel? |
48042 | Hast du die Schmerzen gelindert Je des Beladenen? |
48042 | Hast du die Thränen gestillet Je des Geängsteten? |
48042 | Hast thou ever lightened the burden of the heavy laden? |
48042 | He himself is, he declares, wiser than all the rest in France, as he was wiser than the rest in Germany; why? |
48042 | He shouted:"Will you promise, while I am striving so to do, to stand by me, in prosperity and in adversity? |
48042 | Heaven gave thee a tongue of fire, didst thou ever champion justice? |
48042 | Hegel himself, who took an interest in the young man, had said to him:"How can any one bind himself to a man like that?" |
48042 | Here, under my cloak, I bring thee thy strong sceptre and thy beautiful crown-- dost thou not recognise me, my Emperor? |
48042 | How can a poet calumniate the word in which lies the germ of all the noblest deeds? |
48042 | How characteristically did he feel joy, or grief, or sadness, or love, or enthusiasm, or cynicism? |
48042 | How deeply did he penetrate into the life of his time? |
48042 | How do you explain that?" |
48042 | How many institutions still presented themselves as objects of veneration and faith to the normal mind of the period? |
48042 | How would you set about it? |
48042 | I ca n''t say_ you_, my heart is too full; canst_ thou_ think anything else possible? |
48042 | I was born for danger; dangers, thick and dark, beset my path, yet I know no fear; are they not my destiny? |
48042 | In Dingelstedt''s fine collection of poems,_ Nachtwächters Weltgang_, we find one with the heading:??? |
48042 | In Dingelstedt''s fine collection of poems,_ Nachtwächters Weltgang_, we find one with the heading:??? |
48042 | In Dingelstedt''s fine collection of poems,_ Nachtwächters Weltgang_, we find one with the heading:??? |
48042 | In what domain was it still possible for a German poet to display fresh, original understanding of nature? |
48042 | Instead of this, what happens? |
48042 | Is it for the power of the sovereign or the rights of the people? |
48042 | Is it not dropsy, the result of all the water- drinking introduced by these new total abstinence associations? |
48042 | Is it possible to be glad when one loves? |
48042 | Is not God melancholy? |
48042 | Is not strong party feeling the mother of all victory? |
48042 | Is not the one in rags, the other clad in silk? |
48042 | Is this justice? |
48042 | Is this the end of all your passionate song? |
48042 | Is your watchword slavery or freedom? |
48042 | Ist der Freiligrath kein Dichter? |
48042 | It may triumph the very day after the fall of Poland; and that would be enough to break one''s heart.... Can there be a God? |
48042 | Liberty can and will triumph, sooner or later; but why not now? |
48042 | My love for you makes me happy; what more could marriage give me, since it could not increase that love? |
48042 | Nur offen wie ein Mann: Für oder wider? |
48042 | On its first page stands: Took service With whom? |
48042 | On what is your present bliss founded? |
48042 | Or again, think of that extraordinarily witty poem"1649- 1793-?" |
48042 | Pfui Freund!--Ein guter, Bürger-- Du? |
48042 | Republikaner oder Knecht? |
48042 | Sahid ben Agba one day asked an Arab:"Of what tribe art thou?" |
48042 | Schreiben Esel nicht Kritiken? |
48042 | Shame on you, my friend I Was this your aim in life? |
48042 | Sind es siebenunddreissig Siege, die er abgekämpft dem Feind? |
48042 | Sind es siebenunddreissig Wunden, die der Held trägt auf der Brust? |
48042 | Sind''die Jahre, die du lebtest? |
48042 | Singen nicht die Nachtigallen? |
48042 | Speak out like a man: Are you for or against us? |
48042 | Spielen Affen nicht Komödie? |
48042 | Surely not on the 500 francs( Cotta''s monthly payment)? |
48042 | The Russian asks Heine:"Are you a good Russian?" |
48042 | The answer to the fourth question: What remains for the Estates to do? |
48042 | The last incident was perhaps suggested by the ending of Brentano''s poem:"Wer hat dies''Lied gesungen? |
48042 | The questions to which any work provides us with answers are such as the following: How far- sighted was the author? |
48042 | The real Freiligrath?" |
48042 | Then comes the end:"Kennst du das alte Liedchen? |
48042 | There''s no disgrace in that, surely?" |
48042 | They were: What did the Estates ask? |
48042 | Thus are we for ever asking, Till at length our mouths securely With a clod of earth are fastened-- That is not an answer, surely? |
48042 | Thus spake the king:"A Swabian art thou? |
48042 | To outbid his friend, Dingelstedt wrote the poem"Hochwohlgeboren,"which begins:"Ein guter Bürger willst du werden? |
48042 | To the question: What right had the Estates to make such a demand? |
48042 | To the third question: What answer did they receive? |
48042 | Und auch Pferde, welche rechnen? |
48042 | Und die Parole: Sklave oder frei? |
48042 | Und wen haben sie gemeint? |
48042 | Was greift ihr zu den Schwertern nicht, Ihr Singer und Ihr Beter? |
48042 | Was it any wonder that his pupils drew their own inferences? |
48042 | Was it any wonder that the following generation drew its own logical conclusion? |
48042 | Was it becoming in his position of life? |
48042 | Was soll all der Schmerz, die Lust? |
48042 | Was this the best way to improve matters? |
48042 | Was werdet Ihr Posaunen nicht, Ihr ehr''nen Orgeltuben, Den jüngsten Tag ins Ohr zu schrein den Henkern und den Buben? |
48042 | Wer besäng''den Löwen besser? |
48042 | What answer did they receive? |
48042 | What availeth its unrest-- Pain that findeth no release, Joy that at the best is dreary? |
48042 | What can be the meaning of it?" |
48042 | What does this mean? |
48042 | What entwined hops and parsley in his wreath of laurel? |
48042 | What good has it done me? |
48042 | What had Goethe''s youthful attitude been but one of Titanic defiance? |
48042 | What had he been, that Schiller whose writings had been put into their hands when they were children? |
48042 | What have you to offer us? |
48042 | What is it that constitutes a great writer? |
48042 | What made him a slave of circumstances, a cowardly Philistine, a mere provincial? |
48042 | What position, indeed, did he suppose himself to occupy, seeing he allowed himself such liberty of speech? |
48042 | What remains for them to do? |
48042 | What right had they to make such a request? |
48042 | What set a night- cap on his lofty brow? |
48042 | What was the good of making enemies for himself? |
48042 | What was there remarkable about it? |
48042 | What will my critics say to this, those critics who called me a bad patriot? |
48042 | When Rahel is told this, she writes:"How can he know that I have feeling? |
48042 | When men go out to fight sparrows with halberts and spears, and use cannons to shoot larks, he asks: Why? |
48042 | When new prohibitory enactments are pasted on the notice- board at the town- hall, a little man comes and reads them and quietly asks: Why? |
48042 | When the priests from their pulpits groan and howl at the sunlight, he asks: Why? |
48042 | Where is your effort to keep pace with the times? |
48042 | Wherefore? |
48042 | Whilst he stood on guard that young man gave expression to the feelings of the day in the song:"Was kommt heran mit kühnem Gange? |
48042 | Who can sing of lions better Than their countryman, the camel? |
48042 | Who is God? |
48042 | Why did Freiligrath take a pension? |
48042 | Why endure? |
48042 | Why grasp ye not your swords in wrath, O ye that sing and ye that pray? |
48042 | Why revere? |
48042 | Why should not you, too, at last think of making a settled position for yourself?... |
48042 | Why trust? |
48042 | Wilhelm Müller, the poet of the_ Griechenlieder_, sings of him with fervent enthusiasm:"Siebenunddreissig Trauerschüsse? |
48042 | Willst du den Namen hör''n? |
48042 | Wofür? |
48042 | Would you gently stroke the crocodile coat- of- mail with your warm hand? |
48042 | Wouldst thou know its name? |
48042 | Write not asses criticisms? |
48042 | You would never dream of erasing them-- four innocent little marks of interrogation? |
48042 | [ 11] You ask me why he lies sleepless? |
48042 | [ 14] We clung to each other- was it to pass the time, or was it in despair? |
48042 | [ 1] What mean these thirty- seven minute- guns? |
48042 | [ 1] Ye knights who have made ready to take part in the great battle of the day, lift your visors and speak clearly: On which side are you fighting? |
48042 | [ 2]"Was, wo, worauf, womit soll ich schreiben? |
48042 | [ 6]"_ Geibel_: Is this you? |
48042 | [ 7]_ I_ honour thee? |
48042 | _ Freiligrath_: Ja, willst du mich kennen? |
48042 | be greater still? |
48042 | ever stayed the tears of the distressed? |
48042 | lieber Herr!"? |
48042 | of attacking the great? |
48042 | of thirty- seven wounds on the hero''s breast?... |
48042 | warum er in Wuth die Spitzen am Hemde zerissen? |
48042 | what achievements do I recall? |
48042 | what do you say now? |
48042 | when? |
48042 | who could have looked for this awakening of the German lyre? |
48042 | who would not, in course of time, esteem the influential courtier? |
48042 | why in his rage he tears the lace from his pillow? |
48042 | will you recognise me? |
7427 | ''Miserable business to be in, ai n''t it?'' 7427 ''Who are you?'' |
7427 | Air you the man I voted for and that I''ve been reading about in the papers doin''legislatin''and sich in Washington? |
7427 | And a prominent member of the gymnastic class? |
7427 | And now what is it? |
7427 | And quite a hand at all athletic exercises? |
7427 | And what did she say? |
7427 | By gravy, mister,said the farmer, admiringly,"air you in the aggercultural business?" |
7427 | Ca n''t you postpone the call? |
7427 | Ca n''t you wait until after the call? |
7427 | Did you see any like me there, dear? |
7427 | Did you tell your mamma that Mr. and Mrs. Blank are here? |
7427 | Do you carry big loads of household goods for thirty cents? |
7427 | Do you use the electric or pneumatic signals? |
7427 | Have you a double track? |
7427 | How did politics get you out? |
7427 | How is it you''ve managed to keep so fresh and good- looking all these years? |
7427 | How many did I kill sir? 7427 How many?" |
7427 | How much did you get for both? |
7427 | How much is the cross worth? |
7427 | It''s-- er-- a-- did you say, what is it? |
7427 | Maybe you can help me out"Well, what is it? |
7427 | Nayther whiskey punch? |
7427 | Now, on which side are the most people? |
7427 | On the south side? |
7427 | On which side is the South Pole? |
7427 | Pray, who is that? |
7427 | Quite a hand? 7427 Say, ma, do they play base- ball in heaven?" |
7427 | Shall I send them on an emigrant train, or must they go first- class? 7427 Then how are you an Episcopalian?" |
7427 | Then what in thunder air you? |
7427 | To what parish do you belong? |
7427 | Well, now, suppose they should open on you with shells and musketry, what would you do? |
7427 | Well, of course, you have a train dispatcher, and run all trains by telegraph? |
7427 | Well, then,continued the clergyman,"what diocese do you belong to?" |
7427 | Well, thin, yer riverence, would it be any harrum fur me to give a toast? |
7427 | What barley? |
7427 | What did you do with the hide? |
7427 | What have you been drinking? |
7427 | What is a jackleg carpenter? |
7427 | What is it? |
7427 | What is that boy tied up there for? |
7427 | What is this cent for? |
7427 | What kind of a carpenter? |
7427 | What new substance, my dear? |
7427 | What''s his name? 7427 What''s that for? |
7427 | Where''s the hamper? |
7427 | Who confirmed you, then? |
7427 | Why not? |
7427 | Why, what did he say? |
7427 | Why, what did you mean by sending me such a message? |
7427 | Why, where have you been sleeping these last two nights since we left? |
7427 | Why? 7427 Will you, really?" |
7427 | Y''ain''t selling plows? |
7427 | You know your duty here, do you, sentinel? |
7427 | ''Did you see anything down- stairs worth stealing?'' |
7427 | ( to a committeeman at his side)"Eh? |
7427 | ATHLETIC NURSE Young Wife--"Why, dear, you were the stroke oar at college, were n''t you?" |
7427 | Ai n''t you got the nerve to go up and down Broadway fixed up like that, and your poor father and mother workin''hard at home? |
7427 | Ai n''t you''shamed o''yourself, and your father a honest, hard- workin''driver, and your mother a decent, respectable washwoman? |
7427 | An inquisitive passenger on a railroad recently had the following dialogue:"Do you use the block system on this road?" |
7427 | But he asked who is this coming man? |
7427 | But how are you able to do it?" |
7427 | But why is it not as reputable to invent one''s own story as to tell the story some one else has invented? |
7427 | CUTE BOY The teacher in geography was putting the class through a few simple tests:"On which side of the earth is the North Pole?" |
7427 | Catch on to them gaiters, will you? |
7427 | Do n''t I pay you enough?" |
7427 | Do n''t you Britishers know anything?" |
7427 | Does the second telling improve its morality? |
7427 | FAMILY AFFAIRS"Newlywed seems to find particular delight in parading his little family affairs before the eyes of his acquaintances,""Does he? |
7427 | First, what are sound views of literature; second, what is a religious paper? |
7427 | HITTING A LAWYER"Have you had a job to- day, Tim?" |
7427 | Has our nation always been just and kind? |
7427 | How did it happen? |
7427 | How do you flag the rear of your train if you are stopped from any cause between stations?"'' |
7427 | How in the world do you expect to live and keep a horse on seventy cents a day?" |
7427 | Husband--"May I hear about it?" |
7427 | I never thought of that; but why ca n''t we eat a bit of duck, yer riverence?" |
7427 | I replied:"Very well, stay there, and do n''t let any one see you, do you hear?" |
7427 | MORAL SUASION"What are your usual modes of punishment?" |
7427 | Mrs. McSwatters--"What is?" |
7427 | One year it was,"How many kinds of trees are there in the college yard?" |
7427 | Our Noble Selves: Why not toast ourselves and praise ourselves since we have the best means of knowing all the good in ourselves? |
7427 | STILL ROOM FOR RESEARCH"What is this new substance I hear so much about?" |
7427 | Scandals?" |
7427 | Some of his more intimate companions, in self- defense, would exclaim when he proposed a story,"Is it a mile from Boston?" |
7427 | The dismal youth looked thoughtful, and then replied:"You know I always inclose a stamp for the return of rejected manuscript?" |
7427 | Then, when he was breathless, he turned to his companion, and asked:"Where''s your farm?" |
7427 | Toast.--"Should Religious Papers Make Money?" |
7427 | WHAT''S IN A NAME? |
7427 | Were civilization and Christianity to be snatched from the Zenanese just when both were within their grasp? |
7427 | What a sensation he would create with his modest(?) |
7427 | What are they? |
7427 | What if you are not the most brilliant, humorous, and stirring speaker of the evening? |
7427 | What shall we say to them on this ligneous occasion? |
7427 | Where and how have these qualities been most strikingly manifested? |
7427 | Why did our heroes die? |
7427 | Why do you ask?" |
7427 | Would that be any harrum, sir?" |
7427 | You can put it on, ca n''t you?" |
7427 | _ Does Dr. Jones know it?_"Ma caught her breath, but failed to articulate a response. |
7427 | _ how many_ enemies did I kill? |
7427 | did He? |
7427 | do philosophers love dainties?" |
7427 | musha, Mistress O''Brien, what have ye there?" |
7427 | one man form a line?" |
7427 | replied the scholar;_"do you think all the good things of this world were made only for blockheads? |
7427 | said he,"have you got them hanging there?" |
7427 | says the man;''burglar?'' |
7427 | the next,"What is the make- up of the present English cabinet?" |
63016 | ''At last she is dead?'' 63016 ''Because of his temper?'' |
63016 | ''Do you doubt them?'' 63016 ''Do you honour me with your attention, Doctor?'' |
63016 | ''Duvivier,''said Monsieur de Merret,''I think you bought some crucifixes of those Spaniards who were here last year?'' 63016 ''Have you heard anything to trouble you?'' |
63016 | ''How has this been done, monsieur?'' 63016 ''How long,''I asked,''has this lasted?'' |
63016 | ''I do not address her brother?'' 63016 ''Is it possible that monsieur does n''t know Monsieur Regnault? |
63016 | ''Is she dead?'' 63016 ''Monsieur, to whom have I the honour of speaking?'' |
63016 | ''She has a husband, a father, and a brother?'' 63016 ''She has some recent association with the number twelve?'' |
63016 | ''Was their home a happy one?'' 63016 ''Well, monsieur,''she said,''Monsieur Regnault has no doubt recited to you his famous tale of La Grande Bretèche?'' |
63016 | ''What did he tell you?'' 63016 ''What is it, monsieur?'' |
63016 | ''Who is Monsieur Regnault?'' 63016 ''You are Doctor Manette?'' |
63016 | ''You are not married, are you?'' 63016 A likely stripling-- not ill- born-- and of her own choosing, too? |
63016 | About my door? |
63016 | After all that you have heard? |
63016 | Alas, can I do nothing to help you? |
63016 | And I... do you think I find it easy? 63016 And did your grandfather go to bed again in that room?" |
63016 | And pray how came you here? |
63016 | And what, sir,she demanded,"may be the meaning of all this?" |
63016 | Are you open to a proposition? |
63016 | Are you within, dear son? |
63016 | But it is past midnight; what better hour could you have? |
63016 | Do you fancy,he went on,"that when I had made my little contrivance for the door, I had stopped short with that? |
63016 | Do you mean I am a prisoner? |
63016 | Has the day begun already? |
63016 | I was startled, and asked,''Is it a pressing case?'' 63016 Is that your ship out there?" |
63016 | Just step here, will you? |
63016 | May I lead you thither, madam? |
63016 | May be the maid had warmed it too much? |
63016 | She is in a better frame of spirit? |
63016 | She should have thought of that before she began the dance? 63016 That cursed bet,"murmured the old man, clutching his head in despair...."Why did n''t the man die? |
63016 | Thinkin''of buyin''that''ar gulf, buddy? |
63016 | Vera, do not we, your mother and I, deserve your confidence? 63016 Vera, tell us, what troubles you?" |
63016 | Was he ever apt to walk in his sleep? |
63016 | Well, how do you feel? |
63016 | Well, then it''s nothing? |
63016 | Well, what are you waiting for? |
63016 | What do you mean? |
63016 | What for? |
63016 | What kind of a country is it? |
63016 | What was there for me to do when she did not wish to reveal her sorrow? 63016 What''ll the expressage be to take me out there with you?" |
63016 | What''s doing? |
63016 | What''s the use to deny it? |
63016 | Where are you going to? |
63016 | Who dares? |
63016 | Why did you let it out? |
63016 | Why do you come? |
63016 | You got a deal of some kind to put through? |
63016 | You have n''t been eating loco weed, have you? |
63016 | You speak Spanish? |
63016 | You''re going to throw me down, then, are you? |
63016 | ''But tell me, Rosalie, why did you take a place at an inn after you left Madame de Merret? |
63016 | An excellent lawyer''s office of which you have doubtless heard? |
63016 | And if the old gentleman was sane, what, in God''s name, had he to look for? |
63016 | And is there someone nearer to you than we? |
63016 | And now the banker pacing from corner to corner recalled all this and asked himself:"Why did I make this bet? |
63016 | And then addressing Denis,"Monsieur de Beaulieu,"he asked,"may I present you to my niece? |
63016 | And what was that she tried to say? |
63016 | As if I did not see that some sorrow is gnawing at you-- and what is it? |
63016 | But how is it you have never questioned Rosalie?'' |
63016 | Did I beget cruelty in her? |
63016 | Did I not command her? |
63016 | Did I not entreat her? |
63016 | Did I not teach her about God, about humility, about love?" |
63016 | Did n''t she leave you an annuity?'' |
63016 | Do n''t you get your filial eyes on anything that looks like cash in the Casa Blanca? |
63016 | Do we not love you? |
63016 | Do you care for iguanas, Thacker?" |
63016 | Do you hear?" |
63016 | Do you recall how you bruised your finger once and the blood trickled and you cried a little? |
63016 | Do you understand what you are to me, daughter? |
63016 | For... Pray, do you think me beautiful?" |
63016 | Has God been mocked here; or France betrayed? |
63016 | Have I ever seen you-- have you ever seen me-- before this accursed hour?" |
63016 | How came it to shut so easily and so effectually after him? |
63016 | How does Señorito Urique sound, for a change?" |
63016 | I have been stern; did that prevent her from doing as she wished? |
63016 | I looked for much confusion; for how could I tell whether he was willing to take me for his wife on these sharp terms? |
63016 | If not, why did you come up here to me?'' |
63016 | If old Urique knew you were an impostor, what sort of things would happen to you? |
63016 | Is Messire de Malétroit at hand?" |
63016 | Is it right that it should be so?" |
63016 | Is that so?'' |
63016 | It looked like a snare; and yet who could suppose a snare in such a quiet by- street and in a house of so prosperous and even noble an exterior? |
63016 | It was somewhere here?'' |
63016 | Kid, do you think it''s right to leave me out so long on a husk diet? |
63016 | Monsieur de Beaulieu, how can I look you in the face?" |
63016 | Monsieur de Merret? |
63016 | Not thinking of selling it, are you?" |
63016 | Now, do you_ sabe_?" |
63016 | Now, monsieur, what do you say? |
63016 | Now, what is my name?" |
63016 | Or did I not give you money? |
63016 | Or, you''ll say, I have not been kind? |
63016 | Perhaps she loved you-- you, who wept and humbled yourself?" |
63016 | Reflect, however, did I love her less than you loved her? |
63016 | She-- have you seen her, Doctor?'' |
63016 | Then, I tracked the brother here, and last night climbed in-- a common dog, but sword in hand.-- Where is the loft window? |
63016 | They''re them big lizards, you sabe? |
63016 | Thou wilt be faithful, little Charles?'' |
63016 | Try a cigar?" |
63016 | Was it right to hold it?" |
63016 | Well, why then are you silent? |
63016 | Were you ever at Merret, monsieur?'' |
63016 | What absurd or tragical adventure had befallen him? |
63016 | What ailed the door? |
63016 | What could be more natural than to mount the staircase, lift the curtain, and confront his difficulty at once? |
63016 | What countenance was he to assume? |
63016 | What did the two then, to persuade her husband to use his influence with her, to make her willing?'' |
63016 | What fire from heaven has fallen here? |
63016 | What is death to an old man like me? |
63016 | What is the plan of your round- up?" |
63016 | What sort of man was he?'' |
63016 | What tribunal has ordained that salt be cast upon this dwelling? |
63016 | What was I consul at Sandakan for? |
63016 | What''s doing? |
63016 | What''s the good? |
63016 | What''s the trouble? |
63016 | When I notify them that the rightful heir has returned and is waiting to know whether he will be received and pardoned, what will happen? |
63016 | When people are noble-- don''t you see?'' |
63016 | Where do you think he sat? |
63016 | Where is he?'' |
63016 | Where is the man who was here? |
63016 | Who is the more humane executioner, one who kills you in a few seconds or one who draws the life out of you incessantly, for years?" |
63016 | Why was it open? |
63016 | Why, what more would the jade have?" |
63016 | Will it convince people that capital punishment is worse or better than imprisonment for life? |
63016 | Will you please to enter the carriage?'' |
63016 | Will you please to enter the carriage?'' |
63016 | You understand? |
63016 | You will not disfigure your last hours by a want of politeness to a lady?" |
63016 | _ Que dice, señor?_""It sounds to me!" |
63016 | are not they rightfully mine?'' |
63016 | asked the Kid--"hot or cold?" |
63016 | beg pardon; what am I saying? |
63016 | he called out in a lower tone of voice,"where is the canary?" |
63016 | he demanded hoarsely of the courtiers who stood near him--"who dares insult us with this blasphemous mockery? |
63016 | is n''t it true that I need have no remorse about those fifteen thousand francs? |
63016 | it is a fine spot? |
63016 | what shall we say to my uncle when he returns?" |
6567 | A very long walk? |
6567 | But do n''t you see,said Townsend,"that would be impossible? |
6567 | But why rake up an old scandal? |
6567 | But,it may be argued in reply,"why need you bark in such a loud and raucous way? |
6567 | But,said the contributor,"what else can I call them? |
6567 | Did you ever see Newman? |
6567 | Do you smell sulphur? |
6567 | Had n''t He a sword? |
6567 | Shall we engage? |
6567 | Was he in a big sense eloquent? |
6567 | What business had he to be asking questions like that? |
6567 | What did he look like, my dear? 6567 Who knows? |
6567 | Why,I asked myself,"should I munch for others the remainder biscuit of life?" |
6567 | Why,I asked,"did M. Lamartine make himself into a kind of walking gold- reserve?" |
6567 | You haf so many islands; why could you not give us some? |
6567 | After all, have I not a right to be? |
6567 | Again, is this one of the Sitwells writing like Sassoon in order to drive the grocers to delirium?" |
6567 | An Melibei?" |
6567 | And then:"Had n''t He even a stick with a point?" |
6567 | As I was saying good- bye he suddenly said:"I suppose you can keep a secret?" |
6567 | At any rate, I began:"Whose flock is this?" |
6567 | But how is one to know what will interest one''s readers? |
6567 | But what does that matter? |
6567 | But what is the use of a biography if it is general and not particular? |
6567 | But, after all, why should we be annoyed instead of being thankful, when bright flowers spring up on a dunghill? |
6567 | But, of course, the rub is, shall we be able to awaken the Will of the Majority? |
6567 | By a guess, or( shall I say?) |
6567 | By the way, Strachey, what is Blankitis?" |
6567 | Did her limbs grow cold and numb and dead while the brain still worked? |
6567 | Did not Mrs. Quickly piously ejaculate that the dead Falstaff was"in Arthur''s bosom"? |
6567 | Did the"woman"of Somersetshire stave off the effects of the poison by walking about? |
6567 | Does life or death avail? |
6567 | Does not our Lord Himself tell us,"_ Blessed are the pure in hearty for they shall see God_"? |
6567 | Does not the Third Eclogue of Virgil begin:"Die mihi,...? |
6567 | Fancy the poor critic going through a volume and saying to himself:"Now is this Shanks or is it Graves trying to score off him by a parody? |
6567 | First a handful of the common yellow ones, then some coloured ones, and did ever a Queen prize jewels as I did those coloured flowers? |
6567 | Greatly surprised and perturbed by the fact that Christ did not resist and make a fight of it I energetically enquired,"Had n''t He a gun?" |
6567 | Have I ever felt such joy or happiness since? |
6567 | Have not I preferred a kind of glorified pot- boiling to the service of the spirit?" |
6567 | He once said to her when she laughed at him for some blunders,"Well, my dear, what can the woman with five talents expect from the man with one?" |
6567 | He was fond indeed of saying that there was very little you could do to make an Oriental people grateful.--"Why should they be grateful?" |
6567 | He would n''t be missed and so why should he not just remain where he was? |
6567 | How could he be? |
6567 | How could he? |
6567 | How is it possible to give a warning in earnest without exposing one''s self to the accusation of being bitter? |
6567 | I am quite right, as I can only get an hour''s exercise a day, to go while I am at it, as hard as I can?" |
6567 | I distinctly remember that Tennyson''s"Is there no hope for modern rhyme?" |
6567 | I remember when I heard the story, thirty years ago, at once asking the question,"Which ear was it he held?" |
6567 | I see above me and above the wainscot Romney''s( or is it Gainsborough''s?) |
6567 | I understood; and what is more delightful than that? |
6567 | If he chose to use his money for buying policies as other people used theirs to buy places, why not? |
6567 | If, in verifying the quotation, the parson should be arrested by the neighbouring line,"_ His Poll was kind and true_,"what then? |
6567 | Is it possible there is no other state of being? |
6567 | Is it to be wondered at, then, that I am intensely proud of what I was able to do? |
6567 | Is there anything in the world like being aroused in the grey of dawn by the man with the axe and the rope? |
6567 | It was just like King Arthur and the cakes, were n''t it?" |
6567 | John Strachey, his son, stood at the very cradle of Whiggism, for was he not the intimate friend of John Locke? |
6567 | Lord Cromer''s financial ability, or shall I say financial judgment? |
6567 | My dear mother used to say,"What do you do with all the flowers you pick? |
6567 | O why not speak?--is it so great a thing To cross death''s stream and whisper in the ear Of us weak mortals some faint hope or cheer? |
6567 | Oh, why so cruel? |
6567 | Or were they only trees and clouds? |
6567 | SONNET( 1875) O why so cruel, ye that have left behind Life''s fears, and from draped death have drawn the veil? |
6567 | Said the captain,"What is to hinder you?" |
6567 | She had written to a friend, saying, in effect, What on earth did you mean by not telling me more about your cousin, Lady Strachey? |
6567 | That was the statement: whether ancient or modern, who knows? |
6567 | The Master did not like me, but then, why should he? |
6567 | The following little dialogue will show that he inherits the faith of his fathers:_ Donald:_ Mother, was Jesus Christ a Jew? |
6567 | Then how can one dare to speak of them in the same breath with God? |
6567 | Uncle Joseph makes a remark about the lower classes, to which the carman replies,"Who are the lower classes? |
6567 | Was not one of his favourite characters in Shakespeare the immortal Mrs. Quickly? |
6567 | Was there ever a nobler parable more nobly expressed? |
6567 | We talk of the charm of the open road, but what is it to the charm of the open river, especially when the stream gets narrow? |
6567 | What could have induced him to take the line he took in_ The Spectator_? |
6567 | What else, granted that he was the kind of man described, could Rhodes do with his money? |
6567 | What inducement, they wonder, can the working- men have to vote for them? |
6567 | What is it? |
6567 | What is the journalist''s function in the State, and how am I to carry it out? |
6567 | What is their game?'' |
6567 | What noise of feet is that? |
6567 | What was the quality that placed Lord Cromer so high in the regard of his fellow- countrymen throughout Britain and the Empire? |
6567 | What would you want me to say?" |
6567 | When you begin to ask,''What are they up to? |
6567 | Who can paint a thought, or number the flashes of wit? |
6567 | Who knows? |
6567 | Who will deny that it was good fortune to be brought up in these views and by such an expounder? |
6567 | Why can not you call them something else?" |
6567 | Why come you not to me? |
6567 | Why did you want to keep her to yourself? |
6567 | Why do n''t I steal, you say? |
6567 | Why need you be so bitter?" |
6567 | Why not this journalist? |
6567 | Why should a journalist whom he had never seen be so hostile? |
6567 | Why, ca n''t you call them''the feathered denizens of the moor''?" |
6567 | Will you give me the twenty sous? |
6567 | Without the evidence, of what avail would be advocacy or judgment? |
6567 | Would I therefore mind going to see Mr. Rhodes, and letting him tell me the whole story in his own words? |
6567 | You can mind, carn''t you, wife, how we used to see him and his brothers riding by with their ponies and their long hair? |
6567 | You wo n''t? |
6567 | _ Donald:_ But how could He be, when God the Father is a Presbyterian? |
6567 | all interests weigh''d, All Europe sav''d, yet Britain not betray''d? |
6567 | de Peyronnet,"did he look like, and how did you come to see him?" |
6567 | why sit we mute, Now that each bird saluteth the spring? |
54526 | Day dawned, yet the visions lasted; All too weak to rise he lay; Did he dream that none spake harshly, All were strangely kind that day? 54526 Nothing to do?" |
54526 | Nothing to do? |
54526 | Nothing to do? |
54526 | Nothing to do? |
54526 | Nothing to do? |
54526 | Nothing to do? |
54526 | What is Death, father? |
54526 | What is life, father? |
54526 | What question can be here? 54526 Where is the lamb, my father?" |
54526 | -- What voice came through the sacred air?--"_ My child, give me thy Heart!_""Have I not laid before Thy shrine My wealth, O Lord?" |
54526 | --_Adelaide Procter._ ARE ALL THE CHILDREN IN? |
54526 | --_Adelaide Procter._ Does the Gospel word proclaim Rest for those that weary be? |
54526 | --_Gerhard._ Where wilt thou put thy trust? |
54526 | --_Matthew Arnold._ WHAT IS PRAYER? |
54526 | All can be saved, but how? |
54526 | All light and song; Each day I wonder, And say, How long Shall time me sunder From that dear throng? |
54526 | And are there no mothers whose weary hearts You can comfort for Mary''s sake? |
54526 | And art Thou come for saving, baby- browed And speechless Being-- art Thou come for saving? |
54526 | And in perfect acquiescence is there not perfect rest? |
54526 | And shall we meet the Master so, Bearing our withered leaves? |
54526 | And then the drear sharp tongue of prophecy, With the dread sense of things which shall be done, Doth smite me inly, like a sword-- a sword? |
54526 | And what is thy far errand, my fair child? |
54526 | And would you know the reason why this is? |
54526 | Are darkness and distress my share? |
54526 | Are there no wandering Pilgrims now, To thy heart and thy home to take? |
54526 | Art Thou a King, then? |
54526 | Art come for saving, O my weary One? |
54526 | Art thou alone, and does thy soul complain It lives in vain? |
54526 | Art thou languid? |
54526 | Art thou sore distrest? |
54526 | Art thou weary? |
54526 | Be of good cheer-- A home is here-- Rest in the Shadow of the Rock? |
54526 | Before the whiteness of that Throne appear? |
54526 | Blest with communion so Divine, Take what Thou wilt, shall I repine, When, as the branches to the vine, My soul may cling to Thee? |
54526 | But how can I be deeming Myself a loving child, When here, and there, and everywhere, My thoughts are wandering wild? |
54526 | But since the scope Must widen early, is it well to droop For a few days consumed in loss and taint? |
54526 | But tell me how you know? |
54526 | But what to those who find? |
54526 | Can I suffice for HEAVEN, and not for earth?'' |
54526 | Could we bear from one another What He daily bears from us? |
54526 | Could we choose a nobler joy?--and would we if we might? |
54526 | Dazzling the bewildered vision, More than princely pomp we see: What the blaze of the Alhambra, Dome of emerald, to thee? |
54526 | Did I yesterday Wash_ thy_ feet, my beloved, that they should run Quick to deny me''neath the morning sun, And do thy kisses, like the rest, betray? |
54526 | Finding, following, keeping, struggling, Is He sure to bless? |
54526 | For all upon this earth is broken beauty, Yet out of all what strange, deep lessons rise? |
54526 | For it was He who gave them; Will He forget His own? |
54526 | Go labor on; spend, and be spent,-- Thy joy to do the Father''s will; It is the way the Master went, Should not the servant tread it still? |
54526 | Go labor on;''tis not for nought; Thy earthly loss is heavenly gain; Men heed thee, love thee, praise thee not; The Master praises, what are men? |
54526 | Had God in heaven no work to do, But miracles of love for thee? |
54526 | Had sickness seized him? |
54526 | Has Fate o''erwhelmed thee with some sudden blow? |
54526 | Has thy soul bent beneath earth''s heavy bond? |
54526 | Hast Thou not one word for me? |
54526 | Hast thou beneath another''s stern control Bent thy sad soul, And wasted sacred hopes and precious tears? |
54526 | Hast thou found all she promised thee, Deceit, And Hope a cheat? |
54526 | Hast thou found life a cheat, and worn in vain Its iron chain? |
54526 | Hast thou found naught within thy troubled life Save inward strife? |
54526 | Hast thou gone sadly through a dreary night, And found no light, No guide, no star, to cheer thee through the plain, No friend, save pain? |
54526 | Hast thou o''er the clear heaven of thy soul Seen tempests roll? |
54526 | Hast thou watched all the hopes thou wouldst have won Fade, one by one? |
54526 | Hath He marks to lead me to Him, If He be my Guide? |
54526 | Have I not bade youth''s joys retire, And vain delights depart?" |
54526 | Have I not gained Thy grace, O Lord, And won in heaven my part?" |
54526 | Have I not shunned the path of sin, And chosen the better part?" |
54526 | Have I not watched and wept?" |
54526 | Have the blessed angels Any truer bliss? |
54526 | Hear''st thou, in the red morn, The angels''song? |
54526 | Heir of glory, That shall be for thee and me? |
54526 | Heir of glory, What is that to thee and me? |
54526 | Heir of glory, What is that to thee and me? |
54526 | Heir of glory, What is that to thee and me? |
54526 | Heir of glory, What is that to thee and me? |
54526 | Heir of glory, What is that to thee and me? |
54526 | Heir of glory, What is that to thee and me? |
54526 | How can we read the life, when we can not spell the heart? |
54526 | How could I make me fair? |
54526 | How do you love your father? |
54526 | How hast thou passed the border? |
54526 | How long, O Lord our God, Holy and true, and good, Wilt Thou not judge Thy suffering Church, Her sighs and tears and blood? |
54526 | How shall we gauge the whole, who can only guess a part? |
54526 | How shall we judge their present, we who have never seen That which is past forever, and that which might have been? |
54526 | How shall we measure another, we who can never know From the juttings above the surface the depth of the vein below? |
54526 | How tarry, when around us is thick night? |
54526 | I am listening, Lord, for Thee; What hast Thou to say to me? |
54526 | I know his approbation Outweighs all other meed, That his employ is always joy, But do I love indeed?'' |
54526 | I need Thy presence every passing hour, What but Thy grace can foil the tempter''s power? |
54526 | I stood amazed, and whispered,"Can it be That He hath granted all the boon I sought? |
54526 | I, a creature of a day, What can I know? |
54526 | If I ask Him to receive me, Will He say me nay? |
54526 | If I find Him, if I follow, What his guerdon here? |
54526 | If I still hold closely to Him, What hath He at last? |
54526 | In a frail form of clay, That to its element of dust Must soon resolve away? |
54526 | In the rocks of the world Marches the host of mankind, A feeble, wavering line, Where are they tending? |
54526 | Is it too late? |
54526 | Is not His will the wisest, is not His choice the best? |
54526 | Is not this enough, Though the desert prospect, Open wild and rough? |
54526 | Is there diadem as monarch That His brow adorns? |
54526 | Is there, betwixt the cherub that thou wert, The cherub and the angel thou may''st be, A life''s probation in this sadder world? |
54526 | More oft than any else beneath the skies? |
54526 | Must my prayer unanswered be? |
54526 | My flesh, my Lord!--what name? |
54526 | No weeping yonder? |
54526 | No world to rule, no joy in self, And in his own infinity? |
54526 | O Lord, Thou knowest it well? |
54526 | O strong soul, by what shore Tarriest thou now? |
54526 | O wave, and breeze, and rill, and rock, and wood, Was it not God Himself that called you GOOD? |
54526 | Of all I gave thee, warder, Hast conquered every foe? |
54526 | Oh, where shall rest be found-- Rest for the weary soul? |
54526 | Oh, who like Thee did ever go So patient through a world of woe? |
54526 | Oh, who like Thee, so calm, so bright, So pure, so made to live in light? |
54526 | Oh, who like Thee, so humbly bore The scorn, the scoffs of men, before? |
54526 | Open all his wounds again, And the shameful cross renew? |
54526 | Or will they find a broken reed, When strength of heart they so much need To help them brave the tide? |
54526 | See His body mangled, rent, Covered with a gore of blood; Sinful soul, what hast thou done? |
54526 | Seest thou the eastern dawn? |
54526 | Servants of God!--or sons Shall I not call you? |
54526 | Shall I not love Thee well? |
54526 | Shall I then, choose my way? |
54526 | Should not the loving bride The absent bridegroom mourn? |
54526 | Should she not wear the weeds of grief Until her Lord return? |
54526 | So long in mystic union held, So close with strong embrace compell''d, How canst thou bear the dread decree, That strikes thy clasping nerves from me? |
54526 | So meek, forgiving, god- like, high, So glorious in humility? |
54526 | So vile I am, how dare I hope to stand In the pure glory of that holy land? |
54526 | Soul, soul, what wilt thou answer, When thou shalt stand alone, Before thy God and Saviour,''Midst th''glories of the throne? |
54526 | Stephen the Sabaite._ 256"Looking unto Jesus"_ From the German._ 257 Evening Hymn_ Adelaide Procter._ 259 Are all the Children in? |
54526 | Still heavy is thy heart? |
54526 | Still sink thy spirits down? |
54526 | Still to death thy Lord pursue? |
54526 | Thy steps, can mortal eyes explore? |
54526 | Upon an erring heart, Which hath its own sore ills to bear, And shrinks from sorrow''s dart? |
54526 | Was he wroth? |
54526 | Wert thou an untried dweller in the sky? |
54526 | What course pursued below? |
54526 | What do we give to our beloved? |
54526 | What hast thou done for God, my soul? |
54526 | What is the course of the life Of mortal men on the earth? |
54526 | What language shall I borrow To thank Thee, dearest Friend; For this Thy dying sorrow, Thy pity without end? |
54526 | What shall I fear to lose While I have Thee? |
54526 | What think you? |
54526 | What to that for which we''re waiting Is this glittering earthly toy? |
54526 | What would we give to our beloved? |
54526 | When shall the clouds that veil thy rays For ever be withdrawn? |
54526 | When shall thy gladness dawn? |
54526 | Whence came that beauty, whence that living glow? |
54526 | Whence came that radiant white? |
54526 | Where is death''s sting? |
54526 | Where will thou cast thy care? |
54526 | Wherefore didst thou fear? |
54526 | Which of all our friends, to save us, Could or would have shed his blood? |
54526 | Whither return? |
54526 | Who like Thyself my guide and stay can be? |
54526 | Who would dare the choice,_ neither_ or_ both_ to know, The finest quiver of joy or the agony- thrill of woe? |
54526 | Whom we have left in the snow? |
54526 | Why away, wandering from a home of bliss, To find thy way through darkness home again? |
54526 | Why dost thou tarry, day of days? |
54526 | Why marvel that thy Lord hath kept His word? |
54526 | Why should this anxious load Press down your weary mind? |
54526 | Will they have shelter then secure, Where hearts are waiting strong and sure, And love is true when tried? |
54526 | Wilt thou let Him bleed in vain? |
54526 | Yet that severe, that earnest air, I saw, I felt it once-- but where? |
54526 | You do not think about it;''Tis never in your thought--''I wonder if I love him As deeply as I ought? |
54526 | art thou then a common stone Which I at last must break my heart upon, For all God''s charge to His high angels may Guard my foot better? |
54526 | be ev''ry murmur dumb, It is only"_ Till He come!_"Clouds and darkness round us press; Would we have one sorrow less? |
54526 | does its beauteous ray Aught of hope or joy foretell? |
54526 | for the Father portioneth as He will, To all His beloved children, and shall they not be still? |
54526 | she cried;"Did Thy dear saints do more? |
54526 | she cried;"Have I kept aught of gems or gold, To minister to pride? |
54526 | she cries,"that strife divine, Whence was it, for it is not mine?" |
54526 | such a glory was not for thee; But that care may still be thine; For are there not little ones still to aid For the sake of the Child divine? |
54526 | what are tears? |
54526 | what hast thou done for God? |
54526 | what help? |
54526 | what music will undo That silence to your sense? |
54526 | where, grave, thy victory? |
54526 | will He disown? |
54526 | with such strange spells around me, Fairest of what earth calls fair, How I need thy fairer image, To undo the syren snare? |
41481 | A kidnapping case? |
41481 | A question occurs to me,said the Doctor:"will others be able to manipulate the machine as successfully as you can?" |
41481 | Ai n''t it a small world? |
41481 | An''''ow could I say, sir? |
41481 | And after that? |
41481 | And exactly what is an absolute zero? |
41481 | And exactly what is an absolute zero? |
41481 | And how has business been with you lately? |
41481 | And is there no danger of the machine going wrong-- of destroying itself and us? |
41481 | And the cloaks for Charlie and me? |
41481 | And the-- beetles? |
41481 | And they were all strangers to you? |
41481 | And what''s up there, or down there, or whatever you call it? |
41481 | And yet you had his confidence in other matters? |
41481 | And you do n''t know what the professor was trying to invent? |
41481 | And you feel that you have all the necessary qualifications? |
41481 | Any more bombs? |
41481 | Are you all right? |
41481 | Are you hurt, Doctor? |
41481 | Are you sure they have n''t spirited him away? |
41481 | As a sensible man, do n''t you think yourself that your story is a bit thin? 41481 Bram got-- that girl? |
41481 | But how about getting Haidia across? |
41481 | But how? |
41481 | But what are our chances? |
41481 | But what are they looking for? |
41481 | But what becomes of me after you have frustrated Philip''s plot? |
41481 | But what has all this to do with finding out what has become of my friend? |
41481 | But what if he does? 41481 But wo n''t your lens prevent the ultra- violet light from reaching your plate?" |
41481 | But you are too interested in Wall Street to leave it for the open road? |
41481 | Ca n''t you move that arm and leg at all, Dodd? |
41481 | Can you think of no plausible reason for this attack? 41481 Can you throw any light on a motive for such a crime?" |
41481 | Captain Harvey,said the general,"you are sure that dead spot has not been bombarded with gas- shells?" |
41481 | Carnes,he said at length,"do you see anything on this gun that looks like tooth marks?" |
41481 | Damned weird, is n''t it? |
41481 | Did it turn off the road? |
41481 | Did you hear any noises? |
41481 | Did you notice anything strange about those fruit trees? |
41481 | Did you see it, Doctor? |
41481 | Do n''t you feel the lure of it? 41481 Do n''t you see that he''s insane? |
41481 | Do n''t you understand me now? |
41481 | Do n''t you understand? 41481 Do you know the nature of his will?" |
41481 | Do you mean to tell us that auto drove itself? |
41481 | Do you think he will live? |
41481 | Do you wish to start at once, sir? |
41481 | Excited? |
41481 | For God''s sake, Doctor, what is it? |
41481 | General? |
41481 | Had he been drinking? |
41481 | Have n''t you guessed yet, Travers? |
41481 | Have they been reoccupied? |
41481 | Have those two strayed infantrymen reported yet? |
41481 | Have you been reading those stories that the papers have been carrying about Mammoth Cave? |
41481 | Have you ever been to Mammoth Cave? |
41481 | Hello, Sergeant-- Sergeant Coffee, is it?... 41481 High explosive?" |
41481 | How can it be? 41481 How can you-- how can we dare plunge into this thing? |
41481 | How d''you mean? 41481 How dare you? |
41481 | How does that huge thing ever get through that crack we examined? |
41481 | How does the secret service cut in on it? |
41481 | How far do you think we dropped just now? |
41481 | How large are full grown ones if this is a baby? |
41481 | How long does that gas last? |
41481 | How long have you known Professor Wroxton? |
41481 | How many rooms do you occupy now? |
41481 | How much further, Hope? |
41481 | How near is the next house? |
41481 | How soon are we leaving? |
41481 | How''d you know? |
41481 | How''s Haidia? |
41481 | How? |
41481 | However,Clason drew a deep breath"you see this other device? |
41481 | In Chicago? |
41481 | In other words, an invisible light? |
41481 | Is he dead? |
41481 | Is n''t this enough for just now, Burke? |
41481 | Jimmy, ever see an apple before? |
41481 | Jouret? 41481 King of what? |
41481 | Live stock? |
41481 | Love her? 41481 My God, Captain Storm, do n''t you know the difference between an insect and a crustacean? |
41481 | My little Hope, what is it? 41481 Nicely trained horses, what?" |
41481 | No feeling in them? |
41481 | No, what? |
41481 | Now you understand why I advertised for a man of exceptional character? 41481 Oh, by the way, you did n''t see my lighter anywhere, did you?" |
41481 | On May 27th, the day your husband died, what happened, as you re- remember it? |
41481 | Or do you fear deeds of daring? 41481 Pretty trick, what, Travers? |
41481 | Professor Wroxton was a wealthy man without kith or kin? |
41481 | Ready? |
41481 | Reckon he''s lyin'', Pete? |
41481 | Say, what the-- what-- what''s that? |
41481 | See this range- setter? |
41481 | See what they''re doing, Dodd? 41481 So you dismissed them as mere press agent work?" |
41481 | Strain? 41481 Tell me,"he said in a husky voice,"how do you intend to use me? |
41481 | That is all you know of the Jourets? |
41481 | That so? |
41481 | The king,Derek demanded,"Which is his apartment? |
41481 | The machine started and turned into the road--"Did you notice anyone at the wheel? |
41481 | Their aircraft have not been dropping bombs, positively? |
41481 | Then how did human beings get here, and those damn beetles? 41481 These things?" |
41481 | This gentleman desires information in connection with the death of our neighbor Mr., or is it Dr., Darrow? 41481 This you, Perk?" |
41481 | Tommy, old man, how are you feeling now? |
41481 | Very slippery? |
41481 | Was anything else of value taken? |
41481 | Was there any disturbance heard from the crack? |
41481 | Was there really something to those wild yarns? |
41481 | Well, Dodd, have you experienced a change of heart? |
41481 | Well, Harlin,said the general,"Where will he strike?" |
41481 | Well, but see here, Jimmy, suppose these beetles did inhabit the antarctic continent a few million years ago, why get excited? |
41481 | Well, can you--? |
41481 | Well, what do you think of it? |
41481 | Were there any signs on the floor? |
41481 | Were these rooms locked? |
41481 | Were you ever near a rattlesnake den in the west? |
41481 | What are you trying to get at? 41481 What caused you to answer our advertisement?" |
41481 | What d''you mean? |
41481 | What floor? |
41481 | What happened next? |
41481 | What happened to you after we crashed? |
41481 | What happened? |
41481 | What is it, a crab? |
41481 | What is it? |
41481 | What is it? |
41481 | What is its nature? |
41481 | What is there here to be afraid of? |
41481 | What is this? |
41481 | What kind of a report are you going to make to the Bureau, Doctor? |
41481 | What kinda rations they give you? |
41481 | What matter? 41481 What time is it?" |
41481 | What was he trying to invent? |
41481 | What we got to do? |
41481 | What''s on your mind, Carnes? |
41481 | What''s your estimate? |
41481 | What, the one I saw you with? 41481 What? |
41481 | What? |
41481 | When was that? |
41481 | Where does it bring us out? |
41481 | Where is the king? |
41481 | Where''s that, Haidia? |
41481 | Where? 41481 Where?" |
41481 | Who are you? |
41481 | Who are you? |
41481 | Who lives in the first house to the north? |
41481 | Who lives in the next house south? |
41481 | Why does any man apply for a job? |
41481 | Why not have the Projector confiscated or destroyed by our own Government? |
41481 | Why not? |
41481 | Why? |
41481 | Will you come along? |
41481 | Will you excuse me? |
41481 | Will you speak to the public, General? |
41481 | Without unlocking any doors or taking a car, eh? 41481 Yeah? |
41481 | Yes, what''s up? |
41481 | Yes? |
41481 | You believe a madman did it? |
41481 | You believe your husband was murdered? |
41481 | You do n''t know how to open this? |
41481 | You do not approve of circus people? |
41481 | You do not think anyone is going to call for any supposed package of money at one of the most congested corners in the world in broad daylight? |
41481 | You fool,Tommy bellowed in his ear,"d''you think the south pole lies over there? |
41481 | You mean the ship was gliding down to land? |
41481 | You mean to say you actually believe that stuff you''ve been handing me? |
41481 | You mean to suggest then,I shot at him,"that two full grown men have completely vanished? |
41481 | You mean you--? |
41481 | You say you found this thing pretty nearly upon the site of the true pole? |
41481 | You second wave? |
41481 | You will join our party, little Hope? |
41481 | You''re sure you can? |
41481 | Your prisoner has no recognition signals for his own tanks? 41481 ***** Derek was saying,We have n''t much time: can you get us to the palace?" |
41481 | *****"But, John,"I protested"is there no other reason for your agitation? |
41481 | *****"Have you ever proved it?" |
41481 | *****"What do you know of this-- what''s his name?" |
41481 | A beetle? |
41481 | A new species of beetle? |
41481 | A weapon? |
41481 | Afraid of what? |
41481 | Ai n''t that pretty for you?" |
41481 | An executioner beetle, sent by Bram to summon them to the torture? |
41481 | An''th''canteen stuff--""Your tank men, they get treated fancy?" |
41481 | And as he spoke he remembered vaguely some crank who had once insisted that the two poles were hollow because-- what was the fellow''s reasoning? |
41481 | And how were they going to get out of the damn place? |
41481 | And why''s the grass red?" |
41481 | Are you afraid that in this process of becoming henchman to a king you may perchance get killed?" |
41481 | Are you familiar with fluorescein?" |
41481 | Are you interested?" |
41481 | Astounding? |
41481 | Badly hurt?" |
41481 | But even if it is, do you think that, after perfecting such a tremendous invention, the professor would commit suicide?" |
41481 | But now, what to do? |
41481 | But what could be the purpose behind this villainy? |
41481 | But where was Jim? |
41481 | CHAPTER III_ Ten Miles Underground_"What I was going to say when we were interrupted, was,''Can you beat it?''" |
41481 | CHAPTER I_ Wall Street-- or the Open Road?_ When I was some fifteen years old, I once made the remark,"Why, that''s impossible." |
41481 | CHAPTER V_ Intrigue_"Am I in time, Hope?" |
41481 | Can you get into the palace, Hope? |
41481 | Can you get us anything like that?" |
41481 | Can you place a tent at my disposal?" |
41481 | Can you walk?" |
41481 | Care to smoke? |
41481 | Carnes, how soon can we get a train back to Washington?" |
41481 | Carnes, where is that letter from the Secretary of War?" |
41481 | Derek said quietly,"Difficult to believe, Charlie? |
41481 | Derek whispered to Hope,"The toilers do n''t know of this?" |
41481 | Derek whispered,"Is that Blanca?" |
41481 | Derek, prince of this realm? |
41481 | Did you know that?" |
41481 | Did you recognize any of the body- snatchers?" |
41481 | Do I make this clear?" |
41481 | Do n''t you recognize him? |
41481 | Do n''t you see the distinguishing mark of the coleoptera, those two elytra, or wing- covers, which meet in the median dorsal line? |
41481 | Do you believe, positively, that the gardener is above suspicion?" |
41481 | Do you hear me?" |
41481 | Do you know anything about it?" |
41481 | Do you know the motive behind this affair? |
41481 | Do you know which one I am going to choose?" |
41481 | Do you realize their stupendous power, their invincibility? |
41481 | Do you see it? |
41481 | Do you think, in view of this yarn, that your experiments can wait?" |
41481 | Do you understand?" |
41481 | Do you want to right a great wrong? |
41481 | Does n''t that suggest anything?" |
41481 | Even if it did, what about Mr. Lathom? |
41481 | Ever in Chicago?" |
41481 | Got anything to smoke?" |
41481 | Guard her for me, will you?" |
41481 | Had I arrived in the other realm? |
41481 | Had they seen this attack upon Derek? |
41481 | Have you any objections?" |
41481 | Have you any special advice to give me about the guarding?" |
41481 | Have you, or can you get, any live stock?" |
41481 | He demanded of Derek again,"Who are you?" |
41481 | He did, eh? |
41481 | He got turned around and you caught him wandering about?... |
41481 | He had just dropped back into a lounging attitude when the door burst open and Clason flew into the room? |
41481 | He repeated,"Did you know that?" |
41481 | His voice rang out,"Will you obey me now? |
41481 | His voice rang out:"What are you doing? |
41481 | Hope said,"What is it, Rohbar?" |
41481 | Hope, where does Rohbar stand in this?" |
41481 | How dare you?" |
41481 | How long does it last?" |
41481 | How might he fan this feeble spark of volition to sufficient strength for decisive resistance? |
41481 | How much immediately?" |
41481 | How''d you learn it?" |
41481 | How''y''use it?" |
41481 | How, then, can puny man hope to stand against them? |
41481 | I said,"Henchman to a king?" |
41481 | I was dangling from a parachute.... By the way, where am I now?" |
41481 | I wonder whether you are worth it?" |
41481 | Impossible? |
41481 | Impossible? |
41481 | In the meantime, may I look at that gun that was found?" |
41481 | Is that all you can tell us about the death itself?" |
41481 | Is there a tank stationed at Fort Thomas?" |
41481 | Is there a telegraph office here?" |
41481 | Is there another counterfeit on the market?" |
41481 | Is there no one who might possibly benefit by putting you temporarily out of the way?" |
41481 | Is this it?" |
41481 | It is n''t finished yet, but when the general says that--""Battle?" |
41481 | It seems impossible, but has not Mrs. Darrow told us she heard this humming and saw nothing? |
41481 | May I ask what is the object of the whole thing?" |
41481 | Mrs. Darrow fell to smoothing out the folds in her house apron as Lees asked:"When was the only time you saw her?" |
41481 | Mrs. Darrow, what has happened?'' |
41481 | My trained beetles are blind-- you did n''t happen to notice I''d cut off their antenna? |
41481 | Near dawn? |
41481 | No rest?" |
41481 | Now what would Keane do? |
41481 | Now, Mrs. Darrow, how long had you lived at Brooknook? |
41481 | Odd, was n''t it, getting so much publicity after I was through needing it? |
41481 | Of what use to me an elevator, if it had been running? |
41481 | Or do you want to go down to work as usual in the subway to- morrow morning? |
41481 | Or have you?" |
41481 | Or was I still in Derek''s laboratory? |
41481 | Really, how-- you''re not injured?" |
41481 | Rescue an oppressed people, overturn the tyranny of an evil monarch, and put your friend and the girl he loves upon the throne? |
41481 | Say, where in thunder are we, Jimmy?" |
41481 | Say, you know Heine''s place?" |
41481 | Shall I?" |
41481 | Should he summon help, or go on alone? |
41481 | Space? |
41481 | Still insane upon the subject of fossil monotremes, I suppose?" |
41481 | Suppose that I should spend a hundred million of my government''s money and the purchase prove worthless? |
41481 | Suppose then, that we have an object, either animate or inanimate, the surface of which reflects only ultra- violet light, what will be the result? |
41481 | That''s clear, is n''t it?" |
41481 | The open road? |
41481 | Then a rush of questions:"What''s the matter? |
41481 | Then he asked:"How is the foreman? |
41481 | Then why did he not have it out now? |
41481 | Then why do n''t we drop to the center of the earth, you damn fool?" |
41481 | They told him he would n''t see any of them until the battle was over?... |
41481 | They were n''t taking any chances on any of our listening- posts reporting their tanks, eh?... |
41481 | Very well, go on.... How did he gas our listening- posts?... |
41481 | Walking head downward, are we? |
41481 | Was I going mad? |
41481 | Was I going mad? |
41481 | Was Keane Clason a great inventor, or a madman? |
41481 | Was he here? |
41481 | Was it reported?" |
41481 | Were these things real or imaginary? |
41481 | Were we outdoors? |
41481 | What could he do? |
41481 | What do you see now? |
41481 | What else could they be? |
41481 | What for?" |
41481 | What had I said to make them suspect me of having committed a revolting crime? |
41481 | What harm?" |
41481 | What is the floor of the cave like where we are going?" |
41481 | What killed them off? |
41481 | What matter?" |
41481 | What other fearsome monsters might inhabit that extraordinary valley? |
41481 | What right had he to put me through the third degree? |
41481 | What then? |
41481 | What will you do?" |
41481 | What''s happened to you? |
41481 | What''s happened? |
41481 | What''you doin''around here?" |
41481 | Where are the Clasons?" |
41481 | Where is Major Brown?" |
41481 | Where?" |
41481 | White? |
41481 | Who and what are you?" |
41481 | Why did I not think of it before? |
41481 | Why did n''t they cross into Australia, like the opossum, by the land bridge then existent between that continent and South America? |
41481 | Why did n''t they win the supremacy over man?" |
41481 | Why did n''t you tell me that before?" |
41481 | Why did you bring the shells, Haidia?" |
41481 | Why have n''t they survived into historic times? |
41481 | Why should anyone believe that they were the three crimson nobles whom Derek attacked with his strange ray? |
41481 | Why, of all places, had he fled down into this blind burrow? |
41481 | Why, what was this? |
41481 | Why?" |
41481 | Wildly racing through the night, missing other cars by a breath, the big, visible auto continued its pursuit of-- what? |
41481 | Will you?" |
41481 | With a benzine label for a prescription?" |
41481 | Would I go into the unknown? |
41481 | Would I go? |
41481 | Would I go? |
41481 | Would Philip prove to be a real or an imaginary scoundrel? |
41481 | Would a watchman hear me? |
41481 | Would you allow me to accompany you when you make your attempt?" |
41481 | Yeah, do n''t you get it, Jimmy? |
41481 | Yes sir, knocked me plumb down, and--""Then what happened? |
41481 | You could not have misplaced the other by any chance, could you?'' |
41481 | You have no relatives?" |
41481 | You know what the humans here live on, do n''t you?" |
41481 | You understand, of course, what color is? |
41481 | You understand?" |
41481 | You understand?" |
41481 | You will not? |
41481 | You''re ready to go to work immediately, I hope?" |
41481 | Your prisoner objects to his rations, eh? |
6326 | ''Bravo?'' 6326 ''Can you bear this?'' |
6326 | ''Did he? 6326 ''Do n''t you like falling in, then?'' |
6326 | ''Do you grant it?'' 6326 ''How do you feel, my child?'' |
6326 | ''I mean, what do you feel like?'' 6326 ''Is the fellow mad?'' |
6326 | ''Is there nothing you wish for?'' 6326 ''Is this the gravity you used to make so much of?'' |
6326 | ''Just think? 6326 ''Now, queen,''he said, turning to her majesty,''what is to be done?'' |
6326 | ''Please your majesty, shall I take the baby?'' 6326 ''Put you up where, you beauty?'' |
6326 | ''Put you up where, you beauty?'' 6326 ''Tell me what it is first? |
6326 | ''Well, what is to be done?'' 6326 ''Well, what is your condition?'' |
6326 | ''Well, what of that?'' 6326 ''Well, what''s the matter with your child? |
6326 | ''Well?'' 6326 ''What do you mean?'' |
6326 | ''What is all this about?'' 6326 ''What is it, my darling?'' |
6326 | ''Where is she?'' 6326 ''Why ca n''t we go and have a swim?'' |
6326 | ''Why did n''t you tell me before what your condition was? 6326 ''Why do n''t you have any daughters, at least?'' |
6326 | ''Will you be in the lake tomorrow night?'' 6326 ''Will you kiss me, princess?'' |
6326 | ''Will you promise to let me have it?'' 6326 ''Would you like a fall, princess?'' |
6326 | ''Would you not like to be able to walk like other people?'' 6326 A person could do a good deal with such a sum of money as that,-- could n''t a person, Cobbs?" |
6326 | A what? |
6326 | After a few efforts, the princess panted out:--''Is that what you call_ falling in_?'' |
6326 | All? |
6326 | Am I to be everlastingly plagued with bodies? 6326 And where''s my estates? |
6326 | And which way did he go? |
6326 | Are you going to your grandmamma''s, Cobbs? |
6326 | Are you indeed, sir? 6326 But how was he to be put in? |
6326 | But how was this to be brought about? 6326 Do you know who I am?" |
6326 | Do you mean to say,exclaimed Tom,"that he is nothing but a skeleton?" |
6326 | Do you, sir? 6326 Dost not the actors all call it Juke?" |
6326 | Emmanuel,continued she"what did you and Father Fothergill, and the rest of you, mean yesterday by burying that drowned man so close to me? |
6326 | For what, plaze your majesty? |
6326 | Gratifying, Cobbs? 6326 He won''t-- won''t he? |
6326 | Indeed, sir? 6326 Is it stalin''my horse, you are, honest man?" |
6326 | Is that all? |
6326 | Is there any thing you want just at present, sir? |
6326 | Lord be good to me, what''s that? |
6326 | Mrs. Henry Walmers, Junior, fatigued, sir? |
6326 | Not as a grandmamma, Cobbs? |
6326 | O, indeed, Cobbs? |
6326 | Oh, Jack,she said, as soon as she could recover her breath,"how could you be such a fool? |
6326 | Please may I--the spirit of that little creature, and the way he kept his rising tears down!--"please dear pa-- may I-- kiss Norah before I go?" |
6326 | She got the wine and the biscuit, however, and coming nearer with them:--''Why, prince,''she said,''you do n''t look well? |
6326 | The princess did not appear to understand him, for she retorted his first question:--''How do_ you_ like falling in?'' |
6326 | To my old sister, I suppose you mean?'' 6326 Well, suppose I give you work?" |
6326 | Well, suppose they christened him twice as much,says the wife,"sure, what''s that to us?" |
6326 | What do you think my grandmama gives me when I go down there? |
6326 | What have we got here? |
6326 | What is that? |
6326 | What may be the exact nature of your plans, sir? |
6326 | What should you think, sir,says Cobbs,"of a chamber candlestick?" |
6326 | What was it you--? |
6326 | What''s the matter?--Who are you? |
6326 | When will you undhertake the job, then? |
6326 | Where was it? |
6326 | Who the devil''s that? |
6326 | Who was he? |
6326 | Who was he? |
6326 | Why then bad luck to your impidence,says the Waiver,"would no place sarve you but that? |
6326 | Would it meet your views, sir, if I was to accompany you? |
6326 | Would you like another situation, Cobbs? |
6326 | You''re going away, ai n''t you, Cobbs? |
6326 | ''But might you not try an apology?'' |
6326 | ''But what good will that do your majesty? |
6326 | ''That''s right, my beauty?'' |
6326 | ''What are you crying for, queen?'' |
6326 | ''What business had you to pull me down out of the water, and throw me to the bottom of the air? |
6326 | ''Would you like to run and see your parents before you make your experiment?'' |
6326 | --"How was it?" |
6326 | --"What was he?" |
6326 | --"What was his name?" |
6326 | --"When was it?" |
6326 | --"Where was he?" |
6326 | And Moses,"she continued, layin her he d confidinly again his weskit,"dost know I sumtimes think thou istest of noble birth?" |
6326 | And she squeezes water out her cheeks? |
6326 | And what became of the Clerk of Chatham? |
6326 | And what could have brought the sainted lady out of her warm shrine at such a time of night? |
6326 | And what had he been? |
6326 | Are you sure you do n''t mind it?'' |
6326 | But supposing a young gentleman not eight years old was to run away with a young woman of seven, might I think_ that_ a queer start? |
6326 | But who and what_ was_ the crone who prophesied the catastrophe? |
6326 | By the way, Sam, have you got five dollars about you?" |
6326 | Can it be wondered at that he called for his boots? |
6326 | Certainly? |
6326 | Cobbs, do you think you could bring a biffin, please?" |
6326 | Coriander, you want a gorilla?'' |
6326 | Do n''t you see it, queen? |
6326 | Even supposing Master Harry had n''t come to him one morning early, and said,"Cobbs, how should you spell Norah, if you was asked?" |
6326 | For what indeed could a prince do with a princess that had lost her gravity? |
6326 | He has saved your life, Robert Shurland, for the nonce? |
6326 | How dare you?'' |
6326 | How did Boots happen to know all this? |
6326 | How''s the lake?'' |
6326 | Mr. Walmers, he said to him when he gave him notice of his intentions to leave,"Cobbs,"he says,"have you anything to complain of? |
6326 | NO CHILDREN? |
6326 | No? |
6326 | Oh, will nobody let me out?" |
6326 | Passing near the gorilla''s cage I heard Jack''s voice, as he yelled with stentorian lungs:"Will nobody let me out? |
6326 | Pray ma''am, where is my boy?" |
6326 | Promise first''"''I dare not What is it?'' |
6326 | Seen a good deal? |
6326 | Speak,_ Beatissime!_ what would you with the humblest of your votaries?" |
6326 | Take a glass of wine?'' |
6326 | The king could not see into the garret she lived in, could he? |
6326 | The moment they reached the surface:--"''How do you like falling in?'' |
6326 | WAS MOSES OF NOBLE BIRTH? |
6326 | WHERE IS THE PRINCE? |
6326 | WON''T I, JUST? |
6326 | What do you mean?'' |
6326 | What for?" |
6326 | What was the most curious thing he had seen? |
6326 | What would his lordship do? |
6326 | What''s the object of your journey, sir?--Matrimonial?" |
6326 | What? |
6326 | When Master Harry took her round the waist, she said he"teased her so;"and when he says,"Norah, my young May Moon, your Harry tease you?" |
6326 | When the fair Elizy recovered from her delight at meetin Moses, she said:--"How hast the battle gonest? |
6326 | When they stood at the edge, the prince, turning towards the princess, said:--"''How am I to put you in?'' |
6326 | Where had he been in his time? |
6326 | Which? |
6326 | Who could tell what she might not lose next? |
6326 | Who is it at all?" |
6326 | Who? |
6326 | Why could n''t they leave me alone? |
6326 | Why do I like you, do you think, Cobbs?" |
6326 | Why do n''t they? |
6326 | You have n''t seen Clara Coriander, have you? |
6326 | You see where that green light is burning? |
6326 | and is it spiling my breakquest yez are, you dirty bastes?" |
6326 | and on such a night? |
6326 | and what now?" |
6326 | do me eyes deceive me earsight? |
6326 | he won''t-- won''t he?" |
6326 | said he, at last, putting up his sword with difficulty,--it was so long;''I am obliged to you, you young fool? |
6326 | said the Abbot, crossing himself,"wo n''t that be rather inconvenient? |
6326 | says the king,"why you ongrateful little vagabone, was the like ever given to any man before?" |
6326 | that''s it, is it?'' |
6326 | what are you about?" |
63014 | ''Is it not dull for the lady here at this time of year?'' 63014 ''Just as I came in, did I hear my wife say there was nothing for you to do in this place?'' |
63014 | ''What do you think of it?'' 63014 ''Who is the woman with the white hair?'' |
63014 | A smoker, and no pipe about ye? |
63014 | Ah, cousin, always playful like a kitten; when will you grow old and wise? 63014 And do you know where your brother is at the present time?" |
63014 | And if not a coward why does he sit on the hearth among women and old men in times like these? 63014 And now, if these children have finished speaking of their important affairs, tell me, Gregory, what news do you bring?" |
63014 | And so they''re going to rush your camp tonight? |
63014 | And what are you going to do? 63014 And what is your name, child?" |
63014 | And what may be this glad cause? |
63014 | And what more, cousin Gregory? |
63014 | And-- great heavens!--will they kill you, do you think? |
63014 | Are not all men born to fight the infidel? 63014 Are you ill? |
63014 | Are you mad to- night, Tord? |
63014 | Bob? 63014 Brought you, interested? |
63014 | But I ca n''t do nothing without my staff-- can I, William, and John, and Charles Jake? 63014 But how can it be otherwise?" |
63014 | But how do you know,said one of us,"that the man was her lover?--he might have been her brother or some other relative?" |
63014 | But tell me one thing more: is he well-- no indisposition? 63014 But what is the man''s calling, and where is he one of, that he should come in and join us like this?" |
63014 | Can my words move your heart? 63014 Can you repent?" |
63014 | Can you tell me the way to--? |
63014 | Did you say yes? 63014 Did you think she was pretty?" |
63014 | Did you? |
63014 | Do thieves have to steal, as witches have to use witchcraft? |
63014 | Does that help me if I go alone? 63014 Drunk or mad?" |
63014 | Eh? |
63014 | Going to chase you off the range? |
63014 | Going to set up in trade, perhaps? |
63014 | Got your old blunderbusses loaded up again yet? |
63014 | Have n''t you got the man after all? |
63014 | Have you heard anything more of the Princess, papa? |
63014 | Hey-- what? |
63014 | How do you know? 63014 How do you know?" |
63014 | I must git out? 63014 I suppose you will let me camp here with you to- night?" |
63014 | I wonder if it is my man? |
63014 | In what corner of the earth have you been hiding to ask who the Niño Diablo is? |
63014 | Is it I who perhaps have struck it? 63014 Is there a constable here?" |
63014 | Is your mother a witch? |
63014 | It''s a shocking thing to be near- sighted, is n''t it? |
63014 | José-- look-- ain''t you gittin''kinder tired? 63014 Late to be traipsing athwart this coomb-- hey?" |
63014 | Lost that too? |
63014 | Must I know the history of every cat and dog? |
63014 | No like what? |
63014 | Oh-- you here? |
63014 | One of hereabouts? |
63014 | Or why was he so terrified at sight o''the singing instrument of the law? |
63014 | Papa mine, what have you brought me? |
63014 | The big, red, gaping wound from the blow of the axe? |
63014 | Then what ails the man? |
63014 | There,said Bill to his ally;"did n''t I tell you? |
63014 | They have, have they? |
63014 | Understand? 63014 Wat''s de use,"he was saying,"of chasin''little red cowses and hosses''round for t''ousands of miles? |
63014 | Well, sir, I suppose you will let me camp here with you to- night? |
63014 | Well, travellers,he said,"did I hear ye speak to me?" |
63014 | Well, well,replied the constable impatiently;"I must say something, must n''t I? |
63014 | Well, why in the name of wonder do n''t you go get the sheriff? |
63014 | Well,repeated he,"what more do you want to know? |
63014 | Well? |
63014 | Were there no feasts in your house? |
63014 | What a man can it be? |
63014 | What can I do for you, friend? |
63014 | What do the monks answer? |
63014 | What do you hear, Niño? |
63014 | What does she do with them? |
63014 | What does that mean? |
63014 | What has happened to put her out? |
63014 | What is it? |
63014 | What strange things are you telling me? 63014 What way?" |
63014 | What you talking about? |
63014 | What? |
63014 | What? |
63014 | Where does he think to fly to? 63014 Who is this?" |
63014 | Who speaks? |
63014 | Who will? |
63014 | Who? 63014 Why are you here? |
63014 | Why do you always drop on us in this treacherous way, like rain through a leaky thatch? |
63014 | Why do you cry, wife, before God gives you cause? |
63014 | Why should you do this? |
63014 | Would you like to live with me and have them? 63014 You are a sworn constable?" |
63014 | You do n''t live in Casterbridge? |
63014 | You do n''t want me here? 63014 You''re what they call a''--a''eddycated man, ai n''t you?" |
63014 | ''Is your master then married? |
63014 | ( the erect Barker touched his cap)--"to go to Captain Emmons''s quarters on Indian Island,--I think you call it Indian Island, do n''t you?" |
63014 | A great fear crept into my half frozen brain-- were we not bringing deadly danger, instead of help to these travellers? |
63014 | And is not this life of misery, which we lead in fear and want, penance enough? |
63014 | And now, Niño Diablo, what news of the Indians?" |
63014 | And what more, cousin Gregory?" |
63014 | Bill considered for a time; then he said diffidently,"Mister, you''r a''eddycated man, ai n''t you?" |
63014 | Bill said,"Well, goin''to pull out?" |
63014 | But honestly, Mr.--I beg your pardon-- Mr. Grey, how do you like it?" |
63014 | By the way, Marshfield, you can sit tight to a horse, I trust? |
63014 | Can I never be rid of the sound? |
63014 | Can I ride a hundred leagues and back in fifteen days? |
63014 | Can you not see a sleeping snake without turning aside to stir it up with your naked foot?" |
63014 | Daze it, what''s a cup of mead more or less? |
63014 | Did monsieur not know? |
63014 | Did you steal these garments?" |
63014 | Do I not live parted from friends and everything which makes a man''s happiness? |
63014 | Do you not see how I shudder at you? |
63014 | Fight?" |
63014 | Going the same way?" |
63014 | Has he met with no accident-- a broken bone, a sprained ankle?" |
63014 | Has the mother skunk put her little ones to sleep in their kennel and gone out to seek for the pipit''s nest? |
63014 | Have I not lost lands and home? |
63014 | Have fox and armadillo met to challenge each other to fresh trials of strength and cunning? |
63014 | Have we gone to the root of the matter, in our simple way?'' |
63014 | Have ye any lanterns?" |
63014 | Have you been frightened?" |
63014 | How can I persuade you to be with me? |
63014 | How could such a thing be? |
63014 | How is your cold to- night, mother?" |
63014 | How many of them are there?" |
63014 | I must git off the range? |
63014 | I reckon he''s the finest canned oyster buccaneer and cheese pirate that ever was, but how''s his appetite for fightin''? |
63014 | Is it possible that we, uncivilized, are truer realists than our hyper- cultured Western neighbours? |
63014 | Is this your usual climate?" |
63014 | Look at my knife; do you ask why there are stains on the blade? |
63014 | Marshfield?'' |
63014 | May I come in?" |
63014 | More, tell me more, cousin Gregory?" |
63014 | Oh, friend, can you not guess why you alone were in my thoughts when this trouble came to me-- why I have ridden day and night to find you?" |
63014 | Oh, what will they do with the poor little girl?" |
63014 | The monks?" |
63014 | Then said Gregory,"Tell us, Niño, what voices, fine as the trumpet of the smallest fly, do you hear coming from that great silence? |
63014 | Then she stopped and asked quietly,"Where is Bob?" |
63014 | Then, in spite o''seeming, you be worse off than we?" |
63014 | This part of the business rattles me, do n''t you see?" |
63014 | Un''erstan''? |
63014 | Un''erstan''? |
63014 | Un''erstan''?" |
63014 | Understand? |
63014 | What have I to do with them? |
63014 | What is his occupation?" |
63014 | What is the owl saying this moment to his mistress in praise of her big green eyes?" |
63014 | What more is required?" |
63014 | What you givin''us?" |
63014 | When he comes the dogs bark not-- who knows why? |
63014 | Whereupon a mocking voice from off in the bushes said,"Senor?" |
63014 | White hair, devilish queer, was n''t it? |
63014 | Who can stand before me? |
63014 | Who told you?" |
63014 | Why did you tell me of the just God? |
63014 | Why do they think that I am one who will betray a friend? |
63014 | Why must my two sons be called away, while he, a youth without occupation and with no mother to cry for him, remains behind?" |
63014 | Why shall I see it?" |
63014 | Why? |
63014 | Would you have had them girls?" |
63014 | Would you like to have fine clothes, rings, and beads like these, to have your hair nicely combed and put up so? |
63014 | Would you? |
63014 | Would you?" |
63014 | Yet, what of that? |
63014 | You do n''t want me to camp here?" |
63014 | You know what I''d do if I was main finger of dis bunch? |
63014 | could that savage in the sheepskin be my courteous entertainer? |
63014 | did the baron mean to use them as a bait for his new method of wolf- hunting? |
63014 | exclaimed Polycarp,"into what quagmires would this man lead me? |
63014 | have not I, whom men call Polycarp of the South, wrestled with tigers in the desert, and must I hold my peace because of a boy-- even a boy devil? |
63014 | he said;"what''s the matter?" |
63014 | since when?'' |
44643 | ''Straucht''s a die,''Saunders answered;''but-- hic-- wha''s that wi''ye?'' |
44643 | ''Then,''tain''t the Seventh Cavalry?'' 44643 A snolligoster? |
44643 | A- gamblin''--where? |
44643 | A-- what? |
44643 | Ah, my dear brother,was the response,"all troubles have two ends, and I did n''t say which end, did I?" |
44643 | Ain dis er a free country? |
44643 | An orthodox preacher, I presume? |
44643 | An''''Publicans? |
44643 | An''how you know dat, Bruddah? |
44643 | An''phat be you cryin''fer, now? |
44643 | An''white folks? |
44643 | And do you know and can you tell me what kind o''people live in your town of Boston? |
44643 | And over there is the other side, is n''t it? |
44643 | And this side is the other side, is n''t it? 44643 And what did you have in your coffee?" |
44643 | And what do you want to see Shakespeare for? |
44643 | And what have you been drinking? |
44643 | And what may I call you? |
44643 | And what was that? |
44643 | And when he reaches the age of twelve? |
44643 | And you do preach and believe in a literal hell- fire? |
44643 | And you really believe in hell- fire? |
44643 | And yours, my boy? |
44643 | And, Bill, you are a Prohibitionist, I believe? |
44643 | And, Jim, you are a Democrat? |
44643 | And, mamma, you tell some once in a while? 44643 And, now, Jim, why are you a Democrat?" |
44643 | And, pray, Robert, how do you make that out? |
44643 | As I was peroosin''the bill, a grave young man who sot near me axed me if I''d ever seen Forrest dance''The Essence of Old Virginny? 44643 At Jamison''s barn?" |
44643 | Because,answered the hopeful pupil,"if the cow did n''t stand for Mary, how could Mary milk the cow?" |
44643 | But do n''t you see I can do neither? 44643 But it does n''t fall?" |
44643 | By and by he arose again, courteously saluted, and said:''Cap''n,''scuze me-- but what regiment did you say this was? |
44643 | Can you tell me,said he to his neighbor,"why that senator''s head is like Alaska?" |
44643 | Christian Science? 44643 Cut it out?" |
44643 | D''ye know,drawled the Boston man,"what we Boston people call the people that live in your town?" |
44643 | Democrats? |
44643 | Did I see them gamblin'', d''ye say? |
44643 | Did any one burn up? |
44643 | Did he put it out? |
44643 | Did n''t you have what you said writ out? |
44643 | Did the barn burn? |
44643 | Did you see ole Satan down dar? |
44643 | Do about it? 44643 Do you know why your bald head is like Alaska?" |
44643 | Does an effect ever go before a cause? |
44643 | Dond i d? |
44643 | Feel? |
44643 | For vy shall I hitch me fast mit a wife? |
44643 | Gamblin''at Jamison''s barn? 44643 He kin, kin he?" |
44643 | Healthy climate, I suppose? |
44643 | Healthy? 44643 Hey?" |
44643 | How dare you speak in that way, sir? |
44643 | How do you feel on it? |
44643 | How has Gott ponished him? |
44643 | How long are you? |
44643 | How long have you known the prisoner? |
44643 | How many does that make? |
44643 | How many sides has a circle? |
44643 | How much for the lot? |
44643 | I asked, Zeke, did you see anybody a- gamblin''or not a- gamblin''? |
44643 | I dreamed,said he,"dat I died an''went up to de big gate o''hebbin an''wanted to git in, an''Sent Petah he says to me, says he,''Is you mounted?'' |
44643 | I hope,expostulated his father,"you did n''t put that half dollar on the collection plate?" |
44643 | Is Mr. Hopkins away? |
44643 | Is this the rinktum, sinktum, or some such place, where the editors live? |
44643 | Iss dot so? |
44643 | James, my boy,said he to the favorite regretfully, but kindly,"why were you late to- day?" |
44643 | Jess hopped right up there, took a drink o''water out of the pitcher, hit the table a whack and waded in without no thinkin''nor nothing? |
44643 | Killarney, is it? |
44643 | MOUNTED? |
44643 | Mein himmel, how kin I-- mit a fire- goompany on von side, a fire- goompany on de odder side, undt a schwmmin- school on top? 44643 Mr. Carlyle,"said he,"I have come to see you this morning about my soul----""And what has gone wrong with your soul, then?" |
44643 | Not muzzled? 44643 Not muzzled?" |
44643 | Now, Ephraim, are you sure it''s a tame turkey? |
44643 | Now, sir, did you ever see the prisoner at the bar? |
44643 | Oh, that? 44643 Pray for Old Man Snuckles, my child? |
44643 | Pray, have you been drinking this morning? |
44643 | Queer, is n''t it? |
44643 | Rather steep, is n''t it? 44643 Say, Maria,"said he,"what''s the difference between me and a donkey?" |
44643 | Sez I--''Fair youth, do you know what I''d do with you, if you was my sun?'' 44643 Shellin''? |
44643 | Single? |
44643 | So the lawyer walked ahead, and then called back:''Straucht, Saunders?'' |
44643 | The-- what, my friend? |
44643 | There would be a big thaw but for one thing----"And what''s that? |
44643 | Tom,said she, in evident alarm,"what shall I do? |
44643 | Vat''s der matter oud dere? |
44643 | Vell-- vy do n''t you? |
44643 | WHO''D''A''BIN''ER? |
44643 | Was I? |
44643 | Was de white an''de black''Publicans in de same pen? |
44643 | Was dey-- was dey any niggahs down dar? |
44643 | Was you at Jamison''s? |
44643 | Was you there last week? |
44643 | Wat''s de corporation got to do wid my waggin? |
44643 | Well, I''ll tell you what we''ll do-- if he is n''t there, then suppose you ask him? |
44643 | Well, but--objected his wife,"how do you know he''ll be there? |
44643 | Well, how are you? 44643 Well, what air they doin''over there?" |
44643 | Well,continued Jack, pointing to the opposite side of the street,"that is one side of the street, is n''t it?" |
44643 | Well,said Mickey,"this is one side of the street, is n''t it?" |
44643 | Well-- what is the difference? |
44643 | Were n''t the disciples and the apostles the same thing? |
44643 | Whar''d yo''jine? |
44643 | What ai n''t his name? |
44643 | What do you think of him? |
44643 | What is it? 44643 What is your first name?" |
44643 | What was dey all a- doin''? |
44643 | What you got in that bag? |
44643 | What''s queer? |
44643 | What''s that? |
44643 | What''s the matter with Peter? |
44643 | Where did you put it in? |
44643 | Where''s my umbrella, Annie? |
44643 | Where, Cainny? 44643 Where?" |
44643 | Where? |
44643 | Who said it was? |
44643 | Why, Robert, what in the world is the matter? |
44643 | Why, how is that? |
44643 | Why? |
44643 | Wie? |
44643 | Will you take a drink? |
44643 | Wot gamblin''? |
44643 | Wot''s dat yo''say? |
44643 | Wot-- at Jamison''s? |
44643 | Wot-- in the barn? |
44643 | Wuz who a- gamblin''? |
44643 | You are a Republican, Tom, are you not? |
44643 | You call me an old hoss,said Mr. Lincoln;"may I inquire what kind of a hoss I am?" |
44643 | You come from Kalamazoo, I believe? |
44643 | You do n''t mean to say you made that all up as you went along? |
44643 | Your Honor,howled the lawyer, pulling his beard,"will you make the witness answer my questions?" |
44643 | ''Hev ye ever bin to a Kickin''afore?'' |
44643 | ''Would ye like to go to one of our Kickin''s down yere?'' |
44643 | ***** A youth was heard to remark to a jolly, fat Teutonian,"Have n''t I seen you before? |
44643 | ***** Said an Englishman to an American tourist, as he drew out of his pocket an old English silver coin,"Do you see the image on that coin? |
44643 | *****"Say, Jenks, old boy,"said one man to another on the street,"here''s a good one: What''s the difference between me and a donkey?" |
44643 | 183 What the statute did not say 17"Who''d''a''bin''er?" |
44643 | A HARD WITNESS"Do you know the prisoner well?" |
44643 | A KNIGHTLY CONUNDRUM Query-- A Knight to Jerusalem did repair, And had the colic, when? |
44643 | A LONELY PLACE"Mamma,"said a little girl,"George Washington never told a lie, did he?" |
44643 | A POOR BUSINESS LOCATION"How iss business?" |
44643 | A pause occurred, and then came another question,"How rich are you?" |
44643 | An''Petah says,''Is you mounted?'' |
44643 | And Mickey walked home scratching his head and wondering how it came that"the dang thing did n''t work?" |
44643 | And have you tried it?" |
44643 | And now, sir,"said he to the other sternly,"and where were you?" |
44643 | And say, On the level, Do n''t they Look like the dickens? |
44643 | And the man said,"Why-- what''s the matter with you?" |
44643 | And then the Interpreter asked him whether he knew what Walla Walla meant? |
44643 | And then they both said,"Why, what''s the matter with you, now?" |
44643 | And what''s that fellow, poppy?" |
44643 | And what''s this little one?" |
44643 | And when the hostess sweetly asked him,"Could she not have the pleasure of serving him with another peach?" |
44643 | And your name is-- what, my man?" |
44643 | And, say, Did you ever, in your feeble way, Attempt to calculate What it must be to keep one on straight? |
44643 | Another minister relates that he once asked this famous question of a very much neglected boy,"What is the chief end of man?" |
44643 | Are you studying phrenology?" |
44643 | As he was taking his leave, the lady said to him,"Well, Doctor, what is your opinion of an afternoon tea?" |
44643 | As soon as Mr. Lincoln caught sight of the Senator he saw he was angry, and called out:''Say, Fessenden, are n''t you an Episcopalian?'' |
44643 | As soon as he got near enough to the President he slapped him familiarly on the back and said,"Hello, old hoss, how are ye?" |
44643 | Being so assured, she continued:"And I guess pretty nearly everybody else did?" |
44643 | Better I hope?" |
44643 | But observing one little bright- eyed fellow in deep silence, he said:"Now, my little man, what have you to say?" |
44643 | But the richest of his reminiscences had to do with twins:"What names will you call them?" |
44643 | But, just by way of conversation, may I inquire what you call''em?" |
44643 | But, when the man was asked,"Would he have this woman for his wedded wife?" |
44643 | Catch on?" |
44643 | DELIRIOUS"Say-- how much do you think I had to pay the milliner for my wife''s last spring bonnet? |
44643 | Dear me, what shall I do? |
44643 | Did I not say zat he not look goot?" |
44643 | Did you see them gamblin''?" |
44643 | Did you think God sent you that bread? |
44643 | Do you never look after him at all? |
44643 | Ever get left yourself, cap''n? |
44643 | For, you see, we are not likely to overtake a cow; but what''s to prevent a cow strolling into this car and biting the passengers?" |
44643 | Gee whiz, Why look pazziz, When a woman''s as pretty as a woman is? |
44643 | Hain''t I been doin''it, Jedge? |
44643 | He bit you on the ankle, did he? |
44643 | He had his dear one, to her came, Then lovingly he scanned her; He asked her would she change her name? |
44643 | He read and she knit for about ten minutes, and then the lawyer cried out:"Do you know that I''m a lawyer?" |
44643 | Here, do you see this United States coin? |
44643 | How did it work?" |
44643 | How do you explain that?" |
44643 | How many does that make?" |
44643 | How much was it?" |
44643 | I believe you are a preacher?" |
44643 | I stopped the chair and said,"Hello, Barney, that you?" |
44643 | I''ll git on your back, an''we''ll ride up to de gate an''when Petah says,"Is you mounted?" |
44643 | IN THE CLASS- ROOM Said the professor to a student,"What is the effect of heat, and what the effect of cold?" |
44643 | If I were to fill that bucket with beer, do you think you could drink it all at one sitting?" |
44643 | Is it draimin''ye are? |
44643 | Is it wakin''or shleepin''ye be? |
44643 | Lovejoy?" |
44643 | Mike, seeing Pat crying, exclaimed,"Phat be ye cryin''fer?" |
44643 | Mr. Lovejoy was puzzled likewise, and at length said,"Why, Bobbie, what are you examining my head for? |
44643 | Mr. W. J. Lampton in the New York Times thus discourses on the tender topic: Millinerymania Did you ever see such sights? |
44643 | Now whachee namee I callee you?" |
44643 | Now, vat wass dot?" |
44643 | Now, what do you know about this gamblin''?" |
44643 | Oh, that in the mud? |
44643 | Oh, woman, in your hours of ease, Uncertain, coy and hard to please, Who ever gave you lids like these? |
44643 | One day when Mrs. Van Auken installed a Chinaman in her kitchen, the following conversation took place:"What is your name, sir?" |
44643 | One of the little fellows looked up and promptly answered,"Sir?" |
44643 | Passing his arm affectionately around his old friend General Jackson said in a whisper,"My dear friend, can you keep a secret?" |
44643 | Pointing then to the jail the minister said:"If the gallows had its due, where would you be?" |
44643 | Said the first,"Well, Father Abraham, how are you to- day?" |
44643 | Say-- that''s a mighty fine bed, ai n''t it? |
44643 | Schmitt?'' |
44643 | See? |
44643 | See?" |
44643 | See?" |
44643 | So you tried that, did you? |
44643 | Such frizzly, frazzly frights As now the lovely fair Insist that they must wear? |
44643 | THE CHIEF END OF MAN When Dr. Theodore L. Cuyler once put the question,"What is the chief end of man?" |
44643 | THE STRONGEST MAN"Who was the strongest man?" |
44643 | TOO YOUNG"Say, Isaacstein, do n''t you vant to git married?" |
44643 | Tell her? |
44643 | Ten long minutes in a broiling sun passed away, and the lawyer looked up and asked:"How long are you going to stay here?" |
44643 | The bet was taken, and the colonel called the man from his work, and said,"Diedrich, you see that bucket? |
44643 | The challenged man turned sharply and said:"Can you repeat the Lord''s Prayer, sir?" |
44643 | The colonel went into his kitchen and brought out a two- gallon tin bucket, and said,"See this bucket? |
44643 | The dinner and the discussion ended, one of the men said to the waiter, who was a good listener,"Well, Frank, what kind of game do you like best?" |
44643 | The woman looked at him more carefully for a moment, and said,"An''is that so? |
44643 | Then after a pause he quickly added,"What''s the name of his other eye?" |
44643 | There, now, quit throwing stones at the acanthopterygian; do you want to be kicked? |
44643 | They put the question to Dr. Talmage,"How many angels can be supported by the point of a needle?" |
44643 | This being likewise admitted as probable, she went on,"I guess even father sometimes tells a fib, does n''t he?" |
44643 | This framework in a rag? |
44643 | This millinery jag? |
44643 | Vot I tell you? |
44643 | W-- w-- why do n''t you go to Doctor B-- B-- Brown? |
44643 | Was anybody a- gamblin''?" |
44643 | Was anybody gamblin''at Jamison''s?" |
44643 | Was n''t that Barney Schmitt? |
44643 | Was they a- gamblin''there?" |
44643 | Was you in close proximity to them a- gamblin''?" |
44643 | Was you there?" |
44643 | What are you going to do about it?" |
44643 | What does yer law say yer may charge?" |
44643 | What was to be done? |
44643 | What''s him?" |
44643 | What''s that over yon?" |
44643 | What''s that? |
44643 | What''s that?" |
44643 | What''s the use of my preaching to a parcel of sinners about the danger of hell- fire when the church is as cold as a barn?" |
44643 | What''s the use? |
44643 | What, hic, regiment is this that''s holding a reunion here?'' |
44643 | What, then, is the result? |
44643 | When the hired girl rushed out with more water----""Did they all burn up?" |
44643 | Where did you get it? |
44643 | Who Should get the fearful due? |
44643 | Who done it? |
44643 | Who is he?" |
44643 | Who is it has designed Such cover for your mind? |
44643 | Who said there was any gamblin''?" |
44643 | Who was giffin''us fits now? |
44643 | Who was it you saw a- gamblin''last week?" |
44643 | Whose gommand is makin''dot shellin''?" |
44643 | Why do n''t you sail in, old man?" |
44643 | Why, what do you mean?" |
44643 | Why?" |
44643 | Wow, Ai n''t they the dowdydow? |
44643 | You and the prisoner have been friends?" |
44643 | You know Levy the banker? |
44643 | You speak of making no effort to adjust this bill; what is the use? |
44643 | Your face certainly looks familiar?" |
44643 | and the other little chap looked up from his play and responded,"Sir?" |
44643 | and then she said,"What''s the matter with you, now?" |
44643 | and where? |
44643 | exclaimed a hot looking man with a big valise,"what''s the quickest way to the cars?" |
44643 | replied Charley, flushing at the compliment,"you have seen some of the things I have turned off?" |
44643 | was n''t you summoned here as a friend?" |
44643 | what are all those people doing up there on the mantel- piece?" |
44643 | where did he get that anonaceo- hydro- charideo- nymphaeoid? |
4926 | Ah, Tristram''far away from me, Art thou from restless anguish free? 4926 Ah, lady,"said Geraint,"what hath befallen thee?" |
4926 | And art thou certain that if that knight knew all this, he would come to thy rescue? |
4926 | And how can I do that? |
4926 | And is it thus they have done with a maiden such as she, and moreover my sister, bestowing her without my consent? 4926 And what dost thou here?" |
4926 | And what may that be? |
4926 | And who is he? |
4926 | And who was it that slew them? |
4926 | And you, wherefore come you? |
4926 | By what means will that be? |
4926 | Damsel,said Sir Perceval,"who hath disinherited you? |
4926 | Did he meet with thee? |
4926 | Didst thou hear what Llywarch sung, The intrepid and brave old man? 4926 Didst thou inquire of them if they possessed any art?" |
4926 | Do you do this as one of the best knights? |
4926 | Dost thou know him? |
4926 | Dost thou know how much I owe thee? |
4926 | Fair brother, when came ye hither? |
4926 | Fair damsel,said Sir Launcelot,"know ye in this country any adventures?" |
4926 | Fair knight,said he,"how is it with you?" |
4926 | Geraint,said Guenever,"knowest thou the name of that tall knight yonder?" |
4926 | Has he not given it before the presence of these nobles? |
4926 | Hast thou heard what Avaon sung, The son of Taliesin, of the recording verse? 4926 Hast thou heard what Garselit sung, The Irishman whom it is safe to follow? |
4926 | Hast thou heard what Llenleawg sung, The noble chief wearing the golden torques? 4926 Hast thou hope of being released for gold or for silver, or for any gifts of wealth, or through battle and fighting?" |
4926 | Hast thou not received all thou didst ask? |
4926 | Have you any tidings? |
4926 | Heaven prosper thee, Geraint,said she;"and why didst thou not go with thy lord to hunt?" |
4926 | I come, lord, from singing in England; and wherefore dost thou inquire? |
4926 | I put the case,said Palamedes,"that you were well armed, and I naked as ye be; what would you do to me now, by your true knighthood?" |
4926 | I stand in need of counsel,he answered,"and what may that counsel be?" |
4926 | I will gladly,said he;"and in which direction dost thou intend to go?" |
4926 | In the name of Heaven,said Manawyddan,"where are they of the court, and all my host beside? |
4926 | Is it known,said Arthur,"where she is?" |
4926 | Is it time for us to go to meat? |
4926 | Is not that a mouse that I see in thy hand? |
4926 | Journeying on from break of day, Feel you not fatigued, my fair? 4926 Know ye,"said Arthur,"who is the knight with the long spear that stands by the brook up yonder?" |
4926 | Knowest thou his name? |
4926 | Lady,he said,"wilt thou tell me aught concerning thy purpose?" |
4926 | Lady,said he,"knowest thou where our horses are?" |
4926 | Lady,said they,"what thinkest thou that this is?" |
4926 | Lord,said Kicva,"wherefore should this be borne from these boors?" |
4926 | Lord,said she,"didst thou hear the words of those men concerning thee?" |
4926 | Lord,said she,"what craft wilt thou follow? |
4926 | My men,said Pwyll,"is there any among you who knows yonder lady?" |
4926 | My son,said she,"desirest thou to ride forth?" |
4926 | My soul,said Gawl,"will thy bag ever be full?" |
4926 | My soul,said Pwyll,"what is the boon thou askest?" |
4926 | Now where did he overtake thee? |
4926 | Now, fellow,said King Arthur,"canst thou bring me there where this giant haunteth?" |
4926 | Now,quoth Owain,"would it not be well to go and endeavor to discover that place?" |
4926 | Now,said Arthur,"where is the maiden for whom I heard thou didst give challenge?" |
4926 | O my lord,said she,"what dost thou here?" |
4926 | Say ye so? |
4926 | Seest thou yonder red tilled ground? |
4926 | Sir knight,said Arthur,"for what cause abidest thou here?" |
4926 | Sir, what penance shall I do? |
4926 | Sir,said Geraint,"what is thy counsel to me concerning this knight, on account of the insult which the maiden of Guenever received from the dwarf?" |
4926 | Sir,said Sir Bedivere,"what man is there buried that ye pray so near unto?" |
4926 | Sir,said Sir Bohort,"but how know ye that I shall sit there?" |
4926 | Sir,said Sir Galahad,"can you tell me the marvel of the shield?" |
4926 | Sir,said she,"when thinkest thou that Geraint will be here?" |
4926 | Sir,said the king,"is it your will to alight and partake of our cheer?" |
4926 | Sirs,said Sir Galahad,"what adventure brought you hither?" |
4926 | Tell me, good lad,said one of them,"sawest thou a knight pass this way either today or yesterday?" |
4926 | Tell me, tall man,said Perceval,"is that Arthur yonder?" |
4926 | Tell me,said Sir Bohort,"knowest thou of any adventure?" |
4926 | Tell me,said the knight,"didst thou see any one coming after me from the court?" |
4926 | That will I not, by Heaven,she said;"yonder man was the first to whom my faith was ever pledged; and shall I prove inconstant to him?" |
4926 | Then Perceval told him his name, and said,Who art thou?" |
4926 | There is; wherefore dost thou call? |
4926 | This is indeed a marvel,said he;"saw you aught else?" |
4926 | This will I do gladly; and who art thou? |
4926 | Traitor knight,said Queen Guenever,"what wilt thou do? |
4926 | Truly,said Pwyll,"this is to me the most pleasing quest on which thou couldst have come; and wilt thou tell me who thou art?" |
4926 | Verily,said she,"what thinkest thou to do?" |
4926 | What are ye? |
4926 | What discourse,said Guenever,"do I hear between you? |
4926 | What doth my knight the while? 4926 What harm is there in that, lady?" |
4926 | What has become,said they,"of Caradoc, the son of Bran, and the seven men who were left with him in this island?" |
4926 | What hast thou there, lord? |
4926 | What have ye seen? |
4926 | What is the forest that is seen upon the sea? |
4926 | What is the lofty ridge, with the lake on each side thereof? |
4926 | What is there about him,asked Arthur,"that thou never yet didst see his like?" |
4926 | What is this? |
4926 | What is thy craft? |
4926 | What is your lord''s name? |
4926 | What is your name? |
4926 | What is your name? |
4926 | What kind of a thief may it be, lord, that thou couldst put into thy glove? |
4926 | What knight is he that thou hatest so above others? |
4926 | What manner of thief is that? |
4926 | What manner of thief, lord? |
4926 | What sawest thou there? |
4926 | What sawest thou there? |
4926 | What say ye to this adventure,said Sir Gawain,"that one spear hath felled us all four?" |
4926 | What saying was that? |
4926 | What sort of meal? |
4926 | What then wouldst thou? |
4926 | What thinkest thou that we should do concerning this? |
4926 | What treatment is there for guests and strangers that alight in that castle? |
4926 | What was that? |
4926 | What wight art thou,the lady said,"that will not speak to me? |
4926 | What wilt thou more? |
4926 | What work art thou upon? |
4926 | What wouldst thou with Arthur? |
4926 | Where are my pages and my servants? 4926 Where is Cuchulain?" |
4926 | Where is he that seeks my daughter? 4926 Where is the Earl Ynywl,"said Geraint,"and his wife and his daughter?" |
4926 | Where,said she,"are thy companion and thy dogs?" |
4926 | Wherefore came she to me? |
4926 | Wherefore comes he? |
4926 | Wherefore not? |
4926 | Wherefore not? |
4926 | Wherefore wilt thou not? |
4926 | Wherefore,said Evnissyen,"comes not my nephew, the son of my sister, unto me? |
4926 | Which way went they hence? |
4926 | Who may he be? |
4926 | Whose are the sheep that thou dost keep, and to whom does yonder castle belong? |
4926 | Why dost thou ask my name? |
4926 | Why should I not prove adventures? |
4926 | Why withdrawest thou, false traitor? |
4926 | Why, who is he? |
4926 | Why,said Sir Lionel,"will ye stay me? |
4926 | Why? |
4926 | Will she come here if she is sent to? |
4926 | Will this please thee? |
4926 | Willest thou this, lord? |
4926 | Wilt thou follow my counsel,said the youth,"and take thy meal from me?" |
4926 | Wilt thou follow the counsel of another? |
4926 | Yes, in truth,said she;"and who art thou?" |
4926 | And Arthur said to him,"Hast thou news from the gate?" |
4926 | And Gawain was much grieved to see Arthur in his state, and he questioned him, saying,"O my lord, what has befallen thee?" |
4926 | And Gwernach said to him,"O man, is it true that is reported of thee, that thou knowest how to burnish swords?" |
4926 | And Kilwich said to Yspadaden Penkawr,"Is thy daughter mine now?" |
4926 | And Sir Launcelot heard him say,"O sweet Lord, when shall this sorrow leave me, and when shall the holy vessel come by me whereby I shall be healed?" |
4926 | And after twenty- four days he opened his eyes; and when he saw folk he made great sorrow, and said,"Why have ye wakened me? |
4926 | And as they came in, every one of Pwyll''s knights struck a blow upon the bag, and asked,"What is here?" |
4926 | And his father inquired of him,"What has come over thee, my son, and what aileth thee?" |
4926 | And now, wilt thou come to guide me out of the town?" |
4926 | And the earl said to Enid,"Alas, lady, what hath befallen thee?" |
4926 | And the maiden bent down towards her, and said,"What aileth thee, that thou answereth no one to- day?" |
4926 | And the queen said,"Ah, dear brother, why have ye tarried so long? |
4926 | And the woman asked them,"Upon what errand come you here?" |
4926 | And then he said to the man,"Canst thou tell me the way to some chapel, where I may bury this body?" |
4926 | And they spoke unto him, and said,"O man, whose castle is that?" |
4926 | And they went up to the mound whereon the herdsman was, and they said to him,"How dost thou fare, herdsman?" |
4926 | And thinking that he knew him, he inquired of him,"Art thou Edeyrn, the son of Nudd?" |
4926 | And what work art thou upon, lord?" |
4926 | And what, lord, art thou doing?" |
4926 | And when meat was ended, Pwyll said,"Where are the hosts that went yesterday to the top of the mound?" |
4926 | And whence dost thou come, scholar?" |
4926 | And who will proceed with thee, since thou art not strong enough to traverse the land of Loegyr alone?" |
4926 | And with this they put questions one to another, Who had braver men? |
4926 | And ye also, who are ye?" |
4926 | Asked Gwyddno,"Art thou able to speak, and thou so little?" |
4926 | Bethink thee how thou art a king''s son, and a knight of the Table Round, and how thou art about to dishonor all knighthood and thyself?" |
4926 | But how is mythology to be taught to one who does not learn it through the medium of the languages of Greece and Rome? |
4926 | But may not the requisite knowledge of the subject be acquired by reading the ancient poets in translations? |
4926 | But, O fair nephew, what be these ladies that hither be come with you?" |
4926 | Does she ever come hither, so that she may be seen?" |
4926 | Dost thou bring any new tidings?" |
4926 | Dost thou not know that the shower to- day has left in my dominions neither man nor beast alive that was exposed to it?'' |
4926 | He said to his mother,"Mother, what are those yonder?" |
4926 | How can we describe the conflict that agitated the heart of Tristram? |
4926 | Is it of those who are to conduct Geraint to his country?" |
4926 | Is it well for thee to mourn after that good man, or for anything else that thou canst not have?" |
4926 | Journeying on from break of day, Feel you not fatigued, my fair?" |
4926 | My lord,"he added,"will it be displeasing to thee if I ask whence thou comest also?" |
4926 | Next follow some moral triads:"Hast thou heard what Dremhidydd sung, An ancient watchman on the castle walls? |
4926 | Out upon the wharfs they came, Knight and burgher, lord and dame, And round the prow they read her name,''The Lady of Shalott''"Who is this? |
4926 | Said Gurhyr Gwalstat,"Is there a porter?" |
4926 | Said Gurhyr,"Who is it that laments in this house of stone?" |
4926 | Said Yspadaden Penkawr,"Is it thou that seekest my daughter?" |
4926 | Say, knowest thou aught of Mabon, the son of Modron, who was taken from his mother when three nights old?" |
4926 | Shall we be told that answers to such queries may be found in notes, or by a reference to the Classical Dictionary? |
4926 | So the porter went in, and Gwernach said to him,"Hast thou news from the gate?" |
4926 | Spoke the youth:"Is there a porter?" |
4926 | Then Guenever said to Arthur,"Wilt thou permit me, lord, to go to- morrow to see and hear the hunt of the stag of which the young man spoke?" |
4926 | Then Sir Tristram cried out and said,"Thou coward knight, why wilt thou not do battle with me? |
4926 | Then at noon came a damsel unto him with his dinner, and asked him,"What cheer?" |
4926 | Then cried Sir Colgrevance,"Ah, Sir Bohort, why come ye not to bring me out of peril of death, wherein I have put me to succor you?" |
4926 | Then he asked of Geraint,"Have I thy permission to go and converse with yonder maiden, for I see that she is apart from thee?" |
4926 | Then he cried:"Ah, my lord Arthur, will ye leave me here alone among mine enemies?" |
4926 | Then he overtook a man clothed in a religious clothing, who said,"Sir Knight, what seek ye?" |
4926 | Then he said to the other,"And what is the cause of thy grief?" |
4926 | Then said Arthur,"Which of the marvels will it be best for us to seek next?" |
4926 | Then said Perceval,"Tell me, is Sir Kay in Arthur''s court?" |
4926 | Then said the good man,"Now wottest thou who I am?" |
4926 | Then said the steward of the household,"Whither is it right, lord, to order the maiden?" |
4926 | Then the hoary- headed man said to him,"Young man, wherefore art thou thoughtful?" |
4926 | Then they took counsel, and said,"Which of these marvels will it be best for us to seek next?" |
4926 | To whom do these ships belong, and who is the chief amongst you?" |
4926 | Tristram believed it was certain death for him to return to Ireland; and how could he act as ambassador for his uncle in such a cause? |
4926 | What evil have I done to thee that thou shouldst act towards me and my possessions as thou hast this day? |
4926 | When Enid saw this, she cried out, saying,"O chieftain, whoever thou art, what renown wilt thou gain by slaying a dead man?" |
4926 | When wilt thou that I should present to thee the chieftain who has come with me hither?" |
4926 | Where are my attendants? |
4926 | Who had fairer or swifter horses or greyhounds? |
4926 | Who had more skilful or wiser bards than Maelgan? |
4926 | Why hast thou murdered this Duchess? |
4926 | Why hidest thou thyself within holes and walls like a coward? |
4926 | Will you insure me this, as ye be a true knight?" |
4926 | Will you now turn back, now you are so far advanced upon your journey? |
4926 | Wilt thou shame thyself? |
4926 | a chiding voice was heard of one approaching me and saying:''O knight, what has brought thee hither? |
4926 | and what is here? |
4926 | asked the king,"and will he come to the land?" |
4926 | couldst thou so one moment be, From her who so much loveth thee?" |
4926 | dost thou reproach Arthur? |
4926 | hast thou slain this good knight by thy crafts?" |
4926 | said Arthur,"what hast thou done, Merlin? |
4926 | said Arthur;"and whence do you come?" |
4926 | said Geraint,"how is it that thou hast lost them now?" |
4926 | said Geraint;"and whence dost thou come?" |
4926 | said Rhiannon,"wherefore didst thou give that answer?" |
4926 | said Sir Launcelot,"why have ye betrayed me?" |
4926 | said Sir Tristram,"what have I done? |
4926 | said Sir Tristram;"art thou not Sir Palamedes?" |
4926 | said he,"is it Geraint?" |
4926 | said he;"have you any news?" |
4926 | said they;"what is the mountain that is seen by the side of the ships?" |
4926 | what will he profit thee?" |
4926 | who hath proven him King Uther''s son? |
4926 | why hast thou slain my husband?" |
61348 | ''What shall I bring thee, mother mine? 61348 ''Who is that gentleman?'' |
61348 | ''Why, do n''t you know him? 61348 And yet,"he said,"I meant it for the best; and what else could I do? |
61348 | Did you see my Tom Tug? |
61348 | Do you want me to take the part? |
61348 | Has anything dreadful happened? 61348 Hast thou a charm to stay the morning star In his steep course? |
61348 | Have you ever heard me sing? |
61348 | How have you invariably come off victor? |
61348 | Is it a thousand leagues to Thrace? |
61348 | Is that so? |
61348 | Push- ma- ta- ha,said Forrest, in wondering admiration,"who were your grandparents?" |
61348 | What Sambo? |
61348 | What are you laughing at, my boy? 61348 When is it to be played?" |
61348 | Who are Thallea and Melpomeen? |
61348 | Who is that? |
61348 | Who is that? |
61348 | Why does not brother William write me oftener than he does? 61348 Why?" |
61348 | Will you? |
61348 | _ Dionysius._ What wonder is this? 61348 _ Lord._ You will not dare to hold us? |
61348 | _ Your_ lands? |
61348 | ''What is the other?'' |
61348 | A fool, a Brutus? |
61348 | All, Master and slave, spring from the self- same fount; And why should one drop in the ocean flood Be better than its brother? |
61348 | Also, where is my dear brother Lorman, of whom I have heard nothing for some time? |
61348 | Am I not always kind? |
61348 | And have I not a weapon to requite thee?" |
61348 | And in the latest year of her life he wrote,"Dearly beloved mother, is there not something I can send you which will give you pleasure? |
61348 | And what is to prevent us from having such a Drama? |
61348 | And when, in reply to the exclamation of Alonzo,"Rolla, my friend, my benefactor, how can our lives repay the obligations which we owe thee?" |
61348 | And why should I not? |
61348 | And why should you? |
61348 | And, mortal limits once passed, what matters all this to the immortal soul? |
61348 | Art cold? |
61348 | As he shook hands first with one, then with another, he would say,"Are you married?" |
61348 | As they met in the dressing- room, Kean said, excitedly,"In the name of God, boy, where did you get that?" |
61348 | At that mischievous moment the driver of the cart came up, and, crying out,"What are you doing there, you damned little scoundrel?" |
61348 | Bethink thee; hast not used thy place To tread the weak and poor to dust; to plant Shame on each cheek, and sorrow in each heart? |
61348 | But I,--a thing of no account-- a slave,-- I to your forkéd lightnings bare my bosom In vain,--for what''s a slave-- a dastard slave? |
61348 | But fair and softly: what are we to do with his friend Leggett? |
61348 | But is it still in existence? |
61348 | But what for the king, his father? |
61348 | But, alas, his hapless and guilty Ramon,--where is he? |
61348 | Can I, then, doubt that to the dramatist himself her greeting was most cordial? |
61348 | Cut from his harp his own strings, and where is his music? |
61348 | Dar''st thou take this hand?" |
61348 | Did ever discord hear Sounds so well fitted to her untuned ear?''" |
61348 | Did you ever know a play- actor to get rich?" |
61348 | Did you receive the$ 100 I sent you? |
61348 | Dogs of white men, do you lift your hands against a woman?" |
61348 | Dost thou come here with a lie in thy heart to witness against me? |
61348 | Dost thou not know me? |
61348 | Dost thou think so? |
61348 | Even of those called generous, how many in our day are capable of such a deed in answer to a silent claim of friendship? |
61348 | Forrest accosted him with the inquiry,"Do you know who that man is yonder?" |
61348 | Gazing with astonishment at the haggard wreck before him, the captain exclaimed,"Why, good God, my boy, is that you?" |
61348 | Gosh- a- massy, who be you? |
61348 | Has William gone to Petersburg? |
61348 | Hast thou not plundered, tortured, hunted down Thy fellow- men like brutes? |
61348 | Have I the outline of that caitiff Who to the outraged earth doth bend the head His God did rear for him to heaven? |
61348 | He answered, in a negro voice,"Wha, Dinah, duzzent you know Sambo?" |
61348 | He asked, with a look of fondness, suppressing his stern reserve,"Dost thou not love this little one, Nahmeokee?" |
61348 | He asks,"Is not this Rome, the great city?" |
61348 | He says, with a musing air first, then quickly passing through indignant scorn to mournful expostulation,--"Then Dionysius has o''erswayed it? |
61348 | His bearing and the soul it revealed were such as corresponded with the descriptive comment wrung from the onlooking Gesler:"Can I believe my eyes? |
61348 | His stripling son,-- Young Cade,--remember you Jack Cade? |
61348 | His words have a tender yet ominous meaning in their inflection as he asks Nahmeokee,"Do you not fear the power of the white man? |
61348 | How are my dear sisters? |
61348 | How came they on me?" |
61348 | How does he translate the wily craft, the pitilessness, the mocking tenderness, of the first of these? |
61348 | Hurrying out, he calls to his freedman, Lucullus,"Where is my horse?" |
61348 | I hope you never play The truant? |
61348 | I suppose Col. Wetherill is grubbing away at his farm: or has he got tired of green fields and running brooks? |
61348 | In another letter to her during this same absence, he says,"Mother, do you sometimes wish to see your wandering boy and take him to your arms again? |
61348 | In what other land do so many heaven- pointing spires attest the devotional habits of the people? |
61348 | In what other land is the altar more faithfully served, or its fires kept burning with a steadier lustre? |
61348 | Inestimable precious scenes, Now faded and all past, Can you not fling one ray serene To cheer me on at last? |
61348 | Is he thy brother? |
61348 | Is it just to punish me for a fault of which I am innocent?" |
61348 | Is it not funny?" |
61348 | Is it not plainly best as far as possible to perfect ourselves on every level of our nature? |
61348 | Is it not the office of the player, the very aim of his art, correctly to depict the truth of man and life? |
61348 | Is not the blood Of white- haired Cade black on thy hand? |
61348 | Is silence my opponent? |
61348 | Is''t not, my lord, A merry jest? |
61348 | Let me see him now; Why stands he hence aloof? |
61348 | O blessed vision, how far away art thou? |
61348 | Oh, my mother, where are you? |
61348 | Page? |
61348 | Patriotism itself is a blind preference of our own earth; and shall there be no patriotism in letters? |
61348 | Shall I bring thee jewels that shine In the depths of the shadowy sea?'' |
61348 | She comes in, and sits upon his knee, saying,"Well, father, what is your will?" |
61348 | So he himself said, and added,"The applause I had won before the foot- lights? |
61348 | Tell me, slaves, Where is your tyrant? |
61348 | The aged Orozembo, seized by the Spaniards and brought before their leader, is questioned,"Who is this Rolla joined with Alonzo in command?" |
61348 | The question was often asked, how can this strange conjunction be explained? |
61348 | They demanded of him,"Will you come?" |
61348 | Think you, shall I not believe My own eyes before your tongue? |
61348 | Thou couldst not harm an orphan? |
61348 | Thou seest this hand? |
61348 | To have no meaning For the proud names of liberty and virtue, But as some regal braggart sets it down In his vocabulary? |
61348 | What do you expect?" |
61348 | What dreadful fate awaits him? |
61348 | What else would the demurrer have? |
61348 | What is become of Dionysius? |
61348 | What is the meaning of this?" |
61348 | What shall I bring to thee? |
61348 | What think you did the boy? |
61348 | What think''st thou of it?" |
61348 | When wert thou in thy life hailed with a peal Of hearts and hands like that one? |
61348 | When you shall come to your home, they will ask you, Where is Push- ma- ta- ha? |
61348 | Whence came this greatness but from the miseries of subjugated nations? |
61348 | Where are Joe Shipley, Charley Scriver, and Blighden Van Bann? |
61348 | Where are the foundations of private right more stable, or the limits of public order more inviolately observed? |
61348 | Where does agriculture drive his team a- field with a more cheery spirit, in the certain assurance that the harvest is his own? |
61348 | Where does he behold more diffused prosperity, more active industry, more social harmony, more abiding faith, hope, and charity? |
61348 | Where does labor go to his toil with an alerter step, or an erecter brow, effulgent with the heart- reflected light of conscious independence? |
61348 | Where does the sun, in all his compass, shed his beams on a country freer, better, happier than this? |
61348 | Where is he? |
61348 | Where is your master? |
61348 | White men, can he speak words of truth who has been false to his nation and false to his friends?" |
61348 | Who is you?" |
61348 | Who must not feel his feebleness and insignificance when called to enter the list against such an antagonist? |
61348 | Who that has stepped within the charmed circle traced by his wand would sell the memory of its delight? |
61348 | Who, then, shall seize him? |
61348 | Whose chile am you?" |
61348 | Why do I ask such a question? |
61348 | Why not Forrest? |
61348 | Why should you not share in it? |
61348 | Why was I Idle, and she in chains? |
61348 | Why, what art thou? |
61348 | Will she come, or not? |
61348 | Will you not be advised? |
61348 | Will you?" |
61348 | With a quick articulation and an expostulating tone he said,"Why did you make him Decemvir, and first Decemvir, too?" |
61348 | With one bound he bursts in upon them, levels his gun, and thunders,--"Which of you has lived too long? |
61348 | Without money, without employment or prospects, what could they do? |
61348 | Ye mighty gods, where are your thunders now?" |
61348 | Yet, after a pause, he fancies he hears her answering; and he rapidly asks,--"Is it a voice, or nothing, answers me? |
61348 | Your throats offend the quiet of the city; And thou, who standest foremost of these knaves, Stand back and answer me, a Senator, What have you done?" |
61348 | _ Aylmere._ And wherefore not? |
61348 | _ Brutus._ Seek you instruction? |
61348 | _ Claudius._ She is mine, then: Do I not look at you? |
61348 | _ Clifford._ Thou wilt not slay me, fellow? |
61348 | _ Icilius._ Do I think Virginius owns that hand? |
61348 | _ Lord._ Thou wilt not use us thus? |
61348 | _ Pembroke._ Rebuked his lordship? |
61348 | _ Pembroke._ Who were they? |
61348 | _ Pembroke._ Yet must he feed, from this, his wife and children; What if they starve? |
61348 | _ Straw._ But what of that? |
61348 | _ Sutton._ He who, some ten years gone, Fled from the barony? |
61348 | _ Titus._ Sayest thou? |
61348 | _ Titus._ We are Romans-- Not slaves--_ Brutus._ Not slaves? |
61348 | _ Valerius._ What can this mean? |
61348 | _ Virginia._ You''ll be advised, dear father? |
61348 | _ Virginius._ Do you tell me so? |
61348 | and dost thou dare me to my face? |
61348 | and, as much to his amazement as to his delight, received the answer,"Why, do you not know him? |
61348 | august Athena, where, Where are thy men of might? |
61348 | did not the Sibyl tell you A fool should set Rome free? |
61348 | does it stagger thee?" |
61348 | for who ever knew truth put to the worse in a free and open encounter? |
61348 | hast thou, then, invoked Thy satellites already? |
61348 | is this a sight to show a father? |
61348 | must I call you father, Yet have no token of your tenderness? |
61348 | shall the son of Junius we d a Tarquin? |
61348 | the ashes Of her whom yesternight you gave the flames? |
61348 | they exclaimed,"is it possible that this is you, changed so much and grown so tall?" |
61348 | thy grand in soul? |
61348 | to thee?--O Syracuse, Is this thy registered doom? |
61348 | to whom? |
61348 | what is that? |
61348 | who am dis? |
26358 | ''Are you mad?'' 26358 ''Madam,''said I,''since this censer belongs to you, I know where to place it; will you allow me to have it?'' |
26358 | ''What has hurt your cheek?'' 26358 ''Whence come you, wicked young man?'' |
26358 | ''Who is the proprietor of that censer?'' 26358 ''Why,''said my spouse,''do you leave your lute lying upon the ground?'' |
26358 | A man,says he,"who can not disengage himself from a fly, can he have power over the works of nature?" |
26358 | Abosaber,would he say to him,"you appear to me to be still at the bottom of the well: when is your patience to raise you to the throne?" |
26358 | Alas,said I,"nurse, what new evil has befallen me? |
26358 | And by whom were you chiefly favoured? |
26358 | And could not I,said the dervish,"learn from you your history, when you appear to be so well qualified for giving it?" |
26358 | And how long,said Misnar,"doth this feast last?" |
26358 | And how wilt thou prevail against Ahubal the Prince and Tasnar the magician? |
26358 | And how, my kind governess,said Urad,"will those corns assist me?" |
26358 | And may I not hope,continued the Sultan,"that it will please Him to release these my fellow- sufferers also?" |
26358 | And were you in possession of that science? |
26358 | And what dost thou want now? |
26358 | And what will you do to get hold of her? |
26358 | And what,interrupted Misnar,"is the cause of this change in favour of the Sultan?" |
26358 | And what,said she,"must I do with the peppercorns?" |
26358 | And what,said the Sultan,"has made thee thine own accuser, since the life you took was in your own defence? |
26358 | And what,says she,"has the poor child done to you that you should treat her so roughly?" |
26358 | And wherefore,said Misnar,"is this silence imposed? |
26358 | And who is this young man? |
26358 | And why should I not be kept in that character? 26358 Are my friends dead?" |
26358 | Are not you,said he to him,"the confidant of Chamsada?" |
26358 | Are you afflicted at the loss of your treasure? 26358 Are you ignorant that I have all power over the Prince whose daughter you are desirous to marry? |
26358 | Are you no longer in favour with her? |
26358 | Are you not satisfied with what you have read? |
26358 | Are you not satisfied,said Misnar,"O ill- fated Horam, that you come to deceive me with new illusions? |
26358 | Are you obliged to have recourse to such means? |
26358 | Are you satisfied? |
26358 | Are you truly she? 26358 Art thou not coming?" |
26358 | Ay, true,answered two or three more,"we must look out a clever young fellow for Urad; whom shall she have?" |
26358 | But how can we take our flight? |
26358 | But how did he incur your indignation? |
26358 | But how has this miraculous change been wrought? |
26358 | But how will my lord discover him amidst three hundred thousand troops? |
26358 | But how,said he,"am I to return, for I know not the way?" |
26358 | But if our King is not a god,said they to him,"whom then are we to adore?" |
26358 | But knowest thou not,said Horam,"that death will be the consequence of this rash deed?" |
26358 | But surely,said Mesrour,"you are not kept here in confinement among the number of mad people?" |
26358 | But what is the virtue of this talisman that you offer me? |
26358 | But what precaution will you take to remove them with safety? 26358 But why this cruel reserve with me?" |
26358 | But will your lord ever come again? |
26358 | But, O Mahoud, suffer me, ere I declare my own grief, to ask what has become of the lovely Hemjunah, the Princess of Cassimir? 26358 But, madam,"answered I,"does the happiness of my father''s subjects require such a sacrifice in me? |
26358 | But,said I, as I went along,"what am I about to do? |
26358 | But,said he to the magician,"whither shall I bend my course? |
26358 | But,said he, calling to mind the old woman''s words,"could I not have a dog to accompany me on the way?" |
26358 | By what means is this tablet endued with these rare virtues? |
26358 | Can I not have a few days granted me to think over the matter, and prepare for the sore trial? |
26358 | Can any man on earth do this? |
26358 | Can you imagine I could submit to the ideas that are given us of the Grand Lama? 26358 Death hath nothing dreadful to me,"replied he;"but can I remain insensible to the hardships of your lot? |
26358 | Did she not assure me,said he,"that I should find water enough above me? |
26358 | Did she not say,''If thou shouldst wish to see me, thou must seek me in the fatherland of the variegated butterflies?'' |
26358 | Did you foretell that I was to die by the hand of a robber?--you who threatened me only with dying by that of my son? |
26358 | Did you not hear it? |
26358 | Did you not, then,said Misnar,"hear the adventures of Hemjunah, the Princess of Cassimir?" |
26358 | Do I awake, or do I feel the illusions of a dream? |
26358 | Do you consider,said he to the old man,"of what consequence secrecy will be upon this occasion?" |
26358 | Do you doubt the power of Mahomet? |
26358 | Do you know the King? |
26358 | Do you know,said one,"why the Prophet forbade his disciples to drink wine?" |
26358 | Do you not know your lord,asked Jussuf, full of indignation,"that you thus oppose him?" |
26358 | Do you really mean to say you are happy? |
26358 | Do you wish to make me angry? |
26358 | Dost thou see? |
26358 | Eight hundred? |
26358 | Enemy of our race,said they,"where is he who was to redeem our glory and to revenge our blood? |
26358 | Go on, beauteous Damake,said Nourgehan, with tenderness;"if you love me, can you conceal anything from me?" |
26358 | Hapacuson,said the fair one, addressing herself to the hag,"why wilt thou vainly brandish thy rebellious arms against the powers of Heaven? |
26358 | Has your life returned to you? |
26358 | Hast thou enough now? |
26358 | Hast thou the wonder- stone from Mount Massis? |
26358 | Hast thou, then, mighty enchanter,answered the Prince Ahubal,"the gods of Europe in thy power?" |
26358 | Have I not riches enough in possessing thee? |
26358 | Have not I,replied he,"excellent generals and good troops? |
26358 | Have you ever heard of this unfortunate Naima before? |
26358 | Have you quite forgotten me, that you have allowed so long a time to elapse without asking after me? 26358 Have you, base slave,"said the enchanter,"aught to reveal to us? |
26358 | He causes the former King to be regretted, then? |
26358 | His wife? |
26358 | How can I but be surprised? |
26358 | How could I remain a moment in doubt? |
26358 | How could you know me,replied the dethroned Prince,"since shame and confusion obliged me to be silent? |
26358 | How is Chamsada employed? |
26358 | How now, Jussuf? |
26358 | How shall I procure myself to be recognized as their lawful monarch? |
26358 | How will you escape? |
26358 | How, Hassan Assad, thou the guide that I was to find here? |
26358 | How, O genius,said Urad,"for such I perceive thou art-- how is Urad guilty? |
26358 | I do not remember his features,answered Misnar:"came he not to the council of our divan?" |
26358 | I have heard of it,replied Jalaladdeen;"but in which direction am I to journey, in order to discover this wonder- stone?" |
26358 | I obey,answered Jalaladdeen;"but suffer me before my departure to ask, Who are ye?" |
26358 | I suppose,said Mesrour to him,"that you are entrusted with overseeing those who make a noise in the court?" |
26358 | I ungrateful? |
26358 | If you are Mahomet,said he to the old madman,"who has put you in a place like this?" |
26358 | In how many ranks,said the Sultan,"is the army to be disposed?" |
26358 | In what branch did you excel? |
26358 | In your present condition? 26358 Inform me,"said the Sultan,"whom it is my happy fate to release from this wretched confinement?" |
26358 | Is it by putting me to death that you would show your gratitude and repay my favours? 26358 Is it not,"asked Bennaskar,"O Mahoud, the full of the moon?" |
26358 | Is it possible,said he,"that you whom my daughter loads with her kindness should be engaged in the intrigue of Halechalbe''s marriage? |
26358 | Is it the prospect of death which terrifies you? |
26358 | Is it thus with you? |
26358 | Is not this a vision? |
26358 | Is such a trifle,said I,"the test of friendship? |
26358 | Is there deceit in Horam,said the Sultan,"that he cometh like a thief in the night? |
26358 | Is this really the wonder- stone? |
26358 | Is this the man pointed out by your god? |
26358 | It is,replied I, with a smile;"but doth Bennaskar intend to change with that fluctuating planet?" |
26358 | Look round you,said the crier;"is there none here that pleases you better?" |
26358 | Mahoud, then,returned he,"is faithful?" |
26358 | Mahoud,answered Bennaskar,"art thou faithful, and wilt thou ever remain faithful to thy friend?" |
26358 | Most powerful magician,answered Ibrac,"what need is there of this deceit? |
26358 | Mundian Oppu? |
26358 | My dear Houadir,said Urad,"when shall I behold your proper shape? |
26358 | My lord,answered I,"of what service can I be to you by such a compliance? |
26358 | My slave,said Horam, as he saw the disguised enchanter,"hast thou succeeded? |
26358 | No, no,said one of them, obstructing the way;"what business have you in? |
26358 | Noble Emir,cried the youth,"I am rejoiced to see you-- tell me, how is Perizide? |
26358 | Now, you will not wish to eat any of this enchanted melon? |
26358 | Now,said Jussuf,"what news do you bring?" |
26358 | Now,said she to him,"will you at last be wise, and give up this idleness? |
26358 | O my Prince and master,answered Nemana, in great astonishment,"whom could I serve but your daughter, the Princess Zeraïde?" |
26358 | O my children,said she,"where is the Vizier your father, to revenge me on the man who hath murdered my children?" |
26358 | O son of Houadir, what hast thou done? |
26358 | Of what use is our flight? |
26358 | Oh, why did I neglect my father''s injunctions? 26358 On whose judgment could I better rely than on yours?" |
26358 | Perhaps one of you has eaten it, not knowing that I picked it for myself? |
26358 | Perhaps you could give ninety-- eighty-- seventy? |
26358 | Perhaps,returned Nourgehan,"the difference of our religions is an obstacle to my happiness?" |
26358 | Poor creature,said Haschem,"what is the matter? |
26358 | Prudent Tasnar,said the Prince,"I admire thy foresight; but of what use is this murdered slave now to us?" |
26358 | Queen,replied the slave,"I am willing to sacrifice my life for you: what do you require of me?" |
26358 | Rise, faithful Horam,said the Sultan Misnar;"your plot is sufficiently unravelled; but why did you hide your intentions from your lord?" |
26358 | Seven hundred? |
26358 | Shall I tremble? |
26358 | Shall we hear her? |
26358 | She will speak, then? |
26358 | Sire,replied the modest Aladin,"do the people look for an example of your justice? |
26358 | That was a pomegranate and became wasps, and where are they now gone? |
26358 | The age of thy friendship,said Bennaskar,"is a month, and wouldst thou be admitted in so short a time to all the secrets of my heart? |
26358 | The night is dark and gloomy,said the Rabbi, coming to his casement,"and mine age is great: are there not younger men than I in Cairo?" |
26358 | Then,answered I,"you doubt the faithfulness of Mahoud; else why may not I know the meaning of the wonders I have seen?" |
26358 | Then,said he,"where is Mount Massis? |
26358 | There are two pearls,said he to him,"but you ought to have ten: what have you done with the other eight?" |
26358 | This is a severe task,said he;"is there no alternative, nor any method by which I may evade it?" |
26358 | Thou wilt lead me to the object of my desires? |
26358 | To save him? |
26358 | To whom does this warehouse belong? |
26358 | True,replied the genius;"but although you are weak, ought you therefore to be presumptuous? |
26358 | Wait, wait,said the former;"who knows whether we shall ever see each other again? |
26358 | Well, what has brought you into this situation? |
26358 | Well, what of the melon? 26358 What are you doing here, young man?" |
26358 | What are you doing? |
26358 | What art thou? |
26358 | What avails my fortunate shot? |
26358 | What can I conclude from that? |
26358 | What can be the cause of it? |
26358 | What can you require further? |
26358 | What can you wait for further to render me the happiest man upon earth? |
26358 | What connection has his story with thy crime? 26358 What did she say?" |
26358 | What do these words signify,cried he,"which are upon the standard?" |
26358 | What dost thou see,said the Demon,"that makes thee look so eagerly? |
26358 | What dost thou think of doing? 26358 What dreadful behaviour is this of yours?" |
26358 | What enemies? 26358 What hast thou done, O Tasnar?" |
26358 | What hast thou done, wretched Vizier? |
26358 | What have you for a sign? |
26358 | What hour of the night is it? |
26358 | What image of deformity,said I,"must Mahoud wear? |
26358 | What interest have you in this criminal? |
26358 | What is it I go there to seek? |
26358 | What is it? 26358 What is it?" |
26358 | What is it? |
26358 | What is that to thee? |
26358 | What is that, O lady of beauty? |
26358 | What is that? |
26358 | What is the cause of this deadly feud? |
26358 | What is the matter with you, Chamsada? |
26358 | What is the matter with you, my son? |
26358 | What is the matter? |
26358 | What is the name of him who governs it? |
26358 | What is there so much to be wondered at, and to stand with open mouth? 26358 What is this?" |
26358 | What is your complaint? |
26358 | What is your name? |
26358 | What man? |
26358 | What merchant do you mean? |
26358 | What noise is that? |
26358 | What of that? |
26358 | What shall I owe the obligation to you of procuring me such treasures, shall you make my fortune, and do you think I shall be failing in my return? 26358 What strange things,"said Houadir,"has Urad to ask of the Sultan Almurah?" |
26358 | What think you,said the Prince to the companions of his adventures,"of the story which has now been related? |
26358 | What use would it have been to you not to have brought it to me? |
26358 | What wonderful axe is this,said the Sultan,"that is thus preserved in the bowels of the earth?" |
26358 | What, then,answered I, sternly,"has induced you to deceive my Court?" |
26358 | What,answered the Sultan hastily,"were they? |
26358 | What,said Bennaskar from the closet,"what doth Hemjunah now say to my desires?" |
26358 | What,said I"Eloubrou, what dost thou say? |
26358 | What,said I,"my lord, is the cause of your grief? |
26358 | What,said Mussapulta, sternly,"dost thou refuse my proffered love? |
26358 | What,said Urad,"brings back Lahnar to the sorrows of this cottage?" |
26358 | Whence comes this noise? |
26358 | Whence cometh Mahoud? |
26358 | Whence, then, comes this monster of a melon? |
26358 | Whence,exclaimed he,"is the power of this hideous old woman? |
26358 | Where did that go? |
26358 | Where have you been lingering so long to- day? |
26358 | Where is Camul? |
26358 | Where,said Nouri,"O afflicted stranger, is the pious young man that dutifully bore the burden of age on his shoulders?" |
26358 | Where,said he to himself,"can the mighty find a trusty friend? |
26358 | Whither shall I go? |
26358 | Who are you, young man? |
26358 | Who are you? |
26358 | Who art thou,said Kifri, with the voice of thunder,"that fliest like the roebuck, and tremblest like the heart- stricken antelope?" |
26358 | Who art thou? |
26358 | Who is Camul? 26358 Who is this Abosaber?" |
26358 | Who would do that? 26358 Why blushes, Urad?" |
26358 | Why did the Governor of Dioul,resumed Nourgehan,"conceal from Diafer that Seidel- Beckir was the maker of that which he possessed?" |
26358 | Why have you concealed from me the state of your heart? |
26358 | Why have you concealed it from me, who loved you so dearly? |
26358 | Why should we so soon leave these enchanting scenes? |
26358 | Why should we,said he,"enter in uncertainty on either of those roads? |
26358 | Why so? |
26358 | Why was it,said he anxiously to himself,"that Haschanascha was to- day so mournful at parting? |
26358 | Why would you prolong the strife and contest? |
26358 | Why,said Urad,"didst thou bestow so many peppercorns upon me, as they now will become useless?" |
26358 | Why,said the proud Vizier,"do you delay to obey me?" |
26358 | Will you all believe,she called aloud to the spectators,"that I have done right in killing this snake, if I tell you what you will find within it?" |
26358 | Without thee,said he,"could I never have obtained the object of my desires? |
26358 | You come from Egypt,said the officer:"did you meet Prince Shaseliman?" |
26358 | You could work miracles, then? |
26358 | You have invited us here, and furnished your table most sumptuously; and are matters thus with you? 26358 You were in correspondence with the stars, then?" |
26358 | Young man,said he,"why is a man so rational as you appear to be, to be found among mad people?" |
26358 | ''How could you let your worthy parents continue ignorant of what had become of you?'' |
26358 | ''Need I inform you that the marriage follows the contract? |
26358 | ''O genius,''replied I,''how shall age and infirmity comply with thy commands?'' |
26358 | ''What have I done?'' |
26358 | After she had thus shown him several times, she cried out, laughing mischievously,"Well, hast thou not yet observed why thou failest? |
26358 | Against whom, O my brethren, is this array of battle? |
26358 | Am I to be sacrificed this night to my father''s policy? |
26358 | Am not I Bennaskar, the wealthy merchant of Delhi? |
26358 | Am not I also the creature of Allah? |
26358 | And Haschem repeated his question,"Do you feel strong enough?" |
26358 | And I answered,"May Mahoud be the friend of thy bosom?" |
26358 | And even if they had, how could I descend to the plain with such a beast, through the clefts in the rocks, from this height?" |
26358 | And if the life even of these is to be spared, how could you imagine that you might dispose of your husband''s according to your pleasure and caprice? |
26358 | And of what use have you been to me till to- day? |
26358 | And shall I open you only when I have lost all hope to attain my desire? |
26358 | And she turned to the King, and said,"My King and father, will you suffer yourself any longer to be deceived by these stupid and obstinate men? |
26358 | And the Prince said to him,"Where hast thou found those ancient coins they speak of?" |
26358 | And was I called forth to see only a passage made in the rocks, and the slaves of Horam as ill employed as their master lately has been? |
26358 | And what glory is there not, even in pardoning an offence? |
26358 | And what shall befall him that sweareth not unto you? |
26358 | And what should he set about in that small town till, on the third day after the new moon, he should find his sign- post? |
26358 | And who shall offend him who seeketh not to offend others?" |
26358 | And would he revenge himself on them if they attempted his life?" |
26358 | And, as Jussuf could not carry any more, he asked again,"Now hast thou not enough, at last?" |
26358 | And, even if it were so, what can such a tiresome serious person be to you? |
26358 | Are not these wise and sage magicians, then, a match for a boy''s prudence? |
26358 | Are you a beggar, and do you need any gift? |
26358 | Are you afraid that he will not accept the honour of our alliance?" |
26358 | Are you alone obliged to acknowledge Him?" |
26358 | Are you ill?" |
26358 | Are you strong enough to support the highest joy that your heart can conceive and feel?" |
26358 | Are you sure of yourself? |
26358 | Are you the daughter of Seidel- Beckir, or are you an enchantress yourself?" |
26358 | Are your courage and your zeal for the glory of the kingdom annihilated? |
26358 | Are, then, the riches of Delhi to be so easily resigned, and your tedious marches over the deserts to be foiled by a moment''s fear? |
26358 | Art thou gone so far as to play the hypocrite with thy old master?" |
26358 | Art thou the departed shade of my once- loved Hemjunah?" |
26358 | As he was preparing, he said,"The way up the rock and the oft- frequented path is dangerous; could I not get a travelling- staff to help me?" |
26358 | Be not foolish: hast thou lost thine understanding?" |
26358 | Believest thou that He has forgot to punish the fate of the learned Egyptian, whom thy avarice put to death, contrary to the most sacred oaths?" |
26358 | Besides, what is an earthly sovereignty, subjected to so much labour and exposed to so many dangers, compared to that which you enjoy? |
26358 | But Haschem laughed, and said,"Forgive my ignorance: what is Mundiana?" |
26358 | But Jussuf shook his head thoughtfully, and said,"What shall I do? |
26358 | But Nourgehan, at the entreaty of Damake, having commanded them to continue the conference, one of them demanded,"What is heavier than a mountain?" |
26358 | But can ambition ever be satisfied? |
26358 | But can man, who is bound to the service of Allah by an unalterable law, dispose of himself against the will of his Maker? |
26358 | But can robbers be sheltered in this land?" |
26358 | But he soon continued, with collected courage,"Yet of what use are all the goods of the earth to me? |
26358 | But how could she remove them? |
26358 | But if virtue, pursued by a superior force, is so often deserted, where are the resources of guilt? |
26358 | But in what manner can my slaves have subsisted whilst I have kept them enclosed there? |
26358 | But inform me, O ye sages, under the semblance of which of your brethren did that foul enchanter gain admittance here?" |
26358 | But of what use is this one which the beauteous Damake has presented to me?" |
26358 | But people wondered, and said,"Is not this the man who was called Rabbi Jochonan the Miser? |
26358 | But she answered,"What is there to be wondered at? |
26358 | But she laughed, and said,"Are you not already betrothed to Haschanascha? |
26358 | But speak, what is the cause of your sorrow and your tears?" |
26358 | But suppose ye that the conquerors will give up the treasures they hope to earn by their blood? |
26358 | But tell me, I pray, how is that beautiful animal I used to ride with so much pleasure?" |
26358 | But tell me-- how is it possible? |
26358 | But what could I do in my cage? |
26358 | But what have you done with your turban? |
26358 | But what is this dreadful trial that obliges Bennaskar to suspect his friend?" |
26358 | But what motives determined you to conceal your birth? |
26358 | But what naturalist could name it from this imperfect description, without having seen the butterfly?" |
26358 | But while the presumptive heir of the Persian throne was reduced to such a strange situation, how was Queen Chamsada employed? |
26358 | But why did the distrustful Urad despair, or why did she accuse Providence of deserting her? |
26358 | But why should I be surprised at her weakness, who am myself the object of their malice? |
26358 | But why should I doubt thee? |
26358 | But why should he order us to shun it? |
26358 | But, had I been only a common man, after speaking to you in so modest and friendly a manner, ought you to have threatened me with death?" |
26358 | But,"continued she,"why should I not examine the enchanter, who perhaps is yet immovable in the cottage? |
26358 | By what right do you pretend to it? |
26358 | Can I expect, therefore, that time should spare me? |
26358 | Can I not inform him that my life depends upon his? |
26358 | Can I think calmly upon the loss which the sorrowful Chamsada will suffer?" |
26358 | Can he call back the brave men he has caused to be destroyed, and give life and spirits and joy again to the widows and orphans of India? |
26358 | Can he who has refused silver and gold and diamonds be moved by a paltry bunch of rusty iron?" |
26358 | Can he, who is the tenderest, the best of friends, be also the vilest and most cruel of mankind? |
26358 | Can there be any happy talisman in love but the heart?" |
26358 | Can we believe that a man is immortal? |
26358 | Can you tell me why this street is so quiet, as though every inhabitant were dead?" |
26358 | Can you think of sacrificing your liberty?'' |
26358 | Canst thou be such a stranger in the country as to be ignorant of the prediction of the prophet and the astrologers? |
26358 | Come, will you give me your talisman? |
26358 | Come,"continued she, quickly changing to a quieter and more mischievous manner,"Dost thou see those figs hanging on the branch over the way? |
26358 | Consider how have your days been employed since I left you? |
26358 | Could one regain confidence who has not known how to deserve it by a sincere and timely confession? |
26358 | Could this only have been a shade of the dead one? |
26358 | Could you read upon my forehead a character which the justice of Heaven had effaced? |
26358 | Dakianos answered him,"Who will believe that I am so?" |
26358 | Dakianos being informed of it, sent for them into his presence, and said to them,"Do you adore another God beside me?" |
26358 | Dakianos, surprised with this discourse, answered,"How can it be as you say? |
26358 | Darest thou enter into my womens''apartment, wretch that thou art? |
26358 | Did you think I did not know it? |
26358 | Do I really see you at last?" |
26358 | Do you consider her as a creature like yourself? |
26358 | Do you fear nothing from your own indiscretion?" |
26358 | Do you know, then, what has become of this unfortunate Prince? |
26358 | Do you not recollect the fig that we ate together? |
26358 | Do you take me, then, for a strange outlandish animal, that you lead me about in a cage as a sight?" |
26358 | Do you think me wiser than others? |
26358 | Does fate, then, pursue this monarch even beyond the grave? |
26358 | Does it become thee to search into the secrets of Providence? |
26358 | Does not the law require that every accuser or deponent should have been a witness of the crime? |
26358 | Dost not thou remember, Horam, the story of Mahoud, the son of the jeweller? |
26358 | Dost thou hear? |
26358 | For the first time, as he lay quietly in bed, he asked himself this question:"What shall I do with thee?" |
26358 | For what crime have you been already condemned to lose an ear?" |
26358 | Furious against Casem( for who did not know Casem''s pantofles? |
26358 | Go under a roof-- sit to table with you to partake of meats prepared from the flesh of animals and the flour of wheat? |
26358 | Halechalbe,''continued she,''is very amiable; he undoubtedly loves you, and who would not? |
26358 | Has she shaken off her dependence on Mahomet, and indulged the unavailing sorrows of her heart?" |
26358 | Hast thou at last been able to spare an hour from thy business to pay a visit to the old Modibjah? |
26358 | Have you continued to watch the labours of the silk- worm? |
26358 | Have you ever played with her an hour so merrily as we have played the whole day? |
26358 | Have you repeated the lessons I gave you? |
26358 | Having set out from the city of Issessara, how could they come back so soon from Babylon? |
26358 | He afterwards turned himself towards Jemlikha, and said to him,"How can this house belong to you? |
26358 | He placed himself in the midst, and cried with great earnestness,"Who dares here to usurp Jussuf''s place? |
26358 | He saluted them all very politely, and said very affably to the old man,"This house, I believe, belongs to me; why do I find you here? |
26358 | He that disguises his countenance, how shall one put faith in his words?''" |
26358 | He therefore turned to him, and said,"Forgive me, sir, my curiosity, and tell me if you knew Jussuf''s servant who brought the box?" |
26358 | He would have rubbed the beautiful dust off my wings; and then, what would have become of my beauty? |
26358 | How are wasps and pomegranates generally produced in this world? |
26358 | How can I be the god of the earth?" |
26358 | How can I reconcile these inconsistencies? |
26358 | How can that be?" |
26358 | How could he discern if they were both equally so? |
26358 | How could he know which of the two he ought to spare? |
26358 | How could he strike two objects who were so dear to him? |
26358 | How could you make him known?" |
26358 | How did it acquire this extraordinary name?" |
26358 | How did you fall into the hands of the caravan?" |
26358 | How did you learn to break my charm in this manner? |
26358 | How have you existed? |
26358 | How is it possible that a cypress- tree should bear such beautiful blossoms?" |
26358 | How often did he reproach himself with not having carried it with him? |
26358 | How should he take vengeance on the guilty? |
26358 | How was it possible that lovely being should be betrayed into the powers of those wicked enchanters? |
26358 | How, then, did Urad keep to the instructions of Houadir?" |
26358 | How, then, do you know he is the right one?" |
26358 | How, then, shall we pay honour to Allah, if we neglect and desert the peculiar duties of that post wherein Allah hath placed us? |
26358 | How, young man, have you guessed the cause which made me travel from Egypt into Persia? |
26358 | How? |
26358 | I could explain to you all these mysteries; but to what purpose? |
26358 | I have never been an infidel; how can I then be a reprobate?" |
26358 | I was about to tell her of the pieces of glass, but she interrupted me with asking,''whence I got the censer which I held in my hand?'' |
26358 | If the decree which strikes me comes not from Heaven, what could all your attempts avail? |
26358 | If the exterior of the building delighted him, how much more was he pleased with its interior? |
26358 | Is King Balavan, your Sovereign, still alive?" |
26358 | Is it not true that you have given it me?" |
26358 | Is it our own blood that must be poured forth over these lands to enrich them for a stranger''s benefit? |
26358 | Is it possible that you live? |
26358 | Is it to abuse me that thou feignest this distraction? |
26358 | Is it worth while to make such a fuss about a miserable fragment of stone?" |
26358 | Is no one here who could bring me a refreshing drink?" |
26358 | Is not Haschanascha the magic word which has led me here alone, away from all men who understand my language and share my anxieties?" |
26358 | Is not mine at your disposal?" |
26358 | Is not that the name of her whom I was to call in the ruins of the destroyed capital? |
26358 | Is not the mind of man free? |
26358 | Is she gone to seek her disobedient daughter over the burning lake?" |
26358 | Is there any that could destroy an attested fact? |
26358 | Is there no way to build up the seat of justice and mercy but in murder and fratricide? |
26358 | Is this like the rest of your promises? |
26358 | Is this the way to greet your frolicking playmate? |
26358 | It rejoices my very heart to see you come home sound and well again; but what is it you want with the water- jug?" |
26358 | Jalaladdeen took it, and intimated his readiness to undertake the mission, at the same time asking,"What is my duty?" |
26358 | Jemlikha, ashamed of speaking to him so inadvertently, quitted him, saying within himself,"Most high Allah, have you deprived me of reason?" |
26358 | Jussuf remained irresolute, and looked after her; then she stopped her pace, and called back to him,"Art thou transformed into a statue? |
26358 | Knowest thou not that the Sultan Misnar suffered with you because he despaired? |
26358 | Leaping also nearer to Jussuf, it sang in a higher but equally buzzing tone:"Mark me well: oh, what can be Direful wasps but plagues to thee? |
26358 | Leave me, Mahoud, leave me; nay, if thou departest, where shall I find thy fellow? |
26358 | May I not be permitted to pass the night here?" |
26358 | Men slander him; but the moon rises in heaven, and who will then believe that there is darkness?''" |
26358 | Modibjah also here?" |
26358 | Must I live in a country to whose language and manners I am a stranger? |
26358 | My trouble will be lost; yet what do I risk by awaking this young man, and inquiring concerning the person of whom I am in search? |
26358 | Nevertheless, he was tormented by a new uneasiness: the presence of his son recalled to him his brother--"What is become of him?" |
26358 | Now for the proof: what word will your lips breathe on this talisman?" |
26358 | O Allah, wherefore hast Thou made the weakest the most subject to deceit?" |
26358 | Of what avail is it that these walls are built of precious stones? |
26358 | Of what chapter in my book do you wish to understand the text or the explanation?" |
26358 | On his entry he was met by a man, who took his lance from him and said,"Hast thou done thy duty?" |
26358 | Or can you tell me how it is that grass comes up and grows out of a grain of seed? |
26358 | Or shall I basely betray that love which is proffered me, and embitter fair Noradin''s future cup of life? |
26358 | Perhaps it is beginning to decay, or is it not good for anything? |
26358 | Perhaps you think I am too dear? |
26358 | Say, then, what course shall Misnar pursue that may secure him on the throne of the mighty Dabulcombar?" |
26358 | Say, then, what doth the peace and security of my throne require from me concerning my brother Ahubal, the issue of the mighty Dabulcombar?" |
26358 | Sensible am I that the dangers of my pilgrimage are great; but what resource have I left? |
26358 | Shall I allow myself to be bound for life by the speaking of a hoary imam? |
26358 | Shall I not call her if the spark in Modibjah''s talisman no longer shines? |
26358 | Shall I reap at length the fruit of my anxiety and labours? |
26358 | Shall I, to the end of my days, remain in her trammels? |
26358 | Shall not Mahoud share alike with you the smiles and the frowns of Allah?" |
26358 | She approached him, patted his cheek with her left hand, and holding out the talisman with her right, said smiling,"Does it belong to me? |
26358 | She looked at him with a scornful laugh, and said,"I? |
26358 | Should an unfortunate and suppliant King be treated with so much rigour? |
26358 | Should not the younger be as servant to the first- born of his father, and are not all the Princes the vassals of the Sultans of the East? |
26358 | Since you are able to render yourself invisible, why can not you enter the Sultan''s palace unseen, and stab him to the heart?" |
26358 | So surprised and astonished was he, that he seized the bow, drew an arrow from the quiver, and asked,"What is my duty? |
26358 | Surely,"continued the Sultan,"this our companion, whom you called Princess, can not be the daughter of Zebenezer, the Sultan of Cassimir?" |
26358 | Tell me all, and hide nothing from me; and first let me know frankly who you are?" |
26358 | The King said to him,"Thou seemest to have sense; thy countenance is agreeable, and thy manner composed: how can thy speech be so unreasonable? |
26358 | The King then said,"Who are you? |
26358 | The Princess? |
26358 | The baker answered him with the most eager curiosity,"Where hast thou found this money?" |
26358 | The black negress? |
26358 | The man whom you threaten with death alone escaped from perishing in the waves, and must I this day be the witness of his death? |
26358 | Then Keschetiouch said to them,"How have you found the way to a place where I never yet saw any mortal? |
26358 | Then said he to himself,"What hope can I now have of attaining the end of my wishes? |
26358 | Then she stopped, and asked,"Is this the reason of your earnestness? |
26358 | Then she turned to the high priest, and asked,"Has your god shown you no sign by which you may know the man that ought to be sacrificed?" |
26358 | Then the dervish got up, and turned round on one foot angrily, and exclaimed,"Thou shameful man, art thou insatiable? |
26358 | Then the maiden approached him with ceaseless laughter, and said,"What has happened to thee, friend Jussuf? |
26358 | Then the priests answered,"Do the people doubt of our god? |
26358 | There they seated themselves, and Jussuf asked,"Why am I imprisoned? |
26358 | These words embarrassed me, and, not daring to answer otherwise, I said,"Why doth my lord doubt the sincerity of my heart?" |
26358 | Thinks he that my daughter is obliged to share his unsteady attachment? |
26358 | Thou wert, then, pleased with it?" |
26358 | To whom had I given my goods? |
26358 | To whom, then, can I fly, but to the Prophet of the Faithful? |
26358 | Upon this, one of the young men, who appeared to be the host, said,"Why do you not drink?" |
26358 | Was it for thee, base coward, that Ollomand poured forth his unnumbered stores? |
26358 | Was it worth while to wake me up about that?" |
26358 | Was there one among you all who supported innocence?" |
26358 | What ails you, my son? |
26358 | What binds you to her? |
26358 | What can I tell thee more?" |
26358 | What can be concealed in it? |
26358 | What can make thee imagine that I have found a treasure?" |
26358 | What can you mean? |
26358 | What canst thou reproach me with?" |
26358 | What connection can it have with my bright and waggish playmate, who is only fit to be a daughter of the genii?" |
26358 | What do you, then, mean?" |
26358 | What enemy dost thou mean? |
26358 | What hath made the change?" |
26358 | What have you done with them? |
26358 | What help would a whole army of the most faithful and the boldest companions be to me? |
26358 | What is become of them?" |
26358 | What is snow but water? |
26358 | What is the reason that I am held up in this scandalous manner as a show, and shut up in a cage like a wild beast?" |
26358 | What is the reason that we are summoned from the recesses of the temple, and must even bring the divine snake in its chest with us?" |
26358 | What is this tree? |
26358 | What may all this mean? |
26358 | What must I say? |
26358 | What new device has Misnar practised against them? |
26358 | What secret grief consumes you? |
26358 | What shall I do?" |
26358 | What shall I say? |
26358 | What succours could he find in so barren a desert as that with which it was surrounded? |
26358 | What thoughts are now passing through your head?" |
26358 | What wants there more? |
26358 | What worse can happen than my marriage with a stranger?" |
26358 | What would my master say if I took anything from a poor devil like you? |
26358 | What, then, is he who wantons in the death of those who advantage him not? |
26358 | What, then, is the pride of man but deceit, and the glories of the earth but shadows? |
26358 | What, then, must you think of those mean wretches who cajole you under the appearance of affection, and yet tell you that it was only to try you? |
26358 | When he had said some words to her, she asked Jussuf,"My King and foster- father asks who taught you the name Haschanascha?" |
26358 | When shall I see you as my tutelary genius?" |
26358 | When she had finished her song, she bowed before Jussuf in a mocking mood, and said,"How does that please you, Jussuf? |
26358 | Whence have you drawn those numerous maxims and judicious reflections which can only be the fruit of experience and study?" |
26358 | Where are my slaves? |
26358 | Where are the guards of the seraglio?" |
26358 | Where could I find duties so pleasant to fulfil?" |
26358 | Where could I find him?" |
26358 | Where is Ahubal, of whom the dark saying went forth, that none but our race could overpower him? |
26358 | Where is Picksag, the chief of my eunuchs? |
26358 | Where is my kingdom? |
26358 | Where is my royal father Zebenezer, and the fond Chederazade, the mother of my heart?" |
26358 | Where is the impostor? |
26358 | Where is the impostor? |
26358 | Where, then, is the much- honoured Chederazade? |
26358 | Whither can I fly for comfort? |
26358 | Whither shall guilt flee when Heaven pursues it?--when the Divine vengeance arises from the earth to strike?" |
26358 | Who are you who can promise this?" |
26358 | Who are you?" |
26358 | Who art thou, bold man, that durst stand before the Princess of Cassimir? |
26358 | Who art thou, woman, that speakest to me thus?" |
26358 | Who bid you destroy the cage?" |
26358 | Who could inform you of it? |
26358 | Who dare say aught against my fame? |
26358 | Who dares here to pass for Jussuf''s wife? |
26358 | Who hath reduced you to the distressed situation in which I see you?" |
26358 | Who is the person in that litter, and whither are you conducting it?" |
26358 | Who is the woman you have given him for a wife?" |
26358 | Who knows but we may sleep to- morrow night in this pavilion which now causes uneasiness?" |
26358 | Who knows how many brothers may be dwelling here together? |
26358 | Who knows what is hidden in it?" |
26358 | Who would ask such a thing? |
26358 | Who would make such a commotion about a merry game? |
26358 | Whoever, like Damake, joined such merit to so much beauty? |
26358 | Why are they not veiled deeply over the eyes? |
26358 | Why can she fear that I should ever allow Modibjah''s talisman to get into a stranger''s hands when I always wear it?" |
26358 | Why court they destruction in gazing upon his beauty? |
26358 | Why dost thou gaze upon thy turban with such anxious attention? |
26358 | Why dost thou not sing my little song when thou throwest up the garland? |
26358 | Why have you wrought none?" |
26358 | Why should not my Lord Jussuf have a wife? |
26358 | Will he love thee better than the apple of his eye?''" |
26358 | Will you give nine hundred ducats for me?" |
26358 | Wilt thou not return to the town, and unload thyself of thy treasures?" |
26358 | Without the accident of the serpent, of which any other man would have made the same use, what would have become of him? |
26358 | Would it be indiscreet in us, should we beg of you to give us some account of your history?" |
26358 | Would your god know its enemies if there were any such here? |
26358 | Yet, notwithstanding this, what am I in the eyes of an animal whom God protects? |
26358 | You say the enchanter brings his hateful son with him: why, then, have I never seen him?" |
26358 | Your subjects are devoted to your interest, and where would he find any who would be foolish enough to cherish ambitious designs against you?" |
26358 | and am I brought here to be again deceived?" |
26358 | and am I to carry it in a simple wicker basket?" |
26358 | and canst thou go forth and combat the enchantments of Tasnar, the enemy of thy master''s peace?" |
26358 | and even if I succeed in reaching it, how shall I discover the wonder- stone?" |
26358 | and in the midst of conquest and acclamation, who regardeth the tears and afflictions of those who have lost their friends in the public service?" |
26358 | and is Tasnar, the foe of the Faithful, dead?" |
26358 | and the third,"What is swifter than an arrow?" |
26358 | and what axe doth he bear in his hand? |
26358 | and what business have you to do in it?" |
26358 | and what mysterious place is this?" |
26358 | and where are my accusers? |
26358 | and where is it to be found?" |
26358 | and whose blood seek ye to spill on the plains which our forefathers have cultivated? |
26358 | and why not rather be thyself a sufferer than make an innocent virgin the subject of thy cruelties? |
26358 | and yet shall I go upwards? |
26358 | answered I,"shall I trust to a stranger, whom I know not, and fly from my father''s Court? |
26358 | answered Misnar,"has the rebel army been foraging so near Delhi?" |
26358 | answered the beautiful maiden,"art thou the vile Bennaskar, or the still more vile Mahoud? |
26358 | answered the old woman,"and for what?" |
26358 | are you disconsolate?" |
26358 | asked Jussuf,"does the merchant Jussuf still live?" |
26358 | asked she, jestingly:"if there be one such black creature more or less in the world, what consequence is it to you? |
26358 | can he be alive after the dreadful news that are spread here concerning him?" |
26358 | canst thou not run? |
26358 | cried Jussuf,"shall I be offered to a snake-- to a stupid, superstitious fancy?" |
26358 | cried Jussuf,"your lord already arrived? |
26358 | cried he, at last awaking from his astonishment,"are you indeed she? |
26358 | cried he,"weak worms, what have you presumed to do? |
26358 | cried he:"is it so indeed? |
26358 | cried she, returning his turban,"do you carry such things about with you? |
26358 | darest thou blaspheme a God who has let thee live, notwithstanding the crimes that thou hast been guilty of? |
26358 | dear uncle,"said she,"what sentiments will ever replace those whose sweetness I here experience? |
26358 | do you acknowledge him for your ancestor?" |
26358 | do you not distinguish in these characters the finger of God, and the inspiration of the angel Gabriel? |
26358 | exclaimed Jalaladdeen, bitterly;"why should I thus exhaust my strength? |
26358 | exclaimed Jalaladdeen;"wast thou that hideous old woman? |
26358 | exclaimed the slave,"am I so happy as to hear Shaseliman mentioned? |
26358 | exclaimed the young Halechalbe,"can I retain any resentment against the person who is dearer to me than life? |
26358 | hast thou suffered thyself to be deceived, and to be made an advocate of the imposition? |
26358 | he cried,"what have you done?" |
26358 | how can I direct my steps to Egypt? |
26358 | is it befitting for thee, so young as thou art, to stand there like an old idler? |
26358 | is it possible that the Sultan of India and the Prince of Georgia should be one and the same?" |
26358 | is it you? |
26358 | is not this a snake?" |
26358 | is not this street lonely enough, that you can not hold your discourse aloud? |
26358 | is this thy gratitude for my favour? |
26358 | knowest thou where thou hast been brought?" |
26358 | must I be for ever banished?" |
26358 | my good nurse, what explanation can I expect? |
26358 | or are you sent as a spy to betray the counsels of the brave?" |
26358 | or can the worm of the earth, the property of Heaven, set up itself against the hand that formed it? |
26358 | or has the time of Urad been consumed in idleness and disobedience? |
26358 | or how is it that a fig- tree can spring up from each little seed of the fig? |
26358 | or was it she herself? |
26358 | or what slave will be faithful to that master who has robbed him of his liberty? |
26358 | rejoined the maiden;"where did it go? |
26358 | replied the Prince in anger;"what caution should I observe with my slave? |
26358 | said Ahubal, trembling:"by what misfortune am I bereaved of them? |
26358 | said Bennaskar, as we met,"how can I request my friend to wear the image of deformity?" |
26358 | said Eloubrou,"who shall tell the dismal tale to thy tender heart?" |
26358 | said I,"is my beloved mother no more? |
26358 | said I,"what service hast thou performed? |
26358 | said Jalaladdeen to himself:"can they possibly have camels in this unfrequented place? |
26358 | said Jalaladdeen to himself:"what shall I do with such an unclean animal? |
26358 | said Jalaladdeen,"am I to enter that gloomy hole?" |
26358 | said Misnar, transported, and yet at the same time recoiling with surprise,"is my faithful Horam also the unfortunate partner of my griefs?" |
26358 | said Smaragdine,"and for what purpose have you come into my states?" |
26358 | said Smaragdine,"and wherefore hast thou come into our states?". |
26358 | said Urad to herself,"what will become of thee, inclosed in a forest through which thou knowest no path? |
26358 | said Urad,"why has Houadir deceived me? |
26358 | said a third,"do you wish us to take up the office of host in order to come to the same end at which you have arrived?" |
26358 | said he to him,"dost thou not know Bohetzad? |
26358 | said he to him,"how canst thou bear my sight, thou most ungrateful of mankind?" |
26358 | said he to them,"what torments ought I not to make you suffer when you shall fall into my hands? |
26358 | said he, in perfect astonishment;"would not any one believe that all those things were only a delusion of the mind? |
26358 | said he,"Semà ¦ num? |
26358 | said he,"can not a fortnight''s pleasure in this palace efface the remembrance of your sorrows? |
26358 | said his friend;"do we not all know to what a termagant you are united? |
26358 | said my father,''you are returned from Balsora? |
26358 | said she in emotion,"what is it I behold? |
26358 | said she to him,"what answer did you make to the King when he asked you who this young man was?" |
26358 | said she;"art thou afraid of the water?" |
26358 | said the King to him,"is it thus you acknowledge my favours and your obligations? |
26358 | said the Princess,"I am now convinced of thy perfidy, allowing thine own account to be true; for what promise could bind thee to a cruel action? |
26358 | said the Sultan to himself,"shall I, for the gratification of my passion, give up the glories of my father''s kingdom, and the viceregency of Mahomet? |
26358 | said the Sultan, as he saw his Vizier enter with the female slave,"what new kind of warrior has Horam brought me?" |
26358 | said the Sultan, astonished at his words;"whom hast thou slain, O wicked fakeer, that thine own fears should turn evidence against thee?" |
26358 | said the Sultan, enraged,"hast thou brought me through the dangerous passes of the mountains by night only to cut a rope asunder? |
26358 | said the Sultan, starting from his knees,"do I behold the unfortunate Princess of Cassimir?" |
26358 | said the beautiful Urad,"what is this that I hear?" |
26358 | said the young Sultan Misnar,"what do thy base suspicious fears advise? |
26358 | said this barbarous King to him,"can patience then bring a man from the bottom of a well to a throne? |
26358 | says he,"what do you here?" |
26358 | says the old reprobate,"have I got you at last into my hands? |
26358 | sent no messenger?" |
26358 | shall I not fetch water from the depth, whence commonly springs and streams flow? |
26358 | should not the relieved wait with patience on the hand that supports him, and not cry out with impatience, and charge its benefactor with neglect?" |
26358 | that the plains of India were dyed with the blood of Desra, the mistress of our race?" |
26358 | that this cage is of gold, and hangs on a golden chain? |
26358 | that this lattice is of fine gold? |
26358 | the other,"What is more cutting than a sabre?" |
26358 | venerable old man,"returned Jemlikha,"how can I tell you of my adventure? |
26358 | was this pretended treasure nothing but a slave?" |
26358 | what can_ I_ effect against them, when these fall away before his victorious arm?" |
26358 | what do you come to seek at a Court where you can find nothing but death? |
26358 | what hast thou said? |
26358 | what were four hundred guards and twenty mutes to the army that opposed us? |
26358 | when one has so long wandered from truth, is it possible to return? |
26358 | where art thou? |
26358 | where is Mount Massis? |
26358 | where is the Princess of Cassimir, and the man who revealed thy unrighteous actions?" |
26358 | where my army? |
26358 | where my royalty? |
26358 | where the dear parent of my life?" |
26358 | whispered she to the youth,"will you not buy me?" |
26358 | who art thou?" |
26358 | who is to relieve our distresses but Allah?" |
26358 | would he say,"how were you so little intimidated by the death which threatened you as to recollect all the circumstances you related? |
26358 | you have asked me reasonable and sensible questions, you have understood my answers, and can you imagine that you are asleep?" |
26358 | you want to pay passage- money? |
48171 | Then,saith his wife,"how can it be like me?" |
48171 | (_ CHILD continues to cry_) Keep quiet, ca n''t you? |
48171 | (_ PUNCH fetches his club, and gives JOEY three cracks on the head; repeats_) Lift, will you? |
48171 | (_ aloud_) Did you kill my father out of love of me, and are you sorry? |
48171 | (_ beats him out of his concealment with his club_) Did you not rob the Manhattan Bank? |
48171 | (_ collecting courage_) I hope you and all your respectable family well? |
48171 | (_ exit, and re- enters with a broomstick, belabors the DUTCHMAN all over, says_) You get out of this bed, will you? |
48171 | (_ exit, and returns with a broomstick, belaboring SCHMIDT all over head and body, says_) Pay me that money, will you? |
48171 | (_ hitting him each time_) Do you like that music better than the other? |
48171 | (_ hitting him there_) How do you like that, and that, and that? |
48171 | (_ she falls down, with her head over the platform of the stage; and as he continues to hit at her she puts up her hand to guard her head_) Any more? |
48171 | (_ striking him with it_) What you say it is now? |
48171 | (_ turns to FREDDY_) Now, Freddy, what were you doing over the bridge last night? |
48171 | A black Justice to hold Court? |
48171 | A gentleman? |
48171 | A glazier? |
48171 | Ah, what do you call nothing? |
48171 | An organ? |
48171 | An''t she a beauty? |
48171 | And are you really sorry? |
48171 | And did you see her? |
48171 | And was it that? |
48171 | And who sent for you? |
48171 | And, massa, what will you do with him now? |
48171 | Are any of them in Court? |
48171 | Are you going to get out of here? |
48171 | Are you not Brown? |
48171 | Are you not a liar and a villain? |
48171 | Are you not a liar? |
48171 | Are you not a swindler? |
48171 | Are you ready to bury the hatchet? |
48171 | Are you the proprietor? |
48171 | Arrah, I say, is that ship come in yet? |
48171 | At six o''clock? |
48171 | Brown or Smith, did you not decoy Adelina from her father''s arms? |
48171 | But supposing that he were to dig down through the earth? |
48171 | But what are those black clouds I see? |
48171 | But when I got my present, what do you think that was? |
48171 | But, Willie, Willie, what did you run away for? |
48171 | Ca n''t you see? |
48171 | Call that a fiddle? |
48171 | Can you spell milk? |
48171 | Come, young man, are you fast asleep? |
48171 | Cruel wretch, why did you kill my father? |
48171 | Crying because you''ve lost your mother- in- law? |
48171 | Did I say you were not? |
48171 | Did you not rob the National Bank? |
48171 | Did you not run away with my child? |
48171 | Did you not run away with the Squire''s daughter? |
48171 | Did you not send for me to get a divorce from your wife? |
48171 | Did you not swindle me of a hundred dollars? |
48171 | Diworce from my vife? |
48171 | Do n''t feel very well? |
48171 | Do n''t you know me? |
48171 | Do n''t you know me? |
48171 | Do n''t you see that''ere? |
48171 | Do you call music a noise? |
48171 | Do you call this a bell? |
48171 | Do you know that Joe went down- town and knocked down an old woman near sixty years old? |
48171 | Do you know they all say I''ve grown so tall lately? |
48171 | Do you pretend to say that you were born twenty years ago? |
48171 | Do you then really love me? |
48171 | Do you think she''s a- coming this way? |
48171 | Does the fox ever have a ten- dollar note? |
48171 | Five dollars? |
48171 | Four and four? |
48171 | Four dollars for that bed? |
48171 | Golly, golly, Mr. Punch, what are you doing? |
48171 | Have you seen a steamship come along? |
48171 | He do n''t, do n''t he? |
48171 | He in bed yet? |
48171 | Here, then? |
48171 | Here? |
48171 | Here? |
48171 | Hi, now, vot is all dis trouble about? |
48171 | Hollo, Mr. Punch, what is all this noise about? |
48171 | How could you kill him? |
48171 | How dare you insult? |
48171 | How did that happen? |
48171 | How do you like my kisses? |
48171 | How do you like that? |
48171 | How do, Mr. Scaramouch? |
48171 | How do, my good friend, your master, Mr. Toby? |
48171 | How is your aunty? |
48171 | How much? |
48171 | How old a man are you? |
48171 | How should I know? |
48171 | How you do, sir? |
48171 | How-- in bad deeds? |
48171 | How? |
48171 | I mean, what trade was he? |
48171 | I say, Mr. Valentine? |
48171 | I say, old boy, how do you feel? |
48171 | I say, you there, what are you doing ringing dat bell all this time for? |
48171 | I say-- are you going to lift? |
48171 | I''m de colored man from de South; and what do you want, I say? |
48171 | If it''s a fiddle, why do n''t you play a tune? |
48171 | Is any one in there? |
48171 | Is it here? |
48171 | Is it large? |
48171 | Is not your name Brown? |
48171 | Is that anything good to eat? |
48171 | Is that so? |
48171 | Is that what it spells? |
48171 | Is this my bedroom? |
48171 | Judy answers,"Oh, Mr. Punch, you want the baby, do you? |
48171 | Judy, my dear, ca n''t you answer, my dear? |
48171 | Just as they whisper,"Be my own,"Should some one overhear them, Can mortal be more spiteful? |
48171 | Just like who? |
48171 | Landlady, have you got von leetle bit onion tat ish notinks, un tat you will give to me mitout any charges? |
48171 | Lift, will you? |
48171 | Lor, sure, where was my head? |
48171 | Make_ me_ a present, sir?--what? |
48171 | Me asleep? |
48171 | Me marry you viv that''ere nose? |
48171 | Me pay four dollars for that bed, and have no sleep on it all dis night? |
48171 | Mine ax? |
48171 | Mr. Punch, have you heard the news? |
48171 | Mr. Scaramouch, what have you there? |
48171 | Now, Freddy, supposing that a man were to dig down deep into the earth, what would he come to? |
48171 | Now, Joey and Freddy, do you see that trunk? |
48171 | Now, Joey, what was your father? |
48171 | Now, Teddy, have you fixed it up nice for the gentleman? |
48171 | Now, sir,(_ beats him_) are you not a rascal? |
48171 | Oh, Mr. Punch, what have you done? |
48171 | Oh, vot is o''stealing o''er me? |
48171 | One place to sleep? |
48171 | Out in the rain and caught cold? |
48171 | Prisoner, is that your only defence? |
48171 | Prisoner, what have you got to say to the charge? |
48171 | Prisoner, what have you to say in mitigation of the sentence of the Court, pertaining to this heinous, serious charge? |
48171 | Prisoners wear diamond rings? |
48171 | Punch one another''s heads after the spill of a quartet of beef? |
48171 | Quite dead? |
48171 | Retainer? |
48171 | Roast what? |
48171 | Said he to me,''Adelina, supposing I was to offer you a present, would you accept one?'' |
48171 | She has? |
48171 | Since you can talk, will you please tell me your names? |
48171 | So, then? |
48171 | Surely you do n''t call that a tune? |
48171 | Ten and ten? |
48171 | That bed? |
48171 | That''s the way you killed my poor dog, is it? |
48171 | The baby? |
48171 | The matter? |
48171 | Then how was it, Mr. Valentine, that he did not make a gentleman of you? |
48171 | Then is your handsome leg broken? |
48171 | Think you Heaven has made you pretty But to break your lover''s heart? |
48171 | Through there? |
48171 | Twice eight? |
48171 | Twice eleven? |
48171 | Two lovers wandering in a wood-- What can be more delightful? |
48171 | Vant fifty dollars? |
48171 | Vell, vot is de matter now? |
48171 | Vell, what of that? |
48171 | Vot do yer call that? |
48171 | Vot for? |
48171 | Vot matter now? |
48171 | Vot now-- von you another ghost? |
48171 | Vot vilst du haben vor tat? |
48171 | Vot you ask for un bed? |
48171 | Vot''s that you are saying? |
48171 | Vot, have you not heard the news? |
48171 | Vot, me run away from you? |
48171 | Vy, Paddy, vot great event is on now? |
48171 | Was my face the dirtiest place you could find to spit in? |
48171 | Was that so? |
48171 | Was you there? |
48171 | Well how did you spell it, then? |
48171 | Well, Joey, how do you feel? |
48171 | Well, my Julia, what can I do for you? |
48171 | Well, my little boys, can you talk? |
48171 | Well, on comes his wife, and says:"Did it kiss you back, my dear?" |
48171 | Well, well; what is it you want now? |
48171 | Well, what are we to do with him now? |
48171 | Well, what are you going to sing? |
48171 | Well, what did you do? |
48171 | Well, what do you want, Mr. Punch? |
48171 | Well, what is there inside that box? |
48171 | Well, what of that? |
48171 | Were you hungry-- were you hard up? |
48171 | What appears to be the matter with you? |
48171 | What bell? |
48171 | What brings you this way? |
48171 | What children''s party is brought to a perfect state of merriment unless with the greetings and comicalities of Mr. Punch? |
48171 | What do two and two make? |
48171 | What do you call a likewise? |
48171 | What do you think it is? |
48171 | What do you want, I say? |
48171 | What do you want, now I''m come? |
48171 | What do you wish? |
48171 | What does my wife put in my tea in the morning? |
48171 | What for, pray? |
48171 | What for? |
48171 | What for? |
48171 | What good is the rain? |
48171 | What happened then? |
48171 | What have I done with it? |
48171 | What have you done with it? |
48171 | What have you done with the child, I say? |
48171 | What have you to say? |
48171 | What is that for? |
48171 | What is that? |
48171 | What is the charge? |
48171 | What is the charge? |
48171 | What is the matter now? |
48171 | What is the matter, Mr. Punch? |
48171 | What is the next charge? |
48171 | What is the next charge? |
48171 | What is this grave charge all about? |
48171 | What might your name be, sir? |
48171 | What news? |
48171 | What news? |
48171 | What noise? |
48171 | What that for, I wonder? |
48171 | What was that you were saying? |
48171 | What would you say were you to see one now? |
48171 | What you at? |
48171 | What you want with yat black face through dat window? |
48171 | What''ll ye have, Mr. John Smith? |
48171 | What''s that to you? |
48171 | What, did n''t I pay her? |
48171 | What, so? |
48171 | What, you old black nigger, come at last? |
48171 | What? |
48171 | Where are the officers? |
48171 | Where are you coming to?_"The Ship and Steamer collide together; voices are again heard--"_We are sinking! |
48171 | Where are you hurt? |
48171 | Where is it? |
48171 | Where is my father? |
48171 | Where is the baby? |
48171 | Where''s the child? |
48171 | Whether it has arisen from an absence of that vanity( may we call it?) |
48171 | Who are you calling black? |
48171 | Who are you? |
48171 | Who is that calling the doctor? |
48171 | Who keeps this hotel? |
48171 | Who killed my poor father? |
48171 | Who rang dat bell? |
48171 | Why did you kill Mrs. Punch? |
48171 | Why do n''t they mark the numbers plain, so that a fellow can read them? |
48171 | Why do n''t you lift? |
48171 | Why, where is the bed? |
48171 | Why, who the devil are you? |
48171 | Will you have another? |
48171 | Willie, what did you run away from me for? |
48171 | With all on board? |
48171 | Yes, yes, it is true, and Bella''s to be at the wedding, too; but what, Mr. Punch, have you done with my dog? |
48171 | Yes; and pray, Mr. Valentine, what was your father? |
48171 | You an uproar singer? |
48171 | You are a pretty good speller, are you not, Joey? |
48171 | You are not? |
48171 | You do n''t care? |
48171 | You got out of bed the wrong way upwards? |
48171 | You got the headache? |
48171 | You here, Mike? |
48171 | Your dog? |
48171 | Your fee? |
48171 | [_ Exit._ MRS. B. Teddy, have you brought the pillow? |
48171 | _ Enter PRETTY POLL._"How do you do? |
48171 | golly, golly, Mr. Punch, what are you about? |
48171 | no, is it? |
48171 | was it sleepy then? |
48171 | you cross this morning? |
48171 | you old blind blackguard, ca n''t you see? |
48171 | you wo n''t, wo n''t you? |
48171 | you''ll drop my poor baby out at window again, will you? |
48171 | you''re in earnest, are you? |
21084 | ''Fraid on account of the dog? |
21084 | ''I have the honor of addressing the celebrated Rebel spy, Miss McGillup?'' |
21084 | ''Paul,''he asked,''are those your witnesses?'' 21084 ''Rastus,"she said severely,"do you think it''s right to leave your wife hard at work over the washtub while you pass your time fishing?" |
21084 | A bishop, eh? |
21084 | A s''pose ye''ve a deal o''prescribin''tae dae fer coolds an''sair throats? |
21084 | Aaron? |
21084 | Ah, zese Americans,exclaimed a Frenchman,"where have zey not been?" |
21084 | Ai n''t this just like hell? |
21084 | Air ye aimin''to tell me the Lord died to save me, when He ai n''t never seed me, ner knowed me? |
21084 | All right, then, how much does a six- pound shell weigh? |
21084 | An''what dae ye gin''rally gie fer a sair throat? |
21084 | An''what is that, sir? |
21084 | And I suppose you were once a slave? |
21084 | And candy, too, mamma? |
21084 | And did he finally remember it? |
21084 | And did you post it? |
21084 | And do you remember me, my little man? |
21084 | And do you suppose he will remember me? |
21084 | And do you think you can do it? |
21084 | And fresh beef is good for black eyes, is it not? |
21084 | And have you any former military police? |
21084 | And have you washed your face thoroughly? |
21084 | And how do you like being married? |
21084 | And how is Thomas making out with reading his Bible? |
21084 | And is it like me? |
21084 | And is it so? |
21084 | And it was written to you all the whole way through, every word of it, except----"Except what? |
21084 | And lots of fun? |
21084 | And own two and a half million dollars''worth of property? |
21084 | And the bridegroom, how did he appear? |
21084 | And was your house nicely decorated? |
21084 | And were you particular to wash behind your ears? |
21084 | And what are you doing, Clara? |
21084 | And what are you going to do this time? |
21084 | And what did he say, dear? |
21084 | And what did the couple do then? |
21084 | And what did you do? |
21084 | And what happened? |
21084 | And what is the baby''s name? |
21084 | And what was it? |
21084 | And why do they boil engines? |
21084 | And why not? 21084 And why not?" |
21084 | And you foretold that from his hand? |
21084 | And you''ll write me long, long letters? |
21084 | And your mother was named Bridget and your father Michael? |
21084 | And yourself, Martha, how did you look? |
21084 | Any turkeys? |
21084 | Are you lost? |
21084 | Are you not afraid that someone will marry you for your money? |
21084 | Are you sure that''s all it''s worth? |
21084 | Are you the plumber? |
21084 | Aye, an''did I ring you up in June? |
21084 | Been in the trade long? |
21084 | But how does it jump as high as the Woolworth Building? |
21084 | But how does the squirrel manage to reach the bottom? |
21084 | But how ever did you come to do it? |
21084 | But how''ll I get down? |
21084 | But is n''t he frightened to? |
21084 | But why do you ask? 21084 But why do you order a bulldog?" |
21084 | But, Sandy, mon,he protested,"Ye''re nae goin''yet, with the evenin''just started?" |
21084 | But,said mother,"you do n''t want to be a dirty boy, do you? |
21084 | But,the darky protested,"ai n''t you scairt fer fear you''ll ketch one?" |
21084 | But,_ señor_, what shall we do with the other two days? |
21084 | By my mother, Ella? 21084 By the way, darling, how many men did your regiment muster?" |
21084 | Can you do general housework? |
21084 | Can you do plain cooking? |
21084 | Can you sew? |
21084 | Collision? |
21084 | Colonel dear,he inquired in a wheedling voice,"would ye be after pardonin''me for a brief remark jist at this toime?" |
21084 | Come over there? |
21084 | Could you-- do you think you could ever marry a man like me? |
21084 | Daddy, how can you? |
21084 | De bridegroom? 21084 Dear John,"the widow questioned eagerly,"are you happy now?" |
21084 | Did I hit you? |
21084 | Did he explain the reason why he would not let you go? |
21084 | Did it hum? |
21084 | Did it rain? |
21084 | Did ye ivir meet my bruther Dennis? |
21084 | Did you come from Miss Bings? |
21084 | Did you go to the cemetery for the burying? |
21084 | Did you have a good time? |
21084 | Did you hear that old man Jones''s house burned down last night? |
21084 | Did you promise to marry this lady? |
21084 | Did you receive handsome presents? |
21084 | Did you think it would go through? |
21084 | Did your late employer give you a testimonial, Jack? |
21084 | Did your mother try to stop you marrying me? |
21084 | Do n''t you furnish him for the two dollars? |
21084 | Do n''t you suppose I know? |
21084 | Do n''t you want Jenny to be a good wife like you when she grows up? |
21084 | Do you drink, gamble, smoke, or have you any vices of any kind? |
21084 | Do you know our program? |
21084 | Do you know who I am? |
21084 | Do you know, Mary,he asked impressively,"what I would have done if I had been in Napoleon''s place?" |
21084 | Do you know,she questioned severely,"what happens to little boys who tell falsehoods?" |
21084 | Do you put in equal sums? |
21084 | Eh, mon,replied Sandy,"d''ye see yon field of corn?" |
21084 | Er-- have you kissed the bride? |
21084 | Ever made any mistakes? |
21084 | Fo''ty dollahs? |
21084 | For why did yez not kitch me? |
21084 | Had an accident, I suppose? |
21084 | Happier than you were on earth with me? |
21084 | Has he? |
21084 | Has you- all ever seen two dogs fightin''over a bone? |
21084 | Has your husband got a job? |
21084 | Have gooseberries any legs, muvver? |
21084 | Have n''t you anybody to play with? |
21084 | Have you any bad habits? |
21084 | Have you any glue? |
21084 | Have you been taking something? |
21084 | Have you had some good luck? |
21084 | Have you stolen any geese? |
21084 | Have you washed your hands very carefully? |
21084 | How did you ever come to get such an idea? |
21084 | How do they catch lunatics? |
21084 | How do you like your new little brother? |
21084 | How do you make that out? |
21084 | How does John get along with his reading of the Bible? |
21084 | How does that happen? |
21084 | How long you been there? |
21084 | How many different mistresses have you had, all told? |
21084 | How much did the supper cost you? |
21084 | How much does a six- pound shell weigh? |
21084 | How much is it, uncle? |
21084 | How much is that? |
21084 | How much will you give me for this overcoat? |
21084 | How near were you to the scene of the affair? |
21084 | How old are you now? |
21084 | How so? |
21084 | How soon can you cut my hair? |
21084 | How was that fire in your place last week, Jakey? |
21084 | I say, what''s his destination? 21084 I suppose,"he remarked to a native onlooker,"that even in these isolated parts the bare necessities of life have risen tremendously in price?" |
21084 | I was pounding it with father''s watch? |
21084 | I''m going to have a little sister some day, ai n''t I? |
21084 | I''m £ 60 short am I? 21084 If David was the father of Solomon, and Joab was the son of Zeruiah, what relation was Zeruiah to Joab?" |
21084 | If you knew it,his honor demanded sarcastically,"why did you marry him?" |
21084 | In what way? |
21084 | In_ your_ favor, Sir? 21084 Insulted by whom?" |
21084 | Is Mr. Jones in? |
21084 | Is he a good provider, Alice? |
21084 | Is it serious? |
21084 | Is it the going down? |
21084 | Is that all, my daughter? |
21084 | Is that me? |
21084 | Is that old file a poet? |
21084 | Is that the law? |
21084 | Is what, my boy? |
21084 | It ai n''t swearin''to say it, is it Gramma? |
21084 | It is n''t? 21084 Jim,"the exhorter questioned sadly at last,"ai n''t you teched by the story of the Lord what died to save yer soul?" |
21084 | Leroy, should James have said wunst? |
21084 | Light or dark? |
21084 | Madam,he asked,"are you shopping here?" |
21084 | Maggie,she inquired serenely,"what did you do with the bacon we poisoned for the rats?" |
21084 | Make the beds, wash the dishes? |
21084 | Mr. O''Toole,the lawyer asked,"did you come from Castlebar, County Mayo?" |
21084 | My horses and motor- cars are worth seventy- five thousand dollars? |
21084 | Na, Na? |
21084 | No, I''m going about to see if I''ve overlooked anybody? 21084 Nor_ Huck Finn_?" |
21084 | Nor_ Puddin''head Wilson_? |
21084 | Now, how did that happen? |
21084 | Of course I am,was the laughing response;"have n''t I got a quack?" |
21084 | Of doctors? |
21084 | Of what church? |
21084 | Off the track? |
21084 | Oh, do tell me, John,the widow cried rapturously,"what is it like in heaven?" |
21084 | Oh, oh, tell me,he gasped,"what is it-- a boy or a girl?" |
21084 | On me own time? |
21084 | Pay you fo''what, boss? |
21084 | Pictish? |
21084 | Plank? 21084 Please, Jedge,"interrupted Mrs. Rastus from the rear of the court room,"will yo''Honah jes''split dat sentence? |
21084 | Please, sir, will you tell us what sort of a bug this is? |
21084 | Really? 21084 Remember you? |
21084 | Say, ma,he objected,"do I look as if I had been playing with anybody?" |
21084 | See? |
21084 | Self- starter? |
21084 | Shall I heat it? |
21084 | Shall I throw the leetle dog a bit, mum? |
21084 | Suh? |
21084 | Sure and did n''t I see the mayor? 21084 That my diamonds are insured to the value of a quarter of a million dollars?" |
21084 | That so? |
21084 | The flood? |
21084 | Then what is it makes you so tired, sonny? |
21084 | Then why did n''t you go out and stop them? |
21084 | Then why did n''t you marry him? |
21084 | Then why did you leave her? |
21084 | Then why in thunder do n''t you sell it? |
21084 | This place boasts of a choral society, does n''t it? |
21084 | Thought a great deal of him? 21084 To drink?" |
21084 | To whom? |
21084 | Trousers are what? |
21084 | Vell, it ai n''t fair I should pay all dot, is it? 21084 Vell?" |
21084 | Victory, is ut? |
21084 | Was he mad? |
21084 | Was it your husband? |
21084 | Was n''t it his deal? |
21084 | Well, Bill? |
21084 | Well, Mr. Simson,he said,"how did you like that little book I gave you the other day?" |
21084 | Well, dear,she said,"what languages did you decide to take?" |
21084 | Well, good heavens, what do you want to live another fifty years for? |
21084 | Well, if I dinna gie my auld mither anything, what sort of chance d''ye think you''ve got? |
21084 | Well, what are you sneering about? 21084 Well, what do you think of it, father?" |
21084 | Well, what time does the twelve o''clock train leave? |
21084 | Well, why wo n''t you, then? |
21084 | Well,cried the woman in puzzled exasperation,"what can you do?" |
21084 | Well,the one asked,"did you finally remember what that string was to remind you of?" |
21084 | Well? |
21084 | Whar you- all been de las''foh days? |
21084 | What about her father? 21084 What about the saucer?" |
21084 | What about, little man? |
21084 | What accident was that? |
21084 | What am I to do with this? |
21084 | What are you doing to that poor cat? 21084 What are you doing with them?" |
21084 | What can it be? |
21084 | What caused you to stop quarreling, Lucy? |
21084 | What d''ye think I opened it with? |
21084 | What day of the week is it, Matilda? |
21084 | What did she say? |
21084 | What did the Lord say? |
21084 | What do we find in the spring, George? |
21084 | What do ye mean? |
21084 | What do you deal in? |
21084 | What do you mean by joint account? |
21084 | What do you mean, poem? |
21084 | What do you mean? |
21084 | What does he do? |
21084 | What does it say, then? |
21084 | What else should I be doing? |
21084 | What flowers are not popular? |
21084 | What for? 21084 What in the world is the matter with her?" |
21084 | What is it, dear? |
21084 | What is it, popper? |
21084 | What is it? |
21084 | What is it? |
21084 | What is it? |
21084 | What is that to you? |
21084 | What is to prevent it? |
21084 | What is your fee? |
21084 | What is your specialty? |
21084 | What jail is your son in? |
21084 | What kind of a bird is it, mamma? |
21084 | What kind of a car do you own? |
21084 | What makes you so tired, sonny? 21084 What name?" |
21084 | What of it? |
21084 | What raised your suspicions? |
21084 | What size, madam? |
21084 | What sort of a plant is the Virginia creeper? |
21084 | What way is that? |
21084 | What''s his name? |
21084 | What''s that thing? |
21084 | What''s that ye hev there? |
21084 | What''s the big idea? |
21084 | What''s the matter now? |
21084 | What''s the matter? |
21084 | What''s this goat''s destination, Uncle? |
21084 | What''s up? |
21084 | What,she wanted to know,"will the poor whales do now?" |
21084 | What-- do you like the stuff? |
21084 | What-- who? |
21084 | What? 21084 What?" |
21084 | What? |
21084 | What? |
21084 | Whatever are you trying to do with your doll, Mary? |
21084 | Whatever can we talk about? |
21084 | Whazzamazzer? |
21084 | When is you gwine to git married, missy? |
21084 | When this hand of mine heals, will I be able to play the piano? |
21084 | When you knock,the butler explained,"and he asks,''Who''s there?'' |
21084 | Where am I going to? |
21084 | Where did I learn it? |
21084 | Where did you come from? |
21084 | Where did you first meet this woman who has thus abused you? |
21084 | Where did you get on? |
21084 | Where is my chicken? |
21084 | Where is the bridegroom? |
21084 | Where is your money? |
21084 | Whereabouts shot? |
21084 | Which is he, a bachelor or a widower? |
21084 | Which one,the boy persisted,"Faith or Hope?" |
21084 | Whit d''ye think o''it? |
21084 | Who did this? |
21084 | Who made the world? |
21084 | Who''s Wordsworth? |
21084 | Who''s wantin''me? |
21084 | Why Pictish? |
21084 | Why did n''t yez waken me? 21084 Why did n''t you use the other end of the fork,"he demanded,"and just beat him off, without killing him?" |
21084 | Why do n''t you offer me the whole wig? |
21084 | Why do n''t you speak the English language? |
21084 | Why do you say so? |
21084 | Why does she keep such a number of them then? |
21084 | Why interrupt me-- isn''t my wife at home? |
21084 | Why should they punish you so severely for a little thing like that? 21084 Why should you be so kind to me?" |
21084 | Why were n''t you at church this morning? |
21084 | Why, Sarah,said her mistress,"what made you get white gloves?" |
21084 | Why, ai n''t I shaved? |
21084 | Why, dear, do you want one? |
21084 | Why, what''s the matter, little lamb? |
21084 | Why? |
21084 | Why? |
21084 | Will I be likely to see him to- day? |
21084 | Will that be all? |
21084 | Will yez kitch me? |
21084 | Will you advertise if I can convince you that folks read the ads.? |
21084 | With the accent on the''bi''? |
21084 | Wo n''t you give me something to keep it in? |
21084 | Wo n''t you send your children? |
21084 | Wot was the last card Oi dealt ye, Moike? |
21084 | Would n''t you like to look at some nice thimbles? |
21084 | Ye wo n''t git mad an''put me in the guard house for freein''me mind, so to spake? |
21084 | Ye would n''t, eh? |
21084 | Yes; was n''t it unladylike of her? |
21084 | Yes? |
21084 | Yes? |
21084 | Yo''say how much? 21084 You are going about paying your little debts?" |
21084 | You have only to say''Wilt thou?'' 21084 You know that I have a quarter of a million dollars in cash in my name at the bank?" |
21084 | You say that you heard both shots fired? |
21084 | You thought a great deal of him, I suppose? |
21084 | You understand, no doubt, that when he dies all of his vast fortune will be left to me? |
21084 | You wo n''t? |
21084 | You''ll be back in the morning, I suppose? |
21084 | You''re doin''yer bit, too, ai n''t yer? |
21084 | You''ve no doubt of my character, have you? |
21084 | Your head? |
21084 | Zat so? 21084 (_ long pause_) and what did your husband say when he engaged you? |
21084 | *** A BAD CASE"Rather absent- minded, is n''t he?" |
21084 | *** A CHANCE LOST"Who was the originator of the idea that a husband and wife are one?" |
21084 | *** A DREADFUL POSSIBILITY_ Elsie:_"When is my birthday, Mother?" |
21084 | *** A GOOD MATCH_ Proprietor:_"What made that customer walk out? |
21084 | *** A LOVERS''QUARREL_ George:_"Why do n''t Jack and Laura make up?" |
21084 | *** A NOBLE AIM_ She:_"Have you heard anything about the woman''s Reform Club?" |
21084 | *** A QUESTION OF LOCALITY"Bobby,"said the lady in the tramcar, severely,"why do n''t you get up and give your seat to your father? |
21084 | *** A SOOTHING EFFECT"Do you miss your husband as much as when he first went away?" |
21084 | *** A young lady who was inspecting bicycles, said to the clerk:"What''s the name of this wheel?" |
21084 | *** ANSWERED_ She:_"And what would you be now if it were n''t for my money?" |
21084 | *** ART AND NATURE_ Husband:_"What was that you were playing, my dear?" |
21084 | *** As the boat was sinking, the skipper lifted his voice to ask:"Does anybody know how to pray?" |
21084 | *** BAD BOTH WAYS_ Dobb:_"What''s that piece of cord tied around your finger for?" |
21084 | *** BLOOD RELATIONS_ Actor:_"Are these poor relations of yours blood relations?" |
21084 | *** BOTTLED COURAGE"Is this stuff guaranteed to make a rabbit slap a bulldog in the face?" |
21084 | *** Customer:"But if it costs twenty dollars to make these watches, and you sell them for twenty dollars, where does your profit come in?" |
21084 | *** GETTING BACK_ Customer to Palmist:_"Five dollars fee? |
21084 | *** GOOD OR BAD TURN? |
21084 | *** HE WAS WRONG_ Prison Visitor:_"Am I right in presuming that it was your passion for strong drink that brought you here?" |
21084 | *** HER MATCH_ Tommy:_"What''s an echo, pa?" |
21084 | *** HOW HE DID IT_ First Theatrical Manager:_"Do you have any trouble with the girl who is playing the flapper in your new show?" |
21084 | *** JUSTIFICATION_ Wife:_"_ Two_ bottles of ginger ale, dear?" |
21084 | *** LIFE''S DIFFICULTIES_ Mother:_"Why, what''s the matter, darling?" |
21084 | *** NOT NEEDED_ O''Grady:_"And why do you want to sell your nightshirt?" |
21084 | *** NOT UNIQUE_ He:_"Crowded, were you? |
21084 | *** NOT UP- TO- DATE_ Penelope:_"What made George and Alice break their engagement?" |
21084 | *** OLD ENOUGH TO KNOW THAT"Are all flowers popular?" |
21084 | *** OPENING FATHER''S EYES"Papa,"said Little Horatio,"can you explain philosophy to me?" |
21084 | *** QUALIFIED_ The Leading Woman:_"How does Garrette rank as an actor?" |
21084 | *** Questioning a class, an inspector asked:"If you were to say to me,''You was here yesterday,''would that be right?" |
21084 | *** READY AND WILLING_ Magistrate:_"Ca n''t this case be settled out of court?" |
21084 | *** READY TO JOIN_ Minister:_ Would you care to join us in the new missionary movement? |
21084 | *** SURE SIGNS"Afraid you''re going to have insomnia? |
21084 | *** SYMPATHY_ Freddie_(_ aged six_):"Mother, you know that lovely purse you gave me for my birfday?" |
21084 | *** TALKING SENSE"Darling,"he asked, as he drew his fiancée closer to him,"am I the first man you have ever kissed?" |
21084 | *** TEACHING THE YOUNG IDEA Little Willie looked up from the paper he had been reading, and inquired of his father:***"Dad, who was Mozart?" |
21084 | *** THE CONSUMER INFLAMED"Ever get any nice butter?" |
21084 | *** THE FLOOR HELD"Did your watch stop when it dropped on the floor?" |
21084 | *** THE REAL JOB"What''s this new conference they''re going to have in America?" |
21084 | *** THEY WILT"Which weeds are the easiest to kill?" |
21084 | *** TOO ENTHUSIASTIC_ Wifey:_"Henry, do you think me an angel?" |
21084 | *** TOO ONE- SIDED"What is the use of quarreling, my dear girl? |
21084 | *** TROUBLES OF THE NEW- POOR"George, will you go and speak to cook? |
21084 | *** The teacher put a question to the class:"What does a cat have that no other animal has?" |
21084 | *** WEDDING DECLARED OFF_ John Willie_(_ pleadingly_):"Why ca n''t we be married right away, Elsie?" |
21084 | *** WHAT DID HE MEAN? |
21084 | *** WHAT HE PREFERRED"And did you say you preferred charges against this man?" |
21084 | *** WHY, INDEED_ The Husband:_"Why is it that women always say,''I''ll be ready in two seconds''?" |
21084 | *** When his daughter returned from the girls''college, the farmer regarded her critically, and then demanded:"Ai n''t you a lot fatter than you was?" |
21084 | ***"And about the salary?" |
21084 | ***"And are you a good needlewoman and renovator, and willing to be useful?" |
21084 | ***"And would you love me as much if father lost all his money?" |
21084 | ***"Are you sure this handbag is genuine crocodile skin?" |
21084 | ***"But why do n''t you think he will propose soon?" |
21084 | ***"Can I''ave the arternoon off to see a bloke abaht a job fer my missis?" |
21084 | ***"Can you play bridge to- night?" |
21084 | ***"Do you know anything about palmistry, Herbert?" |
21084 | ***"Do you really believe in heredity?" |
21084 | ***"Do you think I shall live until I''m ninety, doctor?" |
21084 | ***"Does God make lions, Mother?" |
21084 | ***"Ethel,"said the bishop,"you seem to be a bright little girl; can you repeat a verse from the Bible?" |
21084 | ***"Excuse me, officer, but have you seen any pickpockets about here with a handkerchief marked''Susan''?" |
21084 | ***"Goin''in that house over there?" |
21084 | ***"How did you find your steak?" |
21084 | ***"How do countries come to go to war?" |
21084 | ***"I say, dear old bean, will you lend me your motor- bike?" |
21084 | ***"I suppose your landlord asks a lot for the rent of this place?" |
21084 | ***"If a man has a beautiful stenographer, do you suppose that will cause him to take more interest in his business?" |
21084 | ***"Is she making a rich marriage?" |
21084 | ***"James, have you whispered to- day without permission?" |
21084 | ***"Mary,"said the mistress,"did you ask every one for cards to- day, as I told you, when they called?" |
21084 | ***"My dear, you''re not going to the links to- day?" |
21084 | ***"Pa, what''s an actor?" |
21084 | ***"Phwat''s the matter wid yez, Regan? |
21084 | ***"Shall I leave the hall light burning, ma''am?" |
21084 | ***"Some wise person once said that silence was golden, did he not?" |
21084 | ***"Tell me, does your husband snore?" |
21084 | ***"That you, dearie? |
21084 | ***"Well, Mollie, how do you like your new teacher?" |
21084 | ***"What are you doing, Marjory?" |
21084 | ***"What sort of an appearing man is he?" |
21084 | ***"What''s the matter with Smith? |
21084 | ***"What''s the matter, little boy?" |
21084 | ***"Why are they not speaking?" |
21084 | ***"Why did you take Meyerbeer off the dinner card?" |
21084 | ***"Why do you object to children in your apartment house?" |
21084 | ***"Why is it you never get to the office on time in the morning?" |
21084 | ***"Wot''s a minimum wage, Albert?" |
21084 | ***"Would you marry a man to reform him?" |
21084 | ***"You discharged your office boy?" |
21084 | ***"You do n''t mean to say it cost you$ 7000 to have your family tree looked up?" |
21084 | ***"You say you doted on your last mistress?" |
21084 | ***_ Applicant for Situation:_"And''ow long did yer last cook oblige yer?" |
21084 | ***_ Betty:_"Mummy, does God send us our food?" |
21084 | ***_ Boss:_ What do you mean by such language? |
21084 | ***_ Breathless Visitor:_ Doctor, can you help me? |
21084 | ***_ Dad_(_ sternly_): Where were you last night? |
21084 | ***_ Employer_(_ inspecting a very inflated bill for work_):"Look here-- how did you get at this amount?" |
21084 | ***_ Employer_(_ rebuking employee for slackness_): Have you any idea of the meaning of"Esprit de Corps"? |
21084 | ***_ Farmer:_"Would you like to buy a jug of cider?" |
21084 | ***_ First Little Girl:_ What''s your last name, Annie? |
21084 | ***_ First Sailor_(_ searching vainly for his ship after a few hours''leave_):"But she was''ere when we went ashore, was n''t she?" |
21084 | ***_ Foreman:_"''Ow is it that little feller always carries two planks to your one?" |
21084 | ***_ Governess:_"Well, Mollie, what are little girls made of?" |
21084 | ***_ He:_"By the bye, talking of old times, do you remember that occasion when I made such an awful ass of myself?" |
21084 | ***_ Hostess_(_ to small guest, who is casting lingering glances at the cakes_):"I do n''t think you can eat any more of those cakes, can you, John?" |
21084 | ***_ Interviewer:_"What sort of girls make the best show- girls?" |
21084 | ***_ Jones_(_ who is of an inquiring mind_):"Ai n''t you getting_ tired_ of hearing people say,''That is the beautiful Miss Belsize!''?" |
21084 | ***_ Lady:_ Well, what do you want? |
21084 | ***_ Lady:_"If you please, Cook, may we have steak and onions for lunch to- day?" |
21084 | ***_ Lady_(_ in box_):"Can you look over my shoulders?" |
21084 | ***_ Lady_(_ to applicant for situation as cook_):"Have you been accustomed to have a kitchen- maid under you?" |
21084 | ***_ Lady_(_ to box office manager_): Can you tell me what they are playing to- morrow night? |
21084 | ***_ Madge:_"Have you given Jack your final answer yet?" |
21084 | ***_ Master:_"But why do you want to get married, Jones?" |
21084 | ***_ Mistress:_"Oh, Jane, how_ did_ you break that vase?" |
21084 | ***_ Mother:_"Did you remember to pray for everybody, dear?" |
21084 | ***_ Mother:_"Oh, Mary, why_ do_ you wipe your mouth with the back of your hand?" |
21084 | ***_ Mother:_"Well, dear, has Jack kissed you under the mistletoe?" |
21084 | ***_ Mother_(_ to child who has been naughty_):"Are n''t you rather ashamed of yourself?" |
21084 | ***_ Mother_(_ to little girl who had been sent to the hen- house for eggs_):"Well, dear, were there no eggs?" |
21084 | ***_ Motor- Launch Officer_(_ who has rung for full- speed without result_):"What''s the matter?" |
21084 | ***_ New Butler:_"At what time, Sir, would you wish to dine as a rule?" |
21084 | ***_ Office Boy_(_ anxious to go to football match_):"May I have the afternoon off, Sir? |
21084 | ***_ Officer_(_ drilling recruits_): Hey, you, in case of fire, what do you do? |
21084 | ***_ Old Gentleman_(_ to new gardener_):"Why do you always pull your barrow instead of pushing it?" |
21084 | ***_ Old Lady_(_ interrogating her chauffeur''s small boy_):"Well, my little man, and do you know who I am?" |
21084 | ***_ Papa:_"Why did you permit young Gaybird to kiss you in the parlor last night?" |
21084 | ***_ Playful Hostess:_"Could n''t you manage one more_ éclair?_"_ Serious Little Boy:_"No, fanks, I''ve no more room." |
21084 | ***_ Podger_(_ to new acquaintance_):"I wonder if that fat old girl is really trying to flirt with me?" |
21084 | ***_ Professor_(_ endeavoring to impress on class the definition of cynic_): Young man, what would you call a man who pretends to know everything? |
21084 | ***_ Prospective Employer:_ I suppose you have some experience of live stock? |
21084 | ***_ Pupil:_"What I want to know is, am I a bass or a baritone?" |
21084 | ***_ She:_"What do you mean by kissing me? |
21084 | ***_ She_(_ tenderly_):"And are mine the only lips you have kissed?" |
21084 | ***_ Small Boy_(_ toying with dull blanc- mange_):"Please may I have an ice instead of finishing this--''cos I feel sick?" |
21084 | ***_ Small Bridesmaid_(_ loudly, in middle of ceremony_):"Mummie, are we all getting married?" |
21084 | ***_ Small Girl:_"I wonder how old Joan is?" |
21084 | ***_ Specialist_(_ to patient suffering from insomnia_):"And did you try my plan of counting sheep coming through a gate?" |
21084 | ***_ Steward:_ Can I do anything for you, sir? |
21084 | ***_ Sunday School Teacher:_ Now, Alfred, if you are always kind and polite to your playmates, what will be the result? |
21084 | ***_ Sympathetic Lady:_ What''s the matter with your hand, my little man? |
21084 | ***_ The Escort:_ Who''s that fellow who seems to know you? |
21084 | ***_ The Reporter:_"I beg pardon, but would you be kind enough to tell me what blow you will knock Fitzmuggins out with to- morrow night?" |
21084 | ***_ Tourist:_"Have you any cold meat?" |
21084 | ***_ Tramp:_"Would you please''elp a pore man whose wife is out o''work?" |
21084 | ***_ Vicar''s Wife:_"What are you children doing in daddy''s study?" |
21084 | ***_ Wife:_"George, is that you?" |
21084 | ***_ Wife_(_ at upper window_):"Where you bin this hour of the night?" |
21084 | ***_ Wife_(_ referring to guest_):"He''s a most attractive man; is he married?" |
21084 | ***_ Young Woman_(_ holding out hand_): Will you please tell me how to pronounce the name of the stone in this ring? |
21084 | A companion called to him sharply:"You''re not going to shoot the bird while it''s walking?" |
21084 | A friend twitted him with his failure:"Did n''t you shoot anything at all?" |
21084 | A neighbor who chanced along inquired:"How''s that new hand o''your''n?" |
21084 | A parishioner meeting the parson in the street inquired:"When do you expect to see Deacon Jones again?" |
21084 | APPEARANCE The cross- eyed man at the ball bowed with courtly grace, and said:"May I have the pleasure of this dance?" |
21084 | Accordingly, just before the end of the service, he announced:"Will those who wish to be married to- day please come forward?" |
21084 | An''a man says to me,''Why do n''t you jine de Baptis''? |
21084 | An''what yoh t''ink de ole scallywog done did? |
21084 | An''whit micht the like o''they cost?" |
21084 | And John, dear----""Yes; what is it?" |
21084 | And are all them little basins mine, too?" |
21084 | And how did you enjoy your visit to the South?" |
21084 | And strange, miss, ai n''t it, I do n''t see no change in''em since I was a child like?" |
21084 | And the very young clergyman inquired interestedly:"And is it your youngest?" |
21084 | And we''ll have our honeymoon on the top floor of some tall hotel, wo n''t we?" |
21084 | And what did the mayor say to me? |
21084 | Are you perfectly certain that you love me?" |
21084 | Are you really a mind- reader?" |
21084 | Are you the manager here or am I? |
21084 | As he raised himself into a sitting position, a fellow workman asked solicitously:"Are yez kilt intoirly, Mike?" |
21084 | As he took it, he said with shaking voice:"Where''s the nearest hospital, mum, please?" |
21084 | As the expiration of his term grew near, he wrote from the penitentiary to his lawyer, with the plaintive query:"Will it be safe for me to come out?" |
21084 | As the father of such musical geniuses, you must be something yourself, are n''t you?" |
21084 | BATTLE_ Teacher:_"In which of his battles was King Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden slain?" |
21084 | BIGAMY What is the penalty for bigamy? |
21084 | Be flesh of your flesh, and you a- living on cabbage? |
21084 | Be ye allus thet much trouble to yerself?" |
21084 | But as he came close, a voice rang out sharply:"Why in hell did you play that card?" |
21084 | But did I ivir tell ye about my uncle at Ballycluna?" |
21084 | But do you ask questions about how the fire came to start?" |
21084 | But do you remember when our water pipes were frozen last winter?" |
21084 | But may I stroke them?" |
21084 | But presently someone asked:"And you-- what became of you?" |
21084 | But what''s that to me?" |
21084 | But who told you?" |
21084 | But why did you think I should look tired?" |
21084 | But, of course, I know we can not afford----_ Hubby_(_ resignedly_): When have they promised to deliver it? |
21084 | But, tell me, which are the parts that have given you trouble? |
21084 | By the way, what are_ you_ going to buy him?" |
21084 | By the way, what is the price of the catalogue?" |
21084 | CHARITY"Oh, mamma,"questioned the child,"who''s that?" |
21084 | COMPLIMENTS"Would you like a lock of my hair?" |
21084 | Ca n''t I let her have yours?" |
21084 | Can you not give me one ray of hope before I leave you forever?" |
21084 | Could you swear to the man?" |
21084 | D''you mind taking a cheque for the tip?" |
21084 | DIPLOMACY"Now, let me see,"the impecunious man demanded as he buttonholed an acquaintance,"do I owe you anything?" |
21084 | DOMESTIC QUARRELS After a trip abroad, a lady inquired of her colored washerwoman:"Lucy, do you and your husband quarrel now the same as you used to?" |
21084 | DRESS"Oh, have you heard? |
21084 | Did he catch you?" |
21084 | Did he really say he would pay in January?" |
21084 | Did you buy a ticket for me?" |
21084 | Did you find it so amusing?" |
21084 | Did you offend him?" |
21084 | Do you feel very bad, dear?" |
21084 | Do you know where little boys and girls go to who do n''t put their pennies in the collection box?" |
21084 | Do you think you can sell me a pound or so without asking how I got ornamented?" |
21084 | Does n''t it pain you to see him reaching for the strap?" |
21084 | During a pause, one of the party turned to a little girl who had sat listening intently, and asked:"Do you believe that dreams come true?" |
21084 | During an examination in general history, he was asked:"Who was the first man?" |
21084 | Er-- would you have any objection to waiting until I get some of the money you say is coming to me?" |
21084 | Est- ce que vous pouvez me montrer le route à la train?" |
21084 | Finally one of them shouted a commonplace remark and then said in an ordinary tone to the other:"Did you ever see such an ugly nose?" |
21084 | Finally, she climbed to the trap door in the roof, pushed it open, and cried:"John Henry, are you out there?" |
21084 | Finally, the engineer leaned from the cab window and shouted:"You dum fool, why do nt ye git offen the track?" |
21084 | Finally, turning to a negro chap, he said:"How about you, George, are you married?" |
21084 | Fixing the man with his eye, the admiral asked:"Did you get that medal for eating, my man?" |
21084 | For example, the kindly old lady in the elevator questioned the attendant brightly:"Do n''t you get awful tired, sonny?" |
21084 | Goodsole:_"Well, what do you want?" |
21084 | Got lumbago or spinal curvature or something?" |
21084 | HEREAFTER This is the dialogue between a little girl and a little boy:"What are you bawling about, Jimmie?" |
21084 | HUMILITY The slow suitor asked:"Elizabeth, would you like to have a puppy?" |
21084 | Had n''t you better put something on your chest?" |
21084 | Has anybody taken you down to supper?" |
21084 | Have you been fighting again, Johnnie? |
21084 | Have you forgotten that this is the anniversary of our wedding- day?" |
21084 | Have you looked in the cellar?" |
21084 | He addressed one of the students:"Now, Mr. Snead, what would you do in such a case?" |
21084 | He appealed to the conductor:"Ca n''t you go any faster than this?" |
21084 | He consented, in response to much urging, to offer a conundrum:"What is the difference between me and a turkey?" |
21084 | He did not find his wife about, and so called downstairs to the cook:"Bridget, do you know anything of my wife''s whereabouts?" |
21084 | He did so; and, offering the bread, said humbly:"You''ll take yer loaf, wo n''t yer, mum?" |
21084 | He was rewarded by a stony glance and the icy question:"Can you recommend the Belva?" |
21084 | He was scrupulous in his obedience, but at last he approached her timidly, and said:"Please, mother, may I sit on my pants?" |
21084 | Hoo''s beez- ness wi''ye the noo?" |
21084 | How about the Zoo next Sunday, eh?" |
21084 | How can you expect old fogies like they are to know anything about_ love_?" |
21084 | How ever do you manage to find names for them all?" |
21084 | I wo n''t have any man kissing me unless he means business, d''ye hear?" |
21084 | I wonder where it''s gone to?" |
21084 | I wonder who he is?" |
21084 | I''m getting tired of hearing people say,''Is_ that_ the beautiful Miss Belsize?''" |
21084 | I''m sure you''re very glad of it, are n''t you?" |
21084 | If fore gallins of bere will fill thirty to pint bottles, how many pint and half bottles will nine gallins fill? |
21084 | In a fleeting moment of internal calm she murmured pathetically to the bridegroom in whose arms she was clasped:"Oh, Jimmy, Jimmy, do you love me?" |
21084 | In consequence, he called down to the drenched fisherman:"Caught anything?" |
21084 | Is it anything like the fox trot? |
21084 | Is it the going up?'' |
21084 | Is it turkoise or turkwoise? |
21084 | Is there no chance of their becoming reconciled?" |
21084 | It read:"What is Jenkins going to do about it?" |
21084 | It was disappearing in the distance when the wife inquired slyly:"Well, pa, what do you think of it now?" |
21084 | Jones?" |
21084 | Jones?" |
21084 | LEGERDEMAIN"What did you do last night?" |
21084 | LENT"Did you give up anything during Lent?" |
21084 | LISP The kindergarten teacher questioned her tiny pupil:"Do you know, Jennie, what a panther is?" |
21084 | Looking at the hippopotamus, he said:"Ma, ai n''t that the ugliest damn thing you ever saw?" |
21084 | MISCELLANY It is related concerning a sofa, belonging to a man blessed(?) |
21084 | MONOGAMY The wives of the savage chief questioned the wife of the missionary:"And you never let your husband beat you?" |
21084 | Mitcham:_"How did you do that, my dear?" |
21084 | Much surprised at his discovery, and looking rather shocked, he said,"Is n''t she rather young for that sort of thing?" |
21084 | Never heard of_ Tom Sawyer_?" |
21084 | Newlywed:_"What does that inscription mean on that ring you gave me, Archie?" |
21084 | Now, dear, can you say all that?" |
21084 | Now, he burst forth:"I guess he could n''t knock any brains out of you, could he, pa?" |
21084 | Now, the young man shouted:"You''re a little deaf, ai n''t you?" |
21084 | Now, what on earth is an octogenarian anyhow?" |
21084 | Now, whatever did you want to pat yourself on the back for?" |
21084 | O''Rafferty, why do n''t you keep ducks?''" |
21084 | O''Toole?" |
21084 | OPTICAL ILLUSION The sergeant rebuked the private angrily:"Jenkins, why have n''t you shaved this morning?" |
21084 | On the man replying"No, sir,"the admiral rapped out:"Then why the deuce do you wear it on your stomach?" |
21084 | One asked:"Nigger, how much do they set you back for dem clo''s?" |
21084 | One question was:"Did you ever taste any dog- feast stew?" |
21084 | PHONETICS Little Willie questioned his grandmother with an appearance of great seriousness:"Ai n''t Rotterdam the name of a city, Gramma?" |
21084 | PROOF_ Shopper:_--"Are these eggs fresh?" |
21084 | PUNS"What is your name?" |
21084 | Presently, she remarked to the keeper:"Is n''t that a very small piece of meat to give to the lions?" |
21084 | Profiteer:_"Is this a pedigree dog?" |
21084 | Quickrich?" |
21084 | Sarah drew herself up and said in tones of dignity,"Do n''t you s''pose I wants dem niggahs to see dat I''se got on gloves?" |
21084 | See that pretty woman by the window? |
21084 | She accepted his apology, however, and then remarked:"Where are your sideboards?" |
21084 | She gave him no thanks as she seated herself, but she spoke in a heavy voice that filled the whole car:"What are you standing up there for? |
21084 | She inquired of her husband solicitously:"George, shall I have the steward bring some dinner to you here?" |
21084 | She regarded him reprovingly, as she demanded:"My man, where did you learn such awful language?" |
21084 | She says,''Are you so hungry you want to saw some wood for a dinner?'' |
21084 | So soon after burying your wife?" |
21084 | So the retort of Lamb, when Coleridge said to him:"Charles, did you ever hear me lecture?". |
21084 | So, now, Clinton, I ask you, as man to man, what be your intentions?" |
21084 | So, one day, the mistress inquired:"When are you to be married, Nora?" |
21084 | Storme:_"How is your Debating Society getting along?" |
21084 | Supposing this month had had only thirty days, where would I have been?" |
21084 | Surely, you''ve heard me again and again say''_ pneu_monia''?" |
21084 | TENDER MEMORIES"Please tell me, James,"directed the young lady teacher,"where shingles were first used?" |
21084 | Talkalot?" |
21084 | That''ll be your other daughter, I''m thinkin''?" |
21084 | The aged king tottered to and fro on the stage as he declaimed:"On which one of my two sons shall I bestow the crown?" |
21084 | The annoyed patron snorted, and then asked:"Would you be so kind as to play something by request?" |
21084 | The answer was given with proud certainty:"Are you ready for the question?" |
21084 | The clergyman, puzzled, repeated his whisper:"What name?" |
21084 | The colored waiter was so excited that he interrupted:"You say you go after hundred- pound fish in a little motor boat, suh?" |
21084 | The dialogue was as follows:"Can you do fancy cooking?" |
21084 | The fat man leaned forward and addressed the lady very courteously:"Madam, what do you call this dear little child?" |
21084 | The father stared for a moment in horrified amazement, then shouted:"Who in thunder is Jim?" |
21084 | The following conversation was overheard in Rome between a mother and daughter:"Is this Rome, ma?" |
21084 | The following dialogue took place:"You''ve stolen no chickens?" |
21084 | The girl looked at him inquiringly:"Um-- ah-- is Professor Johnson at home?" |
21084 | The girl questioned him:"What is the parliamentary phrase when you wish to call for a vote?" |
21084 | The great lady regarded her hands doubtfully, as she replied:"Oh, do you think so? |
21084 | The judge himself intervened:"What is your name?" |
21084 | The justice turned to the woman:"Are you determined to marry this man?" |
21084 | The little one complied, aspiring:"How many children have you?" |
21084 | The magnate inquired interestedly concerning the bride:"Is she tall or short, slender or plump?" |
21084 | The major addressed the colonel with decorous solemnity:"Colonel, how do you feel, suh?" |
21084 | The new physician made a careful examination of the patient, and then asked:"Did that other doctor take your temperature?" |
21084 | The next morning the boy asked:"Did you have a good night''s rest?" |
21084 | The officer spoke roughly:"Now, what are you bawling about, you big baby?" |
21084 | The old negro chuckled as he said:"Did you ever see de bone fight?" |
21084 | The pessimist answered dolefully:"Do n''t you see that it is raining?" |
21084 | The prosecuting attorney read the indictment sternly, and then asked:"Are you guilty, or not guilty?" |
21084 | The puzzled observer questioned the lad:"Now, sonny, why do n''t you eat your sandwich right down, instead of fussing with it like that?" |
21084 | The subject for debate that so fascinated the Dutchmen was:"Does the cod take the hook, or does the hook take the cod?" |
21084 | The tot puzzled over the matter, and at last sought additional information:"Oh, mumsy, what is she going to do with her old one?" |
21084 | The victim paused in his distressing occupation to snort indignantly:"Weak? |
21084 | The woman stared at it with an accusing eye, and questioned bluntly:"What makes your nose so red?" |
21084 | The young man reflected a moment and then asked,"You have n''t one about fifty, have you?" |
21084 | Then he unwisely added,"Of course, you will have heard of the Himalayas?" |
21084 | Then she asked what name was given to the children? |
21084 | Then, as he nodded assent:"Do you drink anything?" |
21084 | Then, in the impressive silence, a voice asked from the back of the hall:"Can you lay an egg?" |
21084 | This duty done, as the wailings of the boy died away, she demanded sternly:"And now what have you to say?" |
21084 | To illustrate his point, he put the question:"How long does it take you to carry your produce to market by muleback?" |
21084 | To the first applicant St. Peter said,"What kind of a car do you own?" |
21084 | Turning in his chair to fully face the lad, the grouch caustically inquired:"What''n seven kinds of blue blazes do you think I want with a thimble?" |
21084 | Turning to the optician, he asked:"What is it, boss?" |
21084 | WEATHER The old colored attendant at the court house had a formula for addressing the judge:"What''s the news this mawnin'', Jedge?" |
21084 | WIFE A young skeptic in the congregation once interrupted Billy Sunday with the question:"Who was Cain''s wife?" |
21084 | What are the symptoms?" |
21084 | What are you gittin''at? |
21084 | What are you worrying about?" |
21084 | What can we give them?" |
21084 | What can you suggest?" |
21084 | What did it cost you?" |
21084 | What did you and the''Missus''quarrel about this morning?" |
21084 | What difference would it make to you if I had been kissed by a thousand men before I met you?" |
21084 | What do you do with your cast- off clothing?" |
21084 | What do you go round in?" |
21084 | What do you mean?" |
21084 | What do you want, anyhow?" |
21084 | What is it? |
21084 | What of it?" |
21084 | What of it?" |
21084 | What plank? |
21084 | What shall I do?" |
21084 | What sort of a nation do you think this would be, if you put all the women in jail?" |
21084 | What time will the next one be here?" |
21084 | What was it trimmed with?" |
21084 | What would you do if you were in your daddy''s barn?" |
21084 | What? |
21084 | When he finally reappeared, the wife asked demurely:"What did you use to open that can, Jim?" |
21084 | When the door was opened by the old man, the boy asked:"Are you going out to- day, sir?" |
21084 | When the traveller reached the other side he turned and shouted:"I thought you said it was n''t deep?" |
21084 | When they halted before the hippopotamus cage, he remarked admiringly:"Darn''d curi''s fish, ai n''t it, ma?" |
21084 | Where did she hit you?" |
21084 | Where did you find it?" |
21084 | Where''d you happen on it?" |
21084 | Where''s he going?" |
21084 | Where''s the plank?" |
21084 | Where''ve you been all this time?" |
21084 | Where?" |
21084 | Which one do you think would go best with this dress?" |
21084 | While the dead colonel was awaiting burial, one aspirant buttonholed the governor, asking:"Would you object to my taking the place of the colonel?" |
21084 | Who are you?" |
21084 | Who else you''shpecting at this timernight?" |
21084 | Who is it speaking?''" |
21084 | Who''s arguing about it? |
21084 | Why ask?" |
21084 | Why ca n''t you agree once in a while?" |
21084 | Why do n''t you pitch in and fight yourself?" |
21084 | Why do n''t you shoot, man?" |
21084 | Why do n''t you stand up straight, like me?" |
21084 | Why you no ringa da bell?" |
21084 | Why, what is the trouble?" |
21084 | Why?" |
21084 | Why?" |
21084 | Why?" |
21084 | Will ye just look up an''tell me hoo my account stood in June?" |
21084 | Will you demonstrate it again?" |
21084 | Will you swear to him?" |
21084 | With shaking knees, he presented the dish to the prelate, and faltered:"My God, will you have some cheese?" |
21084 | Would n''t you love to go with your husband to the voting place, and there cast your vote along with his?" |
21084 | Would you advise me to buy him?" |
21084 | Would you take the word of an ass instead of mine?" |
21084 | You are, no doubt, fully aware that my father is a millionaire something like ten times over, are n''t you?" |
21084 | You followed my directions, and that prescription did the business-- what, you have n''t taken any of it?" |
21084 | You voted for him, of course?" |
21084 | You wo n''t ever tell another falsehood, will you, darling? |
21084 | You''ll come home as early as you can, wo n''t you? |
21084 | You''re his father, are n''t you?" |
21084 | You''re his mother, are n''t you?" |
21084 | Your brother, the artist, is short, is n''t he?" |
21084 | _ Agent:_ Well, is n''t that proof that you''ve had a burglar? |
21084 | _ Beau:_"Stripped?" |
21084 | _ Benny the Bum:_"I wanna know kin I borry a red lantern off''n you? |
21084 | _ Bride:_"Do n''t I, dear? |
21084 | _ Daphne:_ What bad luck done come to you? |
21084 | _ Dealer:_"Pedigree? |
21084 | _ Dora:_"What did you say in your last letter?" |
21084 | _ Father:_"Are you sure it''s a lost ball?" |
21084 | _ Father:_"Where did you get that from?" |
21084 | _ Fred:_"What did she say?" |
21084 | _ Governess:_"And what are little boys made of?" |
21084 | _ He:_ Do you think your father would be willing to help me in the future? |
21084 | _ He:_ Value them? |
21084 | _ He:_"Are n''t you afraid she is_ too old_ to know better?" |
21084 | _ He:_"But you knew all the time that I loved you, did n''t you?" |
21084 | _ I''m_ ready_ now_''?" |
21084 | _ Kitty:_"Do n''t you ever tell an untruth, Mummy?" |
21084 | _ Kitty:_"Well, you''ll be fearfully lonely, wo n''t you, with only George Washington?" |
21084 | _ Lady:_ Do n''t they even let you know? |
21084 | _ Lady:_"Well, then, your last-- er-- pray what do you call those in whose service you are engaged?" |
21084 | _ Manager:_ Why did you go to all that trouble? |
21084 | _ Mother:_"And did you enjoy it?" |
21084 | _ Mother:_"Then why do n''t you?" |
21084 | _ Neighbor:_"Well, yer did n''t s''pose she''d leave it hangin''aht overnight unless your farver was in prison, did yer?" |
21084 | _ Officer:_ Yell what? |
21084 | _ Officer:_"Well, what is it?" |
21084 | _ Old Steve:_"Why not choose the latter and get both?" |
21084 | _ Pat:_"Shure, and what good is it to me now whin oive me new job av night watchman an''slape in the day toimes?" |
21084 | _ Playful Hostess:_"If I picked you up by the heels and shook you, would that help?" |
21084 | _ Profiteer:_"What time do the best people dine?" |
21084 | _ Recruit:_ Why, what do you suppose? |
21084 | _ Second Burglar:_"Oh, say, was n''t that robbery?" |
21084 | _ Second Flapper:_"And what did you do?" |
21084 | _ She:_ Is n''t he? |
21084 | _ She:_"Which?" |
21084 | _ Shopper:_--"How long since they were laid?" |
21084 | _ Son:_"Did he? |
21084 | _ Sympathetic Lady:_ Dear, dear, how did you do that? |
21084 | _ The Boss:_ Very well, then, if you''re not the manager, why do you talk like a blamed idiot? |
21084 | _ The Child:_"Is that''cos we''re too little to reach the straps?" |
21084 | _ The Gnat:_"What for?" |
21084 | _ The Lawyer:_"Well, what do you expect?" |
21084 | _ The Maid:_"Shure, Miss, could n''t ye take a few out, and sind the rist back unopened?" |
21084 | _ The New Hand:_"Wot yer talkin''about--''run up the curtain''--think I''m a bloomin''squirrel?" |
21084 | _ The Parrot:_"Was n''t it too bad of them-- to go and break the set?" |
21084 | _ The Reporter:_"And er-- if you get beaten, what will your-- er-- weak spot have been?" |
21084 | _ The Summer Man:_"Well-- er-- could you manage to be a sister to me for a couple of weeks?" |
21084 | _ Tourist:_"Well-- er-- is it ambitious and willing to work?" |
21084 | _ Vicar''s Wife:_"Oh-- and what are you writing in it?" |
21084 | _ Wife:_"Did you like it?" |
21084 | _ Young Wife:_"Has it? |
21084 | and what are you learning at school?" |
21084 | do n''t yez know your own father?" |
21084 | exclaimed the vicar,"in what way?" |
21084 | how could you? |
21084 | means?" |
21084 | said the boss, pleasantly,"were you looking for me?" |
21084 | stammered the young man,"what pleasant weather we are having, are n''t we?" |
21084 | think I want to lose my job?" |
21084 | where are you going?" |
41732 | ''Eh, ye haveril, is it the fashion for them_ no''to go on_?'' |
41732 | ''No, Janet?'' 41732 A moose?" |
41732 | Ah,said he,"gane awa''that way by himsel'', has he? |
41732 | An''dee ye no''remember, sir, ye bade us come to be catecheesed? |
41732 | An''fat did he say aboot it? |
41732 | An''hoo are you gaun to vote? |
41732 | And have you ever reflected, sir,went on the minister,"that we may be launched into eternity at any instant?" |
41732 | And in the name of wonder,answered the sculptor,"wha ever saw an angel_ without_ ane?" |
41732 | And so, Molly,said the minister,"you tell me you are worth so much money?" |
41732 | And wha''s it for? |
41732 | And what can that be? |
41732 | And what good can the preaching do you,said he,"if you forget it all?" |
41732 | And when will we pe account for''t? |
41732 | And you tell me, too,continued the minister,"that you made all that money by filling the noggin?" |
41732 | Ay, man,said his lordship,"how can that be?" |
41732 | Ay,replied the doctor,"how''s that?" |
41732 | Ay,said John,"that''s true, too; but can ye tell me what guid the fog does to the stane?" |
41732 | Ay,said his lordship,"and where else can you find such horses and such men?" |
41732 | But are you not afraid ye may sometimes kill your patients, if you do not study medicine for awhile as your proper profession? |
41732 | But did you not enjoy the anthem? |
41732 | But is n''t it strange that such a fine crop should be reared on such bad land? |
41732 | But what,I asked her,"has all this to do with the census?" |
41732 | But, Donald,said his master, after some further trial of a hungry man''s patience,"are ye sure ye made the gentleman understand?" |
41732 | But,added he,"can_ you_ tell me hoo lang he stood after?" |
41732 | Can any little boy or girl tell me what is the shape of the earth? |
41732 | Can any of the little boys or girls tell me what is the shape of the earth? |
41732 | Can any of you lads tell me what bishop of the Church of England has the largest hat? |
41732 | Chwat''s your wull, sir? |
41732 | Chwat''s your wull, sir? |
41732 | D''ye ken the yeditor of the Glasgow_ Herald_? |
41732 | Dae we nae read o''Solomon''s temple,replied the elder,"that a''the snuffers were of pure gold?" |
41732 | Dear me, Elspa,replied the soldier,"d''ye no ken me? |
41732 | Did ye ever hear onything sae gran''? 41732 Do n''t you see? |
41732 | Do you know who I am? |
41732 | Do you know whom I have brought to the island? |
41732 | Do you see any paleness about my face, Jeffrey? |
41732 | Does an effect ever go before a cause? |
41732 | Eh, is that all? |
41732 | Eh, wumman,said one to the other,"can ye tell me what a jubilee is, for I hear a''the folks spakin''aboot it?" |
41732 | Fat d''ye think of the rinderpest, Sandy? |
41732 | Go, you stupid girl,said he,"whoever heard of a sheep''s head that could sing?" |
41732 | Guidwife,quoth John,"did you see that moose? |
41732 | Have you ony shares in it, Sandy? |
41732 | Hech, man,said Jess,"div ye no ken there''s aye maist sawn o''the best crap?" |
41732 | Here, sir,says Walter,"are ye wanting me?" |
41732 | Hoot fie, my lord,said the officer,"what, are ye glad that yer chaplain died a pawpish?" |
41732 | Hoot, mon,says the bishop,"why hae ye na lost your accent, like mysel''?" |
41732 | Hoot, sir,was the reply,"is that a''? |
41732 | How could it ring,said the other,"seeing it was crackit?" |
41732 | How do ye make Jonah out to be the first Presbyterian? |
41732 | How is it made? |
41732 | How many sides has a circle? |
41732 | How''s that? |
41732 | How''s that? |
41732 | How,I asked him,"do you account for light if it is not derived from the sun?" |
41732 | I dinna ken,replied the chafed and mystified witness;"Wad ye say the question ower again, sir?" |
41732 | I mean, were you born in this parish? |
41732 | I mean,replied Jeffrey, testily,"was the man of sufficient ordinary intelligence to qualify him to manage his own affairs?" |
41732 | I say, my girl, can you get me some horse- flies? |
41732 | I''ve seen mair mice than you, guidman-- An''what think ye o''that? 41732 If_ he_ does this, what may the rest no''do? |
41732 | Indeed, laddie, and wha for no''? |
41732 | Indeed,ejaculated the parson;"then it is possible I am speaking to a brother meenister?" |
41732 | Is Peggy in? |
41732 | Is he? |
41732 | Is it incorporated? |
41732 | Is it incorporated? |
41732 | Is n''t she smairt? |
41732 | Is this a smokin''carriage, sor? |
41732 | Is this the bedroom? |
41732 | Is your husband, my good woman, a communicant? |
41732 | Is''t a laddie or a lassie, Jess? |
41732 | John,said he,"what is baptism?" |
41732 | Me, sir? |
41732 | Mebbe I will,was the reply;"but would it no''be better to be a guid laddie just to please me?" |
41732 | Nay, now, David,said Johnny,"did you not tell me that my talents did not lie in tragedy?" |
41732 | No;replied the professor, imitating the whisper;"no, my dear fellow,--have you?" |
41732 | Not a bit,said the other lady;"dinna ye ken the Breetish aye say their prayers before gaun into battle?" |
41732 | Nothing? |
41732 | Oh, Duncan, Duncan, are you going into the house of the Lord with a lie upon your head? |
41732 | Oh, lost your senses, have you? |
41732 | Oh,said the elder,"ye tak''snuff, dae ye?" |
41732 | Ou, ay; weel, no''to keep ye going further, John, was it a hoorned coo or a hemmel that Noah took into the ark? |
41732 | Pray, sir, can you tell me who is speaking now? |
41732 | Sic fules we were to fa''out, guidwife, About a moose--"A what? |
41732 | Then how do you come to be nearly a native of this parish? |
41732 | Then why in the world did you send for me? 41732 Then, Tonald, would you''ll no''lend me ten and twenty shillings?" |
41732 | Then,exclaimed Johnny,"gin they dinna lie there, where the deil dittha lie, mon?" |
41732 | Time? |
41732 | To the Free Kirk? |
41732 | Very weel, Janet, but whaur ye gaun to sleep? |
41732 | Wad ye ca''me a leear to my very face? 41732 Was there onything in the cretur?" |
41732 | Weel, John,familiarly inquired the clerical visitant,"what''s this you are about?" |
41732 | Weel, Marget,asked one female parishioner of another, as they foregathered on the road one day,"wha are you gaun to vote for?" |
41732 | Weel, Sandy,said his oppugner on the predestination question,"did the doctor o''deveenity gie you his opinion?" |
41732 | Weel,argued the religious rustic,"gif reading a preachin''be preachin'', is na reading a prophecy prophesying?" |
41732 | Well, Alexander,said the doctor,"who gave you the gun?" |
41732 | Well, Duncan,said the venerable doctor,"can ye not wait till after worship?" |
41732 | Well, Mr.----,said Sir Walter,"how do you like your book?" |
41732 | What are ye daein''here, Janet, and whaur ye gaun in this warm weather? |
41732 | What are you doing there, man? |
41732 | What d''ye mean, sir? |
41732 | What do you get for them? |
41732 | What do you think o''the haggis? |
41732 | What for no'', laird? 41732 What hae ye to dae wi''my name, gin I gie ye the siller?" |
41732 | What have you come for, John? |
41732 | What is patrimony? |
41732 | What is that, sir? |
41732 | What is that? |
41732 | What is the Lord''s Supper, Peggy? |
41732 | What kind of fools? |
41732 | What news? |
41732 | What on? |
41732 | What would you call it if left by a mother? |
41732 | What''s that to do with you? |
41732 | What''s that? |
41732 | What''s that? |
41732 | What''s the use o''your speerin''that question? |
41732 | What''s this I see? 41732 What''s to be dune, John?" |
41732 | What''s wrong with it, this time? |
41732 | What, sirrah,cries his lordship,"do you know whom you are speaking to? |
41732 | Whaur are ye gaen? |
41732 | Whaur did you get it? |
41732 | Where are you for to- day, Gordon? |
41732 | Where is he? |
41732 | Which would you rather have, Angus,said grandfather;"patience or pie?" |
41732 | Why was Adam like that horse- couper? |
41732 | Why, there''s mutton intil''t, and turnips intil''t, and carrots intil''t and----"Yes, I see, but what is intil''t? |
41732 | Will you allow us, sir,said one of the deputation,"to dig our own graves?" |
41732 | Will you just help me with my bundle, gudeman? |
41732 | Willie,said she, as if seized with a sudden inspiration,"is n''t this a queer world? |
41732 | Would you have trusted him to sell a cow for you? |
41732 | Would you kindly fill in this census paper for us? |
41732 | Would you take a glass of whiskey on the Sabbath? |
41732 | Wull ye gie me a penny if I''m awfu''guid a''day lang? |
41732 | You come here when you were a child, I suppose you mean? |
41732 | ''Lord keep us, Sandy Robertson, can this be_ you_?''" |
41732 | ( Where is it?). |
41732 | ( Where was it?) |
41732 | --Not"Living"="Weel, Girzie, how are ye leevin''?" |
41732 | 123 Walloping Judas 56 Watty Dunlop''s Sympathy for Orphans 18 Wersh Parritch and Wersh Kisses 198"What''s the Lawin'', Lass?" |
41732 | 133 Why Saul Threw a Javelin at David 182 Why the Bishops Disliked the Bible 139 Will any Gentleman Oblige"a Lady"? |
41732 | 190 When Asses may not be Parsons 62 Why Israel made a Golden Calf 92 Why Janet Slept During Her Pastor''s Sermon 99 Why Not? |
41732 | = A Discerning Fool="Jock, how auld will ye be?" |
41732 | = A Scotch"Native"="Are you a native of this parish?" |
41732 | = A Vigorous Translation="What is the meaning of_ ex nihilo nihil fit_?" |
41732 | = Faring Alike=_ First Scotch Boatman_:"Weel, Geordie, how got ye on the day?" |
41732 | = His Own, With"Interest"="Coming from h-- l, Lauchlan?" |
41732 | = Lost Dogs="What dogs are these, Jasper?" |
41732 | = Mortifying Unanimity= I said, to one who picked me up, Just slipping from a rock,"I''m not much good at climbing, eh?" |
41732 | = Objecting to"Regeneration"="What is the meaning of''regeneration,''Tommy?" |
41732 | = Ornithology="Pray, Lord Robertson,"said a lady to that eminent lawyer at a party,"can you tell me what sort of a bird the bul- bul is?" |
41732 | = Religious Loneliness="How is your church getting on?" |
41732 | = Sending Him to Sleep="Sleepin, Tonald?" |
41732 | ="Fou''--Aince"= George Webster once met a shepherd boy in Glenshee, and asked,"My man, were you ever fou''?" |
41732 | ="Invisible and Incomprehensible"=_ First Scot_:"Fat sort o''minister hae ye gotten, Geordie?" |
41732 | ="Things Which Accompany Salvation"="What d''ye think o''this great revival that''s gaun on the noo, Jamie?" |
41732 | ="What''s the Lawin'', Lass? |
41732 | After waiting a little he opened the door and walked in, saying with an authoritative voice,"I should like to know who is head of this house?" |
41732 | Among other questions asked of him by the bishop was,"How long have you been in Canada?" |
41732 | And of dukes, that you dined with yestreen? |
41732 | And why do you like when I preach?" |
41732 | Andrew began in his pompous way, by asking,"Woman, what is thy name? |
41732 | Any amusements, Boots?" |
41732 | Are n''t you Nathan M''Culloch?" |
41732 | Are there no other amusements in this confoundedly dull town?" |
41732 | Ask them, an''what_ will_ they say? |
41732 | Black?" |
41732 | Burns, however, silenced him with an epigram:"What of earls, with whom you have supped? |
41732 | But tell me, Miss Robina, why did Miss M''Farlane not fill up the paper herself?" |
41732 | Can you not make small boots?" |
41732 | Canna ye bring him here and let him speak for himsel''?" |
41732 | Coming from his class one day, a shabby Irishman asked him in the usual confidential manner,"Any old clo'', sir?" |
41732 | Coming up to him in the High Street of Dumfries, they accosted him with much solemnity:"Maister Dunlop, hae ye heard the news?" |
41732 | Could a bishop have said more in as few words? |
41732 | Could ye no step in by?" |
41732 | D''ye ken what they put me in mind o''? |
41732 | D''ye think I might take one, my bonny lass?" |
41732 | Did you ever hear one on''Cause and Effect?''" |
41732 | Do we live on one another? |
41732 | Do ye no ken it''s a dangerous case of typhus?" |
41732 | Do ye understand me noo, frien''? |
41732 | Do you mean to insult me, sir? |
41732 | Do you not know where all drunkards go to?" |
41732 | Do you think that I am dry eneuch noo?" |
41732 | Do you think that I am dry? |
41732 | Does he whisper soft somethings of her betterness, I wonder, while thus he lingers? |
41732 | Fall.=_ Fack._ Fact_ Far eist?_ Where is it? |
41732 | Fall.=_ Fack._ Fact_ Far eist?_ Where is it? |
41732 | Finding that she did not yet comprehend him, he exclaimed:"Why, girl, did you never see a horse- fly?" |
41732 | Has it magistrates?" |
41732 | He led her to the churchyard, and pointing with his finger, he got out:"My fowk lie there, Mary; wad ye like to lie there?" |
41732 | He published a_ jeu d''esprit_ under the form of a catechism, in which a person is made to ask:"Who was the first Presbyterian?" |
41732 | He said:"Ye kenned Tammas----?" |
41732 | He was of a taciturn nature, but of the few remarks which he did make the usual one was,"Weel, and so yer think that light comes from the sun, do yer? |
41732 | He went and offered to shake hands with her, saying,"How are you, Elspa?" |
41732 | His lordship inquired if the stranger was aware he was trespassing, or if he knew to whom the estate belonged? |
41732 | His southern guest thought it incumbent to say,"Ah, minister, that''s wrong, is it not? |
41732 | His wife grumbled:"What profit do you get out of that penny?" |
41732 | In danger of his life he called out to a tall Highlander who was passing by,"How can I get out of this?" |
41732 | In this perplexity he espied some one coming towards him, whom he stopped with this query:"D''ye ken whaur John Clerk bides?" |
41732 | Irving?" |
41732 | Irving?" |
41732 | Is it a borough? |
41732 | Is there nothing else, Boots?" |
41732 | It is a kindly mode of referring to an individual, as we would say to a stranger:"Honest man, would you tell me the way to----?" |
41732 | It was a vara imperfect discourse, in ma opinion; ye did well eneucht till ye took them through, but where did ye leave them? |
41732 | K.----?" |
41732 | Lost of course?" |
41732 | M''Lauchlin?" |
41732 | Macleod?" |
41732 | Mr. M----, of Bathgate, came up to a street pavior one day, and addressed him:"Eh, John, what''s this you''re at?" |
41732 | Now Walter, can you tell me how long Adam stood in a state of innocence?" |
41732 | On a certain occasion the question was asked:"Why was Mary Queen of Scots born at Linlithgow?" |
41732 | On his return the minister said:"Well, John, have you succeeded?" |
41732 | On repassing the hotel, he was again called to by the Aberdonian, who bawled out,"Watchman, far was''t?" |
41732 | Our traveler at last coming up to an old man breaking stones, he asked him if there was any traffic on this road-- was it at_ all_ frequented? |
41732 | Question:"When do your girls marry?" |
41732 | She stood for a moment, and then selecting a poorly dressed man of about forty years of age, she observed:"Are there no gentlemen on the car?" |
41732 | So David opened his criticism:"Thocht o''t, sir? |
41732 | So I seized him by the scruff of the neck:''Do ye see that window, sir? |
41732 | So he addressed the boys thus:"Well, lads, can any of you tell me why black sheep eat less than white sheep?" |
41732 | Some time afterwards, when Mr. Shirra met John on the road, he said,"And so, John, I understand you have become an Independent?" |
41732 | Somewhat surprised at this, the minister said:"Dear me, John, is your memory failing, or what is up with you? |
41732 | The bishop on that condition consented to the loan:"But where is your security?" |
41732 | The doctor next inquired:"And you attend the moral philosophy class, also?" |
41732 | The following conversation took place:"Ah, Mrs. Smith, what are you doing with your watering can?" |
41732 | The laborer, glad to rest himself a little, dropped his hammer, and said quietly to the stranger,"Now, where cam''ye from?" |
41732 | The last preached in the morning, and took for his text,"Adam, where art thou?" |
41732 | The minister, too eager to be scrutinizing, took a long, deep pinch, and then said,"Whaur did you get it?" |
41732 | The one said to the other:"Was it no''a wonderful thing that Breetish were aye victorious in battle?" |
41732 | The other replied:"But canna the French say their prayers as weel?" |
41732 | The question was:"Why did the Israelites make a golden calf?" |
41732 | The teacher, a little annoyed, exclaimed,"Come, come, John, what''s the matter now?" |
41732 | The traveler, nettled at not receiving a direct answer, asked him,"What business have you with where I came from?" |
41732 | The word"inheritance"occurring in the verse, the querist interrogated the youngest as follows:"What is inheritance?" |
41732 | The youth was up to time, and the farmer said,"Well, have you got your character with you?" |
41732 | They burst out with one universal question:"How can you speak this way, Forrat, since you are just as guilty as ony o''us?" |
41732 | They urged,"What gars ye tak''up your bit papers to the pu''pit?" |
41732 | Thus, then, she opened fire:"Weel, doctor, hae ye got through a''your papering and painting yet?" |
41732 | Upon going to the window, he called out,"Watchman, far eist?" |
41732 | Was it na a hint for me? |
41732 | Wasna that a sermon?" |
41732 | Wasna that a sermon?" |
41732 | Well, will you give me the lawin'', as I am going? |
41732 | Whar sorra was the cat?" |
41732 | What are they?" |
41732 | What are we to do? |
41732 | What can you mean, sir?" |
41732 | What do you take us to be-- cannibals? |
41732 | What is the cause of this?'' |
41732 | What is the reason?" |
41732 | What is the shape o''this snuff- box in ma han''?" |
41732 | What wull the minister sink o''this? |
41732 | What''s the meaning of this?" |
41732 | What? |
41732 | Whatever could_ you_ get to cry about?" |
41732 | When examining a student as to the classes he attended, he said:"I understand you attend the class for mathematics?" |
41732 | When he returned, the minister inquired:"Has John come yet?" |
41732 | When we came to the age column--"Is it absolutely necessary,"said she,"to fill in the age? |
41732 | Will you let me see your bill? |
41732 | Will you mind that for a token?" |
41732 | With a pardonable assumption of authority, the marquis interrogated the carter:"Do you know who I am, sir?" |
41732 | Would you like to be born again, Tommy?" |
41732 | Ye see the clock yonder on the face of the new church? |
41732 | You can place it on the top of the peats?" |
41732 | [ 11]= Scotchmen Everywhere= Was ever a place that had n''t its Scotchman? |
41732 | [ 22]= A Scotch"Squire"="What name, sir?" |
41732 | [ 9]= The Same with a Difference= A young wit asked a man who rode about on a wretched horse:"Is that the same horse you had last year?" |
41732 | _ Customer_:"A''ae oo"( All same wool)? |
41732 | _ Customer_:"A''oo"( All wool)? |
41732 | _ Duke_:"Why, what''s the matter?" |
41732 | _ Far was''t?_ Where was it? |
41732 | _ Far was''t?_ Where was it? |
41732 | _ Fat?_ What? |
41732 | _ Fat?_ What? |
41732 | _ Jenny_: Hoot, ay, sir; didna ye see a farm as ye came up yestreen, just three parks aff? |
41732 | _ Servant Maid_:"Ay, an''you''ll pe shurely wear this at a crand party?" |
41732 | _ Tourist_: A man''s daughter? |
41732 | _ Tourist_: And how do you know what to charge? |
41732 | _ Tourist_: Oh, indeed, I beg your pardon; how much is it? |
41732 | _ Tourist_: What, do you object to take it? |
41732 | and where is thy usual place of residence?" |
41732 | but is''na he a queer man, that doctor; he''ll neither speak to God nor man?" |
41732 | calling to the old man,"come here a moment, will you?" |
41732 | do n''t you know,"said the minister,"that the bishop with the largest hat is the bishop with the largest head? |
41732 | how''s that?" |
41732 | or as Lord Hermand, when about to sentence a woman for stealing, began remonstratively;"Honest woman, what gar''d ye steal your neighbor''s tub?" |
41732 | quoth the indignant theologian;"do ye think he can foil me wi''my ain natural toils?" |
41732 | said he to himself;"man, is n''t she smairt? |
41732 | said the colonel;"is your father alive yet?" |
41732 | said the justice;"what d''ye mean by deft-- eh?" |
41732 | said the priest;"what is nothing?" |
41732 | sic jabberin''bodies; wha could understand them if thae did?" |
41732 | what has she been about, the jaud?" |
41732 | what is thy age? |
41732 | will none of you go with the old gentleman? |
41732 | you will see America from here?" |
35891 | ''Ah that''il do for a start,''says Sally Hogan;''but where in glory are we all to put our legs under that wee table? 35891 ''Ails?'' |
35891 | ''Am I too late?'' 35891 ''An''where in glory wid ye have me put it, Kitty Malone?'' |
35891 | ''And she is to marry the survivor, I understand?'' 35891 ''Arrah, Dan,''said he,''do you think me a fool? |
35891 | ''Arrah, what is it, Jack?'' 35891 ''Arrah, why, Harry-- why, avick?'' |
35891 | ''Arrah, why, Harry? 35891 ''Aw, is Mrs. Flaherty at home, this fine day?'' |
35891 | ''Ay, but, Harry, what''s that rowled up in the tail of your cothamore( big coat)?'' 35891 ''Ensign Brady?'' |
35891 | ''God be wud this day twelve months,''siz she,''do you remimber the fine thrish you caught in the crib?'' 35891 ''Good morrow to you, Daniel O''Rourke,''says he;''how do you do?'' |
35891 | ''If there was n''t, Jack, what''d put Harry, that knows so much, in that state he''s in?'' 35891 ''Indeed, sir,''says I,''''tis much against my will I''m here at all; but how am I to go back?'' |
35891 | ''Is that all, and is this the way you leave me, you brute, you?'' 35891 ''Jack Rafferty, what is it? |
35891 | ''Jack Rafferty,''says he, and, by the way, Jack was his tenant,''what the dickens does all this mane?'' 35891 ''John,''says Hannah, again, an''looks knives an''forks at him,''where''s your manners the day?'' |
35891 | ''Katty,''says he,''what in the dickens is in this pot on the fire?'' 35891 ''What are you doin''Kitty?'' |
35891 | ''What do you propose,''said he to my second--''What do you propose to do, Major?'' 35891 ''What the dickens is he carryin''in the skirts of his big coat?'' |
35891 | ''What''s up?'' 35891 ''Where is it goin''?'' |
35891 | ''Which,''said he,''is it to be-- two out of three, as at Newmarket, or the first toss to decide?'' 35891 ''Will you be my second?'' |
35891 | ''Wisha, in throth, Shawn,''siz Nancy,''''tis a thrish; do you want to take the sight o''my eyes from me?'' 35891 A what?" |
35891 | Ah, thin, it is y''r ould flower- beds y''re makin''all this row about? 35891 Ai n''t I?" |
35891 | Am I to be at the loss of a son who is the finest boy in all Ireland? |
35891 | Amn''t I after seeing it with me own eyes? |
35891 | Amn''t I just after telling you? |
35891 | An''''twas really the wee dog? |
35891 | An'', Mr. Darby Doyle,siz he,"do you mean to persuade us that you swam from Cork to this afther us?" |
35891 | An''Ned,siz I,"ca n''t you cram me down there, and give me a lock ov straw an''a bit?" |
35891 | An''Ned,siz I,"does anyone live down there?" |
35891 | An''do ye think I care a thrawneen[1] for the likes ov her? 35891 An''if yu please, Misther O''Brien,"said Mrs. Macfarlane with ferocious politeness,"will yu kindly mintion, if yu did not do the job, who did?" |
35891 | An''is there no other place? |
35891 | An''pray, what is your name, my lad? |
35891 | An''this is Jim O''Brien''s house? |
35891 | An''what is it, avic? |
35891 | An''what''ll I get for that same? |
35891 | An''where''ll I go? |
35891 | An''where, Ned, is the place I saw you comin''up out ov? |
35891 | An''who are ye,says he,"in the name iv all the holy saints?" |
35891 | An''why so? |
35891 | An''why would not I,says he,"if they desarve it?" |
35891 | An''you left your shawl in pledge again to get this for me? |
35891 | An''you''ll never say''twas a thrish agin? |
35891 | And King James? |
35891 | And could we do anything for your comfort, my poor fellow? |
35891 | And have they no name for the malady? |
35891 | And how about the bit of a doll, ma''am? |
35891 | And how did he get here if he took his place in Dublin? |
35891 | And how would that be a misfortune to a fine lad like yourself? |
35891 | And how''s our friend the goat? |
35891 | And may I ask, sir,said I, in a very mild and soothing tone of voice--"may I ask the reason for this singular propensity of yours?" |
35891 | And might n''t you be frying us a few eggs in the pan, Julia? 35891 And sell your grandmother''s birthday present to me?" |
35891 | And what call have they to be cocking up e''er a one there,said Mrs. Hugh,"where there was never such a thing seen till this day?" |
35891 | And what''s the fix, sir? |
35891 | And where are they going to meet? |
35891 | And where''s my estates, plaze your holiness? |
35891 | And who did you get that news from,she said,"supposing it''s true?" |
35891 | And who owns this valuable property? |
35891 | And who was Affy Hynes? |
35891 | And why would n''t I? |
35891 | And with you, too, O''Malley? |
35891 | And you have the malady on you at present? |
35891 | And you''re asking the Bench to believe that this decent man left his business in Lisheen in order to slash fish at your mother? |
35891 | Any divarshun''goin on? |
35891 | Are we trying a breach of promise? |
35891 | Are ye so? |
35891 | Are ye sure this milk is fresh an''has n''t been skimmed? |
35891 | Are you any good at throwin''a stone? |
35891 | Are you certain of that? |
35891 | Are you goin''to lep back agen? |
35891 | Are you ill, sir? |
35891 | Are you nearly full inside? |
35891 | Are you sure you have n''t that since the time there was that business between yourself and the post- mistress at Munig? 35891 Arrah, what outrage are ye talkin''ov ma''am?" |
35891 | As I was sayin'',he resumed,"Did ever ye hear tell o''the battle o''Scarva?" |
35891 | Augh, give us your fist,siz I;"did ye ever hear ov Paddies dishaving any man in the European world yet-- barrin''themselves?" |
35891 | Becase what? |
35891 | Bother Father Magrath, young man? |
35891 | But how, may I ask, and when? |
35891 | But who brought me here? |
35891 | But why dally over the detail of my unfortunate loves? 35891 But why wo n''t he speak English?" |
35891 | But, Tim,said she, after finishing the story,"how did the dispute about the blackbird come first? |
35891 | By the way,said Webber,"was n''t Sir George Dashwood down in the West lately? |
35891 | Can he, avic? |
35891 | Did he murder the bailiff? |
35891 | Did n''t I tell you she''d score? |
35891 | Did y''hear the news? |
35891 | Did ye hear anything quare, Thady? |
35891 | Did ye iver see the like av it? |
35891 | Did yiz see the skelp Bob landed him? |
35891 | Did you have any talk with his wife about the fish? |
35891 | Did you think of trying him with the Irish? |
35891 | Do I no believe in love? 35891 Do n''t you know rightly when you are not in it, herself will be feasting and entertaining and going on with every diversion?" |
35891 | Do n''t you, indeed? |
35891 | Do ye know what I''m goin''te tell ye? |
35891 | Do ye know what I''m goin''te tell ye? |
35891 | Do ye see that pin- head? 35891 Do ye see that pin- head?" |
35891 | Do you happen to have a dictionary, Norwegian or Swedish, in the house? |
35891 | Do you know who I am,says the king,"that you make so free, good man?" |
35891 | Do you mind if I smoke? |
35891 | Do you tell me that? |
35891 | Eh? |
35891 | Exact, is it? |
35891 | For what, plaze your majesty? |
35891 | Had he any kind of a Prayer Book or a religious emblem of any sort on him when you were taking the clothes off him? |
35891 | Happened? 35891 Have ye any use for it?" |
35891 | Have you ever been beagling before? |
35891 | He had a bad masther then,says Elizabeth, lookin''at his dirty boots;"could n''t you wipe yer feet before ye desthroyed me carpets, young man?" |
35891 | How can I tell what chances you have or have n''t, and you after running wild through the country for better than a couple of hours? |
35891 | How could we? |
35891 | How d''ye know they''re lilies at all? 35891 How dar''you say dirty to the greatest hand in Ireland?" |
35891 | How did the likes ov her iver get a husban''? |
35891 | How much does he owe you? |
35891 | How much for them calves? 35891 How much money have ye gother for my shwimmin''?" |
35891 | How would His Excellency the Lord Liftinant of Ireland sthrike you? |
35891 | How would you be satisfied with the meat which is set before you when you are not able to use any portion of it at all? |
35891 | How''s that? |
35891 | I ax,says he,"who you are?" |
35891 | I hope you will do me the favour to dance next set with me, Miss Macan? |
35891 | I say, Power, and has your worthy General sent me a card for his ball? |
35891 | I thought you were all friends at Scarva? |
35891 | I''m Fan MaCool,sez the other, as impident as a cocksparra'';"have you anything to say agen me?" |
35891 | I''m off to the house-- I want to wash."Sure, you''re not hurt? |
35891 | If himself is that uneasy about you how would it be possible you''d bring me to the house to be speaking with him? |
35891 | In the name of the Blessed Vargin,says she,"what is it?" |
35891 | Intimately? |
35891 | Is it a doll? |
35891 | Is it a pig,says he,"or is it a Christian?" |
35891 | Is it jokin''you are, Ned? |
35891 | Is it likely I''d promise you my best colt? 35891 Is it me have it? |
35891 | Is it me? 35891 Is it me?" |
35891 | Is it me? |
35891 | Is it that I''d be lodging an information against a noble person like yourself? |
35891 | Is it that curby, long- backed brute? 35891 Is it what took me?" |
35891 | Is n''t that what he laid out for yourself? |
35891 | Is that a venerable way,says he,"to approach your clargy?" |
35891 | Is that all? |
35891 | Is that the hot wather? |
35891 | Is the Prince o''Wales comin''? 35891 Is the Queen widin?" |
35891 | Is the food in this place not to your liking? 35891 Is there any talk about that esplanade from Sandycove to Dunlary?" |
35891 | Is there much difference? |
35891 | Is there no place where they would take her in? |
35891 | It''s jokin''you are,says Terence, turnin''mighty pale;"how can an ould gandher be my father?" |
35891 | Italian? |
35891 | Let the baste out, ca n''t ye? |
35891 | Look at her, Tim,she exclaimed,"an''is n''t she as young an''as hearty as ever? |
35891 | Mary O''Brien-- O''Brien? |
35891 | May I request leave to pass you? |
35891 | Maybe now, ma''am, you can explain to us what sort of a boat is she? |
35891 | Misther O''Brien,she said in a high, stilted voice that trembled with rage,"will yu please to inform me the meanin''o''this dasthardly outrage?" |
35891 | Musha, good gracious, woman alive, if that''s all''s ailing you, where''s the need to be so exact? |
35891 | Musha,says she,"if the pooka does be cleaning up everything that way when we are asleep, what should we be slaving ourselves for doing his work?" |
35891 | Ned, avic,siz I,"what''s the meanin''ov the boords acrass the stick the people walk on, and the big white boord up there?" |
35891 | Ned,siz I,"does this mean your humble sarvint?" |
35891 | Never, and he hopes to leave Ireland without that blessing? |
35891 | Not a doubt of it, Mr. Lorrequer; and may I make bould to ask were you the outside? |
35891 | O, Ned,says I,"is this the way you''re goin''to threat me after all? |
35891 | Och, Bridgie, what will I do? |
35891 | Och, is it yoorself that''s there, Ned? |
35891 | Oh, Thady, dear, and what''ll the children do then? |
35891 | Oh, is it that filly? |
35891 | Oh, wirra, why did ye dhraw her on ye? 35891 Patsy,"said Mr. Fanshawe,"when does the post go out?" |
35891 | Phil, however, persisted, and approached me:''Are you fighting about Dosy Mac?'' 35891 Rooney barking!--why, what does that mean?" |
35891 | Russian? 35891 Saw you ever the like of that?" |
35891 | So he understood every word we said to him all the time? |
35891 | So,says Tom to the King,"will you let me have the other half of the princess if I bring you the flail?" |
35891 | Surely, Thomas, you have been in love yourself, too, now, with Peggy- Anne, and your present wife? 35891 Tell me simply this: Were you justified in making a statement which you knew to be a baseless invention? |
35891 | Tell me this now,he said,"why did n''t you let me know who you were? |
35891 | That you kiss Miss Dashwood, and are not kicked downstairs for your pains; are those the terms of your wager? |
35891 | The Mimber of Parlymint? |
35891 | The like of what at all? |
35891 | Then what did he run away for? |
35891 | Then what, may I beg to know, did you mean by your story about Barney Doyle, and the hydrophobia, and Cusack Rooney''s thumb-- eh? |
35891 | Then, he has never yet seen her? |
35891 | There is n''t a one in it; all of them''s as red as coals of fire yet, or else as green as grass-- sure, what matter? |
35891 | They sha n''t want feedin''? |
35891 | Thrue for you,says Terence,"but how did you come to the knowledge iv my father''s sowl,"says he,"bein''in the ould gandher?" |
35891 | Tip us the mitten,siz I,"mabouchal,"siz I;"Where are we going to shwim to? |
35891 | To be sure, I have,says the king, moighty high;"sure, ai n''t I the King o''Dublin?" |
35891 | Was Con Brickley fishing the same day? |
35891 | Was any one hurt? |
35891 | Was anyone hurted? 35891 Was that a marble you picked up, Patsy?" |
35891 | Was you able to get her e''er a one? |
35891 | We had you here before us not so very long ago about kicking a goat, was n''t it? 35891 Well, Michael, did you make him speak?" |
35891 | Well, avochal( my boy),sez Fan,"are you dry yet?" |
35891 | Well, but, is it exactly prudent, in your present delicate state, to undertake a journey? |
35891 | Well, do ye know what I''m goin''te tell ye? 35891 Well, now, Julia woman, and is it yourself?" |
35891 | Well, suppose I give you work? |
35891 | Well, suppose they christened him twice as much,says the wife,"sure, what''s that to uz?" |
35891 | Well, supposing it does, where''s the odds? |
35891 | Well, they accordingly went in, and put this question to him,''Harry, what''s wrong, ahagur? 35891 Well, what''s your plan? |
35891 | What about the Loop Line? |
35891 | What are we to do with her? |
35891 | What became of William? |
35891 | What d''ye call that? |
35891 | What do ye mane, you uncivilised bliggard? |
35891 | What do you bet I do n''t? 35891 What do you mean by''the boat''s share''?" |
35891 | What do you mean? |
35891 | What do you say, Mary? |
35891 | What do you take me for, young man? 35891 What docther will I go for, ma''am?" |
35891 | What for? |
35891 | What friend is this of yours and Judy''s that you''re stripping of her character? |
35891 | What hard look I had to follow yees, at all at all-- which ov ye is the masther? |
35891 | What harm could a little touch of a stool on the back do the big brute? |
35891 | What have you lost? |
35891 | What is it? |
35891 | What is the cause of it at all? |
35891 | What news? |
35891 | What ould geochagh( beggar) have we now? |
35891 | What the dickens is she doin''? |
35891 | What the mischief put that notion in your head? |
35891 | What took you trapesing off down there, might I ask? |
35891 | What will you give me, then, if I do? |
35891 | What would that be proving? |
35891 | What''ll I do at all? |
35891 | What''s happint you now? |
35891 | What''s that nize? |
35891 | What''s that you were axing me? |
35891 | What''s that? |
35891 | What''s that? |
35891 | What''s the cause? |
35891 | What''s the news, Rafferty? |
35891 | What''s this? 35891 What''s this?" |
35891 | What''s took you to be tearing along at that rate, and without so much as a shawl over your head? |
35891 | What''s up? |
35891 | What''s wrong with the ould wan, sir? |
35891 | When will you undhertake the job, thin? |
35891 | Where am I? |
35891 | Where can it be if M''Carthy will not produce it? |
35891 | Where in the world have you been all the evening? |
35891 | Where pray, may I pay my respects? |
35891 | Where should it be, at all, at all? |
35891 | Where''ll we throw to? |
35891 | Where''s Lucy, brother? 35891 Where''s your misses?" |
35891 | Whist, woman, d''ye think I''m a fool? 35891 Who are ye?" |
35891 | Who are yiz hittin''? 35891 Who are you, ye schoundhrel iv the world?" |
35891 | Who is he? |
35891 | Who? |
35891 | Whose else i d it be? 35891 Whose is the car?" |
35891 | Why did n''t you tell me then? |
35891 | Why would n''t they? |
35891 | Why, Doctor-- Doctor Finucane,cried I,"is it possible? |
35891 | Why, I thought you said you were not going? |
35891 | Why, man, what are you dreaming of? 35891 Why, thin,"says the waiver,"would no place sarve you but that? |
35891 | Why, you ongrateful little vagabone, was the like ever given to any man before? |
35891 | Will you give in it was a blackbird? |
35891 | Will you kindly tell me what is the proper light in which to view this extraordinary performance of yours? |
35891 | Will you kindly tell me,said Mrs. Knox, slowly,"am I in Bedlam, or are you? |
35891 | Wisha, Shawn, achora, what else''d I be but fond av you? |
35891 | Wo n''t ye have a cup o''tay, me lady? 35891 Wo n''t you be afther givin''your face the lick of a tow''l?" |
35891 | Would I do? |
35891 | Would you have any objection to my saying a few words to him, doctor? |
35891 | Would you kindly explain what you mean by the steer of the boat? |
35891 | Would you mind leaving out the monkey on the tree and getting back to the geological survey story? |
35891 | Yes, sir? |
35891 | Yes, sir? |
35891 | Yes, yes-- oh, rather,I assented, as one dizzily accepts the propositions of a bimetallist;"and you do n''t know of anything else----?" |
35891 | Yes? |
35891 | You are surely not speaking of_ hydrophobia_? |
35891 | You can get through a hedge? |
35891 | You do n''t happen to know the name of the best book on the subject? |
35891 | You do n''t know his name, then? |
35891 | You know Mr. Boxall, Patsy? |
35891 | You know the young lady you gave the note to this morning-- by the way, how did you give it? |
35891 | You mean that Jer would n''t have her unless he got the boat''s share with her? |
35891 | You will never let on to a living soul? |
35891 | You''re a widower, I understand, with no objection to consoling yourself? |
35891 | ''An''how''s yourself, Kitty, me dear? |
35891 | ''And how''s the one that had the bad cough?'' |
35891 | ''And where are you going all the way so fast?'' |
35891 | ''And, my lord, sir,''said I,''who in the world axed you to fly so far-- was it I? |
35891 | ''Aw, how d''ye do, Mrs. Breen? |
35891 | ''D''ye see what you''ve done?'' |
35891 | ''Get up,''said she again:''and of all places in the parish would no place sarve your turn to lie down upon but under the ould walls of Carrigaphooka? |
35891 | ''Good morrow to you,''says he,''Daniel O''Rourke; how are you in health this morning?'' |
35891 | ''Honor her name is, is n''t it?'' |
35891 | ''Hurt is it?'' |
35891 | ''I am afraid,''says I,''your honour''s making game of me; for who ever heard of riding horseback on an eagle before?'' |
35891 | ''Is Mrs. Flaherty at home?'' |
35891 | ''Is it Manders they call the minister?'' |
35891 | ''Is it out of the island you want to go, Dan?'' |
35891 | ''Is it sit down on the moon?'' |
35891 | ''Thunder an''ounze, what''s over them all?'' |
35891 | ''Tis a long journey, an''maybe they''ll be hungry-- an apples? |
35891 | ''Tis on''y the best John Jameson that''s kep'', or sherry wine? |
35891 | ''Twas herself was the handy dairy- woman, too; but what''d she be till a machine?" |
35891 | ''Was he hurt, Slipper?'' |
35891 | ''What brings you here, Dan?'' |
35891 | ''What brought you here, Dan?'' |
35891 | ''What good''s in ye that ye are n''t able to skelp her?''... |
35891 | ''What have we here? |
35891 | ''What the divil''s this?'' |
35891 | ''What''s floostered ye, Jane Flaherty? |
35891 | ''Where in the world are you going, sir?'' |
35891 | ''Who''s it from?'' |
35891 | ''Who''s there?'' |
35891 | ''Why, then,''said I to him-- thinking he did not know the right road home-- very civilly, because why? |
35891 | ''Wid ye all be steppin''in, please?'' |
35891 | ''You ugly, unnatural baste, and is this the way you serve me at last?'' |
35891 | --''Did you get the Doctor to her?'' |
35891 | All you have to do is to ask the man,''What is your religion?'' |
35891 | An''how the blazes are the rest o''ye, me girls?'' |
35891 | An''when will ye be able for the shwim, avic?" |
35891 | An''wid Mrs. Breen be inside?'' |
35891 | And it was you that I drove outside in all the rain last night? |
35891 | And she got marriet on a boy out o''Ballinahone on him, and do ye know what I''m goin''te tell ye? |
35891 | And still more, is it likely that you''d refuse him if I did?" |
35891 | And what brings you here?" |
35891 | And what is that?" |
35891 | Are n''t ye goin''to have your tay, me dear?'' |
35891 | Are you good at German?" |
35891 | At last, one night, siz he to me:--"Now, Darby, what''s to be done? |
35891 | At last--"Darby,"siz he,"are you any way cow''d? |
35891 | At long last he says,"Let your Lordship''s honour be telling-- What is it ails you at all?" |
35891 | But do you tell me, Sally, she''s afther givin''in it was a blackbird?" |
35891 | But is n''t it powerful quare o''Hannah to keep us sittin''here so long in our bonnets an''shawls, an''us dreepin''wi''the heat?'' |
35891 | But sure who''d be mindin''her? |
35891 | But there was wan battle that bate all-- do ye know what I''m goin''te tell ye? |
35891 | But what does this mane? |
35891 | But what in glory are ye all doin''over there, away from the table? |
35891 | But, Jack, this bates Banagher,''says he again, puttin''the spoonful of pudden into his mouth;''has there been drink here?'' |
35891 | By the way, how are you going to manage about Thomas O''Flaherty''s bit of land? |
35891 | By the way, what is your opinion of the Gaelic League?" |
35891 | Cakes, ma''am, for the little ladies? |
35891 | Can he be coming back already? |
35891 | Can you deny that you made proposals of marriage to Con Brickley''s daughter last Shraft?" |
35891 | Can you see me?" |
35891 | Can you speak it?" |
35891 | Come, boys, where''s your pitchforks?'' |
35891 | Con Brickley had the shteer o''the boat in his hand, and says he,''is there any man here that''ll take the shteer from me?'' |
35891 | Did I no''learn him his releegion mesel, and bid him foller after him that has gone before?" |
35891 | Did ever ye hear tell of the battle o''Scarva? |
35891 | Did ye ever hear tell of Barney Doyle?" |
35891 | Did you ever read a book on pragmatism?" |
35891 | Did you say he was a parson?" |
35891 | Did you see that old shandrydan of hers in the street a while ago, and a fellow on the box with a red beard on him like Robinson Crusoe? |
35891 | Do n''t yeh know the backin''she has? |
35891 | Do n''t you know the Earl of Leinsther when y''see him? |
35891 | Do n''t you see the smoke that''s out of it?'' |
35891 | Do ye mane to tell me that''s a Nationalist cow? |
35891 | Do ye tell me that? |
35891 | Do you care about babies? |
35891 | Do you know what took him there?" |
35891 | Do you know where Ireland is?" |
35891 | Do you mind lending it to me?" |
35891 | Do you say done?" |
35891 | Do you see that car?" |
35891 | Do you think the weather will hold up? |
35891 | Do you want me to make her a bid for one of the lapdogs?" |
35891 | Does Mrs. Jackson know Italian or Spanish?" |
35891 | Down it came with a pounce, and looked at me full in the face; and what was it but an eagle? |
35891 | Dutch?" |
35891 | Fanshawe?" |
35891 | Father Magrath says----""Who''s he?" |
35891 | Going up to an ould man who was sittin''on a rock, he took off his hat, and, says he--"That''s great weather we''re havin''?" |
35891 | Had n''t I betther go and pay my way?" |
35891 | Had n''t she seen it the night before looking the size of ten? |
35891 | Have n''t yeh childer to think about? |
35891 | Have ye no sperrit, woman alive, to let her ride rough- shod over uz this way? |
35891 | Have you any cigars? |
35891 | He subsidised the Pope o''Rome, did he? |
35891 | Heart is it?" |
35891 | Heffernan was so put about that he made no answer, and the man went on to say,"Is it that you do n''t know me? |
35891 | Heffernan?" |
35891 | Heffernan?" |
35891 | How could I fight him, when he had never given me the slightest affront? |
35891 | How could the ancient Greeks possibly have got on without it?" |
35891 | How dar''you be comin''round this a- way, dressed like a playacthor, takin''us in?" |
35891 | How do you explain the fact that you told a deliberate-- that you did n''t tell the truth?" |
35891 | How do you like Inishgowlan, now you are here? |
35891 | How should I act?'' |
35891 | How was she to escape from them, or to exculpate herself? |
35891 | Hurry up, will yez? |
35891 | Hush up now, will ye? |
35891 | I demanded;"where is he? |
35891 | I exclaimed, feeling cold all down my back;"do you mean the police have got hold of it?" |
35891 | I know who''ll carry the whip hand, anyhow; but in the manetime let us ax Harry within what ails the sun?'' |
35891 | I suppose you''re goin''to first Mass? |
35891 | In the name of endurance, then, what do we wait for? |
35891 | Is it Irish at all she is-- or what? |
35891 | Is it makin''a liar ov me she''d be whin I tould her I did n''t touch her ould lilies? |
35891 | Is it there yet?" |
35891 | Is it wanting a present you are of the finest calves in Ardenoo?" |
35891 | Is n''t a mouse the prettiest animal you might ask to see?" |
35891 | Is n''t that a fact?" |
35891 | Is there no place where you cou''d hide me from the captin?" |
35891 | It was the piper who said,''Master, what''s the prize to be?'' |
35891 | It''s a nice little island, is n''t it?" |
35891 | It''s aisy enough to sort out the Catholic farmers from the Protestant; but what about the cattle?" |
35891 | It''s what Affy was saying to me this minute:''Michael,''says he,''is Manders the name that''s on the priest that''s in the parish presently?'' |
35891 | Katty, ahagur, will you tell us what it manes?'' |
35891 | Look down in the next field, and do n''t you see two men and a gun? |
35891 | Maybe you''d guess what that was? |
35891 | Ne''er thought of a simper or sigh; For why? |
35891 | Now, what are you going to do when a Nationalist buys an Orange cow? |
35891 | Now, who but herself''ud be up to the likes o''this?" |
35891 | Of course, you would not recommend anything so ungenteel as a prosecution? |
35891 | Says I te her:"''Peggy- Anne, wud ye conceit a clove?'' |
35891 | Says I te him:''Do ye know what I''m goin''te tell ye? |
35891 | Ses I to her, ses I,''What did they give ye?'' |
35891 | Shawn, avourneen, machree_,"she exclaimed,"wo n''t you spake to me?" |
35891 | So he looked at me in the face, and says he to me,''Daniel O''Rourke,''says he,''how do you do?'' |
35891 | So says I to her,''What at all should I do wid the lovely doll, after your poor daddy sendin''it to yourself?'' |
35891 | Sorra another raison had they, for what else''ud make them take and build it behind our backs? |
35891 | Spanish? |
35891 | Suddenly she spoke--"What is the matter?" |
35891 | Sure, and I had an uncle o''me own, me own mother''s brother, that was tuk that way, and what did he do? |
35891 | Sure, do n''t ye know me? |
35891 | Sure, does n''t she know''twas Irish blood they spilt at the Boyne? |
35891 | Tell me now, doctor, is there any fear that I might be took by the police?" |
35891 | Tell me,"says she,"is Westland Row Station finished yet?" |
35891 | The ould gander, who was their general, turning about his head, cried out to me,''Is that you, Dan?'' |
35891 | The puir wee dog that never harmed yu? |
35891 | There''s been a lot of trouble over that?" |
35891 | There''s nothin''like it this side o''Dublin; A glass o''whiskey, sir? |
35891 | They''ll say''Why should n''t she have orange lilies if she likes?''" |
35891 | Try, now, sergeant, can you read Munig on her forehead?" |
35891 | Two minutes grace she had; then said I:"What had happened, Anne?" |
35891 | Well, as soon as the bird was gone, says Jer Garvan, says he,"Do you know what that ould gandher is, Terence Mooney?" |
35891 | Were you ever in England?" |
35891 | Were you, then, really the inside in the mail last night?" |
35891 | What about the washing and sweeping?" |
35891 | What annoyance is there in the matter, Julia woman? |
35891 | What could I do to her? |
35891 | What did you say to them?" |
35891 | What did you strike Honora Brickley with? |
35891 | What had you in your hand?" |
35891 | What i d ye think if we swum to Keep Cleer or the Keep ov Good Hope?" |
35891 | What i''d you give to know?" |
35891 | What is it now, for if anybody alive knows''tis yourself?'' |
35891 | What kept ye at all? |
35891 | What on earth did she want to grow? |
35891 | What ought I to do in such a case?'' |
35891 | What then can I do now?'' |
35891 | What''ll Mary say now? |
35891 | What''s that ye say? |
35891 | When his friend asked,"Why did not you change places with your_ vis- à- vis_?" |
35891 | When it came up close, I roared out--"Did ye hear me at last?" |
35891 | Where would be the good? |
35891 | Where''s the cowardly scoundrel that dare look crooked at it?" |
35891 | Who are you crowdin''? |
35891 | Who has not heard of the Oberammergau of the North? |
35891 | Who is it, at all?" |
35891 | Who is the Great Example? |
35891 | Who is this you have with you?" |
35891 | Who knows what harm it might do? |
35891 | Who lived in the town of Athlone, Alone? |
35891 | Who wants yez here at all?" |
35891 | Who wud it be, but him on the white horse?''" |
35891 | Why did n''t some decent tramp take and sling a spark of a lighted match into it, and he passing by with his pipe? |
35891 | Why do n''t ye sit an''have your tay like Christians?'' |
35891 | Why do you ax?'' |
35891 | Why should I put up wid her, I''d like to know?" |
35891 | Why, avick?'' |
35891 | Why, how can that be?" |
35891 | Why, it''s not possible, sir,"said I,"you would travel in a public conveyance in the state you mention; your friends surely would not permit it?" |
35891 | Why, wumman, dear, have I no seen it mesel? |
35891 | Will nobody give us the word to begin?" |
35891 | Will that plase you?" |
35891 | Will you give in it was a blackbird?" |
35891 | Will you take the governess cart back to the house, Boxall?" |
35891 | Wirra, man alive, what''s to be done?'' |
35891 | Would n''t he have destroyed you on''y for me?" |
35891 | You got a little touch of a pound, I think?" |
35891 | You know Higginbotham, of course?" |
35891 | You never were at Aussolas? |
35891 | You speak French, of course?" |
35891 | You understand the Ritschlian theory of value judgments, of course?" |
35891 | You wo n''t say that I''m posing for the British Public if I drink tea, will you?" |
35891 | You would n''t care to earn the price of a pint?" |
35891 | You''d like some tea, would n''t you, Mr Willoughby?" |
35891 | and is it spyling my brekquest yiz are, you dirty bastes?" |
35891 | and it with a bushy, black beard around it, and big rolling eyes, and a wide, old hat cocked back upon it? |
35891 | and who thinks to pity Hughie?" |
35891 | are you hurt?" |
35891 | began Mr. Mooney, stimulatingly,"and are you the biggest blackguard from here to America?" |
35891 | but them that has n''t it, what do they know about it? |
35891 | cried Mr. Mahony, as he rattled up behind in the cart,"where are yiz off to?" |
35891 | did not I beg, and pray, and beseech you to stop half- an- hour ago?'' |
35891 | do n''t you?" |
35891 | he ejaculated,"is n''t that her dog coming into the field? |
35891 | he thundered,"tell me what time it was when all this was going on?" |
35891 | is there any whiskey negus?" |
35891 | me gay fella, that''s what you''ve been up to, is it?" |
35891 | me not able? |
35891 | said Hughie;"and why would n''t he? |
35891 | said Hughie;"have n''t I two of them lame legs? |
35891 | said I;''is it upon that little round thing, then? |
35891 | said McCaffery, venomously;"you had a stick yourself, I daresay?" |
35891 | says Bonypart,"do you tell me so?" |
35891 | says Heffernan, pretty stiff;"well, and what do you want here?" |
35891 | says Hughie;"but what matter for that? |
35891 | says Hughie;"how could anyone get hurted so simple as that? |
35891 | says Ould Nick,"is that the way? |
35891 | says Sally,''or am I too early?'' |
35891 | says he,"my bones is bruck wid yer thricks, what are ye doin''wid me?" |
35891 | says she,''can you see anything?'' |
35891 | says she,''or what in glory ails the two o''ye?'' |
35891 | says the boy that was next to the car, turnin''as white as the top iv a musharoon;"did ye hear anything quare soundin''out iv the hamper?" |
35891 | sez the king,"who have we now?" |
35891 | siz I;"are ye goin''to Amerrykey?" |
35891 | siz I;"but can he shwim up agenst them?" |
35891 | the baron replied,"How could I? |
35891 | then, sir,''said I,''will you drop me on the ship if you please?'' |
35891 | what direct did you send it?" |
35891 | what is that?--is it possible he can be asleep;--is it really a snore? |
35891 | what should fly by close to my ear but a flock of wild geese; all the way from my own bog of Ballyasheenogh, or else, how should they know me? |
35891 | what''s that?" |
35891 | what''s this for?'' |
35891 | will you swear you got any ill- usage from Con Brickley or his wife?" |
7148 | Would Pomponius,says he, with a sarcastic application,"hear milder reproaches if his father were living?" |
7148 | A basket? |
7148 | After surviving so many sufferings, Lear can only die; and what more truly tragic end for him than to die from grief for the death of Cordelia? |
7148 | All this was in verse: and why not? |
7148 | And does not the poet paint the true way of the world, which never makes much of man''s injustice to woman, if so- called family honour is preserved? |
7148 | And how could such maxims be at all introduced, without the same important involution of human relations as that which is exhibited in perfect Comedy? |
7148 | And how does that which in the first description is a public place become afterwards a hall of audience? |
7148 | And on what foundation do these boundless praises rest? |
7148 | And to take an example from quite a different sphere, is not Shakspeare''s_ Julius Caesar_, as respects the action, constructed on the same principle? |
7148 | And what were these Mimes? |
7148 | And why was it denied them to take this last step? |
7148 | Are human sacrifices conceivable among a people whose chiefs and heroes are so susceptible of the tenderest emotions? |
7148 | Both drew their materials from Tacitus: but which of them has shown the more perfect understanding 01 this profound master of the human heart? |
7148 | But does our admiration of the one compel us to depreciate the other? |
7148 | But has Shakspeare ever attempted to soften the impression made by his unfeeling pride and light- hearted perversity? |
7148 | But how does a dramatic work become theatrical, or fitted to appear with advantage on the stage? |
7148 | But how does he there consider the oratorical art? |
7148 | But how does this apply to so premeditated a crime? |
7148 | But is it just to exact the severity of the tragical cothurnus in light works of this description? |
7148 | But it will be asked, are not extrinsic aims of this kind prejudicial to the pure poetical impressions which the composition ought to produce? |
7148 | But what compelled him to measure his powers with theirs, and to write an_ Electra_ at all? |
7148 | But what if Lessing, with his acute analytical criticism, split exactly on the same rock? |
7148 | But what if each determines on something not exactly opposite, but altogether different? |
7148 | But where are the limits of this plurality? |
7148 | But which of the actions of the four persons is the main action? |
7148 | But who can possibly enumerate all the different combinations and situations by which our minds are here as it were stormed by the poet? |
7148 | But why are the Greek and romantic poets so different in their practice with respect to place and time? |
7148 | But why does Tragedy select subjects so awfully repugnant to the wishes and the wants of our sensuous nature? |
7148 | But why has Aristophanes personified the sophistical metaphysics by the venerable Socrates, who was himself a determined opponent of the Sophists? |
7148 | But why has this revival of the admiration of Shakspeare remained unproductive for dramatic poetry? |
7148 | By exhibiting to us an image hovering in the air? |
7148 | By what means can a noble youth be more easily seduced than by female tenderness and modesty? |
7148 | Can Posthumus have got this tablet with the prophecy by dreaming? |
7148 | Can any other poet be named who has drawn aside the curtain of eternity at the close of this life with such overpowering and awful effect? |
7148 | Comment l''a- t- elle pris, et comment l''a- t- il fait? |
7148 | Do not the faults which they censure unavoidably follow from the selection of an intractable subject, so very inconvenient as a nightly enterprise? |
7148 | Do we not find in all Terence''s plays serious, impassioned, and touching passages? |
7148 | For does not the impression of a drama depend in an especial manner on the relation of the parts to each other? |
7148 | Harpagon starves his coach- horses: but why has he any? |
7148 | Has it not rather very different measures of time for agreeable occupation and for wearisomeness? |
7148 | How comes Alceste to have chosen Philinte for a friend, a man whose principles were directly the reverse of his own? |
7148 | How comes he also to be enamoured of a coquette, who has nothing amiable in her character, and who entertains us merely by her scandal? |
7148 | How has Shakspeare solved this difficulty? |
7148 | How many women then did Theseus wish to carry off for Pirithöus? |
7148 | How now have the gaps arising from the omission of the lyrical parts been filled up? |
7148 | How then does the latter attain his end? |
7148 | How was the transition from low farce to such elevation effected? |
7148 | How was this compatible with the relations of the Grecian women of that day? |
7148 | How was this to be accomplished? |
7148 | How within, yet not within? |
7148 | In this province, can there be either beginning or end, corresponding to Aristotle''s very accurate definition of these notions? |
7148 | Is Euripides within? |
7148 | Is it possible to persuade ourselves that they would not have known if a piece in their repertory did or did not really belong to Shakspeare? |
7148 | Is it to be imagined that Shakspeare would require of his spectators the belief in a wonder without a visible cause? |
7148 | Is not the concatenation of causes and effects, backwards and forwards, without end? |
7148 | Is our soul then a piece of clock- work, that tells the hours and minutes with infallible accuracy? |
7148 | Its offences against propriety? |
7148 | Knows he how great a pest he is himself? |
7148 | May we not admit that each is great and admirable in its kind, although the one is, and is meant to be, different from the other? |
7148 | Of what avail is all foreign imitation? |
7148 | Of_ Macbeth_ I have already spoken once in passing, and who could exhaust the praises of this sublime work? |
7148 | On nerves so steeled what effect could the more refined gradations of tragic pathos produce? |
7148 | On regularity of form? |
7148 | Or on the political sentiments? |
7148 | Orestes determines on flight into foreign lands, while Electra asks,"Who will now take me in marriage?" |
7148 | Quels courages Venus n''a- t- elle pas domtés? |
7148 | Shall we endeavour to accustom ourselves again to the French form of Tragedy, which has been so long banished? |
7148 | So that it was only for the structure of his own pieces that he had no thought to spare? |
7148 | Son hommage auprès d''elle a- t- il eu plein effet? |
7148 | The Furies on the other hand: O Night, black Mother, seest thou these doings? |
7148 | The following from his_ Otho_ are equally well known: Dis moi donc, lorsqu''Othon s''est offert à Camille, A- t- il paru contraint? |
7148 | The ludicrous can hardly be carried farther than it is in these lines: Craint- on de s''égarer sur les traces d''Hercule? |
7148 | The question of Hamlet with respect to the players--"Do they grow rusty?" |
7148 | The tricks of Scapin, for the sake of which he has spoiled the plot, occupy the foremost place: but we may well ask whether they deserve it? |
7148 | This drama does, it is true, embrace a considerable period of time: but does its rapid progress leave us leisure to calculate this? |
7148 | Those in which old Oeneus, That hapless wight, went through his bitter conflict? |
7148 | Those of blind Phoenix? |
7148 | Uggargini( Oude?) |
7148 | Vous même,_ où seriez vous_, vous qui la combattez, Si toujours Antiope, à ses loix opposée, D''une_ pudique_ ardeur n''eut brûlé pour Thésée? |
7148 | Was Rome the less the conqueror of the world, because Remus could leap over its first walls? |
7148 | Was ever such a wretch? |
7148 | Was it the rage for novelty which led him here into such faults? |
7148 | Was this done with an artistic design, and were they actually desirous of excelling their Grecian predecessors in the structure of their pieces? |
7148 | We may be allowed, however, to observe that the last line--"Doch wozu ist des Weisen Thorheit nutz?" |
7148 | What can be more improbable than that people should confide their secrets to one another in a place where they know their enemies are close at hand? |
7148 | What foundation is there, then, for the alleged barbarity of his age? |
7148 | What is action? |
7148 | What is dramatic? |
7148 | What is it, then, that makes a drama poetical? |
7148 | What is more revolting-- what proves a deeper degeneracy of human nature, than horrid crimes conceived in the bosom of cowardly effeminacy? |
7148 | What is the best means of becoming imbued with the spirit of the Greeks, without a knowledge of their language? |
7148 | What is the poet''s meaning here? |
7148 | What path shall we now enter? |
7148 | What rags will suit you? |
7148 | What shall we say to this? |
7148 | What sort of opera- music would it be, which should set the words to a mere rhythmical accompaniment of the simplest modulations? |
7148 | What would the Greeks have thought of this bold and indecent courtship? |
7148 | What''s thy need on''t? |
7148 | What, dost loiter? |
7148 | Where would be the objection, if the only obstacle were the supposed impossibility? |
7148 | Which now is the principal action? |
7148 | Who can recognise, in his blustering and raging Nero, the man who, as Tacitus says, seemed formed by nature"to veil hatred with caresses?" |
7148 | Who can refrain from laughing, when Rome, in the speech of Caesar, implores the_ chaste_ love of Cleopatra for young Caesar? |
7148 | Who''s there? |
7148 | Whose sorry tatters can the fellow want? |
7148 | Why should not Poetry also be allowed her arabesque? |
7148 | Why then should the poets have lavished such labour and art upon them, if it were all to be lost in the delivery? |
7148 | Why, for instance, does Orestes fruitlessly torment his sister by maintaining his incognito so long? |
7148 | Why, then, should not this phenomenon recur on a grander scale in the history of man? |
7148 | Why? |
7148 | Wist thou what conflict thou must soon contend in To proffer speech and full defence for Sparta? |
7148 | Within, and not within: Can''st fathom that? |
7148 | Yet what to do? |
7148 | a- t- elle été facile? |
7148 | and may we then, with equal propriety, begin and break off wherever we please? |
7148 | and the Duchess de la Vallière are represented under the names Titus and Berenice? |
7148 | breathes out its longing for its distant home, what else but melancholy can be the key- note of its songs? |
7148 | hast not imbibed Euripides? |
7148 | or that plots against a sovereign should be hatched in his own antechamber? |
7148 | pourquoi rappeler mes ennuis? |
7148 | que dis- tu? |
7148 | which of you copied the other?" |
43490 | What... what... what is to become of us if he do n''t come home? |
43490 | Where have I been? |
43490 | Why are you crowing? |
43490 | ''Tis only a mistake? |
43490 | (_ To Mrs. Alving._) Had I not cause to be deeply concerned about your son? |
43490 | )__ Manders( excited)._ What in the world is the matter? |
43490 | ... And what did he say about Chapel? |
43490 | After Dick, that I''ve bullied till he''s a fool? |
43490 | Allow it to go on in the light of day? |
43490 | Alving._ Is that only a superstition? |
43490 | Alving._ Nothing more? |
43490 | Am I a liar, a coward, a traitor? |
43490 | Am I a man to believe that the stars are fragments of hellebore, or that one may drop something into a well and put out the moon?... |
43490 | Am I not right? |
43490 | Am I so very unmerciful? |
43490 | An empty place.... Why disturb the soul with the desire to soar into the sky?... |
43490 | And at that price she is to be forgiven for another person''s crime.... Then that is Society''s welcome to the new born child? |
43490 | And besides, have n''t I the free and independent press with me? |
43490 | And is she not a criminal? |
43490 | And we were so happy,--weren''t we?... |
43490 | And what about the dividing of the money? |
43490 | And what ha''you got by it-- what? |
43490 | And when we are fifty years old, and other regular conditions have been fulfilled, that can be arranged, ca n''t it? |
43490 | And where would they get the money to rescue us if we was to let on we''re no worse than other people? |
43490 | And yonder tongues of fire shooting up towards the heavens-- do you know what they are? |
43490 | Are n''t there enough police to prevent children of fifteen from being seduced like that? |
43490 | Are n''t you every bit as good as the next? |
43490 | Are people incapable of understanding that there can be no crime in a situation which only tends to make both parties better and nobler? |
43490 | Are we not thus turned into weaklings and cowards, and do we not enter into new relationships with lies upon our lips? |
43490 | Are you going to make our shelter another tied house for him, and ask me to keep it? |
43490 | Are you going to spend your life saying ought, like the rest of our moralists? |
43490 | Are you mad? |
43490 | Are you really English? |
43490 | Are you shocked? |
43490 | Are you yourself without sin, that you are so relentless to others? |
43490 | Besides, is she not shielded, protected, and cared for? |
43490 | But I-- for a wretched lark-- what is there left for a leper like me? |
43490 | But how is one to know what is back of the paint and artifice? |
43490 | But is that enough?... |
43490 | But what about a woman? |
43490 | But where can a woman get the money to save in any other business? |
43490 | But where is the path? |
43490 | But where is the wise man that hath not his private madness, the good man to whom no monstrous idea has ever come? |
43490 | But why should I not make it convenient for you? |
43490 | Ca n''t we have done with this old- fashioned tug- of- war business? |
43490 | Can you forsake your holiest duties in this way? |
43490 | Children to come after me-- glad o''what I done? |
43490 | Come, now, is there? |
43490 | Could you save out of four shillings a week and keep yourself dressed as well? |
43490 | D''ye understand? |
43490 | D''you know what your gran''mother was? |
43490 | Did not_ Helmer_ tell her that the very presence of a criminal like_ Krogstad_ poisons the children? |
43490 | Dipsomaniac?... |
43490 | Do I not belong to this house, and am I not smothered with the damnable charity of my benefactors, like yourself? |
43490 | Do n''t I know that? |
43490 | Do n''t you think so, Dr. Vockerat? |
43490 | Do not human spirits look out at you from every tree in the orchard, from every leaf and every stem? |
43490 | Do parents lose by their son becoming a better, wiser man? |
43490 | Do we not become a lie to ourselves and a lie to those we associate with? |
43490 | Do ye go lyin''down an''trustin''to the tender mercies of this merciful Nature? |
43490 | Do you hear? |
43490 | Do you know that you have the law on your side and that the courts can force him to pay? |
43490 | Do you like it? |
43490 | Do you mean to say that respectable men from home here would----? |
43490 | Do you not hear human voices?... |
43490 | Do you not think so, Dr. Vockerat? |
43490 | Do you really cling to the old superstition?--you who are so enlightened in other ways? |
43490 | Do you remember your Crofts scholarship at Newnham? |
43490 | Do you sing the Italian school or the French school or the German school?" |
43490 | Do you suppose I am not a most unhappy husband all the time I have a future mother at my side instead of a loving wife?... |
43490 | Do you suppose that after that your daughter is likely to find a second husband?... |
43490 | Do you suppose that you and a half a dozen amateurs like you, sitting in a row in that foolish gabble shop, can govern Undershaft and Lazarus? |
43490 | Do you suppose the Army''d be allowed if it went and did right? |
43490 | Do you think that my position in your house-- for it is yours-- is agreeable to me? |
43490 | Do you think that this poor little thing has not been unlucky enough in her start in life? |
43490 | Do you understand human speech? |
43490 | Do you understand? |
43490 | Does a wife lose by the spiritual growth of her husband? |
43490 | For Rutherfords''? |
43490 | For as one of the men says,"What''s to hinder a weaver waitin''for an hour, or for a day? |
43490 | For is it not true that we are all bound by gratitude, tied and fettered by what we think we owe to others? |
43490 | For is not success, as commonly understood, but too frequently bought at the expense of character and idealism? |
43490 | Four out of a thousand? |
43490 | Hands together, and victory-- or-- the starvation you''ve got now? |
43490 | Harte._ An''would you be seeing a heavier cross put on them that did all that mortal man and woman could do for you? |
43490 | Harte._ And will you have no pity at all on us and on Owen here, that have slaved for you all our lives? |
43490 | Harte._ If you do n''t how can I ever face outside this door or lift my head again?... |
43490 | Harte._ What business was it of his, I''d like to know? |
43490 | Harte._ You''ll go back? |
43490 | Have I not built up my career step by step, like thousands of my kind? |
43490 | Have I not worked early and late for ten long years? |
43490 | Have I not woven this dress with sleepless nights? |
43490 | Have we not tried sobriety? |
43490 | Have you forgotten that Lord Saxmundham is Bodger the whisky man? |
43490 | Have you gone silly? |
43490 | Here!--Would you like to know what my circumstances were? |
43490 | How can they know the infinite shades between strong and weak, how could they grasp the endless variations between the good and the bad? |
43490 | How could I ever face again into town o''Macroom? |
43490 | How could I listen to the neighbors making pity for me, and many a one o''them only glad in their hearts? |
43490 | How d''ye suppose most of them manage? |
43490 | How has the national strength of Prussia been purchased? |
43490 | How is it that you are n''t going to marry Beatrice Farrar? |
43490 | How many do you think there are? |
43490 | How many hundred nights has I lain an''racked my head to think what I could do to cheat the churchyard of my little one? |
43490 | How much has Thomas given up-- ten pounds or five or what? |
43490 | How much more did you care for me? |
43490 | How should they be to blame? |
43490 | How then could she fail a Vockerat? |
43490 | I accept all they have to give.... Was I not picked up from the street, as my uncle so kindly informed me for the second time-- like yourself? |
43490 | I ask, is it right? |
43490 | I asked him once:"Grandfather, why do men really live?" |
43490 | I did n''t act as I ought to have, about references; but what are you to do? |
43490 | I ought to have left him, run away, come home, ought n''t I? |
43490 | I sincerely trust that such things will not occur again.--Who gets all the blame for it? |
43490 | I thought-- Why should I undervalue my position? |
43490 | I wonder do you really know what you''ve made of us? |
43490 | I''ll see somebody struck by lightnin'', or hear a voice sayin'',"Snobby Price: where will you spend eternity?" |
43490 | I''ll tell''em how I blasphemed and gambled and wopped my poor old mother--_ Rummy._ Used you to beat your mother? |
43490 | I''m to be given away with a pound of tea, as it were? |
43490 | I''ve loved in wretchedness, all the joy I ever had made wicked by the fear o''you.... Who are you? |
43490 | I, in love with my coachman? |
43490 | If I make money, what''ll I buy with it? |
43490 | If I steal this, what''ll I gain by it? |
43490 | If I were rich, should I not be simply verree original,''ighly respected, with soul above commerce, traveling to see the world? |
43490 | If it went out about you this day, is n''t it destroyed forever we''d be? |
43490 | If she''s in his own station of life, let her make him marry her; but if she''s far beneath him, she ca n''t expect it-- why should she? |
43490 | If you can not, how is it our fault? |
43490 | If you give it to me what''ll you gain by it? |
43490 | In good or in ill? |
43490 | Is he not the most powerful king on earth? |
43490 | Is he to become a member of the luckless crews that man those dark, ill- starred ships called prisons?... |
43490 | Is it necessary to dwell on the revolutionary significance of this cruel reality? |
43490 | Is it not strange that a beloved image can live thus in a man''s heart? |
43490 | Is it not the echo from the past? |
43490 | Is it right, sir, that that should be allowed? |
43490 | Is it to buy macaroons or finery? |
43490 | Is n''t a man to support his wife? |
43490 | Is n''t that nice, just now when the girls are grown up and are going out into life? |
43490 | Is that true? |
43490 | Is that your remedy for everything? |
43490 | Is there a despotism more compelling and destructive than that of the facts of property, of the State and Church? |
43490 | Is there a man among you who has given up eight hundred pounds since this trouble began? |
43490 | Is there a man of you here who has less to gain by striking? |
43490 | Is there a man of you that had more to lose? |
43490 | Is there anything I can do for you? |
43490 | Is there anything more degrading to woman than to live with a stranger, and bear him children? |
43490 | It is often asked,"Why is the Russian drama so pessimistic?" |
43490 | It''s Rutherfords''.... Will you give it to me? |
43490 | John, that''s wished me dead? |
43490 | Learned Man, or is it not? |
43490 | Must it always be thus? |
43490 | My God, why hast thou forsaked me? |
43490 | No good in a free society to have right on your side? |
43490 | No; do you know when and where I have found immorality in artistic circles? |
43490 | Nor is_ Bertha_ different in her concept of love, which is expressed in the following dialogue:_ Bertha._ Will you be very good, very, very good? |
43490 | Now, is n''t it?... |
43490 | Of what use am I in your house? |
43490 | Oh, it''s easy to talk, very easy, is n''t it? |
43490 | Oh, this feeling of shame!--What good to me is an encyclopedia that wo n''t answer me concerning the most important question in life? |
43490 | Pleasure, maybe? |
43490 | Poverty, in all its ugliness, to be presented as an after- dinner amusement? |
43490 | See here; supposing I told you that in all my life I have only had two mistresses, what would you say to that? |
43490 | Should not a son love his father, all the same? |
43490 | So she comes to you:"Ca n''t I,"says she,"make some use of my money?" |
43490 | So that happened which was sure to happen.... Oswald, my dear boy; has it shaken you very much? |
43490 | So that''s your line, is it?... |
43490 | So what could I do but sign? |
43490 | So, when he had you in his tent, alone, with a cloak for all your covering, all night long, you say he spared you?... |
43490 | Speaking of the motor he bought for his only son_ Alan_, he tells his wife:_ Jeffcote._ Why did I buy a motor- car? |
43490 | Stockmann._ Should I let myself be beaten off the field by public opinion, and the compact majority, and such deviltry? |
43490 | Strange, is it not, that those who serve and drudge for others, should think so much of themselves as to refuse to be played with? |
43490 | Tell me, for all their talk, is there one of them that will consent to another penny on the Income Tax to help the poor? |
43490 | That did n''t occur to you? |
43490 | That was worth being respectable for, was n''t it? |
43490 | That''s why we''re so reserved about it.... Do n''t turn up your nose at business, Miss Vivie: where would your Newnhams and Girtons be without it?... |
43490 | The compact majority behind me? |
43490 | The harm we do to others-- is it so much? |
43490 | The slave is faithful to- day,_ King- Hunger_ warns the judges, but"who can trust the to- morrow? |
43490 | Then how could I, this very evening, so overcome with feeling for my fellow- man-- how could I pass Him by? |
43490 | Then we can, under some pretext, adopt it, ca n''t we? |
43490 | Then you have killed my father and grandfather and great- grandfather, and would''st thou kill us? |
43490 | There is another, as expressed by_ Laura_:"Do you remember when I first came into your life, I was like a second mother?... |
43490 | They might have killed me.... Then they would be taken to court again, put in prison, sent back to Siberia.... Why all that? |
43490 | They''re welcome to the worst that can happen to me, to the worst that can happen to us all, are n''t they-- aren''t they? |
43490 | Through blood to love and kisses? |
43490 | To what end did I aspire? |
43490 | Unheard of, is it not, that a Fanny should refuse to be made a"good woman,"and that she should dare demand the right to live in her own way? |
43490 | Vanna? |
43490 | Was he not forever the seeker, the restless spirit roaming the earth, ever in the death- throes of the Old, to give birth to the New? |
43490 | Was it Major Barbara? |
43490 | We''re companions in misfortune, Rummy...._ Rummy._ Who saved you, Mr. Price? |
43490 | Well then, is n''t it better for me to clear out of it? |
43490 | Well, what did they get by their respectability? |
43490 | Were n''t you fond of her? |
43490 | What am I to you? |
43490 | What are they to do? |
43490 | What are you talking about, Henry Thomas? |
43490 | What can they do with me, Monsieur, with that girl, or with that old man? |
43490 | What chance would_ Bertha_ have with one of her own sex in authority? |
43490 | What did the Chairman tell me up in London? |
43490 | What do you think of it? |
43490 | What does he want, for goodness''sake? |
43490 | What duties do you mean? |
43490 | What else is he there for?" |
43490 | What good''s it doing you? |
43490 | What harm has a baby like that done that it must come to such a miserable end-- eh? |
43490 | What have they gained by cursing? |
43490 | What is it that passes current here? |
43490 | What is it, Mrs. Alving? |
43490 | What is science for if not to advise a lethal chamber? |
43490 | What is the earth? |
43490 | What is the good of being right when you have n''t any might? |
43490 | What is the matter with him? |
43490 | What is the sky? |
43490 | What is the use of burning the books? |
43490 | What more can you want? |
43490 | What pillar of society is averse to basking in the glow of celebrities? |
43490 | What right have we human beings to happiness? |
43490 | What would become of these living corpses were it not for the rebels like_ Becker_, to put fire, spirit, and hope in them? |
43490 | What would you have? |
43490 | What''s the use in such hypocrisy? |
43490 | What''s the use of being alive if one is n''t?" |
43490 | What''s there to mend except what''s bound you like a slave all the years? |
43490 | What? |
43490 | When he arrives in the midst of these distinguished society people, he is plied with the query,"How do you sing? |
43490 | When she saw I''d grown up good- looking she said to me across the bar:"What are you doing there, you little fool? |
43490 | Where do you lead us, unarmed? |
43490 | Where is my blood? |
43490 | Where is my body? |
43490 | Where is my soul? |
43490 | Where is the path? |
43490 | Where would we be now if we''d minded the clergyman''s foolishness? |
43490 | Which is it to be? |
43490 | Who are you? |
43490 | Who are you? |
43490 | Who calls it so? |
43490 | Who in modern dramatic art is there to teach us that lesson with the insight of an August Strindberg? |
43490 | Who is to blame? |
43490 | Who shall thus come? |
43490 | Who, indeed, would expect depth of a doll, a"squirrel,"a song- bird? |
43490 | Who, then, would suspect_ Nora_ of depth? |
43490 | Whose will did I shape? |
43490 | Why bother your head? |
43490 | Why care if they faint away with hunger, like the little boy in_ Dreissiger''s_ office? |
43490 | Why is Liz looked up to in a cathedral town? |
43490 | Why need the chanteclers know how they sing? |
43490 | Why need you bother about the sun?" |
43490 | Why on earth should I love you? |
43490 | Why should I blush before anyone? |
43490 | Why should he, with so much wealth awaiting him? |
43490 | Why should n''t I have done it? |
43490 | Why should n''t they''av''a bit o''credit, poor loves? |
43490 | Why should this gold upon my body, and the lustre which surrounds my name, only increase my infamy? |
43490 | Why should_ Fanny_ marry a young man in order to become"good,"any more than that he should marry her in order to become good? |
43490 | Why spend sleepless nights? |
43490 | Why wo n''t you marry me? |
43490 | Why, then, care if they starve? |
43490 | Why, then, should it not be strong enough to break the fetters of even Rutherfords''? |
43490 | Will they ever? |
43490 | Will this prevent Kitty''s grieving herself to death?... |
43490 | Will you pay your men one penny more than they force you to pay them? |
43490 | With the adder in Maxim Gorki''s"Song of the Falcon"they sneer,"What is the sky? |
43490 | With trade unionism lacking in true solidarity, and the workers not conscious of their power, why should the Company pay one penny more? |
43490 | Would you have had me stay in them and become a worn- out old drudge before I was forty?... |
43490 | Would you, Father? |
43490 | Would you? |
43490 | Ye have got it on its knees; are ye to give up at the last minute to save your miserable bodies pain? |
43490 | Ye wonder why I tell ye that? |
43490 | Yes, of what good is an encyclopedia or the other wise books to the quivering, restless spirit of the child? |
43490 | You ask me for a certificate in order to prove to the court that your son- in- law has contracted syphilis? |
43490 | You chaps that live over the hill, an''go home dead beat in the dark on a snowy night-- don''t ye fight your way every inch of it? |
43490 | You clamored so loud-- why are you mute? |
43490 | You listened to him, and what had he to say? |
43490 | You would n''t like people to say that of your mother, would you? |
43490 | You would n''t prevent a woman enjoying herself as well as a man, if she takes it into her head? |
43490 | You''ll please be so very kind as to let me have a few pence on the next job, sir? |
43490 | You''re silent? |
43490 | Yours? |
43490 | _ Akim._ What is this? |
43490 | _ Alan._ And you want me to marry Fanny? |
43490 | _ Alan._ But do you mean to say that you did n''t care any more for me than a fellow cares for any girl he happens to pick up? |
43490 | _ Alan._ But you did n''t ever really love me? |
43490 | _ Alan._ Look here, Fanny, what''s all this nonsense about?... |
43490 | _ Anya._ Why is it that I no longer love the cherry orchard as I did? |
43490 | _ Axel._ Go begging? |
43490 | _ Barbara_ is indeed ignorant or she would not protest against a fact so notorious:_ Barbara._ Do you know what my father is? |
43490 | _ Bertha._ You would not make a sacrifice for your wife, would you? |
43490 | _ Bertley._ Now, what is to be done? |
43490 | _ Brignac._ Do I do it out of selfishness? |
43490 | _ Brignac._ What do you mean by that? |
43490 | _ Burgomaster._ Do you really think so? |
43490 | _ Calway._ Is it, do you think, chronic unemployment with a vagrant tendency? |
43490 | _ Constable._ Well, sir, we ca n''t get over the facts, can we?... |
43490 | _ Doctor._ You were very happy, why did you want to change? |
43490 | _ Fanny._ Love you? |
43490 | _ Fanny._ Made you? |
43490 | _ Fanny._ Then all you want to we d me for is what you''ll get with me? |
43490 | _ Fanny._ You ca n''t understand a girl not jumping at you when she gets the chance, can you?... |
43490 | _ Guido._ My wife? |
43490 | _ Heinrich._ I am thy Balder? |
43490 | _ Helmer._ Do you ask me that? |
43490 | _ Jack._ Did n''t you see yourself how dishonest it was? |
43490 | _ Janet._ What''s there to mend? |
43490 | _ Jean._ Why should one respect them? |
43490 | _ Jean_ says: Do you know how people in high life look from the under- world?... |
43490 | _ John._ But we''ll not talk about that at present.... And is one really to sacrifice everything that one has gained to this cursed conventionality? |
43490 | _ John._ How do you mean? |
43490 | _ King- Hunger._ What is your offense, starveling? |
43490 | _ King- Hunger._ What''s your offense? |
43490 | _ King- Hunger._ Who are you, starveling? |
43490 | _ King- Hunger._ Why, coughing blood, do you smile and gaze to heaven? |
43490 | _ Loche._ Then what am I to do? |
43490 | _ Lona_ alone sees the abyss facing him, and tells him:"What does it matter whether such a society is supported or not? |
43490 | _ Lordan._ Is n''t it easily seen? |
43490 | _ Lucie._ How? |
43490 | _ Lucie._ You seriously propose to send that poor child to Paris, where she does n''t know a soul? |
43490 | _ Luise._ You an''your piety an''religion-- did they serve to keep the life in my poor children? |
43490 | _ Magda._ What-- what do you say? |
43490 | _ Magda._ Your child? |
43490 | _ Manders._ How can the authorities tolerate such things? |
43490 | _ Manders._ What are they to do? |
43490 | _ Manders._ What? |
43490 | _ Martin._ And what will Mr. John get for it? |
43490 | _ Mary._ What you''ve made of us? |
43490 | _ Maurice._ Father, would you have your son live a life of sacrilege? |
43490 | _ Melchior._ Did you dream? |
43490 | _ Melchior._ Do n''t you know that yet either, Moritz? |
43490 | _ Melchior._ Manhood''s emotion? |
43490 | _ Melchior._ What? |
43490 | _ Melchior_, like_ Wendla_, was also"pure of heart"; yet how was he"blessed"? |
43490 | _ Michael._ Maurice, would you break our hearts? |
43490 | _ Michael._ You''ll go back, Maurice? |
43490 | _ Miss Mahr._ But will you get anyone, except me, to believe this? |
43490 | _ Mitrich._ Not according to the Law? |
43490 | _ Moritz._ Did he tell you that?... |
43490 | _ Moritz._ Do you believe, Melchior, that the feeling of shame in man is only a product of his education? |
43490 | _ Moritz._ Have you experienced it yet? |
43490 | _ Moritz._ How do you say it? |
43490 | _ Moritz._ How should I know it? |
43490 | _ Nora._ What do you call my holiest duties? |
43490 | _ Oswald._ Have you never heard these respectable men, when they got home again, talking about the way in which immorality was running rampant abroad? |
43490 | _ Oswald._ Is n''t that the day to enjoy one''s self? |
43490 | _ Oswald._ What are they to do? |
43490 | _ Oswald._ When a son has nothing to thank his father for? |
43490 | _ Paul Ruttledge._ I think_ you_ have something to say, Colonel Lawley? |
43490 | _ Paul Ruttledge._ To organize? |
43490 | _ Petra._ And would you supply the public with such stuff? |
43490 | _ Roberts._ Justice from London? |
43490 | _ Roberts._ You do n''t want to hear me then? |
43490 | _ Rummy._ What am I to do? |
43490 | _ Rutherford._ After all? |
43490 | _ Rutherford._ And after that? |
43490 | _ Rutherford._ How far''s it gone? |
43490 | _ Rutherford._ What''s that? |
43490 | _ Rutherford._ What''s your receipt? |
43490 | _ Rutherford._ Your price-- your price? |
43490 | _ Schwartze._ How? |
43490 | _ Second Workingman._ Through violence to freedom? |
43490 | _ Trigorin._ What is there so fine about it? |
43490 | _ Vivie._ Did you and your sister think so? |
43490 | _ Vivie._ My aunt Lizzie? |
43490 | _ Von Keller._ Oh, pray don''t--_ Magda._ Well, between old friends--_ Von Keller._ Really, are we that, really? |
43490 | _ Wendla._ But why do you weep so frightfully, then? |
43490 | _ Wendla._ I''ll go-- And suppose your child went out and asked the chimney sweep? |
43490 | always, always upon the joy of life?--light and sunshine and glorious air, and faces radiant with happiness? |
43490 | are you mad? |
43490 | bien-- what are we now? |
43490 | ca n''t you see what a splendid sacrifice you have it in your power to make? |
43490 | has never known him? |
43490 | when all the rest are pocketing what they can, like sensible men? |
41170 | ''Did you know, trumpeter, that, when I came to Plymouth, they put me into a line regiment?'' 41170 ''How should it be with me? |
41170 | ''They-- who?'' 41170 ''Troop Sergeant- Major Thomas Irons, how is it with you?'' |
41170 | ''Trooper Henry Buckingham, how is it with you?'' 41170 A-- dead-- man?" |
41170 | Am I not foolish? |
41170 | An enemy? 41170 And do you see that iron chimney coming out of the wall there? |
41170 | And the dimensions of this picture, Mister Vénius? |
41170 | And the trumpeter just lifted the lids of his eyes, and answered:''How should I not be one with you, drummer Johnny-- Johnny boy? 41170 And this woman,"continued the judge--"this woman who is being murdered at the side of the well-- did you imagine her also?" |
41170 | And what about the cigar- case? |
41170 | And what did you see? |
41170 | And where can I find him? |
41170 | And where can I put up my horse, Mynheer? |
41170 | And who is it that will be making that strange music? |
41170 | And who will be playing that? |
41170 | And who would be doing that? |
41170 | And will you make it my home for me by coming to live with me, as I''ve asked you again and again? |
41170 | And you are certain you did_ not_ see him? |
41170 | Are they all gone? |
41170 | Are you game to follow me, my man? 41170 Are you quite sure you have not dreamed it, Roland?" |
41170 | Are you sure it was he? |
41170 | Ay, lass, and what about the birdeen? |
41170 | Ay? |
41170 | Bagley,I said,"I want you to come out with me tonight to watch for----""Poachers, Colonel?" |
41170 | But how will you get across by night from Blackwater to Stockbridge with seventy- five thousand pounds in your pocket? |
41170 | But now that he has come back? |
41170 | But, Roland, what can I do? |
41170 | But, my boy,I said( I was at my wits''end),"if it was a child that was lost, or any poor human creature-- but, Roland, what do you want me to do?" |
41170 | By all the spirits of the Hartz Mountains----"Nay, why not by Heaven? |
41170 | Ca n''t we stay together, Colonel? |
41170 | Can you describe his appearance? |
41170 | Can you remember if he was absent on the 4th instant? |
41170 | Can you tell me who took the Blackwater tickets of that train? |
41170 | Could I dream of a branch line that I had never heard of? 41170 Did Mr. Dwerrihouse leave the station in this person''s company?" |
41170 | Did he charge much? |
41170 | Did you hear anything fall? 41170 Did you see Mr. Raikes in the train or on the platform?" |
41170 | Did you see me ask for his ticket, sir? |
41170 | Did you, or did you not, meet Mr. John Dwerrihouse at Blackwater station? 41170 Do n''t you see how it shakes my whole frame with its struggles? |
41170 | Do you believe in Purgatory, Doctor? 41170 Do you call my child''s life nothing?" |
41170 | Do you catch the likeness of any face or figure as you look? |
41170 | Do you consider the consequences of your words? 41170 Do you hear it, Bagley? |
41170 | Do you know if he was in the 4:15 express yesterday afternoon? |
41170 | Do you know that your neighbour is Countess Edwina S----? 41170 Do you remember having thrown this woman, Theresa Becker, into this well, after having strangled her to rob her of her money?" |
41170 | Do you see anybody? |
41170 | Do you see that lintie yonder, father? |
41170 | Do you want to tell me it is a ghost? |
41170 | Father? |
41170 | For God''s sake, what is it, sir? |
41170 | Hav''anybody seen her? |
41170 | Have you never had a curiosity yourself to pass a night in that house? |
41170 | He is not known to have been down the line any time yesterday, for instance? |
41170 | He is one of the village, I suppose? |
41170 | He knows who we are, no doubt? |
41170 | Her eyes, then, are not dark like mine? |
41170 | How can that do good? |
41170 | How can you answer so positively? |
41170 | How did it happen? |
41170 | How do you think he is? |
41170 | How far did you conduct that 4:15 express on the day in question, Somers? |
41170 | How long does this go on? |
41170 | How long is it since the house acquired this sinister character? |
41170 | How was it that you were not relieved at Clayborough? 41170 I believe I may say the same,"added the chairman;"yet how account for the way in which Mr. Langford asserts that it came into his possession?" |
41170 | I could get you a bit, miss, for nothing, if you''d like? |
41170 | I suppose it is a charm or a spell: would n''t you call it something of that kind? |
41170 | I will be asking you this one thing, Katreen, daughter of my father''s brother: do you love that man Achanna who lives at Ranza- beag? |
41170 | I wouldna say but what I would go; but what would the folk say to hear of Cornel Mortimer with an auld silly woman at his heels? |
41170 | I!--what? |
41170 | In Heaven''s name,I whispered,"what was the matter just now? |
41170 | In truth?--in very truth? 41170 Is father married then?" |
41170 | Is it possible? |
41170 | Is she ladylike? |
41170 | Is she tall? |
41170 | Is she young? |
41170 | Is there one minute to spare? |
41170 | Is there-- is there one of the-- cave- women here? |
41170 | It will come all right, wo n''t it, father? |
41170 | Lover not to know, eh? |
41170 | Marcella, dear, did you hear? |
41170 | Mister Christian Vénius, the painter? |
41170 | Mr. John Dwerrihouse, I think? |
41170 | Mr. John Dwerrihouse, the late director? |
41170 | My dear boy, how then could you have heard it? |
41170 | My good sir, have I not been telling you so for the last half- hour? |
41170 | No living man? |
41170 | Not Conjuror Trendle? |
41170 | Nothing more? |
41170 | O, can it be,she said to herself, when her visitor had departed,"that I exercise a malignant power over people against my own will?" |
41170 | Oh, Henry, can it be that we have pushed him on too much with his work-- a delicate boy like Roland? 41170 Oh, Johnny, you''ve not heard? |
41170 | Or impress our senses with the belief in such effects-- we never having been_ en rapport_ with the person acting on us? 41170 Over there? |
41170 | Quite true, guard,I replied;"but do you not also remember the face of the gentleman who travelled down in the same carriage with me as far as here?" |
41170 | Really haunted?--and by what-- ghosts? |
41170 | Should you know him if you saw him? |
41170 | So you call me witless, do you? 41170 Tell me, Katreen, are you glad to see me back again?" |
41170 | The archdeacon, yes? 41170 The drummer walked past my father as if he never saw him, and stood by the elbow- chair and said:"''Trumpeter, trumpeter, are you one with me?'' |
41170 | The man answered,''How should it be with me? 41170 The price?" |
41170 | The trumpeter looked down on him from the height of six- foot- two, and asked:''Did they die well?'' 41170 Then how do you account for it?" |
41170 | Then you saw the man? |
41170 | There were two gentlemen standing here a moment ago,I said to a porter at my elbow;"which way can they have gone?" |
41170 | Took no notice of you? |
41170 | Was it you who first proposed coming here? |
41170 | Was it, then, surely a picture? |
41170 | Was that you, sir? |
41170 | Well,said Van Spreckdal, with solemn accents,"what have you to say?" |
41170 | What about the fire in the chimney of the blue room-- should I have heard of that during my journey? |
41170 | What ailed thee, dearest? 41170 What did she wear this morning?" |
41170 | What did you see? |
41170 | What do you mean? |
41170 | What do you think? |
41170 | What do you want with me? 41170 What do you want?" |
41170 | What has your being in Devonshire to do with the matter? |
41170 | What have I done? |
41170 | What is going on there? |
41170 | What is it, Sheumais? 41170 What is it, Sheumais? |
41170 | What is man? |
41170 | What is that place I see over there, all lighted up by the sun? |
41170 | What is that, Achanna? |
41170 | What is that? |
41170 | What is the matter? |
41170 | What is the price of it? |
41170 | What is the subject? |
41170 | What music? |
41170 | What of that? 41170 What was that noise in your chimmer, mother, last night?" |
41170 | What''s the meaning of it all? 41170 What''s up?" |
41170 | What-- what is the matter? 41170 What? |
41170 | What?--what? |
41170 | When were you in Devonshire? |
41170 | Where am I? |
41170 | Where does he live? |
41170 | Where is it now? |
41170 | Where would you be that you were not hearing his good- bye? 41170 Who is there?" |
41170 | Whose ghosts, Matthew? |
41170 | Why do you call him conjuror? |
41170 | Why do you laugh? |
41170 | Why not remain here, Wilfred? |
41170 | Why, sir,began the pastry cook,"who told you that the house next door belongs to us? |
41170 | Will you be easily tempted after this to promenade on the Lido or at Fusina with your beauty? |
41170 | Will you come with me? |
41170 | Will you go round and examine the other side, or will you stay here with the lantern? |
41170 | Will you let me see it? |
41170 | With whom, pray? |
41170 | Would not!--and why? |
41170 | Yes, Colonel; at what hour, sir? |
41170 | Yes, of course,she said;"and how am I to proceed?" |
41170 | Yet many do so, who in outward appearance are Christians,rejoined Wilfred;"say, will you be married, or shall I take my daughter away with me?" |
41170 | You are an East Anglian director, I presume? |
41170 | You are not at all frightened? |
41170 | You are the author of it? |
41170 | You can contrive for me all that''s necessary? |
41170 | You can send away warts and other excrescences, I know,she said;"why ca n''t you send away this?" |
41170 | You do not mean to say that you have seventy- five thousand pounds at this moment upon your person? |
41170 | You fell off the bed, surely? |
41170 | You have never seen her? |
41170 | You have not copied the details from some spot? |
41170 | You said you came from Transylvania? |
41170 | Your name? |
41170 | _ I_, sir? |
41170 | _ What was it, then, that you saw in the train?_***** What was it that I saw in the train? |
41170 | _ What was it, then, that you saw in the train?_***** What was it that I saw in the train? |
41170 | ''Did he say"Bayonne"? |
41170 | ''Do you happen to know if the 38th Regiment was engaged?'' |
41170 | ''What d''ee mean by crying stale fish at that rate?'' |
41170 | ''What news?'' |
41170 | ), and for what reason? |
41170 | Above all, what had he been doing throughout those mysterious three months of disappearance? |
41170 | After a few minutes of silence, Van Spreckdal asked me:"What is his name?" |
41170 | Ah, bonnie fool that you are, and is it you that will be the death o''me?" |
41170 | Ah, must I confess it? |
41170 | And do you know also that it is her mother''s sister who lives in the deserted house, incurably mad for many years? |
41170 | And moreover, what is chance but the effect of a cause of which we are ignorant? |
41170 | And now, Sheumais, can you be thinking of what the tune was that I played? |
41170 | And of Manus MacCodrum? |
41170 | And then I asked myself:"Is this indeed Clarimonde? |
41170 | And what harm had I ever done thee that thou shouldst violate my poor tomb, and lay bare the miseries of my nothingness? |
41170 | And what is his work in comparison with his health? |
41170 | And what might you be doin''here?'' |
41170 | And when shall we depart, my fair sir?" |
41170 | And you will be going to Sleat in Skye? |
41170 | And you?" |
41170 | Another wreck, you say? |
41170 | Are we already at Blackwater?" |
41170 | Are you hearing me?" |
41170 | Are you sure that he had not alighted by means of that key before the guard came round for the tickets?" |
41170 | Are you, then, from that country?" |
41170 | As I was turning away, a beer- boy, collecting pewter pots at the neighbouring areas, said to me,"Do you want any one at that house, sir?" |
41170 | At last my father rose, and then, for the first time I spoke, saying,"Father, where is my brother, Cæsar?" |
41170 | At the end of a minute, Van Spreckdal lifted his head:"Are you the author of that sketch?" |
41170 | At what time?" |
41170 | But after all, though it gave me a shock for a moment, what did that matter? |
41170 | But enough; do you comprehend my theory?" |
41170 | But how to do it? |
41170 | But how was it possible to stand still in the moving crowd without attracting attention? |
41170 | But the mirror? |
41170 | But to do something for it was the great problem; how was I to be serviceable to a being that was invisible, that was mortal no longer? |
41170 | But when the Count told her the story of Gabrielle''s child she clapped her hands and laughed aloud, crying:''Did the little darling arrive? |
41170 | But when, as I was winding up my watch, I heard a light tap at the door, and a low voice saying,''May I come in?'' |
41170 | But who would shoulder the responsibility? |
41170 | But why do n''t you go and see for yourself?" |
41170 | But why does that surprise you?" |
41170 | By the way,"he added shortly,"did n''t you notice that juniper- bush on the left- hand side?" |
41170 | Can I be the bearer of any message from you?" |
41170 | Can Jehovah offer thee aught in exchange? |
41170 | Could I dream of a hundred and one business details that had no kind of interest for me? |
41170 | Could I dream of the seventy- five thousand pounds?" |
41170 | Could anything be more mysterious? |
41170 | Could not you go with me to show me the way-- say tomorrow afternoon?" |
41170 | Could this be the explanation, and had such things as this ever happened before? |
41170 | Dear me-- what was his name? |
41170 | Did the pony dream it?" |
41170 | Did you see that person distinctly?" |
41170 | Do n''t you know me? |
41170 | Do ye think the Lord will close the door, ye faint- hearted creature? |
41170 | Do you consider that you are bringing a charge of the gravest character against one of the company''s servants?" |
41170 | Do you hear me, lad? |
41170 | Do you know how much your bill is? |
41170 | Do you know if there is anything interesting in it?" |
41170 | Do you know that she lies under the green grass? |
41170 | Do you think she would ever close her door on her own lad? |
41170 | Do you think, if I take you with me, I may rely on your presence of mind, whatever may happen?" |
41170 | Doctor, what made you decide upon the person and the name?" |
41170 | Good God, what age are we living in? |
41170 | Had there been any seizure?" |
41170 | Had this been done in the dark?--must it not have been by a hand human as mine?--must there not have been a human agency all the while in that room? |
41170 | Had you a conflagration on the occasion of your last visit to Dumbleton?" |
41170 | Have you seen the green lion with the fiery blue eyes?'' |
41170 | Have you time to do that now?" |
41170 | Having satisfied our curiosity, and bound every one in the house to secrecy, it became a question what was to be done with our Enigma? |
41170 | He actually told you that he had the seventy- five thousand pounds in his pocket?" |
41170 | He breathed upon the glass and holding it up to me, he asked:"Do you see anything?" |
41170 | He drew me to one side and said, with a smile,"Do you know that the secrets of our deserted house are beginning to be revealed?" |
41170 | How could I combine the story of the strange and gruesome singing with the appearance of the beautiful arm at the window? |
41170 | How could I tell? |
41170 | How could any one advise on such a subject? |
41170 | How dared he show himself along the line? |
41170 | How did he look?" |
41170 | How did my mother- in- law receive the wound unless from his gun? |
41170 | How did these heterogeneous details suggest themselves to my imagination? |
41170 | How long do you think it will be necessary to stay here? |
41170 | How should he have ventured again into the light of day? |
41170 | How was the maid at fault?" |
41170 | How was the poor young gentleman? |
41170 | How, then, had the Thing, whatever it was, which had so scared him, obtained ingress except through my own chamber? |
41170 | I cried out, with a trembling voice,"Who is there?" |
41170 | I cried out,"In the name of God who are you?" |
41170 | I do n''t want to cry; it''s like a baby, I know; but what can I do else? |
41170 | I got to Edinburgh very early in the blackness of the winter morning, and scarcely dared look the man in the face, at whom I gasped,"What news?" |
41170 | I had to spend a certain part of it with Roland, which was a terrible ordeal for me, for what could I say to the boy? |
41170 | I heard his pen scratch over the paper, and I thought:"Why did they ask me that question? |
41170 | I opened, as was to be expected, the last first, and this was what I read:"Why do n''t you come or answer? |
41170 | I said to myself in my terror:"Can it be that that scoundrel of a Rap has had any bones broken?" |
41170 | I strove to speak-- my voice utterly failed me; I could only think to myself:"Is this fear? |
41170 | I suppose we are bound for the same destination?" |
41170 | I was obliged to go at last, but what could I say? |
41170 | I was to help this weeping, sobbing thing, which was already to me as distinct a personality as anything I knew; or what should I say to Roland? |
41170 | If there were no human creature on the island, and if their eyes had not played them false, who could it be? |
41170 | In the old house-- in the last window?" |
41170 | In this transitory life, as the Prayer- book says, how can one ever be certain what is going to happen? |
41170 | Is he alive?" |
41170 | Is he the owner of the house?" |
41170 | Is it far to where he lives?" |
41170 | Is it for killing your own brother you would be?" |
41170 | Is the unfortunate man a relation; or, I should say, perhaps"( looking at her dress)"a person who''s been in your employ?" |
41170 | Is there no parallel, though, for such a phenomenon? |
41170 | It was only when we were in sight of the house that I said,"What do you think of it?" |
41170 | Langford?" |
41170 | Lord, when is it too late for Thee, or what is too hard for Thee? |
41170 | May I ask whence you come?" |
41170 | May I take the box home? |
41170 | Might not that black page have passed into the service of some other lady? |
41170 | My daughter, who rides behind me, is now more dead than alive-- say, can you assist us in our difficulty?" |
41170 | My own experiences were as before: still whispering and whispering: what is it that he wants to say? |
41170 | My wife has an idea about it, and she may be right----""What idea?" |
41170 | Or is it because literature is nearer the truth and can please at the same time? |
41170 | Rhoda could not avoid the subject which had so mystified her, and after the first few words she stammered,"I hope your-- arm is well again, ma''am?" |
41170 | She called to him loudly enough to be heard above the roar of the weir; he looked down and said,"What d''ye want here?" |
41170 | She tapped me lightly with it, and exclaimed:"Well, my fine sleeper, is this the way you make your preparations? |
41170 | So you are going to leave Eilanmore without an Achanna upon it? |
41170 | So you only go as far as Mallingford tonight?" |
41170 | So you played on your drum when the ship was goin''down? |
41170 | The lodgers came out of their rooms, asking:"What is the matter? |
41170 | The parson listened, and put a question or two, and then asked:"''Have you tried to open the lock since that night?'' |
41170 | The wraith of Marcus, mayhap; or might it be the old man himself( his father), risen to bid farewell to his youngest son, or to warn him? |
41170 | Then the minister spoke again,"Are you hearing me, Will? |
41170 | They made me sit down, and Van Spreckdal, raising his voice, said to me:"Christian Vénius, where did you get this sketch?" |
41170 | Three slow, loud, distinct knocks were now heard at the bed- head; my servant called out:"Is that you, sir?" |
41170 | To what train of circumstances would it owe its existence? |
41170 | WHAT WAS IT? |
41170 | WHAT WAS IT? |
41170 | Was ever such a task given to an anxious father trembling for his only boy? |
41170 | Was it a hallucination? |
41170 | Was it chance? |
41170 | Was it the disordered fancy caused by great bodily weakness? |
41170 | Was it the fever of the brain? |
41170 | Was it the visit this morning?" |
41170 | Was that something dark huddled in a heap by the side of it? |
41170 | Was this the case?" |
41170 | Well, what''s the matter about that? |
41170 | Well, who is this somebody, and who has been ill- using him? |
41170 | Were ever facts so strangely incongruous, so difficult to reconcile? |
41170 | Wert thou not happy? |
41170 | Wha wad set themsels up for a laughin''-stock to a''the country- side, making a wark about a ghost? |
41170 | What bad news?" |
41170 | What became of the figure in which it was concealed?" |
41170 | What colour is her hair and face?" |
41170 | What could I do in order to see Clarimonde once more? |
41170 | What could I do? |
41170 | What could you do, Ian Mhic Ian? |
41170 | What did I want? |
41170 | What did he say or do?" |
41170 | What did it matter which path I took? |
41170 | What did it mean? |
41170 | What do you mean? |
41170 | What do you think is the matter with me, all of you? |
41170 | What do you think is the matter with me? |
41170 | What does it mean?" |
41170 | What enemy?" |
41170 | What for should I have spoiled the bargain and hairmed the property for no- thing?" |
41170 | What good could come of it? |
41170 | What had I said?" |
41170 | What has happened?" |
41170 | What hast thou done? |
41170 | What hast thou done?" |
41170 | What hast thou done?" |
41170 | What have I done?" |
41170 | What have you to say in reply?" |
41170 | What is it-- ill, is he?" |
41170 | What might it be? |
41170 | What might that mean? |
41170 | What on earth can I do with the house?" |
41170 | What proof have I that it is she? |
41170 | What shall I do?" |
41170 | What so easily explained as that I should have strayed from the path in the darkness? |
41170 | What then? |
41170 | What time is the execution?" |
41170 | What was it to me whether or no he was absent without leave? |
41170 | What was it? |
41170 | What was that awful cry?" |
41170 | What''s the complaint? |
41170 | What''s your name?'' |
41170 | When did you do this deed?" |
41170 | When he reached home his mother said,"Well?" |
41170 | Where else should I be?" |
41170 | Where was our brother, Cæsar? |
41170 | Where were you on the afternoon and evening of the 4th of the present month?" |
41170 | Wherefore have hearkened to that imbecile priest? |
41170 | Who can open to him but Thee? |
41170 | Who knows? |
41170 | Who was I? |
41170 | Who would undertake the execution of this horrible semblance of a human being? |
41170 | Why came ye not to me? |
41170 | Why do n''t you speak?" |
41170 | Why had I come there to do him an ill turn with his employers? |
41170 | Why had the fool of a woman at the gate allowed any one to come in to disturb the quiet of the place? |
41170 | Why not give it chloroform? |
41170 | Why not go on with my_ Defence of Episcopacy_? |
41170 | Will you consent to marry her after my fashion? |
41170 | Will you make me swear by that in which I do not believe?" |
41170 | Will you permit me to see the case again?" |
41170 | Will you still persist in telling me, Mr. Painter, that you have no money?" |
41170 | Wilt engage me for thy valet de chambre?" |
41170 | With my sacred character of priest, to whom could I dare unbosom myself, in whom could I confide? |
41170 | Yes.... On what night did it come?" |
41170 | You buried her, you say? |
41170 | You laugh at me? |
41170 | You look upon me as an incorrigible dreamer? |
41170 | _ As if it had been real!_ What do I mean by that? |
41170 | and all the other magic? |
41170 | and if I could do nothing, what would become of my boy? |
41170 | cried my father,"the wolves are there, are they?" |
41170 | do you hear what it is saying?" |
41170 | do you think so?" |
41170 | exclaimed he,"why, where can he be?" |
41170 | for what object?" |
41170 | he exclaimed,"what horrible mystery is this? |
41170 | he said, in familiar speech; then more solemnly,"How should I not recognize a person that I know better-- far better-- than I know you?" |
41170 | is it you?" |
41170 | replied the hunter,"would you harm a potent spirit of the Hartz Mountains? |
41170 | said I, rather disappointed;"have you not seen nor heard anything remarkable?" |
41170 | so he would have you console the poor lost spirit? |
41170 | the young gentleman will be worse?" |
41170 | what are you doing here?" |
41170 | what has happened?" |
41170 | what shall I do? |
41170 | why come ye here frighting them that know you not? |
41170 | would be impossible, for by whom could I despatch my letter? |
41170 | you believe it is all an imposture? |
8072 | ''What art thou, horrid form that rid''st the air? 8072 Ah, mother, why dost thou thus trifle with me? |
8072 | Am I not alive? |
8072 | Art thou divine, or human? |
8072 | Barons,said Carle,"whom shall I leave in charge of these deep defiles and narrow passes?" |
8072 | But what shall I call thee, maiden? 8072 Can it be Heaven,"said Nisus then,"That lends such warmth to hearts of men, Or passion surging past control That plays the god to each one''s soul? |
8072 | Comrade, where is thy sword, thy Halteclere? |
8072 | Comrades,he cried,"do you remember our promises to our king? |
8072 | Euryalus, my chiefest care, Where left I you, unhappy? 8072 Hast thou seen my sister?" |
8072 | How can it gain dominion, and keep it when gained? 8072 How shall I approach the chief?" |
8072 | My lords, whom shall we send to meet Marsile at Saragossa? |
8072 | Not one except yourselves knoweth my secret; Ye, my affectionate and faithful servants, What remedy can ye now devise for my ease? 8072 Shalt thou escape, decked out with Pallas''s spoils? |
8072 | Should I receive as a gift from thee what I myself could command if I so desired? 8072 Sir, how came you hither, where none who ventures alone escapes alive? |
8072 | Think''st thou not I recognized thee? 8072 Thinkest thou we need to fear with two such allies?" |
8072 | Was the blow meant for me, my comrade? |
8072 | What boot our gifts, King Etzel? 8072 What can save us?" |
8072 | What hast thou to do with my hunger? |
8072 | What is mundane glory? |
8072 | What men be ye who hither come? |
8072 | What violence or what chance led thee so wide From Campaldino,I of him inquired,"That''s still unknown thy burial- place retired?" |
8072 | What,thought he,"can he mean? |
8072 | When hope is gone, what is there left to fear? 8072 Where is Roland, my betrothed?" |
8072 | Who has dared move my bed? |
8072 | Why not sit and eat? |
8072 | Why sank I not in ocean,( was her cry),"When first I reared my sail upon the main?" |
8072 | Why shouldst thou weep, sister dear? 8072 Why stoppest thou here?" |
8072 | Would you, Thrones and Imperial Powers,he cried,"think to build up a kingdom here, secure from the arm of Heaven? |
8072 | Yet what can wealth do without these? |
8072 | ''Has one weak reign so corrupted you?'' |
8072 | ''Have you so soon forgotten our brave sires? |
8072 | ''Who art thou?'' |
8072 | ******* Loud o''er the din of battle stout Gernot shouted then,"How now, right noble Rüdeger? |
8072 | --Who is there, that has power to tell aright The gentle Isabella''s doleful mood? |
8072 | A goddess, a nymph? |
8072 | Alas? |
8072 | Alike, all wretched they, as I-- ah, whose this triple deed of blood? |
8072 | Am I mad that I should voluntarily leave my pleasant home and dare the terrors of an unknown sea? |
8072 | And if I haste to the worst that can be, why shouldest thou go so slowly to the best? |
8072 | And what slighter recompense could he expect from men who could return nothing else?" |
8072 | And whither hath not the fame of Troy penetrated? |
8072 | And who the herb, the wholesome root, or wild fruit from the wood shall bring? |
8072 | At the lone midnight had I come to draw the river''s limpid flood, And here am struck to death, by whom? |
8072 | But seek, I pray thee, some way to thy presence; For what converse can we hold, I on the ground, and thou on the terrace?" |
8072 | But what avails? |
8072 | But what canst thou, a lowly carpenter''s son, accomplish without aid? |
8072 | But where were Draupadi and the gallant princes, her husbands? |
8072 | But wherefore thus of guiltlessness debate? |
8072 | But who can deceive a lover? |
8072 | By this, thy fatal shaft, this one, three miserable victims fall, The sire, the mother, and the son-- ah why? |
8072 | Came they not with the rest From pleasant Lacedaemon to the war? |
8072 | Can Truth''s own light thy loveliness outshine? |
8072 | Does not our love restrain thee, and the thought that I shall surely die when thou art gone? |
8072 | Dost thou grant this?" |
8072 | Doubtless he takes his sport now with his peers; And who''neath Heav''n would dare attack Rollánd? |
8072 | Father, what ails thee, say?'' |
8072 | For who the herbs will now supply,--the roots, the fruit, their blameless food?'' |
8072 | Had I only been created a lower Power!--But even then, might not some higher one have led me into temptation? |
8072 | Hath Yudhi- sthira vanquished self, to melt With one pure passion at the door of bliss? |
8072 | Have you lost all reverence for your father, That whom his own parent cast from his bosom, Him will you receive into yours? |
8072 | He answers brief:"Your pleas are naught: Firm stands the purpose of my thought: Come, stir we: why so slow?" |
8072 | He longed to escape, but how leave the unhappy Dido? |
8072 | How lull the guards, or by what process speed The sacred Image from its vaulted cell? |
8072 | How then hath the revelation come down upon him? |
8072 | How through the open door you rushed, across the court- yard flew; How sprawling in your terror on the wine- press beam you lay? |
8072 | In jest or earnest, say, Have I offended you? |
8072 | In these my babes shalt thou thine image see, And, still tremendous, hurl thy rage on me? |
8072 | Is it not a rank injustice that you should be forbidden to taste it and to lack the Knowledge of Good and Evil which it would give you? |
8072 | Is this then the Zal, the nursling of a bird? |
8072 | Is to die so wretched a thing? |
8072 | Let soul and body perish now; life why should I prolong, Conquered and captive at the hands of such an ill- breeched throng?" |
8072 | Must friend with friend do battle, nor heaven the conflict part?" |
8072 | My Cid lay sleeping when you saw the unchained lion near; What did you do, Ferrando, then, in your agony of fear? |
8072 | My truth-- my God- giv''n innocence-- must they be both forgot? |
8072 | Nay, sire, ride on apace; Why do you halt? |
8072 | Or have ye chosen this place After the toil of battle to repose Your wearied virtue, for the ease you find To slumber here, as in the vales of Heaven? |
8072 | Or hear''st thou rather pure Ethereal stream, Whose fountain who shall tell? |
8072 | Or of the Eternal coeternal beam May I express thee unblamed? |
8072 | Or, having crossed the deep in their goodships, Shun they to fight among the valiant ones Of Greece, because of my reproach and shame?" |
8072 | Our Trojan comrades, one and all, Cry loud, Aeneas to recall, And where, they say, the men to go And let him of our peril know? |
8072 | Plunge through the spears that line the wood, And death and glory win with blood? |
8072 | Rollánd asked Olivier--"Why show to me Your anger, friend?" |
8072 | Say, with thyself who else his ill- timed zeal allied?" |
8072 | Shall I look on, and let you go Alone to venture''mid the foe? |
8072 | Since the Savior seemed to prefer a contemplative life, why should he not seek that seat of learning? |
8072 | Stay''st thou for this, who did not stay for them,-- Draupadi, Bhima?" |
8072 | Suppose I reject both riches and realms? |
8072 | That sightless pair, for many a day, from me their scanty food have earned; What lot is theirs when I''m away, to the five elements returned? |
8072 | The evening prayer, th''ablution done, the fire adored with worship meet, Who now shall soothe like thee, my son, with fondling hand, my aged feet? |
8072 | The mother''s word was law, but would the gods permit them to share Draupadi? |
8072 | The oak- tree must be felled if the land was to prosper, but who could fell it? |
8072 | The soul can never cease to be; who then can destroy it? |
8072 | The spoil-- who could count it? |
8072 | The youth returns, while thirst of praise Infects him with a strange amaze:"Can Nisus aim at heights so great, Nor take his friend to share his fate? |
8072 | Then Sâvitrî spake sadly:"It is taught Thy messengers are sent to fetch the dying; Why is it, Mightiest, thou art come thyself?" |
8072 | They wept, and spoke my little Anselm:''Pray Why lookest so? |
8072 | This hound hath ate with me, Followed me, loved me; must I leave him now?" |
8072 | This is the condition; Wilt thou fall down and worship me as thy superior lord?" |
8072 | This the old man, white- haired and withered? |
8072 | Thou knowest who I am as I know who thou art; why shouldest thou suggest distrust to me?" |
8072 | Thou knowest; make us know, why hath she failed?" |
8072 | Thus spake she to Rüdeger,"How have we ever yet"Deserv''d that you, good Rüdeger, should make our anguish more? |
8072 | Thy blind old mother, heaven- resigned, within our hermit- dwelling lone, How shall I tend, myself as blind, now all my strength of life is gone? |
8072 | To this the tyrant, now incensed, returned,"Where rests the Image?" |
8072 | To us the blind, the destitute, with helpless hunger perishing? |
8072 | Volscens cries,"Whence come, or whither tend?" |
8072 | Was it for thee to slay thy father''s son? |
8072 | Was it for this he heaped gifts upon us? |
8072 | Was it for this he stirred us up to glorious deeds? |
8072 | Were my eye dazzled by a star, How could it rejoice to gaze even upon the moon? |
8072 | What clue may guide my erring tread This leafy labyrinth back to thread?" |
8072 | What matter where, if I be still the same, And what I should be, all but less than he Whom thunder hath made greater? |
8072 | What of it? |
8072 | What promise will ye give me? |
8072 | What return can we make, then, but to think out some slow but sure and sweet revenge? |
8072 | What shall I do, whither shall I fly, to escape infinite wrath, and infinite despair? |
8072 | What should he do? |
8072 | What talk is this about my Cid-- him of Bivar, I mean? |
8072 | What thanks does the victor in countless battles gain? |
8072 | What will ye do for me? |
8072 | When have we found aught but treachery in the Saracen? |
8072 | When we the fourth day''s agony did receive Stretched at my feet himself my Gaddo threw, And said:''My father, canst thou nothing do?'' |
8072 | Whence falleth he?" |
8072 | Whence the harp''s enchanting arches? |
8072 | Whence the necessary harp- pins? |
8072 | Whence the sweetly singing harp- strings? |
8072 | Where can the offence lie? |
8072 | Where wilt thou find authority, where followers? |
8072 | Wherefore falter I, Who strove to stand?" |
8072 | Who are ye?" |
8072 | Who could have guessed the power of the Almighty? |
8072 | Who gave thee the kingdoms of the earth if He did not? |
8072 | Who in Heaven is willing to make the sacrifice?" |
8072 | Who now,''neath the dark wood by night, a pious reader shall be heard? |
8072 | Whose honeyed voice my ear delight with th''holy Veda''s living word? |
8072 | Why did you carry with you brides ye loved not, treacherous curs? |
8072 | Why doth she fail? |
8072 | Why have ye laid my heartstrings bare? |
8072 | Why may not I clasp thy loved hands and exchange true words with thee?" |
8072 | Why regret that thou hast at last forgotten Sichaeus? |
8072 | Why tear their flesh in Corpes wood with saddle- girths and spurs, And leave them to the beasts of prey? |
8072 | Why the long way thou hast begun, without one gentle word to me? |
8072 | Will you not silent keep that mouth where truth was never found? |
8072 | Wouldst thou behold the mild radiance of the moon? |
8072 | Wouldst thou inhale delightful odors? |
8072 | Yet why repine? |
8072 | You are a craven at the core; tall, handsome, as you stand: How dare you talk as now you talk, you tongue without a hand? |
8072 | ah whose this wrongful deed of blood? |
8072 | and oh, what crime has won This death? |
8072 | asked her tempter,"and have I not eaten of it? |
8072 | can it be That one exalted should seem pitiless? |
8072 | cried Rustem;"what hast thou done? |
8072 | didst thou think to escape from me? |
8072 | is death so dear, Or am I so ill able to sustain A mortal''s wrath, that thou must needs appear? |
8072 | she inquired,"hunting the boar, wrapped in a spotted lynx hide, her quiver at her back?" |
8072 | the lion scare have you forgotten too? |
8072 | was it, my lord, for this We gave him all he asked us? |
8072 | was the like ever seen? |
8072 | what boots it now? |
8072 | what cruel man is he? |
8072 | what excuse, what answer do ye make? |
8072 | what force employ To rescue the beloved boy? |
8072 | what rewards so great, For worth like yours to compensate? |
8072 | where? |
8072 | who are ye?" |
8072 | why art thou broke? |
8072 | with anger art thou moved, that not a word thou wilt bestow?'' |
43101 | ''About how large?'' 43101 ''Do you have to wear that when you are seeking religion?'' |
43101 | ''How many times have you been baptized in the course of life?'' 43101 ''How wad a noice bit av Spring lamb soot?'' |
43101 | ''What are you seeking?'' 43101 ''What on earth is the matter, Tilly?'' |
43101 | ''Where''s your money?'' 43101 Ah, how do you know?" |
43101 | All well down there? |
43101 | And you are not to blame? |
43101 | And you ca n''t come? |
43101 | And you wanted to come to a place where your vote counted? |
43101 | Any middle name? |
43101 | Are you married or single? |
43101 | Array, honey, an''is n''t it to my poor mother, who is very deaf, that I''m writing a loud letther? |
43101 | At wat time, massa? |
43101 | Av Oi''ll let''em wha- at? |
43101 | But he-- he----"But what of it? 43101 But how are we going to get in when we come back?" |
43101 | But if people ca n''t come and do n''t come, what are you going to do? |
43101 | But suppose the Mugwumps should develop power some day and carry things? |
43101 | But sure''n ye have n''t no twinty- noine thousand dollars to give thim, me frind? |
43101 | But what have I done? |
43101 | But,said the other,"is n''t it a question not of faith, but of works?" |
43101 | Ca n''t I stand in here out of the rain? |
43101 | Charlotte, my dear, how is it I find you weeping? 43101 Could n''t introduce a fellow, eh?" |
43101 | Dare you swear that the meat you ate that day was n''t coon or bear meat? |
43101 | Did I not tell you,said the maternal parent, in a somewhat angry tone,"not to touch them?" |
43101 | Did I ten''to hit''i m? |
43101 | Did Reading go up? |
43101 | Did n''t he tell you to move on? |
43101 | Did n''t lose it going down, did you? |
43101 | Did you catch one of the good fishes, Herr Yager? |
43101 | Did you intend to hit this man when you shot at him? |
43101 | Did you, Mrs. Bowser? 43101 Do n''t you believe your vote was counted?" |
43101 | Do you ever want to sleep, Major, when you ca n''t? |
43101 | Do you know all the women in Chicago? |
43101 | Do you know my name? |
43101 | Do you mean to say you will do the whitewashing? |
43101 | Do you take the number of every street car you ride in? |
43101 | Do you? 43101 Do you? |
43101 | Does it make any difference if it ai n''t right? |
43101 | Even if it takes you all day? |
43101 | Fresh pork? |
43101 | Gone to his_ bier_, eh? |
43101 | Got what? |
43101 | Hain''t he shiftless and onery? |
43101 | Half- pass tree o''clock? |
43101 | Has thee any objections that I should call thee by that name? |
43101 | Has, eh? 43101 Have you an occupation?" |
43101 | Have you ever tried, Lawrence, to estimate the height of my father''s regard for you? |
43101 | Have you gone and got some more hens or bought another horse? |
43101 | He said the Park Commishioners be blowed, an''he cood do good enough wurruk fer them on roast bafe, an''wad Oi git roast bafe the nixt toime? 43101 How did you know my name was Jack?" |
43101 | How is that? |
43101 | How is that? |
43101 | How long since you had any fresh pork at your house? |
43101 | How then,said the interrogator, evidently surprised and disconcerted,"does thee manage to live?" |
43101 | How''s that? |
43101 | How? |
43101 | Hush; do n''t I know low- down blackguard talk when I hears it? 43101 I say, Pat, what are you writing there in such a large hand?" |
43101 | I will, eh? 43101 I''ll be glad to, of course, but----""But what?" |
43101 | Indeed, and how is that? |
43101 | Is it to- night you have that party? |
43101 | Is kissing on the lips no longer fashionable? |
43101 | Is that so, now? |
43101 | Is that why you suspected him? |
43101 | Is this Bowser''s? |
43101 | Is this one of the pastoral scenes you referred to? |
43101 | Jack,said a commercial traveller to a country joskin,"which is the way to Harlingford?" |
43101 | Jim, why is it that a musician''s strains are always heard so much less distinctly when he plays alone, than when in a band? |
43101 | John, what is the past of see? |
43101 | Johnnie, my boy, would n''t you have liked to have been George Washington? |
43101 | Judge,said the witness, turning imploringly to the dignitary of the Bench,"must I answer that question?" |
43101 | Kitty, where''s the frying- pan? |
43101 | Ma,said a juvenile grammarian, when she returned from school;"ma, may n''t I take some of the currant- jelly on the sideboard?" |
43101 | Make me cross? 43101 Martha, does thee love me?" |
43101 | Martha, my dear,said a loving husband to his spouse, who was several years his junior,"what do you say to moving to the far West?" |
43101 | Mr. Smith, you said you once officiated in a pulpit-- do you mean by that that you preached? |
43101 | Mrs. Andrews,asked the lawyer when she was called,"do you remember when Jackson called about the quilt frames?" |
43101 | Must be quite an expense, eh? |
43101 | My good woman,said Howard,"will you kindly give me a drink of water?" |
43101 | No floods or famine? |
43101 | No small- pox or yellow fever? |
43101 | No? 43101 Oh, you did, did you, Maria? |
43101 | Old Mr. Skinner is a very charitable man, is n''t he? |
43101 | Pa, where was Captain Anson born? |
43101 | Pa,said a lad to his father,"I have often read of people poor but honest; why do n''t they sometimes say''rich but honest?''" |
43101 | Pap, did you ever hear music from a rubber band? |
43101 | Say, boss,said the darky,"how much you charge for dat stuff you put in dat mule?" |
43101 | Say, old man, why continue this coldness any longer? 43101 Shall I write married or single? |
43101 | Sign my name? 43101 Some mash of yours?" |
43101 | Take what? |
43101 | That is very nice of him; but surely you are not crying about that? 43101 That you, Bowser?" |
43101 | They have, eh? 43101 Tom, did you ever see this hog in question?" |
43101 | War ye uver in Parish, Oi dunno? |
43101 | Well, Herr Schulze, what are you going to do with your boy? |
43101 | Well, how do you know he is dead? 43101 Well, then, ma, may n''t I take some of the ice- cream?" |
43101 | Well, what ails your town this year? |
43101 | Well, what are you grinning at? |
43101 | Well, what do you do? |
43101 | Well, what is the trouble? |
43101 | Well, what was it? |
43101 | Well, what''s the matter with Noah? |
43101 | Well, why do n''t you hasten to her? |
43101 | Well,says he,"if I find my wife up, I''ll kick her-- what business has she to sit up, wasting fire and light, eh? |
43101 | Well? |
43101 | Went where he pleased, did n''t he? |
43101 | Were you confused? |
43101 | Were you cooking meat? |
43101 | Were you ever engaged in a train robbery? |
43101 | Whar-- whar-- what, sah? 43101 What about those bristles and hoofs he says he saw?" |
43101 | What are you trying to do? |
43101 | What are your prospects in life, Julius? |
43101 | What can I do for you? |
43101 | What did you say when he told you to move on? |
43101 | What do I do? 43101 What do I mean? |
43101 | What do you mean? |
43101 | What fellow? |
43101 | What for? |
43101 | What has he been doing? |
43101 | What have you done? 43101 What is it, Laura?" |
43101 | What is it? |
43101 | What is your age, please? |
43101 | What makes you think so? |
43101 | What meat did Miner eat there that day? |
43101 | What of it? 43101 What to do?" |
43101 | What were you doing? |
43101 | What will you do? |
43101 | What''s that? |
43101 | What''s the matter? |
43101 | What''s the matter? |
43101 | What_ ales_ the one you have, Dick? |
43101 | When was that? |
43101 | Where for? |
43101 | Where was John L. Sullivan born? |
43101 | Where''s the old man? |
43101 | Where''s your ticket? |
43101 | Where? |
43101 | Where? |
43101 | Which one, Julius? |
43101 | Whin the ould mon had gone out to wurruk, Oi tuk a luck at the chunk av mate that was left, an''phat do you tink Oi saw? 43101 Who else?" |
43101 | Who else? |
43101 | Who hired you? |
43101 | Why do you suspect him of stealing the hog? |
43101 | Why not? |
43101 | Why, Seth,answered she,"we are commanded to love one another, are we not?" |
43101 | Why, sir? |
43101 | Why, then, do n''t you go and wash yourself? |
43101 | Will you pass me the butter, please? |
43101 | Would you know Why tear drops from my eyes now fall? 43101 Yes, sah, but whut bizness was it o''his''n? |
43101 | Yes, you reckon, but do you know it was? |
43101 | You ca n''t? |
43101 | You declare that on your oath, do you? |
43101 | You do n''t care for the office, then? |
43101 | You know Gregg? 43101 You left it on the street car when you come up?" |
43101 | You wo n''t have me? |
43101 | You would n''t want to marry us if we were n''t, would you, gaby? |
43101 | You''ll have our photographs taken after we all get seated in that rig, wo n''t you? |
43101 | ''An''fwhat''ll we put ye down for, ma''am?'' |
43101 | ''Fwhat did the McGuffin''s beyant give ye?'' |
43101 | ''Fwhat''ll ye shushcroibe to the Wurruld''s Fair this foine mawrnin'', ma''am?'' |
43101 | ''Tilly,''I said,''do you have to go through that performance every time you get religion?'' |
43101 | --"Another pound?" |
43101 | --_Albany Argus._[ Illustration] ANCIENT MARINER-- Holy smoke, where''s that young feller gone to? |
43101 | --_Denver News._ Undertakers are gravely opposed to cremation.--_Boston Gazette._ Are they in urn est? |
43101 | --_Denver News._[ Illustration] CHOLLY-- I say, Fweddie, what makes J. Wilkes Brutus take such long stweps? |
43101 | --_Harvard Lampoon._ A burning question among the Rochester newspapers is:"Have bicycles an earnest purpose?" |
43101 | --_Kansas City Journal._[ Illustration] CHOLLY-- Aw, Fweddie, did you see her smile at me? |
43101 | --_Light._[ Illustration] SOFTLEIGH-- What is the matter with your nose? |
43101 | --_Washington Post._"Kin a Quack Move?" |
43101 | A German boy entered, removed his hat, and asked:"Is Mr. Vepsider in?" |
43101 | About three o''clock the next afternoon a friend of the gambler dropped in on the Chinaman and said:"Hip, where is George to- day?" |
43101 | After the day''s work was over the young man said to the foreman:"You do n''t mind my having fits?" |
43101 | After the man had gone, Mr. Bowser came into the house and asked:"Did you hire a colored man?" |
43101 | Ai n''t it enough to have to drink the stuff? |
43101 | Ai n''t this necessity? |
43101 | And if I find her in bed, I''ll kick her-- what business has she to go to bed before I get home?" |
43101 | And why?" |
43101 | And, as I said, if you think----""Residence?" |
43101 | Ar''yer ears wide open, Tom?" |
43101 | Architectural Upholsterer-- And how do you think of having the library furnished, Mr. Gasbuhm? |
43101 | Are n''t you ashamed of yourself, fighting this way in the street?" |
43101 | Are n''t you? |
43101 | Are you a kinsman of the prisoner? |
43101 | Are you getting ready for the insane asylum? |
43101 | BROMLEY-- Why, Digsby, what''s the matter? |
43101 | Bliffers-- What''s wrong to- day, Bluffers? |
43101 | Bostone-- How long do you suppose these gold mines out here will continue profitable, Mr. Boomer? |
43101 | Bowser?" |
43101 | Bowser?" |
43101 | Can it be that I made the gown out of the bonnet trimming and trimmed the bonnet with the dress pattern? |
43101 | Can you swear that that hog is n''t home this very minute?" |
43101 | Careful Papa-- But which loves Clara most-- Brown, Jones or Smith? |
43101 | Coaxed, bribed and bulldozed me into giving a progressive euchre party, and where''s the party? |
43101 | Could n''t we have heard pwetty nearly as well without it? |
43101 | DOCTOR-- Now, gentlemen, how do you feel, one at a time, please? |
43101 | Dew I say"I ring yer,""I rang yer,"or"I rung yer?" |
43101 | Did I say thirty- five? |
43101 | Did any one vote besides you? |
43101 | Did you ever see a negro who would n''t say anything to fit the occasion?" |
43101 | Did you use all the goods? |
43101 | Dilly moved the bowl of her spoon back and forth over the supposed crack, and then exclaimed, triumphantly:"Kin a quack move?" |
43101 | Do I look married? |
43101 | Do all actahs walk that way? |
43101 | Do n''t you believe me? |
43101 | Do you hear?" |
43101 | Do you imagine that all other people are like you? |
43101 | Do you suppose a man who has trotted around Boston for five years is going to lose his way in the Adirondacks? |
43101 | Enthusiastic Friend-- Ah, how d''do, Charlie? |
43101 | FWEDDIE-- Smiled, did she? |
43101 | Ferguson-- So our cook is going, is she? |
43101 | First Cadet-- Did you ever smell powder? |
43101 | Flynn?'' |
43101 | Freddie-- Papa, what does"filly"mean? |
43101 | Freddie-- Well, then, what do they call a young cow, papa? |
43101 | Fwhere''s yer h''art, woman? |
43101 | G. C.--Matter? |
43101 | Genevieve-- Whose are you after, pa''s? |
43101 | Going to New York to do a little shopping? |
43101 | Grocer''s wife( anxiously)--Oh, Jim, are you hurt? |
43101 | Grocer( savagely, but with dignity)--Go away, woman; what do you know about war? |
43101 | HE-- Brute, eh? |
43101 | Had a scourge of any kind? |
43101 | Had she recognized him he would fain Have lifted his hat; But how could he do that And carry his cumbersome cane? |
43101 | Had you provoked him? |
43101 | Has he recognized anyone to- day? |
43101 | Have ye no sinse, at all, at all, alanna? |
43101 | Have you anything to say? |
43101 | Have you bad news from your husband?" |
43101 | He asked me''what was the State of my nativity?''" |
43101 | He was accosted by his host as follows:"What is thy name, friend? |
43101 | He-- Of course you know what a garter snake is? |
43101 | He-- Then this is your final answer, Miss Jones? |
43101 | Hotel Clerk-- Is there anything that I can do for you? |
43101 | How can you think of borrowing money on those terms and from people of that stamp? |
43101 | How far have you hunted for him?" |
43101 | How long do you expect I am going to sit here with my mouth wide open? |
43101 | How would an egg- intercepting screen at the front of the stage do? |
43101 | How''s a feller to do any fishin''if he do n''t have bait? |
43101 | However, you took the number of the car, I presume?" |
43101 | I do n''t want you to call, and if you dare to send a police to see----""What is the place and number?" |
43101 | I must have one before I go, It''s hard to hurt his feelings-- still, Can I say yes? |
43101 | I wonder now will he propose? |
43101 | I wonder now would she say yes? |
43101 | In asking about her affliction Fannie said:"Did you enjoy much pain when you were ill?" |
43101 | In selecting your wife were you governed by her chin? |
43101 | In view of what has transpired what have you to say?" |
43101 | Is it a lot of rubber figures that you blow up and then do they play music?" |
43101 | Is it a promising one?" |
43101 | It so happened that he came one morning before Mr. Bowser had left the house, and was greeted with:"Well, what''s up now?" |
43101 | JAMES-- Hello, Gus, where have you been? |
43101 | Johnny-- Necessity? |
43101 | Judge Peters, a Philadelphian and a punster, having observed to another judge on the bench that one of the witnesses had a_ vegetable_ head,"How so?" |
43101 | Kansas Tramp-- Mister, could you do a little something to assist a poor man? |
43101 | Kind Lady( to tramp)--That coat you have on is pretty well worn out, is n''t it? |
43101 | LE SAWFT-- Why, captain, what in the world is that flat boat for? |
43101 | Lawyer-- For what reason? |
43101 | Let me see, this is the 10th, is n''t it? |
43101 | MISS BIRDIE-- Is this the place where you recover umbrellas? |
43101 | MRS. GABB-- Shall I give him the opiates at once? |
43101 | MRS. GABB-- What is the matter with my husband? |
43101 | Magazine Editor-- Yes-- um-- haven''t we got a story of hers sent in four or five years ago? |
43101 | Magistrate-- How is this, McDooly? |
43101 | Magoogin?" |
43101 | Magoogin?" |
43101 | Magoogin?" |
43101 | Magoogin?" |
43101 | Maria-- What''s he got, Ephraim? |
43101 | Matilda''s voice queried,"Is that you, dear?" |
43101 | McGlaggerty?" |
43101 | McGlaggerty?" |
43101 | Ministerial Friend( on a visit)--I wonder what makes your mamma so happy to- day? |
43101 | Miss Debut-- Do you know, Mr. Reimer, I dreamed last night that I was reading your poetry? |
43101 | Mr. Bowser suddenly looked up from his paper the other evening and asked:"Why is it that we have n''t given a progressive euchre party this season?" |
43101 | Mrs. Bowser, what did you come out here for?" |
43101 | Mrs. Ferguson-- What do you mean by that? |
43101 | Mrs. Prim-- It''s dreadful the way the men drink these days; is n''t it? |
43101 | Mrs. Smith-- John, has Mrs. Thompson done anything to offend you? |
43101 | Now, d''ye know fwhat the Montmorincy McGues ar''givin''out? |
43101 | Of course I----""What did you say your occupation is?" |
43101 | Oh why so sad, my lady fair? |
43101 | Oi hoonted up the beautiful Dootchman, an''sez Oi:"''Have you enny noice mate this mornin'', Dootchy?'' |
43101 | Old Farmer( coming to the fence)--What did you say, mister? |
43101 | Old Farmer( in a potato patch)--Speakin''to me? |
43101 | Old Grinder( to seedy applicant for job)--I hope that no bad habits have brought you to this poverty? |
43101 | Once he does enter; and one of the barbers venturing the inquiry,"Hair cut, sir?" |
43101 | Page 33, added missing quote after"Well, what ails your town this year?" |
43101 | Page 35, changed"mawrnin,''"to"mawrnin'',"Page 38, changed double quote to single quote after"Do you have to wear that when you are seeking religion?" |
43101 | Papa-- How can you make that out? |
43101 | Parson( to candidate for Sunday school)--Have you been christened, my boy? |
43101 | Pat-- Imprison for life, d''ye say? |
43101 | Policeman( to street musician)--Have you a permit to play on the streets? |
43101 | RETIRED POLITICIAN( to Society Artist)--Now you are sure you can make a good likeness of me? |
43101 | SUSIE-- Why do n''t you get married, Kittie? |
43101 | School Teacher( to boy at head of class, the lesson being philosophy)--How many kinds of force are there? |
43101 | Second Cadet-- Yes? |
43101 | Stranger-- Did a pedestrian pass this way a few minutes ago? |
43101 | Suppose I am a cooper, what you call, and I make de big tub to hold wine? |
43101 | Suppose I make de round wheel of de coach? |
43101 | Terrified Tenderfoot-- Why, I-- I-- what have I written? |
43101 | The Don said:"Are you stronger?" |
43101 | The countryman went out on the platform and said to the conductor:"Do you know where I want to get off?" |
43101 | The fellows who discuss"Is Marriage a Failure?" |
43101 | The witness who had sworn to eating pork at Andrews''table was asked:"Can you tell pork from a two- year- old hog from pig meat?" |
43101 | Then as he pressed her closer He lisped:"Why dost thou sigh?" |
43101 | Then he suddenly turned on me with:"Mrs. Bowser, what possible excuse can you urge in extenuation of your conduct?" |
43101 | Then why repine, sweet maid? |
43101 | To vote? |
43101 | Uncle-- Bobby, do n''t you hear your mother calling you? |
43101 | W''y doan I go wash merse''f?" |
43101 | Was it for amusement, or was it to provide her with rabbit soup? |
43101 | Weather Bureau Chief( to assistant)--Well, what''s the forecast for Pennsylvania? |
43101 | Were you ever a train robber?" |
43101 | What de flood do for him? |
43101 | What do you say?" |
43101 | What do you wish to sing? |
43101 | What does a woman''s calculation amount to?" |
43101 | What have you got it?" |
43101 | What is it? |
43101 | What is your name?" |
43101 | What joy is there that is not thine? |
43101 | What lacks thy lot to make it sweet? |
43101 | What makes that heart in sorrow beat And gives of happiness no sign? |
43101 | What on earth ails you, Mrs. Bowser? |
43101 | What pales thy cheek and dims thy eye? |
43101 | What was it?" |
43101 | What would I blame you about? |
43101 | What''s the game? |
43101 | What''s the ideah of having a howid big flap on a fellah''s ear? |
43101 | What''s the matter? |
43101 | What''s your opinion about marriage being a failure?" |
43101 | When the opposing counsel got hold of the plaintiff he asked:"Was this hog ranging the country?" |
43101 | Which of us applies for a divorce?" |
43101 | While there might be no question that Major Jones went out to hunt rabbits while his wife was dying, what was his object? |
43101 | Who is she? |
43101 | Who''s coming? |
43101 | Why am I a woman suffragist? |
43101 | Why are very young sailors like condiments? |
43101 | Why did you ask?" |
43101 | Why do n''t you go down to the river and take a bath and try to earn a living? |
43101 | Why do n''t you say your prayers at night?" |
43101 | Why do you object to it?" |
43101 | Why?" |
43101 | Wife( sobbing)--You do n''t suppose I can get a bonnet for ten dollars, do you? |
43101 | Wife-- Why do you think so? |
43101 | You blamed idiot, what would any man with a brain do? |
43101 | You have him arrested?" |
43101 | You see the point now, do n''t you?" |
43101 | You should Be overjoyed to hear the news; You soon will we d a husband good, How can you, then, this grief excuse? |
43101 | Young fellow, I suppose?" |
43101 | [ Illustration:"Wondah ef dat bi- spi''s got dun countin''yet?"] |
43101 | asked the culprit,"ai n''t the whole thing going to end in a choke?" |
43101 | but doest not thee regard me with that feeling that the world calls_ love_?" |
43101 | going into the Adirondacks without a guide? |
43101 | in"do you mean by that that you preached?" |
43101 | replied Jack;"what is it?" |
43101 | run? |
43101 | said the fellow,"what do you mean? |
43101 | said the officer, putting up his billy--"Where are you going?" |
43101 | she almost screamed,"what are you doing? |
43101 | to? |
43101 | what are you sending to the exhibition this year? |
43101 | what have you done?" |
43101 | what was that? |
43101 | why art thou thus?" |
43101 | your wife?" |
8221 | ''Shall I call thee Bird, Or but a wandering Voice?'' 8221 Ah, but where is it? |
8221 | And afterward, what else? |
8221 | Are these children who are playing in the sunlight,said Fromentin,"or is it a place in the sunlight in which children are playing?" |
8221 | Did we not imply,asks the Athenian Stranger in Plato''s_ Laws_,"that the poets are not always quite capable of knowing what is good or evil?" |
8221 | Every cradle asks us,''Whence?'' 8221 Have the elder races halted? |
8221 | Iambicwith initial truncation or"trochaic"with final truncation? |
8221 | Why should we fear that which will come to all that is? 8221 ( b) What sort of imaginative transformation of the material furnished by the senses? 8221 ( c) What degree of technical mastery of lyric structure? 8221 *****Our frigate takes fire, The other asks if we demand quarter? |
8221 | And are there not characteristic activities of the poetic imagination which antedate the fixation and expression of images in words? |
8221 | And does not each of the other poems release and excite the lyric mood? |
8221 | And what is it which the preferable face or tree or color stirs or awakens within us as we look at it? |
8221 | And who cares? |
8221 | And why? |
8221 | And yet,_ to me_, what is this quintessence of dust?" |
8221 | Are these plays in harmony with Tennyson''s theology, as indicated elsewhere in his work? |
8221 | Are you instantly on horseback? |
8221 | As an object for aesthetic contemplation, is the average lyric too small to afford the highest and most permanent pleasure? |
8221 | Because they spoke, must we be dumb?" |
8221 | But are there not functions of the poet''s mind preceding the formation of verbal images? |
8221 | But do such lyrics lack"adequate magnitude"? |
8221 | But do they? |
8221 | But how far are words capable of embodying emotion in permanent form? |
8221 | But how? |
8221 | But is there any real antagonism between the elements of form and significance, beauty and expressiveness? |
8221 | But what have you to say?" |
8221 | But who shall correct them? |
8221 | But why lengthen this list of truisms? |
8221 | But, alas, who can constrain love? |
8221 | By her composite effects? |
8221 | C"EXPRESSION"What is to be said of the range and character of the poet''s vocabulary? |
8221 | C. What may be said in general of Tennyson''s handling of the dramatic form? |
8221 | Can one go farther? |
8221 | Can you see her? |
8221 | Choice of metres? |
8221 | Compare with this the sprightly egotism of the lyric poet''s"If she be not so to me, What care I how fair she be?" |
8221 | Did not the peaceful Robert Louis Stevenson confess his romantic longing to"knife a man"? |
8221 | Do I talk nonsense, or do you understand me?" |
8221 | Do the later narratives show an increased proportion of tragic situations? |
8221 | Do these plays give evidence of a genuine comic sense? |
8221 | Do they contain any clear exposition of the problems of the religious life? |
8221 | Do they droop and end their lesson, wearied over there beyond the seas? |
8221 | Do you count waves from crest to crest or from hollow to hollow? |
8221 | Do you feel in this poem the presence of a creative personality? |
8221 | Do you hear it as clearly as you can hear"_ The tambourines Jing- jing- jingled in the hands of Queens_"? |
8221 | Do you hear the tune? |
8221 | Do you regard Tennyson''s previous literary experience as a help or a hindrance to success in the drama? |
8221 | Do you think he has the power of creating a character, in the same sense as Shakespeare had it? |
8221 | Do you think that these themes offer promising dramatic material? |
8221 | Do your eyes feel that pressure? |
8221 | Does Tennyson''s lyric poetry reveal a sense of spiritual law? |
8221 | Does Tennyson''s narrative poetry throw any light upon his attitude towards contemporary English society? |
8221 | Does a lyric possess"an adequate magnitude?" |
8221 | Does his allotment of poetic justice show a sympathy with the moral order of the world? |
8221 | Does his exhibition of action fulfill dramatic requirements? |
8221 | Does his use of narrative material ever show a deficiency of emotion; i. e., could the story have been better told in prose? |
8221 | Does it always have a subordinate place, as a part of the setting of the story? |
8221 | Does it ever retard the movement unduly? |
8221 | Does it overlay the story with too ornate detail? |
8221 | Does not a book of lyrics often seem like a plantation of carefully tended little trees, rather than a forest? |
8221 | Does she know Katharine Tynan''s verses about"Planting Bulbs"? |
8221 | Does the author''s power of artistic expression keep pace with his feeling and imagination? |
8221 | Employment of figurative language? |
8221 | Evidence of the artist''s caring for either form or content to the neglect of the other? |
8221 | FORM/ CONTENT A"IMPRESSION"_ Of Nature._ What sort of observation of natural phenomena is revealed in this poem? |
8221 | Feeling and Imagination_ What is feeling, and exactly how is it bound up with the imagination? |
8221 | From contact with men through the medium of books? |
8221 | From introspection? |
8221 | Has he the story- telling gift? |
8221 | Has he"the dramatic sense"? |
8221 | Have the lines been fused into their rhymed grouping by passionate feeling, or is their unity a mere mechanical conformation to a pattern? |
8221 | Here the stark truthfulness of the images does not prevent an instinctive"Well, what of it?" |
8221 | How can the body touch the flower which only the spirit may touch?" |
8221 | How clearly do his lyrics reflect the social problems of his own time? |
8221 | How do the other arts convey feeling? |
8221 | How far does he identify himself with his race? |
8221 | How far is Tennyson''s personality indicated by these instinctive processes through which his poetical material is transformed? |
8221 | How is it that they cross the gulf which separates the enjoyer from the producer? |
8221 | How much of his dramatic work do you consider purely objective, i. e., untinged by what was called the lyric egoism? |
8221 | How much of his lyric poetry seems to spring from direct contact with men? |
8221 | I asked an American composer the other day:"Is there anything at all in the old distinction between secular and sacred music?" |
8221 | If most words are perishable stuff, what is it that keeps other words from perishing? |
8221 | If not, what other relationships or associations are involved? |
8221 | If our colors are struck and the fighting done? |
8221 | Imitative effects? |
8221 | Impressions of movement, form, color, sound, hours of the day or night, seasons of the year; knowledge of scientific facts, etc.? |
8221 | In general, is there harmony between form and content, or is there evidence of the artist''s caring for one rather than the other? |
8221 | In his later lyrics are there traces of deeper or shallower interest in men and women? |
8221 | In idealization? |
8221 | In patriotism? |
8221 | In power of representation through images? |
8221 | In power of representation through images? |
8221 | In the historical dramas, can you trace the influence of the poet''s own personality in giving color to historical personages? |
8221 | In the love- lyrics, what different relationships of men and women? |
8221 | Is his lyric egoism a noble one? |
8221 | Is his lyric passion always genuine? |
8221 | Is his vocabulary suited to stage purposes? |
8221 | Is it a delusion? |
8221 | Is it superior organization and arrangement of this fragile material,"fame''s great antiseptic, style"? |
8221 | Is it true poetry or only verse? |
8221 | Is the lyric passion sustained as the poet grows old? |
8221 | Is the poet''s own attitude clearly evident? |
8221 | Is the"motive"of this lyric purely personal? |
8221 | Is this a"painter- like"subject? |
8221 | Is this poem consistent with his other poems? |
8221 | Lyric Expression_ Is it possible to formulate the laws of lyric expression? |
8221 | Me laetum quando facies, Ut vultu tuo saties? |
8221 | Modification of rhythm and sound to suggest the idea conveyed? |
8221 | Modification of rhythm and sound to suit the idea conveyed? |
8221 | Noticeable words or phrases? |
8221 | Occasional use of presentative rather than representative language? |
8221 | Of conceiving characters in complication and collision with one another or with circumstances? |
8221 | Of greater or less faith in the progress of society? |
8221 | Of his management of the web of circumstance in which the characters are involved and brought into conflict? |
8221 | Of his technical skill in suiting rhythm and sound to the requirements of his story? |
8221 | Of knowledge of man gained through acquaintance with Biblical, classical, foreign or English literature? |
8221 | Of those having a historical basis, how many are drawn from English sources? |
8221 | Or that the second stanza of the"Ode to a Nightingale"runs on four sounds instead of five? |
8221 | Or, take Calverley''s parody of Robert Browning:"You see this pebble- stone? |
8221 | Precisely what is their racial reaction to a lyric of Sappho? |
8221 | Religious attitude? |
8221 | Selection of metre? |
8221 | Self- knowledge? |
8221 | Subordination of material to unity of"tone"? |
8221 | TOLSTOY, L._ What is Art_? |
8221 | Taken as a whole, is the form of the various plays artistically in harmony with the themes employed? |
8221 | The Chaucerian stanza rhymes_ a b a b b c c_:"''Loke up, I seye, and telle me what she is Anon, that I may gone aboute thi nede: Know iche hire ought? |
8221 | The Nature of Rhythm_ And why must the words begin to dance? |
8221 | The Special Field_ What then do we mean by the province of poetry? |
8221 | The sea? |
8221 | The walls re- echo''d:''Where is the General of the Nation?''" |
8221 | To a Scotch ballad? |
8221 | To an Anglo- Saxon war- song of the tenth century? |
8221 | To one of Shakspere''s songs? |
8221 | To what extent do you find his narrative work purely objective, i. e., without admixture of reflective or didactic elements? |
8221 | To what extent does he find a lyric motive in friendship? |
8221 | To what extent is the lyrical emotion called forth by the details of nature? |
8221 | Tweedle- dum or tweedle- dee? |
8221 | Upon sensitiveness to successive experiences? |
8221 | Use of rhymes? |
8221 | Use of rhymes? |
8221 | Was it''Come, shepherds, deck your heads''? |
8221 | What arrangement or rhythmic ordering of facts do they use in this process? |
8221 | What can Lessing''s"space- arts,"sculpture and painting, do with the material furnished by the Orpheus myth? |
8221 | What can the musician do with the theme? |
8221 | What can you say of Tennyson''s mastery of distinctly narrative metres? |
8221 | What can you say of Tennyson''s power of observing character? |
8221 | What devices of rhythm or sound to heighten the intended effect? |
8221 | What evidence of poetic instinct in the selection of characteristic traits? |
8221 | What evidence of poetic instinct in the selection of characteristic traits? |
8221 | What is the impulse which urges certain persons to create beautiful objects? |
8221 | What kind of imagery? |
8221 | What kind or degree of sensitiveness to the facts of nature? |
8221 | What may be said in general of his handling of the lyric form: as to unity, brevity, simplicity of structure? |
8221 | What song was it, I pray? |
8221 | What sort of inner mood or passion? |
8221 | What takes place in us as we confront the work of art, or, in other words, what is our reaction to an artistic stimulus? |
8221 | What themes are of mythical or legendary origin? |
8221 | What tragic forces seem to have made the most impression upon Tennyson? |
8221 | When you count the links in a bicycle chain, do you begin with the slender middle of each link or with one of the swelling ends? |
8221 | Wherein lies the difference, as far as the objects themselves are concerned? |
8221 | Wherein lies the difference? |
8221 | Who can strain the blue from the sky? |
8221 | Who knows precisely where that"guarded mount"is upon the map? |
8221 | Who walks? |
8221 | Why do you not write an opening paragraph, for better for worse, instead of looking out of the window and quoting Katharine Tynan? |
8221 | With humanity? |
8221 | Wo n''t beauty go with these?" |
8221 | Would you learn who won by the light of the moon and stars? |
8221 | [ Illustration: M?----- C?----- H?----- C?---- S]"Thus, a tired wayfarer on a hot day throws himself on the damp earth beneath a maple- tree. |
8221 | [ Illustration: M?----- C?----- H?----- C?---- S]"Thus, a tired wayfarer on a hot day throws himself on the damp earth beneath a maple- tree. |
8221 | [ Illustration: M?----- C?----- H?----- C?---- S]"Thus, a tired wayfarer on a hot day throws himself on the damp earth beneath a maple- tree. |
8221 | [ Illustration: M?----- C?----- H?----- C?---- S]"Thus, a tired wayfarer on a hot day throws himself on the damp earth beneath a maple- tree. |
8221 | _ General Characteristics._ After classifying Tennyson''s narrative poetry, how many of his themes seem to you to be of his own invention? |
8221 | _ General Characteristics._ Does the freshness of the lyric mood seem in Tennyson''s case dependent upon any philosophical position? |
8221 | _ Of God._ Perception of spiritual laws? |
8221 | _ Of Man._ What evidence of the poet''s direct knowledge of men? |
8221 | _ Of Man._ What human relationships furnish the themes for his lyrics? |
8221 | _ Of Nature._ How far does the description of natural phenomena, as outlined in Topic II, A, enter into Tennyson''s narrative poetry? |
8221 | _ What is Poetry?_ New York, 1900. |
8221 | _ What is Poetry?_ edited by Albert S. Cook. |
8221 | and every coffin,''Whither?'' |
8221 | or,''As at noon Dulcina rested''? |
8221 | or,''Chevy Chase''? |
8221 | or,''Johnny Armstrong''? |
8221 | or,''Phillida flouts me''? |
8221 | or,''Troy Town''?" |
8221 | predominant verse rhythms, with occasional emphasis upon metrical feet:"Would you hear of an old- time sea- fight? |
61625 | From the classics? |
61625 | To what extent do I revise? |
61625 | Tools of the trade? |
61625 | = Barry Scobee=: Tee- totally nothing, unless it might be for a few minor-- what shall I say, tricks of technique? |
61625 | = Clyde B. Hough=:"How much of your craft have you learned from reading current authors?" |
61625 | = Eugene Manlove Rhodes=: How would a given character react to a given situation? |
61625 | = Frederick J. Jackson=: Do I map it out in advance? |
61625 | = Frederick J. Jackson=: To a beginner? |
61625 | = Frederick Orin Bartlett=: A story may grow from any of the sources you suggest-- even from that mysterious"or what?" |
61625 | = Hapsburg Liebe=: My general feeling as to the value of technique? |
61625 | = Harold Lamb=: Technique? |
61625 | = John Joseph=: The genesis of a story? |
61625 | = John Joseph=: Yes, my pencil lies beside the machine and I make a great many notes, otherwise I''d lose many good(?) |
61625 | = Katharine Holland Brown=: The fact that we all like to dramatize ourselves,--and the story- writer helps us do it? |
61625 | = Ralph Henry Barbour=: Suggestions to the beginner? |
61625 | = Ralph Henry Barbour=: Who knows the answer to this question? |
61625 | = Samuel Hopkins Adams=: How can one tell? |
61625 | = Sinclair Lewis=: How can one segregate them? |
61625 | A man to your liking, unhampered by clogging, useless words? |
61625 | A village church? |
61625 | Advice, hints to the practised writer? |
61625 | Allan Dunn=: Here is a hard question, how does the story grow? |
61625 | And did you ever think how much this may help? |
61625 | And that rotten sex stuff-- who but a moron would read it? |
61625 | And what are working hours? |
61625 | And why do critics always criticize from a"trade standpoint,"that is, as if novels were written for other novelists? |
61625 | Are details distinct or blurred? |
61625 | Are details distinct or blurred?_ 3. |
61625 | Are not character and setting part of material, and color of setting? |
61625 | Are the answers, then, valueless? |
61625 | Are the pictures you see colored or more in black and white? |
61625 | Are the pictures you see colored or more in black and white? |
61625 | Are they really prepared for the student, or written because the author had certain views he wished to publish about a certain subject? |
61625 | As for advising a practised writer: why invite one to practise an impertinence toward those who know as much of the craft as I myself do? |
61625 | As tools of your trade? |
61625 | As tools? |
61625 | As tools? |
61625 | As tools? |
61625 | Beyond the elementary stages? |
61625 | Beyond the elementary stages?_ ANSWERS= Bill Adams=: No course of any sort. |
61625 | Books on it? |
61625 | Books on it? |
61625 | Buddha? |
61625 | But do I see things as clearly as if they were before my physical eye? |
61625 | But is n''t the field of exact vision smaller in one case than in the other? |
61625 | But literature? |
61625 | But what''s the use? |
61625 | But, after all, is not that only another way of saying he must learn to crawl by himself, unless some one wiser than he will instruct him?) |
61625 | By the looks of my hair, when"genius"(?) |
61625 | Can art be as lazy, as unscrupulous as that? |
61625 | Can the one be developed through the other? |
61625 | Can this, if true, be explained as resulting from an unusually clear connection between their conscious and subconscious mentalities? |
61625 | Can you unravel that? |
61625 | Chasing one''s imagination, as it were, around a vicious circle? |
61625 | Classics? |
61625 | Classics? |
61625 | Color? |
61625 | Consider these things"tools of my trade"? |
61625 | Crazy, eh? |
61625 | Did Columbus? |
61625 | Did he know what the ending would be? |
61625 | Did n''t characterization do that? |
61625 | Did this help beyond the elementary stages? |
61625 | Did you ever see a reader wanting to be the villain of a story? |
61625 | Difference in behavior of imagination when reading or writing stories? |
61625 | Difference in imagination when reading and when writing? |
61625 | Difference when reading and writing? |
61625 | Difference when reading and writing? |
61625 | Do 21 of our writers therefore not know how and do 45 of them consider not knowing how to be not extremely important? |
61625 | Do I"have stock pictures for church, cowboy,"etc.? |
61625 | Do you actually hear all sounds described, mentioned and inferred, just as if they were real sounds? |
61625 | Do you actually hear all sounds described, mentioned and inferred, just as if they were real sounds? |
61625 | Do you have stock pictures for, say, a village church or a cowboy, or does each case produce its individual vision? |
61625 | Do you lose ideas because your imagination travels faster than your means of recording? |
61625 | Do you map it out in advance, or do you start with, say, a character or situation, and let the story tell itself as you write? |
61625 | Do you prefer writing in the first person or the third? |
61625 | Do you realize that the probability is that nothing in this world exists at all except in an individual''s inner consciousness? |
61625 | Do you taste the flavors in a story, so really that your mouth literally waters to a pleasant one? |
61625 | Do you taste the flavors in a story, so really that your mouth literally waters to a pleasant one? |
61625 | Do you write it in pieces to be joined together, or straightaway as a whole? |
61625 | Do you write it in pieces to be joined together, or straightaway as a whole? |
61625 | Does he have the same grasp of detail as the practical- minded man? |
61625 | Does this story I am writing interest_ me_ as I write it-- does it satisfy_ me_? |
61625 | Does your imagination make you feel actual physical pain corresponding, though in a slighter degree, to pain presented in a story? |
61625 | Does your imagination make you feel actual physical pain corresponding, though in a slighter degree, to pain presented in a story? |
61625 | Does your imagination reproduce the sense of touch-- of rough or smooth contact, hard or gentle impact or pressure, etc.? |
61625 | Does your imagination reproduce the sense of touch-- of rough or smooth contact, hard or gentle impact or pressure, etc.? |
61625 | Even with successful writers, who can say where the benefit from studying other authors ends and harm begins? |
61625 | For instance, which do you like best, the tires, seats, engine or chassis of an auto? |
61625 | For of what use is a story if it gives the reader no pleasure to read? |
61625 | Gallileo? |
61625 | Geometry? |
61625 | Have you ever considered these matters as"tools of your trade"? |
61625 | How can I make a good, readable yarn out of it?" |
61625 | How can I obey the law of proportion? |
61625 | How can you make another man see a thing if you do n''t see it yourself? |
61625 | How can you tell a story if you are thinking about its effect on the people? |
61625 | How could he lose money? |
61625 | How do I know that my ideas are not all stock ideas? |
61625 | How it leads one to cast about for the exact word, for a word that balances with the sentence both in thought and rhythm? |
61625 | How many writers can you recognize from their stories if their names are covered up? |
61625 | How many_ famous_ writers are graduates of such a course? |
61625 | How may it be"objectively told"without the object in mind? |
61625 | How much do I revise? |
61625 | How much have I learned from Homer and Vergil, and how much from Kipling and Conan Doyle? |
61625 | How much of your craft have you learned from reading current authors? |
61625 | How real does your imagination make the smells in a story you read? |
61625 | How real does your imagination make the smells in a story you read? |
61625 | How would you like to read one about some place you knew intimately and find it all mixed up? |
61625 | How''s this for a theory? |
61625 | I ask myself: Why did the author do this? |
61625 | I call it blasting out of solid ivory-- eh? |
61625 | I do n''t strive to write classics, so why study them? |
61625 | I had written stories about nearly all of the menagerie except_ procyon lotors_; therefore, why not a''coon story? |
61625 | I think,"Now how can I get this effect or that; how can I make this fellow behave like a real man?" |
61625 | I wonder if this would be true of a writer of character stories? |
61625 | If a plumber serves an apprenticeship to learn his trade-- is a writer''s craft any less exacting in the matter of skill? |
61625 | If so, to what extent and how do you use them? |
61625 | If we take the more usual phrase,"Do you write down to your readers?" |
61625 | If you can really"see things with your eyes shut,"what limitations? |
61625 | If you studied geometry, did it give you more trouble than other mathematics? |
61625 | If you_ think_ the medium does not matter, does it? |
61625 | In revising? |
61625 | Is it not curiosity? |
61625 | Is the ending clearly in mind when you begin? |
61625 | Is the ending clearly in mind when you begin? |
61625 | Is there any difference in behavior of your imagination when you are reading stories and when writing them? |
61625 | Is there any difference in behavior of your imagination when you are reading stories and when writing them? |
61625 | Is there any difference in the workings of my imagination when I am reading and when I am writing? |
61625 | It is like salt and pepper in a dish, but who wants a dish of salt or a dish of pepper? |
61625 | Just what do you mean by"technique"? |
61625 | Lincoln? |
61625 | Local color, do you mean? |
61625 | Marconi? |
61625 | No one I know-- and Rascoe, Mencken, Fanny Butcher and some others drop into this honored(?) |
61625 | Of what good is imagery if it can not be seen? |
61625 | Of what value is technique if gaining it has suppressed any of the individuality whose expression is technique''s only warrant for existence? |
61625 | On page 7,"etc?" |
61625 | Perhaps because, like every child who asks"Daddy, is it true?" |
61625 | Perhaps interest in the affairs of the other fellow, for we all love gossip--? |
61625 | Perhaps that is begging the question, but what else can I say? |
61625 | Pessimistic? |
61625 | Proof? |
61625 | QUESTION II_ Do you map it out in advance, or do you start with, say, a character or situation, and let the story tell itself as you write? |
61625 | QUESTION IV_ When you write do you center your mind on the story itself or do you constantly have your readers in mind? |
61625 | QUESTION IX_ What are two or three of the most valuable suggestions you could give to a beginner? |
61625 | QUESTION VI_ How much of your craft have you learned from reading current authors? |
61625 | QUESTION V_ Have you had a classroom or correspondence course on writing fiction? |
61625 | QUESTION XII_ Do you lose ideas because your imagination travels faster than your means of recording? |
61625 | QUESTION XI_ Do you prefer writing in the first person or the third? |
61625 | QUESTION X_ What is the elemental hold of fiction on the human mind?_ ANSWERS= Bill Adams=: Life pitched against death; and man the master. |
61625 | R. Buckley=: Most important ingredient to me? |
61625 | Rather pathetic as information, is n''t it? |
61625 | Reading vs. writing? |
61625 | Reading vs. writing? |
61625 | Reading_ vs._ writing? |
61625 | Really now, when you read about characters, does n''t your mind supply a picture of the physical man? |
61625 | Resent too many images? |
61625 | Revise? |
61625 | See the point? |
61625 | Setting and color? |
61625 | Setting? |
61625 | Shakespeare? |
61625 | Smells? |
61625 | So where are we? |
61625 | Solid geometry? |
61625 | Sounds like I''ve been reading friend Freud, does n''t it?) |
61625 | Specialize on stories concerned almost entirely with smells? |
61625 | Stock pictures for stock"sets"? |
61625 | Stock pictures or individual vision? |
61625 | Stock pictures? |
61625 | Structure is a part of plot, do n''t you think? |
61625 | Such a flow of bull would have to be edited very carefully afterward-- so why be so precipitate? |
61625 | Technique, you say? |
61625 | That is, what do you mean by an idea for a story? |
61625 | That last phrase( the italics are mine)--does it leave anything invisible? |
61625 | The classics? |
61625 | The classics?_ ANSWERS= Bill Adams=: I have to admit that I know no current authors-- I_ never_ read a magazine story, and exceedingly seldom a book. |
61625 | These may be harsh words, but-- must the dollar taint_ everything_ in this world? |
61625 | Things can be taught, certainly; but shall we learn to do a thing as others would do it? |
61625 | To a practised writer? |
61625 | To a practised writer?_ ANSWERS= Bill Adams=: In the matter of hints-- to beginners-- don''t begin yet. |
61625 | To what degree is a writer''s power of imagery, of sense stimulation in general, dependent on his own powers of imagination? |
61625 | To what extent did this help in the elementary stages? |
61625 | To what extent did this help in the elementary stages? |
61625 | To what extent do you revise? |
61625 | To what extent do you revise?_ ANSWERS= Bill Adams=: It writes itself-- nothing to do with me. |
61625 | To what extent is his imagination sense- power related to his physical sense- power? |
61625 | To- day, I wonder if the tools of the masters of the craft cut as deep as then? |
61625 | Tools of trade? |
61625 | Tools of trade? |
61625 | Tools of trade? |
61625 | Tools? |
61625 | Tools? |
61625 | Tools? |
61625 | V. Have you had a class- room or correspondence course on writing fiction? |
61625 | What ailed that man? |
61625 | What are Yonkers, anyhow? |
61625 | What are two or three of the most valuable suggestions you could give to a beginner? |
61625 | What does it matter how he tells it? |
61625 | What does it mean? |
61625 | What had gone wrong? |
61625 | What imagination, what regard for the ethics of his craft must a man have who sells his wares over and over again? |
61625 | What is most interesting and important to you in your writing-- plot, structure, style, material, setting, character, color, etc.? |
61625 | What is the elemental hold of fiction on the human mind? |
61625 | What is the genesis of a story with you-- does it grow from an incident, a character, a trait of character, a situation, setting, a title, or what? |
61625 | What is this something which the imagination follows-- which leads the imagination? |
61625 | What is your general feeling on the value of technique? |
61625 | What man can imagine a million objects? |
61625 | What man, then, can imagine thought? |
61625 | What point in trying to interest picture- lovers or sound- lovers by refusing to give them pictures or sounds? |
61625 | What will his climax be? |
61625 | What will make a ship owner mad? |
61625 | What would have happened to me if I had started to swell up at the tender age of eighteen and could have found a market for the stuff? |
61625 | What would he find when he came to the house and the two old ladies? |
61625 | What, then, should be the general rule of procedure? |
61625 | When you write do you center your mind on the story itself or do you constantly have your readers in mind? |
61625 | Where and how did he get the idea in the first place? |
61625 | Where would you be if one of them was lacking? |
61625 | Which affords least check-- pencil, typewriter or stenographer? |
61625 | Who am I to suggest things to the practised writer? |
61625 | Who can tell where matter merges into spirit? |
61625 | Who can tell where the imagination of the writer leaves off and the imagination of the reader begins? |
61625 | Who else can do it for him? |
61625 | Why do n''t the profs come down out of the clouds and use a simpler word, namely, mechanics? |
61625 | Why has the story of A. S. M. Hutchinson swept the English reading people off its feet? |
61625 | Why is that? |
61625 | Why not go in for"olfactory fiction"? |
61625 | Why should I attempt to make a reader think, when I know so little myself? |
61625 | Why? |
61625 | Why? |
61625 | Would any of them? |
61625 | Would n''t it be better to say that plot, character and atmosphere should be considered of primary importance in the building of a story? |
61625 | Yet, do they? |
61625 | _ Do you have stock pictures for, say, a village church or a cowboy, or does each case produce its individual vision?_ 6. |
61625 | _ Have you ever considered these matters as"tools of your trade"? |
61625 | _ If you can really"see things with your eyes shut,"what limitations? |
61625 | _ If you studied solid geometry, did it give you more trouble than other mathematics?_ 4. |
61625 | _ Is there any difference in behavior of your imagination when you are reading stories and when writing them?_ 7. |
61625 | or,"Do you write for money or for art?" |
61625 | was replaced with"etc.?". |
5637 | And what if he had willed thee to burne our Temples? |
5637 | But what if he had done it? |
5637 | For, what love is this of friendship? 5637 Hast thou hope of being released for gold or for silver, or for any gifts of wealth, or through battle and fighting?" |
5637 | Owl of Cwm Cawlwyd, here is an embassy from Arthur; knowest thou aught of Mabon the son of Modron, who was taken after three nights from his mother? |
5637 | The speach that intendeth truth must be plaine and unpollisht: Who speaketh elaborately, but he that meanes to speake unfavourably? |
5637 | What would he think of me and the manner in which I am going to speak of him to the public? |
5637 | What, all things? |
5637 | --cur amplius addere quaeris Rursum quod pereat male, et ingratum occidat omne? |
5637 | 100 Or is it a reason against the hypothesis that so much time would have been lost to me? |
5637 | 16 But of what kind of moral education was a people so raw, so incapable of abstract thoughts, and so entirely in their childhood capable? |
5637 | 18 But, it will be asked, to what purpose was this education of so rude a people, a people with whom God had to begin so entirely from the beginning? |
5637 | 38 The child, sent abroad, saw other children who knew more, who lived more becomingly, and asked itself, in confusion,"Why do I not know that too? |
5637 | 81 Or, is the human species never to arrive at this highest step of illumination and purity?--Never? |
5637 | 84 This is the aim of human education, and should not the Divine education extend as far? |
5637 | 95 Is this hypothesis so laughable merely because it is the oldest? |
5637 | 97 And once more, why not another time all those steps, to perform which the views of Eternal Rewards so powerfully assist us? |
5637 | 99 Is this a reason against it? |
5637 | Again, if Armorica saw the birth of the Arthurian cycle, how is it that we fail to find there any traces of that brilliant nativity? |
5637 | Alas to men in yeares how small A part of life is left in all? |
5637 | Alloquar? |
5637 | And Aemylius Lepidus with hitting his foot against a doore- seele? |
5637 | And Aufidius with stumbling against the Consull- chamber doore as he was going in thereat? |
5637 | And an Emperour die by the scratch of a combe, whilest he was combing his head? |
5637 | And did he not himself dash into fragments the ignoble cup, so soon as he beheld something worthy the devotion of his life? |
5637 | And if company may solace you, doth not the whole world walke the same path? |
5637 | And in reaching the modern world, how would it be? |
5637 | And in what relation should we be placed with past and future ages if the perfecting of human nature made sach a sacrifice indispensable? |
5637 | And of a farre worse example Speusippus, the Platonian philosopher, and one of our Popes? |
5637 | And teacheth miserie, famine, and sicknesse to laugh? |
5637 | And that this kind of lesson be more easie and naturall than that of Gaza, who will make question? |
5637 | And that which even I must forget now, is that necessarily forgotten for ever? |
5637 | And those that are most injurious can not aske, wherefore I have taken, and why I have not paied? |
5637 | And to say but a small thing, what could have more procrastinated it than the promise of such a miraculous recompense in this life? |
5637 | And what said another? |
5637 | And who appear by his side? |
5637 | And will you know what, in my seeming, the cause is? |
5637 | And would not that physician deserve to be whipped who should wish the plague amongst us that he might put his art into practice?" |
5637 | Are we so free from the evil reflected in their verse as to have a right to condemn their memory? |
5637 | Because the human understanding, before the sophistries of the Schools had dissipated and debilitated it, lighted upon it at once? |
5637 | But can it be true that man has to neglect himself for any end whatever? |
5637 | But from what brutall stupiditie may so grosse a blindnesse come upon him? |
5637 | But has this innovator examined himself to see if these disorders of the moral world wound his reason, or if they do not rather wound his self- love? |
5637 | But have you seene any that hath received hurt thereby? |
5637 | But how can the cultivation of the fine arts remedy, at the same time, these opposite defects, and unite in itself two contradictory qualities? |
5637 | But how will the artist avoid the corruption of his time which encloses him on all hands? |
5637 | But if the pious did not reflect thereupon, who then should reflect? |
5637 | But perhaps the objection has for some time occurred to you, Is not the beautiful degraded by this, that it is made a mere play? |
5637 | But perhaps there is a vicious circle in our previous reasoning? |
5637 | But what shall he doe, if he be urged with sophisticall subtilties about a Sillogisme? |
5637 | But what? |
5637 | But whence have we the conception of God as the supreme good? |
5637 | But why should not every individual man have existed more than once upon this World? |
5637 | But why speak always of authors and writings? |
5637 | But, subject to the influence of a social constitution still barbarous, how can character become ennobled? |
5637 | But, you might object: Is this mediation absolutely indispensable? |
5637 | Can he have been, in one and the self- same life, a sensual Jew and a spiritual Christian? |
5637 | Can he in the self- same life have overtaken both? |
5637 | Can it bind nature in the savage, and set it free in the barbarian? |
5637 | Can nature snatch from us; for any end whatever, the perfection which is prescribed to us by the aim of reason? |
5637 | Can this effect of harmony be attained by the state? |
5637 | Could not truth and duty, one or the other, in themselves and by themselves, find access to the sensuous man? |
5637 | Cur non ut plenus vitae conviva recedis? |
5637 | Did not Horace, doing the honours to himself, say that in war he one day let his shield fall( relicta non bene parmula)? |
5637 | Did you thinke you should never come to the place, where you were still going? |
5637 | Do Christians even now do much better with their slaves? |
5637 | Do I bring away so much from once, that there is nothing to repay the trouble of coming back? |
5637 | Doe not all things move as you doe, or keepe your course? |
5637 | Doe we offer thee any wrong? |
5637 | Doe you thinke they can take any pleasure in it? |
5637 | Does he come back? |
5637 | Does he expect to come back? |
5637 | Does he will riches, how much anxiety, envy, and snares might he not thereby draw upon his shoulders? |
5637 | Does it that of His necessary Reality? |
5637 | Does such a state of beauty in appearance exist, and where? |
5637 | Equalitie is the chiefe ground- worke of equitie, who can complaine to be comprehended where all are contained? |
5637 | For example, is Shakespeare a classic? |
5637 | For what possession has he in it if that which he recognises as the Best does not become the best in his lifetime? |
5637 | For what was to impel it to seek for these better proofs? |
5637 | For why should it extend further? |
5637 | For why should we feare to lose a thing, which being lost, can not be moaned? |
5637 | For, who would give eare unto him, that for it''s end would establish our paine and disturbance? |
5637 | Has he not somewhere said that"the beautiful is the result of happy position? |
5637 | Hast thou not seene one of our late Kings slaine in the middest of his sports? |
5637 | Have I gone too far in this portraiture of our times? |
5637 | Have travelled over in one and the same life? |
5637 | How can two such opposite tendencies exist together in the same being? |
5637 | How can we remove this contradiction? |
5637 | How could they avoid reproducing it in their works? |
5637 | How is a Categorical Imperative Possible? |
5637 | How much more decent were it to see their school- houses and formes strewed with greene boughs and flowers, than with bloudy burchen- twigs? |
5637 | How then shall we re- establish the unity of human nature, a unity that appears completely destroyed by this primitive and radical opposition? |
5637 | I change then the suggestion of self- love into a universal law, and state the question thus: How would it be if my maxim were a universal law? |
5637 | I know it too well; but what lasting influence can be exerted on social life by those who have no real life of their own? |
5637 | I will therefore call this the principle of Autonomy of the will, in contrast with every other which I accordingly reckon as Heteronomy? |
5637 | If two at one instant should require helpe, to which would you run? |
5637 | In what, then, can their worth lie, if it is not to consist in the will and in reference to its expected effect? |
5637 | Inclination can only say:"That is good FOR YOUR INDIVIDUALITY and PRESENT NECESSITY?" |
5637 | Is it not shee that cleereth all stormes of the mind? |
5637 | Is it reason so long to fear a thing of so short time? |
5637 | Is it surprising that natural feeling should not recognise itself in such a copy, and if in the report of the analyst the truth appears as paradox? |
5637 | Is that which is successful in the way of Art with the individual, not to be successful in the way of Nature with the whole? |
5637 | Is there any thing grows not old together with yourselfe? |
5637 | LETTER V. Does the present age, do passing events, present this character? |
5637 | Let him borrow this pleasant counter- craft of Aristippus;"Why shall I unbind that, which being bound doth so much trouble me?" |
5637 | Let the question be, for example: May I when in distress make a promise with the intention not to keep it? |
5637 | Lost?--And how much then should I miss?--Is not a whole Eternity mine? |
5637 | MONTAIGNE WHAT IS A CLASSIC? |
5637 | Man paints himself in his actions, and what is the form depicted in the drama of the present time? |
5637 | Mere curiosity? |
5637 | Moreover, the correspondencie and relation that begetteth these true and mutually perfect amities, why shall it be found in these? |
5637 | Must not God at least have the most perfect conception of Himself, i. e., a conception in which is found everything which is in Him? |
5637 | Must philosophy therefore retire from this field, disappointed in its hopes? |
5637 | Must the contest of blind forces last eternally in the political world, and is social law never to triumph over a hating egotism? |
5637 | My wings, are they not withered stumps? |
5637 | Nay, what would Ariosto say of it himselfe? |
5637 | Nec charus aeque nec superstes, Integer? |
5637 | Now arises the question, how are all these imperatives possible? |
5637 | Nunquam ego te vita frater amabilior, Aspiciam posthac? |
5637 | Omnem crede diem tibi diluxisse supremum, Grata superveniet; quae non sperabitur, hora? |
5637 | On the other hand the question, how the imperative of morality is possible, is undoubtedly one, the only one? |
5637 | On whom, on what, expend the exuberant vitality within them? |
5637 | Or how would you discharge your selfe? |
5637 | Or, because I forget that I have been here already? |
5637 | Ought I not to have been taught and admonished of all this in my father''s house?" |
5637 | Ought he to be blamed because he lost sight of the dignity of human nature, so long as he was concerned in preserving his existence? |
5637 | Quis desiderio sit pudor aut modus, Tam chari capitis? |
5637 | Said Gwrhyr,"Who is it that laments in this house of stone?" |
5637 | Say, knowest thou aught of Mabon the son of Modron, who was taken from his mother when three nights old?" |
5637 | Shal I not change this goodly contexture of things for you? |
5637 | Shall we never be sufficiently firm in our own faith to dare to show fitting reverence for the grand typical figures of an anterior age? |
5637 | Should one commit a matter to your silence, which if the other knew would greatly profit him, what course would you take? |
5637 | Should they crave contrary offices of you, what order would you follow? |
5637 | Since that part of my soule riper fate reft me, Why stay I heere the other part he left me? |
5637 | The fairest Queene, wife to the greatest King of Christendome, was she not lately scene to die by the hands of an executioner? |
5637 | The transgressor? |
5637 | Thee brother, than life dearer, never see? |
5637 | Therefore, a short and conclusive answer can be given to this question-- How far will appearance be permitted in the moral world? |
5637 | Thus compressed between two forces, within and without, could humanity follow any other course than that which it has taken? |
5637 | To which of these does his dignity best respond? |
5637 | WHAT IS A CLASSIC? |
5637 | Was it a defect in them? |
5637 | What can they do with the liberty so painfully won? |
5637 | What does he sing? |
5637 | What else then can freedom of the will be but autonomy, that is the property of the will to be a law to itself? |
5637 | What fondnesse is it to carke and care so much, at that instant and passage from all exemption of paine and care? |
5637 | What is man before beauty liberates him from free pleasure, and the serenity of form tames down the savageness of life? |
5637 | What matter is it, will you say unto me, how and in what manner it is, so long as a man doe not trouble and vex himselfe therewith? |
5637 | What mattered to the world the fate of an unknown peninsula, and the strife waged on its behalf? |
5637 | What may a man expect at a Phisitians hand that discourseth of warre, or of a bare Scholler treating of Princes secret designes? |
5637 | What modesty or measure may I beare, In want and wish of him that was so deare? |
5637 | What part has Armorican Brittany played in the creation or propagation of the legends of the Round Table? |
5637 | What phaenomenon accompanies the initiation of the savage into humanity? |
5637 | What profit shall he not reap, touching this point, reading the lives of our Plutark? |
5637 | What then is it which justifies virtue or the morally good disposition, in making such lofty claims? |
5637 | What would be seen? |
5637 | Whence comes this disadvantageous relation of individuals coupled with great advantages of the race? |
5637 | Whence then is it that we remain still barbarians? |
5637 | Where will you find reason in the fourth book of the AEneid and the transports of Dido? |
5637 | Wherefore shall I study and take care about the mobility and variation of the world? |
5637 | Which is worth more, the imaginative instinct of man, or the narrow orthodoxy that pretends to remain rational, when speaking of things divine? |
5637 | Whilst in all other directions the dominion of forms is extended, must this the most precious of all gifts be abandoned to a formless chance? |
5637 | Who among the moderns could step forth, man against man, and strive with an Athenian for the prize of higher humanity? |
5637 | Who can prove by experience the non- existence of a cause when all that experience tells us is that we do not perceive it? |
5637 | Who shall dare to say where, here on earth, is the boundary between reason and dreaming? |
5637 | Who shall say what in our own times has fermented in the bosom of the most stubborn, the most powerless of nationalities-- Poland? |
5637 | Who would ever enquire of his scholler what he thinketh of Rhetorike, of Grammar, of this or of that sentence of Cicero? |
5637 | Why could the individual Greek be qualified as the type of his time? |
5637 | Why do I not live so too? |
5637 | Why doest thou complaine of me and of destinie? |
5637 | Why fearest thou thy last day? |
5637 | Why like a full- fed guest, Depart you not to rest? |
5637 | Why may not even I have already performed those steps of my perfecting which bring to man only temporal punishments and rewards? |
5637 | Why seeke you more to gaine, what must againe All perish ill, and passe with griefe or paine? |
5637 | Why should I not come back as often as I am capable of acquiring fresh knowledge, fresh expertness? |
5637 | Would he have long life, who guarantees to him that it would not be a long misery? |
5637 | Xiv] To aime why are we ever bold, At many things in so short hold? |
5637 | and another choaked with the kernell of a grape? |
5637 | and does it not contradict the empirical conception of play, which can coexist with the exclusion of all taste, to confine it merely to beauty? |
5637 | and how could he reflect upon a thing after which he did not yearn? |
5637 | and is it not reduced to the level of frivolous objects which have for ages passed under that name? |
5637 | and why can no modern dare to offer himself as such? |
5637 | and why should it not continually seeme unto us, that shee is still ready at hand to take us by the throat? |
5637 | audiero nunquam tua verba loquentem? |
5637 | but it is seldome: I have especially observed this one place:"Ego vero me minus diu senem esse mallem, quam esse senem, antequam essem? |
5637 | but may rather demand, why I doe not quit, and wherefore I doe not give? |
5637 | can be bequeathed unquenchably to the future? |
5637 | creature as thou art, who hath limited the end of thy daies? |
5637 | cur neque deformem adolescentem quisquam amat, neque formosum senem? |
5637 | did ever attaine unto an absolute enjoying of it? |
5637 | eloquence in him: He was a good citizen, of an honest, gentle nature, as are commonly fat and burly men: for so was he: But to speake truly of thim? |
5637 | gastlie, and frowning visage; who hath masked her with so counterfet, pale, and hideous a countenance? |
5637 | he who felt the punishments of his misdeeds, and if he cursed this life, must have so gladly renounced that other existence? |
5637 | how does ours seem to you? |
5637 | how often has uneasiness of the body restrained from excesses into which perfect health would have allowed one to fall? |
5637 | i, p. 22] How did Montaigne conduct himself in his duties as first magistrate of a great city? |
5637 | is it for thee to direct us, or for us to governe thee? |
5637 | of an hog? |
5637 | of quite a special character? |
5637 | or be any thing delighted? |
5637 | reason expressed with brilliance;--soul? |
5637 | reason put in practice;--talent? |
5637 | saw you ever anything so drooping, so changed, and so distracted? |
5637 | what would Montaigne say of such a word coined in his honour? |
5637 | why doth no man love either a deformed young man, or a beautifull old man?" |
5637 | would he at least have health? |
19926 | ''Dar, marsa,''says I,''do n''t ye see? 19926 ''Is we got a goose? |
19926 | ''Is we got a goose?'' 19926 ''What do you mean, Ithuriel Butters?'' |
19926 | ''What''ll you take for dinner, Miss?'' 19926 ''What''ll you take for dinner, sah?'' |
19926 | ''Why ai n''t it fair?'' 19926 ''Why, where is she?'' |
19926 | ''You mean to say dat de gooses on my plantation on''y got one leg?'' 19926 A native of--?" |
19926 | Ah, Monsieur le Cure, you do not despise me? 19926 Ah, is this true? |
19926 | Am I your little heart''s- ease, then? |
19926 | And did I not,said Allan,"did I not Forbid you, Dora?" |
19926 | And did he thrash you? |
19926 | And since then, have you seen him among the prisoners? |
19926 | And the man whom you thought you recognized as your son, was not your son? |
19926 | And was it the innermost heart of the bliss To find out so, what a wisdom love is? 19926 And what''s that?" |
19926 | And you come? |
19926 | Anything else? |
19926 | Are you a tramp? |
19926 | Art thou mad, O Sallust? |
19926 | Art thou mad, O Sallust? |
19926 | Ben, did you say hit only taks faith as er grain er mustard seed ter move er mountain? |
19926 | Bennie? 19926 Bolder, if your father thinks that because-- why, what''s this, sir?" |
19926 | But who are you, then? |
19926 | Calenus, priest of Isis, thou accusest Arbaces of the murder of Apæcides? |
19926 | Can none of you save Zoroaster? |
19926 | Count Alberti''s bride, Whose else? |
19926 | Did life roll back its records, dear, And show, as they say it does, past things clear? 19926 Do n''t de Book say,''Ask, an''you shall receive''?" |
19926 | Do n''t you think, my dear, it would be better for you to remonstrate with Mary Anne? |
19926 | Do you retract what you said a few hours ago? |
19926 | Dumb to the ear and still to the sense, But to heart and to soul distinct, intense? 19926 Ef I had faith enough, I could fetch er rain, for do n''t de Book say, ef you have faith as er mustard seed you can move mountains? |
19926 | For how many? |
19926 | God bless you, sir,said Blossom; and who shall doubt that God heard and registered the request? |
19926 | Good land, Mis''Tree, did n''t you see him? 19926 Got''nough fer rain?" |
19926 | Gy-- Bogy!--Fogy!--Soaky!--Oh,said Jill, coming to at last,"I thought-- why, what''s up?" |
19926 | Hast thou been through purgatory? |
19926 | Hast thou relations there? |
19926 | Hey there, are ye through? 19926 Hey, there, brat senior-- see that ladder? |
19926 | Hey? |
19926 | Hey? |
19926 | Hey? |
19926 | How can you ask me anything so foolish? 19926 How can you be such a silly thing,"replied Dora, slapping my hand,"as to sit there telling such stories? |
19926 | How is this? 19926 How long did it take you to earn that?" |
19926 | How much? |
19926 | How shall we rank thee upon glory''s page, Thou more than soldier, and just less than sage? 19926 I am thy uncle, child-- why stare So frightfully aghast?-- The arras waves, but know''st thou not''Tis nothing but the blast? |
19926 | I have eaten thy bread, shall I leave thee in the hour of death? |
19926 | I wonder where the comet went to? |
19926 | If he were pointed out to you, would you recognize him? |
19926 | Is it he? |
19926 | Is that all? 19926 Is that you, Jill?" |
19926 | Is your heart mine still, dear Dora? |
19926 | It has a secret spring; the touch Is known to me alone; Slowly I raise the lid, and now-- What see you, that you groan So heavily? 19926 Ivan, the traitor?" |
19926 | Jack? |
19926 | Knowest thou not, Zoroaster, that I would rather die with thee than live with any other? 19926 Look where?" |
19926 | MY DEAR FRIEND:--Can you come? 19926 Marsa John? |
19926 | Mo''coffee, Major? |
19926 | Must? |
19926 | My dearest life,I said one day to Dora,"do you think Mary Anne has any idea of time?" |
19926 | Next minute I hyerd old marsa a- hollerin:''Mammy Jane, ai n''t we got a goose?'' |
19926 | No, what then? |
19926 | Not much-- I say, Jack? |
19926 | Nothing-- and all that? |
19926 | Of whom do you speak? 19926 Oh, a gentleman made me a present of''em, down the street-- say, they''ve got hides like linseed plasters, hain''t they?" |
19926 | Oh, is it weed, or fish, or floating hair-- A tress o''golden hair, O''drowned maiden''s hair Above the nets at sea? 19926 Oh, sir?" |
19926 | On which side are they coming? |
19926 | Or was it a greater marvel to feel The perfect calm o''er the agony steal? 19926 Others pick and choose, and why not we? |
19926 | Please, oh, please, whoever you are, wo n''t you forgive me and let me go? 19926 Right here?" |
19926 | See now; I will listen with soul, not ear; What was the secret of dying, dear? 19926 See things, hey, new folks, new faces, get ideas, is that it?" |
19926 | Shall we fight or shall we fly? 19926 Sir?" |
19926 | That room up there, see? |
19926 | Then you do not know that your son, Michael Strogoff, Courier to the Czar, has passed through Omsk? |
19926 | Then you will not demand my money of me? |
19926 | This is two penn''orth of milk, is it, waiter? |
19926 | Thou didst behold the deed? |
19926 | Thou dost know Siberia? |
19926 | Thy name? 19926 Thy rank?" |
19926 | To the very top, sir? 19926 To whom?" |
19926 | W- would-- you-- call-- Aunt-- John? |
19926 | Was it the infinite wonder of all That you ever could let life''s flower fall? 19926 Was n''t he fed, poor thing?" |
19926 | Was the miracle greater to find how deep Beyond all dreams sank downward that sleep? 19926 Well, ai n''t dat faith? |
19926 | Well, my child,he said, in his pleasant, cheerful tones,"what do you want so bright and early in the morning?" |
19926 | Well, where did you get them, Gavroche? |
19926 | Well, why do n''t you git rain, then? 19926 What bride, whose bride?" |
19926 | What did you say then? |
19926 | What do you call this, sir? |
19926 | What do you here, my friend? |
19926 | What do you want here? |
19926 | What does he look like? |
19926 | What faces will smile on me when I die? 19926 What hast thou to say?" |
19926 | What is it this morning? |
19926 | What is it, my dear? |
19926 | What is it? |
19926 | What is rats? |
19926 | What is this you say, child? 19926 What is we d?" |
19926 | What means this raving? |
19926 | What say? |
19926 | What tramp? |
19926 | What''s that noise? |
19926 | What''s the matter with you, brats? |
19926 | What''s the matter? |
19926 | What, you call me sir-- You do not drive me out? 19926 What?" |
19926 | When will dinner be ready? |
19926 | When? |
19926 | Where are you taking them, Gavroche? |
19926 | Where is Zoroaster? |
19926 | Where is he? |
19926 | Where is the violin? |
19926 | Where''s the use? 19926 Who am I? |
19926 | Who are you, my good woman? |
19926 | Who cares? |
19926 | Who is it? 19926 Who is this prisoner?" |
19926 | Whoa there, monsieur, where''s your roof? 19926 Why ca n''t you?" |
19926 | Why do n''t you ask fer er million dollars; what you hoein''out dah en de sun fer, when all you got ter do is ter ask de Lord fer money? |
19926 | Why do n''t you get a cat? |
19926 | Why do n''t you give up drink? |
19926 | Why do you not go with the rest, my little maid? |
19926 | Why not, my love? |
19926 | Why, Doady? |
19926 | Why? |
19926 | Would n''t you like to go to some hotel? 19926 Yes; did you get much hurt?" |
19926 | Yo''fam''bly got any? |
19926 | You are Marfa Strogoff? |
19926 | You b''lieve ef you had faith you could fetch er rain? |
19926 | You do n''t mean Napoleon''s monument? |
19926 | You got any? |
19926 | You want my answer? 19926 You want my answer?" |
19926 | ''Baked ham?'' |
19926 | ''Had I betther swallow some insect powdher?'' |
19926 | ''It is pre--''where is my place? |
19926 | ''Misther Dugan, how old a- are ye?'' |
19926 | ''Nice breast o''goose, or slice o''ham?'' |
19926 | ''Twas,"Papa, where does the whiteness go?" |
19926 | ''What sort iv bug?'' |
19926 | ''What''s thim?'' |
19926 | ''Who''s thrick is that?'' |
19926 | --Say, ai n''t them two nice specimens to be bawlin''jes''''cause they ai n''t got no home? |
19926 | A bed, with sheets, like the rest of the world? |
19926 | A few years ago appeared"Quo Vadis?" |
19926 | A genteel man? |
19926 | A little red- haired girl? |
19926 | A message to a countess all forlorn? |
19926 | A nuss''s is a horrid life, ai n''t it, child? |
19926 | A voice--''twas his-- demanded:"Who is there?" |
19926 | A wife, sir, did you say? |
19926 | A window opened, and a voice called out:"Qui e?" |
19926 | A- waitin''fo''yo''daddy? |
19926 | ABOLITION OF WAR[34] CHARLES SUMNER Can there be in our age any peace that is not honorable, any war that is not dishonorable? |
19926 | Ah, my friends, is not the reason for the change evident to any one who will look at the matter? |
19926 | Ah, yes-- what have I done? |
19926 | Ai n''t you neber gwine ter sleep? |
19926 | Ai n''t you nevah hyeahd Malindy? |
19926 | All de frogs keep on diggin''tell bimeby Big Frog holler out,"Dis deep nuff? |
19926 | All? |
19926 | Am I a woman? |
19926 | Am I not blest? |
19926 | An''why do the crowds gather fast in the strate? |
19926 | An''why does the long rope hang from the cross- tree? |
19926 | And I am one? |
19926 | And a day less or more At sea or ashore, We die-- does it matter when? |
19926 | And am I better? |
19926 | And didst thou visit him no more? |
19926 | And dost thou love me better for such fault? |
19926 | And for all of these Men work, and toil, and mourn, and weep and fight? |
19926 | And have you brought your tercel back? |
19926 | And how used he his power? |
19926 | And if I love too wildly, Who would not love thee like Pauline? |
19926 | And is Athens then the world? |
19926 | And is it possible that neither of these causes, that not all combined, were able to blast this bud of hope? |
19926 | And is the duke well? |
19926 | And is thy wife as beautiful as I? |
19926 | And little Nutmeg-- is his ear better? |
19926 | And now that they are married, do they always bill and coo? |
19926 | And now what have we to say? |
19926 | And other women? |
19926 | And so I turned from those far hills to see-- A stranger? |
19926 | And the lady''s name? |
19926 | And then, her mother feelings arising within her, she had only one thought: Can I unwittingly have ruined him? |
19926 | And this circumstance? |
19926 | And though you be done to the death, what then? |
19926 | And to the guilt of massacre is added the impudence of denial, and this process will continue-- how long? |
19926 | And what claim founded in justice and right has been withheld? |
19926 | And what have we to oppose them? |
19926 | And when thy wife returns, She''ll let me stay with thee? |
19926 | And where was Julia Mills? |
19926 | And which is to be mine, sir; the niece, or the aunt? |
19926 | And whither''s the beauty flown? |
19926 | And who was he? |
19926 | And why, Pygmalion? |
19926 | And why? |
19926 | And,"Where''s all the beauty gone? |
19926 | Another proof of your kind heart; is it not? |
19926 | Any card or letter? |
19926 | Any complaints?" |
19926 | Are fleets and armies necessary to a work of love and reconciliation? |
19926 | Are n''t you coming in to see me?" |
19926 | Are these the men who philosophize about a resurrection? |
19926 | Are we to have a place in that honorable company? |
19926 | Are ye in bed? |
19926 | Are you afraid I wo n''t pay you? |
19926 | Are you cold?" |
19926 | Are you dead?" |
19926 | Are you killed? |
19926 | Are you philosophers, seeking to explore the hidden mysteries of mind? |
19926 | Are you ready? |
19926 | Are you ready?" |
19926 | Are you willing that I should remain?" |
19926 | Are you?" |
19926 | Art thou a woman? |
19926 | Art thou afraid?" |
19926 | Art thou not satisfied with all the ill Thy heedlessness has worked, that thou art come To gaze upon thy victim''s misery? |
19926 | As low as that poor gardener''s son Who dared to lift his eyes to thee? |
19926 | Because he was a bad man? |
19926 | Because he was a youth? |
19926 | Because he was an aged man? |
19926 | Because he was good and kind? |
19926 | Because the defense was unsuccessful? |
19926 | Big old frog say,"How we gwine ter do it? |
19926 | Bimeby Big Frog holler,"Dis deep nuff? |
19926 | Bofe got faith, now, bofe got faith, an''one pray fer rain while t''other pray fer dry weather; what de Lord goin''do? |
19926 | Bright jewels of the mine? |
19926 | Buckley kept in the shadow but Valiant called out,"Oh, is that you, Mr. Buckley? |
19926 | But I told you vat it is, dot''s a pully piece, I baed you, don''d it? |
19926 | But can we believe that one State will ever suffer itself to be used as an instrument of coercion? |
19926 | But do you reply that in many instances they have violated this compact, and have not been faithful to their engagements? |
19926 | But dost thou know what I would say? |
19926 | But how came I to be? |
19926 | But if he had been five feet three, we should have said,''Who cares where you go?''" |
19926 | But it do n''t take away your voice, does it? |
19926 | But she''ll come back? |
19926 | But should she come too late? |
19926 | But strew his ashes to the wind, Whose sword or voice has saved mankind, And is he dead, whose glorious mind Lifts thine on high? |
19926 | But tell me, love, Is this great fault that I''m committing now The kind of fault that only serves to show That thou and I are of one common kin? |
19926 | But tell me, will you promise me to do as you are bid? |
19926 | But we shall meet again?--and very soon? |
19926 | But were you never in love?--never engaged? |
19926 | But who hath seen her wave her hand? |
19926 | But why did you stay so long, Guy dear?" |
19926 | But, Jack, you are not sorry to find your mistress is so beautiful? |
19926 | But, again, gentlemen, what have we to gain by this proposed change of our relation to the general government? |
19926 | But, suppose we were going to give you another choice, will you promise us to give up this Beverley? |
19926 | Ca n''t ye see where yer goin''? |
19926 | Ca n''t you be cool, like me? |
19926 | Ca n''t you see repentance in my eye? |
19926 | Can Parliament be so dead to its dignity and its duty as to be thus deluded into the loss of the one and the violation of the other? |
19926 | Can gentlemen assign any other possible motive for it? |
19926 | Can nations be less amenable to the supreme moral law? |
19926 | Can the minister of the day now presume to expect a continuance of support in this ruinous infatuation? |
19926 | Can this be the object of the gentlemen? |
19926 | Can we stay here, my lord? |
19926 | Can we then doubt which of these alternatives is the fact? |
19926 | Can you place that man in the mesmeric sleep? |
19926 | Chad, you wu''thless nigger, ai n''t you tuk dat goose out yit?'' |
19926 | Claude, you have not deceived her? |
19926 | Come here, sirrah, who the devil are you? |
19926 | Come you back to Mandalay, Where the old Flotilla lay: Ca n''t you''ear their paddles chuckin''from Rangoon to Mandalay? |
19926 | Come, now, off with your demure face; come, confess, Jack, you have been lying, ha''nt you? |
19926 | Could I foresee the tender bloom Of pansies round a little tomb? |
19926 | DR. F. What is the hour? |
19926 | DR. F. What more shall he be asked? |
19926 | Dah''s de ole black swan a- swimmin'', ai n''t she got a''awfu''neck? |
19926 | Dat must''a''been de same time I come in de winder dere, was n''t it? |
19926 | Defending it against whom? |
19926 | Den Mr. Coon he shake his head an''''low,"Den how come I ai n''t ketch no frogs?" |
19926 | Den de frogs dey dig an''dey dig tell bimeby Big Frog say,"Dis deep nuff? |
19926 | Den de old man says,"Did n''t I told you so?" |
19926 | Den he says,"Vell, vot for you dook dot gold, you false- hearded leetle gal?" |
19926 | Dey shook han''s dey did, an''den Mr. Coon he''low:"Brer Rabbit, whar you git sech a fine chance er fish?" |
19926 | Did n''t you help pick it?'' |
19926 | Did the solemn inquiry break forth through our land, Is the dreadful necessity indeed laid upon us to send abroad death and woe? |
19926 | Did we dare In our agony of prayer, Ask for more than He has done? |
19926 | Did we feel as if threatened with a calamity more fearful than earthquakes, famine, or pestilence? |
19926 | Did ye iver have it? |
19926 | Did you ever hear the like of it? |
19926 | Did you hear dem liddle fellers just now? |
19926 | Did you never meet Mrs. Malaprop, and her niece, Miss Languish, who came into our country just before you were last ordered to your regiment? |
19926 | Die, did I say? |
19926 | Dis deep nuff?" |
19926 | Dis deep nuff?" |
19926 | Dis deep nuff?" |
19926 | Do n''t ye feel something like Jonah? |
19926 | Do n''t you see dat moon? |
19926 | Do n''t you understand? |
19926 | Do they her beauty keep? |
19926 | Do they never fret and quarrel, like other couples do? |
19926 | Do we look for high examples of noble daring? |
19926 | Do we not feel an interest in getting to that outlet with such institutions as we would like to have prevail there? |
19926 | Do we not wish for an outlet for our surplus population, if I may so express myself? |
19926 | Do we want a cause, my lords? |
19926 | Do ye not perceive that they are bringing everything to ruin? |
19926 | Do you ask how you are to get them? |
19926 | Do you hear what I say, Mr. Brummell? |
19926 | Do you hear?" |
19926 | Do you keep an inn? |
19926 | Do you know that you are in my rooms, sir? |
19926 | Do you lodge me close to yourself like this? |
19926 | Do you not guess his name? |
19926 | Do you not know me? |
19926 | Do you remember the boy that died here?" |
19926 | Do you suppose that the municipal towns and the colonies and the prefectures have any other opinion? |
19926 | Do you think he knew you, Willie? |
19926 | Do you want a criminal, my lords? |
19926 | Do you want exemplars worthy of study and imitation? |
19926 | Do you wish to see the church guided by the hand of the astrologer? |
19926 | Does half my heart lie buried there In Texas, down by the Rio Grande? |
19926 | Does he cherish her and love her? |
19926 | Does he sit down in sullenness and despair? |
19926 | Does no voice within Answer my cry, and say we are akin?" |
19926 | Does success gild crime into patriotism, and the want of it change heroic self- devotion into imprudence? |
19926 | Dost thou no longer know thy mother?" |
19926 | Dost thou not love her? |
19926 | Drown my sorrows? |
19926 | Ere Asmiel breathed again The eager answer leaped to meet him,"When?" |
19926 | F. AND T. CONTENTS I NARRATIVE, DESCRIPTIVE, PATHETIC PAGE Arena Scene from"Quo Vadis?" |
19926 | Feel faint, hey?" |
19926 | Fellow- citizens, is this Fanueil Hall doctrine? |
19926 | For on what account, tell me, do you thus weep for one departed? |
19926 | For what else can we call him, when the Senate decides that extraordinary honors are to be devised for those men who are leading armies against him? |
19926 | For what else does a magistrate exist? |
19926 | For what other sort of defense deserves praise? |
19926 | For what will they not say? |
19926 | Forgive thee? |
19926 | Girdled with gold? |
19926 | Good woman, I really-- why, Prince, what is this?--does the old lady know you? |
19926 | Gretchen, are you goin''to drive me away? |
19926 | HOW DID YOU DIE? |
19926 | Ha!--would a madman have been so wise as this? |
19926 | Has Great Britain any enemy in this quarter of the world to call for all this accumulation of navies and armies? |
19926 | Has Macedony Church got any?" |
19926 | Has anything ever threatened the existence of this Union save this very institution of slavery? |
19926 | Has earth a clod Its Maker meant not should be trod By man, the image of his God, Erect and free, Unscourged by superstition''s rod To bow the knee? |
19926 | Has not every man who has been in our Legislature experienced the truth of this position? |
19926 | Has our contention that the choice lay between autonomy and coercion been justified or not? |
19926 | Hast thou forgotten thy church? |
19926 | Hast thou in thy heart one touch Of human kindness? |
19926 | Hast thou no care for her? |
19926 | Hast thou no pity for her? |
19926 | Hath dreams as sweet as childhood''s-- who can tell? |
19926 | Have not all of us been witnesses to the unhappy embarrassments which resulted from these proceedings? |
19926 | Have we anything new to offer upon the subject? |
19926 | Have we shown ourselves so unwilling to be reconciled that force must be called in to win back our love? |
19926 | Have you a stable?" |
19926 | He laughed loud as anybody; an''den dat night he says to me as I was puttin''some wood on de fire,''Chad, where did dat leg go?'' |
19926 | He looks a long look at me, and asks how far to Mootzig? |
19926 | He says of her,"Leah, how is dot you been here?" |
19926 | He stood at my right hand, His eyes were grave and sweet; Methought he said:"In this far land, O, is it thus we meet? |
19926 | He turned and started across the room; when a soft voice said,"Is that you, dear?" |
19926 | His grasp of lead is on my throat-- Will no one help or save?" |
19926 | How are you? |
19926 | How can I pay Jaffar?" |
19926 | How confused he looks!--this strange place!--this woman-- what can it mean?--I half suspect-- who are you, madam?--who are you? |
19926 | How d''e do, Fotherby? |
19926 | How did he get thar? |
19926 | How do you do? |
19926 | How do you know that I am not a murderer?" |
19926 | How do you like tramping, now?" |
19926 | How is dot, you got cheek to talk of me afder dot vitch you hafe done?" |
19926 | How many times have we had danger from this question? |
19926 | How much have you?" |
19926 | How old are you, my rose? |
19926 | How shall the hearer be otherwise than ridiculous? |
19926 | How we gwine ter do it?" |
19926 | How would the intimation have been received that Warren and his associates should have waited a better time? |
19926 | How you was? |
19926 | I The Wind and the Beam loved the Rose, And the Rose loved one; For who seeks the Wind where it blows? |
19926 | I ask gentlemen, sir, what means this martial array, if its purpose be not to force us to submission? |
19926 | I generally say it''s a good ting, don''d I? |
19926 | I must disguise my voice.--Will not Miss Languish lend an ear to the mild accents of true love? |
19926 | I must fly, but follow quick, We are six ships of the line; can we fight with fifty- three?" |
19926 | I never met His face before, but, at first view, I felt quite sure that God had set Himself to Satan; who would spend A minute''s mistrust on the end? |
19926 | I only gave the gondolier his name, And said,"You know him?" |
19926 | I put on de ham an''some mo''dishes, an''marsa says, lookin''up:"''I t''ought dere was a roast goose, Chad?'' |
19926 | I said:"You are a chemist?" |
19926 | I say to myself what profit comes to me from my labors, while the hearers do not choose to benefit by what they hear from me? |
19926 | I says,''How''s Miss Butters now, Ithuriel?'' |
19926 | I smiled-- for what had I to fear? |
19926 | I was daffy, Jawn, d''ye mind? |
19926 | I went down to open it with a light heart-- for what had I now to fear? |
19926 | I whispered to the mother and asked:"Why did you wait so long to send for me? |
19926 | I wonder whether the king will do anything for him? |
19926 | I, who have died once and been laid in tomb? |
19926 | I? |
19926 | IV How can the Wind its love reveal? |
19926 | If I doubted? |
19926 | If I rest here a-- a moment? |
19926 | If every treaty may be overthrown by which states have been settled into a nation, what form of political union may not on like grounds be severed? |
19926 | If the existence of Burnes was but a troubled dream, his death oblivion, what avails it that the Senate should pause to recount his virtues? |
19926 | If the gold standard is a bad thing, why should we wait until other nations are willing to help us to let go? |
19926 | If the gold standard is a good thing, why try to get rid of it? |
19926 | If the gold standard is the standard of civilization, why should we not have it? |
19926 | If this be Juan''s page, why, where is Miriam? |
19926 | If this be so what are they worth? |
19926 | If this be true, how do you propose to improve the condition of things by enlarging it? |
19926 | If we say this of ourselves, shall we say less of the slave- holders? |
19926 | If you break up the Whig party, sir, where am I to go?" |
19926 | If you make requisitions and they are not complied with what is to be done? |
19926 | In what vain conceit of wisdom and virtue do you find this incongruous morality? |
19926 | In yonder villa? |
19926 | Indeed, Pygmalion; then it is wrong To think that one is exquisitely fair? |
19926 | Indeed, among elegant men I fancy myself in the van; But what is the value of that, When I''m a superfluous man? |
19926 | Is he always so, my good woman? |
19926 | Is he goin''ter split er rain on dat fence? |
19926 | Is it Direxia? |
19926 | Is it not a magnificent sight, to see that strange soldier and that noble black horse dashing, like a meteor, down the long columns of battle? |
19926 | Is it not the same virtue which does everything for us here in England? |
19926 | Is it possible To say one thing and mean another? |
19926 | Is it possible, can it be believed, that ministers are yet blind to this impending destruction? |
19926 | Is it that insidious smile with which our petition has been lately received? |
19926 | Is it you, Jack?" |
19926 | Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? |
19926 | Is not all nature decked with stillness and silence? |
19926 | Is she within? |
19926 | Is sin so pleasant? |
19926 | Is that all? |
19926 | Is that the truth? |
19926 | Is the assertion of such freedom before the age? |
19926 | Is the wig fit to put on? |
19926 | Is there anything else you wish to retrench or alter, gentlemen? |
19926 | Is this a jest? |
19926 | Is this so? |
19926 | Is this the part of wise men engaged in a great and arduous struggle for liberty? |
19926 | Is this the world? |
19926 | Is this you?" |
19926 | Is''t death to fall for Freedom''s right? |
19926 | Isidore, which do I prefer, boots or shoes? |
19926 | It has ravaged how many of our homes, it has wrung how many of the hearts before me? |
19926 | It is n''t the fact that you''re licked that counts; It''s how did you fight-- and why? |
19926 | Its symptoms? |
19926 | Jealous? |
19926 | Just fill that mug up with lukewarm water, William, will you?" |
19926 | Just now, as we was comin''along togedder, Schneider and me-- I don''d know if you know Schneider myself? |
19926 | Know him, madam? |
19926 | Know you not that you are wedded to my son, Claude Melnotte? |
19926 | Know you not, then, madam, that this young man is of poor though honest parents? |
19926 | Leave that to you? |
19926 | Let go my head, won''d you? |
19926 | Let that dog Schneider alone, will you? |
19926 | Like an orange? |
19926 | Look hyeah, ai n''t you jokin'', honey? |
19926 | MAMMY''S PICKANIN''LUCY DEAN JENKINS Now, whah d''ye s''pose dat chile is? |
19926 | MARCUS TULLIUS CICERO ORATION AGAINST ANTONY[27] Who is there who does not see that Antonius has been adjudged to be an enemy? |
19926 | MR. H. For supper, sir? |
19926 | MR. H. Punch, sir? |
19926 | MRS. M. What business have you, miss, with preference and aversion? |
19926 | Mandy, mek dat chile keep still; Do n''t you hyeah de echoes callin'', F''om de valley to de hill? |
19926 | Marfa went up to him, and looking straight into his eyes, said,"Art thou not the son of Peter and Marfa Strogoff?" |
19926 | Miriam? |
19926 | Mr. Rabbit''low,"Kin you jump out?" |
19926 | Mr. Rabbit''low,"Kin you jump out?" |
19926 | Mr. Rabbit''low,"Kin you jump out?" |
19926 | Mrs. Squeers, my dear, will you take the money? |
19926 | Must not the mass, in its conscience, be like the individuals of which it is composed? |
19926 | My dear fellow, why, what do you call those things upon your feet? |
19926 | My lords, what is it that we want here to a great act of national justice? |
19926 | My love is different in kind to thine; I am no sculptor, and I''ve done no work, Yet I do love thee; say-- what love is mine? |
19926 | Nickleby?" |
19926 | No? |
19926 | Not her dressing- maid? |
19926 | Not so; has not a monarch''s second son More cause for anger that he lacks a throne Than he whose lot is cast in slavery? |
19926 | Not thine, nor mine, to question or reply When He commands us, asking''how?'' |
19926 | Not to please your father, sir? |
19926 | Now then, where''s the first boy?" |
19926 | Now what voting power are the eighty members to have? |
19926 | Now where are you going?" |
19926 | Now, Mr. Brummell, can you pay me-- or ca n''t you-- or wo n''t you? |
19926 | Now, is it?" |
19926 | Now, what answer has New England to this message? |
19926 | Now, what''s de mattah, honey? |
19926 | O Father,"Where does the whiteness go? |
19926 | Obstinate as ever?" |
19926 | Oh, Englishmen, would you let a minority dictate in such a way to you? |
19926 | Oh, ca n''t you reach that ladder? |
19926 | Oh, well; dere, now, don''d you cry, don''d you cry, Gretchen; you hear what I said? |
19926 | Oh, what is to be done? |
19926 | On your honor? |
19926 | One great big green frog up an''holler,"W''at de matter? |
19926 | Or at the casement seen her stand? |
19926 | Or is she known in all the land, The Lady of Shalott? |
19926 | Or loves not the Sun? |
19926 | Our elder boy has got the clear Great brow; though when his brother''s black Full eye shows scorn, it... Gismond here? |
19926 | Pardon me, monsieur inn- keeper,--what is your name?" |
19926 | People of Hungary, will you die under the exterminating sword of the Russians? |
19926 | Plain Jack and Jill? |
19926 | Poor lady-- dare I tell her, Claude? |
19926 | Pray, sir, who is the lady? |
19926 | Remember, hey? |
19926 | S''pose two men side by side pray diffunt-- an''wid faith-- what happen? |
19926 | SIR A. Aye, a wife-- why, did not I mention her before? |
19926 | Say, Meenie, is de ole wild cat home? |
19926 | Say, hast thou lied?" |
19926 | Say, hev ye got any shiners?" |
19926 | See my two kids?" |
19926 | Seek''st thou the plashy brink Of weedy lake, or marge of river wide, Or where the rocking billows rise and sink On the chafed ocean- side? |
19926 | Seest thou these bracelets and this chain? |
19926 | Shall she who sinned so bold at night Unblushing, queen it in the day? |
19926 | Shall the mass, in relation with other masses, do what individuals in relation with each other may not do? |
19926 | Shall we be tenderer over them than over ourselves? |
19926 | Shall we gather strength by irresolution and inaction? |
19926 | Shall we make their creed our jailer? |
19926 | Shall we resort to entreaty and humble supplication? |
19926 | Shall we take the old Confederation as a basis of a new system? |
19926 | Shall we try argument? |
19926 | She is no more to thee than senseless stone? |
19926 | She loves thee? |
19926 | She squints, do n''t she? |
19926 | Shut now the volume of history and tell me, on any principle of human probability, what shall be the fate of this handful of adventurers? |
19926 | Since, therefore, in all other things we differ from them, shall we agree with them in our sentiments respecting death? |
19926 | So I went straight up and saw him, and he said:"Well, what''s the matter with you?" |
19926 | So much before the age as to leave one no right to make it because it displeases the community? |
19926 | So soon, and for so long? |
19926 | So this very afternoon that''s comin'', he''s to go? |
19926 | So thought Palmyra-- where is she? |
19926 | So you know the Prince? |
19926 | So, then, you have no turn for politics, I find? |
19926 | So, you are come-- your dagger in your hand? |
19926 | So, you will fly out? |
19926 | Sosia, how much dost thou require to make up thy freedom?" |
19926 | Still what, Pauline? |
19926 | THOMAS CAMPBELL What''s hallowed ground? |
19926 | Tell me, politician, how long did this shadow of a colony, on which your conventions and treaties had not smiled, languish on the distant coast? |
19926 | That I escape the pains thou hast to bear? |
19926 | That is well said; thou dost not love her then? |
19926 | That was n''t very sensible, was it?" |
19926 | The Page? |
19926 | The dog Schneider? |
19926 | The lady''s name, sir? |
19926 | The maiden answers,"Let us wait, To borrow trouble where''s the need?" |
19926 | The men who cry out for secession of the Southern States in America would say,"Kent seceding? |
19926 | The mornin''was bright, an''the mists rose on high, An''the lark whistled merrily in the clear sky; But why are the men standin''idle so late? |
19926 | The self- same question, Brahma asked,"Hast thou been through purgatory?" |
19926 | Then I am beautiful? |
19926 | Then he said:"Cold lips and breasts without breath, Is there no voice, no language of death? |
19926 | Then is this life? |
19926 | Then the question before us is: Is she or is she not to vote so strongly upon matters purely British? |
19926 | Then there are other men in this strange world? |
19926 | Then when the farmer pass''d into the field He spied her, and he left his men at work, And came and said,"Where were you yesterday? |
19926 | Then, a- slyly lookin''round, She says:"Did you hear me, Ben?" |
19926 | Then, with a cloud upon his face,"What shall we do,"he turned to say,"Should he refuse to take his pay From what is in the pillow- case?" |
19926 | Then:"Thy name?" |
19926 | There were men with hoary hair amidst that pilgrim band; Why had they come to wither there, away from their childhood''s land? |
19926 | They tell us, sir, that we are weak, unable to cope with so formidable an adversary; but when shall we be stronger? |
19926 | Third boy, what''s a horse?" |
19926 | This being the case can we suppose it wise to hazard a civil war? |
19926 | This is my grandson''s room-- he died here-- what''s the matter-- feel faint-- hey?" |
19926 | This room? |
19926 | Though he told me, who will believe it was said? |
19926 | Thy love for her is dead? |
19926 | To Marc or Claudian? |
19926 | Tree?" |
19926 | Tree?" |
19926 | Turn those tracks toward past or future that make Plymouth Rock sublime? |
19926 | Turquoise? |
19926 | Und den she says vile she gries,"Leedle childs, don''d you got some names?" |
19926 | Und she is extonished, und says,"Vot is dis aboud dot?" |
19926 | VON B. Ah, yes, that''s all right, Rip, very funny, very funny; but what do you say to a glass of liquor, Rip? |
19926 | Vot gold is dot?" |
19926 | W''at de matter?" |
19926 | WHAT''S HALLOWED GROUND? |
19926 | WHEN MALINDY SINGS[77] PAUL LAURENCE DUNBAR G''way an''quit dat noise, Miss Lucy-- Put dat music book away; What''s de use to keep on tryin''? |
19926 | Warm work, now and then, at elections, I suppose? |
19926 | Was Hampden imprudent when he drew the sword and threw away the scabbard? |
19926 | Was ever such a request made to a man in his own house? |
19926 | Was it for this that heaven gave me life? |
19926 | Was it possible they heard not? |
19926 | Was it received as a proposition to slaughter thousands of our fellow- creatures? |
19926 | Was it the winter''s storm, beating upon the houseless heads of women and children? |
19926 | Was it viewed at once in the light in which a Christian nation should immediately and most earnestly consider it? |
19926 | Was that thunder? |
19926 | We baffled the aspirations of a people for liberty?" |
19926 | Well, now, Derrick, what do I generally say to a glass? |
19926 | Well, now, let me see, who was dat I called a wild cat? |
19926 | Well, put your foot on-- Now ye ai n''t agoin''ter be afraid are ye? |
19926 | Well, sir? |
19926 | Well, well, what''s that? |
19926 | Well? |
19926 | Were they afraid that I should be afraid? |
19926 | Were we so much to blame? |
19926 | Were you at the opera last night? |
19926 | What I answered? |
19926 | What are you doing here?" |
19926 | What better school was ever seen in which to learn the lesson of mutual esteem and forbearance than this great exposition? |
19926 | What blight and ruin met his anguished eyes, whose lips may tell? |
19926 | What can alone ennoble fight? |
19926 | What can the girl mean? |
19926 | What come they to talk of? |
19926 | What crime, madam, have I committed, to be treated thus? |
19926 | What de Lord goin''do?" |
19926 | What did Philip first make himself master of after the peace? |
19926 | What did she say When last she left thee? |
19926 | What does he at the villa? |
19926 | What does he do-- this hero in gray with a heart of gold? |
19926 | What doest thou, O Lord? |
19926 | What dost thou mean? |
19926 | What fearful words are these? |
19926 | What good can passion do? |
19926 | What hallows ground where heroes sleep? |
19926 | What has been the opinion which Decimus Brutus has formed of Marcus Antonius? |
19926 | What has been the result of the dilemma as it was then put forward on this side of the House and repelled by the other? |
19926 | What has ever threatened our liberty and prosperity except this institution of slavery? |
19926 | What has your philosophy got in the house for supper? |
19926 | What have I done to thee? |
19926 | What interest of the South has been invaded? |
19926 | What is a man? |
19926 | What is it that gentlemen wish? |
19926 | What is it that we hold most dear amongst us? |
19926 | What is that word? |
19926 | What is this place? |
19926 | What is your present situation there? |
19926 | What justice has been denied? |
19926 | What kind of love is that? |
19926 | What makes it be wet spots''stead o''snow, When it gets in where it''s warm?" |
19926 | What more adverse decisions, O Marcus Antonius, can you want? |
19926 | What mortal shall restrict the application of these words? |
19926 | What must I ask? |
19926 | What new light dawned upon him? |
19926 | What picture does this idea present to our view? |
19926 | What reasons can you give to the nations of the earth to justify it? |
19926 | What right has the North assailed? |
19926 | What said the billet? |
19926 | What says the body when they spring Some monstrous torture- engine''s whole Strength on it? |
19926 | What should he do, he wondered? |
19926 | What sought they thus afar? |
19926 | What terms shall we find which have not been already exhausted? |
19926 | What the devil shall I do? |
19926 | What then became of those splendid titles by which our pride is flattered? |
19926 | What think you of Miss Lydia Languish? |
19926 | What was the slight of a poor powerless girl To the deep wrong of this most vile revenge? |
19926 | What was then taking place in his soul? |
19926 | What will they not utter concerning us? |
19926 | What would they have? |
19926 | What would you have? |
19926 | What wouldst thou with her now? |
19926 | What you want to do a ting like dat for? |
19926 | What''s dat? |
19926 | What''s hallowed ground? |
19926 | What''s here? |
19926 | What''s that to you, sir? |
19926 | What''s that? |
19926 | What''s the matter? |
19926 | What''s the matter? |
19926 | What, did n''t you hear about dat, de day what Gretchen she like to got drownded? |
19926 | What, did not the Martial legion decide by its resolutions that Antonius was an enemy before the Senate had come to any resolution? |
19926 | What, does the opinion of Decimus Brutus which has this day reached us appear to any one deserving of being lightly esteemed? |
19926 | What, sir, have I lived Three times four weeks your wedded loyal wife, And do not know your follies? |
19926 | What, sir, is the cure for this great evil? |
19926 | What, the Languishes of Worcestershire? |
19926 | What, then, can you do? |
19926 | What, then, shall we do? |
19926 | What, then, you stole from him? |
19926 | What, you are recruiting here, hey? |
19926 | What-- what is to be done? |
19926 | What? |
19926 | What? |
19926 | When I was in Naples, I asked Thomas Fowell Buxton,"Is Daniel O''Connell an honest man?" |
19926 | When recently the suggestion of war was thrown out to this people, what reception did it meet? |
19926 | When was there so much iniquity ever laid to the charge of any one? |
19926 | When we asked a three- fifths representation in Congress for our slaves, was it not granted? |
19926 | When we was first got married? |
19926 | When will he come and tell me he forgives And loves me still? |
19926 | Whence came I? |
19926 | Whence do you draw these partial laws of an impartial God? |
19926 | Where am I going? |
19926 | Where am I, then? |
19926 | Where am I? |
19926 | Where am I? |
19926 | Where are they all?" |
19926 | Where can you find them purer than in Scotland? |
19926 | Where did you say he--""Why, good evening, Malviny, what was it you were saying?" |
19926 | Where is Bennie now?" |
19926 | Where is Bolder? |
19926 | Where is Pygmalion? |
19926 | Where is he? |
19926 | Where is he? |
19926 | Where is it declared that God, who is no respecter of persons, is a respecter of multitudes? |
19926 | Where is the mortal that could answer"no"? |
19926 | Where shall we find them brighter than in Scotland? |
19926 | Where should I go? |
19926 | Where were the gay loiterers who once lingered at the feasts and drank the rich wines of the house of Glaucus? |
19926 | Where will you find them brighter than in Scotland? |
19926 | Where''s the second boy?" |
19926 | Which is Mr. Marlow? |
19926 | Which is your room?" |
19926 | Which of the two would fail first? |
19926 | Which would fall first? |
19926 | Who art thou that complainest of thy life of toil? |
19926 | Who called? |
19926 | Who can tell the new thoughts that have been awakened, and ambitions fired, and the high achievements that will be wrought through this Exposition? |
19926 | Who could look on that face and stifle love? |
19926 | Who dat says dat humble praises Wif de Master nevah counts? |
19926 | Who has not known a Carcassonne? |
19926 | Who invents this libel on his country? |
19926 | Who is Bennie?" |
19926 | Who is this? |
19926 | Who on earth is empowered to vary or abridge the commandments of God? |
19926 | Who then thinks he is consul except a few robbers? |
19926 | Who was dat I called a wild cat? |
19926 | Who was more worthy to command you, and in whom did you find command more honorable? |
19926 | Who was that you called a wild cat? |
19926 | Who was the queen then? |
19926 | Who was the rider of the black horse? |
19926 | Who will talk to me in those long nights? |
19926 | Who''s dis feller dat''s a- comin''? |
19926 | Whose child is that? |
19926 | Why are there''wet spots''stead o''snow''On my cheek as I face the storm?" |
19926 | Why are these lights? |
19926 | Why did n''t you trot that old woman aboard her train? |
19926 | Why did the gods then send me here to thee? |
19926 | Why do n''t you begin, Jack? |
19926 | Why had he stopped? |
19926 | Why had n''t I got housemaid''s knee? |
19926 | Why is it that within three months such a change has come over the country? |
19926 | Why loved he not Beata? |
19926 | Why make that full- blown rose Into a bud again? |
19926 | Why slumberest thou? |
19926 | Why so? |
19926 | Why stand we here idle? |
19926 | Why this change? |
19926 | Why this invidious reservation? |
19926 | Why would they not be gone? |
19926 | Why, Mrs. Malaprop, in moderation, now, what would you have a woman know? |
19926 | Why, of course it is a likely story-- ain''t he my dog? |
19926 | Why, s''posing the world did come to an end? |
19926 | Why, what difference does that make? |
19926 | Why? |
19926 | Why? |
19926 | Will it be the next week, or the next year? |
19926 | Will it be when we are totally disarmed, and when a British guard shall be stationed in every house? |
19926 | Will not ye too come, ye whom he honored by making you his friends? |
19926 | Will she permit the prejudice of war to remain in the hearts of the conquerors, when it has died in the hearts of the conquered? |
19926 | Will she withhold, save in strained courtesy, the hand which straight from his soldier''s heart Grant offered to Lee at Appomattox? |
19926 | Will they eat us up too?" |
19926 | Will you be so good as to pledge me, sir? |
19926 | Will you behold your villages in flames, and your harvests destroyed? |
19926 | Will you call me a name I want you to call me?" |
19926 | Will you die of hunger on the land which your sweat has made fertile? |
19926 | Will you give me something to eat and a bed? |
19926 | Will you look on while the Kossacks of the far north tread under foot the bodies of your fathers, mothers, wives and children? |
19926 | Will you see a part of your fellow- citizens sent to the wilds of Siberia, made to serve in the wars of tyrants, or bleed under the murderous knout? |
19926 | Will you so? |
19926 | Will you take a husband of your friend''s choosing? |
19926 | Will your lordships submit to hear the corrupt practices of mankind made the principles of Government? |
19926 | With a doubtful brow He scanned the doubtful task, and muttered,"How?" |
19926 | With three such saints Lupon is trebly blest; But, Lord, I fain would know which loves thee best?" |
19926 | With what kind of love? |
19926 | With whom then wouldst thou fight? |
19926 | Wo n''t you forgive me? |
19926 | Worshipers of light ancestral make the present light a crime; Was the Mayflower launched by cowards, steered by men behind their time? |
19926 | Would I? |
19926 | Would you give it up? |
19926 | Would you witness greatness? |
19926 | Yes, Jack, the independence I was talking of is by a marriage,--the fortune is saddled with a wife; but I suppose that makes no difference? |
19926 | Yet the sound increased-- and what could I do? |
19926 | Yet thou lovest me? |
19926 | You all know your posts and your places, and can show that you have been used to good company, without stirring from home? |
19926 | You are beaten to earth? |
19926 | You brought a billet to the Countess-- well? |
19926 | You do, do you? |
19926 | You goin''ter git rain, Ben?" |
19926 | You goin''to drink dat? |
19926 | You have been playing the hypocrite, hey? |
19926 | You knew what I was called?" |
19926 | You light your candles for me? |
19926 | You must want a bald- headed husband, don''d you? |
19926 | You ordered that thick bread and butter for three, did you?" |
19926 | You prefer boots then, sir, doubtless? |
19926 | You receive me into your house? |
19926 | You reckon Mr. Ed''ards let er nigger stay on dis place an''pray fer rain when he cuttin''oats? |
19926 | You will not harm me, sir? |
19926 | Your armies in the last war effected everything that could be effected; and what was it? |
19926 | Your lips compressed and blanchèd, and your hair Tumbled wildly all about your eyes, Like a river- god''s? |
19926 | Yours? |
19926 | Yours? |
19926 | [ MATTHIS_ stooping, goes a few steps as if following a trail._] The axe-- where is the axe? |
19926 | [_ In broken tones, almost sobbing._] But where will I go? |
19926 | [_ Touching him._] Art flesh? |
19926 | a pretty figure of a man? |
19926 | almost twelve? |
19926 | and what is here? |
19926 | are you Americans, men, and fly before British soldiers? |
19926 | are you goin''to drive me away like a dog on a night like dis? |
19926 | are you struck dumb? |
19926 | art man? |
19926 | asked Mrs. Jaquith;"my dear soul, what brings you out so early in the morning? |
19926 | ca n''t you speak? |
19926 | do you mark me well? |
19926 | do you seek usefulness? |
19926 | do you think we have brought down the whole joiner''s company, or the corporation of Bedford? |
19926 | does she honor and obey? |
19926 | feel pretty well, hey? |
19926 | has my Paris wig arrived? |
19926 | have fiends a parent? |
19926 | how canst thou prove That bright love of thine? |
19926 | how could you, could you do it-- my own little piece that I loved so much? |
19926 | how sinn''d against thee, That thou shouldst crush me thus? |
19926 | is it? |
19926 | just for a few paltry thalers and a beggarly violin, to work myself to death? |
19926 | man, have n''t you been long enough with me to know that these are not moments when I can speak or listen? |
19926 | my father? |
19926 | not more? |
19926 | or but The shadows seen in sleep? |
19926 | or''why?'' |
19926 | pretty page, who owns you? |
19926 | said the grave prætor--"who is there?" |
19926 | said the prætor,"what means this raving?" |
19926 | say, is dat you, Gretchen? |
19926 | she''s as mad as Bedlam!--or has this fellow been playing us a rogue''s trick? |
19926 | straight he saith,"Where is my wife, Elizabeth?" |
19926 | that''s the milk and water, is it, William? |
19926 | then I''m not original? |
19926 | thus to find glory in an act, performed by a nation, which you condemn as a crime or a barbarism, when committed by an individual? |
19926 | und she says,"Vot gold is dot? |
19926 | was it disease? |
19926 | was it hard labor and spare meals? |
19926 | was it the tomahawk? |
19926 | what come they to see? |
19926 | what could I do? |
19926 | what do I hear? |
19926 | what think you of blooming, love- breathing seventeen? |
19926 | what''s de matter? |
19926 | what? |
19926 | what? |
19926 | where are you? |
19926 | who is with you?" |
19926 | why do n''t you speak? |
19926 | wish you that I should sing of love?" |
19926 | wot do they understand? |
19926 | would you do homage at the shrine of literature? |
19926 | would you know the law, the true, sole expression of the people''s will? |
19926 | would you visit her clearest founts? |
19926 | your rank and wealth, Your pearls and splendors-- what did they avail Against the sharp stiletto''s little point? |
7013 | A what? |
7013 | After whom is the king of Israel come out? 7013 And did they give thee my knife, together with thy leopard- skin purse, which I found on the ground, after I had dragged thee forth?" |
7013 | And he said unto me,''Who art thou?'' 7013 And his name,"said Dick,"was Victor?" |
7013 | And if he be the devil,replied De Bracy,"would you fly from him into the mouth of hell? |
7013 | And nowhere else but where thou hast named? 7013 And sayest thou so, my dear?" |
7013 | And, moreover, my brother, thou talkest of ease in the grave; but hast thou forgotten the hell, whither for certain the murderers go? 7013 Are you so foolish as to think you can please so many lords? |
7013 | Black hair? |
7013 | But how if this path should lead us out of the way? |
7013 | But you maintained your post? |
7013 | Can I rescue thee? |
7013 | Dick, you have no conscience,replied Paul;"you surely would not deceive the girl in such a heartless manner? |
7013 | Didst thou dream that I should be faithless and forsake thee? 7013 Do not be afraid,"said Paul; but he continued:"It may be a difficult affair if he is a powerful man-- what size is he?" |
7013 | Do you aim at princes? |
7013 | Father, are you mad? |
7013 | Father, do you not hear a tumult in the streets? |
7013 | For if a man find his enemy, will he let him go well away? 7013 For why,"said he,"should you choose life, seeing it is attended with so much bitterness?" |
7013 | Front- de- Boeuf? |
7013 | Had not lost an arm? |
7013 | He may come to- morrow, as he used to do? |
7013 | How can we reach him? 7013 How sayest thou, Corvinus; when and how have I contended with thee?" |
7013 | How so? |
7013 | If I''ll stick to you, captain? 7013 Is it thee, thou poor lad?" |
7013 | Is she young, and perhaps beautiful? |
7013 | Lives Reginald Front- de- Boeuf,said a broken and shrill voice close by his bedside,"to say there is that which he dares not?" |
7013 | Look,said Christian,"did not I tell you so? |
7013 | Nello may come here again, father? |
7013 | No? 7013 Pray, did you know him?" |
7013 | Roman nose? |
7013 | Say he:''Dear James, to murder me Were a foolish thing to do, For do n''t you see that you ca n''t cook me, While I can-- and will-- cook you?'' 7013 Seem there no other leaders?" |
7013 | That ridge-- the ridge which communicates with the castle-- have they won that pass? |
7013 | The assailants have won the barriers, have they not? |
7013 | The infidel Jew-- it was merit with Heaven to deal with him as I did, else wherefore are men canonized who dip their hands in the blood of Saracens? 7013 Then only the cook and me was left, And the delicate question,''Which Of us two goes to the kettle?'' |
7013 | Then,said the other,"Do you see yonder shining light?" |
7013 | True,muttered Hutchinson to himself;"what care these roarers for the name of king? |
7013 | Under what banner? |
7013 | What art thou? |
7013 | What boat''s that? |
7013 | What device does he bear on his shield? |
7013 | What do they now, maiden? |
7013 | What do you think of my becoming an author, and relying for support upon my pen? 7013 What dost thou see, Rebecca?" |
7013 | What is the matter, my child? |
7013 | What remains? |
7013 | Whence came you? 7013 Where be these dog- priests now,"growled the baron,"who set such price on their ghostly mummery? |
7013 | Where did you learn that hymn? |
7013 | Where is Front- de- Boeuf? |
7013 | Where lies my way? 7013 Where, I again ask?" |
7013 | Will the king''s name protect you now? 7013 Will you?" |
7013 | Yes,added Dick Stone,"I think we can manage it if we''re all true friends; and may I ask your name, my dear? |
7013 | ***** Of all the characters in this story, which is the most important and the most interesting? |
7013 | After a while, as he was thus musing, there appeared before him one in white garments, who said unto him,''Sleepest thou or wakest thou, Rodrigo?'' |
7013 | Ai n''t it, captain?" |
7013 | Am I not a Philistine and ye servants to Saul? |
7013 | An engine for assault or siege?" |
7013 | And David enquired of the Lord, saying,"Shall I go up to the Philistines? |
7013 | And David fled from Naioth in Ramah, and came and said before Jonathan,"What have I done? |
7013 | And David said unto Saul,"Who am I? |
7013 | And David said unto him,"From whence comest thou?" |
7013 | And David said unto him,"How wast thou not afraid to stretch forth thine hand to destroy the Lord''s anointed?" |
7013 | And David said unto him,"How went the matter? |
7013 | And David said unto the young man that told him,"How knowest thou that Saul and Jonathan his son be dead?" |
7013 | And David said unto the young man that told him,"Whence art thou?" |
7013 | And David said,"What have I now done? |
7013 | And Joab said unto the man that told him,"And, behold, thou sawest him, and why didst thou not smite him there to the ground? |
7013 | And Jonathan answered Saul his father, and said unto him,"Wherefore shall he be slain? |
7013 | And Michal answered Saul,"He said unto me,''Let me go; why should I kill thee?''" |
7013 | And Saul said to him,"Whose son art thou, thou young man?" |
7013 | And Saul said unto Michal,"Why hast thou deceived me so, and sent away mine enemy, that he is escaped?" |
7013 | And art thou now nothing but fear? |
7013 | And he bowed himself, and said,"What is thy servant, that thou shouldest look upon such a dead dog as I am?" |
7013 | And he stood and cried unto the armies of Israel, and said unto them,"Why are ye come out to set your battle in array? |
7013 | And it came to pass, when David had made an end of speaking these words unto Saul, that Saul said,"Is this thy voice, my son David?" |
7013 | And must I answer for the fault done by fifty? |
7013 | And the Cid made answer,"What man art thou who askest me?" |
7013 | And the king said unto Cushi,"Is the young man Absalom safe?" |
7013 | And then the men of Israel said,"Have ye seen this man that is come up?" |
7013 | And when the king saw them, before Alvar Fañez could deliver his bidding, he said unto him,"Minaya, who sends me this goodly present?" |
7013 | And when the lad was come to the place of the arrow which Jonathan had shot, Jonathan cried after the lad, and said,"Is not the arrow beyond thee?" |
7013 | Art thou fled? |
7013 | At this Pliable began to be offended, and angrily said to his fellow,"Is this the happiness you have told me all this while of? |
7013 | But I trust there is no dishonor in wishing I had here some two scores of my gallant troop of Free Companions? |
7013 | But how about the sentry?" |
7013 | But she, the child that, at nineteen, had wrought wonders so great for France, was she not elated? |
7013 | But what is Troy, or glory what to me? |
7013 | Can his dear image from my soul depart, Long as the vital spirit moves my heart? |
7013 | Can you find other similar expressions? |
7013 | Canst thou not see the motto?" |
7013 | Come presents without wrong From Danaans? |
7013 | Did she not lose, as men so often_ have_ lost, all sobriety of mind when standing upon the pinnacle of success so giddy? |
7013 | Didst thou think it was but the darkening of thy bursting eyes, the difficulty of thy cumbered breathing? |
7013 | Does it seem at all strange to you that we should call this poetry? |
7013 | Does this not give you a vivid idea of the helplessness of David and his hopelessness? |
7013 | Dost thou believe me now? |
7013 | Girt with a throng of Ilium''s sons, Down from the tower Laocoön runs, And,"Wretched countrymen,"he cries,"What monstrous madness blinds your eyes? |
7013 | Have I been always a viper on thy path?" |
7013 | Have you not, yourself, known dogs that were as intelligent, as affectionate and as faithful as Patrasche? |
7013 | He means to say by this that God is strong enough to protect him and defend him, but is not his way of saying it more forceful? |
7013 | He shuddered and drew himself together; but, instantly summoning up his wonted resolution, he exclaimed,"Who is there? |
7013 | Her voice faltered and her hand trembled, and it was only the cold question of Ivanhoe,"Is it you, gentle maiden?" |
7013 | How can I help you? |
7013 | How couldst thou hope to inflict wounds on others, ere that be healed which thou thyself hast received?" |
7013 | How did he git thar? |
7013 | How far do you think he may be before?" |
7013 | How fought these villain yeomen on thy side?" |
7013 | How is it, then, that thou hast run away from thy king? |
7013 | How think you, Sir Brian, were we not better make a virtue of necessity, and compound with the rogues by delivering up our prisoners?" |
7013 | I looked then, and saw a man named Evangelist coming to him, who asked,"Wherefore dost thou cry?" |
7013 | I-- a dog?" |
7013 | If so, how will this end, or how can I protect Rowena and my father?" |
7013 | If we have such ill- speed at our first setting out, what may we expect betwixt this and our journey''s end? |
7013 | In the forests to which he prays for pity, will he find a respite? |
7013 | Is it a martyr''s scaffold? |
7013 | Is it, indeed, come to this? |
7013 | Is there not a cause?" |
7013 | KATEY''S LETTER_ By_ LADY DUFFERIN Och, girls, did you ever hear I wrote my love a letter? |
7013 | Knowing that she would reap nothing from answering her persecutors, why did she not retire by silence from the superfluous contest? |
7013 | Look, doth it not go along by the wayside?" |
7013 | Markest thou the smouldering and suffocating vapor which already eddies in sable folds through the chamber? |
7013 | My dear brother Victor, a prisoner in England?" |
7013 | My lord, have you no counsel? |
7013 | Noble Cedric, wilt thou take the direction of those which remain?" |
7013 | Nor did the glow of hatred cool, Till, wielding Calchas* as his tool-- But why a tedious tale repeat, To stay you from your morsel sweet? |
7013 | Now when Saul saw David go forth against the Philistine, he said unto Abner, the captain of the host,"Abner, whose son is this youth?" |
7013 | Now, as they came up to these places, behold the gardener stood in the way, to whom the pilgrims said,"Whose goodly vineyards and gardens are these?" |
7013 | Now, girls, would you believe it, That postman so_ consated_, No answer will he bring me, So long have I waited? |
7013 | O say, what may it be?" |
7013 | O say, what may it be?" |
7013 | O say, what may it be?" |
7013 | Rather tall?" |
7013 | Rememberest thou the magazine of fuel that is stored beneath these apartments?" |
7013 | Seest thou nought else, Rebecca, by which the Black Knight may be distinguished?" |
7013 | Seest thou who they be that act as leaders?" |
7013 | Shall it be''Gabrielle,''or''Celestine,''or''Evangeline''?" |
7013 | Shall my Lord of Beauvais sit again upon the judgment- seat, and again number the hours for the innocent? |
7013 | Shall we be ruled by the Giant?" |
7013 | Since now at length the powerful will of heaven The dire destroyer to our arm has given, Is not Troy fallen already? |
7013 | Surety all is false; you never met the French prisoner at Falmouth?" |
7013 | Templar, thou wilt not fail me?" |
7013 | That sentence reached the public ear, And bred the dull amaze of fear: Through every heart a shudder ran,''Apollo''s victim-- who the man?'' |
7013 | The king said unto him,"Where is he?". |
7013 | The man therefore read it, and looking upon Evangelist very carefully, said,"Whither must I fly?" |
7013 | The voice, the glance, the heart I sought,--give answer, where are they? |
7013 | The wealth of seas, the spoils of war? |
7013 | Then Joab arose, and came to Absalom unto his house, and said unto him,"Wherefore have thy servants set my field on fire?" |
7013 | Then said David to Jonathan,"Who shall tell me? |
7013 | Then said Evangelist, pointing with his finger over a very wide field,"Do you see yonder wicket gate?" |
7013 | Then said Evangelist,"If this be thy condition, why standest thou still?" |
7013 | Then said Evangelist,"Why not willing to die, since this life is attended with so many evils?" |
7013 | Then said Hopeful,"Where are we now?" |
7013 | There were men with hoary hair Amidst that pilgrim band;-- Why had_ they_ come to wither there, Away from their childhood''s land? |
7013 | Think you your enemies removed? |
7013 | Thinkest thou Front- de- Boeuf will be singled out to go alone? |
7013 | Up from the ground he sprang and gazed; but who could paint that gaze? |
7013 | Was he merely a worthless beauty, and is he despised for that reason?" |
7013 | Well, p''r''aps I never have, and p''r''aps Dick Stone''s a coward? |
7013 | Were they not aware of this three years ago? |
7013 | What boots thee now, that Troy forsook the plain? |
7013 | What building is that which hands so rapid are raising? |
7013 | What can we do to save ourselves?" |
7013 | What else but her meek, saintly demeanour won, from the enemies that till now had believed her a witch, tears of rapturous admiration? |
7013 | What else drove the executioner to kneel at every shrine for pardon to_ his_ share in the tragedy? |
7013 | What else, I demand, than mere weight of metal, absolute nobility of deportment, broke the vast line of battle then arrayed against her? |
7013 | What god, O Muse,* assisted Hector''s force With fate itself so long to hold the course? |
7013 | What is my iniquity? |
7013 | What sayest thou of the knife?" |
7013 | What sought they thus afar?-- Bright jewels of the mine? |
7013 | What was he saying to them? |
7013 | What was it? |
7013 | What were they? |
7013 | What''s your plan, captain? |
7013 | When the gods had expressed their pleasure in all that had so far been done, Odin said,"Where shall we fix our own dwelling? |
7013 | When thy chariot was dashed furiously along the Appian way, didst thou not hear the tramp of horses''hoofs trying to overtake thee?" |
7013 | When was your brother taken?" |
7013 | Where is the use of our power and wisdom if we can not, out of this evil thing, make something good and beautiful?" |
7013 | Where was his squaw that he should be obliged to make a woman of himself?" |
7013 | Who can it be?" |
7013 | Who is she in bloody coronation robes from Rheims? |
7013 | Who is she that cometh with blackened flesh from walking the furnaces of Rouen? |
7013 | Who is this Philistine that he should defy the armies of the living God?" |
7013 | Who is this that cometh from Domrémy? |
7013 | Who knows but that God that made the world may cause that Giant Despair may die? |
7013 | Who knows but that he may have strength to draw the bow? |
7013 | Who or what could disturb the domestic quiet of such a great and powerful personage as now sat in Grandfather''s chair? |
7013 | Who push their way?" |
7013 | Who stirred up the licentious John to war against his grayheaded father-- against his generous brother?" |
7013 | Who yield? |
7013 | Why liest thou here, like a worn- out hind, when the Saxon storms thy place of strength? |
7013 | Why, then,_ did_ she contend? |
7013 | Will they burn the child of Domrémy a second time? |
7013 | Wilt thou not accept my guidance?" |
7013 | Would Domrémy know them again for the features of her child? |
7013 | You''re not a bad- looking fellow, why should you not do the love- making?" |
7013 | [ Footnote:_ Derring- do_ is an old word for daring, or_ warlike deed_] A fetterlock, and a shackle- bolt on a field sable-- what may that mean? |
7013 | [ Illustration: DAVID MEETS GOLIATH] And the Philistine said unto David,"Am I a dog, that thou comest to me with staves?" |
7013 | [ Illustration: IS THE YOUNG MAN, ABSALOM, SAFE?] |
7013 | [ Illustration: NATHANIEL HAWTHORNE 1804- 1864]"Who goes there?" |
7013 | [ Illustration: NELLO AND PATRASCHE]"Dost much of such folly?" |
7013 | [ Illustration: THE BLACK KNIGHT AT THE GATE OF THE CASTLE]"Who is down?" |
7013 | [ Illustration:"FATHER, DO YOU NOT HEAR?"] |
7013 | [ Illustration:"FOR DON''T YOU SEE THAT YOU CAN''T COOK ME?"] |
7013 | _ Apol._"Thou hast already been unfaithful in thy service to him; and how dost thou think to receive wages of him?" |
7013 | _ By_ THOMAS DE QUINCEY What is to be thought of_ her_? |
7013 | _ Chr._"But I have let myself to another, even to the King of princes; and how can I, with fairness, go back with thee?" |
7013 | _ Chr._"I have given him my faith, and sworn my allegiance to him; how, then, can I go back from this, and not be hanged as a traitor?" |
7013 | _ Chr._"Who could have thought that this path should have led us out of the way?" |
7013 | _ Help._"But why did you not look for the steps?" |
7013 | after whom dost thou pursue? |
7013 | and he answered and said,''I do not sleep: but who art thou that bringest with thee such brightness and so sweet an odour?'' |
7013 | and how, pray?" |
7013 | and tell me what is this? |
7013 | and what is my life, or my father''s family in Israel, that I should be son- in- law to the king?" |
7013 | and what is my sin before thy father, that he seeketh my life?" |
7013 | and whither are you bound?" |
7013 | art thou silenced?" |
7013 | cried Ivanhoe;"for our dear Lady''s sake, tell me which has fallen?" |
7013 | exclaimed Ivanhoe;"does he blench from the helm when the wind blows highest?" |
7013 | exclaimed the knight;"do the false yeomen give way?" |
7013 | exclaimed the prefect''s son in a fury;"and was it thy accursed steed which, purposely urged forward, frightened mine, and nearly caused my death?" |
7013 | false- hearted knaves, where tarry ye?" |
7013 | have I been unfaithful to him?" |
7013 | have you thus approved Ulysses,* known so long? |
7013 | he exclaimed with fury,"thou hast not set fire to it? |
7013 | he repeated;"but have I deserved his trust?" |
7013 | he shouted,"art thou there?" |
7013 | it is then thou who art come to exult over the ruins thou hast assisted to lay low?" |
7013 | neighbor Christian, where are you now?" |
7013 | or that he may, in a short time, have another of his fits before us, and may lose the use of his limbs? |
7013 | or that, at some time or other, he may forget to lock us in? |
7013 | or what if thy father answer thee roughly?" |
7013 | said De Bracy,"will ye let_ two_ men win our only pass for safety?" |
7013 | said De Bracy;"what is to be done?" |
7013 | surely you can help us?" |
7013 | thinkest thou that I believe thee, when thou hast lain ever as a viper on my path, to bite my heel and overthrow me?" |
7013 | to enter in the wall? |
7013 | what art thou, that darest to echo my words in a tone like that of the night raven? |
7013 | what hath he done?" |
7013 | who shall lift that wand of magic power, And the lost dew regain? |
7013 | why leave ye the good knight and noble Cedric to storm the pass alone? |
7013 | wilt thou deliver them into mine hand?" |
43996 | A different story from what I have told, sir? |
43996 | A hundred? |
43996 | Ah, Julius, what was dat? |
43996 | Ah, well-- yes-- but_ do_ you pray in secret? |
43996 | And do you believe the story? |
43996 | And how did you like him? |
43996 | And how do you manage when the happy pair are negroes? |
43996 | And that I am a valuable man? |
43996 | And that I was a good soldier? |
43996 | And to what effect? |
43996 | And what do you expect will be your portion there? |
43996 | And why not, sir? |
43996 | And,continued the old man, in a voice husky with emotion,"are you in favour of a vigorous prosecution of the war?" |
43996 | Any relations? |
43996 | Are you sure of that, now? |
43996 | Are you? |
43996 | But I suppose you do n''t know what''nigger mathematics''is? |
43996 | But how did you happen to know him? |
43996 | But why do n''t you mend it when it does n''t rain? |
43996 | But why on earth did you not take it? 43996 But, I thought, you said your name was Michael Flynn?" |
43996 | Can I see him? |
43996 | Could n''t I, though? |
43996 | Day, what Day? |
43996 | De same way as I come up, Mass Tom? |
43996 | Did I understand you to say, Sir, that you had a wife and six children living in New York, and had never seen one of them? |
43996 | Did he die? |
43996 | Did he have a double- barrelled gun? |
43996 | Did n''t I, though? |
43996 | Did n''t you hear the general say it had come? |
43996 | Did you marry a widow, Sir? |
43996 | Did you see the Queen? |
43996 | Do you know Captain Scott, of our State? |
43996 | Do you know anybody from this neighbourhood who is in the army? |
43996 | Do you mean to insinuate that I lie, sir? |
43996 | Do you really think so? |
43996 | Do? 43996 Does the razor take hold well?" |
43996 | Dou you smoke, sir? |
43996 | Drew too much? |
43996 | Ellen, do n''t you know what that agrees with? |
43996 | Engaged, is it? |
43996 | Fifty? |
43996 | Goin''to Heaven? |
43996 | Hallo, landlord, can I get lodgings here to- night? |
43996 | Hallo, what''s the matter now? |
43996 | Have n''t you any brothers and sisters? |
43996 | Here is the agreement in black and white,responded the counsel, pointing to the parties;"pray what does your honour want more than this?" |
43996 | Ho, there Mr.----, have you taken out a warrant against Burt? |
43996 | How d''ye do? |
43996 | How do you keep yourself alive? |
43996 | How do you know me? |
43996 | How do you know they are your ducks? |
43996 | How is that? |
43996 | How long do you wear a shirt? |
43996 | How long is it since you have seen your wife? |
43996 | How much did your father tell you to give for him? |
43996 | How much is this sugar a pound? |
43996 | How much? |
43996 | How so? |
43996 | How the divil do you know but you axe the other Mike Sullivan? |
43996 | How was that? |
43996 | How? |
43996 | I say, John, where did you get that loafer''s hat? |
43996 | Is it how do I know your honour? |
43996 | Is it possible? |
43996 | Is it possible? |
43996 | Is the doctor in? |
43996 | Is there no one else? |
43996 | John, my son,said a doting father, who was about taking him into business,"what shall be the style of the new firm?" |
43996 | John, what do you do for a living? |
43996 | Johnson, you say Snow was de man dat robbed you? |
43996 | Lives in your place, I believe, do n''t he? |
43996 | Looking for a berth? |
43996 | Mrs. Green,said a tolerably dressed female, entering a grocery store, in which were several customers,"have you any fresh- corned pork?" |
43996 | Mutton-- with sauce? |
43996 | No? |
43996 | Oh, I think I remember her; she ate a great deal, did she not? |
43996 | Old Harry,said Biddle;"why, that is the name they give to the devil, is it not?" |
43996 | One in twenty? |
43996 | Papa,said Mr. Brown''s youngest son, the other day,"ca n''t I go to the circus?" |
43996 | Pray, sir, can you tell me if he has many patients? |
43996 | Race, what race? |
43996 | Really,said the man,"where do you think you are going?" |
43996 | Sam what? |
43996 | Sam,said an interesting young mother to her youngest hopeful,"do you know what the difference is between the body and soul? |
43996 | Sambo, you nigger, are you afraid of work? |
43996 | Seen it? |
43996 | Shall I read from the Bible? |
43996 | Sir,said Lee,"what do you mean? |
43996 | Sir,said a gentleman, present,"do you descend to salute a slave?" |
43996 | Sir,said the man,"do you mistake me for a waiter?" |
43996 | Surely you have not forgotten me,said he.--"What name, sir?" |
43996 | That usually I-- I-- am neat and genteel? |
43996 | The boundaries of our country, sir? |
43996 | Then why is it New Englanders always answer a question by asking one in return? |
43996 | Then, Miss L.,said the young tutor,"in six years you will cease to be Miss L.?" |
43996 | Then,said calico,"why do n''t you stay there?" |
43996 | To church, sir,was the prompt reply.--"What church, Sam?" |
43996 | True, but do you know what office? |
43996 | Ven you arrive at the dignity of sawin''wood, Lafayette, if you is elvevated to that perfesshun, mind and always saw de biggest fust; cause vy? 43996 Very sociable man, ai n''t he?" |
43996 | Wa''al,says she,"if the airth is reound, and goes reound, what holds it_ up_?" |
43996 | Wal, did yever see de bone fight? |
43996 | Wal, mas''r,replied the contraband,"did yever see two dogs fightin''for a bone?" |
43996 | Was it a_ near_ or distant relative? |
43996 | Was it moonlight when it took place? |
43996 | Was it starlight? |
43996 | Was you ever in a real heavy gale of wind? |
43996 | Well, Ellen, why do n''t you parse that word? 43996 Well, Sambo, how do you like your new place?" |
43996 | Well, Uncle Sam,said he,"do you see any difference in Mr. P. since he joined the church?" |
43996 | Well, here are grandpa''s spectacles-- won''t you take them to him? |
43996 | Well, how do you like the looks of the varmint? |
43996 | Well, that was unfortunate,remarked Holton,"but what in the world did you do with the house? |
43996 | Well, was there any light shining from any house near by? |
43996 | Well, what did you do then? |
43996 | Well, what explanation can you make? |
43996 | Well, what of that? |
43996 | Well, what''s your father and mother''s name? |
43996 | Well, where do you live? |
43996 | Well, why? |
43996 | Well,said the captain,"what did you do?" |
43996 | Were you ever blind, Sir? |
43996 | What did he do the first year? |
43996 | What did they do with him? |
43996 | What did you have for breakfast this morning? |
43996 | What do you call them hot for, you black and blue swindler? |
43996 | What do you charge for blacking boots? |
43996 | What do you want with him? |
43996 | What do you want? |
43996 | What i''dat? |
43996 | What is it? |
43996 | What is the matter, my dear? |
43996 | What is the use of living? |
43996 | What is your name? |
43996 | What kind of a preacher do you want? |
43996 | What o''that? |
43996 | What tongue is able to unfold The worth in woman we behold? 43996 What two characters in scripture remind us of a certain President in Washington and a certain Marshal in Baltimore?" |
43996 | What''s my chances, doctor? |
43996 | What''s the matter with you? |
43996 | What''s the matter? |
43996 | What''s this? 43996 What''s your master''s name?" |
43996 | What''s your other name? |
43996 | What_ rôle_ would you prefer, my friend? |
43996 | Where am I to sleep? |
43996 | Where are my pants? 43996 Where are you going, Emma?" |
43996 | Where is the hoe, Sambo? |
43996 | Where is your house? |
43996 | Who are you? |
43996 | Who was your father? |
43996 | Who were Adam and Eve? |
43996 | Who were your forefathers? |
43996 | Who, you? |
43996 | Why did you leave your connexion, Mr. Dickson, if I maybe permitted to ask? |
43996 | Why do n''t you enlist, Ginger? |
43996 | Why do n''t you get married? |
43996 | Why do n''t you mend your roof, Cuff? |
43996 | Why not? |
43996 | Why so? 43996 Why the devil did n''t you stay at''ome?" |
43996 | Why, General? |
43996 | Why, now, what did you dream your mother said? |
43996 | Why, what was the reason? |
43996 | Why? |
43996 | Will there be any butter on it, ma? |
43996 | Will you have a story? |
43996 | Will you have me, Sarah? |
43996 | Will your horse eat oysters? |
43996 | Wo n''t go, eh? |
43996 | Wo n''t he? |
43996 | Yes; but what of that? |
43996 | You are in employ of the railroad? |
43996 | You do not mean to say,remarked the sceptic,"that the spirit of your wife really embraced you and kissed you?" |
43996 | You have considerable floating population in this village, havn''t you? |
43996 | You receive your pay regularly? |
43996 | You''re from down East, I guess? |
43996 | _ Du they?_was Jonathan''s reply. |
43996 | _ If I may be so bold, sir_,said he,"_ may I ask how long you have been in this country_?" |
43996 | ''And I?'' |
43996 | ''Entirely forgotten, Madam?'' |
43996 | ''Hello, Lincoln, are you not going to the court- house? |
43996 | ''Jack,''said she,''we are sorry to disturb you, but wo n''t you see me home?'' |
43996 | ''Now Pompey, spose dere am tree pigeons sittin''on a rail- fence, and you fire a gun at''em and shoot one, how many''s left?'' |
43996 | ''Shall I help you to a bit of Icthoyaturns?'' |
43996 | ''Twould break the spell If I should tell-- Would n''t you like to know? |
43996 | --"And is n''t that mighty poor pay?" |
43996 | --"Are you travelling on business?" |
43996 | --"But where are they both?" |
43996 | --"Capital,"was the instant reply,"you are just the girl I have been looking for these five years-- will you marry me?" |
43996 | --"Going West?" |
43996 | --"Good sermon, my boy?" |
43996 | --"Had a good sermon, Sam?" |
43996 | --"Heard me preach?" |
43996 | --"In the little old island? |
43996 | --"It runs through the piece of wood in the lower part of the meadow,"said the judge.--"What, that little brook? |
43996 | --"Preach, and do you get paid for it?" |
43996 | --"Travelling alone?" |
43996 | --"Was you raised down East?" |
43996 | --"Well, governor,"said the youth,"I do n''t know-- but suppose we have it John H. Samplin and Father?" |
43996 | --"Well, now, what are you travelling for?" |
43996 | --"Well, where is the rake?" |
43996 | --"What business do you follow?" |
43996 | --Dentist( looking aghast):"Why, you do n''t mean to sell your own teeth? |
43996 | --Dentist:"Well, I might want them; have you many?" |
43996 | --Jersey man:"Why, look here, they''re no airthly use to Sal and me; for what''s the use of teeth when one''s nothing to eat?" |
43996 | --Second question:''Where did they stone him?'' |
43996 | --The third question:''Why did they take him beyond the limits of the city?'' |
43996 | --_Philadelphia Gazette._ All of which goes to prove That grammar a farce is; For where is the plural Of rum and molasses? |
43996 | A Milwaukee paper says that when a Wisconsin girl is kissed, she looks surprised, and says,"How could you do it?" |
43996 | A Yankee pedlar with his cart, overtaking another of his class on the road, was thus addressed:"Hallo, what do you carry?" |
43996 | A gentleman present, who had himself been a severe sufferer with the same complaint, said to her:"Did you ever try electricity, madam? |
43996 | A gentleman, finding his servant intoxicated, said,"What, drunk again, Sam? |
43996 | A pompous, well- dressed individual entered the bank, and, addressing the teller, who is something of a wag, inquired:''Is the cashier in?'' |
43996 | A rebel officer shouted to him to go back, but the sergeant was unmindful of the warning, and asked,"Wo n''t you exchange newspapers?" |
43996 | A rebel sentinel discovered them, and hallooed out:"How are you, Yank?" |
43996 | A young sprig of a lawyer stepped up one day and said to her,''You seem to have some fine apples; are they sweet or sour?'' |
43996 | After Joseph''s brotheren had beat him out ov hiz cut ov many cullars, what did tha dew nex? |
43996 | After calling several times without effect, the reb vidette called out,"I say, Yank, what''s the matter on your side of the tree?" |
43996 | After settling the merits of the weather, Miss said, looking slyly into his face,"I dreamed of you last night,""Did you? |
43996 | An American clergyman, preaching a drowsy sermon, asked,"What is the price of earthly pleasure?" |
43996 | An Ohio stumper, while making a speech, paused in the midst of it and exclaimed,"Now, gentlemen, what do you think?" |
43996 | An aboriginal American was asked if he had known the Bishop of Quebec? |
43996 | An exchange asks, very innocently, if it is any harm for young ladies to sit in the lapse of ages? |
43996 | An impertinent editor in Alabama, says a paper, wants to know when we"intend to pay''the debt of Nature?''" |
43996 | An old acquaintance stepped up to the prisoner, and said:"Jem, the danger is passed; and now, honour bright, did n''t you steal that horse?" |
43996 | And where it goes Beneath the rose-- Would n''t you like to know? |
43996 | Are you a widow?" |
43996 | Are you mail or femail? |
43996 | Are you subject to fits? |
43996 | Are yu married or single, or are yu a bachelor? |
43996 | At a railway station, an old lady said to a very pompous- looking gentleman, who was talking about steam communication:"Pray, sir, what is steam?" |
43996 | Biddy, did you hear that? |
43996 | Bogs.--The atmosphere? |
43996 | But as the teacher said,"Very well, what does courting agree with?" |
43996 | But the girl came at length, and her impatient master broke forth with--"For goodness''sake, Maggie, where have you been?" |
43996 | But we''ve got the African, or ruther he''s got us, and how are we going to do about it? |
43996 | But what can I do now? |
43996 | But what woman''s heart could resist the pleadings of a mother then? |
43996 | Can I do anything for you?" |
43996 | Clogs.--What map did you travel by? |
43996 | Coming to settle out West, I suppose?" |
43996 | Dickson?" |
43996 | Did Job ever try, when he was hungry, to eat shad with a frisky baby in his lap? |
43996 | Did you ever have any ancestors? |
43996 | Dis razor hurt you, sah?" |
43996 | Do n''t you think he was an ignorant feller?" |
43996 | Do you hear me? |
43996 | Do you know that Napoleon lost about a hundred aides- de- camp in one campaign?" |
43996 | Do you think I would come all the way from Ireland to belong to one State, when I had a right to belong to the whole of''em?" |
43996 | Do you think you can dodge the balls? |
43996 | Dogs.--Any fish in the ponds? |
43996 | Du yu believe in a future stait? |
43996 | Du yu have any night- mare? |
43996 | Fogs.--What did you live on? |
43996 | Franklin was once asked,"What is the use of your discovery of atmospheric electricity?" |
43996 | Frogs.--What did you find the women? |
43996 | Getting no reply from the dumb reflection before him, he again repeated--"I say, mister, when does this here boat start?" |
43996 | Give it up, reader? |
43996 | Had you a father or mother? |
43996 | Hav yu ever committed suicide? |
43996 | He could put his wife in his heart, and have room for other things besides; and what was she but precious, and what could she be but little? |
43996 | He got his head above water for once, took off his hat, and said,''Ladies and gentlemen, will you please excuse me?'' |
43996 | His father hailed him with,"Well, Sam, been to the Second Methodist again to- day?" |
43996 | His friends got around his bed, and one of them says:"John do you feel willing to die?" |
43996 | Hogs.--What were your draught animals? |
43996 | How are you, colonel? |
43996 | How do you do?" |
43996 | How do you do?" |
43996 | How do you get your bread?" |
43996 | How do you live?" |
43996 | How do you make out that you are exempt, eh?" |
43996 | How do you support yourself?" |
43996 | I asked him:"How long were you in the hospital at----?" |
43996 | I cried;''ca n''t you get a beau without hauling a fellow out of bed? |
43996 | I dare say you think you are doing a great deal of good?" |
43996 | I expect you ai n''t ashamed of either of''em, so now wo n''t you just obleedge me?" |
43996 | I locked my door last night, and somebody has stolen them?" |
43996 | I picked it up, and immediately wrote on it,''It is a very good one; what rent do you pay?'' |
43996 | I thought this was his office?" |
43996 | I''ve jest called to see if yeou do n''t want to buy some real, genuine, sound teeth?" |
43996 | In selling a Newfoundland dog do you know whether it is valued according to what it will fetch or what it will bring? |
43996 | Is Death''s door opened with a skeleton key? |
43996 | Is it the languisher, or the giraffe, or the_ élégante_? |
43996 | Is there any truth in the report that the Arabs who live in the desert have sandy hair? |
43996 | It is not in my power to give each of you the same thing; but such want of uniformity in my largesses, should that deprive them of all merit?'' |
43996 | Jeff., will you have this, our favourite dish, or haunch of mutton?" |
43996 | Jenkins?" |
43996 | Jersey man( entering a dentist''s store):"Air yeou a doctor, sir?" |
43996 | Lincoln?" |
43996 | Meeting a negro on the road, a traveller said:"You have lost some of your friends, I see?" |
43996 | Meeting an American friend travelling in the United States, I enquired whither he was going? |
43996 | Meeting the waiter an hour or two afterwards, he said--"Well, Sambo, did you bring my baggage down?" |
43996 | Mr. Webster took the account, which he immediately recognized, and, scanning the wood- sawyer a moment, said:"How do you keep your books, sir?" |
43996 | Now, master, what do_ you_ think about sich stuff? |
43996 | On Sunday afternoon, Sam came in and went up stairs very heavy, when the judge put the question to him:"Sam, where have you been?" |
43996 | On whom they beam With melting gleam-- Would n''t you like to know? |
43996 | One day, in a social mood, Biddle said to the darkey,"Well, what is your name, my old friend?" |
43996 | One of the deacons of a certain church in Virginia asked the Bishop if he usually kissed the bride at weddings? |
43996 | One of the neatest and latest conundrums is as follows:--"Why is i the happiest of vowels? |
43996 | Pray, what did he teach?" |
43996 | Prentice says:"Would n''t it have been a still greater wonder if he had escaped without it?" |
43996 | Said he,"And who are you?" |
43996 | Said she,"John Stiles, it''s one o''clock; You''ll die of indigestion; I''m sick of all this popping corn, Why do n''t you Pop the Question?" |
43996 | Sam was petrified with astonishment, but presently said--"Why did n''t de brine run out of the same hole?" |
43996 | Says the minister,"What shall I call the child?" |
43996 | Sez I,"Wall, Hetty, it''s me; wo n''t you say yes?" |
43996 | She looked at the diminutive little beings a few moments, when, turning to her father, she inquired:"Pa, which one are you going to keep?" |
43996 | She rose to her hands, and, looking back, asked:"_ Jeems, do they allus stop like that?_""ANY RELATIONS?"--423. |
43996 | Snow was the man, and how did you see him?" |
43996 | Speaking of wags-- what is more waggish than a dog''s tail when he is pleased? |
43996 | Surely you never cured that chimney?" |
43996 | T''other day he levelled at an old''un, in a high tree; the varmint looked at him a minute, and then bawled out,''Hallo, Cap''n Scott, is that you?'' |
43996 | Ten yards? |
43996 | That kinder staggered me; but I was too cute to lose the opportunity, and so sez I again,"Suppose it was me?" |
43996 | The fact that they did all this with one bullet led to the following cross question:--"How did you kill all these buffaloes with only one bullet?" |
43996 | The first question was,''Who stoned Stephen?'' |
43996 | The following dialogue ensued:--"Does Dr. Channing live here?" |
43996 | The following dialogue on"sharp shooting"is reported to have taken place between a Virginee and a Yankee picket:--"I say, can you fellows shoot?" |
43996 | The husband ran a few rods, but soon returned, exclaiming:"My dear, where shall I find you when I get back?" |
43996 | The interrogator again enquired--"How can it be, Sir, that you never saw one of them?" |
43996 | The judge said,"Put the boy upon evidence,"upon hearing which young America exclaimed,"Who are you calling a boy? |
43996 | The law is against_ entering_ a house, and can a man be said to_ enter_ a house when only_ one- half_ of his body is_ in_, and the other half_ out_?" |
43996 | The lawyer who cross- examined her said,"You assert that your son has worked on a farm ever since he was born?" |
43996 | The next morning they met, when Sam says--"Good mornin'', Julius, anything happen strange or mysterious down in your vicinity lately?" |
43996 | The philosopher answered the question by another,"What is the_ use_ of a new- born infant?" |
43996 | The secretary, when he could stand the nuisance no longer, said to the doorkeeper:"Do you know what that man comes after?" |
43996 | Then Lib sings out,''Jack, are you in there?'' |
43996 | Then he offered a toast,''Guilty or Not Guilty?'' |
43996 | Then sez I,"Suppose it was Ned Willis?" |
43996 | This is your body,"touching the little fellow''s shoulders and arms,"but there is something deeper in-- you can feel it now; what is that?" |
43996 | Throughout all this have you been loyal?" |
43996 | Traveller:"Ca n''t you give me a blanket and a bunch of shavings for a pillow in your bar- room?" |
43996 | WOULDN''T YOU LIKE TO KNOW? |
43996 | Well, you''re kinder glad to leave it, I guess? |
43996 | Were you not well treated?" |
43996 | What are your private sentiments about a rush of rats to the he d? |
43996 | What do you follow?" |
43996 | What do you think of it?" |
43996 | What does it agree with?" |
43996 | What is the land? |
43996 | What is your business?" |
43996 | What is your legal opinion of the constitushunality of the ten commandments? |
43996 | What iz your precise fiting wate? |
43996 | What lover sips Those dewy lips-- Would n''t you like to know? |
43996 | What nonsense people talk about love, do n''t they? |
43996 | What relation were said parties previous to their marriage? |
43996 | What scripture name did he utter? |
43996 | What scripture name did the old gentleman use to induce another son to accompany the guests? |
43996 | What was it? |
43996 | What was it? |
43996 | What was it? |
43996 | What was the last scripture name thus used? |
43996 | What will he do?" |
43996 | What''s the matter? |
43996 | When I came into the town, says our captain to me,"Peabody, what in natur is that ere great yaller thing that''s a sticking out of your pocket?" |
43996 | When I cut up an old fowl, and help the boarders, I always feel as if I ought to say,"Wo n''t you have a slice of widdah?" |
43996 | When did you shave last?" |
43996 | When he has waked up each morning, his reflection has been,"Now, is it to be a horsewhipping or a kicking to- day?" |
43996 | When the young lady and four lovers were out again, she says to the captain,"What am I to do with them now, they are so wet?" |
43996 | Where did he live? |
43996 | Whereupon the officer, turning to the corporal in charge of the gun, said,''Corporal, do you see that light?'' |
43996 | Who bids? |
43996 | Who build all our gaols? |
43996 | Who build our railroads? |
43996 | Who fill all our gaols? |
43996 | Who made it less One little tress-- Would n''t you like to know? |
43996 | Who rises betimes, and superintends the morning meal? |
43996 | Who wants help? |
43996 | Who was Scipio''s wife? |
43996 | Who''s afraid of you? |
43996 | Who''s the lucky man?" |
43996 | Whose hand they press With fond caress-- Would n''t you like to know? |
43996 | Why call them hot now?" |
43996 | Why did''nt you give them the boots?" |
43996 | Why, Susan, what''s the matter?" |
43996 | Witness, has not an effort been made to induce you to tell a different story?" |
43996 | Wo n''t he, mother?" |
43996 | Wo n''t you catch it, though? |
43996 | Would it not be the part of wisdom to attend to your soul''s concerns immediately? |
43996 | Would you put a tuck in it? |
43996 | Would you say a lady dressed loud who was covered all over with bugles? |
43996 | You cast them aside, do you not?" |
43996 | You do n''t call that a fine stream, do you?" |
43996 | You''re not Mrs. Ellis, are you?" |
43996 | and added,"Do you know Morrissey?" |
43996 | and have you derived any benefit from the use of it?" |
43996 | and if so, du yu have more than one at a time? |
43996 | and if so, how did it affect yu? |
43996 | and if so, how much? |
43996 | and"Where are you from?" |
43996 | asked Holton;"of course you could not live in such a house?" |
43996 | can it be did successfully? |
43996 | do n''t you raise bigger apples than these in America?" |
43996 | he was, eh?" |
43996 | howse I goin ter get down dis ladder?" |
43996 | if so, which? |
43996 | inquired Pat;"are we not friends?" |
43996 | preparing your leader?" |
43996 | queried the hopeful;"ca n''t you get him up? |
43996 | replied the Englishman evidently not posted up in local historical matters,"did it hurt him much?" |
43996 | said Holton, with interest,"did you ever see a smoky chimney cured?" |
43996 | said he.--"Pretty well,"said I.--"What are you about? |
43996 | said the boy;"feel grand, do you? |
43996 | said the judge,"where is he gone?" |
43996 | well, I must not tell-- Would n''t you like to know? |
43996 | what on airth''s gev way on the keers?" |
43996 | what this?" |
43996 | where is he?" |
43996 | where''s his baggage?" |
43996 | who comes there?" |
43996 | you here again?" |
43223 | And hast thou slain the Jabberwock? 43223 And is he gone, and is he gone?" |
43223 | And might not this, this second Eve, console The emptiest heart? 43223 And where is the diver so stout to go-- I ask ye again-- to the deep below?" |
43223 | At mine? |
43223 | But then there''s their barley: how much will they need? 43223 But what are dukes and viscounts to The happiness of all my crew? |
43223 | Came I not forth upon thy pledge, my father''s hand to kiss? 43223 Did I o''ercharge him a ha''penny? |
43223 | Fiddlesticks, is it, sir? 43223 Help you out?" |
43223 | How now? 43223 How otherwise?" |
43223 | How, a sledge? 43223 Ivà n, dear-- you indeed? |
43223 | My gentle lad, what is''t you read,-- Romance or fairy fable? 43223 Now art thou a bachelor, stranger?" |
43223 | Now cheare up, sire abbot, did you never hear yet, That a fool he may learne a wise man witt? 43223 Now, lonely fisherman, who are you That say you saw this terrible wreck? |
43223 | O, is it weed, or fish, or floating hair,-- A tress o''golden hair, O''drownèd maiden''s hair,-- Above the nets at sea? 43223 On what? |
43223 | Or has your good woman, if one you have, In Cornwall ever been? 43223 Tell me and does my costume suit?" |
43223 | Then only the cook and me was left, And the delicate question,''Which Of us two goes to the kettle?'' 43223 Vot you vantsh mit your schnapps und your lager? |
43223 | Was that-- wind? 43223 What''s inward grace?" |
43223 | Where are we now, sir? 43223 Who has made you judge Of what you call God''s good, and what you think God''s evil? |
43223 | Why not? 43223 Why strikest not? |
43223 | You drank of the well, I warrant, betimes? |
43223 | ''t is a lost fear; Man but a rush against Othello''s breast, And he retires:--where should Othello go?-- Now, how dost thou look now? |
43223 | ( Have you not read the Rights of Man, by Tom Paine?) |
43223 | ( Is n''t it, old Fatchaps? |
43223 | --What do you think the parson found, When he got up and stared around? |
43223 | --_London Papers._ What, what, what, What''s the news from Swat? |
43223 | A centipede was happy quite, Until a frog in fun Said,"Pray, which leg comes after which?" |
43223 | A moment thus; then asked, With reverential wonder quivering through His sinking voice,"Who, spirit, and what, art thou?" |
43223 | ANTONY.--Will you be patient? |
43223 | Accuser, witness, judge, What, all in one? |
43223 | Ah me ve ara silicet, Vi laudu vimin thus? |
43223 | Ah, where is Weinsberg, sir, I pray? |
43223 | And I feel so weary and sad, Through the blow that I have had,-- You''ll sit, Fra Giacomo? |
43223 | And I reckon that you Are a stranger? |
43223 | And didst thou visit him no more? |
43223 | And gazing at the doleful brute My sweetheart gave a merry cry-- I quote her language with a sigh--"O Charlie, ai n''t he awful cute?" |
43223 | And hurried question,"Are they come?" |
43223 | And if_ he_ be lost-- but to save_ my_ soul, that is all your desire: Do you think that I care for_ my_ soul if my boy be gone to the fire? |
43223 | And pray, then, why do you marry us, If we''re all the plagues you say? |
43223 | And thrice spoke the monarch--"The cup to win, Is there never a wight who will venture in?" |
43223 | And to myself I murmured low, As on her upturned face and dress The moonlight fell,"Would she say No,-- By chance, or Yes?" |
43223 | And who art thou thus chosen forth Out of the multitude of living men To kill the innocent? |
43223 | And why do you take such care of us, And keep us so safe at home, And are never easy a moment If ever we chance to roam? |
43223 | And ye''ll pay the potheen? |
43223 | And yet our fathers deemed it two: Nor am I confident they erred;-- Are you? |
43223 | And-- that''s a peart hoss Thet you''ve got-- ain''t it now? |
43223 | Answer me,-- If I had wronged you, you would answer me Out of the dusty porches of the tomb:-- Is this a dream, a falsehood? |
43223 | Anything fallen again? |
43223 | Are is for us to brethe, What signifies who preaches if i ca nt brethe? |
43223 | Are the stars brighter than they are? |
43223 | Are they from heaven, these softenings of the heart? |
43223 | Art thou not, fatal vision, sensible To feeling as to sight? |
43223 | As I was walking all alane, I heard two corbies making a mane; The tane unto the t''other say,"Where sall we gang and dine to- day?" |
43223 | Ask ye what brings me here? |
43223 | Averrhoes''thought? |
43223 | Away went Gilpin,--who but he? |
43223 | BEATRICE.--Cardinal Camillo, You have a good repute for gentleness And wisdom: can it be that you sit here To countenance a wicked farce like this? |
43223 | BEATRICE.--What evidence? |
43223 | Be still, and gaze thou on, false king, and tell me what is this? |
43223 | Bending then with knee On earth, she spake a speech most piteous:--''See you this breast, O youth? |
43223 | But Sohrab looked upon the horse, and said:"Is this then Ruksh? |
43223 | But first he would convince his stubborn foe; And, rising sternly on one arm, he said:"Man, who art thou, who dost deny my words? |
43223 | But if some maid with beauty blest, As pure and fair as Heaven can make her, Will share my labor and my rest Till envious Death shall overtake her? |
43223 | But if some maiden with a heart On me should venture to bestow it, Pray, should I act the wiser part To take the treasure or forego it? |
43223 | But speak, Were Laura living, would the same stale play Of raging passion tearing out its heart Upon the rock of duty be performed?" |
43223 | But what art thou, That but by reflex canst show What his deity can do,-- As the false Egyptian spell Aped the true Hebrew miracle? |
43223 | But what if, seemingly afraid To bind her fate in Hymen''s fetter, She vow she means to die a maid, In answer to my loving letter? |
43223 | But what of the cakes and ale? |
43223 | But when the morning gilt the sky, What happened? |
43223 | But why harrow the feelings by lifting the curtain From these scenes of woe? |
43223 | But with a cold, incredulous voice, he said:--"What prate is this of fathers and revenge? |
43223 | But, answers the optimist, who knows what_ ambulando_ argument for poetry is not now preparing somewhere in the fatherland? |
43223 | CAMILLO(_ much moved_).--What shall we think, my Lords? |
43223 | CAMILLO.--What say ye now, my Lords? |
43223 | Ca n''t a man drop''s glass in yer shop But you must rar''? |
43223 | Can it be? |
43223 | Cats may have had their goose Cooked by tobacco- juice; Still why deny its use Thoughtfully taken? |
43223 | Cold, cold, my girl? |
43223 | Colts grew horses, beards turned gray, Deacon and deaconess dropped away, Children and grandchildren,--where were they? |
43223 | Could he sustain that shock, The doting father? |
43223 | De gray owl sing fum de chimbly top:"Who-- who-- is-- you- oo?" |
43223 | De gray owl sing fum de cypress tree:"Who-- who-- is-- you- oo?" |
43223 | Dead?-- That little cuss? |
43223 | Did not you speak? |
43223 | Did some rich man tyrannically use you? |
43223 | Didst thou not hear a noise? |
43223 | Do you go back dismayed? |
43223 | Do you think I was scared by the bones? |
43223 | Does the lapse of these mean a lapse in poetry at large? |
43223 | Dost hear old Chewton[1] roar? |
43223 | Doublet and hose, and powdered beaux? |
43223 | Eh? |
43223 | FIRST JUDGE.--Accused, do you persist in your denial? |
43223 | FIRST JUDGE.--Dare you, with lips yet white from the rack''s kiss Speak false? |
43223 | FIRST JUDGE.--Who urged you to it? |
43223 | Falls? |
43223 | Father, Son, Holy Ghost, Can not you bring again my blessèd yesterday?" |
43223 | Feasters and those full- fed are staying behind... Ah, why? |
43223 | Figure and phrase, that bent all ways Duns Scotus liked to twist''em? |
43223 | Flash again? |
43223 | For instance, as I left the cars, a youth with smutty face Said,"Shine?" |
43223 | For the Ahkoond I mourn, Who would n''t? |
43223 | For why should I live? |
43223 | For why? |
43223 | For you see the dern cuss had struck--"Water?" |
43223 | Go double or quits? |
43223 | Gone hence a month ago: Home again, this rough jaunt-- alone through night and snow-- What can the cause be? |
43223 | Hab I laid heah more''n a week? |
43223 | Hadst thou such cheer? |
43223 | Hans Breitmann gife a barty-- Where ish dat barty now? |
43223 | He ask me questions sooch as dose: Who baints mine nose so red? |
43223 | He does his best: Yet they gain on us, gain, till they reach,--one reaches... How utter the rest? |
43223 | He hath brought many captives home to Rome, Whose ransom did the general coffers fill: Did this in CÃ ¦ sar seem ambitious? |
43223 | He is wanton for... O God, Why give this wolf his taste? |
43223 | He runs und schumps und schmashes dings In all barts off der house; But vot off dot? |
43223 | Heard, have you? |
43223 | Here is Orsino''s name; Where is Orsino? |
43223 | Heu sed heu vix en imago, My missis mare sta; O cantu redit in mihi Hibernas arida? |
43223 | Hi, daddy, how does the old thing work?" |
43223 | How could you serve me so? |
43223 | How did he git thar? |
43223 | How did you learn what you relate?" |
43223 | How do I know what you say is true, When every mortal was swept from the deck? |
43223 | How do they know it? |
43223 | How far, then, has man ceased to sing in crowds, and taken to thinking by himself? |
43223 | How is''t with me, when every noise appalls me? |
43223 | How long Will he live thus? |
43223 | How? |
43223 | I ask you, are you innocent, or guilty? |
43223 | I ca n''t appwove this hawid waw;-- Why do n''t the pawties compwamise? |
43223 | I demand who were the participators In your offence? |
43223 | I do n''t appwove this hawid waw; Those dweadful bannahs hawt my eyes; And guns and dwums are such a baw,-- Why do n''t the pawties compwamise? |
43223 | I flung? |
43223 | I hear the church- bells ring; Oh say, what may it be?" |
43223 | I hear the sound of guns; Oh say, what may it be?" |
43223 | I pity the dumb victim at the altar-- But does the robed priest for his pity falter? |
43223 | I then said to a jehu, whose breath suggested gin,"Friend, can thee take me to a reputable inn?" |
43223 | I"Prior"sought, but could not see The"Hood"so late in front, And when I turned to hunt for"Lee,"O, where was my"Leigh Hunt"? |
43223 | I''d rack thee though I knew A thousand lives were perishing in thine-- What were ten thousand to a fame like mine? |
43223 | I''ll travel no farther, I''m dyin''for-- wather;-- Come on, if ye like,-- Can ye loan me a quather? |
43223 | I''ve sot here in a patient way, Say, hain''t I, Piper?" |
43223 | I( can you pardon my presumption?) |
43223 | Is his heart still? |
43223 | Is it so soft a questioner, That you would bandy lovers''talk with it Till it wind out your life and soul? |
43223 | Is not her bosom white as snow? |
43223 | Is not poetry really a flight from self and solitude to at least a conventional, imaginative society? |
43223 | Is that sign the proper sign Of Rustum''s son, or of some other man''s?" |
43223 | Is this your love so warm? |
43223 | Isaac eyed Toby, fearfully askant, And saw he was a strapper, stout and tall; Then put this question,"Pray, sir, what d''ye want?" |
43223 | JUDGE(_ to_ BEATRICE).--Know you this paper, Lady? |
43223 | JUDGE.--What did he say? |
43223 | JUDGE.--What is this? |
43223 | Keep silence fur yo''betters!--don''t you hear de banjo talkin''? |
43223 | Kind souls, what, weep you when you but behold Our CÃ ¦ sar''s vesture wounded? |
43223 | Knocking within._ MACBETH.--Whence is that knocking? |
43223 | Knows he that never took a pinch, Nosey, the pleasure thence which flows? |
43223 | Knows he the titillating joys Which my nose knows? |
43223 | LADY MACBETH.--Who was it that thus cried? |
43223 | Let me entreat for them-- what have they done? |
43223 | Look upon this man; When did you see him last? |
43223 | Lost she many, or lost she few?" |
43223 | MACBETH(_ within_).--Who''s there? |
43223 | MACBETH.--As I descended? |
43223 | MACBETH.--But wherefore could not I pronounce"Amen"? |
43223 | MACBETH.--Hark!-- Who lies i''the second chamber? |
43223 | MACBETH.--When? |
43223 | Move hence? |
43223 | My fist-- why not crunch that? |
43223 | My mother laughed; I soon found out That ancient ladies have no feeling: My father frowned; but how should gout See any happiness in kneeling? |
43223 | My stomach is not ruled by other men''s, And, grumbling for a reason, quaintly begs Wherefore should master rise before the hens Have laid their eggs? |
43223 | Nebuchadnezzah!_ Is this heah me, or not me? |
43223 | Next ask that dumpled hag, stood snuffling by, With her three frowsy- browsy brats o''babes, The scum o''the kennel, cream o''the filth- heap-- Faugh? |
43223 | No fear, this time, your mother flings... Flings? |
43223 | No? |
43223 | No? |
43223 | No? |
43223 | Now how long will a church ful of are last at that rate, I ask you-- say 15 minits-- and then wats to be did? |
43223 | O Kìrill under me, Could I do more? |
43223 | O fancy, why hast thou let die So many a frolic fashion? |
43223 | Of cawce, the twoilet has its chawms; But why must all the vulgah cwowd Pawsist in spawting unifawms, In cullahs so extwemely loud? |
43223 | Oh say, what may it be?" |
43223 | Or is de debbil got me? |
43223 | Or is it some historic page, Of kings and crowns unstable?" |
43223 | Or roguish lawyer made you lose your little All in a lawsuit? |
43223 | Or the attorney? |
43223 | Or what has taken their place? |
43223 | Or what to God would be that self- same power, If so bereaved?" |
43223 | Our rude forefathers deemed it two; Can you imagine so absurd A view? |
43223 | P''r''aps Some on you chaps Might know Jim Wild? |
43223 | Pap''s got his patent right, and rich as all creation; But where''s the peace and comfort that we all had before? |
43223 | Passing a neighbor''s cottage in his way,-- Mark Fenton''s,--him he took with short delay To bear him company,--for who could say What need might be? |
43223 | Pray, what do you know of a woman''s necessities? |
43223 | Put case I had n''t''em on me, could I ha''bought This sort- o''-kind- o''-what- you- might- call toy, This pebble- thing, o''the boy- thing? |
43223 | Right beautiful the dewy meads appear Besprinkled by the rosy- fingered girl; What then,--if I prefer my pillow- beer To early pearl? |
43223 | Said I,"What can the matter be? |
43223 | Say, would you seek instruction? |
43223 | Sea- serpents obsolete? |
43223 | Shall I descend? |
43223 | Shall I lean out-- look-- learn The truth whatever it be? |
43223 | Shall it be That earth must lose her wholly? |
43223 | Shall nought be said of theories dead? |
43223 | Shall she bear Life''s burden twice, and life''s temptations twice, While God is justice?" |
43223 | Shall we not defend her ever, As we''d defend That fair maiden, kind and tender, Calling us friend? |
43223 | Sihons and Ogs? |
43223 | Sin? |
43223 | So soon is resumed your chase? |
43223 | So the harsh phrase passed unreproved: Still mute--(O brothers, was it sin?) |
43223 | Sweet maiden of Passamaquoddy, Shall we seek for communion of souls Where the deep Mississippi meanders, Or the distant Saskatchewan rolls? |
43223 | Take next the miser''s contrast, who destroys Health, fame, and fortune in a round of joys; Will any paper match him? |
43223 | Tell me how many she had aboard,-- Wives, and husbands, and lovers true,-- How did it fare with her human hoard? |
43223 | Tell me, knife- grinder, how came you to grind knives? |
43223 | Tell me, what is that far away,-- There, where over the isle of sand Hangs the mist- cloud sullen and gray? |
43223 | Thar''s your way To the left of yon tree; But-- a-- look h''yur, say, Wo n''t you come up to tea? |
43223 | The Ptolemaic system? |
43223 | The calender, amazed to see His neighbor in such trim, Laid down his pipe, flew to the gate, And thus accosted him:"What news? |
43223 | The courteous citizen bade me to his feast With hollow words, and overly[7] request:"Come, will ye dine with me this holiday?" |
43223 | The hasty gentleman, whose blood runs high, Who picks a quarrel, if you step awry, Who ca n''t a jest, a hint, or look endure,-- What is he?--what? |
43223 | The same? |
43223 | The voice, the glance, the heart I sought-- give answer, where are they? |
43223 | Then I looked up at Nye, And he gazed upon me; And he rose with a sigh, And said,"Can this be? |
43223 | Then he bethought him,"Shall this wonder die, And leave behind no shadow? |
43223 | Then stooping, peering round-- what is it now he lacks? |
43223 | These dragons( their tails, you remark, Into bunches of gillyflowers grew),-- When Noah came out of the ark, Did these lie in wait for his crew? |
43223 | They hanged him in chains for a show-- we had always borne a good name-- To be hanged for a thief-- and then put away-- isn''t that enough shame? |
43223 | They sayde,"And why should this thing be, What danger lowers by land or sea? |
43223 | This man''s? |
43223 | Thou didst, thou didst, my daughter deare? |
43223 | Thou shalt have one God only: who Would be at the expense of two? |
43223 | Though stern I sometimes be, To thee, thou know''st, I was not so,-- Who could be so to thee? |
43223 | Thy vehicle is doubtless made to carry folks about in; Why then prevaricate?" |
43223 | To prevent all mistakes, that low price I will fix; Now what will that make? |
43223 | Too hard To die this way, torn piecemeal? |
43223 | Und oop dere rose a meermaid, Vot had n''t got nodings on, Und she say,"O, Ritter Hugo, Vare you goes mit yourself alone?" |
43223 | Und vhere der plaze goes vrom der lamp Vene''er der glim I douse; How gan I all dose dings eggsblain To dot schmall Yawcob Strauss? |
43223 | Up from the ground he sprung, and gazed, but who could paint that gaze? |
43223 | V. Ah-- you, that have lived so soft, what should_ you_ know of the night, The blast and the burning shame and the bitter frost and the fright? |
43223 | Was it the squire for killing of his game? |
43223 | Was it the squire? |
43223 | Was my sire not King Of all broad Phrygia? |
43223 | Was the transaction illegal? |
43223 | Was there no sinking at the mother''s heart When, all equipt, they turned them to depart? |
43223 | Wats Pol? |
43223 | Wats Pollus to sinners who are ded? |
43223 | We ca n''t never choose him o''course,--thet''s flat; Guess we shall hev to come round,( do n''t you?) |
43223 | Well, grant''t was genius; and is genius naught? |
43223 | Well, here''s to us; Eh? |
43223 | Well, thar-- Good- bye,-- No more, sir,--I-- Eh? |
43223 | Werther had a love for Charlotte Such as words could never utter; Would you know how first he met her? |
43223 | Whar have you been for the last three year That you have n''t heard folks tell How Jimmy Bludso passed in his checks The night of the Prairie Belle? |
43223 | Whar is you tryin''to go, sah? |
43223 | What am I saying? |
43223 | What are a thousand lives? |
43223 | What are our poets, take them as they fall, Good, bad, rich, poor, much read, not read at all? |
43223 | What baron or squire, Or knight of the shire, Lives half so well as a holy friar? |
43223 | What baron or squire, Or knight of the shire, Lives half so well as a holy friar? |
43223 | What cares he? |
43223 | What cause withholds you, then, to mourn for him? |
43223 | What comes of it all? |
43223 | What gave Death ever from his kingdom back To check the sceptic''s laughter? |
43223 | What has been done? |
43223 | What help, as, nigh and nigher, The flames came furious? |
43223 | What if the lark does carol in the sky, Soaring beyond the sight to find him out,-- Wherefore am I to rise at such a fly? |
43223 | What if, aweary of the strife That long has lured the dear deceiver, She promise to amend her life, And sin no more; can I believe her? |
43223 | What if, in spite of her disdain, I find my heart intwined about With Cupid''s dear delicious chain So closely that I ca n''t get out? |
43223 | What is his poor life? |
43223 | What is it startles you? |
43223 | What is the shrinkage, quality as well as quantity, in the proportion of verse to prose since the invention of printing? |
43223 | What is this meets my hand, Moth- eaten, mouldy, and Covered with fluff, Faded and stiff and scant? |
43223 | What makes you star,-- You over thar? |
43223 | What means this scrawl? |
43223 | What might be her cost? |
43223 | What of homely, comfortable poetry, too, commonplace perhaps, but dear to declaiming youth? |
43223 | What of that? |
43223 | What of the uncritical folk? |
43223 | What progress? |
43223 | What should I do with slaying any more? |
43223 | What stands now, since people have come indoors, for the old ring of dancers, the old songs of May and Harvest Home? |
43223 | What strange adventure stares Up at us in your face? |
43223 | What though I can not meet my bills? |
43223 | What though I suffer toothache''s ills? |
43223 | What though I swallow countless pills? |
43223 | What though I''m in a sorry case? |
43223 | What to me Is my creative power, bereft of love? |
43223 | What was the white you touched, There at his side? |
43223 | What would you ask More than God''s power, from nothing to create?" |
43223 | What''s here?" |
43223 | What''s that you say?-- Why, dern it!--sho!-- No? |
43223 | What, have these dry lips drank So deep of the sweets of pleasure--_ Sub rosa_, but quite without measure-- That Montepulciano tastes rank? |
43223 | What, you still head the race, Your eyes and tongue and teeth crave fresh food, Satan- face? |
43223 | When down the lane she watched them as they went Till out of sight, was no forefeeling sent Of coming ill? |
43223 | When you ought to be thanking heaven That your Plague is out of the way, You all keep fussing and fretting--"Where is_ my_ Plague to- day?" |
43223 | Where are thy songs whose passion Turned thought to fire in knight and squire, While hearts of ladies beat? |
43223 | Where ish de himmelstrahlende Stern-- De shtar of de shpirit''s light? |
43223 | Where ish de lofely golden cloud Dat float on de moundain''s prow? |
43223 | Where thy sweet style, ours, ours erewhile? |
43223 | Where were you in that hour of death? |
43223 | Where''s the unriven rock Can bide such blasting in its flintiest part As that soft sentient thing,--the human heart? |
43223 | Wherefore welcome were Xerxes, Ximenes, Xanthus, Xavier? |
43223 | Wherein hath CÃ ¦ sar thus deserved your loves? |
43223 | Which way to Weinsberg? |
43223 | Who art thou then, that canst so touch my soul? |
43223 | Who can control his fate? |
43223 | Who dreads to the dust returning? |
43223 | Who let her in? |
43223 | Who stands here As my accuser? |
43223 | Who vas it cuts dot schmoodth blace oudt Vrom der hair upon mine he d? |
43223 | Who''ll paint the Countess, as she lies to- night In state within the chapel? |
43223 | Who''s flittering round the peat- stack in such weather? |
43223 | Whom should I marry?--should it be A dashing damsel, gay and pert, A pattern of inconstancy; Or selfish, mercenary flirt? |
43223 | Why did you bring these daggers from the place? |
43223 | Why did you sit so quiet? |
43223 | Why dost not answer plainly? |
43223 | Why from a comfortable pillow start To see faint flushes in the east awaken? |
43223 | Why must it wait there, along with all the old metaphysical questions, for a decision that never can be handed down? |
43223 | Why must this glutton leave the faded, choose the fresh? |
43223 | Why should he call me to- night, when he knows that I can not go? |
43223 | Why was not law observed? |
43223 | Why weepest thou so sore? |
43223 | Why wish we warfare? |
43223 | Why, there''s two of you there-- can''t you help one another?" |
43223 | Will all great Neptune''s ocean wash this blood Clean from my hand? |
43223 | Will not this thing outlast The fairest creature fashioned in the flesh? |
43223 | Will nothing appease, naught tire The furies? |
43223 | Will you stay awhile? |
43223 | Wilt thou not go and get for her who died Most nobly, bravest- souled, some gift?'' |
43223 | Wine? |
43223 | Wo n''t Stewart, or some of our dry- goods importers, Take a contract for clothing our wives and our daughters? |
43223 | Wo n''t some kind philanthropist, seeing that aid is So needed at once by these indigent ladies, Take charge of the matter? |
43223 | Wo n''t somebody, moved by this touching description, Come forward to- morrow and head a subscription? |
43223 | Would she have owned how pleased she was, And told her love with widow''s pride? |
43223 | Would you know why I summoned you together? |
43223 | Wut shall we du? |
43223 | Wuz dat a cannon shot me? |
43223 | Ya- as, you, What,--two? |
43223 | Ye''ve eyes like a bat!--can ye see in the dark?" |
43223 | You all did see that on the Lupercal I thrice presented him a kingly crown, Which he did thrice refuse: was this ambition? |
43223 | You know friends-- which is which? |
43223 | You''ll bless it with your prayers, And quaff a cup, I trust, To the health of the saint up stairs? |
43223 | Yourself, for example? |
43223 | [ 10] You see this pebble- stone? |
43223 | _ Bene, satis, male_,-- Where was I? |
43223 | _ Lover._ But come, thou saucy, pert romancer, Who is as fair as Phoebe? |
43223 | _ Lover._ Has Phoebe not a heavenly brow? |
43223 | _ Lover._ Say, what will turn that frisking coney Into the toils of matrimony? |
43223 | _ Osgood._ All through a hundred years?" |
43223 | a sound of stealthy footsteps and of voices whispering low, Was it nothing but the young leaves, or the brooklet''s murmuring flow? |
43223 | ai n''t it terrible? |
43223 | and children-- where are they? |
43223 | and showers of frogs? |
43223 | and what are_ you_? |
43223 | and what was taught, In Salamanca''s seat? |
43223 | and will you give me leave? |
43223 | are you of his kin? |
43223 | are_ they_ his mother? |
43223 | asked,"Which of them, pray?" |
43223 | can thee take me to an inn? |
43223 | dead? |
43223 | do you come as a spy? |
43223 | dost thou lie so low? |
43223 | down, old boy!--not quite so free,-- The thing thou sniffest is no game for thee.-- But what''s the meaning? |
43223 | father, my father, what more can there rest? |
43223 | fill a fresh bumper,--for why should we go logwood While the{ nectar} still reddens our cups as they flow? |
43223 | from the heart of that far- floating gloom, What gleams on the darkness so swanlike and white? |
43223 | hast thou then no robe, No funeral honors for the maid to bring? |
43223 | have you ever heard, when the storm on the downs began, The wind that''ill wail like a child and the sea that''ill moan like a man? |
43223 | he mutters Brokenly now-- that was a difficult breath-- Another? |
43223 | how long has she been? |
43223 | must I stay?" |
43223 | nay-- what was there left to fall? |
43223 | not a trace Of all the glory that environed her, That mellow nimbus circling round my star?" |
43223 | or Covetous parson for his tithes distraining? |
43223 | or art thou but A dagger of the mind, a false creation, Proceeding from the heat- oppressèd brain? |
43223 | or have I Spoken the very truth?" |
43223 | or parson of the parish? |
43223 | quoth Hodge, with wondering eyes, And voice not much unlike an Indian yell;"What were they made for, then, you dog?" |
43223 | said this young Turk;"A liquid or a paste? |
43223 | sayest thou nothing? |
43223 | she cried in grief,_ Campbell._"My eyes are dim with tears,_ Bayard Taylor._ How shall I live through all the days? |
43223 | she murmured,"who says I forgot? |
43223 | straight he sayth;"Where is my wife, Elizabeth?" |
43223 | that I say,-- Will ye heed what I told ye? |
43223 | was ever such a pair? |
43223 | wert thou ever there before? |
43223 | what falls? |
43223 | what news? |
43223 | what of that? |
43223 | what power divine Shall henceforth wash the river Rhine? |
43223 | what wanteth there For curious cost, and wondrous choice of cheer? |
43223 | what''s the odds?" |
43223 | what? |
43223 | when comes such another? |
43223 | when? |
43223 | where was he? |
43223 | where was he? |
43223 | where was_ he_? |
43223 | where? |
43223 | whither are you going? |
43223 | who knows? |
43223 | who said what of one in a quag? |
43223 | wilt thou be he, Who art my judge? |
43223 | wilt thou say That I did murder my own father? |
43223 | would ye ask What ye should do? |
43223 | ye know not what, And therefore on the chance that it may be Some evil, will ye kill us? |
43223 | you''ve seen her? |
43223 | you-- what have you heard? |
43223 | your tidings tell; Tell me you must and shall,-- Say why bareheaded you are come, Or why you come at all?" |
5902 | ''Is this reality, or delusion?'' 5902 ''What matters it how far we go?'' |
5902 | Aha,laughed Siegfried,"so that is what the fair lady has been up to, is it? |
5902 | Aha,laughed the mother,"is not this an excellent substitute for tobacco, far more refreshing than the nasty weed itself? |
5902 | All help is from Heaven, sir,said I;"but can you put a stranger in the way to help you? |
5902 | And his hair,inquired the second sister,"is it straight or curling, black or fair?" |
5902 | And how did you manage on the twelfth? |
5902 | And how many hours a day did you do lessons? |
5902 | And is he gone, and is he gone? |
5902 | And washing? |
5902 | And what are they made of? |
5902 | And,he continued, looking at his mother and me,"will you not welcome him as a friend and a brother to our family circle?" |
5902 | Are five nights warmer than one night, then? |
5902 | Are these leaves to form a substitute for tobacco? |
5902 | Art thou not happy with me, Pysche? |
5902 | Bless us,cried the Mayor,"what''s that?" |
5902 | But about his toes? |
5902 | But are thou a cousin* of Robin Hood then? 5902 But how CAN it have got there without my knowing it?" |
5902 | But the horrible wretch is never going to swallow him all at once, father? |
5902 | But where is the wine, King Gunther? |
5902 | But why,she asked,"did you not tell me of this at first? |
5902 | But,said Franz,"how can the snake separate the flesh from the bones without teeth? |
5902 | Can YOU do sums? |
5902 | Can you answer useful questions? |
5902 | Can you do Division? 5902 Can you do Subtraction? |
5902 | Can you do addition? |
5902 | Child,he asked,"was not your father called Mustapha the tailor?" |
5902 | Child,said the mother, as she looked upon the silver dishes and smelled the savory odor from the food,"who has given us these wonderful things? |
5902 | Could any of you enjoy a little jelly? |
5902 | Did anybody ever think of eating serpents? |
5902 | Did you hear them? 5902 Did you kill this creature, my dear Fritz?" |
5902 | Do I not fill thy heart as thou fillest mine? |
5902 | Do n''t you mean''purpose''? |
5902 | Do you know languages? 5902 Do you know why it''s called a whiting?" |
5902 | Do you know,said I to the boys,"how the natives of India secure a newly captured elephant?" |
5902 | Do you notice,said the elder sister,"that while she says much about what her husband does for her, she says nothing at all about him? |
5902 | Do you think to stay me thus? |
5902 | Do you think we might begin now, father? |
5902 | Dost thou not mind, old woman,he said,"Since thou made me sup and dine? |
5902 | Fritz, what are you about? |
5902 | Good people, do you know that to- morrow is a very great and important day? 5902 Has he blue eyes or brown?" |
5902 | Have they any firearms? |
5902 | Have you any further command? |
5902 | He came to the door with a corkscrew in his hand--"What did he want? |
5902 | How COULD he turn them out with his nose, you know? |
5902 | How are we to eat our soup when he does come? |
5902 | How is bread made? |
5902 | How? |
5902 | I mean, what makes them so shiny? |
5902 | I prithee, good fellow, O where art thou now? |
5902 | I''m sure you must be weary With soaring up so high; Will you rest upon my little bed? |
5902 | If seven maids with seven mops Swept it for half a year, Do you suppose,the Walrus said,"That they could get it clear?" |
5902 | In a garden, or in the hedges? |
5902 | Is there generally? |
5902 | Look you, sir,said I,"if I venture upon your deliverance, are you willing to make two conditions with me?" |
5902 | May we not attack it, father? |
5902 | May we not establish a pearl fishery at once, father? |
5902 | Miss Montrose came quickly forward--"Who? 5902 My dear prince,"cried the terrified princess,"what have you done? |
5902 | My dear wife,exclaimed I,"this dish is indeed a masterpiece of culinary art, but where had you met with it? |
5902 | My good mother,said the princess,"what is a roc, and where may one get an egg?" |
5902 | Now, father, one thought occupies me continually: will my note ever reach this Englishwoman? 5902 Now,"I continued,"who will try this delicacy?" |
5902 | Now,said my wife, tasting the soup with the stick with which she had been stirring it,"dinner is ready; but where can Fritz be?" |
5902 | O mother,he cried,"have I an uncle?" |
5902 | O, what''s the matter? |
5902 | O, where does faithful Gelert roam, The flower of all his race; So true, so brave,--a lamb at home, A lion in the chase? |
5902 | Of course not,said the Mock Turtle;"why, if a fish came to ME, and told me he was going a journey, I should say''With what porpoise?''" |
5902 | Of course you know your A B C? |
5902 | Oh, as to the whiting,said the Mock Turtle,"they-- you''ve seen them, of course?" |
5902 | Oh, what have they done? |
5902 | Oh, who are these,the sheriff he said,"Come tripping over the lee?" |
5902 | One? 5902 Only a scraping of shoes on the mat? |
5902 | Or must all this great bagful be used at once? 5902 Or would you like the Mock Turtle to sing you a song?" |
5902 | Send Roland on a peaceful mission? 5902 Shall a mere mortal,"they said,"venture to seek the love of Venus, queen of beauty?" |
5902 | Shall we try another figure of the Lobster- Quadrille? |
5902 | The dog would lose its temper, would n''t it? |
5902 | The night is fine,the Walrus said,"Do you admire the view? |
5902 | Then the eleventh day must have been a holiday? |
5902 | We gave you the opportunity of doing it,the Red Queen remarked:"but I dare say you''ve not had many lessons in manners yet?" |
5902 | Well, it is n''t PICKED at all,Alice explained:"it''s GROUND--""How many acres of ground?" |
5902 | Well, then,said I,"leave the rest to me; I see they are all asleep; it is an easy thing to kill them all; but shall we rather take them prisoners?" |
5902 | What IS the use of repeating all that stuff,the Mock Turtle interrupted,"if you do n''t explain it as you go on? |
5902 | What are you thinking of? 5902 What business do you follow, my nephew,"he asked;"have you any trade?" |
5902 | What can have made us oversleep ourselves like this? |
5902 | What do you mean by''If you really are a queen?'' 5902 What does the Jew give you for such a plate?" |
5902 | What had kept him so long, and why had he turned blackamoor? |
5902 | What hast thou here? |
5902 | What have I done, uncle,said the boy, trembling with fear,"to be treated in such a manner?" |
5902 | What have we to do with genii? |
5902 | What is his sorrow? |
5902 | What is it? |
5902 | What is that I hear? |
5902 | What is that, good mother? |
5902 | What is the cause of lightning? |
5902 | What is the good of pressing them, father? |
5902 | What is the meaning of all this preparation for public festivity? |
5902 | What is thy name? |
5902 | What news? 5902 What news? |
5902 | What possible connection can there be between bread and tobacco graters? 5902 What shall we do? |
5902 | What sort of a dance is it? |
5902 | What time of day? |
5902 | What was THAT like? |
5902 | What was that? |
5902 | What wouldst thou have? |
5902 | What wouldst thou have? |
5902 | What wouldst thou? |
5902 | What''s one and one and one and one and one and one and one and one and one and one? |
5902 | What''s to be done with him now? |
5902 | What,said I to myself,"can this English vessel be doing thus far from the usual track of ships?" |
5902 | Where are those brutes, your enemies,said I;"do you know where they are gone?" |
5902 | Where,said she on her way home,"can Aladdin get so many large gold trays and such precious stones to fill them? |
5902 | Which of the cattle shall we saddle for you, Jenny? |
5902 | Who ever said it was? |
5902 | Who gives me this maid? |
5902 | Who must we yield to? 5902 Who or what has been pommeling the boy?" |
5902 | Whom shall I leave in command of the rear guard? |
5902 | Why wait until the last moment with such joyful news? |
5902 | Why, what are YOUR shoes done with? |
5902 | Why? |
5902 | Will good King Gunther ever sail back again into the Rhine country? |
5902 | Will this stuff keep any time? |
5902 | Will you take me over the river? |
5902 | With extras? |
5902 | Would n''t it really? |
5902 | Would you believe it, father? 5902 Would you like to see a little of it?" |
5902 | You know what to beautify is, I suppose? |
5902 | You take some flour--"Where do you pick the flower? |
5902 | *[ Footnote: Spells, bewitches] Had the prayers of Ingeborg at length availed? |
5902 | --"Will they give us quarter then?" |
5902 | Alice did not feel encouraged to ask any more questions about it, so she turned to the Mock Turtle, and said,"What else had you to learn?" |
5902 | And is this kind of snake poisonous?" |
5902 | And ought I not to be willing to give her to one who values her at so great a price?" |
5902 | And what IS this on my head?" |
5902 | And when he came bold Robin before, Robin askt him courteously,"O, hast thou any money to spare"For my merry men and me?" |
5902 | And would you believe it? |
5902 | Are the sailors gone? |
5902 | At that summons the genie appeared to him as he had to Aladdin and said,"What wouldst thou have? |
5902 | But have you really done all this work yourselves?" |
5902 | But if some maiden with a heart On me should venture to bestow it, Pray should I act the wiser part To take the treasure, or forego it? |
5902 | But what if, seemingly afraid To bind her fate in Hymen''s fetter, She vow she means to die a maid, In answer to my loving letter? |
5902 | But when they met with Little John, He unto them did say,"O master, pray where have you been, You have tarried so long away?" |
5902 | Can you name these deeds in just the order in which you have read them? |
5902 | Can you see any reason why the one name should be used for both? |
5902 | Can you tell me where the old lamp now is?" |
5902 | Could he longer escape the avenging anger of Balder? |
5902 | Darest thou to enter its stagnant depths to do battle with the monster and to deliver us from her ravages?" |
5902 | Did I say all? |
5902 | Did you hear them?" |
5902 | Did you not find the work too hard?" |
5902 | Did you take your mysterious voyage in search of him, or did you meet him by chance? |
5902 | Divide a loaf by a knife-- what''s the answer to that?" |
5902 | Do Psyche''s sisters, for instance, represent anything? |
5902 | Do you know, my eagle caught these pretty little fellows for me? |
5902 | Do you think that is a good plan?" |
5902 | Do you think they can be pearls? |
5902 | First and foremost, how did you bring down those beautiful little animals you have there?" |
5902 | Gunther, however, was unmoved by the warning, and turning to Siegfried, he asked,"Will you not help me to carry out my plan? |
5902 | Had we not better get a supply from Woodlands? |
5902 | Had we really heard guns from a strange ship? |
5902 | Has the sultan remembered us?" |
5902 | Have they taken away the boats? |
5902 | Have you forgotten that you promised me the hand of the lady Kriemhild?" |
5902 | He was now assailed with a storm of questions from all sides:"Where had he been?" |
5902 | How could you serve me so? |
5902 | How did you shoot it? |
5902 | How do you preserve these sorts of fish? |
5902 | How many of the bold deeds of Frithiof can you recall without turning to the story? |
5902 | How should she confess that, after these many months, she had never seen her husband; that she knew not at all what manner of man he was? |
5902 | How were we to saddle and bridle a bird? |
5902 | I came as near them undiscovered as I could, and then, before any of them saw me, I called aloud to them in Spanish,"What are ye, gentlemen?" |
5902 | I have within my pantry Good store of all that''s nice; I''m sure you''re very welcome-- Will you please to take a slice?" |
5902 | If your nation beat them, how came you to be taken? |
5902 | Instantly the same genie that he had seen in the cave appeared before him and said,"What wouldst thou? |
5902 | Insulted by a lazy ribald With idle pipe and vesture piebald? |
5902 | Is it a real man, or an angel?" |
5902 | Is it not worthy of the princess, my daughter? |
5902 | Is it possible you are going to make snuff? |
5902 | Is n''t THAT grand? |
5902 | Is not that the case?" |
5902 | Just as he said this, what could hap At the chamber door but a gentle tap? |
5902 | Little cowboy, what have you heard, Up on the lonely rath''s green mound? |
5902 | Master.--But why did not your side recover you from the hands of your enemies, then? |
5902 | Master.--Do they come hither? |
5902 | Master.--Have you been here with them? |
5902 | Master.--How beat? |
5902 | Master.--Well, Friday, and what does your nation do with the men they take; do they carry them away and eat them, as these did? |
5902 | Master.--Where do they carry them? |
5902 | May I not establish a warren there? |
5902 | Noticing his gloom, Siegfried exclaimed:"What troubles you, King Gunther? |
5902 | Now that I am speaking of the palace, pray how do you like it? |
5902 | On the way he began to cry out,"Who will exchange old lamps for new ones?" |
5902 | Only do tell me, where did those seeds come from?" |
5902 | Only the grasshopper and the bee? |
5902 | Only the plaintive yellow- bird Singing in sultry fields around? |
5902 | Or did those sounds proceed from a Malay pirate, who would rob and murder us? |
5902 | Or had the boys again fired? |
5902 | Pennyworth only of beautiful Soup? |
5902 | Potted, salted or smoked?" |
5902 | Remembering that the butterfly was the emblem of the soul, can you imagine what the artists meant to show by this? |
5902 | Said the cunning spider to the fly,"Dear friend, what shall I do To prove the warm affection I''ve always felt for you? |
5902 | Shall I be able to find, and to save her?" |
5902 | Shall we be trotting home again?" |
5902 | Shall we brook such insult? |
5902 | Sing her''Turtle Soup,''will you, old fellow?" |
5902 | So daring in love, and so dauntless in war, Have ye e''er heard of gallant like young Lochinvar? |
5902 | THE SPIDER AND THE FLY By MARY HOWITT"Will you walk into my parlor?" |
5902 | Take a bone from a dog: what remains?" |
5902 | The master was an old Turtle-- we used to call him Tortoise--"[ Illustration: ALICE SAT STILL]"Why did you call him Tortoise, if he was n''t one?" |
5902 | The poor man, with tears running down his face, and trembling, looking like one astonished, returned--"Am I talking to God, or man? |
5902 | The sorcerer regarded not their scoffs, hooting, or anything they could say, but continued to cry shrilly,"Who will exchange old lamps for new ones?" |
5902 | The vizier was charmed, and the sultan continued,"What sayest thou to such a present? |
5902 | They are waiting on the shingle-- will you come and join the dance? |
5902 | This stranger may be on different shores from these entirely; every stroke of my paddle may be carrying me further from the blazing signal: who knows? |
5902 | To go to the realms of the dead-- what did it mean but that she must die? |
5902 | To which type do you think the story of Cupid and Psyche belongs? |
5902 | Tom Smith answered immediately,"Is that Robinson?" |
5902 | Upon this, Will Atkins cried out,"For God''s sake, captain, give me quarter; what have I done? |
5902 | Was it a European vessel close upon our shores, and were we about to be linked once more to civilized life? |
5902 | Was it fancy? |
5902 | We have said that this story is an allegory; do you understand just what an allegory is? |
5902 | What brings you to our court?" |
5902 | What can be more delightful than to find harmony of opinion in those we love, when a great and momentous decision has to be taken? |
5902 | What can we do by ourselves?" |
5902 | What did the oracle say? |
5902 | What do you suppose is the use of a child without any meaning? |
5902 | What if, aweary of the strife That long has lured the dear deceiver, She promise to amend her life, And sin no more; can I believe her? |
5902 | What if, in spite of her disdain, I find my heart intwined about With Cupid''s dear delicious chain So closely that I ca n''t get out? |
5902 | What in the world can it be? |
5902 | What is your case?" |
5902 | What may we give him to eat? |
5902 | What put it into your head?" |
5902 | What right have you to call yourself so? |
5902 | What shall we do? |
5902 | What was it they saw in the narrow valley before them? |
5902 | What was the real fault of Psyche-- the folly that cost her her happiness? |
5902 | What would I advise? |
5902 | What''s the French for fiddle- de- dee?" |
5902 | What?" |
5902 | When I come again to my palace and people ask tidings, what can I say but that we have conquered cities, provinces and countries and left Roland dead? |
5902 | When does the next post come in, Ernest?" |
5902 | Where are they?" |
5902 | Where did Fritz find him? |
5902 | Where did you get it? |
5902 | Where now is the picture that fancy touched bright,-- Thy parent''s fond pressure, and love''s honeyed kiss? |
5902 | Where shall we go?" |
5902 | Where would be the use of it?" |
5902 | Where''s Fritz?" |
5902 | Which shall sing?" |
5902 | Who cares for fish, Game, or any other dish? |
5902 | Who could tell? |
5902 | Who for such dainties would not stoop? |
5902 | Who has anything to propose?" |
5902 | Who would not give all else for two p ennyworth only of beautiful Soup? |
5902 | Whom should I marry?--should it be A dashing damsel, gay and pert, A pattern of inconstancy; Or selfish, mercenary flirt? |
5902 | Why not build a raft and all get on shore together?" |
5902 | Will any one come?" |
5902 | Will share my labor and my rest Till envious Death shall overtake her? |
5902 | Will you not remember that and try to shield him while in battle?" |
5902 | Will you, wo n''t you, will you, wo n''t you, will you join the dance? |
5902 | Will you, wo n''t you, will you, wo n''t you, will you join the dance? |
5902 | Will you, wo n''t you, will you, wo n''t you, wo n''t you join the dance? |
5902 | Will you, wo n''t you, will you, wo n''t you, wo n''t you join the dance?''" |
5902 | With the slaves of the ring and of the lamp to help me, how can I fail? |
5902 | Wouldst thou enter our household? |
5902 | You hope, because you''re old and obese, To find in the furry civic robe ease? |
5902 | You must discover an iron mine next, for iron is what ostriches chiefly live on, is it not? |
5902 | You threaten us, fellow? |
5902 | [ Illustration: ALICE CONSIDERED]"Then you think nothing would remain?" |
5902 | [ Illustration: IN THE GREENWOOD]"How many miles is it to thy true love? |
5902 | [ Illustration: THE AGOUTI]"But the sucking- pig,"said Jack;"where did you get it?" |
5902 | [ Illustration: TWO QUEENS ASLEEP AT ONCE]"What AM I to do?" |
5902 | and why I might not order myself and my business so, that I might be able to go over thither, as they were to come to me? |
5902 | cried Fritz;"a good addition to your stores, is it not?" |
5902 | cried his mother,"was it the lamp that caused that horrible genie to speak to me instead of to you? |
5902 | cried the Mayor,"d''ye think I''ll brook Being worse treated than a cook? |
5902 | do n''t you see my harpoon?" |
5902 | do you not know it? |
5902 | how far off the coast was from whence they came? |
5902 | said I;"do you so long for its refreshing smell?" |
5902 | said the mother,"and how came that vile one to speak to me instead of to you, whom he had seen in the cave?" |
5902 | said the person whom he asked,"have you never seen nor heard of her? |
5902 | shouted the boys, interrupting the narrative;"who came forward?" |
5902 | thou silly old man, What news, I do thee pray?" |
5902 | thou silly old woman, What news hast thou for me?" |
5902 | thought I,''Can it be true, that a fellow- creature breathes with us the air of this lonely region?'' |
5902 | what has become of everybody? |
5902 | what is that sound which now''larms on his ear? |
5902 | what kind of boats they had? |
5902 | what news? |
5902 | what news? |
5902 | what they ventured over so far from home for? |
5902 | whence is that flame which now bursts on his eye? |
5902 | why did they leave us behind? |
9380 | ''Oh, boatswain, down in the for''ard hold What water do you find?'' 9380 ''Oh, how does our good ship head to- night? |
9380 | ''Oh, what does the quadrant indicate? 9380 And do fish bite? |
9380 | And hast thou slain the Jabberwock? 9380 Dear Pig, are you willing to sell for one shilling Your ring?" |
9380 | Did I o''ercharge him a ha''penny? 9380 If seven maids with seven mops Swept it for half a year, Do you suppose,"the Walrus said,"That they could get it clear?" |
9380 | Oh, holy father,Alice said,"''twould grieve you, would it not? |
9380 | Race? 9380 The night is fine,"the Walrus said,"Do you admire the view?" |
9380 | Then why, O, Cumberbunce,I cried,"Did you come walking at my side And ask me if you, please, might sing, When you could not warble anything?" |
9380 | Who are you, aged man? |
9380 | You boast indeed of your wonderful speed-- but what is the boasting worth? 9380 ''What, no soap?'' 9380 ( Is n''t it, old Fatchops? 9380 --Or what? 9380 A THRENODY What, what, what, What''s the news from Swat? 9380 Ai n''t he cute? 9380 Ai n''t you sorry for him? 9380 Am I not as wild as the wind and more crazy? 9380 And I have said, my little Will, Why should not he continue still A thing of Nature''s rearing? 9380 And I said,Oh, gentle pieman, why so very, very merry? |
9380 | And I-- was I brusque and surly? |
9380 | And I? |
9380 | And as for my hair, Do you think I should care To comb it at night with my toes? |
9380 | And colics? |
9380 | And how does the sextant stand?'' |
9380 | And must we really part for good, But meet again here where we''ve stood? |
9380 | And now it''s taken wing; I s''pose no man before or since Dreamt such a funny thing? |
9380 | And who can wonder that it made That loving creature cry? |
9380 | And yet, why should I clasp the earthful urn? |
9380 | Art on the chokesome cherry bent? |
9380 | Art thou a Buddhist, or dost thou indeed Put faith in the monstrous Mohammedan creed? |
9380 | Art thou a Ghebir-- a blinded Parsee? |
9380 | Art thou not greater who art less? |
9380 | As I mentioned before, by what light is it lighted? |
9380 | At night if he suddenly screams and wakes, Do they bring him only a few small cakes, or a Lot, For the Ahkond of Swat? |
9380 | At penny- a- lining make your whack, Or with the mummers mug and gag? |
9380 | BUZ, QUOTH THE BLUE FLY Buz, quoth the blue fly, Hum, quoth the bee, Buz and hum they cry, And so do we: In his ear, in his nose, thus, do you see? |
9380 | Bees, Who was stung in the arm by a wasp; When they asked,"Does it hurt?" |
9380 | Bene, satis, male_,-- Where was I with my trope''bout one in a quag? |
9380 | Burns gives us: Ken ye aught o''Captain Grose? |
9380 | But do they re- al- ly com- pre- hend What Scho- pen- hau- er''s driv- ing at? |
9380 | But is n''t he wise-- To jes''dream of stars, as the doctors advise?" |
9380 | But shall I see thee far beyond the sun, When the new dawn lights Empyrean scenes? |
9380 | But what to me are woven clouds, or what, If dames from spiders learn to warp their looms? |
9380 | Can he talk nonsense?" |
9380 | Can he write a letter concisely clear, Without a speck or a smudge or smear or Blot, The Ahkond of Swat? |
9380 | Can it be on an errand she hath delayed? |
9380 | De win''she blow from nor''-eas''-wes'',-- De sout''win''she blow too, Wen Rosie cry,"Mon cher captinne, Mon cher, w''at I shall do?" |
9380 | Delicate hands, unaccustom''d to reels, To set''em working a poor body''s wheels? |
9380 | Did they explain and render hazier The policies of Central Asia? |
9380 | Do his people like him extremely well? |
9380 | Do his people prig in the lanes or park? |
9380 | Does Fiction mend where Fact has mauled? |
9380 | Does he beat his wife with a gold- topped pipe, When she lets the gooseberries grow too ripe, or Rot, The Ahkond of Swat? |
9380 | Does he drink his soup and his coffee cold, or Hot, The Ahkond of Swat? |
9380 | Does he drink small beer from a silver jug? |
9380 | Does he like new cream, and hate mince- pies? |
9380 | Does he like to sit by the calm blue wave? |
9380 | Does he live on turnips, tea or tripe, Does he like his shawl to be marked with a stripe or a Dot, The Ahkond of Swat? |
9380 | Does he sail about on an inland lake, in a Yacht, The Ahkond of Swat? |
9380 | Does he sing or whistle, jabber or talk, And when riding abroad does he gallop or walk, or Trot, The Ahkond of Swat? |
9380 | Does he sit on a stool or sofa or chair, or Squat, The Ahkond of Swat? |
9380 | Does he sleep on a mattress, a bed or a mat, or a Cot, The Ahkond of Swat? |
9380 | Does he study the wants of his own dominion? |
9380 | Does he teach his subjects to roast and bake? |
9380 | Does he wear a turban, a fez or a hat? |
9380 | Does he wear a white tie when he dines with his friends, And tie it neat in a bow with ends, or a Knot, The Ahkond of Swat? |
9380 | Dost seek the chestnut burr? |
9380 | Dost thou remember Jeames? |
9380 | Dost thou remember Jeames? |
9380 | Doubt is faith in the main; but faith, on the whole, is doubt; We can not believe by proof; but could we believe without? |
9380 | FERDINANDO AND ELVIRA, OR THE GENTLE PIEMAN*****"Love you?" |
9380 | For instance, take a case like this: Is fancied kick a real kiss, Or rather the reverse? |
9380 | For the Ahkoond I mourn, Who would n''t? |
9380 | Go double or quits? |
9380 | Had I lost at that awful juncture my presence of mind? |
9380 | Has Death its wisest victims called When idiots are born? |
9380 | Hast thou no garland for this aching head That soon so low must be? |
9380 | Hast thou no pity? |
9380 | He sent them word I had not gone( We know it to be true); If she should push the matter on, What would become of you? |
9380 | Hear''st not the billow''s solemn roar, That echoes through the vaults of night? |
9380 | Her hair, was it quaintly curly, Or as straight as a beadle''s wand? |
9380 | Her teeth, I presume, were"pearly": But which was she, brunette or blonde? |
9380 | His rival, but in what? |
9380 | How do you melt the multy swag? |
9380 | How heads our gallant craft?'' |
9380 | I can not recall her figure: Was it regal as Juno''s own? |
9380 | I said,"And how is it you live?" |
9380 | I see a goose ring a hog, And a snail that bit a dog; Thou hast well drunken, man: Who''s the fool now? |
9380 | I see a goose ring a hog, Who''s the fool now? |
9380 | I see a hare chase a hound, Twenty mile above the ground; Thou hast well drunken, man: Who''s the fool now? |
9380 | I see a hare chase a hound, Who''s the fool now? |
9380 | I see a man in the moon, Clouting of St. Peter''s shoon, Thou hast well drunken, man: Who''s the fool now? |
9380 | I see a man in the moon, Who''s the fool now? |
9380 | I see a mouse catch the cat, And the cheese to eat the rat; Thou hast well drunken, man: Who''s the fool now? |
9380 | I see a mouse catch the cat, Who''s the fool now? |
9380 | I see a sheep shearing corn, And a cuckoo blow his horn; Thou hast well drunken, man: Who''s the fool now? |
9380 | I see a sheep shearing corn, Who''s the fool now? |
9380 | III Ah, how can fear sit and hear as love hears it grief''s heart''s cracked grate''s screech? |
9380 | IMERICKS There was an old person of Ware Who rode on the back of a bear; When they said,"Does it trot?" |
9380 | If coal- black ghosts turn soldiers for the State, With wooden eyes, and lightning- rods for plumes? |
9380 | If he catches them then, either old or young, Does he have them chopped in pieces or hung, or Shot, The Ahkond of Swat? |
9380 | If so, who will change it? |
9380 | Igo and ago, If he''s''mang his freens or foes? |
9380 | Igo and ago; And eaten like a weather haggis? |
9380 | In February, eighteen sixty nine, Alexandrina Victoria, Fidei, Hm-- hm-- how runs the jargon? |
9380 | In the height of the height, in the depth of the deep? |
9380 | Is he quiet, or always making a fuss? |
9380 | Is he slain by Highlan''bodies? |
9380 | Is he tall or short, or dark or fair? |
9380 | Is he wise or foolish, young or old? |
9380 | Is his steward a Swiss or a Swede or a Russ, or a Scot, The Ahkond of Swat? |
9380 | Is it a mayor that a mother has knighted, Or is it a horse of the sun and the day? |
9380 | Is it a pony? |
9380 | Is it fourpence, or piebald, or gray? |
9380 | Is it purity of conscience, or your one- and- seven sherry?" |
9380 | Is it the gibber of gungs and keeks? |
9380 | Is plenitude of passion palled By poverty of scorn? |
9380 | Is present pain a future bliss, Or is it something worse? |
9380 | Is she afraid Of the hound that howls, or the moaning mole? |
9380 | Is there no music in the trees To charm thee with its frolic mirth? |
9380 | Is this your love so warm? |
9380 | Is_ all_ forgot? |
9380 | It is by the author of''As in a looking- Glass,''is it not?" |
9380 | JOHN JONES_ At the Piano_ I Love me and leave me; what love bids retrieve me? |
9380 | Khabu, did there come great fear On thy Khabuldozed Ameer Ali Shere? |
9380 | Low love fulfilled of low success? |
9380 | Made they mots, as"There to- day are No more Himalayehs,"Or, if you prefer it,"There to- day are No more Himalaya"? |
9380 | Martin said to his man, Fill thou the cup, and I the can; Thou hast well drunken, man: Who''s the fool now? |
9380 | Must Care''s wan phantom still beguile And chain thee to the stubborn earth? |
9380 | Must I darkly tread The unknown paths that lead me wide from thee? |
9380 | My soul, in desolate eclipse, With recollection teems-- And then I hask, with weeping lips, Dost thou remember Jeames? |
9380 | Namely, in life they rivals were, or foes, And in their deaths not very much divided? |
9380 | No sigh? |
9380 | No smile? |
9380 | No sound? |
9380 | Not understood? |
9380 | O joy to pluck it from the ground, To view the purple sac, To touch the sessile stigma''s round-- And shall I then turn back? |
9380 | ON THE ROAD Said Folly to Wisdom,"Pray, where are we going?" |
9380 | Oh, Martin said to his man, Who''s the fool now? |
9380 | Oh, let us be married; too long we have tarried: But what shall we do for a ring?" |
9380 | Oh, not at all; but what of that? |
9380 | Oh, the Ahkond of Swat? |
9380 | Oi, said the Akhoond,"Sah, L''État de Swat c''est moi"? |
9380 | Or a bowl? |
9380 | Or choose to chase the cheese around the churn? |
9380 | Or did the Khan of far Kashgar Tremble at the menace hot Of the Moolla of Kotal,"I will extirpate thee, pal Of my foe the Akhoond of Swat"? |
9380 | Or do they, whenever they can, rebel, or Plot, At the Ahkond of Swat? |
9380 | Or does n''t he care for public opinion a Jot, The Ahkond of Swat? |
9380 | Or even at times, when days are dark, Garotte? |
9380 | Or fake the broads? |
9380 | Or find the frittered fig that felt the fast? |
9380 | Or get the straight, and land your pot? |
9380 | Or her uncle? |
9380 | Or made each in the cabinet his mark Kotalese Gortschakoff, Swattish Bismarck? |
9380 | Or only a trifle bigger Than the elves who surround the throne Of the Faëry Queen, and are seen, I ween, By mortals in dreams alone? |
9380 | Or oppressively bland and fond? |
9380 | Or pitch a snide? |
9380 | Or swallow any pill from out the past? |
9380 | Or thimble- rig? |
9380 | Or to sleep and snore in a dark green cave, or a Grott, The Ahkond of Swat? |
9380 | Or were wails despairing caught, as The burghers pale of Swat Cried in panic,"Moolla ad Portas"? |
9380 | Or why did we twain abscond, All breakfastless too, from the public view To prowl by a misty pond? |
9380 | POOR DEAR GRANDPAPA What is the matter with Grandpapa? |
9380 | Polkam jungere, Virgo, vis, Will you join the Polka, Miss? |
9380 | Put case I had n''t''em on me, could I ha''bought This sort- o''-kind- o''-what- you- might- call- toy, This pebble- thing, o''the boy- thing? |
9380 | SHE''S ALL MY FANCY PAINTED HIM She''s all my fancy painted him,( I make no idle boast); If he or you had lost a limb, Which would have suffered most? |
9380 | Said Folly to Wisdom,"Then what shall we do?" |
9380 | Say shall Destruction''s lava load the gale, The furnace quiver and the mountain quail? |
9380 | Say shall the son of Sympathy pretend His cedar fragrance with our Chiefs to blend? |
9380 | See? |
9380 | Shall I bribe with a store of minted metal? |
9380 | Shall the price of a slave be its treasure to keep? |
9380 | Shall the sea-- storm declare it, or paint it, or smell it? |
9380 | Shall we be trotting home again?" |
9380 | Sing, my Cumberbunce? |
9380 | Sitting where the pumpkins blow, Will you come and be my wife?" |
9380 | So thy dear eyes and thy kind lips but say-- Ere from his cerements Timon seems to flit:"What of the reaper grim with sickle keen?" |
9380 | Suppose you duff? |
9380 | Suppose you try a different tack, And on the square you flash your flag? |
9380 | Susan''s papa was greatly vexed, And he said to Susan,"My dear, what next?" |
9380 | THE AHKOND OF SWAT Who, or why, or which, or_ what_, Is the Ahkond of Swat? |
9380 | THE HIPPOPOTAMUS"Oh, say, what is this fearful, wild, Incorrigible cuss?" |
9380 | THE NOBLE TUCK- MAN Americus, as he did wend With A. J. Mortimer, his chum, The two were greeted by a friend,"And how are you, boys, Hi, Ho, Hum?" |
9380 | THE SORROWS OF WERTHER Werther had a love for Charlotte Such as words could never utter; Would you know how first he met her? |
9380 | THERE WAS A FROG There was a frog swum in the lake, The crab came crawling by:"Wilt thou,"coth the frog,"be my make?" |
9380 | The Ahkond of Swat? |
9380 | The padre said,"Whatever have you been and gone and done?" |
9380 | Then the hand that reposed so snugly In mine-- was it plump or spare? |
9380 | There once was a man who said,"How Shall I manage to carry my cow? |
9380 | There once was an old man of Lyme Who married three wives at a time; When asked,"Why a third?" |
9380 | There was a young maid who said,"Why Ca n''t I look in my ear with my eye? |
9380 | There was an old man who said,"Do Tell me how I''m to add two and two? |
9380 | There you sit snoring, forgetting her ills; Who is to give her her Bolus and Pills? |
9380 | To amuse his mind do his people show him Pictures, or any one''s last new poem, or What, For the Ahkond of Swat? |
9380 | Two bright stars Peep''d into the shell, What are they dreaming of? |
9380 | VILLON''S STRAIGHT TIP TO ALL CROSS COVES"_ Tout aux tavernes et aux fiells_"Suppose you screeve? |
9380 | WILD FLOWERS"Of what are you afraid, my child?" |
9380 | Was I haply the lady''s suitor? |
9380 | Was I partial to rising early? |
9380 | Was Kotal''s proud citadel-- Bastioned, and demi- luned, Beaten down with shot and shell By the guns of the Akhoond? |
9380 | Was it in the tented field With crash of sword on shield, While backward meaner champions reeled And loud the tom- tom pealed? |
9380 | Was the countenance fair or ugly? |
9380 | Was the transaction illegal? |
9380 | Well, as I looked upon the thing, It murmured,"Please, sir, can I sing?" |
9380 | What boots to fall again forlorn? |
9380 | What can the matter be? |
9380 | What do you think the bride was dressed in? |
9380 | What do you think they had for a fiddle? |
9380 | What do you think they had for supper? |
9380 | What do you think was the tune they danced to? |
9380 | What is a race"( and a mocking face had Jill as she spake the word)"Unless for a prize the runner tries? |
9380 | What is so simple as primitive Monkeydom Born in the sea with a cold in its head? |
9380 | What matters now? |
9380 | What profits it to rise i''the dark? |
9380 | What ship could live in such a sea? |
9380 | What though on pinions of the blast The sea- gulls sweep with leaden flight? |
9380 | What though the watery caverns deep Gleam ghostly on the wandering sight? |
9380 | What thunder shall tell it? |
9380 | What vessel bear the shock? |
9380 | What wail of smitten strings hear we? |
9380 | When he heard the shot he quickly arose, And while he stood upon his toes, The coffee fell and burned his nose;"Oh dear,"he cried,"what burns me so?" |
9380 | When he looks at the sun does he wink his eyes, or Not, The Ahkond of Swat? |
9380 | When he writes a copy in round- hand size, Does he cross his t''s and finish his i''s with a Dot, The Ahkond of Swat? |
9380 | When they said,"Is it small?" |
9380 | Wherein did the deceased Akhoond of Swat Kotal''s lamented Moolla late, As it were, emulate? |
9380 | Who can tell? |
9380 | Who knows Of Moolla and Akhoond aught more than I did? |
9380 | Why do I sit in the moonshade, while the eye- star mocks me while I ask what I am? |
9380 | Why doth she warble not? |
9380 | Why, and whither, and how? |
9380 | Why? |
9380 | Why? |
9380 | Will you please to go away? |
9380 | With Everton toffee thee persuade? |
9380 | Wo n''t you accept such plain doctrines instead? |
9380 | You are amazed that I could tell The creature''s name so quickly? |
9380 | _ Excessit, evasit, erupit_--off slogs boy; Off like bird,_ avi similis_--(you observed The dative? |
9380 | _ London, 1662__ IF_ If all the land were apple- pie, And all the sea were ink; And all the trees were bread and cheese, What should we do for drink? |
9380 | _ MARTIN LUTHER AT POTSDAM_ What lightning shall light it? |
9380 | _ Pale Studént_: The wooden- chuck is next of kin Unto the wood- peckére: I fear not thine ill- boding din, And why should I fear her? |
9380 | _ THE COCK AND THE BULL_ You see this pebble- stone? |
9380 | _ YE LAYE OF YE WOODPECKORE__ Picus Erythrocephalus_: O whither goest thou, pale studént Within the wood so fur? |
9380 | adder- like, now bloom bursts bladder- like,-- bloom frost bequeathed? |
9380 | can June''s fist grasp May? |
9380 | cried she,"what shall I do?" |
9380 | down a horrible volcano?" |
9380 | for how canst thou hope To have such a stomach as it? |
9380 | for who shall decide The depths of his badgerly soul? |
9380 | has it come to this pass?" |
9380 | is n''t he a curious bird, that red, long- leg''d Flamingo? |
9380 | my Child, where is the Pen That can do Justice to the Hen? |
9380 | or a Pot, The Ahkond of Swat? |
9380 | or a cup? |
9380 | or a glass? |
9380 | or a mug? |
9380 | or fig a nag? |
9380 | or go cheap- jack? |
9380 | or knap a yack? |
9380 | or nose and lag? |
9380 | or smash a rag? |
9380 | see''st thou not the torrent''s flash Far shooting o''er the mountain height? |
9380 | she exclaimed,"how_ can_ you try An honest Moon this way? |
9380 | such a funny thing-- And now it''s taken wing; I s''pose no man before or since Dreamt such a funny thing? |
9380 | tell me did you ever see a bird so funny stand- o When forth he from the water comes and gets upon the land- o? |
9380 | tell me have you ever seen a red, long- leg''d Flamingo? |
9380 | tell me have you ever yet seen him the water in go? |
9380 | what shall save the soul, When cobblers ask three dollars for their shoes? |
9380 | what''s the odds?" |
9380 | who can feel the crimson ecstasy That soothes with bickering jar the Glorious Tree? |
9380 | who is he that sneaks along Into South Middle''s door? |
9380 | why am I what I am, And why am I anything? |
9380 | wo n''t they soon be upset, you know? |
50874 | Grumbling Sir, or counterfeit Lapland Lady, I admire thy impudence in calling thyself a Lady: Art thou a Lady and hast so much haire?... 50874 Our man in the moon drinks Clarret, With powder- beef, turnep, and carret; If he doth so, why should not you Drink until the sky looks blew?" |
50874 | Why Sir, is this such a piece of study? 50874 ''Tis certain her own hayr, who would have thought it? 50874 ''Tis true was wear him_ Shirkin Frieze_, But what is that? 50874 ( 1650?) 50874 18 Jan. 1656(? 50874 39] cross Humours we will not allow, Sir, out of the King''s own Dominion, pray, what can you say to me now? 50874 A Crow? 50874 A Lyon? 50874 A Man being ask''d whether his friend_ Tom_, that was lately dead, had left him any Legacy? 50874 A Minister going to one of his Parishioners he asked her, who made her? 50874 A Scholar coming home from_ Cambridge_ to his Father, his Father askt him what he had learnt? 50874 A Shoomaker thought to mock a Collier being black, saying, What news from Hell? 50874 A Thiefe came fast, and loose my Bible found: Was''t bound and loose at once? 50874 A Tradesman that would never work by Candle light, was asked the reason why? 50874 A certain Knave asking a virtuous Gentlewoman, jearingly,_ What was honesty?_ she answered,_ What''s that to you? 50874 A certain Knave asking a virtuous Gentlewoman, jearingly,_ What was honesty?_ she answered,_ What''s that to you? 50874 A deaf Man was selling Pears at the Towns end in_ S^t Gileses_, and a Gentleman riding out o''th''Town, askt him what''twas a Clock? 50874 A delightfull Discourse, by George Baron No- Body_ Why do''st thou father all thy Lies On me? 50874 A fat man riding upon a lean horse, was ask''d, Why he was so fat, and the horse so lean? 50874 A lye, quoth the Justice, you saucy knave, dost thou give me the lye? 50874 A mad young Gallant, having rid as he feared, out of his way, overtook a blunt Country fellow, and asked him, which was the way to_ Salesbury_? 50874 A man excused y^e beating of his wife, because she was his owne flesh, saying, may I not beat mine owne flesh? 50874 A man shall come to doe such Dunces good, And can not have his meaning understood? 50874 A melting Sermon being preached in a Country Church, all fell a weeping, except a Country man, who being ask''d why he did not weep with the rest? 50874 A silly old fellow meeting his God son, ask''d whither he was going? 50874 About six months after, this Gentleman was riding that way with his Man, and as they rode, says his Master, Do n''t you see something move yonder? 50874 Alas, said the first, what is foure mile an houre amongst us all? 50874 And call''d the drawer for to shew a room, The drawer did, and what room think ye was''t? 50874 And is not here two, said_ Jacke_? 50874 And on a time he needs would of him know, What was the cause his pulse did go so slow? 50874 And so went his way, and left them: then to the Swan he went, to the good man of the house, and asked if he would buy two loades of Hay? 50874 And this, says the Gentleman, you''ll avouch for Law? 50874 And what at the fourth? 50874 And when he came to them the old man requested him to tel them what beasts those were? 50874 And why so? 50874 Ar''t asleepe Husband? 50874 Are you not sicke? 50874 Art thou sure of it? 50874 Asked his friend if he would find a hare? 50874 At last_ Scogin_ said, doth the fish play? 50874 At the last one of his fellows came and asked him what he sought for? 50874 Being sot at dinner, My host, quoth_ George_, how fals the Tyde out for London; not till the evening, quoth mine Hoste, have you any businesse, Sir? 50874 But at last this man did go, The Doctor''s skill to know, Saying, Sir, can you cure a Woman of the Dumb? 50874 But at the Lords Bar he was askt what he could say, that Judgment should not pass upon him? 50874 But how now Landlord? 50874 But whither shall wee bring them? 50874 By L. P.(? |
50874 | By and by one went to_ Scogin_, and said, Sir, is it as it is spoken in the Church of you? |
50874 | By my troth, said_ Scogin_, and I have but two shillings, and how much have you Master Parson? |
50874 | Co. Wench._ Is it possible would_ Bumpkin_ be in love? |
50874 | Co. Wench._ Will you not stay, my Love? |
50874 | Death put a trick upon him, and what was''t? |
50874 | Did I? |
50874 | Did''st tell him, I was not running away? |
50874 | Doctor, doe you heare? |
50874 | Doe you prate, you Slave? |
50874 | Dost think her Country knows not chalk from Cheese? |
50874 | Faire dame( quoth she) why dost thou so? |
50874 | For what cause? |
50874 | For what? |
50874 | Forty pounds( quoth the Gentleman) And what do they profit you? |
50874 | From Sun to Sun are the set times of Pay, But you should have been up by break of Day: Yet if you had? |
50874 | From thence I went to Westminster and for to see the Tombs, Ah, said I, what a house is here, with an infinite sight of Rooms? |
50874 | Garden doore? |
50874 | God Bless you and them both together._ Well, but, Neighbour,( says he) Do you think you can keep these Commandments? |
50874 | Goe leade, sir Knave, quoth she and wherefore not goe ride? |
50874 | Good Lord blesse me, said the Countryman, is shee so big growne in one yeere, what a greatnesse will shee bee by the time she comes to my age? |
50874 | Got a woman with Child, But the Justice did take his part; Then she cry''d and did mumble, Sayes the Justice de''e grumble? |
50874 | Had you but Kept the Watch well, I suppose,''Twas no hard thing to Know how the_ Day_ goes? |
50874 | Hath any one angered you? |
50874 | Have we not Hero''s still who are endu''d With Valor,( Stars of the first Magnitude?) |
50874 | Have you a mind, Sir, to arrest the_ Day_? |
50874 | Have you e''er a Watch you can show, Sir? |
50874 | He answered, where, but in their beds? |
50874 | He said Ten a Penny, Master: Then he askt him agen what''twas a Clock? |
50874 | He thinking it had been a Serjeant which had thus shoulder clapt him, looking back, said,_ At whose Suit I pray you?_[ 105.] |
50874 | Heere is a wond''rous Water for the Eye; This for the Stomacke: Maisters will you buy? |
50874 | How can that be? |
50874 | Hunt._ Canst thou sleep well? |
50874 | Hunt._ Why, what''s the matter? |
50874 | Hunt._ Why? |
50874 | I am content qd the old man, by whom shall we be tryed? |
50874 | I beseech your worship said the man, to pardon mee, for I was afraid: afraid of what? |
50874 | I have liv''d among books, yet am never the better: I have eaten up the Muses, yet I know not a verse, What student is this, I pray you rehearse? |
50874 | I pray thee( quoth she) how doth he doe? |
50874 | I shall tell you, sir, said Jacke: Is not here one? |
50874 | I thank you Sir, answered the Porter, Master_ Peele_, my Master is in the Hall, pleaseth it you to walke in? |
50874 | I thank''d, took, gave my word; say then, Am I at all indebted to this man? |
50874 | I will saies he:& comming to the Steward, Sir, saies_ Tarlton_, where shall our horses spend the time? |
50874 | I wonder then, quoth he, what meaneth these? |
50874 | I''le instruct thee: Cans''t thou be melancholly? |
50874 | If Pride be a sin and a folly, why then Han''t we a far better Example from Men? |
50874 | If you ask why borrowed Books seldom return to their Owners? |
50874 | In the Roxburghe Ballads are three editions of this ballad, catalogued(?) |
50874 | Is dat de Poke? |
50874 | Is it just forty pound? |
50874 | Is it so, said the fellow, a pox upon him, why did he not blow his horn? |
50874 | Is not_ France_, and the Nation still the same, Whom_ England_ did in all Encounters tame? |
50874 | Is''t not, honest_ Nab_? |
50874 | Jack could not get foure herrings but three for his penny; and when he came home, Scogin said, how many herrings hast thou brought? |
50874 | John gathers up all ye pieces: y^e D^r demanded why? |
50874 | Me thought I met( sore discontent) some poore men on the way, I asked one whither he went, so fast, and could not stay? |
50874 | My Lord, said the Survayor, I pray you what shall wee doe with the earth which we digge out of the said pit? |
50874 | Neighbour( sayd he) I have a Sonne, And he doth use to climbe, Pray let me know the same for him Against another time? |
50874 | No, Landlord, No; you now may truly say, And to your cost too, you have lost a Day, By twy- light_ Day_ is neither Day nor Night; What then? |
50874 | Not I, so God helpe me, quoth the Barber, I pray Sir where is the Gentleman Master_ Peele_ that came along with me? |
50874 | O God, O God saies the fellow, is my fault so great? |
50874 | O Lord, replys he, what should be the reason of that? |
50874 | O''my Conscience, if I should woo my heart out, I should never be the fatter for it.--Where''s your promise now? |
50874 | Of mee? |
50874 | One ask''t him what colour his Greyhounds were? |
50874 | One asking a certain Person how his friend came off at the Sessions House? |
50874 | One demanded of a wild yong Gentleman the reason why he would sel his land? |
50874 | One meeting a mad Fellow that was drunk, ask''t him whither he was going? |
50874 | One seeing another wear a Threadbare Cloak, asked him whether his Cloak was not sleepy, or no? |
50874 | Paintings, and beauty spots for faces? |
50874 | Poke, what is dat? |
50874 | Pray Sir, says the Porter, what is that_ Fenester_? |
50874 | Pray what Countryman Are you? |
50874 | Put off your passion, pray; true,''tis a Summe: But do n''t you know that a Pay- day will come? |
50874 | Quoth hee, had you it not againe? |
50874 | Said his Wife did long, And what was it for but Mackrill? |
50874 | Said_ Scogin_, what a lie is this? |
50874 | Say you so, says the Scholar, I pray where is it? |
50874 | Says his Friend, I fear That you have a Worm in your Head; Why de''e praise dead Beer? |
50874 | Says one, why is thy Beard so brown, and thy head so white? |
50874 | See p. 159._][ Music:_ Shall I lye beyond thee? |
50874 | She had both tooth enough, and too much tongue: What should I now of toothlesse_ Scylla_ say? |
50874 | She leaves uncovered still; what''s that? |
50874 | Sir, tell me, and do not deceive me, where have you been playing your part? |
50874 | Sirrah,( said the Justice) must I bid you bee gone so many times, and will you not goe? |
50874 | So when he came before the Judge, he said to the Debter, Dost thou owe this Merchant so much money? |
50874 | Some Gentlemen were sitting at a Coffee- house together, one was asking what News there was? |
50874 | Sometimes when our Husbands are out of the way, Pray tell me what huffing young Gallants will stay, If that a fine Delicate Wife were not there? |
50874 | That is not sufficient, What are you? |
50874 | The Alderman said, When shall I have my money? |
50874 | The Constable and Watch who were within the Gate hearing a bustle, called out, saying, Who goes there? |
50874 | The Cowheard said, Sir, doe you see yonder Cow with the cut tail? |
50874 | The Fellow immediately run after his Master, and ask''d him What he should say to the Gentleman if he should not come? |
50874 | The Fool told him the same again: And what the third day? |
50874 | The Gentleman being driven to a non plus, caught sudden hold of his sword and asked the Jew if hee would not attend till his beard was all shaved? |
50874 | The Ladies above from a window, seeing horses in the Garden Alley call the Knight, who cries out to_ Tarlton_, Fellow, what meanest thou? |
50874 | The Scripture saith there was a certaine man: A certaine man? |
50874 | The jolly Farmer brisk and bold, as soon as he the Sword beheld, He cry''d what is there to be sold? |
50874 | The mad fellow called him, and said, Gentleman, whether go you? |
50874 | The next that came by was a tawny Moor, and the Devil bid him see, And he fleered on his tawny skin, crying, Friend, art thou any kin to me? |
50874 | Then gesse the cause he thus to bed is drawne What? |
50874 | Then said Scogin, what, wilt thou shame me? |
50874 | Then the Ordinary will say,_ Es tu literatus?_ art thou learned? |
50874 | Then the Ordinary will say,_ Es tu literatus?_ art thou learned? |
50874 | Then they askt him how it possibly could be plaid on? |
50874 | Then will he say,_ Quid petis?_ What thing doest thou aske? |
50874 | Then will he say,_ Quid petis?_ What thing doest thou aske? |
50874 | Then, said the Parson, How do you now, Master_ Scogin_? |
50874 | Then_ Jacke_ did tell the first egge againe, saying, is not this the third? |
50874 | Then_ Jacke_ prepared his fish to seeth them: then_ Scogin_ said,_ Jacke_ doth the fish play now? |
50874 | Then_ Scogin_ asked his man how much money hee had in his purse? |
50874 | Then_ Scogin_ came to the Priest, and said Master, here is the woman, will you dispatch her after Masse is done? |
50874 | There goeth a bargain, said the Cowheard: what wilt thou give me? |
50874 | There''s nothing there but holy- days, with musick out of measure; Who can forbear to speak the praise of such a land of pleasure? |
50874 | Thirdly, he smells Intelligence, that''s better, And cheaper too, than_ Pym_ from his own Letter: Who''s doubly pay''d( Fortune or we the blinder?) |
50874 | This caused his friends most strangely to admire, And some of them his reason did require? |
50874 | This is the West, and this the South? |
50874 | Thus away he goes with his Bargain home, but when he comes to look in the Poke, he see the Dog, O de diable,( said he) is dis de Pig? |
50874 | To his friend t''other day, That his sow had lost her life; Sayes one Mr_ Howes_, Now you talk of Sowes, Pray, Neighbour, how does your wife? |
50874 | We''ll come to the purpose, says he, and what the fifth day? |
50874 | Well now, what is to bee done in this matter? |
50874 | Well, quoth the Fryer, have you not a whetstone? |
50874 | Well, says the Prince, and what the second day? |
50874 | What Doctor in the world can offer more? |
50874 | What Master? |
50874 | What Sign, I prithee? |
50874 | What Trade are you, Brewer or Baker? |
50874 | What did I promise thee anything? |
50874 | What do they cost you a yeare to keepe them? |
50874 | What do you with all those Kites and Dogs? |
50874 | What is it that goeth to the water, and leaveth its guts at home? |
50874 | What is it then? |
50874 | What is that goeth about the wood and can not get in? |
50874 | What is that no man would have, and yet when he hath it, will not forgoe it? |
50874 | What is that that hath his belly full of man''s meat and his mouth full of dirt? |
50874 | What is that the more ye lay on, the faster it wasteth? |
50874 | What is that which 20 will goe into a Tankard, and one will fill a Barn? |
50874 | What is that, Gossip? |
50874 | What is the matter? |
50874 | What is the most profitable beast, and that men eat least on? |
50874 | What is your reason for that? |
50874 | What lacke you friend? |
50874 | What man? |
50874 | What saiest thou, knave, doest mocke me? |
50874 | What shall I pay, quoth the In- keeper? |
50874 | What wilt thou give me,( quoth he) if I do? |
50874 | What work is that the faster ye work, longer is it ere ye have done, and the slower ye work the sooner ye make an end? |
50874 | What''s that,( quoth the Priest?) |
50874 | What, beast? |
50874 | What, ca n''t you sleep, you do so long for_ Day_? |
50874 | What, said he, do you mean to undo me by such extravagant Expenses? |
50874 | When he came, his Master said all angerly, Thou knave, come give me my cloak: hast thou not served me well, to let me be thus wet? |
50874 | When only TALBOT''S Name did bear such sway, To make Ten thousand French men run away? |
50874 | When the Girle came up, he demanded the cause why she so lamented, and called upon her Father? |
50874 | When the Ordinary heard him say so, he said_ Quomodo valet Magister tuus?_ How doth thy Master? |
50874 | When the Ordinary heard him say so, he said_ Quomodo valet Magister tuus?_ How doth thy Master? |
50874 | When_ France_ was drown''d with streams of Frenchmen''s blood, And English Valor could not be withstood? |
50874 | Where can shee have more happines than there? |
50874 | Wherefore keep you them? |
50874 | Whereupon hee demanded whether they had ever a Garden? |
50874 | Why do Ladies so affect slender wastes, said one? |
50874 | Why do you ask? |
50874 | Why thou Rogue, says he, did you not tell me it might be past over? |
50874 | Why thou wilt not serve me so, I hope,( quoth the Lawyer) now I have used thee so kindly? |
50874 | Why, Landlord, is the Quarter out I pray; That you Keep such a quarter for the Day? |
50874 | Why, how now? |
50874 | Why, knave, quoth he, didst thou not promise me to beare my charges to London? |
50874 | Why, quoth the Deputy, hast thou no other defence but present death? |
50874 | Why, quoth the other, how did shee ride I pray? |
50874 | Why, said the woman, I can not tarry to reason of such matters, therefore I pray you to pay me my money, that I were gone: Wherefore? |
50874 | Why, saith he, where did your great Grandfather, Grandfather and Father die? |
50874 | Why, says one, how could it live and bloom as you say without some earth, or the Sun''s influence? |
50874 | Why, thou Coxcombe, said the Cardinall, canst thou not dig the pit deepe enough, and bury all together? |
50874 | Why? |
50874 | Why? |
50874 | Will hee not come? |
50874 | Wilt thou? |
50874 | YORKS Duke, Brave ALBEMARLE, equal to those Our Ancestors, who French men did oppose? |
50874 | Yea but( quoth his Master) what if he do pay me? |
50874 | Yea, said she, but what the devil will ye do therewith? |
50874 | Yes, quoth the Inne keeper, where be they? |
50874 | You Dunghill, quoth_ George_, doe you out face me? |
50874 | You Rogue, quoth_ George_, have I not forewarned you of this? |
50874 | You whorson Keeperly Rascall, quoth the fellow, dare you come any honest Gentleman in my Masters house? |
50874 | [ Footnote 159: The date of this ballad in the Museum Catalogue is 1610(?).] |
50874 | [ Footnote 163:? |
50874 | [ Footnote 169:? |
50874 | [ Footnote 205:? |
50874 | [ Footnote 49: Is this legacy a gentle intimation to his son that he may hang himself?] |
50874 | [ Footnote 50: Is this William Onley, who published from 1650 to 1702?] |
50874 | [ Footnote 74:? |
50874 | [ Footnote 93:? |
50874 | [ Illustration] Your Words they are sawcy and evil, this may be a Charge to your Purse; For why? |
50874 | _ 1 Hunt._ Canst thou not guess the reason of this trouble? |
50874 | _ 1 Hunt._ With whom? |
50874 | _ Acteon._ Fie, what mean you? |
50874 | _ And I wish in Heaven his Soul may dwell That first devised the Leather Bottel._ Then what do you say to these Cans of Wood? |
50874 | _ And I wish& c_ Then what do you say these black Pots three? |
50874 | _ And a begging& c_ I fear no Plots against me, but live in open Cell; Why who woud be a King when a Beggar lives so well? |
50874 | _ Bump._ Away you burrs, why do you stick so on me? |
50874 | _ Bump._ Nimble? |
50874 | _ Bump._ Then who shall have me whole? |
50874 | _ Bump._ What''s that to you? |
50874 | _ Bump._ What, to my hanging? |
50874 | _ Corne_,_ Leather_,_ Partrich_,_ Pheasant_,_ Rags_,_ Gold twist_, Thou brought''st all to my_ Mill_, what was''t we mist? |
50874 | _ Drugger._ Yes Sir,_ Sub._ A Seller of_ Tobacco_? |
50874 | _ Englishman._ But_ Monsieur_, have you never heard report Of Poictiers, Crescy, and of Agen- court? |
50874 | _ Englishman._''Tis true, in dancing you do us excel, But can you, as the English, fight as well? |
50874 | _ Englishman.__ Monsieur_, good morn, whither away so faste? |
50874 | _ Face._ Already, Sir, ha''you found it? |
50874 | _ Face._ What, and so little Beard? |
50874 | _ Face._ Which finger''s that? |
50874 | _ Face._''Slid, Doctor, how canst thou know this so soone? |
50874 | _ George_ thus saluted him, My honest Barber, quoth_ George_, welcome to London, I partly know your businesse, you come for your Lute, doe you not? |
50874 | _ Jacke_ said, would you have one play without a fellow? |
50874 | _ John._ Not I, o''my sincerity, mother; she long''d above three houres, ere she would let me know it; who was it_ Win_? |
50874 | _ Maids, where are your hearts become? |
50874 | _ Of Treason._ Treason doth never prosper; what''s the reason? |
50874 | _ On Me? |
50874 | _ On a Watch lost in a Tavern._ A Watch lost in a Tavern? |
50874 | _ Pure._ I meane i''the_ Fayre_, if it can be any way made, or found lawfull; where is our brother_ Busy_? |
50874 | _ Pure._ What shall we doe? |
50874 | _ Quid petis?_ that is to say, what dost thou aske or desire? |
50874 | _ Quid petis?_ that is to say, what dost thou aske or desire? |
50874 | _ Scogin_ said to the Cowheard, what shall I give thee to tell mee, when I shall have raine or faire weather? |
50874 | _ Sub._ Well, Your business_ Abel_? |
50874 | _ Subtle._ What is your name, say you,_ Abel Drugger_? |
50874 | _ Tarlton_, that had his Wife there, offered to throw her over- boord: but the company rescued her; and being asked wherefore he meant so to doe? |
50874 | _ The Queen''s Speech._-- Gallants all of British bloud, Why do ye not saile on th''Ocean flood? |
50874 | _ Then I wish& c_ Then what do you say to the Silver Flaggons fine? |
50874 | _ What''s that?_ says his Master,_ Why Sir_, says he,_ I did eat it.__ Sirrah_, says he,_ I bid you heat it with an H_. |
50874 | and she upon that excused y^e scratching of him, saying, May I not scratch mine own head? |
50874 | another, What lacke you Countryman? |
50874 | do I not see you at home? |
50874 | for soap or butter) and a dredger,(? |
50874 | he) they be sheep, do you not know sheep? |
50874 | heaping Indignities On one that never injur''d thee?_ Some- Body_ My Words and Acts hurt_ No- Body. |
50874 | how can that be? |
50874 | how fares the Devil? |
50874 | how now_ Win the fight_, Child: how do you? |
50874 | is your Room with Rapiers fill''d? |
50874 | may such a hap procure it? |
50874 | my honest_ Abel_? |
50874 | or do you a Waterman ply? |
50874 | quoth the Justice, when didst thou see a Lyon? |
50874 | quoth they, were you so_ drunk_? |
50874 | said the Justice, why wast thou afraid of mee? |
50874 | says she, An Ass spoke for an Angel, and wo n''t you speak under Twenty Shillings? |
50874 | she, what wilt thou do with the door? |
50874 | the other) will you make me a fool? |
50874 | think you I know not Sheep from Swine? |
50874 | think you so? |
50874 | what''s the matter pray? |
50874 | what-- are you mad? |
50874 | where do you dwell? |
50874 | where? |
50874 | why, I pray? |
50874 | without dissimulation, When dost thou home return again, and leave this English Nation? |
38172 | Are you lacking anything, Aunt Margaret? |
38172 | Do n''t be ever fussing and too- ing, will you? |
38172 | They''ll sure be around for us soon now, wo n''t they, sister? |
38172 | Well,I says,"look what''s here now-- what difference does it make if I am?" |
38172 | ''"Who are you, an''what in thunder are you doing here?" |
38172 | ''A message from the doctor?'' |
38172 | ''A new explosive?'' |
38172 | ''A white flag? |
38172 | ''Am I a wraith?'' |
38172 | ''Am I about to discover a gold- mine, or what?'' |
38172 | ''Am I dreaming?'' |
38172 | ''And Becky, do you realize that it was after I left you last night that I went back? |
38172 | ''And I sha n''t have you any more?'' |
38172 | ''And do you suppose the children are a comfort to her? |
38172 | ''And he never got on?'' |
38172 | ''And his father?'' |
38172 | ''And in return?'' |
38172 | ''And rabbits, squirrels, birds, even insects? |
38172 | ''And say, can I use your telephone?'' |
38172 | ''And that is--?'' |
38172 | ''And that other hussy that''s after making a ganzy out of her good coat? |
38172 | ''And then you will come out into the world again? |
38172 | ''And what do you think she is colloguing about?'' |
38172 | ''And what have you to do with Ruth, or her mother?'' |
38172 | ''And what, may I ask, are you?'' |
38172 | ''And when are you going again?'' |
38172 | ''And where,''I said,''do you think they go to when they die?'' |
38172 | ''And wholesome living among bursting shells? |
38172 | ''And wo n''t you come?'' |
38172 | ''And yet,''she went on,''we used the house and the money--''''You have n''t known much about the business for several years, have you? |
38172 | ''And you are sorry you have been so easily influenced?'' |
38172 | ''And you are unwilling to be thrust off, as you put it?'' |
38172 | ''And you never received any policy?'' |
38172 | ''And you think she''s in her right mind all the same?'' |
38172 | ''Anything I can do for ye, Bill?'' |
38172 | ''Anything up?'' |
38172 | ''Are all the stories in books true?'' |
38172 | ''Are we any happier for perching on chairs around great scaffoldings and piling the scaffoldings with so many kinds of porcelain and metal? |
38172 | ''Are you of that opinion? |
38172 | ''Are you there, my dearest?'' |
38172 | ''As big as the baby?'' |
38172 | ''Best for him?'' |
38172 | ''But John,''she urged herself to argue,''is it honest?'' |
38172 | ''But are you going to bury the box too?'' |
38172 | ''But he was Uncle John''s own son,''said Alice, earnestly, compellingly;''and was n''t Uncle John in the wrong?'' |
38172 | ''But the moral right?'' |
38172 | ''But why did you want to save his life?'' |
38172 | ''But you get used to it?'' |
38172 | ''But you went?'' |
38172 | ''But, Max, another? |
38172 | ''But-- Jack-- why?'' |
38172 | ''By the way, Maggie, may I see you a second?'' |
38172 | ''Ca n''t I come back to you when I''ve told them?'' |
38172 | ''Ca n''t come down?'' |
38172 | ''Ca n''t we use them this time for Stephen''s sake?'' |
38172 | ''Ca n''t you answer a simple question?'' |
38172 | ''Cable?'' |
38172 | ''Can you help me put it on my back?'' |
38172 | ''Could I be fitting it a bit, I wonder, the way mother does cut down John''s coats for Martin?'' |
38172 | ''Courage?'' |
38172 | ''D''ye think there is any chance for me?'' |
38172 | ''D''ye want another drink?'' |
38172 | ''Did Frank have any children?'' |
38172 | ''Did he tell you?'' |
38172 | ''Did n''t give who what?'' |
38172 | ''Did n''t you think o''that?'' |
38172 | ''Did the minister tell you to write Imogen in?'' |
38172 | ''Did you ever hear that epigram of Disraeli-- that all men should marry, but no women? |
38172 | ''Do n''t you care for me at all, Ruth?'' |
38172 | ''Do n''t you think,''pursued David,''that he might be brought in here-- or somewhere?'' |
38172 | ''Do they say so in the books?'' |
38172 | ''Do they?'' |
38172 | ''Do you care so much?'' |
38172 | ''Do you know any other reason?'' |
38172 | ''Do you know when you''re going to be married?'' |
38172 | ''Do you know, that''s the first time you''ve called me"Noakes"?'' |
38172 | ''Do you live here?'' |
38172 | ''Do you mind that bold lass clouting her pet bull, now?'' |
38172 | ''Do you not like it?'' |
38172 | ''Do you really think I ought to hunt Frank up?'' |
38172 | ''Do you remember how you come to be hurted this way?'' |
38172 | ''Do you remember that day-- when we first came here, mummy?'' |
38172 | ''Do you remember the day we motored from Stoneham? |
38172 | ''Do you think a woman who has suffered willingly gives her children over to the same fate?'' |
38172 | ''Do your family approve of this marriage?'' |
38172 | ''Eh? |
38172 | ''Even if they had been felled and carted away?'' |
38172 | ''Father--?'' |
38172 | ''Frank''s marriage, was n''t it? |
38172 | ''Gay old place, is n''t it?'' |
38172 | ''Get her? |
38172 | ''Getting ready for bed, Eunice?'' |
38172 | ''Good?'' |
38172 | ''Had n''t I better? |
38172 | ''Harmless?'' |
38172 | ''Have n''t you done anything but work these days?'' |
38172 | ''Have you ever saved any money of your own earning, or have you any property in your own name?'' |
38172 | ''Have you missed me?'' |
38172 | ''Have you missed me?'' |
38172 | ''Have you no playfellows here?'' |
38172 | ''Hello, is that Annie?'' |
38172 | ''How are you, dear?'' |
38172 | ''How are you, dear?'' |
38172 | ''How big was he, Peg? |
38172 | ''How do you do, Mr. Lannithorne? |
38172 | ''How do you do?'' |
38172 | ''How long is it since you have been to your country, Shaban?'' |
38172 | ''How much do I lose?'' |
38172 | ''How soon, little son, how soon?'' |
38172 | ''How''s that?'' |
38172 | ''How''s the weather?'' |
38172 | ''I mean, d''ye think I''ve got to go to hell?'' |
38172 | ''I reckon you would n''t understand about the Laurel Literary Society?'' |
38172 | ''I say I''m blown to wisps; could n''t you find me a mirror, please?'' |
38172 | ''I say, is Eliza Anna Bomination your grandmother?'' |
38172 | ''I''ve been face to face with war an''death an''Hell an''God,--I''ve been born again,--do you reckon any of them little old things matter now?'' |
38172 | ''I?'' |
38172 | ''If John had been jealous, would n''t he have had reason, Rachel? |
38172 | ''In London?'' |
38172 | ''In there?'' |
38172 | ''In what ways?'' |
38172 | ''Is it Helen?'' |
38172 | ''Is it afraid of the end you are, darling?'' |
38172 | ''Is it dark yet?'' |
38172 | ''Is it good to leave a young woman like that? |
38172 | ''Is it irremediable?'' |
38172 | ''Is it yours, Esther?'' |
38172 | ''Is it yours, John?'' |
38172 | ''Is n''t it a little quixotic?'' |
38172 | ''Is n''t it just as possible for me to forget, to overlook a telephone message, as the other fellow? |
38172 | ''Is n''t it?'' |
38172 | ''Is n''t she written down in the middle of your Bible at all?'' |
38172 | ''Is she an aunt?'' |
38172 | ''Is she dead and gone to heaven, and that''s why you say"unto the Lord"?'' |
38172 | ''Is that you? |
38172 | ''Is that you? |
38172 | ''Is that you?'' |
38172 | ''Is the child after making that jacket herself?'' |
38172 | ''Is there a corner of the house where it is appropriate for him to lie now, except that little cubby- hole of his upstairs?'' |
38172 | ''Is there company in the kiosque or is madama alone?'' |
38172 | ''Is this plain living, or is this a fairy story?'' |
38172 | ''Is your aunt at home?'' |
38172 | ''Is"a lie''s an abomination"in the Bible?'' |
38172 | ''Is-- is any one in front?'' |
38172 | ''Is-- is there anybody ashore you''d want me to write to?'' |
38172 | ''It ai n''t the Bible?'' |
38172 | ''It''s queer about folks''lives is n''t it?'' |
38172 | ''John, ca n''t you see that the ten thousand dollars does n''t matter to me? |
38172 | ''Late? |
38172 | ''Lunch with Kitty?'' |
38172 | ''Madame Pomegranate? |
38172 | ''Married? |
38172 | ''May we walk up to the churchyard?'' |
38172 | ''Me back''s broke?'' |
38172 | ''Moved?--Where?'' |
38172 | ''My-- Did the house ever fit into him? |
38172 | ''New? |
38172 | ''No service to make?'' |
38172 | ''Noakes, was it wise to come? |
38172 | ''Not after a week? |
38172 | ''Not just groan, but shriek, an''scream?'' |
38172 | ''Not smooth over a disagreeable occurrence?'' |
38172 | ''Oh,--mother? |
38172 | ''Oliver Pickersgill?'' |
38172 | ''Only till to- night, Jack? |
38172 | ''Or a team?'' |
38172 | ''Or a-- horse?'' |
38172 | ''Ought n''t I to speak to your mother?'' |
38172 | ''Room for one more?'' |
38172 | ''Say, is Hamden near here?'' |
38172 | ''Sha n''t we, papa?'' |
38172 | ''Shall I be giving them to little Bee for playthings?'' |
38172 | ''Shall I come too, my Pasha? |
38172 | ''Shall I read to ye a bit?'' |
38172 | ''Shall we go in the wood now?'' |
38172 | ''Shall we wait, my Pasha?'' |
38172 | ''She knows what''s fair, does she? |
38172 | ''So long since?'' |
38172 | ''So this is your enchanted forest?'' |
38172 | ''So you want to marry Peter Lannithorne''s daughter, do you? |
38172 | ''Something new?'' |
38172 | ''Stay to dinner, will you?'' |
38172 | ''Stephen has a funny way of saying things, has n''t he?'' |
38172 | ''Strange; what about?'' |
38172 | ''That you, Bill? |
38172 | ''The church was struck by a thunder- bolt was it not?'' |
38172 | ''The middle of the minister''s Bible?'' |
38172 | ''The racket? |
38172 | ''The ship''ud stand a likely chance in a blow like this without a skipper, would n''t she?'' |
38172 | ''Then she did n''t tell--''''About the insurance? |
38172 | ''Then who is it says them things?'' |
38172 | ''Then why do I have to go and tell him?'' |
38172 | ''They sent you to me, did they, boy? |
38172 | ''Think of? |
38172 | ''This box, Shaban-- you see this box? |
38172 | ''This really exists?'' |
38172 | ''Théophile, is the great gate locked?'' |
38172 | ''To what good?'' |
38172 | ''To- morrow?'' |
38172 | ''Was Mr. Maxineff at home this morning?'' |
38172 | ''We laity are hopeless, are n''t we? |
38172 | ''Well, how did Cornish behave on your way back?'' |
38172 | ''Well, now,''asked the closely built man,''what is_ your_ line?'' |
38172 | ''Well, why are n''t you after catching him and holding him for ransom? |
38172 | ''What am I so damned happy about, all of a sudden?'' |
38172 | ''What are you doing?'' |
38172 | ''What are you talking about?'' |
38172 | ''What became of the little marble angel?'' |
38172 | ''What d''you mean?'' |
38172 | ''What d''you think I am-- a damned philanthropist?'' |
38172 | ''What did you think it was, darling?'' |
38172 | ''What do you mean, Zümbül Agha?'' |
38172 | ''What does matter--_now_?'' |
38172 | ''What form did her delusions take?'' |
38172 | ''What have you been doing this week?'' |
38172 | ''What is it, dear?'' |
38172 | ''What is it, mother, what is it?'' |
38172 | ''What is it?'' |
38172 | ''What is it?'' |
38172 | ''What is that book?'' |
38172 | ''What is that?'' |
38172 | ''What is your line, may I ask?'' |
38172 | ''What kind of a girl are you, at all, to be ever lepping and tearing like a redshanks[ deer]? |
38172 | ''What life, Aunt Margaret?'' |
38172 | ''What of your work?'' |
38172 | ''What sausage- skin is that you''ve got into?'' |
38172 | ''What sort of things?'' |
38172 | ''What things shall I have to see?'' |
38172 | ''What time is it?'' |
38172 | ''What time is it?'' |
38172 | ''What was the quarrel about, anyway?'' |
38172 | ''What watch is it?'' |
38172 | ''What woman likes to be followed about?'' |
38172 | ''What would I do with a mirror here? |
38172 | ''What would have been necessary to bring that about?'' |
38172 | ''What''ll I do with my suit- case?'' |
38172 | ''What''ll I do, Cargan? |
38172 | ''What''ll we play now?'' |
38172 | ''What''s all this glare about?'' |
38172 | ''What''s goin''to stop us?'' |
38172 | ''What''s on for to- morrow?'' |
38172 | ''What''s that plaster?'' |
38172 | ''What''s that, Margaret? |
38172 | ''What''s that?'' |
38172 | ''What''s the trouble? |
38172 | ''What?'' |
38172 | ''When was that?'' |
38172 | ''When? |
38172 | ''Where are we?'' |
38172 | ''Where did you get it? |
38172 | ''Where is he?'' |
38172 | ''Where is he?'' |
38172 | ''Where is she, Jack?'' |
38172 | ''Where shall we set the table?'' |
38172 | ''Where''s Margaret gone to?'' |
38172 | ''Where?'' |
38172 | ''Where?'' |
38172 | ''Which one?'' |
38172 | ''Who bandaged my head?'' |
38172 | ''Who is it? |
38172 | ''Who''s me?'' |
38172 | ''Why ai n''t you on deck, Jansen?'' |
38172 | ''Why did n''t you tell me that Mr. Sanders was waiting?'' |
38172 | ''Why did you try to stop it?'' |
38172 | ''Why do n''t you go down too?'' |
38172 | ''Why do n''t you read your letters?'' |
38172 | ''Why does n''t father come?'' |
38172 | ''Why have you come?'' |
38172 | ''Why is a hen?'' |
38172 | ''Why is he here?'' |
38172 | ''Why not?'' |
38172 | ''Why should it? |
38172 | ''Why should she have?'' |
38172 | ''Why, did n''t you get my telephone message? |
38172 | ''Why, where are you going, Eunice?'' |
38172 | ''Why? |
38172 | ''Will duty call you back before you have been with me just a little while?'' |
38172 | ''Will you ask Zümbül Agha to come here?'' |
38172 | ''Will you not go? |
38172 | ''Wo n''t you come up and see?'' |
38172 | ''Yes, Noakes?'' |
38172 | ''Yes,--don''t you know Hannah? |
38172 | ''Yes? |
38172 | ''You ai n''t sorry you did it?'' |
38172 | ''You alchemists are capable of the utterest abstraction, are n''t you?'' |
38172 | ''You are coming, I hope?'' |
38172 | ''You could not make one?'' |
38172 | ''You did talk to me in the shrubbery, did n''t you?'' |
38172 | ''You have n''t been thinking of selling me out-- after all the business I''ve given you?'' |
38172 | ''You have not an American flag?'' |
38172 | ''You love me, and blind?'' |
38172 | ''You remember, do n''t ye, Bill?'' |
38172 | ''You wish that you had been called Gwendolin?'' |
38172 | ''You''d not say a word?'' |
38172 | ''You''ve been to see Hesper Sherwood again?'' |
38172 | ''You, Françoise? |
38172 | ''Your baby?'' |
38172 | ''Zümbül Agha,''he suddenly heard himself harshly saying,''is this your house or mine? |
38172 | ''_ He?_''I questioned, awestruck by her tone. |
38172 | *****''What did you think of when the car stopped rolling?'' |
38172 | *****''Who was the boy who ran round by the espaliers a minute ago? |
38172 | A thief? |
38172 | After all, did he dare say that his wife would never suffer? |
38172 | After all, what did he know about her? |
38172 | After what you told me? |
38172 | Alchemist?'' |
38172 | Am I to stand by and watch dishonor brought upon it simply because you have eaten the poison of a woman?'' |
38172 | An aeroplane over Sézanne at dawn? |
38172 | And a question came, near the sharp one, yet hoping to evade it:--''Jack, dearest, how long will you be with me? |
38172 | And after a moment, for his laboring breath had failed, she said,''Yes, dear?'' |
38172 | And he called back from the stair,''How soon_ may_ I come?'' |
38172 | And if Lot''s wife could be turned into a pillar of salt, why should not a marble child turn into a real one? |
38172 | And just ask Mustafa to bring me a coffee at the fountain, will you? |
38172 | And she was deeply thankful that they should see alike, while she answered,''It''s not exactly a time for considering one''s nerves, is it, Jack? |
38172 | And then he asked,''Are we dining up there, do you know?'' |
38172 | And then the reply,''Yes, who is it?'' |
38172 | And what could be easier than to turn it upside down? |
38172 | And what did they tell you to ask me? |
38172 | And what if, after all, only calamity were to come out of the chest, and he were to lose his last gift of hope? |
38172 | And why not? |
38172 | And why should he not have been saved fresh for just such a need as this? |
38172 | And why this high attainment in the realm of the short story? |
38172 | And yet one day when she had answered,''You and I, Stephen?'' |
38172 | And you are not afraid that_ monsieur le fiancé_ will fight? |
38172 | And you, Mathilde? |
38172 | And, then, if I do n''t come back, will you, for my sake, see that they are safe?'' |
38172 | Are n''t there really any happy times for married people, ever? |
38172 | Are there any men in the world who have n''t given way at least_ once_ about something or other?--are there, father?'' |
38172 | Are there no lights in this place?'' |
38172 | Are there not superior horses as well as superior men-- a Peroxide Jim to complement a Wade? |
38172 | Are they all right?'' |
38172 | Are you and mother miserable? |
38172 | Are you not afraid?'' |
38172 | As big as yourself, I wonder?'' |
38172 | As if from the hushed heart of it, he said,--''What did you hear, mother?'' |
38172 | At last he asked,--''What kind of a man is Peter Lannithorne?'' |
38172 | Belgium flowing with blood? |
38172 | Besides, what had the black man to do with their private affairs? |
38172 | Bradley?'' |
38172 | Bring her here, to stay?'' |
38172 | But after a moment she added,''Will you ask them to turn off the water in the fountain? |
38172 | But after all, what could one do with old Zümbül? |
38172 | But how could she stop it before the end? |
38172 | But where do their armies come from?'' |
38172 | But why was I brought into this house? |
38172 | But, after all, it is n''t home, Johnny, is it?'' |
38172 | Ca n''t it be our Glory- Box, for us both to use on special occasions-- like this?'' |
38172 | Can you find such a thing without asking any one?'' |
38172 | Can you shelter her soul as well as her body? |
38172 | Cargan called,''can you get an auto anywhere here?'' |
38172 | Confess now, there is a reason for your-- your application?'' |
38172 | Could I have rung up the wrong office?'' |
38172 | Could it really be that it was not the divine thing it seemed when he and Ruth looked into each other''s eyes? |
38172 | Could you not cable him to come over and bring the thing with him? |
38172 | D''ye hear the news, you port watch? |
38172 | Did Dollie care about any of the things she cared about? |
38172 | Did she hold her head high at the mention of his name? |
38172 | Did she recognize and acknowledge the situation? |
38172 | Did she think he had the courage to settle such a question decisively-- righteously? |
38172 | Did you ever hear a_ man_ scream?'' |
38172 | Did you ever hear them big guns?'' |
38172 | Did you ever take Gregory''s powder? |
38172 | Do n''t you know that he would have been glad if you had openly found fault with him? |
38172 | Do n''t you listen to the minister, Prudence Jane?'' |
38172 | Do n''t you s''pose you''ll get a little credit for that?'' |
38172 | Do n''t you see what ails your father''s point of view, and my wife''s? |
38172 | Do n''t you understand?'' |
38172 | Do n''t you want to show me your things? |
38172 | Do you ever see their spirits?'' |
38172 | Do you forbid Ruth and me to marry-- is that it?'' |
38172 | Do you hear the thunder? |
38172 | Do you hear? |
38172 | Do you suppose so?'' |
38172 | Do you suppose when that hour comes to you that you''ll want to remember his grandfather was a convict? |
38172 | Do you think could it be that?'' |
38172 | Do you think that you have shown me that your qualifications are adequate?'' |
38172 | Do you think the roots really reach so far?'' |
38172 | Do you want I should be telling you what I''ve been hatching these many long days and nights? |
38172 | Even if the enemy politely waited for her to finish it, would they not detect it at once? |
38172 | Excuse my untractableness, wo n''t you?'' |
38172 | For orders do you permit circles about your eyes as dark as they themselves are? |
38172 | Had Shaban really meant anything? |
38172 | Had any one received a telephone message about a week ago from Mrs. Julia Norris? |
38172 | Had he played the game boldly and well? |
38172 | Had he the right to purchase a quiet conscience at the expense of Kitty''s pride? |
38172 | Had he them then, or was it a dream? |
38172 | Had his birth given such pain? |
38172 | Had n''t we better use them?'' |
38172 | Had the Germans been good to her? |
38172 | Has any one--?'' |
38172 | Have I not eaten your bread and your father''s for thirty years?'' |
38172 | Have n''t I been good to you?'' |
38172 | Have n''t you noticed a transparency about her lately, Annie?'' |
38172 | Have you ever figured it out?'' |
38172 | He appeared to belong to the place as much as the hollyhocks and honeysuckle; and yet, how could that be? |
38172 | Her body had never lent itself to an immodest gesture; what-- she caught at the notion-- could be more immodest than visible fear? |
38172 | His voice sounded at once:''Are you there?'' |
38172 | His wife''s smile gave way to a puzzled look as she returned very quietly,--''Do you really think it worth while to face these imaginary situations?'' |
38172 | How about them?'' |
38172 | How am I to suppose that they know best about Ruth and me?'' |
38172 | How can you be so naughty?'' |
38172 | How could any one refuse to share such a radiant life when it was offered? |
38172 | How did any of it concern her, that she should be cooped in a country manor to await horrors from unknown people? |
38172 | How did that happen? |
38172 | How do I know you are not like that?'' |
38172 | How long is the leave?'' |
38172 | How many men marry without being sure that they have even so much to offer? |
38172 | How many states were there? |
38172 | How many times have I told you to bring your people here, Shaban? |
38172 | How much ought he to be influenced by Mrs. Lannithorne''s passionate protests and his father''s stern warnings? |
38172 | How was she faring, this marvelous night? |
38172 | How were she and Dollie getting on? |
38172 | How will you face that down?'' |
38172 | I am glad you are here, but wo n''t it hurt you, retard your recovery?'' |
38172 | I do n''t want to help it; you do n''t mind my saying so?'' |
38172 | I know what you--''''How do you know what I think?'' |
38172 | I thought they gave you longer?'' |
38172 | I would n''t have had it happen for-- Let me see, what was the amount of your order?'' |
38172 | III''Why not?'' |
38172 | If he did, would the people take baby away? |
38172 | If the memory of Julia Norris''s confidence stabbed him, what of the attitude of his superiors at the office? |
38172 | If, as his heart told him, there was nothing to be afraid of, why were his elders thus cautious and terrified? |
38172 | Immolation, you call it?'' |
38172 | In return, is it too much to ask that she be assured a roof over her head, food to her mouth, clothes to her body? |
38172 | Instead, this is what she said:--''Is Eliza Anna Bomination your grandmother?'' |
38172 | Is he wealthy?'' |
38172 | Is it as long as that? |
38172 | Is n''t that so? |
38172 | Is that what you mean?'' |
38172 | Is that you? |
38172 | Is this life,''he cried,''or death?'' |
38172 | Is your arm strong? |
38172 | Is your heart loyal? |
38172 | It may be miserable for other people, but how could it be miserable for Ruth and me?'' |
38172 | It was again Zümbül Agha who spoke, turning one question by another:--''Did Shaban come with you?'' |
38172 | It was''Why, John, what''s the matter?'' |
38172 | It''s your job, is n''t it, to be dead sure that everything''s all right, or somehow going to be all right-- no matter about all the mussed- upness? |
38172 | Just what did it mean? |
38172 | Knew what? |
38172 | Lannithorne, have you any objection to letting Ruth marry me?'' |
38172 | MR. SQUEM BY ARTHUR RUSSELL TAYLOR''Why do we go on perpetuating an uncomfortable breed?'' |
38172 | May I keep on caring?'' |
38172 | Might it not be the best way out? |
38172 | Mother, darling, I wonder, could you just go and see her once or twice? |
38172 | Mother-- I''m married.--I came back to get married.--I was married this morning.--O mother, can you ever forgive me?'' |
38172 | Noakes?'' |
38172 | Nor did he grow less puzzled when the eunuch turned to her and said in another tone,--''Now will you give me that key?'' |
38172 | Now, what do you suppose you would advise me to do in a situation like that? |
38172 | Now, will you please tell me how you happened to be up here? |
38172 | Open- mouthed silence waited upon them, until Cousin Austin broke the spell with,--''I say, would you mind if I looked over your shoulder?'' |
38172 | Opening the door, I said,--''May I come in?'' |
38172 | Or a bitterness of not being like other men? |
38172 | Or might some tatter of preposterous humanity still work obscurely in him? |
38172 | Or was it all suggestion, the superior intelligence above riding-- not the flesh, but the spirit? |
38172 | Or, here again, did she prefer a blind certainty? |
38172 | Ought he to go to some farmhouse? |
38172 | Ought n''t one to try to be safe?'' |
38172 | Paris in danger? |
38172 | Perhaps: but how to take it on their word? |
38172 | Pickersgill, what are your qualifications for the care of a wife and family?'' |
38172 | Please, at once?'' |
38172 | Reflected from what? |
38172 | Say, do you know the picture was painted by a man out in Montana? |
38172 | Say, do you want to carry_ him_? |
38172 | Say-- do you want to?'' |
38172 | See?'' |
38172 | Separate him from it? |
38172 | Shall I take you to see her? |
38172 | She took all things as they came, since how could anything matter now that everything that mattered was over? |
38172 | She turned on;''Are you there?'' |
38172 | Should I go to school, or should I keep my eyes as long as I could? |
38172 | Some of our fellows are deaf from it.--You heard of Toppie, mother?'' |
38172 | Suppose the aunts catch you?'' |
38172 | Take it from me that this is Gospel truth, ca n''t you? |
38172 | That glancing creature grow old? |
38172 | That was what you said, was n''t it? |
38172 | The Germans in France? |
38172 | Then he asks that fateful question-- What will my reading public say? |
38172 | Then he said, as abruptly as before,''Can you have him moved in the morning?'' |
38172 | Then what does she say about marrying you?'' |
38172 | Then,--''What the devil are you patronizing him for? |
38172 | There is nothing like music for that, is there? |
38172 | There''s no holding him? |
38172 | They tell no tales?'' |
38172 | They were dear and kind, but why should they be so kind? |
38172 | This kid I found-- where do you suppose? |
38172 | Tires are your life- preserver-- they are shaped like life- preservers, are n''t they?'' |
38172 | To Babylon, or some lost coast of gods and visions? |
38172 | Understood what? |
38172 | Upon what day had Julia Norris telephoned? |
38172 | WHAT ROAD GOETH HE? |
38172 | WHAT ROAD GOETH HE? |
38172 | Want a drink, Bill?'' |
38172 | Was Hélène''safe''? |
38172 | Was any other face hidden beside it, mocking him? |
38172 | Was it last Friday? |
38172 | Was it more intimate association with the man on his back, and so, a further remove from the wild thing which domestication does not seem to touch? |
38172 | Was it not quite her natural voice? |
38172 | Was it possible for his wife, the wife who had lived so close to all his weaknesses, to glorify him with so large a hope? |
38172 | Was it right to keep a baby out all night? |
38172 | Was it training? |
38172 | Was it very hard to find words to rhyme, if one tried poetry? |
38172 | Was that what Hélène had stood looking at so long? |
38172 | Was there no way out? |
38172 | We have n''t heard of him for more than fifteen years or so, have we?'' |
38172 | We wait here for our men, hein?'' |
38172 | Well, now what is there in the idea of marrying a jail- bird''s child that you find especially attractive?'' |
38172 | Were you with him?'' |
38172 | What are the ideas?'' |
38172 | What could be more humiliating than to hold up a white flag in vain? |
38172 | What could it mean to any one? |
38172 | What did she really mean? |
38172 | What did she say to your things?'' |
38172 | What did you come out for?'' |
38172 | What else can you expect? |
38172 | What had he given Kitty in the fifteen years of their wedded life? |
38172 | What had she ever really told him, and what had he ever really divined of her? |
38172 | What if he were right-- if he really knew? |
38172 | What if it had burned up? |
38172 | What if it were burning up at this very moment? |
38172 | What if she were a poor dressmaker at the little village of Johnson''s Falls? |
38172 | What is it, Bill?'' |
38172 | What is the tongue put out behind the back of the enemy without the applause of some admirer? |
38172 | What kept you out so late, Johnny?'' |
38172 | What kind of--? |
38172 | What matters it now that her father was not an aristocratic Virginian? |
38172 | What should he do? |
38172 | What though she was not elected a member of the Laurel Literary Society? |
38172 | What to him was a policy of world- peace? |
38172 | What was Jack to do with her? |
38172 | What was it, after all, this adventure of the married life whereof these seasoned travelers spoke so dubiously? |
38172 | What was she doing with herself? |
38172 | What was ten thousand dollars to her? |
38172 | What will you find in caring for me?'' |
38172 | What would you tell me to do?'' |
38172 | What, we may be interested in asking, are these larger and more persistent demands? |
38172 | Whatever do you mean by telling such an outrageous fib?'' |
38172 | When?'' |
38172 | Where were his footsteps taking him down the empty street? |
38172 | Where''s the girl gone to, I wonder?'' |
38172 | Who can trust her? |
38172 | Who cared about the cut- and- dried life of a grown woman? |
38172 | Who had a wagon? |
38172 | Who was she? |
38172 | Who was there to fetch and carry? |
38172 | Who would have believed that the camera would ever be anything but a dream? |
38172 | Whose is gone?'' |
38172 | Whose race was it? |
38172 | Why did babies come this way? |
38172 | Why did they stare at her as if she might have an idol''s power over events? |
38172 | Why had she not taken greater precautions? |
38172 | Why in the world could n''t I wait until bedtime? |
38172 | Why not marry where there is no taint?'' |
38172 | Why not? |
38172 | Why should Edmund Laye, who had chosen an antipodal career, be dragged back to present himself as a mark for some Prussian shell? |
38172 | Why should he be brought here, she thought pitifully, to the room he never frequented, where she scarcely welcomed him, she acknowledged? |
38172 | Why should he be, as he possessed without that trouble a goodly share of what men acquire by taking thought? |
38172 | Why should he make such an absurd fuss over confessing his fault to Julia Norris? |
38172 | Why should she sit beside him here, when she had so seldom done so before? |
38172 | Will you keep it for me please? |
38172 | Wo n''t you, Becky?'' |
38172 | Worn out, she fell asleep; to wake-- to what? |
38172 | Would he have let her love him''too well''? |
38172 | Would she die? |
38172 | Would she have been happy with her lover? |
38172 | Would the next leap carry them after him? |
38172 | Would you get me an overcoat please, Shaban, and a brush of some kind? |
38172 | Yet for what other end was their strength given them? |
38172 | Yet what was this strange up- welling of relief, deep, deep relief, for Jack; this gladness, poignant and celestial, like that of the hepaticas? |
38172 | You are n''t in a hurry, are you?'' |
38172 | You are thinking that I could n''t possibly understand?'' |
38172 | You did n''t show her the tablecloth I gave you?'' |
38172 | You have never been so near me-- so how can anything be spoiled? |
38172 | You know how it is?'' |
38172 | You know, those little dolls that Catholics tote around? |
38172 | You know, when you''re young and kind of unhappy and slighted, how you make up things to sort of comfort yourself?'' |
38172 | You made it, did n''t you?'' |
38172 | You see, if it did, where should I be?'' |
38172 | You were sorry for yourself because John was not on your level?'' |
38172 | You yourself, of what are you sure? |
38172 | You''d swear she was in fear of missing something?'' |
38172 | Your grandfather, was it?'' |
38172 | _ Did_ you see that newly- wed rooster,--I''ll bet he was that,--the one with the celluloid collar? |
38172 | _ Is_ married life something to be afraid of? |
38172 | _ Monsieur votre fiancé_ will not have to fight, then? |
38172 | and the girl? |
38172 | and the little ones? |
38172 | from Aunt Mary, and''Well, John, how goes it?'' |
38172 | from Uncle Philip, who looked as if he knew that it went very badly indeed; and''What makes you look so worried? |
38172 | how help any one? |
38172 | is that you, John? |
38172 | why not?'' |
7283 | Ah, did n''t I tell ye so? |
7283 | And where will that be? |
7283 | And why that, and why that, O Morag, lennavanmo? |
7283 | And you? |
7283 | But if I had been born lord of Brisetout, and you had been the poor scholar Francis, would the difference have been any the less? 7283 Can we dig next to you, then?" |
7283 | Do n''t you get any gold? |
7283 | Does the Heaven- born want this ball? |
7283 | Fishing? |
7283 | Gain? |
7283 | Have you any money? |
7283 | How do they call you? |
7283 | How do you know,he said,"that your own eyesight has not degenerated with time? |
7283 | Is that gold? |
7283 | May we look? |
7283 | Of what trade? |
7283 | Put it,said Villon,"that I were really a thief, should I not play my life also, and against heavier odds?" |
7283 | Sure, now, Morag- a- ghraidh, you will be my own lass and no other? |
7283 | Time for what, Morag? |
7283 | What has gone wrong? |
7283 | What is it, Morag- mo- run? |
7283 | Where would it be but to the place you took me out of, and called across? |
7283 | Why does he make that abominable noise? 7283 Why should we put on fertilizer?" |
7283 | Will you seat yourself,said the old man,"and forgive me if I leave you? |
7283 | Yes,said I,"but when he gets old his face is black; and do you not see his nose, how flat it is, like yours?" |
7283 | You are cold,repeated the old man,"and hungry? |
7283 | Your donkey,says he,"is very old?" |
7283 | Among what kind of people would a story like this be believed? |
7283 | And have I nothing to reproach myself for? |
7283 | And when I wanted to go fishing for trout, have I ever hesitated to dismiss you?" |
7283 | Are the descriptions in the story simple or elaborate?] |
7283 | Are there any points of likeness?] |
7283 | Are you not ashamed of yourself? |
7283 | As a spectator, what things would you find most interesting in the scene? |
7283 | Born about 570 in Mecca(?) |
7283 | Born in 1500(?) |
7283 | But being deceived, why should she think it odd to find hay inside? |
7283 | But how had he managed to see that polo- ball? |
7283 | But if not milk, why not hay? |
7283 | By what details do you learn the state of the country? |
7283 | By what details does the author give special poignancy to the pathos of her account? |
7283 | By what incidents does the author show the unselfish devotion of the old musician for his pet? |
7283 | Can you characterize this kind of description?] |
7283 | Can you get any hint of the social conditions at the time of the story? |
7283 | Can you give any instances from history or fiction to show the attitude of the French aristocracy before the Revolution? |
7283 | Can you mention any other famous speeches that are regarded as fine literature?] |
7283 | Can you point to anything in Lincoln''s addresses that proves the correctness of the popular judgment of him? |
7283 | Can you quote any of the sayings in it? |
7283 | Can you see any likeness in this to Lamb and Hawthorne?] |
7283 | Can you show the evidence of Scotch Covenanter inheritance in the writer''s philosophy? |
7283 | Can you tell anything about the first rush of gold seekers to California? |
7283 | Could it have lived an hour as happily?" |
7283 | Could you infer anything about the writer''s character from this sketch?] |
7283 | Did Robin Hood ever take service with King Richard? |
7283 | Did you ever have the impulse to"take your spite out"on something, animate or inanimate? |
7283 | Did you ever sleep at night out of doors? |
7283 | Did you feel any better for relieving your feelings so? |
7283 | Do Lincoln''s statements about war apply to the present great European conflict? |
7283 | Do children think of their dolls as alive? |
7283 | Do people ever work such tricks? |
7283 | Do they heighten the picture? |
7283 | Do women in this country do the same kinds of work as the European peasant women? |
7283 | Do you feel the personality of Lincoln in these speeches? |
7283 | Do you get a single picture, or a rapid succession of pictures? |
7283 | Do you imagine that Mr. Beecher was successful in his addresses to the English people? |
7283 | Do you imagine that he would be a good out- of- doors companion? |
7283 | Do you imagine that the writer learned to make bread? |
7283 | Do you know Kipling''s ballad,"The East and the West"?] |
7283 | Do you know any books similar to what you may imagine the"Castle of the Pyrenees"to be?] |
7283 | Do you know any other stories written in this vein? |
7283 | Do you know anything about the custom of"heckling"in England? |
7283 | Do you know anything about the difficulties of Alpine climbing from other accounts you have read? |
7283 | Do you know anything about the"Lincoln Mythology"that has grown up since the war?] |
7283 | Do you know anything of Franklin''s life that showed whether he lived up to the moral he sets forth in this story?] |
7283 | Do you know of any abuses or wrongs that have been abolished by being shown up as ridiculous? |
7283 | Do you know what happened to the Marquis in the"Tale of Two Cities"? |
7283 | Do you know what science now says about"the beginning of things"being"associated with water"? |
7283 | Do you know what the general attitude of the savage and semi- civilized people is toward strange things? |
7283 | Do you know whether the monkey family is capable of the training which the author hoped to give to his pet? |
7283 | Do you know why the author calls the Sultan''s palace impenetrable? |
7283 | Do you sympathize with Pepper or the author? |
7283 | Do you think it likely that the militaristic type of mind can have much sense of humor?] |
7283 | Do you think that philosophizing helped or hindered the climber? |
7283 | Do you think the descriptions would be so purely objective if they were written by the explorer himself? |
7283 | Does Ichabod seem a real character or only a caricature?] |
7283 | Does Villon make out a good case? |
7283 | Does any article of food arouse your enthusiasm? |
7283 | Does ceremoniousness increase or decrease with civilization?] |
7283 | Does it add to the interest of the battle to attribute human qualities to the combatants? |
7283 | Does it add to the reality of the scene? |
7283 | Does that spirit live in France to- day?] |
7283 | Does the author describe the bear sympathetically and lovingly or as a naturalist? |
7283 | Does the author describe the taste of roast pig sympathetically? |
7283 | Does the author make the scene of the arrival of the Prussians vivid? |
7283 | Does the author make this story a personal tragedy or the tragedy of France? |
7283 | Does the author place the blame for such conditions as made this child an unhappy weakling? |
7283 | Does the author seem to think that Miss Betsey''s charms or her money were her attraction?] |
7283 | Does the author show a love for, and knowledge of, nature? |
7283 | Does the author show a sympathetic attitude toward war? |
7283 | Does the author succeed in giving a clear picture of the volcano?] |
7283 | Does the author succeed in giving you an idea of the excitement of coon- hunting? |
7283 | Does the author succeed in making the panther appeal to our sympathy? |
7283 | Does the author succeed in making you like or dislike"Tommy"? |
7283 | Does the author win your sympathy for the cats? |
7283 | Does the author write as an enthusiastic hunter? |
7283 | Does the author''s humor seem to you unkindly? |
7283 | Does the change wrought in Roaring Camp seem to you to be reasonable? |
7283 | Does the description seem like ridicule? |
7283 | Does the early life in New York appear to you attractive or uninteresting? |
7283 | Does the incident seem probable from what you know of the period? |
7283 | Does the portrait of the child seem real or exaggerated? |
7283 | Does the story seem plausible or merely fantastic? |
7283 | Does the story show"poetic insight"? |
7283 | Does the understanding between Buck and his master seem unusual? |
7283 | Does the"taboo"here seem to you to be a matter of law or religion? |
7283 | Does this give you any clue to Villon''s character?] |
7283 | Does this story seem to justify a belief in the origin of species? |
7283 | Does war seem glorious or heroic from this point of view? |
7283 | For what are you to do? |
7283 | Had these men any quarrel? |
7283 | Has any of it ever seemed so to you? |
7283 | Has the author used the element of surprise effectively? |
7283 | Has the narrative the stamp of a real experience? |
7283 | Have I not often made you water my garden instead of studying? |
7283 | Have we any"taboos"in our social system? |
7283 | Have you ever heard other stories of elephants that seem to show the power of reasoning?] |
7283 | Have you ever read any stories or fairy tales that tell about changelings? |
7283 | Have you ever thought of the quaint absurdity of this figurative expression?] |
7283 | Have you read any prose or poetry in which war is made to seem glorious? |
7283 | He has to bear so many hard words as it is; why should not we then be a little kind to him-- we who love music? |
7283 | How are the terror and suffering of the people indicated? |
7283 | How did she seem to be always putting him in the wrong? |
7283 | How did the war affect even the people remote from the battlefields? |
7283 | How do these cats differ from cats as you know them? |
7283 | How does it seem here? |
7283 | How does the element of suspense add to the interest? |
7283 | How has the author contrasted the civilizations of East and West? |
7283 | How has the author drawn the character of Bernadou? |
7283 | How is the sense of silence and isolation conveyed?] |
7283 | How is this done? |
7283 | How much was the success of the speech due to Mr. Beecher''s sense of humor? |
7283 | How then? |
7283 | How would the natives have solved the problem? |
7283 | How? |
7283 | If so, was the night empty of impressions or did you hear and see things? |
7283 | In the exaggerations? |
7283 | In what does the humor of the account lie?] |
7283 | In what does the humor of the story lie? |
7283 | Is his attitude toward the author a typically Eastern one? |
7283 | Is his description of war a fair one? |
7283 | Is it effective? |
7283 | Is it his child?" |
7283 | Is it in the absurdity of the story told? |
7283 | Is it made more poignant by being unexpected?] |
7283 | Is it not a kind of theft?" |
7283 | Is ridicule an effective weapon against wrongs? |
7283 | Is the account more interesting by being told in the first person? |
7283 | Is the appeal in the speeches to reason or to feeling? |
7283 | Is the description of the scene objective or subjective? |
7283 | Is the humor of the story one of situation merely? |
7283 | Is the humor of the story one of situation or character? |
7283 | Is the picture of the old man dignified or sordid? |
7283 | Is the story technical at the expense of the reader''s interest? |
7283 | Is the story too fantastic to gain the reader''s sympathy?] |
7283 | Is the term used seriously or ironically? |
7283 | Is there any suggestion of the poet in his remarks? |
7283 | Is there anything in the narrative to suggest the identity of Locksley? |
7283 | Is there no difference between these two?" |
7283 | Or as representing people they know? |
7283 | Shall I tell you how it came into my head? |
7283 | She was well acquainted with the process of putting hay inside, why therefore should she be surprised to find hay inside? |
7283 | Should he, as he at first thought of doing, kill it with a shot from his carbine? |
7283 | Should not I have been the soldier, and you the thief?" |
7283 | Should not I have been warming my knees at this charcoal pan, and would not you have been groping for farthings in the snow? |
7283 | So you''ve been eating some Arab or other, eh? |
7283 | The Heaven- born set no particular store by it; but of what use was a polo- ball to a khitmatgar? |
7283 | The creature, part tiger and part woman, suggests what famous monument?] |
7283 | The fish had turned under it, and whether he was now up the river or down, or where he was who could tell? |
7283 | The horses there; are they right?" |
7283 | The sultana of the desert[ Footnote: Why does the author call the tiger the sultana of the desert?] |
7283 | WAR What, speaking in quite unofficial language, is the net purpose and upshot of war? |
7283 | Was Whitman''s carefulness about his personal appearance an evidence of egotism or altruism? |
7283 | Was his pet winning or lovable? |
7283 | Was it a crocodile? |
7283 | Was it a lion? |
7283 | Was it a tiger? |
7283 | Was the native in the story the sort of person whom you would expect to"hold forth in an authoritative voice on a variety of subjects"? |
7283 | Was the old Arab vain or only stupid? |
7283 | Was this, then, to be the end of the enterprise, and were they to meet death in that cold and pitiless sea? |
7283 | What Oriental custom is the author alluding to?] |
7283 | What adjective would we use now?] |
7283 | What are they called in the third sentence from the end of the paragraph?] |
7283 | What characteristic things has Stevenson chosen to give you in the picture of camping out at night? |
7283 | What characteristics of Villon are brought out? |
7283 | What characteristics of the author are shown in this sketch? |
7283 | What colors predominate? |
7283 | What contrasts between beauty and sordidness are made in the descriptions?] |
7283 | What country did use and still uses this system?] |
7283 | What courses of study do you imagine were given in Ichabod''s school? |
7283 | What do such stories make you think of"the glory of conquest"? |
7283 | What do we mean when we say of an act or a thing that it is"taboo,"or"tabooed"? |
7283 | What do we wish to obtain from him, and why have we brought him forth from his impenetrable palace? |
7283 | What do you imagine were the"adventures with the pine knots"that Burroughs speaks of?] |
7283 | What do you know of Peary''s later expedition? |
7283 | What do you know of Thoreau''s life at Walden Pond?] |
7283 | What do you think of the priest and his comment? |
7283 | What does it mean? |
7283 | What does the author mean by this?] |
7283 | What does this mean?] |
7283 | What does this mean?] |
7283 | What effect is produced by the absence of color in the description? |
7283 | What famous book of maxims was written by Franklin? |
7283 | What glimpses of the character of the miners does the story give you? |
7283 | What has come to be the universally accepted estimate of Lincoln? |
7283 | What human qualities does"Tommy"show? |
7283 | What impresses you most in the account: the fun or the cruelty of hunting? |
7283 | What is added to the story by attributing human qualities to Modestine? |
7283 | What is gained by this? |
7283 | What is meant by this term?] |
7283 | What is the allusion? |
7283 | What is the climax of the story? |
7283 | What is the effect of Hubert''s repetition of the words"my grandsire drew a long bow,"etc.? |
7283 | What is the effect of this? |
7283 | What is the most interesting point in the narrative?] |
7283 | What is the probable time? |
7283 | What is the real difference between the two men? |
7283 | What is the significance of the title"A Leaf in the Storm"?] |
7283 | What is the usual form?] |
7283 | What kind of child do you imagine the writer was? |
7283 | What kind of spirit does it show? |
7283 | What observations does the author make on the difference between East and West? |
7283 | What other qualities of the naturalist does Burroughs show in this account? |
7283 | What other selections are similar to this in the style of writing? |
7283 | What other selections have you studied in which this sort of humor is shown? |
7283 | What other stories have been told in this way? |
7283 | What other things might the descriptions have included if the author had not been so much interested in the people? |
7283 | What parts of the sketch are humorous? |
7283 | What picture do you get of the country in which the travelers journeyed? |
7283 | What plea does the author make for all childhood? |
7283 | What possibilities of tragedy are hinted at in the narrative? |
7283 | What qualities had the cub that endeared it to the author? |
7283 | What qualities have they that you recognize? |
7283 | What qualities of Lincoln seem most to impress the writer? |
7283 | What qualities of Whitman''s do you think most endeared him to the soldiers? |
7283 | What qualities of the true explorer does Peary show? |
7283 | What qualities would you attribute to an English audience, judging from this account? |
7283 | What sense would you find most active if you were on the coon- hunt? |
7283 | What similar statement was made in"An Arab Fisherman"?] |
7283 | What stories, of those you have studied, does this most resemble? |
7283 | What success do you think they had? |
7283 | What things are contrasted in the account? |
7283 | What things are sold in the bazaar that show the Eastern skill in handicraft? |
7283 | What things do you suppose Stevenson most enjoyed in his life out of doors?] |
7283 | What things does he notice? |
7283 | What things in nature seem most to attract his attention? |
7283 | What things in the scene should you like to see for yourself? |
7283 | What things in the text suggest this? |
7283 | What touches of humor do you find in the description? |
7283 | What traits of character does the writer show? |
7283 | What was the music like? |
7283 | What was the real"luck"that Tommy brought to Roaring Camp?] |
7283 | What was to be done? |
7283 | What were they?] |
7283 | What words in the first sentence show that it is not the beginning of the story? |
7283 | Where do you find surprises in the story that add to its interest?] |
7283 | Where do you see these things in this story? |
7283 | Where does the author indicate that he is about to begin a story? |
7283 | Where is the climax of the story? |
7283 | Which is the author really giving you: nature as it is, or as it seems to the boy? |
7283 | Which of the senses predominates in the description? |
7283 | Who and what may you be?" |
7283 | Who threw that?" |
7283 | Why did Locksley refuse the money?] |
7283 | Why did Villon not steal the goblets?] |
7283 | Why did the miners insist on"frills"for Tommy? |
7283 | Why did the old man care so much for it? |
7283 | Why do you suppose Mr. Beecher was introduced as Henry Ward Beecher Stowe? |
7283 | Why do you think Muhammad Din always played alone? |
7283 | Why does the author call the child the"Future of the Race"? |
7283 | Why does the author introduce such incongruous terms as"foreman of the jury,""jury box,""insurance offices"?] |
7283 | Why does the author think that his interview with the Sultan may be useless?] |
7283 | Why does the author use almost entirely the short sentences? |
7283 | Why does the danger of the enterprise take so small a part in the narrative? |
7283 | Why does the writer dwell on the physical fitness of Buck? |
7283 | Why not?] |
7283 | Why royal?] |
7283 | Why was it to Muhammad Din? |
7283 | Why was the decree made that this was to be"the last class in French"? |
7283 | Why was the miner willing to admit the newcomers? |
7283 | Why was there a staircase leading into a blind space? |
7283 | Why was there a strong padlocked door shutting off the staircase? |
7283 | Why would a painter find it easy to paint a picture from these written descriptions? |
7283 | Why"slippery"? |
7283 | Why? |
7283 | Why? |
7283 | Why? |
7283 | Why? |
7283 | Why? |
7283 | Why? |
7283 | Why? |
7283 | Why? |
7283 | Why? |
7283 | Why?] |
7283 | Why?] |
7283 | Why?] |
7283 | Why?] |
7283 | Will it be a''coon, or will it turn out a''possum, a wild- cat, or mayhap an owl? |
7283 | Would the account have any added interest if it were told in the first person?] |
7283 | Would the account seem more real or more interesting if it had been told in the first person?] |
7283 | Would the destruction of the sand- house be a tragedy to most Western children? |
7283 | Would you consider"Baby Sylvester"capable of training? |
7283 | Would you have been able to recognize Muhammad Din from the author''s description? |
7283 | Would you judge that the writer was a scientist? |
7283 | [ Footnote: Are there any parts of the country where the traditions of the"best parlor"are still kept? |
7283 | [ Footnote: Could you tell from the context where the scene is laid? |
7283 | [ Footnote: Do the incidents related seem real or exaggerated? |
7283 | [ Footnote: Do you know any facts of Lincoln''s life that would support some of these statements? |
7283 | [ Footnote: Does Carlyle write from the usual military standpoint? |
7283 | [ Footnote: Does the opening paragraph give you any hint as to the source of this extract? |
7283 | [ Footnote: Does the style and sentiment expressed remind you of an older literature? |
7283 | [ Footnote: How does the heroism shown in this account of Peary''s struggle compare with military courage? |
7283 | [ Footnote: In this essay where does the humor lie? |
7283 | [ Footnote: Is the first part of the narrative a typical story of"fisherman''s luck"? |
7283 | [ Footnote: Is this style of writing similar to that of any other selections you have studied? |
7283 | [ Footnote: What do you imagine has preceded this selection? |
7283 | [ Footnote: What does the phrase"the trails would grow cold"mean? |
7283 | [ Footnote: What does this power of minute observation tell you about the writer? |
7283 | [ Footnote: What hints does the sketch give you of the period in which the story is laid? |
7283 | [ Footnote: What interested the author in the old organ- grinder? |
7283 | [ Footnote: What is the effect of the repeated use of"always"in the first paragraph? |
7283 | [ Footnote: What part do you imagine the writer had in the expedition he describes? |
7283 | [ Footnote: What picture do you get of Whitman in this account? |
7283 | [ Footnote: What qualities of"Tommy"endeared him to his captors? |
7283 | [ Footnote: What reference in the first sentence to the sports in the arena of Rome? |
7283 | [ Footnote: What things are contrasted in the story? |
7283 | [ Footnote: What things in nature do you think most interested the writer? |
7283 | [ Footnote: What things in the account of the battle show that the writer is a trained observer? |
7283 | [ Footnote: What things in the description would tell you that the scene was Oriental? |
7283 | [ Footnote: What traits does the author find most admirable in the women of Brittany? |
7283 | [ Footnote: What traits of character does Maggie show? |
7283 | [ Footnote: What use does the author make of contrast? |
7283 | [ Footnote: Where do you imagine this scene is laid? |
7283 | [ Footnote: Where is the scene of the story laid? |
7283 | [ Footnote: Whore do you imagine this scene is laid? |
7283 | [ Footnote: Why could the child enjoy only"peppermints and kippered herring"? |
7283 | [ Footnote: Why had the miners chosen the name"Baby Sylvester"for the bear cub? |
7283 | [ Footnote: Would you imagine, from this extract, that the book from which it was taken would be interesting? |
7283 | [ Footnote: Would you judge that this was the writer''s first experience in camping? |
7283 | and quiver, to the Provost of the sports?" |
7283 | and the hoarse voice out in the sea?" |
7283 | but how when she is really hungry?" |
7283 | in the humor?] |
7283 | mademoiselle, you''re a nice girl, ai n''t you? |
7283 | manners? |
7283 | orders from headquarters; and I thought without stopping:"What can it be now?" |
7283 | said Pat;"what will we do now?" |
7283 | that show superstition? |
7283 | we hear so much about? |
7283 | we like to be petted, do n''t we? |
6333 | ''How air you feelin''now?'' 6333 ''Sary,''says he,''wot''s that a- cookin''?'' |
6333 | ''Waal, Doctor,''says Dock Smith,''what do you think''bout it?'' 6333 And did you really find it by the body of the murdered man?" |
6333 | And for what? 6333 Before I deliver sentence on you, Abner Barrow,"he said with an old man''s kind severity,"is there anything you have to say on your own behalf?" |
6333 | Bill Holbrook? |
6333 | But what did this woman do-- my wife, the woman I misused and beat and dragged down in the mud with me? 6333 But you''re not ready to swear to that?" |
6333 | Could ye explain the sun''s motion around the earth? |
6333 | Do you propose to grant us independence? |
6333 | Do you propose to grant us independence? |
6333 | Done with him,says I, kinder mad like;"what more do you want me to do with him? |
6333 | How do you know it? |
6333 | No, put on by his wife,said my friend;"and there was this--""Hold on,"I interrupted;"put on by his wife, did you say?" |
6333 | Now, Simpson, what do you mean by that? |
6333 | Pat, do you know what hangs on your word? 6333 Please stop this fighting"? |
6333 | Please stop this fighting? |
6333 | There,says I, well satisfied with myself,"will that do for ye?" |
6333 | Well, why then, an armistice? |
6333 | Well, why, then, an armistice? |
6333 | What are you picking''simmons for? |
6333 | What for,Aguinaldo would say;"do you propose to retire?" |
6333 | What for? |
6333 | What is that? |
6333 | What is that? |
6333 | What''s that? |
6333 | Who is here so_ base_ that would be a_ bondman_? |
6333 | Why not answer it yourself? |
6333 | Why read ye not the changeless truth, The free can conquer but to save? |
6333 | You knew it was there? |
6333 | ''R----,''said he,''you were brought up on a farm, were you not? |
6333 | 1 Armed, say you? |
6333 | 2 Where dwellest thou? |
6333 | 3 Should he have asked Aguinaldo for an armistice? |
6333 | 5 And what have we to oppose them? |
6333 | A MAN''S A MAN FOR A''THAT BY ROBERT BURNS Is there for honest poverty That hings his head, an''a''that? |
6333 | Again, education imparts knowledge, and who has greater need to know economics, history, and natural science than the man of large business? |
6333 | Aguinaldo would say;"do you propose to retire?" |
6333 | And I appeal to you, gentlemen, what cause there now is to alter our sentiments? |
6333 | And a day less or more At sea or ashore, We die-- does it matter when? |
6333 | And do you now cull out a holiday? |
6333 | And do you now put on your best attire? |
6333 | And do you now strew flowers in his way That comes in triumph over Pompey''s blood? |
6333 | And fixed his eyes upon you? |
6333 | And from whom, I repeat? |
6333 | And from whom? |
6333 | And have indignation, and anger, and terror no power to affect the human countenance or the human frame? |
6333 | And here let me ask in sober reason, what language more opprobrious, what actions more exasperating, than those used on this occasion? |
6333 | And is this the mode by which a tribunal of justice reconciles contradictions? |
6333 | And now what have we to say? |
6333 | And what evidence, gentlemen of the jury, does the Crown offer to you in compliance with these sound and sacred doctrines of justice? |
6333 | And what have we to oppose them? |
6333 | And what sort of business do we mean? |
6333 | And who was he? |
6333 | And with that dread burden, are you ready to tell this jury that the hat, to your certain knowledge, belongs to the prisoner?" |
6333 | And, seeing the production of such evidence, might they not feel fear and alarm? |
6333 | Are all thy conquests, glories, triumphs, spoils, shrunk to this little measure? |
6333 | Are kings only grateful, and do not republics forget? |
6333 | Are the tempter and the tempted the same in your eyes? |
6333 | Are then free institutions wrong or inexpedient? |
6333 | Are there no grades in your estimations of guilt? |
6333 | Are these the traditions by which we are exhorted to stand? |
6333 | Are we to have a place in that honorable company? |
6333 | Are you afraid of it? |
6333 | As a mere item of personal comfort is it not worth having? |
6333 | BRITAIN AND AMERICA From an address in the House of Commons, March, 1865 BY JOHN BRIGHT Why should we fear a great nation on the American Continent? |
6333 | BY ALFRED LORD TENNYSON"Shall we fight or shall we fly? |
6333 | BY D. W. VOORHEES Who is John E. Cook? |
6333 | BY OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES Has there any old fellow got mixed with the boys? |
6333 | Brutus and Cæsar: what should be in that"Cæsar"? |
6333 | But does the soldier step out of his ranks to seek his revenge? |
6333 | But had the words on the other hand a similar tendency? |
6333 | But in all this what have we accomplished? |
6333 | But was anything done on the part of the assailants similar to the conduct, warnings, and declarations of the prisoners? |
6333 | But what avail these words? |
6333 | But what could be better of its kind than this? |
6333 | But what is literature? |
6333 | But when, after your long meal, you go home in the wee small hours, what do you expect to find? |
6333 | But when, after your long meal, you go home in the wee small hours, what do you expect to find? |
6333 | But will not some one set up a stone for my memory at Fort Adams or at Orleans, that my disgrace may not be more than I ought to bear? |
6333 | But, says Lowell, if he had been five feet three, we should have said, Who_ cares_ where you go? |
6333 | By the Irish traditions? |
6333 | Can gentlemen assign any other possible motive for it? |
6333 | Can it be that a jury of Christian men will find no discrimination should be made between them? |
6333 | Can you be your own taskmaster? |
6333 | Could we have done that in the sight of God or man? |
6333 | Could we have left them in a state of anarchy and justified ourselves in our own consciences or before the tribunal of mankind? |
6333 | Could we have required less and done our duty? |
6333 | Did n''t I bring him from the east to the west? |
6333 | Did not the people repeatedly come within the points of their bayonets and strike on the muzzles of the guns? |
6333 | Do they always yield the best government? |
6333 | Do we grow in it, or do we shrink in it? |
6333 | Do we lose the zest we''ve known before? |
6333 | Do we not know, Mr. President, that it is a law never to be repealed that falsehood shall be short- lived? |
6333 | Do we want a cause, my Lords? |
6333 | Do we want a tribunal? |
6333 | Do you ask who he was? |
6333 | Do you moind the poetry there? |
6333 | Do you not know me? |
6333 | Do you think I am partial? |
6333 | Do you want a criminal, my Lords? |
6333 | Does common sense, does the law expect impossibilities? |
6333 | Does he sit down in sullenness and despair? |
6333 | Does it hurt us or help us? |
6333 | Fellow citizens, is this Faneuil Hall doctrine? |
6333 | For what was this France of ours, if you please? |
6333 | From top to toe? |
6333 | Gentlemen, is the happiness of a sensitive and confiding female to be trifled away by such shallow artifices as these? |
6333 | Gentlemen, what does this mean? |
6333 | Had they already vanished? |
6333 | Had you rather Cæsar were living, and die all slaves, than that Cæsar were dead, to live all free men? |
6333 | Has Great Britain any enemy in this quarter of the world, to call for all this accumulation of navies and armies? |
6333 | Has not this made the passage far more real and human to you than all the thought you have devoted to it? |
6333 | Has society a right to be afraid of it? |
6333 | Hast thou never seen That woman since? |
6333 | Have we anything new to offer upon the subject? |
6333 | Have we anything new to offer upon the subject? |
6333 | Have you got it in yourselves to control yourselves? |
6333 | Have you got the will- power in you to regulate your own conduct? |
6333 | Have you learned to control yourselves? |
6333 | Have you not grown rich with these pains in your stomach? |
6333 | Have you the sense and the resolution to regulate your own conduct? |
6333 | He called out sharply,"What are you doing here?" |
6333 | He came in, flung his riding- whip and hat on the table, was told the circumstances, and, taking up the hat, said to the witness,"Whose hat is this?" |
6333 | He makes it his business to be so; this wretched France is in the straitjacket, and if she stirs-- Ah, what is this spectacle before our eyes? |
6333 | Hence arises a most touching question--"Where are the girls of my youth?" |
6333 | How different is the complexion of the cause? |
6333 | How is it with free political institutions? |
6333 | How much need was there for my desire that you should suspend your judgment till the witnesses were all examined? |
6333 | How shall we accomplish it? |
6333 | I noticed he had a scar on the side of his foot, and asked him how he got it, to which he responded, with indifference:--"Oh, that? |
6333 | I said,"Now, wait a minute, give me time to realize that; do I understand that in this hotel I am going to sit where I like?" |
6333 | I said,"Why these weeps?" |
6333 | I say:"Why not? |
6333 | I''the city of kites and crows!-- Then thou dwellest with daws, too? |
6333 | II But here a distressing doubt strikes me; how will the manager get back? |
6333 | If he had been five feet three, we should have said,''Who cares where you go?''" |
6333 | If he ordered his pap bottle, and it was n''t warm, did you talk back? |
6333 | If in the years of the future they are established in government under law and liberty, who will regret our perils and sacrifices? |
6333 | If men will not act for themselves, what will they do when the benefit of the effort is for all? |
6333 | If so, upon what basis should he have requested it? |
6333 | If so, upon what basis should he have requested it? |
6333 | If the defendants were innocent, would they not feel indignation at this unjust accusation? |
6333 | If they saw an attempt to produce false evidence against them, would they not be angry? |
6333 | If we can benefit these remote peoples, who will object? |
6333 | If you break the Whig party, sir, where am I to go?" |
6333 | If you break up the Whig party, where am_ I_ to go?" |
6333 | In the morning the landlord said,--"How do you feel-- old hoss-- hay?" |
6333 | In the present case, how great was the prepossession against us? |
6333 | In the very Cradle of Liberty did no son survive to awake its slumbering echoes? |
6333 | In this new revolution, thus established forever, who shall decide which is the sun and which is the moon? |
6333 | Is each one, without respect to age or circumstances, to be beaten with the same number of stripes? |
6333 | Is fame a travesty, and the judgment of mankind a farce? |
6333 | Is freedom dangerous? |
6333 | Is it a danger? |
6333 | Is it a dream? |
6333 | Is it a good thing for you or a bad thing? |
6333 | Is it a nightmare? |
6333 | Is it an injury? |
6333 | Is it fair play, Mr. Speaker, is it what you call''English fair play''that the press of this city will not let my voice be heard?" |
6333 | Is it the faculty or the players themselves? |
6333 | Is not active business a field in which mental power finds full play? |
6333 | Is not this consciousness a great asset to have in your mind and memory? |
6333 | Is the beguiled youth to die the same as the old offender who has pondered his crimes for thirty years? |
6333 | Is the goal too far?--Too hard to gain? |
6333 | Is there nothing that can agitate the frame or excite the blood but the consciousness of guilt? |
6333 | Is this an electioneering juggle, or is it hypocrisy''s masquerade? |
6333 | It is alleged that I wish to sell the independence of my country; and for what end? |
6333 | Jones asked him what was the matter, and whether he was afraid of the warrior upon the stage? |
6333 | Little more worth remembering occurred during the play, at the end of which Jones asked him which of the players he had liked best? |
6333 | Lud have mercy upon such foolhardiness!--Whatever happens, it is good enough for you.--Follow you? |
6333 | May I not ask if there have not been too often between us petty quarrels, which happily do not wound the heart of the nation? |
6333 | Mayor,''my young one, how are you to- night? |
6333 | Meg''s mother, of course, wanted to know all about it, and then she said,"Noo, laird, what are you gaun to do with the prisoner?" |
6333 | Mr. President, did you ever see a more self- satisfied or contented set of men than these that are gathered at these tables this evening? |
6333 | My Lords, is it a prosecutor you want? |
6333 | My Lords, what is it that we want here to a great act of national justice? |
6333 | Not one now, to mock your own grinning? |
6333 | Now what answer has New England to this message? |
6333 | Now, Pat, did you see that name in the hat?" |
6333 | Now, if this be so, whence does he derive the right to appropriate them for partial and local objects? |
6333 | Now, in the names of all the gods at once, Upon what meat doth this our Cæsar feed, That he is grown so great? |
6333 | Now, my friends, can this country be saved on that basis? |
6333 | Now, what shall I do about it?'' |
6333 | O you hard hearts, you cruel men of Rome, Knew you not Pompey? |
6333 | Or shall he first my pictured volume scan Where London lifts its hot and fevered brow For cooling night to fan?" |
6333 | Pale or red? |
6333 | Published in"The Drama; Addresses by Henry Irving,"William Heinemann, London, publisher, 1893 BY HENRY IRVING What is the art of acting? |
6333 | Shall we always be youthful, and laughing, and gay, Till the last dear companion drops smiling away? |
6333 | Shall we resort to entreaty and humble supplication? |
6333 | Shall we resort to entreaty and humble supplication? |
6333 | Shall we try argument? |
6333 | Shall we try argument? |
6333 | Should he have asked Aguinaldo for an armistice? |
6333 | Sir, does he suppose it in his power to exhibit a Carolina name so bright as to produce envy in my bosom? |
6333 | Sure it is not armor, is it?" |
6333 | The joy of running?--The kick of the oar When the ash sweeps buckle and bend? |
6333 | The point I wish to make is this: McKinley gave Rowan a letter to be delivered to Garcia; Rowan took the letter and did not ask,"Where is he at?" |
6333 | The praise of men they dared despise, They set the game above the prize, Must we fear to look in our fathers''eyes, Nor reap where they have sown? |
6333 | The question has to be put again and again to the young speaker, What is your point? |
6333 | The question is, Which of the two is it safer and wiser to trust? |
6333 | The remembrance often makes me ask--"Where are the boys of my youth?" |
6333 | Then saw you not His face? |
6333 | They shouted thrice: what was the last cry for? |
6333 | Thy shores are empires, changed in all save thee: Assyria, Greece, Rome, Carthage,--what are they? |
6333 | To think alike as to men and measures? |
6333 | To whom do you go for counsel? |
6333 | Upon what basis could he have brought about a cessation of hostilities? |
6333 | Was it for a change of masters? |
6333 | Was it not ordained of old that truth only shall abide for ever? |
6333 | Was it snowing I spoke of? |
6333 | Was the crown offered him thrice? |
6333 | Was the spirit of the Revolution quite extinct? |
6333 | Was this the object of my ambition? |
6333 | We baffled the aspirations of a people for liberty"? |
6333 | Well, what about this Forefathers''Day? |
6333 | Whar have you been for the last three year That you have n''t heard folks tell How Jimmy Bludso passed in his checks The night of the"Prairie Belle"? |
6333 | What barricade of wrong, injustice, and oppression has ever been carried except by force? |
6333 | What can overturn such a proof as this? |
6333 | What conquest brings he home? |
6333 | What does he do-- this hero in gray, with a heart of gold? |
6333 | What does it do for us? |
6333 | What had this young man done to merit immortality? |
6333 | What have we to say? |
6333 | What have we? |
6333 | What is freedom for? |
6333 | What is freedom for? |
6333 | What is our duty? |
6333 | What is the matter with this seat?" |
6333 | What is the point in some larger division of the speech? |
6333 | What is the point in the sentence? |
6333 | What is the point, or purpose, of the speech as a whole? |
6333 | What is the sum of our work? |
6333 | What more cutting and provoking to a soldier? |
6333 | What more do you want?" |
6333 | What more will they get? |
6333 | What on earth has become of them?" |
6333 | What other assurance that the virtue of the people is equal to any emergency of national life? |
6333 | What other evidence will be needed of the value of republican institutions? |
6333 | What other test of the strength and vigor of our government? |
6333 | What shall our action be? |
6333 | What should he say to him? |
6333 | What should he say to him? |
6333 | What terms shall we find which have not been already exhausted? |
6333 | What terms shall we find which have not been already exhausted? |
6333 | What traditions? |
6333 | What tributaries follow him to Rome, To grace in captive bonds his chariot- wheels? |
6333 | What was the second noise for? |
6333 | What was your action in the darkest hour of your country''s fortunes, when she was engaged in the deadly struggle from which she has just emerged? |
6333 | What words more galling? |
6333 | What, indeed, would Bœotes think of this new constellation? |
6333 | What, looked he frowningly? |
6333 | What, sir, was the conduct of the South during the Revolution? |
6333 | When could they say till now, that talked of Rome, That her wide walls encompass''d but one man? |
6333 | When has a battle for humanity and liberty ever been won except by force? |
6333 | When he called for soothing syrup, did you venture to throw out any remarks about certain services unbecoming to an officer and a gentleman? |
6333 | When was there so much iniquity ever laid to the charge of any one? |
6333 | When went there by an age, since the great flood, But it was fam''d with more than with one man? |
6333 | Whence come these powers and attainments-- either to the educated or to the uneducated-- save through practice and study? |
6333 | Where is he? |
6333 | Where shall we have his earliest wondering look Into my magic book? |
6333 | Where''s that? |
6333 | Wherefore rejoice? |
6333 | Who could have imagined that four years would make that enormous difference? |
6333 | Who determine the only scientific test which reflects the hardest upon the other? |
6333 | Who is here so base that would be a bondman? |
6333 | Who is here so rude that would not be a Roman? |
6333 | Who is here so vile that will not love his country? |
6333 | Who is it that makes football a dangerous and painful sport? |
6333 | Who is to gainsay it? |
6333 | Who now boasts that he opposed Lincoln? |
6333 | Who offered him the crown? |
6333 | Who says we are more? |
6333 | Who will not rejoice in our heroism and humanity? |
6333 | Who would think, by looking into the king''s face, that he had ever committed a murder?" |
6333 | Who''s fool then? |
6333 | Why dost thou lead these men about the streets? |
6333 | Why has God made men free, as he has not made the plants and the animals? |
6333 | Why have I groped among these ashes? |
6333 | Why should that name be sounded more than yours? |
6333 | Why should we be so weak or wicked as to offer this idle apology for ravaging a neighboring Republic? |
6333 | Why should we? |
6333 | Why was_ he_ singled out? |
6333 | Why was_ he_ singled out? |
6333 | Why, gentlemen, who_ does_ trouble himself about a warming- pan? |
6333 | Why, then, conquer it? |
6333 | Why, what would be the answer of the rustic to this nonsensical monition? |
6333 | Why, you were with him, were you not? |
6333 | Will any one say that the heaviest judgment which you can render is any adequate punishment for these crimes? |
6333 | Will not all this serve to show every honest man the little truth to be attained in partial hearings? |
6333 | Will she permit the prejudices of war to remain in the hearts of the conquerors, when it has died in the hearts of the conquered? |
6333 | Will she withhold, save in strained courtesy, the hand which straight from his soldier''s heart Grant offered to Lee at Appomattox? |
6333 | Will you bear with me while I tell you of another army that sought its home at the close of the late war? |
6333 | Will you? |
6333 | Would you not spurn at that spiritless institution of society which tells you to be a subject at the expense of your manhood? |
6333 | Yes, we''re boys,--always playing with tongue or with pen,-- And I sometimes have asked,--Shall we ever be men? |
6333 | You pull''d me by the cloak; would you speak with me? |
6333 | You surely will not be so foolish and so indiscreet as to part with the pains in your stomach?" |
6333 | You''eathen, where the mischief''ave you been? |
6333 | and for what end? |
6333 | and for what end? |
6333 | and for what? |
6333 | dear sir, do n''t you hear him?" |
6333 | didst thou never hear Of the old prediction that was verified When I became the Doge? |
6333 | does no voice within Answer my cry, and say we are akin?" |
6333 | dost thou lie so low? |
6333 | has not your situation since you were first attacked been improving every year? |
6333 | have you not risen under them from poverty to prosperity? |
6333 | in this land of France where none would dare to slap the face of his fellow, this man can slap the face of the nation? |
6333 | is he frightened now or no? |
6333 | is that thing still going?" |
6333 | my gorge rises at it.--Where be your gibes now? |
6333 | quite chop- fallen? |
6333 | through a marble wilderness? |
6333 | was it personal ambition that could influence me? |
6333 | who brags of his voting against Grant? |
6333 | your flashes of merriment, that were wo nt to set the table in a roar? |
6333 | your gambols? |
6333 | your songs? |
57813 | And she was starved, of course,said a young man;"do you rue it?" |
57813 | End is there none? |
57813 | End is there none? |
57813 | Now, my dear children,said the good priest,"where shall we put St. Patrick? |
57813 | --DANIEL WEBSTER_ How many kinds of series are there?_ Two, the commencing and the concluding. |
57813 | --EDWIN M. STANTON,_ in Sickles''trial__ Distrust of Witnesses._ Are they witnesses to be trusted with report of evidence by words? |
57813 | --EMERSON EMPHASIS_ What is emphasis?_ Any impressive utterance that arrests the attention of the listener. |
57813 | --GEORGE W. CURTIS_ Indirect Question._ When, O Catiline, do you mean to cease abusing our patience? |
57813 | A remarkable change has taken place since; but what did the wise and great men of all parts of the country think of slavery then? |
57813 | A series is often composed of qualifying words; as, What though it breaks like lightning from the cloud? |
57813 | Ah, my friends, is not the reason for the change evident to any one who will look at the matter? |
57813 | Am I mistaken in this? |
57813 | Am I of opinion, then, you will ask, that the conspirators should be set free, and that the army of Catiline should thus be increased? |
57813 | An American no longer? |
57813 | And Themistocles and the men who fell at Marathon and Plataea, think you that they are insensible to what is taking place? |
57813 | And has it come to this? |
57813 | And how are you to accomplish this? |
57813 | And how should we regard the events happening now? |
57813 | And how was this to be enumerated among the high crimes which caused the Colonies to sever their connection with the mother country? |
57813 | And is it not plain to every man? |
57813 | And now in what strains did Homer voice this theme? |
57813 | And what do you suppose will be my thoughts, if I find in this very trial any violation of the laws committed in any similar manner? |
57813 | And what is that evidence? |
57813 | And what matters it to you? |
57813 | And when in Manchester I saw those huge placards:"Who is Henry Ward Beecher?" |
57813 | And, what have we to oppose to them? |
57813 | Are fleets and armies necessary to a work of love and reconciliation? |
57813 | Are my pickaxes and shovels in good order, and am I in good trim myself-- and my sleeves well up to the elbows, and my breath good, and my temper?" |
57813 | Are there not many of us who believe the same thing? |
57813 | Are they the companions of his youth who shared with him the manly toils of the chase or the robust exercises of the palaestra? |
57813 | Are your blandishments more seducing in public than in private, and with other women''s husbands than with your own? |
57813 | As to Gabinius, Statilius, Coeparius, why should I make any remark upon them? |
57813 | Ask of the jurors whether they know Chabrias, Iphicrates and Timotheus, and learn from them why they have honored and erected statues to them? |
57813 | Brothers? |
57813 | But can we, for that reason run ahead, and infer that he will make any particular change, of which he himself has given no intimation? |
57813 | But here you must ask the defendant:"What was your resentment against your country? |
57813 | But how are speakers to do this? |
57813 | But how can a daughter hear that mother''s name without a blush? |
57813 | But how, you may ask, will you decide justly? |
57813 | But if a war should come, what damage must be expected? |
57813 | But if it is, how can he resist it? |
57813 | But what happened directly, almost immediately, afterwards? |
57813 | But when shall we be stronger? |
57813 | But who, it may be asked, will blame any severity that shall be decreed against these parricides of their country? |
57813 | But why at all these tears, these cries, this voice of lamentation? |
57813 | Can gentlemen assign any other possible motive for it? |
57813 | Can he possibly show that it is less a sacred right to buy them where they can be bought cheapest? |
57813 | Can he, then, be willing to put his life in jeopardy? |
57813 | Can we safely base our action upon any such vague inference? |
57813 | Children? |
57813 | Could not each have made the same request to her husband at home? |
57813 | DIGGING FOR THE THOUGHT JOHN RUSKIN When you come to a good book, you must ask yourself,"Am I inclined to work as an Australian miner would? |
57813 | Did not God choose David from the sheepfolds to make him ruler of his people Israel? |
57813 | Did you think that I would say nothing of such serious matters as these? |
57813 | Do gentlemen hold the feelings and wishes of their brethren at so cheap a rate that they refuse to gratify them at so small a price? |
57813 | Do not such careers illustrate the prophecy of Solomon,"Seest thou the man diligent in his business? |
57813 | Do the concealments of which I speak still cover animosities, which neither time nor reflection nor the march of events have yet suffered to subdue? |
57813 | Do you ask me to support a government that will tax my property; that will plunder me; that will demand my blood, and will not protect me? |
57813 | Do you undertake the cause of impartiality, of integrity, of good faith and religion? |
57813 | Do you undertake the cause of the tribunals? |
57813 | Does Douglas believe an effort to revive that trade is approaching? |
57813 | Does any of you, Athenians, compute or consider the means by which Philip, originally weak, has become great? |
57813 | Does he lack organ or medium to impart his truths? |
57813 | Does he not perceive the feeling of our city towards him?" |
57813 | Does he really think so? |
57813 | Does not the event show they judged rightly? |
57813 | Does that exclude those whose blood and money paid for it? |
57813 | Does"dispose of"mean to rob the rightful owners? |
57813 | Fellow citizens, is this Faneuil Hall doctrine? |
57813 | Finally, why are there so few orators in the world today? |
57813 | For peace? |
57813 | For should we sacrifice them and their children, would this compensate for the murder of your fathers, your sons, and your brothers? |
57813 | For war? |
57813 | For what alliance has come to the state by your procurement? |
57813 | For what purpose could ye have sent for them at that period? |
57813 | For what purpose? |
57813 | For whom else have I to plead for me? |
57813 | Had the Declaration announced that the negroes were free and equal, how was the prince to be arraigned for stirring up insurrection among them? |
57813 | Has Great Britain any enemy, in this quarter of the world, to call for all this accumulation of navies and armies? |
57813 | Have we anything new to offer upon the subject? |
57813 | Have we no tendency to the latter condition? |
57813 | Have we shown ourselves so unwilling to be reconciled that force must be called in to win back our love? |
57813 | He met my father going out, who said to him:"Are you the visitor whom the company here expect? |
57813 | Here he is in your jurisdiction: shall not his doom be death? |
57813 | How can he oppose the advance of slavery? |
57813 | How can he refuse that trade in that"property"shall be"perfectly free,"unless he does it as a protection to the home production? |
57813 | How can we best do it? |
57813 | How hast thou spent that money? |
57813 | How is any one of the thirty states to defend itself? |
57813 | How is it now? |
57813 | How is it today? |
57813 | How long is that madness of yours still to mock us? |
57813 | How many modern orators measure up to this standard set by the ancient master? |
57813 | How many of you at this moment are, in fancy, back in the dear old county of Greene? |
57813 | How then? |
57813 | How would the intimation have been received that Warren and his associations should have waited a better time? |
57813 | How, then, is this reproach to be avoided? |
57813 | I ask gentlemen, sir, What means this martial array, if its purpose be not to force us to submission? |
57813 | INFLECTION_ What is inflection?_ Inflection is a bending of the voice. |
57813 | If Philip take that city, who shall then prevent his marching here? |
57813 | If my error would thus be criminal, how great would yours be if you should render an unjust verdict? |
57813 | If precedents in bad times are to be implicitly followed, why should we have heard any evidence at all? |
57813 | If the gold standard is a good thing, why try to get rid of it? |
57813 | If the gold standard is the standard of civilization, why, my friends, should we not have it? |
57813 | If we look back to the history of the commerce of this country in the early years of this government, what were our exports? |
57813 | In honoring such an one will you not dishonor yourselves and the gallant men who have laid down their lives for you in the field? |
57813 | In other causes it is usual to ask the accusers:"What is your resentment against the defendants?" |
57813 | In other words, how are you going to compel me? |
57813 | In such a case, does any one talk to me of gentleness and compassion? |
57813 | In what estimation did they hold it at the time when this Constitution was adopted? |
57813 | In what event? |
57813 | Is Philip dead? |
57813 | Is it because thou art a valiant soldier? |
57813 | Is it for his venality, for his cowardice, for his base desertion of his post in the day of battle? |
57813 | Is it not Ctesiphon who is accused, and even for him may not the penalty be moderated by you? |
57813 | Is it that insidious smile with which our petition has been lately received? |
57813 | Is it to solicit that their parents, their husbands, children, and brothers may be ransomed from captivity under Hannibal? |
57813 | Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? |
57813 | Is man possessed of talents adequate to the great occasion? |
57813 | Is not the common sentiment, or if not, ought it not to be, of the great mass of our people, North and South? |
57813 | Is the doctrine to be sustained here that it is imprudent for men to aid magistrates in executing the laws? |
57813 | Is there a man so bereft of sense that he will set Leocrates free and so place his own security at the mercy of men who would abandon him? |
57813 | Is there any State in this Union which has contributed so much to the honor and welfare of the country? |
57813 | Is this a body of witnesses that are to be trusted to report words, that are the issues of life, with certainty and accuracy? |
57813 | Is this the part of wise men, engaged in a great and arduous struggle for liberty? |
57813 | Is this the spirit in which this government is to be administered? |
57813 | It is in fact simply this: Has the civil magistrate a right to put down a riot? |
57813 | Men are continually asking each other, had Lovejoy a right to resist? |
57813 | Moreover, consider it[ in this point of view]: if we have been islanders, who would have been more impregnable? |
57813 | Moved not to introduce men who were come for the purpose of conferring with you? |
57813 | Mr. President, has it come to this? |
57813 | My father? |
57813 | Now what is the use of telling us that? |
57813 | On what ground, Dicaeogenes, canst thou ask the jury to give a sentence in thy favor? |
57813 | On what occasion, then, do you show your spirit? |
57813 | Or some other ally? |
57813 | Or tell me, do you like walking about and asking one other, Is there any news? |
57813 | Or was it because scourging is a severer penalty than death? |
57813 | Ought it not to be so? |
57813 | Patrick?" |
57813 | Phocians? |
57813 | QUESTIONS_ How many kinds of questions are there?_ Two. |
57813 | Roll the stone from the grave and what shall we see? |
57813 | Shall we gather strength by irresolution and inaction? |
57813 | Shall we put him in a boat sailing over the golden lake when the angels are calling? |
57813 | Shall we put him where the golden light plays around the golden city? |
57813 | Shall we put him where the sapphire river rolls around the throne of the Almighty? |
57813 | Shall we resort to entreaty and humble supplication? |
57813 | Shall we therefore make a law prohibiting the council and the people hereafter from passing bills and decrees? |
57813 | Shall we try argument? |
57813 | Should we abandon these men too, and Philip reduce Olynthus, let any one tell me what is to prevent him marching where he pleases? |
57813 | Should we deprive them of their property, would this indemnify the individuals whom they have beggared, or the State which they have plundered? |
57813 | So thought Palmyra-- where is she? |
57813 | Such being human nature, am I to be tried and judged by the standard of my predecessors? |
57813 | Take God out of the country and what have we? |
57813 | Take God out of the home and what have we? |
57813 | That noble youth suffered for excess of bravery; and do you hesitate what sentence to pass on the most inhuman of traitors? |
57813 | The cowardice, shall I call it? |
57813 | The falling inflection should also be given all direct questions that are earnest appeals; as, Will you_ please_ forgive me? |
57813 | The falling inflection should be given a direct question such as, Has the gentlemen done? |
57813 | The need is here, but where are the orators? |
57813 | The question now is, did he act within the Constitution and the laws? |
57813 | The questions are here, but where are the orators capable of making those questions clear to the masses? |
57813 | Thebans? |
57813 | Then are you not ashamed that the very damage which you suffer, if he had the power, you dare not seize the moment to inflict on him? |
57813 | Then what prevents your being deprived of everything, yea, of the government itself, according to such argument? |
57813 | This last word was scarcely out of his mouth when some one cried out:"The Tammany Tiger?" |
57813 | This might be aptly answered by putting another question, How did other men become public speakers? |
57813 | This right of equality being, then, according to justice and natural equity, a right belonging to all states, when did we give it up? |
57813 | To such indignities, O bravest of men, how long will you submit? |
57813 | Was I further to see three hundred Athenians perish undeservedly, the city involved in calamity, and the citizens suspicious of one another? |
57813 | Was it because the Porcian law forbids it? |
57813 | Was it intended to render you indignant at the conspiracy? |
57813 | Was it my duty to guard the petty interests of the state, and have sold our main interests like these men? |
57813 | Was not the"Lord of life and all the worlds"for thirty years a carpenter at Nazareth? |
57813 | Was this the object of my ambition; and is this the mode by which a tribunal of justice reconciles contradictions? |
57813 | Well, what was the result? |
57813 | Were we not fighting against that majesty? |
57813 | What am I to be? |
57813 | What are the causes? |
57813 | What are we to think then? |
57813 | What are you going to do? |
57813 | What assistance in money have you ever given, either to the rich or the poor, out of public spirit or liberality? |
57813 | What avails it to have conquered them in the field, if you be overcome by them in your councils? |
57813 | What barricade of wrong, injustice, and oppression has ever been carried except by force? |
57813 | What called forth the Licinian law, restricting estates to five hundred acres, but the unbounded desire of enlarging estates? |
57813 | What can show more evidently the contempt in which he holds you, or the confidence which he reposes in others? |
57813 | What concern, domestic, Hellenic, or foreign, of which you have had the management, has improved under it? |
57813 | What did the Tory party do for the colonies? |
57813 | What do I mean? |
57813 | What do the rebels demand? |
57813 | What does the word country signify? |
57813 | What embassy or agency is there of yours, by which the reputation of the country has been increased? |
57813 | What galleys? |
57813 | What helped him then almost to surprise you in a voluntary snare? |
57813 | What in the world are you good for? |
57813 | What inference can you draw from these facts other than that I am an innocent man? |
57813 | What is it that gentlemen wish? |
57813 | What is to become of the army? |
57813 | What is to become of the navy? |
57813 | What is to become of the public lands? |
57813 | What is to remain American? |
57813 | What malice did you bear your fellow citizens? |
57813 | What motive could I have had? |
57813 | What motive, that even common decency will not allow to be mentioned, is pretended for this female insurrection? |
57813 | What states are to secede? |
57813 | What succors, what acquisition of good will or credit? |
57813 | What terms shall we find, which have not already been exhausted? |
57813 | What the Cineian law, concerning gifts and presents, but that the plebeians had become vassals and tributaries to the senate? |
57813 | What was the effect of this, men of Athens? |
57813 | What was their agreement? |
57813 | What would become of Missouri? |
57813 | What would they have? |
57813 | What, but arguing, some in support of the motion of tribunes; others contending for the repeal of the law? |
57813 | What, sir, was the conduct of the South during the Revolution? |
57813 | What, then, Athenians, when will you act as becomes you? |
57813 | What, then, were the statements made by Aeschines, through which everything was lost? |
57813 | What, then, will you take? |
57813 | What, think you, was the reason? |
57813 | When do you shine out? |
57813 | When has a battle for humanity and liberty ever been won except by force? |
57813 | When is there to be an end of that unbridled audacity of yours, swaggering about as it does now? |
57813 | Where are the men to solve those problems? |
57813 | Where is the eagle still to tower?--or is he to cower, and shrink, and fall to the ground? |
57813 | Where is the flag of the Republic to remain? |
57813 | Where is the line to be drawn? |
57813 | Where is the man that dreads a patriot grave? |
57813 | Where is the sting of death when a hero falls for his country? |
57813 | Where then is the man who will vote to clear him? |
57813 | Where, then, was the imprudence? |
57813 | Where? |
57813 | Wherein, then, lie the hopes of the masses? |
57813 | Who can now wonder, judges, that he deceived me, a private individual, when he so notoriously deluded you all in your common assembly? |
57813 | Who could have imagined that four years could make that stupendous difference? |
57813 | Who is he that will show his sympathy with crime that shows malice aforethought? |
57813 | Who is so foolish-- I beg everybody''s pardon-- as to expect to see any such thing? |
57813 | Who that is Greek does not know that they took one Tyrtaeus for their general? |
57813 | Who would dare, however, from this, to accuse the people of Athens of a sordid economy? |
57813 | Who would not prefer the perils of Evagoras to the lot of those who inherited kingdoms from their fathers? |
57813 | Why did you rage with unbridled fury against the state itself?" |
57813 | Why did your fathers give to the land her name? |
57813 | Why do I mention this? |
57813 | Why do I not make a figure, distinguished with gold and purple? |
57813 | Why does he not tell us what he is going to do if he fails to secure an international agreement? |
57813 | Why is he then so disquieted? |
57813 | Why is it that within three months such a change has come over the country? |
57813 | Why stand we here idle? |
57813 | Why this change? |
57813 | Why, could there be greater news than a man of Macedonia subduing Athenians, and directing the affairs of Greece? |
57813 | Why, it may be said, do you mention all this now? |
57813 | Why, what should I have done? |
57813 | Why, what would be the result? |
57813 | Why? |
57813 | Why? |
57813 | Why? |
57813 | Why? |
57813 | Will it be the next week, or the next year? |
57813 | Will it be when we are totally disarmed, and when a British guard shall be stationed in every home? |
57813 | Will she join the_ arrondissement_ of the slave states? |
57813 | Will the gentleman venture that argument before lawyers? |
57813 | Will you behold your villages in flames, and your harvests destroyed? |
57813 | Will you die of hunger on the land which your sweat has made fertile? |
57813 | Will you look on while the Cossacks of the far North tread under foot the bodies of your fathers, mothers, wives, and children? |
57813 | Will you not then punish this scoundrel, now that you have him in your power? |
57813 | Will you not, then, awake to action? |
57813 | Will you see a part of your fellow citizens sent to the wilds of Siberia, made to serve in the wars of tyrants, or bleed under the murderous knout? |
57813 | Would not a man whose life was really upright so speak out; only a knave who assumes the garb of virtue would talk as you do? |
57813 | Would she, had our struggle for liberty failed, have considered that we fought for what we believed to be right? |
57813 | Would that man ever have had a favorable hope of his own safety, if he had not conceived in his mind a bad opinion of you? |
57813 | Would the justice of our opposition have been considered? |
57813 | Would ye have the judges set aside a verdict obtained by fair means, and put me a second time in jeopardy of my life for the same offense? |
57813 | Yet his proposal appears to me, I will not say cruel( for what can be cruel that is directed against such characters? |
57813 | Yet what can be too severe, or too harsh, toward men convicted of such an offence? |
57813 | _ Does it consist of force alone?_ No. |
57813 | _ From what source is the speaker to take his illustrations?_ From all sources: history, books, his own experience, and, best of all, nature. |
57813 | _ How are the contrasts to be brought out?_ By means of inflection and emphasis. |
57813 | _ How can this be accomplished?_ By bringing into use all the muscles that act on the lungs, particularly the abdominal muscles and the diaphragm. |
57813 | _ How is one to breathe properly?_ By inflating the lungs fully from their base to their apex. |
57813 | _ How is one to obtain an effective delivery?_ By close observation, hard study, and diligent practice. |
57813 | _ How is the speaker to make the picture so vivid that it will be immediately seen and comprehended by the listener?_ By seeing it himself. |
57813 | _ How many forms of contrast are there?_ There are three: the single, the double, and the triple. |
57813 | _ How many inflections are there?_ Two. |
57813 | _ Is it placed merely on single words?_ No. |
57813 | _ Is there any difference as to how the two series should be spoken?_ Yes. |
57813 | _ What are they called?_ They are called direct and indirect. |
57813 | _ What does the falling inflection signify?_ The falling inflection, in the main, signifies certainty. |
57813 | _ What does the rising inflection signify?_ The rising inflection, in the main, signifies uncertainty. |
57813 | _ What is a concluding series?_ A series is considered a concluding one when the series is complete with the close of the series. |
57813 | _ What is voice?_ Voice is vocalized breath. |
57813 | and for what end? |
57813 | and for what end? |
57813 | and that, at a crisis of such danger to the republic and my own character, I would consult anything rather than my duty and my dignity? |
57813 | demanded the angel again,"And it is this that awes thy soul?" |
57813 | did you come forward to punish and proclaim what you now charge me with? |
57813 | has he_ completely_ done? |
57813 | his army deserted? |
57813 | his province abandoned? |
57813 | or ordered the Manager not to assign them places at the theatre? |
57813 | shall he not serve warning to others? |
57813 | some man may exclaim; do you move that this be a military fund? |
57813 | that by extending clemency to a traitor he will lay himself open to the retribution of heaven? |
57813 | that out of pity for Leocrates he will take no pity on himself, when his choice may mean death at the hands of the foe? |
57813 | that the consul was plundered and betrayed? |
57813 | the holy nature and obligations imposed on him by lot violated? |
57813 | was such eloquence directed? |
57813 | what ammunition? |
57813 | what arsenals? |
57813 | what cavalry? |
57813 | what repair of walls? |
57813 | when? |
57813 | which of you is so simple as not to know that the war yonder will soon be here if we are careless? |
57813 | will not the judges be influenced by the accusation, by the evidence, by the universal opinion of the Roman people? |
57813 | will you die under the exterminating sword of the savage Russians? |
44640 | Are these the rocks of Nathos? |
44640 | Can the eye see you now? |
44640 | Clessammor,said the king of Morven,"where is the spear of my strength? |
44640 | Do you know Catherine? |
44640 | Does this old iron,said the troubadour, Striking the armour of Eviradnus,"Frighten you?" |
44640 | Dost thou speak to the weak in arms,said Carthon,"bard of the woody Morven? |
44640 | How many did you kill? |
44640 | How old are you, my little one? |
44640 | Is it not the voice melodious Of your mother? 44640 Is she safe?" |
44640 | Lady,he said,"I hope that you slept well?" |
44640 | Mankind, are ye any better Than we others, just because ye Boiled and baked devour your victuals? 44640 Now,"said his father to the silent mob,"Where would you like to shoot me; by this wall, Or round the corner?" |
44640 | Shall I ever, drunk with heaven, Yonder in the starred pavilion, With the Glory, with the palm- branch, Dance before the throne of God? |
44640 | Sounds this not like youthful visions, Which I once dreamt with Chamisso And Brentano and Fouqué, On those deep- blue moonlight evenings? |
44640 | Surely,the captive said,"the King of Kings, Whose hands are swift like lightning, and whose feet Tread down all nations, can find out a way?" |
44640 | This the roar of his mountain streams? 44640 What is so passing bitter,"we should ask,"If life be rounded by a rest and sleep, That one should pine in never- ending grief?" |
44640 | What is this that ye do? |
44640 | What madness has seized you? 44640 When wilt thou rise in thy beauty, first of Erin''s maids? |
44640 | Where are we going? |
44640 | Where is my troubadour and lute- player? |
44640 | Who of my chiefs,said Fingal,"will meet the son of the rolling sea? |
44640 | Who would lose, Though full of pain, this intellectual being, These thoughts that wander through eternity? |
44640 | Why art thou sad, O Nathos? |
44640 | Why dost thou wound my soul? |
44640 | Why is it dark And cold within the temple to my fame? |
44640 | Why? |
44640 | Youth of the heart of pride,replied Cairbar,"shall Erin''s king fight with thee? |
44640 | ''Tis done; away-- my blessing, girl? |
44640 | ( RAGNAR_ enters with the wreath_) Have_ you_ brought the wreath, Ragnar? |
44640 | (_ Exeunt_ FORMAL_ and_ COB) How now, Master Knowell, in dumps? |
44640 | (_ Reads_)"Why, Ned, I beseech thee, hast thou forsworn all thy friends i''the Old Jewry? |
44640 | (_ To_ HERNANI) What is your true name? |
44640 | (_ To_ HORACE) May I call you as a witness to his contempt of court? |
44640 | (_ To_ SICKINGEN) You understand? |
44640 | ***** DIDIER: Are you sure, Saverny, she is Marion de Lorme? |
44640 | ... How shall we breathe in other air Less pure, accustomed to immortal fruits?" |
44640 | A Dervish so magnificent? |
44640 | A GOOD RIDDANCE Linus, you mock my distant farm, And ask what good it is to me? |
44640 | A common thief? |
44640 | A fool, Or libertine? |
44640 | A hundred ducats, was it? |
44640 | A sound like thunder rang Above them, and the King of Kings exclaimed:"What noise was that?" |
44640 | ADELHEID: Already you hesitate? |
44640 | ALL: What is it? |
44640 | AND IS THIS ALL? |
44640 | ARE POETS BORN OR MADE? |
44640 | ATHANASIOS: Is this mere supposition, sir? |
44640 | ATHANASIOS: Was it then A problem merely? |
44640 | Ah, who''s there? |
44640 | All by him fell, thou say''st; by whom fell he? |
44640 | Am I a common thief? |
44640 | Am I not your Marie? |
44640 | Amid all such vanities, then, is there nothing left for which men may reasonably pray? |
44640 | And are n''t there helpers and servers who must do their part too? |
44640 | And be drowned? |
44640 | And how, Goetz, are you thus changed? |
44640 | And is he still alive? |
44640 | And lives Electra, too? |
44640 | And may I at the same time take the hand of this noblest of all women? |
44640 | And now, what news of Weislingen? |
44640 | And shall I feast with Fingal, the son of Comhal, who threw his fire in the midst of my father''s hall? |
44640 | And shall not Jove, With cheeks inflamed and angry brow, forswear A weak indulgence to their future prayer? |
44640 | And that wild mob moving towards us? |
44640 | And then Jean Chouan, who was leading them, Cried:"Is there any missing?" |
44640 | And these the words,"Marry her to this gentleman"? |
44640 | And thou, O Clessammor, where is thy dwelling in the wind? |
44640 | And what chance have you, without attendants, against a street rough? |
44640 | And when could Satire boast so fair a field? |
44640 | Are all these drawings yours? |
44640 | Are the gates well manned? |
44640 | Are there nurseries in_ that_ house, too? |
44640 | Are these looks to receive A messenger from my lord? |
44640 | Are these the hangmen? |
44640 | Are they in your house? |
44640 | Are they married? |
44640 | Are we in the land of strangers, chief of echoing Etha?" |
44640 | Are we our nation''s? |
44640 | Are you a favourite among the ladies? |
44640 | Are you a lord? |
44640 | Are you back already? |
44640 | Are you content?" |
44640 | Are you not as free and nobly born as anyone in Germany? |
44640 | Are you not here by appointment of Justice Clement''s man? |
44640 | Are you not proud to think that you have made So great a conquest? |
44640 | BERNICK(_ amazed_): Gone-- in the_ Indian Girl_? |
44640 | BERNICK(_ involuntarily starting_): Go to the bottom? |
44640 | BERNICK(_ very softly_): Go to the bottom? |
44640 | BERNICK: And is the ship under sail again? |
44640 | BERNICK: Are you going back to your American farm? |
44640 | BERNICK: Well, Lona, what do you think of me now? |
44640 | BERNICK: Why did you and Johan come home to crush me? |
44640 | BLANCHE(_ opening her eyes_): Where am I? |
44640 | BLANCHE: What is it You mean to do? |
44640 | BOBADILL: Squire Down- right, the half- brother was''t not? |
44640 | BORE(_ effusively_): How d''ye do, my dear fellow? |
44640 | BRAIN- WORM: Faith, sir, I would gladly find some other course-- I know what I would say; but as for service-- my name, sir? |
44640 | BRICHANTEAU: You come to Blois to join the regiment? |
44640 | BROVIK: He can have the building of that villa at Lövstrand, if you would only approve of his plans, and retire------ SOLNESS_( angrily):_ Retire? |
44640 | BROVIK: May I have a few words with you? |
44640 | BROVIK_( rising painfully_): Then I''m to die without any certainty, any gleam of happiness or trust in Ragnar? |
44640 | Been here a fortnight? |
44640 | Besides, failure might lead to their annihilation, and who wished for that? |
44640 | Besides, why should an immortal soul need to quit the body at death? |
44640 | Blanche, are you hurt? |
44640 | But have you, sir, no vices of your own? |
44640 | But tell me now, Was not the mother sister to a Templar, Conrade of Stauffen? |
44640 | But tell me now, when Agamemnon fell, Orestes-- did he share his sire''s fate? |
44640 | But then the difficulty arose who should be sent in search of this new world? |
44640 | But to Adam in what sort Shall I appear? |
44640 | But what are the sons of Usnoth to the host of dark- browed Cairbar? |
44640 | But what do you think, monsieur, ought to be done for this complaint? |
44640 | But what ensued? |
44640 | But what if God have seen And death ensue? |
44640 | But what strange piece of silence is this? |
44640 | But when will you come to see my study? |
44640 | But wherefore all night long shine these? |
44640 | But who would have dreamt of your taking into your house that little creature who played angels in the theatre, and scampered about here? |
44640 | But why dost thou fall, my soul? |
44640 | But why, my friend, should_ I_ at Rome remain? |
44640 | But, argues Satan, it is the throne of David to which the Messiah is ordained; why not begin that reign? |
44640 | But, before you proceed, where are my men; what is their fate? |
44640 | By the Threatener? |
44640 | By the fruit? |
44640 | CHORUS: But who is this? |
44640 | CHORUS: Noise call you it, or universal groan, As if the whole inhabitation perished? |
44640 | CLEMENT(_ to_ COB): How now, sirrah? |
44640 | CLEMENT: How began the quarrel between you? |
44640 | CLEMENT: How, knave? |
44640 | CLEMENT: Officer(_ to_ BRAIN- WORM), have you the warrant? |
44640 | CLEMENT: You there(_ to_ BOBADILL), had you my warrant for this gentleman''s apprehension? |
44640 | COUNCILLOR: You gave your knightly parole to appear and humbly to await his majesty''s pleasure? |
44640 | COUNCILLOR: You know how you fell into our hands, and are a prisoner at discretion? |
44640 | Ca n''t he be cured? |
44640 | Came Nathan with thee? |
44640 | Can not you ram this faggot in the sack? |
44640 | Can you not talk to me of death again? |
44640 | Can you rob the dead? |
44640 | Can you see anyone else up there with him? |
44640 | Canst guess, sweet girl? |
44640 | Comes he not? |
44640 | Comes that beam of light from Usnoth''s mighty hall? |
44640 | Could Satan not become a cardinal, And take possession of my very soul? |
44640 | Cross swords with you? |
44640 | DAME BERARDE(_ laughing_): You wish To chase this handsome man away? |
44640 | DAME BERARDE: What? |
44640 | DAYA: Your Recha,_ yours_? |
44640 | DIDIER: How have you obtained This favour for me? |
44640 | DIDIER: I? |
44640 | DIDIER: Marie? |
44640 | DINA: But are not many great things being accomplished? |
44640 | DON CESAR: On whom? |
44640 | DON RUY GOMEZ(_ offering a dagger and a phial_): Which of these Do you prefer? |
44640 | DON RUY GOMEZ: And when your rival dies? |
44640 | DON RUY GOMEZ: Did you not hear What happened? |
44640 | DON RUY GOMEZ: You love him, Doña Sol? |
44640 | DOÑA SOL: Are you mad? |
44640 | DOÑA SOL: Oh, where is Hernani? |
44640 | DOÑA SOL: What is it frightens you? |
44640 | DOÑA SOL: When I refused the throne Offered me by King Charles, was I then false? |
44640 | DR. HERDAL: And what then? |
44640 | DR. HERDAL: On hers, then? |
44640 | DR. HERDAL: She drifted over to you, then? |
44640 | DR. HERDAL: Why on earth do n''t you tell your wife the rights of it? |
44640 | DR. HERDAL_( smiling_): Well, one could n''t help noticing that your wife-- h''m------ SOLNESS: Well? |
44640 | Did I not purchase The land left by thy father? |
44640 | Did you never take any, Master Stephen? |
44640 | Did you see King Charles''s face? |
44640 | Die? |
44640 | Do n''t you know that they give nothing else to parrots, and that they learn to speak by being fed on this diet? |
44640 | Do n''t you remember me, and the mulberry- tree, and the horsepond? |
44640 | Do you deal with witches, rascal? |
44640 | Do you ever work, child? |
44640 | Do you know what is meant by the dismissal of an old workman? |
44640 | Do you know, he lives By Tormez mansion, in a shuttered house, With two black mutes to wait on him? |
44640 | Do you need a sword? |
44640 | Do you still Remember our first meeting? |
44640 | Do you think a mother does not watch? |
44640 | Does n''t it sting you? |
44640 | Dost Thou delight from Thine Olympus, Lord, To look on suffering virtue? |
44640 | Dost thou think us all Jews that inhabit there yet? |
44640 | Doña Sol? |
44640 | Eve responds that if Eden is so exposed that they are not secure apart, how can they be happy? |
44640 | Evening sky, with sun- lit clouds._ MRS. SOLNESS: Have you been round the garden, Miss Wangel? |
44640 | FAUSTUS: And what are you that live with Lucifer? |
44640 | FAUSTUS: Hast thou, as erst I did command, Conducted me within the walls of Rome? |
44640 | FAUSTUS: How comes it, then, that he is prince of devils? |
44640 | FAUSTUS: How comes it, then, that you are out of hell? |
44640 | FAUSTUS: Now tell me what saith Lucifer, thy lord? |
44640 | FAUSTUS: Tell me where is the place that men call hell? |
44640 | FAUSTUS: Tell me, what is that Lucifer, thy lord? |
44640 | FAUSTUS: Was not that Lucifer an angel once? |
44640 | FAUSTUS: Was this the face that launched a thousand ships And burnt the topless towers of Ilium? |
44640 | FAUSTUS: Where are you damned? |
44640 | FIRST SCHOLAR: O my dear Faustus, what imports this fear? |
44640 | FRANZ: Not to stay? |
44640 | FRANZ: You love me, then? |
44640 | FREDERICK: Was this that stern aspect, that awful frown Made the grim monarchs of infernal spirits Tremble and quake at his commanding charms? |
44640 | Father... have they let him live? |
44640 | Flies he, on clouds, with thee? |
44640 | For as the vapours formed by the exhalations of the influences which arise in the region of complaints, coming-- so to speak-- to-- Do you know Latin? |
44640 | For us alone Was death invented? |
44640 | For whom This glorious sight, when sleep hath shut all eyes?" |
44640 | For whom bind''st thou In wreaths thy golden hair, Plain in thy neatness? |
44640 | GASSE: At Blois? |
44640 | GASSE: But Marion de Lorme? |
44640 | GASSE: But have you heard Of the incredible, mysterious flight Of Marion de Lorme? |
44640 | GASSE: Have you observed The edict against duelling, on pain Of hanging? |
44640 | GASSE: What was the man like? |
44640 | GOETZ: How now, Lerse? |
44640 | GOETZ: May I say"yes"for you, Marie? |
44640 | GOETZ: So you want to marry a jilted woman? |
44640 | GOETZ: To prison? |
44640 | GOETZ: What will you give me to forget it? |
44640 | GOETZ: Where can my men be? |
44640 | GOETZ: Who burnt Miltenberg? |
44640 | GOETZ: Why consider? |
44640 | GOETZ: Why? |
44640 | GOETZ: You threaten? |
44640 | GOVERNOR: You dared to open the letter of so powerful a personage? |
44640 | George, sure you wo n''t go? |
44640 | Gone? |
44640 | Gone? |
44640 | GÉRONTE: But, please, what was the cause of the loss of speech? |
44640 | GÉRONTE: Is it possible that you can cure this mental malady also? |
44640 | GÉRONTE: Why so, monsieur? |
44640 | HAFI: Why not? |
44640 | HARDCASTLE: Heartily welcome once more, gentlemen; which is Mr. Marlow? |
44640 | HARDCASTLE: Sure, Dorothy, you have lost your wits? |
44640 | HARDCASTLE: Your cold contempt? |
44640 | HASTINGS: But how could I have hoped to meet my dearest Constance at an inn? |
44640 | HASTINGS: But where are your fellow- passengers? |
44640 | HERNANI(_ in a wild, loud voice_): What man Wishes to gain ten thousand golden crowns? |
44640 | HERNANI: Which one Will sell me to King Charles? |
44640 | HERNANI: Who is speaking thus-- the king? |
44640 | HERNANI: You think I hold with the divinity of kings? |
44640 | HILDA(_ with quivering lips_): Can_ I_ be of any use to you, Mr. Solness? |
44640 | HILDA: And why not? |
44640 | HILDA: Are you pleased about the new house? |
44640 | HILDA: Builders are such very, very stupid people---- SOLNESS: No doubt-- but tell me what we two are to build together? |
44640 | HILDA: Do n''t you remember what happened up at Lysanger? |
44640 | HILDA: He-- dizzy? |
44640 | HILDA: How can you say that? |
44640 | HILDA: Mr. Solness, have you a bad memory? |
44640 | HILDA: Mrs. Solness-- may I stay here with you a little? |
44640 | HILDA: Then you will never build anything more? |
44640 | HILDA: What did you want with me? |
44640 | HILDA: What made her say that about her duty? |
44640 | HILDA: What will you build next? |
44640 | HILDA: You do n''t recognise me? |
44640 | HIS MATE: And now He comes in his great litter through this wall, To see these poor boys hanged? |
44640 | HIS MATE: Could he not come Through the great gate? |
44640 | HORACE(_ seizing the chance of interrupting_): Have you a mother-- any relatives to whom your health is of moment? |
44640 | Hang a gentleman? |
44640 | Has her honour Slept well to- night?" |
44640 | Has no one got a light? |
44640 | Has the youth forgot his wound? |
44640 | Hast thou no son to raise the shield before his father to meet the arm of youth? |
44640 | Hast thou to the king Announced the prudent message as agreed? |
44640 | Have not I seen the fallen Balclutha? |
44640 | Have the sick recovered? |
44640 | Have you a good memory? |
44640 | Have you been out? |
44640 | Have you found, After a search of twenty years, a post Worthy of me? |
44640 | Have you heard the new sensation? |
44640 | Have you not sought him? |
44640 | Have you so soon forgotten all lessons of love and forgiveness?" |
44640 | Having done all you wanted, may I claim A slight reward? |
44640 | He doth not live that can disjoin my life And this firm bosom, but my fate; and fate whose wings can fly? |
44640 | He perchance Adopted you? |
44640 | Hell strives with grace for conquest in my breast; What shall I do to shun the snares of death? |
44640 | House to be broken? |
44640 | How can I live without thee? |
44640 | How could you think this house an inn? |
44640 | How did he die? |
44640 | How did you fare? |
44640 | How dies the Serpent? |
44640 | How do you like this seat? |
44640 | How forego Thy sweet converse, and love so dearly joined, To live again in these wild words forlorn?" |
44640 | How many days can one long year Credit with wealth of Formian cheer? |
44640 | How now, Cousin Stephen-- melancholy? |
44640 | How say you; may I hope? |
44640 | How seldom, Rome, dost thou permit Us by such joys to benefit? |
44640 | How shall you behave to the lady you have come down to visit? |
44640 | How should ye? |
44640 | How? |
44640 | I Recha''s brother? |
44640 | I am sent for this morning by a friend in the Old Jewry: will you bear me company? |
44640 | I suppose she was talking about the two little boys? |
44640 | I want to see him-- is he really dead? |
44640 | I wonder what he means? |
44640 | I? |
44640 | IPHIGENIA: Are we not bound to render the distress''d The gracious kindness from the gods received? |
44640 | IPHIGENIA: Base passion prompted then this deed of shame? |
44640 | IPHIGENIA: Hath not the goddess who protected me Alone a right to my devoted head? |
44640 | IPHIGENIA: Whence art thou? |
44640 | If I am not mistaken, you were making a proposal to my daughter? |
44640 | In a litter borne By four- and twenty men? |
44640 | In name of madness, What could his honour write more to content you? |
44640 | In what can I be useful? |
44640 | Independent, subject only to the emperor? |
44640 | Is Dervish, then, so hopeless? |
44640 | Is her husband at court? |
44640 | Is it true you''re afraid? |
44640 | Is n''t it fortunate? |
44640 | Is not here The deed that does confirm it mine? |
44640 | Is not this your letter, sir? |
44640 | Is she wounded? |
44640 | Is that a man galloping behind us? |
44640 | Is the man mad? |
44640 | Is there anything can harm you?" |
44640 | Is there news Of Hernani? |
44640 | Is there no purse to be cut? |
44640 | Is there no way to rescue him? |
44640 | Is this an ornament vain women wear Upon their wedding day? |
44640 | Is this the fruit of my toils, of my vigils and prayers and privations? |
44640 | Is this the man, That invincible Samson, far renowned, The dread of Israel''s foes? |
44640 | Is this your indifference? |
44640 | Is this your precious evidence, my wise uncle? |
44640 | Is to Thee The object sacred? |
44640 | Is''t not excellent? |
44640 | It is the prophets who teach most plainly"What makes a nation happy, and keeps it so; What ruins kingdoms, and lays cities flat?" |
44640 | It may be asked, why write satire? |
44640 | JOHAN: Yes, indeed, why? |
44640 | JUVENAL[Q] Satires_ I.--Of Satire and its Subjects_ Still shall I hear and never pay the score, Stunned with hoarse Codrus''"Theseid"o''er and o''er? |
44640 | KAIA: You''re feeling very ill, are n''t you, uncle? |
44640 | KATE: Did you call, sir? |
44640 | KATE: In which of your characters may we address you? |
44640 | KATE: Inn? |
44640 | KATE: Is he? |
44640 | KATE: Nectar? |
44640 | KATE: Perhaps it was the other gentleman? |
44640 | KHELSTAKOV(_ indignantly_): How dare you? |
44640 | KHELSTAKOV: Are there any clubs here where a game at cards could be had? |
44640 | KHELSTAKOV: How nothing? |
44640 | KHELSTAKOV: May I venture to be so happy as to offer you a chair? |
44640 | KHELSTAKOV: What have I to do with your enemies or the women you have flogged? |
44640 | KHELSTAKOV: What have you there in your hand? |
44640 | KHELSTAKOV: What? |
44640 | KHELSTAKOV: Why are you so frightened? |
44640 | KNOWELL: Art thou a man, and shamest not thou to beg? |
44640 | KNOWELL: Say that a man should entertain thee now, Would''st thou be modest, humble, just, and true? |
44640 | Kill my own client? |
44640 | Knowledge the clue to life can give; Then wherefore hesitate to live? |
44640 | L''ANGELY: Is not life, sire, a thing of bitterness? |
44640 | L''Angely, do you think That I could master Richelieu, if I wished? |
44640 | LADY ALLWORTH: Stay, sir; would you contest with one distraited? |
44640 | LONA: With a lie for its basis? |
44640 | LOVELL: Are you not moved with the imprecations And curses of whole families, made wretched By these practices? |
44640 | Lands? |
44640 | Look, sirs; comes he not? |
44640 | MAGUELONNE(_ opening the door_): Who is there? |
44640 | MANOA: But for thee what shall be done? |
44640 | MANOA: Wearied with slaughter, then, or how? |
44640 | MANOA: What noise or shout was that? |
44640 | MARGARET: What warrant is your ring? |
44640 | MARION: You pardon me? |
44640 | MARLOW: Daughter? |
44640 | MARLOW: Leave your house? |
44640 | MARLOW: Mr. Hardcastle''s house? |
44640 | MARLOW: Suppose I should call for a taste of the nectar of your lips? |
44640 | MARRALL: Was it not a rare trick, An''t please your worship, to make the deed nothing? |
44640 | MARRALL: With the lady of the lake or queen of fairies? |
44640 | MARTINO: Was this that damnéd head, whose art conspired Benvolio''s shame before the emperor? |
44640 | MEPHISTOPHILIS: Now, Faustus, what wouldst thou have me do? |
44640 | MESSENGER: O, whither shall I run, or which way fly? |
44640 | MRS. SOLNESS: Are there, really? |
44640 | MRS. SOLNESS: Because_ she_ has come? |
44640 | MRS. SOLNESS: But how can you get on without_ her_----? |
44640 | MRS. SOLNESS: Her as well? |
44640 | MRS. SOLNESS: Yes, by all means, if you care to; but I thought you wanted to go in to my husband-- to help him? |
44640 | MRS. SOLNESS: You, who ca n''t even go out on the second- floor balcony? |
44640 | MRS. SOLNESS_( looking at him_): Is it Miss Wangel you are sitting there thinking about? |
44640 | Marion In a place like this? |
44640 | Marquise of Monroy-- and your other names, Don Juan? |
44640 | May I before Thee, Lord, with tears display The feelings of my heart, and rend my soul? |
44640 | Me? |
44640 | Me? |
44640 | Methink I hear already knights and ladies Say,"Sir Giles Overreach, how is it with Your honourable daughter? |
44640 | Mr. Hardcastle''s? |
44640 | Must I thus leave thee, Paradise? |
44640 | My haste commands me hence: in one word, therefore, Is it a match, my lord? |
44640 | NATHAN: Ah, who is he? |
44640 | NATHAN: Art thou, O Saladin, this wiser judge? |
44640 | NATHAN: Hath Saladin no further need of me? |
44640 | NATHAN: How? |
44640 | NATHAN: Is it you? |
44640 | NATHAN: Say, does Recha know I am arrived? |
44640 | NATHAN: Till my capital Becomes all interest? |
44640 | NATHAN: Who hath betrayed me to the Patriarch? |
44640 | NATHAN: Why need you, then, call angels into play? |
44640 | NATHAN: Yes, Daya, thanks; but why"at last"? |
44640 | Nectar? |
44640 | Need I more? |
44640 | No? |
44640 | Now, how can you have the heart to let me go to my grave without having seen what Ragnar is fit for? |
44640 | Now, will you fight? |
44640 | O first created beam, and thou great Word,"Let there be light, and light was over all,"Why am I thus bereaved thy prime decree? |
44640 | ORESTES: Who art thou, that thy voice thus horribly Can harrow up my bosom''s inmost depths? |
44640 | ORESTES: Will he permit our peaceable return? |
44640 | OVERREACH: Are you pale? |
44640 | OVERREACH: How? |
44640 | OVERREACH: I am familiar with the cause that makes you Bear up thus bravely; there''s a certain buz Of a stolen marriage-- do you hear? |
44640 | OVERREACH: Lady, by your leave, did you see my daughter, lady, And the lord, her husband? |
44640 | OVERREACH: She, the mistress? |
44640 | OVERREACH: So my lord have you, what care I who gives you? |
44640 | OVERREACH: Were they a squadron of pikes, when I am mounted Upon my injuries, shall I fear to charge them? |
44640 | OVERREACH: What prodigy is this? |
44640 | OVERREACH: Wilt thou betray me? |
44640 | Oh, I''ll leap up to heaven: who pulls me down? |
44640 | On what footing do you and Mæcenas stand? |
44640 | On your honour, are you sure? |
44640 | One may ask, what of man? |
44640 | Or Abraham''s God? |
44640 | Or Marion de Lorme? |
44640 | Or a Pompey? |
44640 | Or a victorious Cæsar? |
44640 | Or market- woman with eggs that you may murder, And so dispatch the business? |
44640 | Or to us denied This intellectual food, for beasts reserved? |
44640 | Or when the lust of play so curse mankind? |
44640 | Or will God incense his ire For such a petty trespass?... |
44640 | PLAINTIFF(_ loudly to the_ BORE): Where are you off to, you scoundrel? |
44640 | POSTMASTER: How can we catch him? |
44640 | PYLADES: Dost thou not know me, and this sacred grove, And this blest light, which shines not on the dead? |
44640 | Peace is despaired; For who can think submission? |
44640 | Poison? |
44640 | Quare_? |
44640 | Quoth the judge:"Which of you do his brothers love the best? |
44640 | RECHA: Guessed it? |
44640 | RECHA: My brother-- he? |
44640 | RECHA: Well, knight, why thus refuse to look at me? |
44640 | ROCHEBARON: What is the man like? |
44640 | RUY BLAS(_ appearing at the door_): Sir? |
44640 | RUY BLAS: Have you done? |
44640 | RUY BLAS: How did you hear me, madam? |
44640 | RUY BLAS: Letter? |
44640 | RUY BLAS: Never? |
44640 | RUY BLAS: Shall I address the note? |
44640 | RUY BLAS: Surely a nobleman would never stoop To fight a duel with his serving- man? |
44640 | RUY BLAS: What did he say? |
44640 | RUY BLAS: What has brought you here? |
44640 | Richelieu has arrived; Can you not hear the guns announcing him? |
44640 | RÖRLUND: Do you not all make sacrifices in a good cause to save the lapsed and lost? |
44640 | SALADIN: Ah, so? |
44640 | SALADIN: Is this Al Hafi''s hint? |
44640 | SALADIN: Nathan the Wise? |
44640 | SALADIN: Was there none else could lend me, save my sister? |
44640 | SALADIN: Who? |
44640 | SALADIN: Why so cold? |
44640 | SALTABADIL: Who would take that for a limp body? |
44640 | SAMSON: Can they think me so broken, so debased With corporal servitude, that my mind ever Will condescend to such absurd commands? |
44640 | SAVERNY: For both of us? |
44640 | SAVERNY: Hanging? |
44640 | SCHOLARS: Who, Faustus? |
44640 | SECOND SCHOLAR: Oh, what may we do to save Faustus? |
44640 | SECOND SCHOLAR: What ails Faustus? |
44640 | SELBITZ: What do you see? |
44640 | SGANARELLE(_ after having taken the money_): Is it good weight? |
44640 | SGANARELLE(_ rising in astonishment_): You do n''t know Latin? |
44640 | SGANARELLE: Is this the patient? |
44640 | SGANARELLE: What do you want? |
44640 | SGANARELLE: Who is the fool that does not want his wife to be dumb? |
44640 | SITTAH: What of thy friend, the Jew? |
44640 | SOLNESS(_ nods_): Slept well? |
44640 | SOLNESS: Are they gone? |
44640 | SOLNESS: But, seriously, what do you want to do here? |
44640 | SOLNESS: Could you come to love a man like that? |
44640 | SOLNESS: Is she still asleep? |
44640 | SOLNESS: Is that how you''d like to have it? |
44640 | SOLNESS: Is_ yours_ robust? |
44640 | SOLNESS: It was nothing much, was it? |
44640 | SOLNESS: Oh, was she? |
44640 | SOLNESS: So that''s it, is it? |
44640 | SOLNESS: Tell me, doctor, did you notice anything odd about Aline? |
44640 | SOLNESS: Wangel? |
44640 | SOLNESS: Was n''t that what you wished? |
44640 | SOLNESS: What? |
44640 | SOLNESS: What? |
44640 | Saw you lately Sir Giles, your uncle? |
44640 | Say, for their cure what arts would you employ? |
44640 | Say, then, shall man, deprived all power of choice, Ne''er raise to Heaven the supplicating voice? |
44640 | Say, was he saved? |
44640 | Say, when did vice a richer harvest yield? |
44640 | Say, who can find a night''s repose at need, When a son''s wife is bribed to sin for greed, When brides are frail, and youths turn paramours? |
44640 | Shall I die? |
44640 | Shall I fly in Fingal''s sight, in the sight of him I love? |
44640 | Shall I have security? |
44640 | Shall I not fight, I said to my soul, against the children of my foes? |
44640 | Shall I to him make known As yet my change? |
44640 | Shall that be shut to Man which to the Beast Is open? |
44640 | Shall this man''s elegies and the other''s play Unpunished murder a long summer day? |
44640 | Should other people''s faults and vices make you renounce your chivalry, and abandon yourself to vulgar cruelty? |
44640 | Solness?" |
44640 | Some rival quietly despatched? |
44640 | Son of the generous Usnoth, why that broken sigh? |
44640 | Surely I have not mistaken the house? |
44640 | Sweet friends, what shall become of Faustus, being in hell for ever? |
44640 | TEMPLAR: And Nathan reared Her in this error, and persists in it? |
44640 | TEMPLAR: Are you sure of what you say? |
44640 | TEMPLAR: I of thy blood? |
44640 | TEMPLAR: Suppose, my reverend father, that a Jew Brought up a Christian child, in ignorance Of her own faith and lineage, as his daughter, What then? |
44640 | TEMPLAR: To save a Jewish maid? |
44640 | TEMPLAR: Well, Jew; your will? |
44640 | TEMPLAR: What, I? |
44640 | TEMPLAR: Who? |
44640 | THE KING(_ lowering his eyes, dazzled by her beauty_): Are you a sorceress? |
44640 | THE KING: Farewell? |
44640 | THE KING: For whom? |
44640 | THE KING: Go? |
44640 | THE KING: Titles? |
44640 | THE KING: What? |
44640 | THE KING: What? |
44640 | THE KING: Where are my men? |
44640 | THE QUEEN(_ in terror_): What, then, am I? |
44640 | THE QUEEN(_ running up to him_): What have you_ done_? |
44640 | THE QUEEN: What is this, then? |
44640 | THE QUEEN: What was there in that glass? |
44640 | THOAS: From that same Tantalus, whom Jove himself Drew to his council and his social board? |
44640 | THOAS: Now, answer me; how dost thou prove thyself The priestess''brother, Agamemnon''s son? |
44640 | TO A RECITER WHO BAWLED Why wrap your throat with wool before you read? |
44640 | TO PYRRHA What slender youth bedewed with liquid odours Courts thee on roses in some pleasant cave, Pyrrha? |
44640 | TRIBOULET(_ relieved by the bravo''s air_): What price? |
44640 | TRIBOULET(_ still more startled_): What do you want? |
44640 | Tell me, Mr. Solness, have you never called me to you-- inwardly, you know? |
44640 | Tell me, friends, Am I not sung and proverbed for a fool In every street? |
44640 | The King of Kings Groped in the darkness, and with trembling voice He asked:"Is there no way out of this pit?" |
44640 | The Queen of Beauty? |
44640 | The Templar? |
44640 | The faltering gentleman who looks on the ground and hates hypocrisy, or the bold, forward Agreeable Rattle of the ladies''club? |
44640 | The people in the cottages around come running out in wild alarm._ A WOMAN: What is it? |
44640 | The sight of this so horrid spectacle, Which erst my eyes beheld, and yet behold? |
44640 | The sign of the Dumb Man? |
44640 | Then Adam:"What could I more? |
44640 | Then I suppose your father''s better? |
44640 | Then he said:"O Mudjekeewis, Is there nothing that can harm you?" |
44640 | Then shall I angrily see no excuse If honest Homer slumber o''er his muse? |
44640 | Then their leader draws one of the names._ THE CONSPIRATORS: Who is it? |
44640 | Then thus spake he;"Let me beseech, O queen, this truth of thee, Are you of mortal or the deified race? |
44640 | Then, wherefore do I dally my revenge? |
44640 | There''s nothing of any sort in the case, is there? |
44640 | These happy walks and shades, Fit haunt of gods, where I had hoped to spend Quiet, though sad, the respite of that day That must be mortal to us both? |
44640 | They were curious Who I was, what I was doing? |
44640 | This evil on the Philistines is fallen: From whom could else a general cry be heard? |
44640 | This lady your daughter? |
44640 | Thou know''st we are, and yet wilt thou compel me? |
44640 | Thus leave Thee, native soil? |
44640 | To break my oath? |
44640 | To practise such a servile kind of life? |
44640 | To the heart of men, That is not of humanity devoid, It is most awful, wondrous, and endearing; But He who formed the stars, can He admire And wonder? |
44640 | Traffic or rove ye, and, like thieves, oppress Poor strange adventurers, exposing so Your souls to danger, and your lives to woe?" |
44640 | WEISLINGEN: How shall I remember it all? |
44640 | WEISLINGEN: May I, in these moments of lightheartedness, speak to you of serious matters? |
44640 | WEISLINGEN: Who could resist so heavenly a hint? |
44640 | WEISLINGEN: Who would be active abroad while he is threatened at home? |
44640 | WEISLINGEN: Will you be content if we proceed against Berlichingen? |
44640 | WELL- BRED: Captain Bobadill, why muse you so? |
44640 | WELL- BRED: Soft, where''s Master Matthew? |
44640 | WELL- BRED: Whither went your master, Thomas, canst thou tell? |
44640 | WELL- BRED: Why, dost thou not know him? |
44640 | WELLBORN: Now, Master Marrall, what''s the weighty secret You promised to impart? |
44640 | WELLBORN: Well, sir, and what follows? |
44640 | WILLDO: They are married, sir; but why this rage to me? |
44640 | WINTER CHEER Seest thou yon mountain laden with deep snow The groves beneath their fleecy burthen bow, The streams congealed, forget to flow? |
44640 | Was it not at the hospital? |
44640 | Was n''t he cheered by what I wrote him? |
44640 | Was''t the odour of the foolish Plants which stupefied my senses? |
44640 | We''ll praise the God Who bade My angel_ visibly_ on his white wing Athwart the roaring flame---- NATHAN(_ aside_): White wing? |
44640 | Welcome, most welcome; is the deed done? |
44640 | Well, now, what have you in the house for supper? |
44640 | Were Jews and Christians such ere they were men? |
44640 | What Mussulman Numbers my camels yonder? |
44640 | What are ye? |
44640 | What are you doing here? |
44640 | What are you? |
44640 | What became of her parents? |
44640 | What brought that into your head? |
44640 | What cause Brought him so soon at variance with himself Among his foes? |
44640 | What colour hast thou for that? |
44640 | What do you say to that, Hilda? |
44640 | What do you think of it? |
44640 | What do you want of me? |
44640 | What does it mean? |
44640 | What glorious hand gave Samson his death''s wound? |
44640 | What have I accomplished, with all my efforts? |
44640 | What have I done? |
44640 | What have you to say? |
44640 | What hinders then To reach and feed at once both body and mind?" |
44640 | What if he-- That is, a Frank, unused to this fierce sun-- Now languish on a sick- bed, friendless, poor? |
44640 | What is a Roman knight to do if an empress sets her heart on him? |
44640 | What is it, Aline? |
44640 | What is it? |
44640 | What is it? |
44640 | What is that dust beyond? |
44640 | What is the crime of this most peaceful man? |
44640 | What is the end of it all? |
44640 | What is the news From Paris? |
44640 | What is this same, I pray you? |
44640 | What make you here? |
44640 | What money ha''you about you? |
44640 | What of Mumma? |
44640 | What ruined a Crassus? |
44640 | What shall I do? |
44640 | What shall we do-- stay here, or run and see? |
44640 | What sort of man, think you, am I? |
44640 | What sort of pain do you feel? |
44640 | What subtle devil Hath razed out the inscription-- the wax Turned into dust? |
44640 | What then? |
44640 | What think the people? |
44640 | What was he, then? |
44640 | What was it that inspired Such fury in you? |
44640 | What was it? |
44640 | What was that? |
44640 | What was the truth of the matter? |
44640 | What will be the fame of my sword shouldst thou fall?" |
44640 | What would the"weeping"and the"laughing"sages of ancient Greece have thought of the pageants of modern Rome? |
44640 | What''s he? |
44640 | What''s here? |
44640 | What''s that? |
44640 | What''s this? |
44640 | What''s to become of him? |
44640 | What, Tony? |
44640 | What, no? |
44640 | What? |
44640 | What? |
44640 | Whatever be Thy name-- God, Jupiter, Jehovah, Romulus? |
44640 | When did fell avarice so engross the mind? |
44640 | When my life is bound to yours? |
44640 | When out she cried, and bent Beneath my sword her knees, embracing mine, And full of tears, said,"Who, of what high line Art thou? |
44640 | Whence are thy beams, O sun, thy everlasting light? |
44640 | Whence sail ye these seas? |
44640 | Where are you bound for? |
44640 | Where are your clothes? |
44640 | Where have ye been, ye southern winds, when the sons of my love were deceived? |
44640 | Where have you left the ladies? |
44640 | Where is it now? |
44640 | Where is the king? |
44640 | Where is the money? |
44640 | Where is your coronet? |
44640 | Where shall I find thy peace, daughter of mighty Colla? |
44640 | Where was it that we lunched? |
44640 | Where''s the man? |
44640 | Where? |
44640 | Whereabouts are we? |
44640 | Which shall I fast bewail-- Thy bondage or lost sight, Prison within prison Inseparably dark? |
44640 | Who are you, then? |
44640 | Who are you? |
44640 | Who are you? |
44640 | Who are you? |
44640 | Who are you? |
44640 | Who can be a companion of thy course? |
44640 | Who comes from the land of strangers, with his thousands around him? |
44640 | Who else''s daughter should I be? |
44640 | Who first said he was an inspector- general? |
44640 | Who have they put in the sack? |
44640 | Who is it but Darthula, the first of Erin''s maids? |
44640 | Who is that, dim, by their side? |
44640 | Who is the dog now, eh?--the dog to kick And tumble about to make the courtiers laugh? |
44640 | Who knows when we shall return? |
44640 | Who let you in? |
44640 | Who will lend a sword? |
44640 | Who''s a greater master of deportment? |
44640 | Who''s that? |
44640 | Whose cruelty hath sown this sharp suspicion In thy fond heart? |
44640 | Whose fountain who shall tell? |
44640 | Whose voice is that? |
44640 | Why are you silent both? |
44640 | Why did I not study? |
44640 | Why do you always take off that shade when I come? |
44640 | Why dost thou bring thy thousands against the chief of Etha?" |
44640 | Why dost thou rush on in thy valour, youth of the ruddy look? |
44640 | Why hast thou failed to shroud thyself Within the veil of sacerdotal rights? |
44640 | Why is Laffemas Risking his neck by letting me escape? |
44640 | Why not avoid the scandal? |
44640 | Why should He thus be barbarously used And persecuted even unto death By these inhuman and relentless men? |
44640 | Why should he think I tell my apricots? |
44640 | Why should n''t I go a- hunting as well as the rest? |
44640 | Why should she talk in that way? |
44640 | Why should she? |
44640 | Why should swallow vie with swan? |
44640 | Why wert thou not a creature wanting soul, Or why is this immortal that thou hast? |
44640 | Why will you thus a mighty vase intend, If in a worthless bowl your labours end? |
44640 | Will not cold Nor hunger kill him? |
44640 | Will you brand us for an offence not ours? |
44640 | Will you desist from your misdeeds, and act like decent folk who know what they want? |
44640 | Will you leave me like this? |
44640 | Will you not pardon me? |
44640 | Will you not say good- bye to me? |
44640 | Will you now fight with me? |
44640 | Will you take the chance? |
44640 | Will you? |
44640 | Will you? |
44640 | Wilt Thou, Lord, here devote the night to prayer, Or weary, dost thou seek a short repose? |
44640 | Wilt thou behold Connal bound?" |
44640 | Wilt thou not swear this? |
44640 | Would it not serve to entertain your friends? |
44640 | Would you rather be an instance of fallen greatness, or enjoy some safe post in an obscure Italian town? |
44640 | Would you send This mantle to my daughter that her lips May cling to this dear speck? |
44640 | Would you the real use of riches know? |
44640 | Wouldst thou to honours and preferment climb? |
44640 | Wretch, what hast thou done? |
44640 | XII Where in heaven, Master Louis, Have you all this crazy nonsense Scraped together? |
44640 | YOUNG KNOWELL: Did he open it, say''st thou? |
44640 | You do n''t want anything, do you? |
44640 | You leave him in my hands then? |
44640 | You liked my daughter, did you? |
44640 | You look sad? |
44640 | You must be the doctor''s daughter up at Lysanger? |
44640 | You seek my counsel? |
44640 | You turn away and weep? |
44640 | You will not name the man? |
44640 | You would n''t affront the circumcised Jews, would you? |
44640 | You would remove me from the court, where Charles, our emperor''s great successor, is the object of all hope? |
44640 | Your formal interview? |
44640 | Your name is Nathan? |
44640 | Your name? |
44640 | [ DIDIER_ and_ SAVERNY_ are disarmed and led away._ MARION: What has he done? |
44640 | [ DON SALLUST_ rushes towards the outer door;_ RUY BLAS_ pushes him back at the sword''s point._ THE QUEEN: You are not going to slay him? |
44640 | [_ After shaking hands, he goes out-- to his doom._ DON SALLUST: No one has seen you yet, I think, Ruy Blas, Clad in this livery? |
44640 | [_ Exit._ MARLOW: How''s this? |
44640 | [_ Exit._ MARRALL: Is''t not brave sport? |
44640 | [_ He raises the phial to his lips, but his wife wrests it from him._ DOÑA SOL(_ to her guardian_): Why do you desire To kill my husband? |
44640 | [_ He returns to it._ Some innocent wayfarer? |
44640 | [_ Leaping up in a fury, he kicks the sack._ François the First, Do you remember how you treated me? |
44640 | [_ She tries to rise, but falls back groaning._ TRIBOULET_ takes her in his arms._ TRIBOULET: Blanche, have they struck you? |
44640 | _ To_ FRANZ,_ whom she stops as he crosses to follow his master_): Franz, could you get me a starling, or would you yourself be my starling? |
44640 | frowning, Meg? |
44640 | not acknowledge A sister such as she? |
44640 | that I Am Christian and not Nathan''s daughter? |
44640 | they took him among the incendiaries, and he has been executed? |
44640 | what thing of sea or land-- Female of sex it seems-- That, so bedecked, ornate, and gay, Comes this way sailing? |
44640 | what will they do with you? |
5796 | A fowl? 5796 About what?" |
5796 | Ah? |
5796 | Ai n''t I a pretty fellow now? |
5796 | And Tom''s dog? |
5796 | And do you see all those ashes, and slag, and cinders lying about? |
5796 | And have you never seen him, my fair maiden? |
5796 | And how got ye up there? |
5796 | And how happens that? 5796 And now, my pretty little man,"said Mother Carey,"you are sure you know the way to the Other- end- of- Nowhere?" |
5796 | And of course Tom married Ellie? |
5796 | And pray what would satisfy you? |
5796 | And then? 5796 And then?" |
5796 | And what canst thou wish to know so weighty that only I, long dead, can answer thee? |
5796 | And what did Grethel give you? |
5796 | And what did Grethel give you? |
5796 | And what did Grethel give you? |
5796 | And what did she give you? |
5796 | And what did you do with it? |
5796 | And what did you hear, my Mary, All up on the Caldon- Hill? |
5796 | And what did you see, my Mary, All up on the Caldon- Low? |
5796 | And what did you take to her? |
5796 | And what did you take to her? |
5796 | And what do you know? |
5796 | And what excels the tongue? |
5796 | And what good on earth would it do you if I did help you? |
5796 | And what have you given her? |
5796 | And what is he to do, ma''am? |
5796 | And what is there in this magnificent golden rose to make you cry? |
5796 | And what say you, venerable sir? |
5796 | And what will become of your wife? |
5796 | And where are they all now? |
5796 | And where do they come from? |
5796 | And where have you left her, then? |
5796 | And where have you put it? |
5796 | And where have you put it? |
5796 | And where have you put it? |
5796 | And where is the gate? |
5796 | And who are you, you little darling? |
5796 | And who shall dare to strike him down? |
5796 | And why are YOU so sick and sad? |
5796 | And will you never regret the possession of it? |
5796 | And yet Kay won the princess? |
5796 | And you will cuddle me again? |
5796 | Annie, sister Annie, do you see any one coming down the road? |
5796 | Are you not ashamed of yourself, Thomas Grimes? |
5796 | Are you still cold? |
5796 | Bless me, what''s that? |
5796 | Blessings on your heart, and what makes you look so sad the morn? |
5796 | But Kay, little Kay? |
5796 | But ca n''t I help you in any other way? 5796 But can not you give something to little Gerda, so as to give her power over all this?" |
5796 | But could you not have saved them from becoming apes? |
5796 | But how are we to manage it? 5796 But how can I do that?" |
5796 | But the Crow? |
5796 | But then there''s their barley; how much will they need? 5796 But what am I to do, ma''am? |
5796 | But what can you do? |
5796 | But where can the monster be? |
5796 | But why are there not water babies? |
5796 | But why do you tremble with cold? 5796 But why,"asked Thor,"should he burn it up, when he has spent so much work upon it?" |
5796 | But, please, which is the way to Shiny Wall? |
5796 | Ca n''t what? |
5796 | Ca n''t you give me a little bit? |
5796 | Children in the water, you strange little duck? |
5796 | Come along,said Tom;"do n''t you see she is dead?" |
5796 | Cruel? |
5796 | Did I not say so? |
5796 | Did she keep the school at Vendale? |
5796 | Did you ever hear,answered Aesop,"of a bird in a cage that promised to stay in it?" |
5796 | Do you hear the drum,''Rub- dub''? 5796 Do you keep the knife while you''re asleep?" |
5796 | Do you know only one story? |
5796 | Do you know where Lapland is? |
5796 | Do you know,said this old woman, entering the room where Frigga sat spinning,"that the gods and heroes are playing a very dangerous game? |
5796 | Do you see that great peaked mountain there behind, with smoke coming out of its top? |
5796 | Do you think he is dead? |
5796 | Do you think it is my brothers? |
5796 | Does he live with a princess? |
5796 | Dost thou bleed, my immortal horse? |
5796 | For do not we,they cried to Frigga,"love him even as you do? |
5796 | Good morning, brother,said Hans;"have you any message for the King of the Golden River?" |
5796 | Grimes? |
5796 | Has this man power to cut me in pieces? 5796 Have they a queen bee?" |
5796 | Have we not sworn that the streets of our city shall never be stained with blood? 5796 How could it fail?" |
5796 | How did he get in? |
5796 | How did you manage to come on the great rolling river, and to float thus far out into the world? |
5796 | How does she do that? |
5796 | How long,said Odin,"is our city to be made hideous by such noises? |
5796 | How, sir,said Xanthus,"should tongues be the best of meat one day, and the worst another?" |
5796 | I bring nothing; have you anything to give? |
5796 | I ca n''t,said Tom, and he laid his head on his knees, and then asked:"Is it Sunday?" |
5796 | I can give her no greater power than she possesses already; do n''t you see how great that is? 5796 I should he glad enough to go,"said Tom,"but how am I to get up that great hole again, now the steam has stopped blowing?" |
5796 | I should like to know if you deserve that one should run to the end of the world after you? |
5796 | I suppose you are a diamond? |
5796 | I suppose,said Tom,"she cuts up a great whale like you into a whole shoal of porpoises?" |
5796 | I''m very, very hungry, sir; could n''t you spare me a bit of bread before I go? |
5796 | I? |
5796 | In what? |
5796 | Is it Kay whom you mean? |
5796 | Is it true that you have taken my little playmate from me? 5796 Is your name, perhaps, Rumpelstiltzken?" |
5796 | It is very cruel, too,Said little Alice Neal;"I wonder if he knew How sad the bird would feel?" |
5796 | Kay, what are you about? |
5796 | Many a hundred years? |
5796 | May I be permitted to ask if you are gold? |
5796 | Nay, no stopping,say you? |
5796 | Never saw me? 5796 No gate?" |
5796 | No, then; why should it be? |
5796 | Not frightened? 5796 Now,"said the fairy to Tom,"will you be a good boy for my sake, and torment no more sea beasts till I come back?" |
5796 | Oh, Harthover, Harthover,says she,"ye were always a just man and a merciful; and ye''ll no harm the poor lad if I give you tidings of him?" |
5796 | One minute more,replied his wife; and then she called softly,"Annie, sister Annie, do you see any one coming?" |
5796 | Over Harthover? 5796 Poor old woman,"said one,"why are you so sad?" |
5796 | Shall we wager? |
5796 | Shiny Wall? 5796 Shiny Wall? |
5796 | Six shillings a pair-- five-- four-- three- and- six-- To prevent all mistakes, that low price I will fix; Now what will that make? 5796 So there are babies in the sea?" |
5796 | So you have seen things like me before? |
5796 | So you live under the water? 5796 Suppose we turn goldsmiths?" |
5796 | Thank you,said little Gerda, and she went to the other flowers, looked into their cups, and asked,"Do you know where little Kay is?" |
5796 | The Golden Touch,asked the stranger,"or your own little Marygold, warm, soft, and loving, as she was an hour ago?" |
5796 | The Golden Touch,continued the stranger,"or a crust of bread?" |
5796 | Then I shall have some one to play with there? 5796 Then why do n''t you get out through it?" |
5796 | Then why have you a thong to your handle? |
5796 | Then you are not satisfied? |
5796 | Then you will take away all these nasty prickles? |
5796 | Thou come along,said Grimes;"what dost want with washing thyself? |
5796 | WILL you pour me out? |
5796 | Want what? |
5796 | Want? |
5796 | Was it long ago since they wound you up? |
5796 | Water? 5796 Well, dame, and how are you?" |
5796 | Well, friend Midas,said the stranger,"pray how do you succeed with the Golden Touch?" |
5796 | Well, well, well,said the old woman,"is n''t that wonderful? |
5796 | Well, who can know? 5796 Were there no babies up this stream?" |
5796 | Were they of good birth? |
5796 | What am I to do here? 5796 What am I to do, then?" |
5796 | What are bees? |
5796 | What are men? |
5796 | What are salmon? |
5796 | What are they about? |
5796 | What are you crying for? |
5796 | What are you saying there? |
5796 | What art thou, and what dost want? |
5796 | What can it be? |
5796 | What case is this? |
5796 | What could induce me? |
5796 | What did Grethel give you? |
5796 | What did you keep us waiting in the rain for? |
5796 | What did you take her? |
5796 | What did you take her? |
5796 | What did you take to her? |
5796 | What do you know about Vendale? |
5796 | What do you see? |
5796 | What do you want here,it cried quite peevishly,"getting in my way?" |
5796 | What do you want here? |
5796 | What do you want, my little man? 5796 What does this mean?" |
5796 | What hail? |
5796 | What has Grethel given you? |
5796 | What have I done? |
5796 | What have you in that sack? |
5796 | What is honey? |
5796 | What is that sound which you hear rising from the earth? |
5796 | What is that? |
5796 | What is the matter with you this morning? |
5796 | What is the matter, father? |
5796 | What is this? |
5796 | What pleasure have I known since I first drew breath in this sad world? 5796 What shall I call thee?" |
5796 | What shall I help you at? |
5796 | What treasure do you bring today? |
5796 | What will I give? 5796 What will you give me for the sackful?" |
5796 | What will you give me if I spin it for you? |
5796 | What''s going to be done? |
5796 | What''s that? |
5796 | What''s the meaning of this? |
5796 | What''s your business? |
5796 | What, are there no roses here? |
5796 | What, have you been naughty, and have they put you in the lockup? |
5796 | What,replied Aesop,"can be worse than the tongue? |
5796 | What? 5796 What?--give me what?" |
5796 | When did he come? 5796 Where are they all going?" |
5796 | Where did you get all these things? |
5796 | Where did you get in? |
5796 | Where did you put it, Hans? |
5796 | Where didst come from? |
5796 | Where do you come from? |
5796 | Where do you come from? |
5796 | Where have you been? |
5796 | Where in the world have you been? |
5796 | Whither are you going, Hans? |
5796 | Whither are you going, Hans? |
5796 | Whither away, Hans? |
5796 | Whither away, Hans? |
5796 | Whither away, Hans? |
5796 | Whither was the Snow Queen traveling? 5796 Who are you, sir?" |
5796 | Who art thou? |
5796 | Who should know better than I? |
5796 | Who told you that? |
5796 | Who''s Klumpey- Dumpey? |
5796 | Who''s that? |
5796 | Why did you get in? |
5796 | Why do n''t you bring all the bad masters here and serve them out, too? 5796 Why do n''t you come too?" |
5796 | Why do n''t you sell your feather? |
5796 | Why do you cry? |
5796 | Why do you want that? |
5796 | Why do you want to split? |
5796 | Why have you no policeman to carry you? |
5796 | Why should I? |
5796 | Why, did Ellie do that? |
5796 | Why? |
5796 | Will you be honest and faithful if I buy you? |
5796 | Will you be kind enough to tell me whether the fountain has any name? |
5796 | Will you come down now, madam, or shall I fetch you? |
5796 | Will you give this child entirely into my keeping? |
5796 | Will you obey me if I give you a chance? |
5796 | Will you promise not to run away? |
5796 | Would n''t it, sir? |
5796 | You do? |
5796 | You ought to know yourself, for you have been there already,"Have I, ma''am? 5796 You think so?" |
5796 | You''re willing to own me for your son, are n''t you? |
5796 | Your cap, sir? |
5796 | ''Comes he not yet?''" |
5796 | ..... Herbert N. Rudeen"FATHER, WHO MAKES IT SNOW?" |
5796 | A water baby? |
5796 | ARE THERE NOT WATER RATS, WATER FLIES, WATER CRICKETS, WATER CRABS, WATER TORTOISES, WATER SCORPIONS, WATER TIGERS AND SO ON WITHOUT END? |
5796 | Alas, what had he done? |
5796 | Am I in earnest? |
5796 | And Grimes listened, and said every now and then, under his voice,"You''ll mind that, you little beggar?" |
5796 | And I was afraid of you, Tom, at first, because-- because--""Because I was all over prickles? |
5796 | And Tom cried,"Oh, Ellie, where are you?" |
5796 | And Tom? |
5796 | And he remembered that his ancestors had once been men, and tried to say,"Am I not a man and a brother?" |
5796 | And he slapped his great hand upon his great thigh, and said:"Who will go down over Lewthwaite Crag, and see if that boy is alive? |
5796 | And he thought of nothing but lollipops by day, and dreamt of nothing else by night-- and what happened then? |
5796 | And she bent quite down to the flower, and what did it say? |
5796 | And so it was; for from the top of the mountain he could see-- what could he not see? |
5796 | And the king said again unto Esther on the second day at the banquet of wine,"What is thy petition, Queen Esther? |
5796 | And the king said unto him,"What shall be done unto the man whom the king delighteth to honour?" |
5796 | And the king said,"What honour and dignity hath been done to Mordecai for this?" |
5796 | And the king said,"Who is in the court?" |
5796 | And the poor little dog? |
5796 | And the sea snails answered,"Whence we come we know not; and whither we are going, who can tell? |
5796 | And then? |
5796 | And thou hast not been stealing, then?" |
5796 | And truly, my dear little folks, did you ever hear of such a pitiable case in all your lives? |
5796 | And what chain could ever hold him? |
5796 | And what did he live on? |
5796 | And what did the Tiger Lily say? |
5796 | And what did the little girl teach Tom? |
5796 | And what else did Bellerophon behold there? |
5796 | And what is this upon the fire?" |
5796 | And what story did she tell them? |
5796 | And what was the song which she sang? |
5796 | And what was to be done? |
5796 | And where have I been?" |
5796 | And why then should we harm him?" |
5796 | And, this, then, is Pirene? |
5796 | Are the dancing girls sleeping, or are they dead? |
5796 | Are you ashamed of him?" |
5796 | Are you never going to look at me again?" |
5796 | Are you not afraid that Balder will think you are jealous of his good fortune if you take no part in this sport they have invented in his honor?" |
5796 | Art sure thou are not lying?" |
5796 | At last Tom said,"Oh, where have you been all this while? |
5796 | At once the ghostly King of Terrors stood before him and asked,"What do you want with me?" |
5796 | Bluebeard took the key, and looking at it closely, said to his wife,"Why is this blood spot on the key?" |
5796 | But I am not prickly now, am I, Miss Ellie?" |
5796 | But are you quite sure that this will satisfy you?" |
5796 | But how can we write in prose the praise of the picture story- books when Stevenson thinks he can not do it in his pretty rhymes? |
5796 | But how did you come to us, you dear? |
5796 | But may not I help poor Mr. Grimes? |
5796 | But pray, have you lost a horse? |
5796 | But what did the strange fairy do when she saw all her lollipops eaten? |
5796 | But what might this SOMETHING be? |
5796 | But what one of them was willing to sacrifice his hand? |
5796 | But what was the beautiful place like, and where was it? |
5796 | But when did that happen? |
5796 | But why should the lady have such a sad picture as that in her room? |
5796 | But why was it there? |
5796 | But"What is the fare to poppyland? |
5796 | CHAPTER V But what became of little Tom? |
5796 | Ca n''t I help you to get out of this chimney?" |
5796 | Can the flame of the heart die in the flame of the funeral pile?" |
5796 | Can you find out anything more about Waldemar and Margaret? |
5796 | Can you fly?" |
5796 | Can you imagine the great figure of Holger Danske throwing its shadow on the wall and seeming to move about in the candle light? |
5796 | Can you name a few men whom the grandfather, had he been an American, might have said were Holgers? |
5796 | Can you see Holger Danske"clad in iron and steel?" |
5796 | Could he drag the plow so well, think you? |
5796 | DISCREET HANS By Wilhelm and Jakob Grimm Hans''s mother asked,"Whither are you going, Hans?" |
5796 | Dear Bellerophon, do you not see that it is no bird? |
5796 | Did I ask to be brought here into the prison? |
5796 | Did I ask to be set to sweep your foul chimneys? |
5796 | Did I ask to have lighted straw put under me to make me go up? |
5796 | Did I ask to stick fast in the very first chimney of all, because it was so shamefully clogged up with soot? |
5796 | Did it appear a longer walk to the Golden River than he had anticipated? |
5796 | Did she question him, hurry him, frighten him, threaten him, to make him confess? |
5796 | Did the little boy see any other Holger Danske than the one whose beard was grown into the marble table? |
5796 | Did you ever see a picture of his beautiful statue of Christ? |
5796 | Did you meet them?" |
5796 | Do n''t you know any about bacon and tallow candles-- a storeroom story?" |
5796 | Do n''t you know that no one ever marries in a fairy tale, under the rank of a prince or a princess? |
5796 | Do n''t you know that this is a fairy tale, and all fun and pretense; and that you are not to believe one word of it, even if it is true? |
5796 | Do n''t you see how men and animals are obliged to serve her, and how she gets on so well in the world, with her naked feet? |
5796 | Do n''t you think so, you old Fir Tree?" |
5796 | Do the birds begin to twitter while the trees are still bare? |
5796 | Do the pond lilies, the cardinal blossoms, the golden- rod, the asters, and the gentians follow each other in that order? |
5796 | Do the violets pass in May? |
5796 | Do you know a legend about King Canute and the waves of the sea? |
5796 | Do you know anything about it?" |
5796 | Do you know the"smell of sprouting grass"? |
5796 | Do you know whether the winged horse Pegasus still haunts the Fountain of Pirene, as he used to do?" |
5796 | Do you not believe that if the people of the United States need a great man he will be forthcoming if we have faith that he will come? |
5796 | Do you not know where he is?" |
5796 | Do you not think that the little Danish boy, by his dreaming about Holger Danske, might have come to be the very one to aid his country most? |
5796 | Do you not understand that the little boy did not KNOW that Holger Danske was in the deep cellar, but merely believed it to be true? |
5796 | Do you think it possible that the grandfather could mean that every brave man who fights for his country is a Holger Danske? |
5796 | Do you think the man whose face was carved into a figurehead was really Holger Danske? |
5796 | Do you want Shiny Wall? |
5796 | Does a farmer count on having sixty out of eighty eggs hatch successfully? |
5796 | Does it not seem to you that the illustrations are particularly well chosen? |
5796 | Does it seem to you that the author has chosen the right flowers and birds to represent each month? |
5796 | Does no one have a word for me?" |
5796 | Does no one pledge me in wine? |
5796 | Does the grandfather believe that such heroes can do other things than fight? |
5796 | Feet, whence did you come, you darling things? |
5796 | Fenris must be bound-- that was true; but who would dare attempt the task? |
5796 | For who would not have been glad to engage a nurse whose mere touch worked such wonders? |
5796 | For why? |
5796 | For, if he wanted to go into a narrow crack ten yards off, what do you think he did? |
5796 | Grimes?" |
5796 | Had Hans been in similar dangers before? |
5796 | Had Proserpina, then, been drowned in this raging river? |
5796 | Had she hidden away? |
5796 | Has a Holger ever come to save this United States from great danger? |
5796 | Has the United States any arms? |
5796 | Have I not faithfully kept my promise with you? |
5796 | Have you anything to give?" |
5796 | Have you anything to give?" |
5796 | Have you anything to give?" |
5796 | Have you anything to give?" |
5796 | Have you anything to give?" |
5796 | Have you been there? |
5796 | Have you burned your mouth?" |
5796 | Have you not everything that your heart desired?" |
5796 | Have you seen any near here?" |
5796 | He himself felt convinced that he should be a famous actor, but how was he to convince any one else of this fact? |
5796 | Hela remained unmoved by his pleadings; and what wonder? |
5796 | How can I, with my sightless eyes, tell where Balder is? |
5796 | How did they all just come to be you? |
5796 | How he turns? |
5796 | How long may I stay?" |
5796 | How many days, think you, would he survive a continuance of this rich fare? |
5796 | How many dozen eggs in a hundred? |
5796 | How many times does the swing move in the first stanza? |
5796 | How many times in the second? |
5796 | How much is an English shilling in our money? |
5796 | How should you like to have any one breaking your bedroom door in, to see how you looked when you were in bed? |
5796 | How was it you did not see us, or hear us when we sing and romp every evening before we go home?" |
5796 | I say, can you fly?" |
5796 | I suppose you are a princess?" |
5796 | I suppose you have come here to laugh at me, you spiteful little atomy?" |
5796 | I wonder if trees will come out of the forest to look at me? |
5796 | I''M WET, LET ME IN"..... Donn P. Crane"SORRY TO INCOMMODE YOU"..... Donn P. Crane"PRAY SIR, WERE YOU MY MUG?" |
5796 | If a person were crossing a glacier, would sounds of rushing water tend to frighten him? |
5796 | If he has sixty chickens hatched, can he count with certainty on fifty growing big enough to boil or roast? |
5796 | If she could get twenty pounds for her chickens, could she buy a cow, thirty geese, two turkeys and a sow with a litter of eight pigs for the money? |
5796 | If so, why does the story say he KNEW it? |
5796 | In his hand he carried a dart; but who could have guessed, to look at it, that it had been fashioned from the mistletoe on the Valhalla oak? |
5796 | In the spring, when the Swallows and the Stork came, the Tree asked them,"Do you know where the big firs were taken? |
5796 | In this little dialogue, what part do the birds take? |
5796 | In those days spectacles for common people had not been invented, but were already worn by kings, else how could Midas have had any? |
5796 | Is a dollar and a half a pair too much to expect for good chickens? |
5796 | Is eighty- seven and a half cents too small a price for a pair? |
5796 | Is he more clever than I am? |
5796 | Is he more handsome, with his one eye and his gray beard?" |
5796 | Is it not curious that his beard is said to have grown into the marble? |
5796 | Is it true that the cost of the grain to feed them is a mere trifle? |
5796 | Is it worth while for each of us to try to be a Holger? |
5796 | Is twenty pounds too much or too little for twenty- five pairs of chickens at three shillings and sixpence per pair? |
5796 | It''s a business- like suit, do n''t you think?" |
5796 | Late in the night when the fires are out, Why does he gallop and gallop about? |
5796 | Let us ask ourselves a few questions: How many quarts of milk were probably in the pail? |
5796 | Loki approached him and asked craftily:"Why do you not join in the game? |
5796 | MORAL And now, my dear little man, what should we learn from this parable? |
5796 | May n''t I try and get some of these bricks away, that he may move his arms?" |
5796 | No one but herself had ever tended him before-- was it really safe to trust this stranger? |
5796 | No water babies, indeed? |
5796 | Now Haman thought in his heart,"To whom would the king delight to do honour more than to myself?" |
5796 | Now what do you think? |
5796 | Now, was not that strange? |
5796 | Now, was not that very odd? |
5796 | Now, what do you think? |
5796 | Now, what do you think? |
5796 | Of every one she met she demanded,"Have you seen my daughter?" |
5796 | Of what use would wings be to a horse? |
5796 | Only the Fir Tree was silent, and thought,"Shall I not be in it? |
5796 | Shall I grow fast here, and stand adorned in summer and winter?" |
5796 | Shall I have nothing to do in it?" |
5796 | Shall we exchange? |
5796 | Shall we exchange?" |
5796 | Shall we exchange?" |
5796 | Shall we now drink the health of Bertel?" |
5796 | She never could have been dirty, thought Tom to himself; and then he thought,"And are all people like that when they are washed?" |
5796 | She was scarcely seated when her sister called up,"Sister Annie, do you see any one coming?" |
5796 | Should we expect to see lilac buds in February or March? |
5796 | So why should he, when he became a water baby? |
5796 | Some people may say,"But why did she not keep her cupboard locked?" |
5796 | Suddenly the door opened, and in stepped a tiny little man who said:"Good evening, Miss Miller- maid; why are you crying so bitterly?" |
5796 | THE BABY By George Macdonald Where did you come from, baby dear? |
5796 | THE FAIRIES OF THE CALDON- LOW By Mary Howitt"And where have you been, my Mary, And where have you been from me?" |
5796 | THE THIRD STORY THE FLOWER GARDEN OF THE WOMAN WHO COULD CONJURE But how did it fare with little Gerda when Kay did not return? |
5796 | Tell me now, do you sincerely desire to rid yourself of this Golden Touch?" |
5796 | The amazed gods looked at each other with fright in their eyes-- what could they do? |
5796 | Then Xanthus called sharply to Aesop:"Did I not tell you, sirrah, to provide the choicest dainties that money could procure?" |
5796 | Then said the king unto her,"What wilt thou, Queen Esther? |
5796 | Then she called out for the last time,"Annie, sister Annie, do you see any one coming?" |
5796 | Then the king Ahasuerus answered and said unto Esther the queen,"Who is he, and where is he, that durst presume in his heart to do so?" |
5796 | Then the king said to the wise men,"What shall I do unto Queen Vashti because she has not performed the commandment of the King?" |
5796 | Then the king''s servants, that were in the king''s gate, said unto Mordecai,"Why transgressest thou the king''s commandment?" |
5796 | There are land babies-- then why not water babies? |
5796 | There must be something grander, something greater still to come; but what? |
5796 | They looked-- and both of them cried out at once,"Oh, who are you, after all?" |
5796 | To say the truth? |
5796 | Tom came up to her very humbly, and made his bow; and the first thing she said was:"Have you wings? |
5796 | Tom could hear, though, that it was about some poaching fight; and at last Grimes said surlily,"Hast thou anything against me?" |
5796 | Tom thought him a very cool sort of personage; and still more so, when in five minutes he came back, and said,"Ah, you were tired waiting? |
5796 | Up spoke our own little Mabel, Saying,"Father, who makes it snow?" |
5796 | WHO STOLE THE BIRD''S NEST? |
5796 | Was he among the crowd?" |
5796 | Was she carrying enough milk to buy a hundred, or even fourscore, good eggs? |
5796 | Was the surface of the glacier smooth? |
5796 | Well-- but-- what was I saying? |
5796 | Were there many fragments of ice that seemed to take human form? |
5796 | Were these dangers worse than ever before, or was Hans in the mood to be disturbed by them? |
5796 | Were they not a foolish couple? |
5796 | What are eggs worth a dozen? |
5796 | What are lurid lights? |
5796 | What are they? |
5796 | What can be the matter with them?" |
5796 | What can they want with flying, and raising themselves above their proper station in life? |
5796 | What can we find in the books? |
5796 | What changes are there in the picture? |
5796 | What could Tom do now but go away and hide in a corner and cry? |
5796 | What could have become of him? |
5796 | What could that favor be unless to multiply his heaps of treasure? |
5796 | What destiny awaited them? |
5796 | What did Hans find that surprised him? |
5796 | What did such a little black ape want in that sweet young lady''s room? |
5796 | What do you know about Thorwaldsen? |
5796 | What do you want, sir?" |
5796 | What effect did the sights and sounds have upon Hans? |
5796 | What is milk worth a quart? |
5796 | What is to happen?" |
5796 | What kind of a thing is this sea, and how does it look?" |
5796 | What makes the light in them sparkle and spin? |
5796 | What makes your cheek like a warm white rose? |
5796 | What makes your forehead so smooth and high? |
5796 | What month is it when the swinging begins? |
5796 | What part do the animals take? |
5796 | What said the little Snowdrop? |
5796 | What says the Convolvulus? |
5796 | What song might the Buttercup sing? |
5796 | What though he failed? |
5796 | What treasure do you bring?" |
5796 | What treasure do you bring?" |
5796 | What treasure do you bring?" |
5796 | What treasure do you bring?" |
5796 | What treasure do you bring?" |
5796 | What was that by the stove? |
5796 | What was the nature of the ice? |
5796 | What was to be done? |
5796 | What was to happen now? |
5796 | What wickedness is there under the sun that it has not a part in? |
5796 | What would Tom have said if he had seen, walking over the moor behind him, the very same Irishwoman who had taken his part upon the road? |
5796 | What, then, could I throw?" |
5796 | When the girl began to cry the tiny little man appeared again and said:"What''ll you give me if I spin the straw into gold for you?" |
5796 | When the girl was alone, the little man appeared for the third time, and said:"What''ll you give me if I spin the straw for you this third time?" |
5796 | When the little man stepped in afterward and asked his name she said,"Is your name Conrad?" |
5796 | When will that be done? |
5796 | When you read that the Danish Arms consist of"three lions and nine hearts,"what do you see? |
5796 | Whence that three- cornered smile of bliss? |
5796 | Where could he hide except in that stream, and how could he conceal himself there without changing himself to a fish? |
5796 | Where did you get that little tear? |
5796 | Where did you get that pearly ear? |
5796 | Where did you get those arms and hands? |
5796 | Where did you get your eyes so blue? |
5796 | Where do sedges grow? |
5796 | Where have you been?" |
5796 | Where have you been?" |
5796 | Where have you been?" |
5796 | Where have you been?" |
5796 | Where have you been?" |
5796 | Where have you been?" |
5796 | Where have you seen a picture of such clothing? |
5796 | Where is it?" |
5796 | Where were they going? |
5796 | Which of these two ideas do you like better? |
5796 | Which of these two things do you think is, really worth the most-- the gift of the Golden Touch, or one cup of clear, cold water?" |
5796 | Whither are they taken?" |
5796 | Who ever heard anything so ridiculous? |
5796 | Who ever heard the like, if God had n''t led him? |
5796 | Who is afflicting my people on earth?" |
5796 | Who knoweth whether thou art not come to the kingdom for such a purpose as this?" |
5796 | Who said to you,''Those that will, be foul, foul they will be''?" |
5796 | Who sent you here to worry us out of our lives?" |
5796 | Who should know better than I? |
5796 | Who stole a nest away From the plum tree, to- day?" |
5796 | Who stole a nest away From the plum tree, to- day?" |
5796 | Who stole a nest away From the plum tree, to- day?" |
5796 | Who stole four eggs I laid, And the nice nest I made?" |
5796 | Who stole four eggs I laid, And the nice nest I made?" |
5796 | Who stole four eggs I laid, And the nice nest I made?" |
5796 | Who stole four eggs I laid, And the nice nest I made?" |
5796 | Who stole that pretty nest From little yellow- breast?" |
5796 | Who stole that pretty nest From little yellow- breast?" |
5796 | Who was frightened then but Tom? |
5796 | Why are the shadows called deceitful? |
5796 | Why do they keep all their branches? |
5796 | Why dost not eat thy bread?" |
5796 | Why is Time asked to push"twelve times only"? |
5796 | Why not? |
5796 | Why should he be? |
5796 | Why should n''t one be jolly if one can?" |
5796 | Why, friend, are you in your senses? |
5796 | Why? |
5796 | Will the Sparrows fly against the panes? |
5796 | Will ye up, lass, and ride behind me?" |
5796 | Will you hear the story of Ivede- Avede, or of Klumpey- Dumpey, who fell downstairs, and still was raised up to honor and married the princess?" |
5796 | Will you listen to me? |
5796 | Will you listen to me? |
5796 | Will you listen to me? |
5796 | Will you listen to me? |
5796 | Will you take the lamp? |
5796 | Wo n''t you give the little girl a draught, so that she may get twelve men''s power, and overcome the Snow Queen?" |
5796 | Would he be less so by dinner- time? |
5796 | Would you call Washington and Longfellow and Hawthorne, Holgers? |
5796 | Xanthus, a wealthy man, wanted a slave, and he said to the men:"What can you do?" |
5796 | Yes, then something even better will come, something far more charming, else why should they adorn me so? |
5796 | You moon, have you done something wrong in heaven, That God has hidden your face? |
5796 | You never heard of a water baby? |
5796 | You said EVERYTHING, did you not?" |
5796 | You thought me very ugly just now, did you not?" |
5796 | You, who have lost the child you loved-- will you not take charge of our brother and bestow on him some of your love?" |
5796 | [ Illustration: THE SNOWFLAKE AT LAST BECAME A MAIDEN]"Can the Snow Queen come in here?" |
5796 | [ Illustration:"HE IS BLOWING BUBBLES"] What do the Hyacinths say? |
5796 | [ Illustration]"And what were the words, my Mary, That you did hear them say?" |
5796 | and down Lewthwaite Crag? |
5796 | and have you seen the water babies?" |
5796 | and it shall be granted thee; and what is thy request? |
5796 | and what is thy request? |
5796 | cried little Marygold, who was a very affectionate child,"pray what is the matter? |
5796 | cried the crow;"I should like to know What thief took away A bird''s nest to- day?" |
5796 | dear me!--what do you think has happened? |
5796 | do you suppose I carried it all the way up here for you?" |
5796 | do you think so?" |
5796 | he muttered,"that he should be set over me? |
5796 | is little Kay really dead? |
5796 | laughed Schwartz,"are you there? |
5796 | or how can I endure to see the destruction of my kindred?" |
5796 | said Gluck again,"what IS that?" |
5796 | said Gluck;"have you really been so cruel?" |
5796 | said Schwartz;"do you suppose we''ve nothing to do with our bread but to give it to such red- nosed fellows as you?" |
5796 | said the dwarf;"they poured unholy water into my stream; do you suppose I''m going to allow that?" |
5796 | she said, very mournfully-- and then she cried,"Oh, Tom, where are you?" |
5796 | so you have made a discovery since yesterday?" |
5796 | what for, indeed, you little vagabond?" |
5796 | what happens then?" |
5796 | where have you been all this time? |
5796 | wo n''t you lead me to the castle, too?" |
47194 | !----""John,"she said with a winning smile,"you seem very much excited, John,--can I do anything to help you, John?" |
47194 | !----""John,"she said, more smilingly than ever,"you seem quite nervous; would you like to see father?" |
47194 | ''For what?'' 47194 ''Is he yer husband?'' |
47194 | ''Is that the sperrit of Luke Corrigan?'' 47194 ''Now, my lad, you see that''ere rope? |
47194 | ''Tom,''whispers the chief engineer to me,''d''ye think he really means to do it?'' 47194 ''Well, you young whelp,''says he,''what''s brought you here?'' |
47194 | ''What''s wantin'', Nora?'' 47194 ''Who do you call a woman?'' |
47194 | ''Will yer be quiet?'' 47194 A what?" |
47194 | Abject terrorism? |
47194 | Ah, and who was she? |
47194 | Ah, dthin,said Pat,"and pfhat is the Civil Sarvice?" |
47194 | Ah, now, how can I tell you that? 47194 Ai n''t I nevah been intrusted in racin''? |
47194 | Am dat so? 47194 And I harnessed up the old mare into the wagon-- have you got that down?" |
47194 | And he butts, I presume, do n''t he, now, more or less? |
47194 | And now that you have heard it? |
47194 | And what do you know about it,--what do you know about the weather? |
47194 | And what the meed? |
47194 | Another? |
47194 | Are they fresh? |
47194 | Are you not Mrs. Blinkers, and has not your old gray horse died? |
47194 | B- o- g-- dog; is that right? |
47194 | But have n''t you got them in any other color? 47194 By the way, what do you think of the f- f- following widdle?" |
47194 | Charlie Hussel,--and yours, dear? |
47194 | Could you explain the sun''s motion round the earth? |
47194 | Denomination? |
47194 | Did I win? 47194 Did he come down?" |
47194 | Did my wife come down again? |
47194 | Did you know that Myra Dart was goin''to marry that Rylan chap? 47194 Did you say you_ thought_ you could lick me?" |
47194 | Did you use the whip much on him? |
47194 | Do n''t you wish you had two, free, nine,''leben, twenty- six, ninety- ten, free hundred little boys? |
47194 | Do you conjointly and severally acknowledge and assume the obligation of deceased to me? |
47194 | Do you mean to tell me thot he had_ my name_ on thot list? |
47194 | Does I bet? 47194 Done with him?" |
47194 | Fresh? 47194 Got what?" |
47194 | Have you any eggs this morning, Uncle Moses? |
47194 | Have you ever seen any ice that was n''t frozen? |
47194 | He died in the barn, I suppose? |
47194 | Hold up, old chap, you''re a- a- a-- would you mind telling me what your name is? |
47194 | How can I admit what is n''t true? |
47194 | How do you know it is? |
47194 | How in the thunder kin I see Pomology,sez Leander,"when there ai n''t no Pomology to see? |
47194 | How long dat been? 47194 How many shtars are in the shky? |
47194 | How? |
47194 | I guess so; now you----"What, papa? |
47194 | I guess you mean anarchy, do n''t you? |
47194 | I have just purchathed an ethstate som- som- somewhere----Dothn''t the idiot know wh- wh- where he hath bought it? |
47194 | I mak''a toas''? 47194 I reckon you know that the Porters have a boy at their house? |
47194 | I went for a ride the other day-- have you got that down? |
47194 | If I put it here, you''ll----"SWALLOW IT, why do n''t you? 47194 If you have time? |
47194 | Is I your little boy? |
47194 | Is Pat McCarthy''s name on this list? 47194 Is it true, Mr. Henderson,"asked Ethel,"that soda fountains sometimes explode?" |
47194 | Is n''t the weather the same everywhere? |
47194 | Is this the locality where the brave boy charges up the canyon and speeds a bullet to the heart of the dusky redskin? |
47194 | Is this the place where they fight Indians? |
47194 | Is thot so, McManus? |
47194 | Is thot so? |
47194 | Is you''fraid of the dark? |
47194 | Is you? 47194 Look here, McManus, pfhot makes you so busy?" |
47194 | Makes it colder in some places than it''s warmer in others? 47194 Many thanks; and now,''Fellow citizens, peace has fled far, far away, and arkany reigns----''Hold on, is that the right word?" |
47194 | Misser Saint Paul, would you mind telling me whether you ever got answers to those letters you wrote to the Ephesians? |
47194 | Must you go so soon? |
47194 | Now, I''ll put this man there,--no,--perhaps I had better move here,--or I think I''ll----"Going to move in six places at once? 47194 Now, mother, what''s the matter?" |
47194 | O father, my father, and did you not hear The Erl- king whisper so low in my ear? |
47194 | O father, my father, and saw you not plain, The Erl- king''s pale daughter glide past thro''the rain? |
47194 | Of course you go to the opera? |
47194 | Oh, that''s a nice little girl, I am sure; was he discharged? |
47194 | Oh, that''s your idea, is it? 47194 Oh, what is the matter?" |
47194 | Oh, wilt thou go with me, thou loveliest boy? 47194 Oo is n''t?" |
47194 | Pfhat are you thinkin''of? 47194 Pfhat are you thinkin''of? |
47194 | Pfhot''s thot? 47194 Quite a curiosity?" |
47194 | Really? |
47194 | Say Mac, is_ my name_ on thot list? |
47194 | Says he,''Dear James, to murder me Were a foolish thing to do, For do n''t you see that you ca n''t cook_ me_, While I can-- and will-- cook_ you_?'' 47194 She will, eh? |
47194 | Shure woman, dear, pfhot''s that you be tellin''me? 47194 Some mans have n''t got any little boys; but you have, have n''t you?" |
47194 | Some whisky, rum or gin? |
47194 | That''s so,sez Leander,"babies does begin with B, do n''t it?" |
47194 | The first question is,''What is the weight of the moon?'' |
47194 | The ill- timed truth we might have kept,-- Who knows how sharp it pierced and stung? 47194 The water came in and drowned your chickens; what will you do?" |
47194 | The water came in and drowned your chickens; what will you do? |
47194 | Then I''ll be a good boy, wo n''t I, papa? |
47194 | Then do I jump these two men and get a king? 47194 Then only the cook and me was left, And the delicate question,''Which Of us two goes to the kettle?'' |
47194 | Then try the third question, and if you answer it correctly I''ll forgive you the others,''What am I thinking of?'' |
47194 | Then what are you talking about? |
47194 | Then what makes it colder? |
47194 | Then who are his heirs? |
47194 | Then why did you trouble yourself to pick up my purse? |
47194 | There,says I, well satisfied with mesilf,"will that do for ye?" |
47194 | Too busy to please me? 47194 Totally unexpected?" |
47194 | Und den mein brudder in Springwells he rings der pell und calls me oop und says,''How you vhas dis eafnings?'' 47194 Vot vas der reason aboud it, of dot lambs und Mary?" |
47194 | Wan''t that cute? 47194 Watson? |
47194 | Well the first question is,''What is the weight of the moon?'' |
47194 | Well, how''s this different from any other weather? |
47194 | Well, now, I think I really----"You must go? 47194 Well, try the second one,''How many stars are in the sky?''" |
47194 | Well, well, my little friend, could you tell us what has become of the old steward? |
47194 | Well, what do you want? |
47194 | Well, what is it you''re writin''? |
47194 | Well, what now? |
47194 | Well, what now? |
47194 | Well, why did n''t you tell some one? |
47194 | Well? |
47194 | Well? |
47194 | Went right along without it, eh? |
47194 | What are you making fun of me for? |
47194 | What are you trying to play? 47194 What denomination do you want?" |
47194 | What do we care that homely men grudge our candidate his symmetry of form and graceful, upholstered carriage? 47194 What do you mean?" |
47194 | What do you want to tumble them all over for? 47194 What do you want?" |
47194 | What does it want? |
47194 | What have I said or done? |
47194 | What ice? |
47194 | What is it, father? |
47194 | What is it, little girlie? |
47194 | What is it? |
47194 | What makes it warmer in some places than it''s colder in others? |
47194 | What makes the lamb love Mary so? |
47194 | What more do you want me to do with him? 47194 What obligation?" |
47194 | What shall I say, dear? |
47194 | What sort of a speech? |
47194 | What was the matter? 47194 What weather?" |
47194 | What''s de mattah wid dat boy? 47194 What''s pretty warm?" |
47194 | What''s that? |
47194 | What''s that? |
47194 | What''s that? |
47194 | What''s that? |
47194 | What''s the matter with you, anyway? |
47194 | What''s the matter? |
47194 | Where did it come from? |
47194 | Why did n''t you laugh, darling, or do n''t you like to tell? |
47194 | Why do n''t you laugh? 47194 Why do n''t you write it down?" |
47194 | Why is this,said a waiter, holding up a common kitchen utensil,"more remarkable than Napoleon Bonaparte? |
47194 | Why not, I''d like to know? |
47194 | Why not? |
47194 | Why, Mr. Henderson,said Elfrida,"how can you say so? |
47194 | Why, Reubens, man, what is the matter with you? 47194 Why, do n''t you know? |
47194 | Why, how ole am de boy? |
47194 | Why, husband? |
47194 | Why, what''s the matter now? |
47194 | Why, you wicked little girl, why do you want a heathen doll? |
47194 | Wife here? |
47194 | Will ye ever shut up? 47194 With a bell that would ring, papa?" |
47194 | Would n''t you buy me nuffin? |
47194 | Would you? |
47194 | Would_ you_ do that? |
47194 | Yes, yes; now you----"And would the wheels go wound, papa? |
47194 | Yes,repeated the minister, in a slightly perplexed tone,"he kicked the side of the barn down in his last agonies, did he not?" |
47194 | You say you_ can_ lick me? |
47194 | You wo n''t mind if I keep right on with my work, will you, seein''that it ai n''t nothin''but sewin''carpet- rags? 47194 You''wake, papa?" |
47194 | Your goat he runs on the highway, I guess? |
47194 | _ Come back?_said the girls,"we will not! |
47194 | ''And how does your mother gain a livelihood?'' |
47194 | ''And is your father dead?'' |
47194 | ''But how did you escape, father?'' |
47194 | ''But, my brave lad,''said the man in low, musical tones,''do you not recognize your parent on your father''s side?--do you not know me, Georgie? |
47194 | ''Had I better swallow some insect powdher?'' |
47194 | ''May I say my prayers, please?'' |
47194 | ''Misther Dugan, how old a- are ye?'' |
47194 | ''My boy,''asked the solitary horseman, looking at the youth proudly,''what would you say if I told you your father was not dead?'' |
47194 | ''Twas only aid he wanted to help him across the wave, But what are a couple of women with only a man to save? |
47194 | ''Twere an awful smash, an''it laid me out, I ai n''t forgot it, and never shall; Were the passengers hurt? |
47194 | ''What sort if bug?'' |
47194 | ''What''s thim?'' |
47194 | ''Where do you live, my fine fellow?'' |
47194 | ''You support the family? |
47194 | (_ Clears throat and looks wise._) Now, the first question that arises is: How do they get it? |
47194 | (_ Clears throat, wipes perspiration from forehead._) But, you say, how do they get it in the first place? |
47194 | (_ Clerk whispers to Lavery as he is passing out._)"Well, Mr. Lavery, what did he say to you?" |
47194 | (_ Curtain rises on opening scene._) Look, Jimmy, ai n''t that nice, now? |
47194 | (_ Gretchen begins to weep._) Oh, well; dere, now, do n''t you cry, do n''t you cry, Gretchen; you hear what I said? |
47194 | (_ Gruffly._)"What, sir?" |
47194 | (_ He rises._)_ People Behind_(_ sternly_)--"Set down there, will yer?" |
47194 | (_ In measured tone, on toes, tapping words off on fingers of left hand with forefinger of right hand._) How-- do-- they-- get-- it? |
47194 | (_ Laughs._) I know another story,--eh? |
47194 | (_ Said very weakly._)"Well,"I said,"is that as loud as you can holler?" |
47194 | (_ The owner of the hat deigns no reply._)_ Father_(_ more insistently_)--"Would you''ave any objection to oblige me by taking off your''at, mum? |
47194 | (_ The scribe, gathering up his papers._)"What shall I do with all these sheets upon which I have written your nonsense?" |
47194 | 1--"Very well, thank you; and you?" |
47194 | 1:"Very well, thank you; and you?" |
47194 | A few minutes later Mr. McCarthy entered the shop of Mr. McManus, and said,"Is McManus here?" |
47194 | AT THE RESTAURANT ANONYMOUS_ Waiter_--"Well, ladies, what will it be?" |
47194 | After a little while she returned waving triumphantly a folded paper, exclaiming:"Was n''t I lucky? |
47194 | Ai n''t you got any aunts, little fly? |
47194 | Ai n''t you got any brothers or any sisters, little fly? |
47194 | Ai n''t you got anyone to love you? |
47194 | Ai n''t you got anyone to love you? |
47194 | Am I a soldier of the cross From many a boundless plain? |
47194 | Am you avake up dere abofe, Feeling sad and nice to hear Schneider''s fiddle shcrabin''near? |
47194 | An''den I ask, so queeck, so sly:"You theenk som''pretta girl weell try For lovin''me a leetla beet?" |
47194 | An''did they get the tin nails, childher? |
47194 | An''th''ole red steer a- bawlin''? |
47194 | An''what''s a kiss to the like of him and her? |
47194 | An''why is you''s little foot tied, little cat? |
47194 | And again he hears the shepherds pass, And the flocks go wand''ring by, And the soldier asked:"Is the sound I hear, The sound of the battle''s roar?" |
47194 | And how''s your gal comin''on? |
47194 | And now that they are married, do they always bill and coo? |
47194 | And soona then th''parson he turns to Meary, and he says,"Meary, lass, wilt thou have Tummy for to be thy wedded husband?" |
47194 | And still you wo n''t? |
47194 | And tell us quickly what you know Of the Kankakee or the Kokomo?" |
47194 | And then in tones that he strained to hear, She spoke, and she said:"Are you ready, dear?" |
47194 | And what did he do then? |
47194 | And what sayest thou then to my love? |
47194 | And when th''parson says to me,''Meary, lass, will tha ha''Tummy for to be thy wedded husband?'' |
47194 | And when the wind in the tree- tops roared, The soldier asked from the deep, dark grave:"Did the banner flutter then?" |
47194 | And you say she has childruns? |
47194 | And your mudder? |
47194 | Art thou devoid of any sense of shame? |
47194 | Art thou not lonely? |
47194 | As the breath went out of him a Clematis that had been overlooking the sad scene, said:"What time is it?" |
47194 | Ay ask dot man vot make heem go? |
47194 | Beautiful day, is n''t it?" |
47194 | Beaux? |
47194 | Bump them in, thump them in, Why do people worry? |
47194 | But he was the cute jewel- ery man, was n''t he, childher? |
47194 | But how dare I question His faithfulness to his own word; Would he dare not come at my calling? |
47194 | But if some maid with beauty blest, As pure and fair as Heaven can make her, Will share my labor and my rest Till envious Death shall overtake her? |
47194 | But if some maiden with a heart On me should venture to bestow it, Pray, should I act the wiser part To take the treasure or forego it? |
47194 | But nobody cares if----""Then it''s d- o- g, is n''t it?" |
47194 | But on Monday morning, in the same market- place, comes the Dear Jack on the hustings--_his_ cart-- and what does_ he_ say? |
47194 | But really, now, did n''t he have a dangerous trick of suddenly stopping and kicking a wagon all to pieces?" |
47194 | But tell me, will you promise me to do as you are bid? |
47194 | But to the more important point in debate-- you say you have no objection to my proposal? |
47194 | But what do you t''ink was a- waitin''for him on de odder shore when he got dere? |
47194 | But what if, seemingly afraid To bind her fate in Hymen''s fetter, She vow she means to die a maid, In answer to my loving letter? |
47194 | But what''s the use uv harrowin''up one''s feelin''s talkin''''nd thinkin''about these things? |
47194 | But, Kate, dost thou understand thus much English, canst thou love me? |
47194 | C''rrect card, sir? |
47194 | Ca n''t we make it do with one scream, dear?" |
47194 | Ca n''t you hold the board straight? |
47194 | Ca n''t you leave the thing alone until you get ready to move? |
47194 | Ca n''t you see repentance in my eye? |
47194 | Can anyone think? |
47194 | Can it be that Masons take delight In spending thus the hours of night? |
47194 | Channing says:"Is there not an amusement, having an affinity with the drama, which might be usefully introduced among us? |
47194 | Christopher Colum he say,"I notta Mista Jones; I reada the papers; I tinka you sella de green goods, ha? |
47194 | Considering it is the most important toast of the evening you will understand--(_Aside:''What is the toast? |
47194 | D''ye think this is a washboard? |
47194 | Dat must have been the time I came in the window dere, was n''t it? |
47194 | De win''she blow from nor''--eas''--wes'', De sout''win''she blow, too, W''en Rosie cry,"Mon cher captinne, Mon cher, w''at shall I do?" |
47194 | Den Christopher he say,"Whata you maka fun? |
47194 | Dhen see dhose vomens at der tubs, Mit glothes oudt on der lines: Vhich vas der shturdy oaks, mine frendts, Und vhich der glinging vines? |
47194 | Did Mac insult you,--for the love of hivins tell me quick?" |
47194 | Did dey laff whenever you cried? |
47194 | Did dey pisen you''s tummick inside, little cat? |
47194 | Did dey pound you wif bricks Or wif big nasty sticks Or abuse you wif kicks? |
47194 | Did it hurt werry bad when you died, little cat? |
47194 | Did n''t I bring him from the east to the west? |
47194 | Did n''t I do it right?" |
47194 | Did n''t I tell you what to say? |
47194 | Did n''t the minister preach beautifully Sunday? |
47194 | Did n''t you know dat Gretchen like to get drown? |
47194 | Did ye iver have it? |
47194 | Did you hear dem liddle fellers just now? |
47194 | Died hard, did n''t he?" |
47194 | Do n''t ye hyar them cattle callin''? |
47194 | Do n''t ye know anything at all scarcely? |
47194 | Do n''t ye know your part?" |
47194 | Do n''t you know it''s my move? |
47194 | Do n''t you know you''ve got to move cattecornered? |
47194 | Do queens wear----""Will you be kind enough to tell me what pack of cards you got that idea of a queen from? |
47194 | Do they never fret or quarrel, like other couples do? |
47194 | Do ye think the foxes o''the Scriptures had na tails at a''?" |
47194 | Do you buy all your good clothes with missionary money? |
47194 | Do you like me, Kate? |
47194 | Do you moine the poetry there? |
47194 | Do you murmur a prayer, my brothers, when cozy and safe in bed, For men like these, who are ready to die for a wreck off Mumbles Head? |
47194 | Do you say a pound? |
47194 | Do you say ten shillings? |
47194 | Do you see thot list?'' |
47194 | Do you suppose the queen sent for Hamlet to get his opinion about bargains in dry- goods? |
47194 | Do you think I''m the india- rubber man from the circus, or the cork- legged man from Oskoloosa? |
47194 | Do you think this is a game of baseball? |
47194 | Do you understand me, waiter? |
47194 | Do you wonder a man wo n''t play checkers with a woman? |
47194 | Doan you know day Daddy Turner am jist on de p''int of dyin''and gwine up to hebben?" |
47194 | Does half my heart lie buried there In Texas, down by the Rio Grande? |
47194 | Does he cherish her and love her? |
47194 | Does n''t I frequent the race- track? |
47194 | Does she honor and obey? |
47194 | Dot boy-- oh, vhere vas he? |
47194 | Eh? |
47194 | Else, whence this pleasing hope, this fond desire, This longing after immortality? |
47194 | Excuse me, mum, but might I take the liberty of asking you to kindly remove your''at?" |
47194 | For a moment nod a voice vas heard, Bud dot mule he vinked his eye, As dhough to ask, to him occurred,"How vas dot for high?" |
47194 | For one thing I would declare this country in a state of-- what do you call it?" |
47194 | For what you do dat, eh? |
47194 | Give me your answer; i''faith, do: and so clap hands and a bargain: how say you, lady? |
47194 | Go, Cousin Jane, and speak to her, Find out and let me know; Tell her the gals should court the men, For is n''t this leap- year? |
47194 | Going to do it any more?" |
47194 | Got some kind of a notion that the queen''s a fog- horn? |
47194 | Hast thou no feelings such as we possess? |
47194 | Have n''t I met you at Mrs. Titters''teas?" |
47194 | Have n''t ye studied this business? |
47194 | Have n''t you got any sense scarcely? |
47194 | Have you anything to do?" |
47194 | Have you conceived any kind of a notion of what it''s all about?" |
47194 | Have you ever read this play? |
47194 | Have you noticed, at the line- up When everything''s for fair, The referee, the umpire, That should be there, is n''t there? |
47194 | Have you really come back to answer those three questions I put to you yesterday?" |
47194 | He ai n''t doing you no''arm, is he?" |
47194 | He looked all around and then inquired:"Have you seen my wife here?" |
47194 | He raves, insane, forevermore; In a madhouse, chained unto the floor, He gibbers:"Tootsie, shall we go By the Kankakee or the Kokomo?" |
47194 | He said:"What in thunder do you mean by letting your hens tear up my garden?" |
47194 | He say,"How- a- you do, Mista Jones? |
47194 | He says:''Where are you going with that thing?'' |
47194 | He tried the shortest one in his most gallant manner:"Very well, thank you; and you?" |
47194 | Hen._ It is not the fashion for the maids in France to kiss before they are married, would you say? |
47194 | Hen._ Madam my interpreter, what says she? |
47194 | Hen._ No, Kate? |
47194 | Hen._ What says she, fair one? |
47194 | Henderson?" |
47194 | Henderson?" |
47194 | Henderson?" |
47194 | His fadda writa:"Why you notta bringa back de new world? |
47194 | His loving arms his boy embrace; But again that tyrant cried in haste,"An arrow in thy belt is placed; What means it? |
47194 | How a- de folks in Pittaburg?" |
47194 | How answer you, la plus belle Katharine du monde, mon très chère et divine déesse? |
47194 | How ca- ca- can a fellow be changthed at hith b- b- birth? |
47194 | How camest thou beneath this canvas tent? |
47194 | How can I, without tears, relate The lost and ruined Morey''s fate? |
47194 | How can you be so cruel to me?" |
47194 | How co- co- could a b- b- bird know iths own father? |
47194 | How could he ask a girl to take hiths name if he h- h- had no name? |
47194 | How did it happen? |
47194 | How do I know how many Stars there are in the shky?" |
47194 | How long did it take him to go a mile?" |
47194 | How much is chicken?" |
47194 | How much is it?" |
47194 | How much is steak?" |
47194 | How old was he?" |
47194 | How you come on? |
47194 | How''do, suh? |
47194 | How''s that for gehoggraphy? |
47194 | How''s the world a- usin''you?" |
47194 | How''s your son comin''on de school? |
47194 | Humph, you do n''t s''pose I been dead all my life, does you? |
47194 | Hyar the kitchen stove a- roarin''? |
47194 | I care more for it than for jewels, because it----Do you know the tall, fine- looking man who has just come in?" |
47194 | I know no ways to mince it in love, but directly to say,"I love you": then if you urge me further than to say,"Do you in faith?" |
47194 | I never saw your equal.--And I said to the old mare,''_ Go''long_,''and I jerked the reins pretty hard-- have you got that down?" |
47194 | I often say----How_ do_ you do, my deah? |
47194 | I says I vhas feeling like some colts, und he says,''Who vhants to puy some goats?'' |
47194 | I wonder if there iths such a fellow, a fellow without any name? |
47194 | I would die if I did not----Who is the tall lady in black over by the piano?" |
47194 | I yells oudt,''Dot ish not so,''und somepody says,''How can I talk if dot old Dutchmans doan''keep shtill?'' |
47194 | I''ll commence:"Now, mother, what''s the matter?" |
47194 | If he hiths not himthelf, who iths he? |
47194 | If there iths any fellow without any name, how doeths he know who he iths himself? |
47194 | If you do n''t want it taken, why do n''t you masticate it? |
47194 | If you found you could n''t go that way, Why did n''t you go on the Cross- eyed Bay?" |
47194 | If you was wich what would you buy me?" |
47194 | Is he clothed In rags? |
47194 | Is it for a letter or a newspaper?" |
47194 | Is n''t she a deah?" |
47194 | Is n''t that right, dear?" |
47194 | Is you''s purrin''an''humpin''up done? |
47194 | Is your chocolate good, waiter?" |
47194 | Isaac''s eldest nephew,--Henry? |
47194 | It wo n''t? |
47194 | Just now, as we was comin''through the willage-- Schneider und me-- Schneider''s my dog; I do n''t know whether you know him? |
47194 | Know the distinction between a play and a millinery- shop opening? |
47194 | LORD DUNDREARY''S LETTER ANONYMOUS(_ He enters holding a letter in his hand and a monocle in his eye._) I wonder who w- w- wote me this letter? |
47194 | Let me see, is it your move, or mine?" |
47194 | Let me, wo n''t you?" |
47194 | Looking for her every minute, are n''t you?" |
47194 | M- m- mister( hic), will you take me to twenty- two?" |
47194 | M._ But, suppose we were going to give you another choice, will you promise us to give up this Beverley? |
47194 | M._ What business have you, miss, with preference and aversion? |
47194 | Mammy ain''afeard, you hyeah huh laffin''? |
47194 | McManus, have you got my husband''s name on thot list?'' |
47194 | Me? |
47194 | Meenie, is the old wildcat home? |
47194 | My darlin'', my angel, do n''t do dat,--let go my head, wo n''t you? |
47194 | Ne''er thought of a simper or sigh,-- For why? |
47194 | No matter what happened, he''d up an''say:"Yer sorry ye done it, haint ye, hey? |
47194 | No? |
47194 | No? |
47194 | No? |
47194 | Not enough? |
47194 | Now look out for the last question which is,''What am I thinking of?''" |
47194 | Now the second question is,''How many stars are in the sky?''" |
47194 | Now wa''n''t that scand''lous? |
47194 | Now what makes you think she''ll come back?" |
47194 | Now whut is ailin''? |
47194 | Now will you please hold the board straight? |
47194 | Now, are you satisfied? |
47194 | O Jim, Jim, why did n''t you git in bettah, way back dah fouf? |
47194 | Oh, have you loved, and truly loved, and seen Aught else the while than your own stately queen? |
47194 | Oh, say, is dot you, Gretchen? |
47194 | Oh, tell be, ab I sdill your owd? |
47194 | Oh, very well; what''s the odds? |
47194 | Oh, vill she ever voke? |
47194 | Oh, why did n''t you wun off and hide, little cat? |
47194 | Oh, would I? |
47194 | On the mornin''of the third day out from Liverpool, the chief engineer cum down to me in a precious hurry, and says he:''Tom, what d''ye think? |
47194 | Or was that his dear step that I heard? |
47194 | Or, whence this secret dread and inward horror Of falling into naught? |
47194 | P''r''aps the lady would n''t mind taking it off, if you asked her?" |
47194 | P._--"Eighty men, Mr. Potts? |
47194 | Pfhot''s McManus done with thim?" |
47194 | Please t- t- take me( hic) to twenty- two, will you?" |
47194 | Quand j''ay la possession de France, et quand vous avez la possession de moi,--let me see, what then? |
47194 | Quite well, deah?" |
47194 | Rags is but a cotton roll Jest for wrappin''up a soul; An''a soul is worth a true Hale and hearty"How d''ye do?" |
47194 | Reprinted by permission CORYDON BY THOMAS BAILEY ALDRICH_ Shepherd_ Good sir, have you seen pass this way A mischief straight from market- day? |
47194 | S''pose them cows''Ll give down milk''ithout you pailin''? |
47194 | S''pose you''re out of every dime? |
47194 | SAINT CRISPIAN''S DAY BY SHAKESPEARE_ King Henry._ What''s he that wishes so? |
47194 | Say"Hullo"an''"How d''ye do? |
47194 | Say, do the nigger ladies use hymn- book leaves to do their hair up and make it frizzy? |
47194 | Says I,''Is thot so?'' |
47194 | Says I,''Look here, Mr. McManus, pfhot do you mean by kapin''my husband waitin''for his clothes?--have you got thim done?'' |
47194 | Says I,''Pfhot do you mean by writin''thot long document, knowin''well thot my husband is waitin''for his clothes?'' |
47194 | Scream, why do n''t you? |
47194 | See my little chicks? |
47194 | Sez he:"''Do yer want ter see the majum?'' |
47194 | Shall he let it ring? |
47194 | She had a broad smile on her face, and looking straight into my eyes she said knowingly:"You''ve had a successful day, to- day, have n''t you?" |
47194 | Should auld acquaintance be forgot Where saints immortal reign? |
47194 | Should it be A dashing damsel, gay and pert, A pattern of inconstancy; Or selfish, mercenary flirt? |
47194 | Shut your eyes now, and----""And would it go choo, choo, choo, papa?" |
47194 | Sir; but how could I pull ye up i''the kirk? |
47194 | So I-- must you be goin''? |
47194 | So very, very gay, is n''t it?" |
47194 | So you''re old friend Isaac''s nephew? |
47194 | So, after a few commonplaces had been exchanged, she was not at all surprized to hear him remark:"It was a sad bereavement, was it not?" |
47194 | Suppose we say four o''clock?" |
47194 | Swing oh; swing oh;--Lucy whar yo''bin so late? |
47194 | THE C''RRECT CARD BY GEORGE R. SIMS"C''rrect card, sir? |
47194 | THE ERL- KING BY JOHANN WOLFGANG VON GOETHE(_ Translated by Sir Walter Scott_) Oh, who rides by night thro''the woodland so wild? |
47194 | THE FOXES''TAILS ANONYMOUS_ Minister_--Weel, Sandy, man; and how did ye like the sermon the day? |
47194 | THE TRAMP ANONYMOUS Now, is that any way for to treat a poor man? |
47194 | THE VILLAGE ORACLE BY J. L. HARBOUR"Why, Mis''Farley, is it really you? |
47194 | Tha mun gooa to th''church wi''me i''th''mornin'', and when the parson says to thee,''Wilt tha ha''Meary for to be thy wedded wife?'' |
47194 | That''s a pretty cloak you''ve got, ai n''t it? |
47194 | The clock struck twelve and Mary turning to John, sweetly said:"John, it''s leap- year; will you marry me?" |
47194 | The contrast is too striking, do n''t you think?" |
47194 | The man said he was ready, and the farmer dictated as follows:"Dear wife,"and then asked,"Have you got that down?" |
47194 | The minister looked rather surprized, but continued:"Blind staggers was the disease, I believe?" |
47194 | The result I shall give as detailed by her to her friend:"How kem I by the black eye? |
47194 | The same gallery boy shouted:"How''s your mother?" |
47194 | The subject on that occasion will be''Will We Bust the Trusts, or Will the Trusts Bust Us?''" |
47194 | The weary couriers paused and looked At the scamp so blithe and gay, And one of them said,"Heaven save you, friend, You seem to be happy to- day?" |
47194 | The wind, he took to his revels once more; On down, In town, Like a merry mad clown, He leaped and halloed with whistle and roar,"What''s that?" |
47194 | The word we had not sense to say,-- Who knows how grandly it had rung? |
47194 | Then did Kitty Whisper in a tone of pity:"I might kiss_ you_ and be true, sir, To my mother; would that do, sir?" |
47194 | Then he heareth the lovers, laughing, pass, And the soldier asks once more:"Are these not the voices of them that love, That love-- and remember me?" |
47194 | Then they drank their host''s health in their favorite drink, Which was,--now what was it? |
47194 | They met but once:_''Twas a freight- train and a cow!_ THE BRIDEGROOM''S TOAST ANONYMOUS(_ Speaks while seated._)"I know a story,--what? |
47194 | Think Hamlet''s a lunatic asylum? |
47194 | Think this is the first of May and that you''re looking for a new flat? |
47194 | Think you know the difference between a play and a bankrupt sale? |
47194 | Tho why you should n''t ha''done it at fust, I dunno; for you look a deal''ansomer without the''at than what you did in it-- don''t she Maria?" |
47194 | Thou, whose young days in tropic lands were spent, With strange companions, under foreign stars? |
47194 | Ven sickness in der householdt comes, Und veeks und veeks he shtays, Who vas i d fighdts him mitout resdt, Dhose veary nighdts und days? |
47194 | Vhen I goes to ask him ef he feels petter I hear a voice crying out,''Vhat Dutchman is dot on dis line?'' |
47194 | W''at for I warm heem op lak''toas''? |
47194 | WATCHIN''THE SPARKIN''BY FRED EMERSON BROOKS Say, Jim, ye wanter see the fun? |
47194 | WHEN GREEK MEETS GREEK ANONYMOUS_ Stranger here?_ Yes, come from Varmount Rutland county. |
47194 | Wa''n''t she smart? |
47194 | Want to go fight Indians any more(_ twisting the boy''s ear_)? |
47194 | Want to stand proudly upon the pinnacle of the mountain and scatter the plain beneath with the bleeding bodies of uncounted slain? |
47194 | Was n''t his hair apt to fly?" |
47194 | Was n''t she the koind leddy, childher? |
47194 | Was she not smooth as any be That dwell herein in Arcady? |
47194 | Was that thunder? |
47194 | Watson wants to see me?" |
47194 | Well, bimeby, my bruddren, what you tink dat pore man seen? |
47194 | Well, now, let me see, who was dat I called a wildcat? |
47194 | What I done showed you? |
47194 | What are a couple of women? |
47194 | What de crackin''soun''you heah erroun''you? |
47194 | What de use o''bein skeered o''nuffin''? |
47194 | What did he do then? |
47194 | What did he do then? |
47194 | What do we care that calumny crawls out of its hole, calumniates him a couple of times and then goes back? |
47194 | What do you say now? |
47194 | What do you say? |
47194 | What does he do?" |
47194 | What if, aweary of the strife That long has lured the dear deceiver, She promise to amend her life, And sin no more; can I believe her? |
47194 | What if, in spite of her disdain I find my heart entwined about With Cupid''s dear delicious chain So closely that I ca n''t get out? |
47194 | What is life to thee Thus mewed in prison, innocent of crime, Become a spectacle for crowds to see, And reckless boys to jeer at all the time? |
47194 | What is your name?" |
47194 | What more do you want?" |
47194 | What now?" |
47194 | What put that foolish idea into my little birdie''s head, eh?" |
47194 | What the deil mischief d''ye mean, Sir? |
47194 | What then, you ask me, did befall Mehitable Byrde? |
47194 | What was the matter?" |
47194 | What you laffin at? |
47194 | What''ll it be, ladies?" |
47194 | What''s that? |
47194 | What''s the matter?" |
47194 | What''s your hurry? |
47194 | What? |
47194 | What? |
47194 | When Mr. Watson came back in the evening, he met his wife with a cheery smile as he said:"Well, my dear, how have you enjoyed yourself to- day? |
47194 | When all of a sudden, as she came pelting down, a tornado struck her-- now, Henrietta, what in the thunder are you staring at me in that way for? |
47194 | When he came back he walked up to the captain and said:"Captain, what has become of the old steward? |
47194 | When in the world did the coxswain shirk? |
47194 | When she returned he was surprized to find she had not brought back his suit, and he said:"Well, where are my clothes?" |
47194 | Where you got dat? |
47194 | Where''d ye get your idea of this thing, anyway?" |
47194 | Where''s the difference betwixt us? |
47194 | Who all time er- frettin''en de middle er de day? |
47194 | Who all time er- gettin''so sleepy''e ca n''t play? |
47194 | Who all time er- losin''de shovel en de rake? |
47194 | Who all time er- rippin''big hole en es frock? |
47194 | Who all time er- trottin''ter de kitchen fer er bite? |
47194 | Who all time runnin''ole gobble roun''de yard? |
47194 | Who all time stealin''ole massa''s dinner- horn? |
47194 | Who all time stumpin''es toe ergin er rock? |
47194 | Who all time tryin''ter ride''e lazy drake? |
47194 | Who beace und gomfort alvays prings, Und cools dot fefered prow? |
47194 | Who do I know in Amewica? |
47194 | Who ever heard of a b- b- bird being such a f- f- fool as to g- g- go into a corner and flock by himself? |
47194 | Who ever told ye to yell like that? |
47194 | Who has not known a Carcassonne? |
47194 | Who iths Mit- this Thippi? |
47194 | Who mess''esef wi''taters twell his clothes dey look er sight? |
47194 | Who tek''e stick''n hit ole possum dog so hard? |
47194 | Whom should I marry? |
47194 | Whut you layin''theer fur? |
47194 | Why ai n''t we a profession? |
47194 | Why ai n''t we endowed with privileges? |
47194 | Why are we forced to take out a hawker''s license, when no such thing is expected of the political hawkers? |
47194 | Why did n''t you call me?" |
47194 | Why does n''t Willie come?" |
47194 | Why shrinks the soul Back on herself and startles at destruction? |
47194 | Why, how ole am de gal? |
47194 | Why, what can such a little fellow as you do?'' |
47194 | Why, what''s the matter, friend? |
47194 | Why, whut you spec''I''s doin''hyeah ef I hadn''winned? |
47194 | Whyn''t he hunch hisse''f up on dat saddle right? |
47194 | Will that content you? |
47194 | Will that do?" |
47194 | Will this do for you?" |
47194 | Will you marry me?" |
47194 | Will you not accept the hospitality of my home? |
47194 | Will you take a husband of your friends''choosing? |
47194 | Will you take me as I stand? |
47194 | Within this cage? |
47194 | Wo n''t you run your horse down to the train and hold that book agent till I come? |
47194 | Would he come? |
47194 | Would you like a glass of water?" |
47194 | Ye did not? |
47194 | You are sure you have none in a brighter red, or even in a different color-- Nile green, or seal brown, or jubilee blue, for instance?" |
47194 | You born there? |
47194 | You dink I could_ believe_ i d? |
47194 | You don''fink de dakness gwine to bite? |
47194 | You expect her back, I suppose?" |
47194 | You goin''to drink dat? |
47194 | You knew little Fanny Flight-- old Farmer Flight''s one daughter-- always so pretty and bright? |
47194 | You know so much about your measly part, why do n''t you play it?" |
47194 | You love me, do you not?" |
47194 | You mean I would yump in und pull Gretchen out? |
47194 | You must know ole Albert Withers, Henry Bell and Ambrose Cole? |
47194 | You pretty comfortable where you are, eh, father?" |
47194 | You see?" |
47194 | You see?" |
47194 | You see?" |
47194 | You see?" |
47194 | You take it? |
47194 | You want ter rest? |
47194 | You was born at Granville was you? |
47194 | You will come to see me soon?" |
47194 | You wo n''t take it? |
47194 | You wo n''t take the lot yet? |
47194 | You''ve hern tell Mebbe of the town of Granville? |
47194 | _ B._--"Well, little girl, what_ do_ you want?" |
47194 | _ Butcher._--"Well, little girl, what can I do for you?" |
47194 | _ Chaplain_--"Why, what did you say to him?" |
47194 | _ Derrick._ Ah, yes, that''s all right, Rip, very funny, very funny; but what do you say to a glass of liquor, Rip? |
47194 | _ Father_(_ to the husband of the owner of the hat_)--"Will you tell your good lady to take her''at off, sir, please?" |
47194 | _ Father_--"Well, I ca n''t''elp the''at, can I? |
47194 | _ Give you a song?_ No, I ca n''t do that, my singing days are past; My voice is cracked, my throat''s worn out, and my lungs are going fast. |
47194 | _ Gretchen._ The dog Schneider? |
47194 | _ Gretchen._ Who was that you called a wildcat? |
47194 | _ Have I got a hundred dollars I could loan you for a minute, Till you buy a horse at Marcy''s?_ There''s my wallet! |
47194 | _ Kath._ Is it possible dat I should love de enemy of France? |
47194 | _ Kath._ Que dit- il? |
47194 | _ Know them all?_ And born in Granville! |
47194 | _ Little Girl._--"How much is chops this morning, mister?" |
47194 | _ Lyd._ What crime, madam, have I committed, to be treated thus? |
47194 | _ Minister_--Exagger-- what, Sir? |
47194 | _ Minister_--Hoots, man; doesna the wind whustle on the Sawbbath? |
47194 | _ Minister_--What did you think o''the discourse as a whole? |
47194 | _ Minister_--_Streetched the pint!_ D''ye mean to say, Sir, that I tell_ lees_? |
47194 | _ Miss De B._--"Well, what are you going to order?" |
47194 | _ Miss De B._--"Why do n''t you take it with strawberry?" |
47194 | _ Miss F._--"No; that was what I ordered, was n''t it?" |
47194 | _ Mother_(_ annoyed_)--"Was there ever such an aggravating boy? |
47194 | _ P._(_ indignantly_)--"Oh, well, if you think you can tell the story better than I can, why do n''t you tell it? |
47194 | _ P._--"Forty, was it? |
47194 | _ P._--"He did, did he? |
47194 | _ Precentor_--A noise i''the kirk? |
47194 | _ Precentor_--But would it no be an awfu''sin? |
47194 | _ Precentor_--Eh? |
47194 | _ Precentor_--How could I gie ye a signal i''the kirk? |
47194 | _ Rip._ Drown my sorrows? |
47194 | _ Rip._ What do I generally say to a glass? |
47194 | _ Rip._ What you doin''? |
47194 | _ Rip._ Who was dat I call a wildcat? |
47194 | _ Rip._ Why, Gretchen, are you goin''to turn me oud like a dog? |
47194 | _ Shepherd-- thoughtfully_ Good sir, which way did_ this_ one go? |
47194 | _ Shepherd_ Light or dark? |
47194 | _ Solus_ Wal, whut''s th''odds-- an hour, more or less? |
47194 | _ The Owner of the Hat_(_ removing the obstruction_)--"I''ope you''re satisfied now, I''m sure?" |
47194 | _ The Owner of the Hat_--"Sam, are you going to set by and hear me insulted like this?" |
47194 | _ The Owner of the Hat_--"What, now? |
47194 | _ This bad, too?_ Sho! |
47194 | _ Waiter_--"Ice- cream? |
47194 | an''"How d''ye do?" |
47194 | behind these iron bars? |
47194 | cried the tyrant,"doth he quail? |
47194 | doth he blanch?" |
47194 | go''long_''--have you got that down?" |
47194 | he cried, when she threatened to leave him, and left,"How could you deceive me, as you have deceft?" |
47194 | he says;"My boy, upon what dost thou fearfully gaze?" |
47194 | how you was? |
47194 | my gracious, Air you still sleepin''? |
47194 | pause you still? |
47194 | policeman, did you call me? |
47194 | que je suis semblable à les anges? |
47194 | said I,"right here in the post- office?" |
47194 | she eesa blush so sweet!--"An''eef I ask her lika dees For geevin''me a leetla keess, You s''pose she geeve me wan or two?" |
47194 | that the tongues of men are full of deceits? |
47194 | the jolly old times as I''ve seen, when I rode for Lord Arthur( c''rrect card, sir?) |
47194 | w''at you theenk? |
47194 | what''s the matter? |
47194 | where will it end?" |
47194 | you''d ought''o seen her jerk, Spunky? |
47194 | you''ve seen my face before? |
8093 | ''It was I cut down your apple tree; I did--''"His father did? |
8093 | A_ lapsus linguae_? |
8093 | Ah, my sister,said her companion,"why create regrets when there is no remedy? |
8093 | Ah,--Ferguson,--what did I understand you to say the gentleman''s name was? |
8093 | Ah,--did he write it himself, or,--or, how? |
8093 | Am I my brother''s keeper? |
8093 | Am I my brother''s keeper? |
8093 | Am I my brother''s keeper? |
8093 | Am I my brother''s keeper? |
8093 | And George came up and heard them talking about it--"Heard who taking about it? |
8093 | And did I dream, and do I wake? 8093 And has it kiss''d you back, my dear?" |
8093 | And what would you do with it? 8093 And where do you hear the music; since you frequent no concerts?" |
8093 | And you are cold? |
8093 | And you thought, the fruiterer''s window pretty, hey? |
8093 | But his father came home and saw it the first thing, and--"Saw the hatchet? |
8093 | But what is this? 8093 Come here, little boy,"and the little boy did come here; and the bank man said:"Lo, what pickest thou up?" |
8093 | Did it come off? |
8093 | Did she now? 8093 Did you compose it?" |
8093 | Discover America? 8093 Excuse the liberty I take,"Modestus said, with archness on his brow,"Pray, why did not your father make A gentleman of you?" |
8093 | Fashionable, is it? 8093 Foot of land, is it?" |
8093 | Gave who? |
8093 | George did? |
8093 | George who? |
8093 | George''s apple- tree? |
8093 | Hae a''the weans been gude? |
8093 | Happy are you, Mary Maloney? 8093 He said--""His father said?" |
8093 | Heard his father and the men"What were they talking about? |
8093 | Heard you that strain of music light, Borne gently on the breeze of night,-- So soft and low as scarce to seem More than the magic of a dream? 8093 How came it then?" |
8093 | How did he get there? |
8093 | How many have you? 8093 I wonder if God keeps the door fastened tight? |
8093 | I''ve seen mair mice than you, guidman-- An''what think ye o''that? 8093 Im- posseeble""Ah,--which is the bust and which is the pedestal?" |
8093 | Is he wounded? 8093 Is not God good to us?" |
8093 | Is that all you wish for? 8093 Is there any news of the war?" |
8093 | Is we any poorer now, mamma? |
8093 | Little Patience, art thou ready? 8093 Ma, have I got red marks on my head?" |
8093 | Ma,said the boy,"that man''s like a baby, ai n''t he?" |
8093 | Madam,said the man, putting aside a newspaper and looking around,"what''s the matter with that young hyena?" |
8093 | Measles, likely? |
8093 | Mister,said the boy, after a short silence,"does it hurt to be bald- headed?" |
8093 | Nay, who, I mean, instruction gave, Before that Virgin''s head you drew? |
8093 | No, no, no; said he''d rather lose a thousand apple- trees than--"Said he''d rather George would? |
8093 | O, what will mamma say, and all the young girls? |
8093 | Or were you hungry? |
8093 | Parents living? |
8093 | Said he cut his father? |
8093 | Said he''d rather have a thousand apple- trees? |
8093 | Small- pox, think? |
8093 | So George came up and heard them talking about it, and he--"What did he cut it down for? |
8093 | So, George came up, and he said,''Father, I can not tell a lie, I--''"Who could n''t tell a lie? |
8093 | Then I''ll be bald, wo n''t I? |
8093 | We hung up our stockings last Christmas, did n''t we, mamma? |
8093 | Well, one day, George''s father--"George who? |
8093 | Well, well, read on: is he wounded? 8093 What apple- tree?" |
8093 | What apple- tree? |
8093 | What are you singing for? |
8093 | What can we go in for? |
8093 | What did he die of? |
8093 | What on earth, then, have you got to make you happy? 8093 What shall it be?" |
8093 | What shall we do,he turned to say,"Should he refuse to take his pay From what is in the pillow- case?" |
8093 | What''s bald? |
8093 | What( to his pupils) is his meed? 8093 Where did they take him? |
8093 | Where is my brother? |
8093 | Where''s our clean stockings, mamma? 8093 Who is he?" |
8093 | Who says I forgot? 8093 Whose little hatchet?" |
8093 | Why must I hush? |
8093 | Why, no; George could n''t? |
8093 | Will mine come off? |
8093 | Will you care? |
8093 | Ye men of Israel, why marvel ye at this? 8093 Yes, must be careful with his hatchet--""What hatchet?" |
8093 | Yes, told him he must be careful with the hatchet--"Who must be careful? |
8093 | You believe me now? |
8093 | You will come again? |
8093 | You wish to hear-- that is, you would like-- that is-- shall I play for you? |
8093 | Young man,he said,"by what art, craft, or trade, Did your good father gain a livelihood?" |
8093 | Your name,said the judge, as he eyed her With kindly look yet keen,"Is Mary McGuire, if you please, sir,""And your age?" |
8093 | Your name? |
8093 | ''Oh can it be? |
8093 | ''Twas thine at noon of night First from the prow to hail the glimmering light? |
8093 | ( C.) Remember thee? |
8093 | (_ enters_, L. U. E._ disguised as a monk._) Inform me, friend, is not Alonzo, the Spanish prisoner, confined in this dungeon? |
8093 | (_ turns to Marion_,) or in sparkling cold water? |
8093 | )_ Doctor, do you think you can give me anything that will relieve this desprit pain I have in my side? |
8093 | )_ Ha, that beggar woman, where is she? |
8093 | )_ Ha, what sound is that? |
8093 | )_ MAD.--_(not noticing child)_ Where is she? |
8093 | *****"Who did you say is waiting for me?" |
8093 | --she smiled as she drew From her bosom two letters; and-- can it be true? |
8093 | A beggar woman? |
8093 | A drunken brother, a poor helpless sister, no mother, no father, no lover; why, where do you get all your happiness from?" |
8093 | A king of shreds and patches,-- Save me, and hover o''er me with your wings, You heavenly guards!--What would your gracious figure? |
8093 | A vision which fever hath fashion''d to sight? |
8093 | ALON.--And die for me? |
8093 | ALON.--How, is my hour elapsed? |
8093 | ALON.--What voice is that? |
8093 | After a few moments''silence:"Ma, what''s the matter with that man''s head? |
8093 | Alas, how is''t with you, That you do bend your eye on vacancy, And with the incorporal air do hold discourse? |
8093 | Alas, what need you be so boist''rous rough? |
8093 | Am I already mad? |
8093 | Am I not the child of man? |
8093 | An empty glass before the youth Soon drew the waiter near;"What will you take, sir?" |
8093 | An oath, an oath, I have an oath in heaven: Shall I lay perjury upon my soul? |
8093 | An''the mate asks the boy pretty roughly How he dared for to be stow''d away? |
8093 | And I said, Who art thou, Lord? |
8093 | And at last he came to a splendid apple- tree, his father''s favourite, and cut it down, and--""Who cut it down?" |
8093 | And be sure that he knows how much to know, and knows how not to know too much? |
8093 | And do thy kisses, like the rest, betray? |
8093 | And do you want me to tell you I walked alive a murderer of my own child, who stood up to save me? |
8093 | And do you want me to tell you how that mangled little mass killed her mother? |
8093 | And do you want me to tell you the good fellowship you were drinkin''awhile ago brought all this on me? |
8093 | And does delirium utter such sweet words Into a dreamer''s ear? |
8093 | And dress your victuals( if there be any)? |
8093 | And everybody said they did n''t know anything about it, and--""Anything about what?" |
8093 | And he said,''Who has cut down my favourite apple- tree?''" |
8093 | And his father told him--""Told who?" |
8093 | And his father--""Whose father?" |
8093 | And if I stretched my hands towards it, was it a crime? |
8093 | And reckon''st thou thyself with spirits of heaven,_ Hell- doomed_, and breath''st defiance here and scorn, Where I reign king? |
8093 | And shall I on my only son Bestow a curse this day? |
8093 | And the bank man said:"How do you vote?--excuse me, do you go to Sunday school?" |
8093 | And the bank man said:"Little boy, are you good?" |
8093 | And the words? |
8093 | And what is this crawls from the stream? |
8093 | And when we were all fallen to the earth, I heard a voice speaking to me, and saying in the Hebrew tongue, Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou me? |
8093 | And will you? |
8093 | And yet, bold babbler, what art thou to Him Who drowned a world, and heaped the waters far Above its loftiest mountains? |
8093 | And you confess at last that you are conquer''d Are all you schemes run out? |
8093 | And you knew it? |
8093 | Any memory of his sermon? |
8093 | Apples? |
8093 | Are there balance here, to weigh The flesh? |
8093 | Are you acquainted with the difference That holds this present question in the court? |
8093 | Are you gracious? |
8093 | Are you more stubborn- hard than hammer''d iron? |
8093 | Are you sick, Hubert? |
8093 | Arm''d, say ye? |
8093 | Art thou any thing? |
8093 | Art thou contented, Jew; what dost thou say? |
8093 | Art thou not Romeo, and a Montague? |
8093 | Art thou not, fatal vision, sensible To feeling, as to sight? |
8093 | Art thou not, fatal vision, sensible To feeling, as to sight? |
8093 | Art thou sensible that this senate, now thoroughly informed, comprehend the full extent of thy guilt? |
8093 | Art thou sensible that thy measures are detected? |
8093 | Art thou some god, some angel, or some devil, That makest my blood cold, and my hair to stare? |
8093 | As I descended? |
8093 | As I descended? |
8093 | As he fled A voice pursued him to the wilderness:"Where is thy brother, Cain?" |
8093 | At what o''clock to- morrow Shall I send to thee? |
8093 | Aye? |
8093 | Banished? |
8093 | Before her stood fair Bregenz; Once more her towers arose; What were the friends beside her? |
8093 | Born here?" |
8093 | But is this true? |
8093 | But thou thyself movest alone: who can be a companion of thy course? |
8093 | But where''s Will and the rest of them?" |
8093 | But wherefore could I not pronounce,"Amen?" |
8093 | By whose direction found''st thou out this place? |
8093 | CHILD.--A rose- wreath? |
8093 | CHILD.--Did you know the other Leah?--she whom mother and father speak of so often, and for whom every night I must pray? |
8093 | CHILD.--_(coming towards her)._ Is it you? |
8093 | Can he carry a gentleman''s manners within a rhinoceros hide? |
8093 | Can he compass his spirit with meekness, and strangle a natural oath? |
8093 | Can he courteously talk to an equal, and brow- beat an impudent dunce? |
8093 | Can he do an hour''s work in a minute, and live on a sixpence a week? |
8093 | Can he keep things in apple- pie order, and do half- a- dozen at once? |
8093 | Can he know all, and do all, and be all, with cheerfulness, courage, and vim? |
8093 | Can he leave all his wrongs to the future, and carry his heart in his cheek? |
8093 | Can he press all the springs of knowledge, with quick and reliable touch? |
8093 | Can it be His, this_ benedicite_? |
8093 | Can she love Baradas? |
8093 | Can the tongue that lied, still speak? |
8093 | Can you hear?" |
8093 | Can you not read it? |
8093 | Canst thou not feel My warm blood o''er thy heart congeal? |
8093 | Canst thou, I say, behold all this, and yet remain undaunted and unabashed? |
8093 | Christopher Colombo,--pleasant name,--is-- is he dead?" |
8093 | Come swift, O sweet; why falter so? |
8093 | Come, merchant, have you anything to say? |
8093 | Come, phial-- What if this mixture do not work at all? |
8093 | Could he believe that the grand lady, all blazing with jewels, and whom everybody seemed to worship, would really sing his little song? |
8093 | Could you on this fair mountain leave to feed, And batten on this moor? |
8093 | Crouching in the twilight- gray, Like a hunted thing at bay, In his brain one thought is rife: Why not end the bootless strife? |
8093 | Dead? |
8093 | Deep calleth unto deep, and what are we That hear the questions of that voice sublime? |
8093 | Did I say better? |
8093 | Did I say better? |
8093 | Did I yesterday Wash thy feet, my beloved, that they should run Quick to deny me,''neath the morning sun? |
8093 | Did no blood- stained dagger drop upon them? |
8093 | Did not great Julius bleed for justice sake? |
8093 | Did not the angels weep over the scene? |
8093 | Did not you speak? |
8093 | Did ye not hear it? |
8093 | Did you ever hear two married women take leave of each other at the gate on a mild evening? |
8093 | Did you ever stand in the crowded street, In the glare of a city lamp, And list to the tread of the millions feet In their quaintly musical tramp? |
8093 | Did you narrowly look?" |
8093 | Did you ne''er think what wondrous beings these? |
8093 | Did you ne''er think who made them, and who taught The dialect they speak, where melodies Alone are the interpreters of thought? |
8093 | Did you not speak? |
8093 | Did you think so? |
8093 | Do I dream? |
8093 | Do n''t you wish he was your papa?" |
8093 | Do not I know thou would''st? |
8093 | Do you confess so much? |
8093 | Do you confess the bond? |
8093 | Do you hear the rain, Mr. Caudle? |
8093 | Do you mark that? |
8093 | Do you need my help? |
8093 | Do you not come your tardy son to chide, That, lapsed in time and passion, lets go by The important acting of your dread command? |
8093 | Do you see nothing there? |
8093 | Do you think, sir, if you try, You can paint the look of a lie? |
8093 | Does he know how to spur up his virtue, and put a check- rein on his pride? |
8093 | Does it dare to mix with the pure air of heaven? |
8093 | Dost thou hear? |
8093 | Dost thou love me? |
8093 | Drooping?--sighs?-- Art thou not happy at the court? |
8093 | Enter Leah slowly, her hair streaming over her shoulders._ LEAH--[_solus_]-What seek I here? |
8093 | Even so? |
8093 | Firstly? |
8093 | For what? |
8093 | Frenchman, I presume?" |
8093 | Friendly, my child what about him, pray?" |
8093 | Friendly, what would they all say?" |
8093 | George would rather have his father lie?" |
8093 | George? |
8093 | Good morning, Doctor; how do you do? |
8093 | Great Spirit, what is this I dread? |
8093 | HAMLET,( C) Whither wilt thou lead me? |
8093 | Had I understood him?" |
8093 | Had you rather CÃ ¦ sar were living, and die all slaves, than that CÃ ¦ sar were dead, to live all freemen? |
8093 | Hark!-- Who lies i''the second chamber? |
8093 | Hate Mauprat? |
8093 | Hath Cassius lived To be but mirth and laughter to his Brutus, When grief and blood ill- tempered vexeth him? |
8093 | Have I not seen the strongest fall, The fairest led astray? |
8093 | Have we not heard the Bridegroom is so sweet? |
8093 | Have you eyes? |
8093 | Have you not love enough to bear with me, When that rash humour which my mother gave me Makes me forgetful? |
8093 | Have you the heart? |
8093 | He brokenly, timidly said,''Do they know I am thus?'' |
8093 | He kissed me-- and I knew''twas wrong, For he was neither kith nor kin; Need one do penance very long For such a tiny little sin? |
8093 | He pressed my hand-- that was not right; Why will men have such wicked ways? |
8093 | Her mother dying of the gift she gave, That precious gift, what else remained to him? |
8093 | His daily wages had been their sole support, and now that he was gone, what could they do? |
8093 | His eyes slowly filling with tear- drops, He falteringly says,"May I pray?" |
8093 | His feet are on the land, and fair His face is lifting to my face, For who shall now dispute the race? |
8093 | His--""Who gave him the little hatchet?" |
8093 | How cam''st thou hither?--tell me-- and for what? |
8093 | How came she by that light? |
8093 | How do you do, Cornelia? |
8093 | How far wilt thou, O Catiline, abuse our patience? |
8093 | How have I drunk the light of thy blue eye And could I see thee die? |
8093 | How is Mr. Kobble? |
8093 | How is it with you, lady? |
8093 | How is''t with me, when every noise appals me? |
8093 | How long shall thy madness outbrave our justice? |
8093 | How many has he now?" |
8093 | I an itching palm? |
8093 | I do n''t often meddle in other folks''business, do I? |
8093 | I durst not? |
8093 | I expected the bank man would call me in and say:"Little boy, are you good?" |
8093 | I have done the deed:--Did''st thou not hear a noise? |
8093 | I mean-- I-- Does your Eminence-- that is-- Know you Messire de Mauprat? |
8093 | I pray thee, bear my former answer back? |
8093 | I say, do you hear it? |
8093 | I went out and walked about, thinking,"what could he mean? |
8093 | I will not entertain so bad a thought.-- How, if, when I am laid into the tomb, I wake before the time that Romeo Come to redeem me? |
8093 | I''st possible? |
8093 | I_ durst_ not? |
8093 | If on to- morrow morn you fail To answer what I ask, The lash shall force you-- do you hear? |
8093 | In Heaven? |
8093 | Is His heaven far to seek for those who drown? |
8093 | Is he not able to discharge the money? |
8093 | Is it come to this? |
8093 | Is it not Alonzo''s voice? |
8093 | Is it not so? |
8093 | Is it really come again? |
8093 | Is it so nominated in the bond? |
8093 | Is it you? |
8093 | Is not love the right of all,--like the air, the light? |
8093 | Is that the law? |
8093 | Is there One who knows and cares? |
8093 | Is there no remedy? |
8093 | Is this a dagger which I see before me, The handle toward my hand? |
8093 | Is this a dagger which I see before me, The handle toward my hand? |
8093 | Is this the man I worshipped? |
8093 | Is this your promise? |
8093 | Is your name Shylock? |
8093 | Is-- ah!--is he dead?" |
8093 | It is not so express''d; but what of that? |
8093 | It moves!--what form unseen, what being there With torch- like lustre fires the murky air? |
8093 | It was--''""His father could n''t?" |
8093 | JULIE: What doth he? |
8093 | Just two days later, as I sat, half dozing, in my office chair, I heard a timid knock, and called in my brusque fashion,"Who is there?" |
8093 | K. HEN Who hath sent thee now? |
8093 | LADY C. What are you busy? |
8093 | LADY M. What do you mean? |
8093 | LADY M. Who was it that thus cried? |
8093 | LEAH.--And you believed I had taken it? |
8093 | LEAH.--Sent me money? |
8093 | LEAH.--What say you? |
8093 | LEAH.--You would tempt me again? |
8093 | Leah? |
8093 | Let me see; you do n''t own a foot of land in the world?" |
8093 | Likewise, there folks do n''t get hungry; So good people when they dies, Finds themselves well- fixed for ever-- Joe, my boy, wot ails your eyes? |
8093 | Lives he still-- if dead, still where is he? |
8093 | May I say"Father?" |
8093 | Mendez!--say, whose hand Among ye all?" |
8093 | Mister, have all bald- headed men got money?" |
8093 | Must I budge? |
8093 | Must I endure all this? |
8093 | Must I give way and room to your rash choler? |
8093 | Must I observe you? |
8093 | Must I stand and crouch Under your testy humour? |
8093 | Must I thus leave thee, Paradise? |
8093 | My father''s trade? |
8093 | My lord? |
8093 | My old friend''s ghost? |
8093 | My only strength and stay: forlorn of thee, Whither shall I betake me, where subsist? |
8093 | Never see the country did you? |
8093 | No cause-- you hate my foes? |
8093 | No little faces greet him as wo nt at the threshold; and to his hurried question--"Are they come?" |
8093 | No more assassins Now on the road? |
8093 | No-- no; no fairer were you then than at this hour to me, And dear as life to me this day, how could you dearer be? |
8093 | None? |
8093 | Nor did you nothing hear? |
8093 | Not a neighbour Passing, nod or answer will refuse To her whisper,"Is there from the fishers any news?" |
8093 | Not rank De Mauprat with my foes? |
8093 | Now, Cora, did''st thou not wrong me? |
8093 | Now, is n''t it true Tom''s the best fellow that ever you knew? |
8093 | Now, tell me, Are you guilty of this, or no?" |
8093 | Nurse!--What should she do here? |
8093 | O good painter, tell me true, Has your hand the cunning to draw Shapes of things that you never saw? |
8093 | O partner of my gladness, wife, what care, what grief is there, For me you would not bravely face,--with me you would not share? |
8093 | O what are all the notes that ever rung From war''s vain trumpet, by thy thundering side? |
8093 | O, save me, Hubert, save me? |
8093 | O, which way now is left for his retreat? |
8093 | Often? |
8093 | Oh, is it a phantom? |
8093 | Oh, when will day reveal a world unknown?" |
8093 | Oh, wilt thou leave me so unsatisfied? |
8093 | On what compulsion must I? |
8093 | One day George Washington''s father gave him a little hatchet for a--""Gave who a little hatchet?" |
8093 | One day his father--""Who''s father?" |
8093 | One who all his sorrow shares? |
8093 | Or did I wake and now but dream? |
8093 | Or, What good love may I perform for you? |
8093 | Perhaps she''ll wear a plainer dress when she''s as old as I,-- Would thee believe it, Hannah? |
8093 | Pray, why did not your father make A saddler, sir, of you?" |
8093 | Printer; how is your body today? |
8093 | QUEEN-- What have I done, that thou dar''st wag thy tongue In noise so rude against me? |
8093 | QUEEN.--Ah me, what act, That roars so loud, and thunders in the index? |
8093 | ROL.--Did Rolla ever counsel dishonour to his friend? |
8093 | ROL.--Dost thou love thy children and thy wife? |
8093 | ROL.--Hast thou children? |
8093 | ROL.--Soldier!--hast thou a wife? |
8093 | ROL.--What is to be his fate? |
8093 | ROL.--Where didst thou leave them? |
8093 | RUD.--How could I believe otherwise? |
8093 | RUD.--How say you? |
8093 | Remember thee? |
8093 | Reward or punishment?" |
8093 | SEN.--Away!--wouldst thou corrupt me? |
8093 | SEN.--How? |
8093 | SIR P.--Very well, ma''am, very well!--so a husband is to have no influence, no authority? |
8093 | ST. And when you are one, what do you intend? |
8093 | ST. Be it so-- What then? |
8093 | ST. Tell me what brings you, gentle youth, to Rome? |
8093 | ST. Well, having worn the mitre and red hat, And triple crown, what follows after that? |
8093 | ST. Well; and how then? |
8093 | Secondly? |
8093 | See''st thou here? |
8093 | Shall I be frightened when a madman stares? |
8093 | Shall I hear more, or shall I speak at this? |
8093 | Shall I not have barely my principal? |
8093 | Shall I not then be stifled in the vault, To whose foul mouth no healthsome air breathes in, And there die strangled ere my Romeo comes? |
8093 | Shall I of force be married to the Count? |
8093 | Shall I shrink From him who gave me birth? |
8093 | Shall Lewis have Blanche, and Blanche these provinces? |
8093 | Shall it be in wine? |
8093 | Shall not the roaring waters Their headlong gallop check? |
8093 | Shall she let it ring? |
8093 | She speaks, yet she says nothing: what of that? |
8093 | Should I have answered Caius Cassius so? |
8093 | Sir, is it true that you have known-- nay, are you The friend of-- Melnotte? |
8093 | So leavin''the ould cow puffin and blowin''in a shed, I wint to the house, and as luck would have it, whose should it be but Dennis''s? |
8093 | So says the bond;--Doth it not, noble judge? |
8093 | So you note his colours, Julie? |
8093 | Suppose it so,--what have you next in view? |
8093 | Suppose it was, what then? |
8093 | Tell you about it? |
8093 | Ten years pass, and Marguerite Smiles as Will kneels at her feet, Gazing fondly in her eyes, Praying,"Wo n''t you kiss me, sweet?" |
8093 | That dar''st, though grim and terrible, advance Thy miscreated front athwart my way To yonder gates? |
8093 | The doctor put up his eye- glass,--procured for such occasions:--"Ah,--what did you say this gentleman''s name was?" |
8093 | The doctor turned on him savagely:--"Here, now, what do you mean by such conduct as this? |
8093 | The first words he caught were:"Before papa died we always had Christmas, did n''t we, mamma?" |
8093 | The maiden answers,"Let us wait; To borrow trouble where''s the need?" |
8093 | The man lived in Philadelphia who, when young and poor, entered a bank, and says he,"Please, sir, do n''t you want a boy?" |
8093 | The prech''en? |
8093 | The red fox at my feet? |
8093 | Then he said, without any show of interest,--"Ah,--Ferguson,--what-- what did you say was the name of the party who wrote this?" |
8093 | Then you play from ear?" |
8093 | These eyes, that never did, nor never shall, So much as frown on you? |
8093 | These then, are the charms Which no man with impunity can view, Near which no woman dare attempt to stand? |
8093 | Think ye my noble father''s glaive, Could drink the life blood of a slave? |
8093 | This-- trial? |
8093 | Thou art admired-- art young; Does not his Majesty commend thy beauty-- Ask thee to sing to him?--and swear such sounds Had smoothed the brow of Saul? |
8093 | Thou dost not wish more help from England, coz? |
8093 | Thou proud mouth, ye proud lips, why did you not speak? |
8093 | Thou shalt not kill-- what of life have you left me? |
8093 | To induce you to release me-- to---- LEAH.--That I might release you? |
8093 | To whom do you speak this? |
8093 | Too fairly, Hubert, for so foul effect: Must you with hot irons burn out both mine eyes? |
8093 | Transition thus forms a very important part in vocal culture, and public speakers often ask the question:"How can I modulate my voice?" |
8093 | Was that done like Cassius? |
8093 | We said:"And he was told--""George told him?" |
8093 | Wears gold and azure? |
8093 | Well!--and you-- Has he addressed you often? |
8093 | Well, but finds it warm in town, eh? |
8093 | Well, now, how do you know? |
8093 | Well, what did he do?" |
8093 | What ails the woman standing near? |
8093 | What ails you dear Fanny? |
8093 | What are we waiting for, you and I? |
8093 | What are we waiting for? |
8093 | What cared he for money now? |
8093 | What commandant hast thou not broken? |
8093 | What courtly gallants Charm ladies most?--De Sourdioc''Longueville, or The favorite Baradas? |
8093 | What devil was''t That thus hath cozened you at hoodman- blind? |
8093 | What do you see? |
8093 | What do you think that old white mare of ours did while I was out ploughing last week? |
8093 | What good would forty heads do her? |
8093 | What hand is that whose icy press Clings to the dead with death''s own grasp, But meets no answering caress-- No thrilling fingers seek its clasp? |
8093 | What hands are here? |
8093 | What has happened? |
8093 | What have I done? |
8093 | What if your wife were that poor boy''s mother,-- And he only sixteen? |
8093 | What is it she does now? |
8093 | What is that? |
8093 | What is the world to them, Its pomp, its pleasure, and its nonsense all? |
8093 | What is to be done? |
8093 | What light through yonder window breaks? |
8093 | What makes you so nervous?" |
8093 | What man art thou, that, thus bescreened in night So stumblest on my counsel? |
8093 | What mercy can you render him, Antonio? |
8093 | What money? |
8093 | What satisfaction canst thou have to- night? |
8093 | What shall I swear by? |
8093 | What snowy crest Climbs out the willows of the west, All weary, wounded, bent, and slow, And dripping from his streaming hair? |
8093 | What sort of an animal must this Yankee cow be? |
8093 | What was thy delighted measure? |
8093 | What would be thy last request? |
8093 | What would you say to me, my Lady Stuart? |
8093 | What''s banished, but set free From daily contact of the things I loathe? |
8093 | What''s banished, but set free From daily contact with the things I loathe? |
8093 | What''s he that wishes so? |
8093 | What''s in a name? |
8093 | What''s the matter? |
8093 | What''though the field be lost`? |
8093 | What, if''twere_ your_ son, instead of another? |
8093 | What, rub and scrub your noble palace clean? |
8093 | What, silent still? |
8093 | What? |
8093 | What_ durst_ not tempt him? |
8093 | When I consider the heavens, the work of Thy fingers; the moon and the stars, which Thou hast ordained; what is man that Thou art mindful of him? |
8093 | When before the great throne you each shall stand,-- And he only sixteen? |
8093 | When the elements, melting with fervent heat, Shall proclaim the triumph of RIGHT complete? |
8093 | When was it she last walked? |
8093 | When? |
8093 | When? |
8093 | Whence came they? |
8093 | Whence is that knocking? |
8093 | Where do you live?" |
8093 | Where is the king? |
8093 | Where shall that land, that spot of earth be found? |
8093 | Where? |
8093 | Whereon do you look? |
8093 | Which is the merchant here, and which the Jew? |
8093 | Who bade the sun Clothe you with rainbows? |
8093 | Who bound him hand and foot? |
8093 | Who could guess If ever more should meet those mutual eyes, Since upon night so sweet such awful morn could rise? |
8093 | Who dragged him down? |
8093 | Who grasped His gold-- his health-- his life-- his hope-- his all? |
8093 | Who in God''s wide world would weep, Should he brave death''s dreamless sleep? |
8093 | Who is here so base, that would be a bondman? |
8093 | Who is here so rude that would not be a Roman? |
8093 | Who is here so vile that will not love his country? |
8093 | Who lies i''the second chamber? |
8093 | Who made you glorious as the gates of heaven Beneath the keen, full moon? |
8093 | Who now shall rear ye to the sun, or rank Your tribes, and water from the ambrosial fount? |
8093 | Who saw His beggared children wandering in the streets? |
8093 | Who saw his Mary fade and die? |
8093 | Who says this? |
8093 | Who says this? |
8093 | Who sent him to the pit? |
8093 | Who shall prevent me? |
8093 | Who smiled and smiled While yet the hellish work went on? |
8093 | Who''ll prove it, at his peril on my head? |
8093 | Who''ll prove it, at his peril, on my head? |
8093 | Who''s there? |
8093 | Why does my hate melt away at this soft voice with which heaven calls to me? |
8093 | Why doth the Jew pause? |
8093 | Why judge the living for the dead one''s fall?" |
8093 | Why should it be thought a thing incredible with you, that God should raise the dead? |
8093 | Why should the poor be flattered? |
8093 | Why was I silent? |
8093 | Why where''s the boy? |
8093 | Why, blockhead, are you mad? |
8093 | Why, just suppose it was you? |
8093 | Why, who can say But I''ve a chance of being pope one day? |
8093 | Will all great Neptune''s ocean wash this blood Clean from my hand? |
8093 | Will it be made with sufficient force to save the people? |
8093 | Will no adventurer Attempt again for you the sad achievement? |
8093 | Will you not,_( offers him her hand, which he takes,)_ my husband? |
8093 | Withhold my hand And see a parent perish? |
8093 | Would you like to come to my concert?" |
8093 | Would''st thou withdraw it? |
8093 | Yea, what is all the riot man can make, In his short life, to thine unceasing roar? |
8093 | Yes, they''re mighty pretty, Joe, Smellin''of them''s made you happy? |
8093 | Yet of these flowers Of France, not one, in whose more honeyed breath Thy heart hears Summer whisper? |
8093 | You call me back? |
8093 | You do n''t mean to die yet, eh? |
8093 | You first and failing from a race? |
8093 | You have brought your bride a wreath? |
8093 | You know I ca n''t wear clogs; and, with no umbrella, the wet''s sure to give me a cold: it always does: but what do you care for that? |
8093 | You love him thus And yet desert him? |
8093 | You might make her_ look_ all mended-- but what do I care for looks? |
8093 | You permitted it? |
8093 | You thought Bridget was watching them? |
8093 | Your brother''s badly hurt you say? |
8093 | [_ Enters the cavern_, R. U. E. SEN.--Who''s there? |
8093 | _ He_? |
8093 | _ Just takin''drinks for good fellowship?_ Yes, I know all''bout that. |
8093 | _ Several voices--(Eagerly)_--What is it? |
8093 | _( kisses her,)_ What is your name, my darling? |
8093 | _( turning to the judge,)_ father, shall I drink it now? |
8093 | _[ Exeunt in house.__ Enter Leah from behind a hayrick._ LEAH.--Have I heard aright? |
8093 | a dream of the night? |
8093 | and sure they ca n''t be Injin, haythen, or naygur, for its plain English they''re afther spakin?" |
8093 | and the son of man, that Thou visitest him? |
8093 | and then, Where is your boasted power, base men?" |
8093 | and where''s the''change''he should have brought an hour ago? |
8093 | and, Where lies your grief? |
8093 | art thou then a common stone, Which I at last must break my heart upon, For all God''s charge to His high angels may Guard my foot better? |
8093 | bad luck to your deaf ould head, Paddy McFiggin, I say-- do you hear that? |
8093 | can he be dead? |
8093 | d''ye hear?" |
8093 | dead so soon? |
8093 | did I say? |
8093 | did you say so*? |
8093 | do n''t you have no fear; Heaven was made for such as you is-- Joe, what makes you look so queer? |
8093 | do you think I''ll work? |
8093 | durst not tempt him? |
8093 | for what purpose, love? |
8093 | from thee How shall I part, and whither wander down Into a lower world, to this obscure And wild? |
8093 | have ye flown? |
8093 | have you eyes? |
8093 | he inquired,"Stout, bitter, mild, or clear? |
8093 | he said, in a low tone,"who and what are you?" |
8093 | he said,"what sound is that? |
8093 | he thought, were he to taste, Who could the end divine? |
8093 | how can I rest, With this shot- shattered head, and sabre- pierced breast? |
8093 | how shall I begin? |
8093 | how shall we breathe in other air Less pure, accustom''d to immortal fruits? |
8093 | is it not fair writ? |
8093 | is there naught to prize, Familiar in thy bosom scenes of life? |
8093 | must you die? |
8093 | my uncle? |
8093 | or art thou but A dagger of the mind, a false creation, Proceeding from a heat- oppressed brain? |
8093 | or art thou but A dagger of the mind-- a false creation, Proceeding from a heat- oppressed brain? |
8093 | or why look ye so earnestly on us, as though by our own power or holiness, we had made this man to walk?" |
8093 | said Murillo kindly;"choose Your own reward-- what shall it be? |
8093 | shrieked the mother,"one; Can land or gold redeem my son? |
8093 | start ye back? |
8093 | thus leave Thee, native soil, these happy walks and shades, Fit haunt of gods? |
8093 | thy everlasting light? |
8093 | to guide my daily path? |
8093 | what wert thou, melodious strain?" |
8093 | what''s the matter? |
8093 | when wilt thou grant to this babe''s mother such repose? |
8093 | whence art thou? |
8093 | where is thy blush? |
8093 | where is thy brother now? |
8093 | wherefore art thou Romeo? |
8093 | who comes here? |
8093 | why should they mock poor fellows thus? |
8093 | ye braves? |
8093 | you durst not so have tempted him? |
8093 | you have brought me berries red? |
8093 | you knew,''You know them?'' |
12444 | ''But the rose?'' 12444 ''Did you git''em, boss?" |
12444 | ''Did you git''em, boss? |
12444 | ''How is Congress divided?'' 12444 ''How''s that, my boy?'' |
12444 | ''Jim,''he said,''how is it the colonel is able to sleep so soundly with so many mosquitoes around?'' 12444 ''Liza, what fo''yo''buy dat udder box of shoe- blacknin''?" |
12444 | ''My, my,''I said,''what am I to do now?'' 12444 ''See that there tree?'' |
12444 | ''Seen Ole?'' 12444 ''Ullo, Bill,''ow''s things with yer?" |
12444 | ''Wait a moment,''said Bill,''is it codfish they caught?'' 12444 ''Well,''said the teacher,''what do you say the answer is?'' |
12444 | ''What office do you mean, uncle?'' 12444 ''What s the matter? |
12444 | ''What s the matter? 12444 ''What''s in here?'' |
12444 | ''What''s that?'' 12444 ''What''s the matter?'' |
12444 | ''Who broke the glass in the back window?'' |
12444 | ''Who''s there?'' 12444 ''Who''s there?'' |
12444 | ''Why do you cherish in this way,''my friend said to his host,''that common brick and that dead rose?'' 12444 ''William,''said I,''your face is fairly clean, but how did you get such dirty hands?" |
12444 | ''Wot''s so funny about bein''flogged?'' 12444 ''Would n''t change hit, boss, would he?'' |
12444 | ''Would n''t change hit, boss, would he?'' 12444 A compromise?" |
12444 | A missionary in a slum once laid his hand on a man''s shoulder and said:''Friend, do you hear the solemn ticking of that clock? |
12444 | A sense of humor? 12444 A wish?" |
12444 | Ah,she answered in the sweetest of tones,"I did n''t miss it so far, after all, did I?" |
12444 | Ai n''t there a lot o''stuff in the pantry? |
12444 | Ai n''t they fine boys? |
12444 | Ai n''t we got a good house to live in? |
12444 | Ai n''t yer''fraid ye''ll freeze? |
12444 | All paid, eh? |
12444 | All right, Jake, but what are you going to do this time? |
12444 | An''how long have ye been here? |
12444 | An''what are ye thinkin''about noo-- anither, eh? |
12444 | An''what micht it be? |
12444 | And are you a regular communicant? |
12444 | And did he say he would not come? |
12444 | And did you actually see this yourself? |
12444 | And did you call Mr. Jones a worse fool? |
12444 | And do n''t you take anything for it? |
12444 | And do you have to be called in the morning? |
12444 | And how do you plant it? |
12444 | And how much money have you given her? |
12444 | And how would you do it? |
12444 | And is your husband a good provider? |
12444 | And so you''re working''ard to keep out of mischief? |
12444 | And were you not decorated? |
12444 | And what are those things on her head? |
12444 | And what can I do for you? |
12444 | And what did he say? |
12444 | And what did you do, Johnny? |
12444 | And what did you get a hundred in? |
12444 | And what did you say? |
12444 | And what did you say? |
12444 | And what do you do in winter? |
12444 | And what do you wish the new one to be? |
12444 | And what have you brought me? |
12444 | And what kind of an egg might that be? |
12444 | And what were you talking about? |
12444 | And what,he asked,"do you suppose is the name of the chap who keeps a whole county dry?" |
12444 | And who are you? |
12444 | And why not? |
12444 | And you are trying to free the niggers, are n''t you? |
12444 | And you would n''t let a man beat you-- not even if he was your husband-- would you? |
12444 | And you would n''t let a man beat you-- not even if he was your husband-- would you? |
12444 | Any good? 12444 Any good?" |
12444 | Any good? |
12444 | Any trouble, Tom? |
12444 | Anything on your mind, Catherine? |
12444 | Are fried potatoes rich in carbohydrates or not? |
12444 | Are n''t they rather light? |
12444 | Are n''t you working to- day, Uncle? |
12444 | Are there any trout out there? |
12444 | Are we all goin'', too? |
12444 | Are ye the captain of that vessel? |
12444 | Are you a lawyer? |
12444 | Are you a pillar of the church? |
12444 | Are you a woman suffragist? |
12444 | Are you an Episcopalian? |
12444 | Are you an experienced aviator? |
12444 | Are you drunk, too? |
12444 | Are you going back? |
12444 | Are you hurt, dear? |
12444 | Are you married? |
12444 | Are you positive of it? |
12444 | Are you quite sure that was a marriage license you gave me last month? |
12444 | Are you quite sure they wo n''t leave us any money? |
12444 | Are you sick? |
12444 | Are you sure this is all you have? |
12444 | Are you the boss? |
12444 | Are you trying to save souls from hell? |
12444 | Are you waiting for me, dear? |
12444 | Are you? |
12444 | As to how? |
12444 | Ask me? |
12444 | Better? |
12444 | Burn? |
12444 | Burned, eh? |
12444 | But do you really, after a year, want to marry? |
12444 | But how can I help that? |
12444 | But how did that fact make you think you were still alive? |
12444 | But how is it that you have the candy now? |
12444 | But what would we do with the other two days? |
12444 | But why does laziness make him howl? |
12444 | But why not? |
12444 | But why should n''t faith work as well in one case as in the other? |
12444 | But would n''t tomorrow night do just as well? |
12444 | But you''re a Jew? |
12444 | But your views, as you expressed them some time ago? |
12444 | But, my dear sir,expostulated the author,"does he sign them with his feet?" |
12444 | But,one asked,"how does it get to the other end of the hole?" |
12444 | By the way, do you put these fines back into the roads? |
12444 | By whom? |
12444 | By whom? |
12444 | Can you give me some particulars of this accident? |
12444 | Can you ride a horse and swim, too? |
12444 | Can you ride a horse and swim, too? |
12444 | Chicken pie? 12444 Choked to death?" |
12444 | Come, come, I know that-- drunk again, I suppose? |
12444 | Conductor,he demanded indignantly,"do you permit drunken people to ride upon this train?" |
12444 | Could you not do it yourself, father? 12444 Could you tell him what to do in case of an attack?" |
12444 | D''ye call thot applause? |
12444 | D''ye think thot I''m goin''to put in me whole day drivin''ye around for two hours? 12444 D''you s''pose I''d be workin''in the garden on Saturday morning if she was n''t?" |
12444 | Dare yez to answer me when I puts a question to yez? |
12444 | Dat''s hard luck,said the first;"did youse lose anyt''ing?" |
12444 | Dead? |
12444 | Dear me, how tiresome,said the lady;"have you Praed?" |
12444 | Dear me, son, how did that happen? |
12444 | Dear, dear, that''s too bad;''oo did it happen? |
12444 | Did Hardlucke bear his misfortune like a man? |
12444 | Did n''t I tell ye she''d had her pound of meat? |
12444 | Did n''t I tell ye the fire department was comin?" |
12444 | Did n''t I tell ye to keep out of the way? |
12444 | Did n''t he wire you too? |
12444 | Did n''t that make him come across? |
12444 | Did n''t the boy bring that dozen bass I gave him? |
12444 | Did n''t you hear of the lawsuit over a title that I had with Jones down in Malone last summer? |
12444 | Did n''t you notice that he counted his fingers after I had shaken hands with him and we were coming away? |
12444 | Did n''t you tell Dr. Brooks last week that they were Episcopal kittens? |
12444 | Did she tell you she''d forgotten? |
12444 | Did the ass fancy that one would pay any attention to his wire? |
12444 | Did ye see as Jim got ten years''penal for stealing that''oss? |
12444 | Did you cast your vote, Aunty? |
12444 | Did you come by it honestly? |
12444 | Did you get rid of him? |
12444 | Did you have orders? |
12444 | Did you run like the wind, Sam? |
12444 | Did you say your prayers before you went to bed? |
12444 | Did you see it? |
12444 | Did you sleep well, Mary? |
12444 | Did you take it? |
12444 | Did you tell the police? |
12444 | Did you write this report on my lecture,''The Curse of Whiskey''? |
12444 | Did youse git anyt''ing? |
12444 | Do I understand, Mr. Stevens,asked the Judge, eying"old Thad"indignantly,"that you wish to show your contempt for this court?" |
12444 | Do n''t you ever pray? |
12444 | Do n''t you know what becomes of little boys who stay away from school to play baseball? |
12444 | Do n''t you like the show? |
12444 | Do n''t you love me too? |
12444 | Do n''t you remember what happened to Ananias and Sapphira? |
12444 | Do n''t you think he offers up a good prayer, Joe? |
12444 | Do n''t you think she is a wonder? |
12444 | Do n''t your wife miss you on these occasions? |
12444 | Do you believe in the doctrine of election to be saved? |
12444 | Do you call that an insult? |
12444 | Do you call that thunder? 12444 Do you cycle?" |
12444 | Do you doubt it? |
12444 | Do you drink yourself? |
12444 | Do you have much trouble with your automobile? |
12444 | Do you know that that bulldog of yours killed my wife''s little harmless, affectionate poodle? |
12444 | Do you know where Johnny Locke lives, my little boy? |
12444 | Do you know who I am? |
12444 | Do you know,said the swimmer,"this is the third time to- day that I''ve fallen off that bally old ranch of mine?" |
12444 | Do you live in this house, too? |
12444 | Do you live in this house? |
12444 | Do you live in this parish? |
12444 | Do you mean to say such a physical wreck as he gave you that black eye? |
12444 | Do you motor? |
12444 | Do you save up money for a rainy day, dear? |
12444 | Do you see those two men sitting in the corner? 12444 Do you still like them?" |
12444 | Do you think only of me? |
12444 | Do you think that is long enough to know a man before taking such an important step? |
12444 | Do you understand the requirements of that responsible position? |
12444 | Do you want a lawyer? |
12444 | Do you want me to help you upstairs? |
12444 | Do you, sir,the doctor asked, in the course of his examination,"talk in your sleep?" |
12444 | Do you, then, perhaps, fly? |
12444 | Does being bald bother you much? |
12444 | Does de white folks in youah neighborhood keep eny chickens, Br''er Rastus? |
12444 | Does he pray for the members? |
12444 | Does n''t he just take all the hope out of life? |
12444 | Does n''t it ever rain around here? |
12444 | Does n''t it? |
12444 | Does your head feel better now, Mamma? |
12444 | Does your wife want to vote? |
12444 | Doin''any good? |
12444 | Don''yo''want y''soul washed w''ite as snow, Brudder Jones? |
12444 | Doyle,he asked,"how is it that you have n''t shaved this morning?" |
12444 | Er-- have you kissed the bride? |
12444 | Excuse me, are you a preacher? |
12444 | Excuse me,interrupted the would- be- wit;"but can you tell us what the evening wore on that occasion?" |
12444 | Felicia,said her father upon her return,"did you give him the check?" |
12444 | Five dollars for what? |
12444 | Found a horse? 12444 From headquarters, I suppose?" |
12444 | From where in hell do you come, sir? |
12444 | General, why do you not give the order to fire? |
12444 | George,his wife said,"why did n''t you stand up?" |
12444 | Gerald,said the young wife, noticing how heartily he was eating,"do I cook as well as your mother did?" |
12444 | Get it? |
12444 | Guilty, or not guilty? |
12444 | Had Solomon really seven hundred wives? |
12444 | Hair cut? |
12444 | Hand- clapping? |
12444 | Happy? 12444 Happy? |
12444 | Hard? 12444 Hard?" |
12444 | Has he a sense of humor? |
12444 | Have a good time? |
12444 | Have n''t I got damages enough already, man? 12444 Have they such tall buildings in America as they say, Pat?" |
12444 | Have you a good cook now? |
12444 | Have you a newspaper in town? |
12444 | Have you any money left? |
12444 | Have you done anything for her? |
12444 | Have you heard about the new manner in which the planters are going to pick their cotton this season? |
12444 | Have you no other ambition, Mr. Herford,she demanded,"than to force people to degrade themselves by laughter?" |
12444 | Have you tried brown paper and a hot iron? |
12444 | Have you tried gasoline? |
12444 | Have you_ A Joy Forever_? |
12444 | Heavens, Clancy, do n''t you ever stop? |
12444 | Henry,faltered the young bride,"do you still love me?" |
12444 | Here, officer,he said,"what''s this man charged with?" |
12444 | Here,said a congressman to the head waiter,"why do n''t you put them things on our table too?" |
12444 | Hey, how far''s the next town? |
12444 | Homesick at a time like that? |
12444 | Homesick? |
12444 | Hoo is it, Jeemes, that you mak''sic an enairmous profit aff yer potatoes? 12444 How about beefsteak?" |
12444 | How am I out of order? |
12444 | How are you getting on? |
12444 | How are you making out? |
12444 | How are you, Mary? |
12444 | How can that be,continued the storekeeper,"when it was cured only a week?" |
12444 | How can we ever get Papa out of that little hole? |
12444 | How can we? |
12444 | How dare you say that when we all heard him? 12444 How dare you tell me that with the beard you have on your face?" |
12444 | How did he get his title of colonel? |
12444 | How did you hurt your feet, Dinah? |
12444 | How did you like our railroad trains? |
12444 | How did you lose your arm? |
12444 | How did you pull it? |
12444 | How did you sleep? |
12444 | How did you write my name? |
12444 | How do you do? |
12444 | How do you get along here? |
12444 | How do you know that this one is mine? |
12444 | How do you know? |
12444 | How do you mean it''s no use? |
12444 | How do you plow that field? |
12444 | How do_ you_ know? |
12444 | How does it happen that you are five minutes late at school this morning? |
12444 | How far apart were they? |
12444 | How far in? |
12444 | How far to the next town? |
12444 | How fast is your car, Jimpson? |
12444 | How has it worked? |
12444 | How long did he cry? |
12444 | How long have you been married, Uncle Moses? |
12444 | How many children have you? |
12444 | How many of you boys,asked the Sunday- school superintendent,"can bring two other boys next Sunday?" |
12444 | How many people work in your office? |
12444 | How many shots did you hear? |
12444 | How many strokes? |
12444 | How many times have I told you not to play with that bad Jenkins boy? |
12444 | How many trees have you? |
12444 | How much are they? |
12444 | How much did he leave? |
12444 | How much did that medicine cost, Doc? |
12444 | How much have you saved, darling? |
12444 | How much land have you? |
12444 | How much to pay? |
12444 | How old are you, Tommy? |
12444 | How old are you? |
12444 | How so? |
12444 | How so? |
12444 | How so? |
12444 | How so? |
12444 | How soon? |
12444 | How was that? |
12444 | How was that? |
12444 | How was that? |
12444 | How will you do it? |
12444 | How would you make a Venetian blind? |
12444 | How''s that? |
12444 | How''s that? |
12444 | How''s times? |
12444 | However did you reconcile Adele and Mary? |
12444 | I beg the gentleman''s pardon,said General Cochrane, springing to his feet;"but what was that last remark?" |
12444 | I ca n''t, ca n''t I? |
12444 | I do n''t remember having seen you here before,said she;"how long have you been in the asylum?" |
12444 | I know a very outspoken painter whose little daughter called at a friend''s house and said:''Show me your new parlor rug, wo n''t you, please?'' |
12444 | I presume,she remarked,"that you begin the day over here the same as they do in New York?" |
12444 | I suppose that interfered with his holding a good position? |
12444 | I suppose you gave it up then? |
12444 | I wonder if that''s what makes the Delaware Water Gap? |
12444 | If he is good for nothing what do you want him back for? |
12444 | Igh cost o''livin''not''ittin''yer, Bill? |
12444 | In the first place, where did you meet this woman who, according to your story, has treated you so dreadfully? |
12444 | In the first place, where did you meet this woman who, according to your story, has treated you so dreadfully? |
12444 | Insulted? |
12444 | Insulted? |
12444 | Is a spanking hereditary? |
12444 | Is he as good as Foy? |
12444 | Is he balky? |
12444 | Is he hurt? |
12444 | Is he? |
12444 | Is it true that he is henpecked? |
12444 | Is it true, father,he asked,"that marriage is a failure?" |
12444 | Is it, laddie? |
12444 | Is n''t it? |
12444 | Is n''t this the---- Theater? |
12444 | Is she short or is she tall, slender, willowy? |
12444 | Is that nitrogenous? |
12444 | Is that the city gas- works? |
12444 | Is that the truth? |
12444 | Is that you, dear? |
12444 | Is the baby strong? |
12444 | Is there any one you would like to see? |
12444 | Is this it? |
12444 | Ish it possible I have the honor of speakin''to Misshus Smith? |
12444 | It did n''t hurt as much as you expected it would, did it? |
12444 | It is very gratifying to know that your mother thought of me in her illness,said he,"Is your minister out of town?" |
12444 | It''ll last till you git another husband, wo n''t it? 12444 It''s a fine thing for you to belong to the church,"replied the younger brother,"If I join the church who''ll weigh the coal?" |
12444 | It''s cold out to- day, is n''t it? |
12444 | It''s like dis, aindt it? 12444 It''s pretty rough to be gone through like this, ai n''t it, sir?" |
12444 | It''s you, John, is it? 12444 Johnny,"said the mother as she vigorously scrubbed the small boy''s face with soap and water,"did n''t I tell you never to blacken your face again? |
12444 | Kinder chilly, ai n''t it? |
12444 | Large and affectionate? |
12444 | Last days of Pompey? 12444 Look here, Sam,"he said,"what did I order?" |
12444 | Look here, young lady,she said,"who are you that calls my husband and insists on talking to him?" |
12444 | Madam,he said,"if this man were your husband and had given you a beating, would you call in the police?" |
12444 | Martha, have you wiped the sink dry yet? |
12444 | Martha, is it possible that you are thinking of getting married? |
12444 | Mary,he asked,"will you marry me?" |
12444 | May I venture to inquire as to the nature of the book you propose to write? |
12444 | Maybe you are a Baptist? |
12444 | Maybe--here the sentry laughed--"maybe you''re the major himself?" |
12444 | Me mind your machine? 12444 Me?" |
12444 | Miss Annie, is that so? |
12444 | Miss Annie,said the young man, in deep earnest tones,"I am thinking of proposing to your sister Kate-- will you make your home with us?" |
12444 | Mister,he inquired,"was you tryin''to ketch that Pennsylvania train?" |
12444 | Mr. Henry? 12444 Mulligan, what the divvil ar- re ye doin''?" |
12444 | My boy, is it true that you called Mrs. Jones a fool? |
12444 | My dear man,observed the onlooker,"are you not afraid that your brain will be affected in the hot sun?" |
12444 | My friend,he said, shrugging his shoulders and indicating the crowd in front,"I quite agree with you, but what are we two against so many?" |
12444 | My friend,says I,"I''ve heard that there''s nothing in a name, but are you not one of the Wood family?" |
12444 | My horses? |
12444 | My mother, Flora? 12444 My mother, Flora? |
12444 | My poor man,he said,"I suppose you will have to make good this loss out of your own pocket?" |
12444 | New minister? |
12444 | No use? |
12444 | No? 12444 No? |
12444 | Not much chance for caddying then, I suppose? |
12444 | Not that young fellow who has been calling on you lately? |
12444 | Now supposing you had your wish, what would you do? |
12444 | Now that you have made$ 50,000,000, I suppose you are going to keep right on for the purpose of trying to get a hundred millions? |
12444 | Now, Charlie,she pleaded,"are you going to let the sun go down on your wrath?" |
12444 | Now, Lena,she asked earnestly,"are you a_ good_ cook?" |
12444 | Now, look here, Mother,said Bobby,"do I look as if we''d been playing?" |
12444 | Now, what did he say? |
12444 | Now, where in hell have I seen you? |
12444 | Now,said the clergyman to the Sunday- school class,"can any of you tell me what are sins of omission?" |
12444 | Now,said the teacher,"why did n''t you know when Moses lived?" |
12444 | Nurse,he said one day, leaving his blocks and laying his hand on her knee,"nurse, is this God''s day?" |
12444 | O, Mother, why are the men in the front baldheaded? |
12444 | Oh nonsense, uncle, you do n''t mean to say that you subscribe to all the articles of the Presbyterian faith? |
12444 | Oh, Cousin John, what is that? |
12444 | Oh, ai n''t he? |
12444 | Oh, dearest, how did you do it? 12444 Oh, do n''t you_ love_ Ibsen?" |
12444 | Oh, is it? |
12444 | Oh, is that all? |
12444 | Oh, my brother,groaned the reverend gentleman,"wouldst thou rob me? |
12444 | Oh, that''s all right,replied Ben;"but what about the mornings I do n''t get home in time? |
12444 | Oh, that''s too bad, but just supposing you were, whom would you support in the present campaign? |
12444 | Oh, well, your servant is honest, is n''t she? |
12444 | Ole,she said desperately,"why do n''t you say something?" |
12444 | Oxford, Oxford,remonstrated that surprised dignitary,"why this unseemly haste?" |
12444 | Pardon me,continued the Hubbite,"but what did you try to get him to swallow?" |
12444 | Pass you in? 12444 Pete?" |
12444 | Please, Mis''Mary, might I have the aft''noon off three weeks frum Wednesday? |
12444 | Pride, eh? |
12444 | Prisoner at the bar,called out the clerk,"do you wish to challenge any of the jury?" |
12444 | Quite,said the clergyman;"but do you really want an appropriate verse?" |
12444 | Rain? 12444 Rain?" |
12444 | Robbers? |
12444 | Say, Captain,he said"you ai n''t got anything but the habit, have you?" |
12444 | Say, cap''n,said one of them,"what ought I to carry home to the children for a souvenir?" |
12444 | Say, do you know where I can buy a folding toothbrush? |
12444 | Say, do you know who I am? |
12444 | Say, fellers,he murmured anxiously,"is the boss mad? |
12444 | Say, friend,called out one of the men,"how far is it to the next town?" |
12444 | Say, have you seen this show? |
12444 | Say, young man,asked an old lady at the ticket- office,"what time does the next train pull in here and how long does it stay?" |
12444 | Say,asked the stranger, mopping his brow,"do you always go home like this? |
12444 | See that millinery shop over there? |
12444 | Senator, why do n''t you unpack your trunk? 12444 Shall I help you upstairs?" |
12444 | Shine yer boots, sir? |
12444 | Shine''em so''s yer can see yer face in''em? |
12444 | Sho,said Uncle Abe,"who they buryin''today?" |
12444 | Shore dere was-- plenty of''em,the other hastened to assure his minister"What was dey a- doin''?" |
12444 | Smoking, is it, sor? 12444 So I is, Missus, but do you''spose I''d keep all dis yer money in de house wid dat strange nigger?" |
12444 | So you did n''t spend your 2 cents? |
12444 | So you have adopted a baby to raise? |
12444 | So you have had a long siege of nervous prostration? |
12444 | So you heard the bullet whiz past you? |
12444 | So you think the author of this play will live, do you? |
12444 | So you want to see the boss? |
12444 | So? |
12444 | Something else, Jimmy? 12444 Souls?" |
12444 | Squirrel whisky? |
12444 | Sunrise? |
12444 | Suppose a reporter should visit our church? |
12444 | Sure? |
12444 | Surely you are glad? |
12444 | Suspicious? 12444 Tall buildings ye ask, sur?" |
12444 | Tart, what? |
12444 | Tart, what? |
12444 | Tell me,pleaded the insurance agent, when the lad came into the kitchen,"are you the boss of the house?" |
12444 | That so? 12444 That your boy, Billups?" |
12444 | That? 12444 The barber from the village?" |
12444 | The burglar''s legs? |
12444 | The morrn''? |
12444 | Then how are you an Episcopalian? |
12444 | Then nothing passed between ye? |
12444 | Then what in thunder''s she hollering for? |
12444 | Then where is the funny paper? |
12444 | Then why did you come away? |
12444 | Then why do n''t you go into the speculation? |
12444 | Then why do you call it chicken pie? 12444 Then why do you give it to me?" |
12444 | Then why do you persist in hissing the performers? |
12444 | Then,said James,"why do n''t you chew cloves?" |
12444 | There are several I have n''t heard, are n''t there? |
12444 | They ca n''t sell liquor at all there? |
12444 | Three months, is it? 12444 Tite Harrison, hey? |
12444 | To drink? |
12444 | To what parish do you belong? |
12444 | Tommy,said his mother reprovingly,"what did I say I''d do to you if I ever caught you stealing jam again?" |
12444 | Up the soide of the hill is it, sor? |
12444 | Up the soide of the hill? 12444 Up to my shoulders?" |
12444 | Vell, say,he whispered again,"he must be pretty exbensive, then, ai n''t he? |
12444 | Vittles fo''what? |
12444 | Vocation? |
12444 | Want a raise, do you? 12444 Want to buy some nice cold tea?" |
12444 | Want to see the boss? |
12444 | Was Helen''s marriage a success? |
12444 | Was Minerva married? |
12444 | Was dere any white men dere? |
12444 | Was they brought on specially for this show, or do they live here? |
12444 | Watcher want? |
12444 | Well did anybody ever? |
12444 | Well then tell me do you believe that I am elected to be saved? |
12444 | Well, Bobby, what do you want to be when you grow up? |
12444 | Well, George, have you tried ammonia? |
12444 | Well, I''ll tell you,he said then, thoughtfully:"why do n''t you sugar your head and go as a pill?" |
12444 | Well, Jenny? |
12444 | Well, Pat, what good would it do if yez knew? |
12444 | Well, William? |
12444 | Well, Willie? |
12444 | Well, boys, where have you been all afternoon? |
12444 | Well, did n''t they give any encouragement? 12444 Well, did you have a good night''s rest?" |
12444 | Well, father, was he the man who said,''Give me liberty or give me death?'' |
12444 | Well, how did you like the piece, my dear? |
12444 | Well, if yer do n''t like it,the conductor finally blurted out,"why in thunder do n''t yer git out an''walk?" |
12444 | Well, it may turn out all right, but do n''t you think you are taking chances? |
12444 | Well, little girl,the mother began,"did you tell God all about how naughty you''d been?" |
12444 | Well, my good woman,said he,"so you are ill and require the consolations of religion? |
12444 | Well, my little man, and what can I do for you? |
12444 | Well, my little man, did you want to see me? |
12444 | Well, my lord, you''ll excuse me, but he said,''Who''s that old woman with the red bed curtain round her, sitting up there? |
12444 | Well, then, madam,requested the little man,"would you mind changing seats with me? |
12444 | Well, what about it? |
12444 | Well, what are we called? |
12444 | Well, what are you going to do about it? |
12444 | Well, what are you going to do, then? |
12444 | Well, what do the revolutionists want? |
12444 | Well, what do we care,mumbled John, rolling over,"so long as they do n''t die in the house?" |
12444 | Well, what do you think of that? |
12444 | Well, what do you want me to do? |
12444 | Well, what if I do? 12444 Well, what is it, sweetheart?" |
12444 | Well, what is it? |
12444 | Well, what is it? |
12444 | Well, what is it? |
12444 | Well, what of it? |
12444 | Well, why do n''t you go there then? |
12444 | Well, why do you preach your doctrines up here? 12444 Well, why is n''t your wife helping you to celebrate?" |
12444 | Well,rejoined the Governor,"now that you have seen one, are you satisfied?" |
12444 | Well,said the first,"what''s new this morning?" |
12444 | Well? |
12444 | Well? |
12444 | Well? |
12444 | Were any of them receipted? |
12444 | Were any of your boyish ambitions ever realized? |
12444 | Wh- why are you following me? |
12444 | Whah wuz yo''soul washed w''ite as snow, Brudder Jones? |
12444 | Whar did you git such a fine goose? |
12444 | Whar yo''vittles? |
12444 | Whar''d yoh jine? |
12444 | What American name would you like to have? |
12444 | What about? |
12444 | What are her days at home? |
12444 | What are they? |
12444 | What are ye wearin''thot mournful thing for? |
12444 | What are you cutting out of the paper? |
12444 | What are you cutting out of the paper? |
12444 | What are you doing for her? |
12444 | What are you doing here? |
12444 | What are you eating? |
12444 | What are you going to do with all that paper, Henry? |
12444 | What are you going to do with it? |
12444 | What are you going to do with it? |
12444 | What are you going to do? |
12444 | What are you in bed for? |
12444 | What are you running for, Mose? |
12444 | What are you trying to do? 12444 What are you, then, uncle?" |
12444 | What caused it? 12444 What caused the coolness between you and that young doctor? |
12444 | What d''ye mane? |
12444 | What did he say? |
12444 | What did he say? |
12444 | What did he want? |
12444 | What did they do? 12444 What did they do?" |
12444 | What did you bring that sign in here for? |
12444 | What did you do with it? |
12444 | What did you do? |
12444 | What do they do to you? |
12444 | What do you consider the most important event in the history of Paris? |
12444 | What do you mean by bo''n oratah? |
12444 | What do you mean by following me in this manner? |
12444 | What do you mean by that? |
12444 | What do you mean? 12444 What do you mean? |
12444 | What do you think I''m running? 12444 What do you think about it, Uncle Bill?" |
12444 | What do you want? |
12444 | What does he say? |
12444 | What does this mean, your being asleep out here? 12444 What does your mother say when you tell her those dreadful lies?" |
12444 | What explanation have you,he asked severely,"for not speaking to your wife in five years?" |
12444 | What floor do you live on? |
12444 | What for? |
12444 | What for? |
12444 | What for? |
12444 | What good will thet be? |
12444 | What great event took place July 4, 1776? |
12444 | What happened? |
12444 | What has that to do with it? 12444 What have you there?" |
12444 | What is a drunken man like, Fool? |
12444 | What is a steward? |
12444 | What is a''faculty''? |
12444 | What is faith, Johnny? |
12444 | What is he so angry with you for? |
12444 | What is it? |
12444 | What is that Japanese idol over there worth? |
12444 | What is that little boy crying about? |
12444 | What is that? |
12444 | What is the charge against these young men? |
12444 | What is the matter with him? |
12444 | What is the matter, dearest? |
12444 | What is the name of your automobile? |
12444 | What is the old one? |
12444 | What is the trouble, my dear? |
12444 | What is the trouble? |
12444 | What is this for? |
12444 | What is this? |
12444 | What is this? |
12444 | What is wrong, dear? |
12444 | What is your ideal man? |
12444 | What is your name? |
12444 | What is your opinion of a tolerable egg? |
12444 | What little boy can tell me the difference between the''quick''and the''dead?'' |
12444 | What made you go crazy? |
12444 | What makes you carry that horrible shriek machine for an automobile signal? |
12444 | What makes you think the baby is going to be a great politician? |
12444 | What of it? |
12444 | What on earth are you doing, man? |
12444 | What on earth are you trying to do there, Dudley? |
12444 | What on earth has the dog to do with it? |
12444 | What profit do you make out of that? |
12444 | What punishment did that defaulting banker get? |
12444 | What seems to be the trouble? |
12444 | What sort of a man is he? |
12444 | What sort of a ticket does your suffragette club favor? |
12444 | What sort of chap is he? |
12444 | What then have you got? |
12444 | What was he put in for? |
12444 | What was that, feyther? |
12444 | What was the dream? |
12444 | What was the matter? |
12444 | What was your adventure, though? |
12444 | What were you and Mr. Smith talking about in the parlor? |
12444 | What were you in for? |
12444 | What will we do? |
12444 | What with all their clothes on? |
12444 | What you been doin''to get tired? |
12444 | What''d he do with it? |
12444 | What''d he do? |
12444 | What''ll ye pay? |
12444 | What''s brought you here? |
12444 | What''s that man shaking his stick at her for? |
12444 | What''s that? 12444 What''s that?" |
12444 | What''s the charge ag''in this man? |
12444 | What''s the charge? |
12444 | What''s the greatest play you ever saw? |
12444 | What''s the matter there? |
12444 | What''s the matter, Bill? |
12444 | What''s the matter, Crane? 12444 What''s the matter, Jim?" |
12444 | What''s the matter? |
12444 | What''s the matter? |
12444 | What''s the matter? |
12444 | What''s the matter? |
12444 | What''s the trouble? |
12444 | What''s the word? |
12444 | What''s this? |
12444 | What''s this? |
12444 | What''s up? 12444 What''s wrong now?" |
12444 | What''s wrong? |
12444 | What,asked the Sunday- school teacher,"is meant by bearing false witness against one''s neighbor?" |
12444 | What- all''s de matter wif de chile? |
12444 | What? 12444 What?" |
12444 | What? |
12444 | When is you gwine to git married, Miss Maudie? |
12444 | When will I be old enough to, Mama? |
12444 | Where am I-- in heaven? |
12444 | Where am I? |
12444 | Where are the bottles? |
12444 | Where did you come from, Lizzie? |
12444 | Where did you get the pattern, Mamma? |
12444 | Where did you sit? |
12444 | Where do all them troopers come from? |
12444 | Where do you feel worst? |
12444 | Where hae you been the nicht, Andrew? |
12444 | Where have you been? |
12444 | Where is everybody? |
12444 | Where is he? |
12444 | Where is your lawyer? |
12444 | Where were you when the first shot was fired? |
12444 | Where were you when the second shot was fired? |
12444 | Where''d you go? |
12444 | Where''s old Four- Fingered Pete? |
12444 | Where''s the fish? |
12444 | Which one? |
12444 | Who are those people who are cheering? |
12444 | Who are you? |
12444 | Who confirmed you, then? |
12444 | Who is Orlando Day? |
12444 | Who is it? |
12444 | Who is this?'' 12444 Who''s going to pay me for my horse?" |
12444 | Who''s there? 12444 Who''s there?" |
12444 | Who, father, is that gentleman? |
12444 | Who-- who the devil is this, anyhow? |
12444 | Whom do you wish to see? |
12444 | Why are you driving so recklessly? 12444 Why did you break your engagement with that school teacher?" |
12444 | Why did you come to college, anyway? 12444 Why did you run when you had this permit?" |
12444 | Why do n''t both sides come together and arbitrate? |
12444 | Why do n''t women have the same sense of humor that men possess? |
12444 | Why do n''t you make up? |
12444 | Why do n''t you stay in out of the rain? |
12444 | Why do you ask? |
12444 | Why do you ask? |
12444 | Why do you object to Baedeker? |
12444 | Why do you wish to change your name? |
12444 | Why does it take him so long? |
12444 | Why in thunder do n''t you make it a rule to tell only half what you hear? |
12444 | Why is it,asked the persistent poetess,"that you always insist that we write on one side of the paper only? |
12444 | Why is it? |
12444 | Why not? 12444 Why not?" |
12444 | Why not? |
12444 | Why on earth did you agree to do it for so little? |
12444 | Why on earth did you do that? |
12444 | Why should I keep your money for you? 12444 Why was it you never married again, Aunt Sallie?" |
12444 | Why were you not at our revival? |
12444 | Why you no ringa da bell? |
12444 | Why, Brudder Brown,he asked,"whar''r all yo''chickens?" |
12444 | Why, I came home late, and my wife heard me and said,''John, what time is it?'' 12444 Why, Johnny,"said his mother,"what''s the matter?" |
12444 | Why, Mother dear, did n''t you know that was the ribbon I won at the show? |
12444 | Why, colonel, what''s the matter? |
12444 | Why, how big is your father''s farm? |
12444 | Why, mother,cried Hilda,"ca n''t you see? |
12444 | Why, then,the stranger queried,"should the dog howl?" |
12444 | Why, what is it, Harry? |
12444 | Why, what on earth''s the matter? |
12444 | Why, what''s he been doin''now? |
12444 | Why, what''s the matter, dear? |
12444 | Why, you would not speak to a strange man, would you? |
12444 | Why,asked headquarters,"do you wish to be transferred?" |
12444 | Why,he inquired,"do you, who fought on the other side, give me so much more than any of those who were my comrades in arms?" |
12444 | Why,said he,"does a bride invariably desire to be clothed in white at her marriage?" |
12444 | Why,said the teacher,"George Washington did his own sewing in the wars, and do you think you are better than George Washington?" |
12444 | Why? |
12444 | Will they bite easily? |
12444 | Will they? |
12444 | Will you give me a certificate to that effect? |
12444 | Will you please tell me, sir, what is the extreme penalty for bigamy? |
12444 | Will you take tart or pudding? |
12444 | Will you, really? |
12444 | Willie,she said,"did you invite Tommy to your party tonight?" |
12444 | Wo n''t do? 12444 Wo n''t you try it on?" |
12444 | Wot cheer, Alf? 12444 Wotcher wages?" |
12444 | Would n''t it be awful? |
12444 | Would n''t yo''gib me one? |
12444 | Would n''t yo''give me twenty- five? |
12444 | Would you be offended if I was to present him with a nice brass collar? |
12444 | Would you call Si Perkins a liar? |
12444 | Would you mind writing all that down for me? |
12444 | Ye do n''t, hey? 12444 Yes, Father, but how can I tell when I have enough or am drunk?" |
12444 | Yes, but how about the man who works and has to listen to him? |
12444 | Yes, ma''am,replied the salesman;"something very strong?" |
12444 | Yes, sir,said the waiter, reaching for the sandwich;"will you eat it or take it with you?" |
12444 | Yes, yes,said the Bishop of London with the suspicion of a twinkle in his kindly old eyes,"but why such haste? |
12444 | Yes; what is it? |
12444 | Yes? 12444 Yes?" |
12444 | Yes? |
12444 | Yis, sor, but is this the relief station? |
12444 | You blithering idiot,said the foreman,"did n''t I tell you to get out of the road? |
12444 | You can make doors, windows, and blinds? |
12444 | You did n''t suppose God was a Yankee, did you? |
12444 | You do n''t know? 12444 You do n''t mean to imply that he is a spendthrift?" |
12444 | You do n''t mean to say they sell whiskey in a millinery store? |
12444 | You do n''t suppose God would be loafing around here this time of day, do you? 12444 You do n''t think they''ll take everything, do you?" |
12444 | You do n''t think we''re rehearsin''with him, do you? |
12444 | You had$ 35 when you left the fort, did n''t you? |
12444 | You have a pretty tough looking lot of customers to dispose of this morning, have n''t you? |
12444 | You have been conspicuous in the halls of legislation, have you not? |
12444 | You have? 12444 You say you are your wife''s third husband?" |
12444 | You say your jewels were stolen while the family was at dinner? |
12444 | You thoroughly understand carpentry? |
12444 | You''re a Jew, ai n''t you? |
12444 | You''re sure it''s in style? |
12444 | You- all carried moah''n a million passengers? 12444 Young man,"he said brusquely,"do you know what time it is?" |
12444 | Your chief? 12444 Your fortune?" |
12444 | Your husband will be all right now,said an English doctor to a woman whose husband was dangerously ill."What do you mean?" |
12444 | ''"Ow long''ave yer been at it?" |
12444 | ''"Tis cold, ai n''t it? |
12444 | ''Any entertainment here tonight to help a stranger while away his evening?'' |
12444 | ''Are ye dead?'' |
12444 | ''Honest?'' |
12444 | --_The Advertiser_ SALOONS"Where can I get a drink in this town?" |
12444 | A Bostonian died, and when he arrived at St. Peter''s gate he was asked the usual questions:"What is your name, and where are you from?" |
12444 | A German woman called up Central and instructed her as follows:"Ist dis de mittle? |
12444 | A darky meeting another coming from the library with a book accosted him as follows:"What book you done got there, Rastus?" |
12444 | A freighter?" |
12444 | A genius who once did aspire To invent an aerial flyer, When asked,"Does it go?" |
12444 | A gentleman sprang to assist her; He picked up her glove and her wrister;"Did you fall, Ma''am?" |
12444 | A passing Irishman stopped and watched him with great interest for two or three minutes; at last he said:"Well, why do n''t ye jump?" |
12444 | A playmate passed him, looked at his position, then sang out:"Hey, Bobbie, have you lost your other skate?" |
12444 | A political speaker, while making a speech, paused in the midst of it and exclaimed:"Now gentlemen, what do you think?" |
12444 | A poor lady the other day hastened to the nursery and said to her little daughter:"Minnie, what do you mean by shouting and screaming? |
12444 | A woman stuck her head out of a second- story window and demanded, none too sweetly:"What do you want?" |
12444 | AERONAUTICS A flea and a fly in a flue, Were imprisoned; now what could they do? |
12444 | AEROPLANES"Mother, may I go aeroplane?" |
12444 | AGENTS"John, whatever induced you to buy a house in this forsaken region?" |
12444 | ALERTNESS"Alert?" |
12444 | ALIMONY"What is alimony, ma?" |
12444 | ALLOWANCES"Why do n''t you give your wife an allowance?" |
12444 | ANNIVERSARIES MRS. JONES--"Does your husband remember your wedding anniversary?" |
12444 | ASPIRING VOCALIST--"Professor, do you think I will ever be able to do anything with my voice?" |
12444 | AUTOMOBILES TEACHER--"If a man saves$ 2 a week, how long will it take him to save a thousand?" |
12444 | AVIATOR( to young assistant, who has begun to be frightened)--"Well, what do you want now?" |
12444 | About two months later she cuddled up close to him on the sofa one evening, and said:"Robert dear, have you saved up that thousand yet?" |
12444 | According to directions he knocked and the Dean asked:"Who is there?" |
12444 | After a few minutes he leaned over to a gentleman near him and whispered,"Say, mine frient, this must be a pretty goot doctor, ai n''t he?" |
12444 | After a few moments''deep thought:"Say, ma, then do n''t you think they''d be lots more surprised if you did take us all?" |
12444 | After looking around in considerable astonishment Pat replied:"And is it yez, captain? |
12444 | After the beau had made a rapid exit, the father turned to the girl and said in astonishment:"What was the matter with that fellow? |
12444 | After the service the preacher met the Judge in the vestibule and said:"Well, your Honor, how did you like the sermon?" |
12444 | After the train had made another stop and gone on, the brakeman came into the caboose and said to the conductor:"Well, is he off?" |
12444 | Ai n''t that a character for ye?" |
12444 | Am I walking straight?" |
12444 | Am you habbing prosper''s times?" |
12444 | An aviator alighted on a field and said to a rather well- dressed individual:"Here, mind my machine a minute, will you?" |
12444 | An old farmer, driving past the place after work had been started, and seeing a man in the doorway, called to him:"What be ye doin''in this place?" |
12444 | An''ef yo''had a hundred watermillions would yo''gib me fifty?" |
12444 | And are you married?" |
12444 | And he was ground to pieces, I suppose?" |
12444 | And oh, friend, do you know what day it inexorably and relentlessly brings nearer?" |
12444 | And when he says to me,''Wilt thou have this man to be thy wedded husband?'' |
12444 | Any tender little romance there?" |
12444 | Anybody happen to know?" |
12444 | Approaching an old lady in a Lakewood hotel, he said:"Can you crack nuts?" |
12444 | Are n''t you a- gwine in?" |
12444 | Are n''t you aware that I am a divine?" |
12444 | Are there any questions to be asked?" |
12444 | Are yo''corresponding wif some other female?" |
12444 | Are yo''so good for nuffen lazy dat yo''cahn''t wish fo''yo''own watermillions?" |
12444 | Are you married?" |
12444 | As I jabbed the pen back into the dish of bird shot, I said:"''Can you direct me to the bank?'' |
12444 | As he passed down the street a gamin yelled:"What''s the kid done?" |
12444 | As the waiter placed the order before him he said in a loud voice:"Waiter, what is largest tip you ever received?" |
12444 | At last, unable to stand it longer, he arose and demanded, in a high, penetrating voice,"Is there a Christian Scientist in this room?" |
12444 | At the conclusion of the service the American chanced to ask one of the jackies:"Are you obliged to attend these Sunday morning services?" |
12444 | At the end he said,"Did the other doctor take your temperature?" |
12444 | B--"Would you mind telling me what it was?" |
12444 | BALL-"What is silence?" |
12444 | BARGAINS MANAGER( five- and- ten- cent store)--"What did the lady who just went out want?" |
12444 | BEER A man to whom illness was chronic, When told that he needed a tonic, Said,"O Doctor dear, Wo n''t you please make it beer?" |
12444 | BEES TEACHER--"Tommy, do you know''How Doth the Little Busy Bee''?" |
12444 | BIBLE INTERPRETATION"Miss Jane, did Moses have the same after- dinner complaint my papa''s got?" |
12444 | BILLY--"Then why ai n''t you sick today?" |
12444 | BOBBY--"When did you begin, then, Mamma?" |
12444 | BOGGS--"What luck did you have with them?" |
12444 | BOOKS AND READING LADY PRESIDENT--"What book has helped you most?" |
12444 | BORES"What kind of a looking man is that chap Gabbleton you just mentioned? |
12444 | BRIDGE WHIST"How about the sermon?" |
12444 | BROOKLYN At the Brooklyn Bridge.--"Madam, do you want to go to Brooklyn?" |
12444 | BUSINESS ETHICS"Johnny,"said his teacher,"if coal is selling at$ 6 a ton and you pay your dealer$ 24 how many tons will he bring you?" |
12444 | Bangs?" |
12444 | Be you the whistle?" |
12444 | Being told that such was the case the old darky said;"Do you mind telling me something that has been botherin''my old haid? |
12444 | But I got out shust in time, eh?" |
12444 | But I will give you two thousand,"answered the upholder of American honor; and then in a moment he added:"May I ask who gave you the thousand francs?" |
12444 | But how on earth did you do it, Ethel?" |
12444 | But how was I to know? |
12444 | But how, pray, could he really know? |
12444 | But sure, this is the relief station?" |
12444 | But taking the matter seriously, how would one define humor? |
12444 | But what are you going to do now?" |
12444 | But what in tarnation was them drunken painters in sech an all- fired hurry fer?" |
12444 | But what on earth is she doing up in Virginia?" |
12444 | But where are you dining tonight?" |
12444 | But where does the insult to you come in?" |
12444 | But where does the insult to you come in?" |
12444 | But you see that big man over there?" |
12444 | But"--suddenly looking up--"where the divvil is the cat?" |
12444 | CASEY--"Now, phwat wu''u''d ye do in a case loike thot?" |
12444 | CHAMPAGNE MR. HILTON--"Have you opened that bottle of champagne, Bridget?" |
12444 | CHIEF CLERK( to office boy)--"Why on earth do n''t you laugh when the boss tells a joke?" |
12444 | CHINAMAN--"You tellee me where railroad depot?" |
12444 | CITIZEN--"What''s the matter, John? |
12444 | CLANCY--"Loike phwat?" |
12444 | CLERK--"To cut out?" |
12444 | CLERK--"What is it, please?" |
12444 | COLLEGE STUDENTS"Say, dad, remember that story you told me about when you were expelled from college?" |
12444 | COLONEL HIGHFLYER--"What are your rates per column?" |
12444 | COMMUTERS BRIGGS--"Is it true that you have broken off your engagement to that girl who lives in the suburbs?" |
12444 | CONFESSIONS"You say Garston made a complete confession? |
12444 | CONUNDRUMS"Mose, what is the difference between a bucket of milk in a rain storm and a conversation between two confidence men?" |
12444 | COST OF LIVING"Did you punish our son for throwing a lump of coal at Willie Smiggs?" |
12444 | COUNTRY LIFE BILTER( at servants''agency)--"Have you got a cook who will go to the country?" |
12444 | COURAGE AUNT ETHEL--"Well, Beatrice, were you very brave at the dentist''s?" |
12444 | COURTSHIP"Do you think a woman believes you when you tell her she is the first girl you ever loved?" |
12444 | CRITIC--"By George, old chap, when I look at one of your paintings I stand and wonder--"ARTIST--"How I do it?" |
12444 | CRITIC--"Why not give it to an institution for the blind?" |
12444 | CRUELTY"Why do you beat your little son? |
12444 | CURIOUS CHARLEY--"Then what tree does the doughnut grow on?" |
12444 | Ca n''t you tell the difference?" |
12444 | Can it be possible in a civilized country?" |
12444 | Can nothing he done to stop it?" |
12444 | Can you write? |
12444 | Clemens?" |
12444 | Come on, sir, what was it?" |
12444 | Could n''t yer make it a quarter an''thoroly enjoy yourself?" |
12444 | Could you love a girl like that?" |
12444 | Could you not spoil the marriage?" |
12444 | D''ye think I''d be relyin''on total strangers for support if I had a wife?" |
12444 | D''ye want to drown me?" |
12444 | DANCING He was a remarkably stout gentleman, excessively fond of dancing, so his friends asked him why he had stopped, and was it final? |
12444 | DEMOCRACY"Why are you so vexed, Irma?" |
12444 | DEMOCRATIC PARTY HOSPITAL PHYSICIAN--"Which ward do you wish to be taken to? |
12444 | DEWLEY--"Is the machine on the market yet?" |
12444 | DIVORCE"When a woman marries and then divorces her husband inside of a week what would you call it?" |
12444 | DOGS LADY( to tramp who had been commissioned to find her lost poodle)--"The poor little darling, where did you find him?" |
12444 | Dey ai n''t no dog in a dog biscuit, is dey?" |
12444 | Did he mention any names?" |
12444 | Did n''t I tell you to take care and get out of the way? |
12444 | Did n''t the lady you last worked for have them on the table?" |
12444 | Did n''t they appreciate it?" |
12444 | Did n''t they ask you to come before the curtain?" |
12444 | Did ye not hear it?" |
12444 | Did, eh?" |
12444 | Do n''t you care anything about your souls?" |
12444 | Do n''t you know me? |
12444 | Do n''t you know the difference in value? |
12444 | Do n''t you see how it reads? |
12444 | Do n''t you see the gentleman wants to take the lady''s picture?" |
12444 | Do n''t you think that is very nice of them?" |
12444 | Do ye see this big dent in my head? |
12444 | Do you do it to avoid repeating yourself?" |
12444 | Do you ever take alcoholic drinks?" |
12444 | Do you know her equal?" |
12444 | Do you know why? |
12444 | Do you mean to say that they actually used to quarrel?" |
12444 | Do you think I am made of money?" |
12444 | Do you think-- is it your opinion-- that they have, so to speak, decreased in violence, if I may use that word?" |
12444 | Do you understand?" |
12444 | Do you understand?" |
12444 | Do you understand?" |
12444 | Do your parents look after your moral welfare?" |
12444 | Dost thou love life? |
12444 | Dost thou love life? |
12444 | EARNEST YOUNG MAN--"Don''t work?" |
12444 | EARNEST YOUNG MAN--"Have you any advice to a struggling young employee?" |
12444 | EDITOR--"Well, what further proof do you want?" |
12444 | EDITOR--"You wish a position as a proofreader?" |
12444 | ELECTRICITY In school a boy was asked this question in physics:"What is the difference between lightning and electricity?" |
12444 | EMPLOYERS AND EMPLOYEES"You want more money? |
12444 | Each favorite vintage in its turn,-- What man could wish for more? |
12444 | Elated with her seeming quick perception, he then turned to the picture of a Chimpanzee and said:"Baby, what is this?" |
12444 | Elizabeth gazed at the sardines in wonder, and then asked:"But, mother, how do the large fish get the cans open?" |
12444 | Excuse my asking you, but is there much more to do before we get there?" |
12444 | Eyeing her sleepily he said curiously,"Say, are you talking yet or again?" |
12444 | FAIR VISITOR--"Why are you giving Fido''s teeth such a thorough brushing?" |
12444 | FAST FRIEND--"Who from?" |
12444 | FATHER( impressively)--"Suppose I should be taken away suddenly, what would become of you, my boy?" |
12444 | FATHER( reprovingly)--"Do you know what happens to liars when they die?" |
12444 | FATHER-"And what did he say?" |
12444 | FEET BIG MAN( with a grouch)--"Will you be so kind as to get off my feet?" |
12444 | FIGHTING"Who gave ye th''black eye, Jim?" |
12444 | FIRST DEAF MUTE--"He was n''t so very angry, was he?" |
12444 | FIRST ENGLISHMAN--"Why do you allow your wife to be a militant suffragette?" |
12444 | FIRST EUROPEAN SOCIETY LADY--"Wouldn''t you like to be presented to our sovereign?" |
12444 | FLATS"Hello, Tom, old man, got your new flat fitted up yet?" |
12444 | FORESIGHT"They tell me you''re working''ard night an''day, Sarah?" |
12444 | FOUNTAIN PENS"Fust time you''ve ever milked a cow, is it?" |
12444 | FOURTH OF JULY"You are in favor of a safe and sane Fourth of July?" |
12444 | FREE THOUGHT TOMMY--"Pop, what is a freethinker?" |
12444 | FRIEND-"So your great Russian actor was a total failure?" |
12444 | FRIEND--"So you''re going to make it hot for that fellow who held up the bank, shot the cashier, and got away with the ten thousand?" |
12444 | Fee?" |
12444 | Finally the captain, taking him by the shoulder and giving him a vigorous shake said:"Pat, why do n''t you answer? |
12444 | Finally the hostess turned to Field and asked:"You, sir, must have often seen these affairs?" |
12444 | Finally the traveler approached and asked, solicitously:"Is your horse sick?" |
12444 | Finally the young man asked timidly,"Do n''t you think, sir, that this painting of mine is-- well-- er-- tolerable?" |
12444 | Finally the youngster asked,"Are you really and truly a governor?" |
12444 | Fishin''?" |
12444 | Freddie read over the list, and then said:"Mother, have n''t you a list for a bad little boy?" |
12444 | From almost every berth on the car a head came out from between the curtains, and with one accord nearly every man shouted:''What''s that?''" |
12444 | GENTLEMEN"Sadie, what is a gentleman?" |
12444 | GERTIE--"Then you think every woman should have a vote?" |
12444 | GOVERNMENT OWNERSHIP"Do n''t you think the coal- mines ought to be controlled by the government?" |
12444 | GRAFT"What is meant by graft?" |
12444 | GUARANTEES TRAVELER( on an English train)--"Shall I have time to get a drink?" |
12444 | GUESTS"Look here, Dinah,"said Binks, as he opened a questionable egg at breakfast,"is this the freshest egg you can find?" |
12444 | Get home all right?" |
12444 | H.F.--"What have you to live on?" |
12444 | H.F.--"Will you have a church or a private wedding?" |
12444 | HASH"George,"said the Titian- haired school marm,"is there any connecting link between the animal kingdom and the vegetable kingdom?" |
12444 | HE--"But what reason have you for refusing to marry me?" |
12444 | HE--"Why stop there? |
12444 | HEALTH RESORTS"Where''ve you been, Murray?" |
12444 | HEIRLOOMS HE( wondering if his rival has been accepted)--"Are both your rings heirlooms?" |
12444 | HER SUITOR--"Then do n''t you think you''d better let me take her off your hands?" |
12444 | HEREDITY"Papa, what does hereditary mean?" |
12444 | HIS BETTER HALF--"But why wait? |
12444 | HIS FATHER--"And what were your thoughts after you had done so?" |
12444 | HIS FATHER--"Well, my son?" |
12444 | HIS WIFE( in surprise)--"Honestly?" |
12444 | HUSBAND( to his wife)--"Shall I have another glass, Henrietta?" |
12444 | HUSBAND--"At the counter where the sweet little blond works? |
12444 | HUSBAND--"Did he whisper it or say it out loud?" |
12444 | HUSBAND--"What letter?" |
12444 | HUSBANDS"Is she making him a good wife?" |
12444 | Hamlet? |
12444 | Harold, what would your mother say if she saw you smoking cigarets?" |
12444 | Has Easter gone back on you?'' |
12444 | Has Easter gone back on you?'' |
12444 | Has anybody got any whiskey?" |
12444 | Has n''t his father got an automobile, too?" |
12444 | Has you, sah?" |
12444 | Have a bite?" |
12444 | Have n''t you got any more sense than to eat persimmons at this time of the year? |
12444 | Have n''t you washed that Afghan yet?" |
12444 | Have you any money?" |
12444 | Have you fixed the day of the wedding?" |
12444 | He answered,"My queen, Is it manners you mean, Or do you refer to my figure?" |
12444 | He asked a native:"How long does it take you to carry your goods to market by muleback?" |
12444 | He got the wrong number and, without asking to whom he was talking, he said,"Can I get a box for two to- night?" |
12444 | He paused at the door, asking:"Sor, may I speak to you, not as an officer, but as mon to mon?" |
12444 | He smiled and added:"Is there anything quite so queerly cosmopolitan as a New York cafe? |
12444 | He stepped up to the man in charge and inquired:"Is this the relief station, sor?" |
12444 | He walked ahead of the servant for a short distance and then asked:"How is it? |
12444 | He was once approached at a reception by a fussy old lady, who demanded,"Oh, Mr. Zangwill, what is your Christian name?" |
12444 | Hence the following conversation in Brownsville recently between two of the old- time residents:"Where have you been lately, Bob? |
12444 | Hennessey?" |
12444 | Henry?" |
12444 | His answer was:"What On?" |
12444 | His wife said to him on his arrival:"Well, what luck?" |
12444 | How can I repay you? |
12444 | How can I show my gratitude? |
12444 | How can you eat so much?" |
12444 | How dare you do that?" |
12444 | How many battles was he in?" |
12444 | How many children have you?" |
12444 | How much are you getting?" |
12444 | How would you like to stay back in this class another year and have little Mary go ahead of you?" |
12444 | How''s this guy Hitchcock, anyhow?" |
12444 | Hurriedly came the answer:"Mine frent, you surely vould not refuse me two per zent discount on a strictly cash transaction like dis?" |
12444 | I cried:"What is my fault? |
12444 | I have thought of journalism--""What are your own inclinations?" |
12444 | I may look like her, but do you tink dat''s a favor?" |
12444 | I paid the cook this noon, and what do you think? |
12444 | I said,''Pat, will you have a drink of whisky?''" |
12444 | I thought you were going to be married?" |
12444 | I wonder where all the pins go to, anyway?" |
12444 | I wonder why?" |
12444 | I''d like to know what you think I''m sending you to college for? |
12444 | INSURGENTS"And what,"asked a visitor to the North Dakota State Fair,"do you call that kind of cucumber?" |
12444 | INTERVIEWS"Have n''t your opinions on this subject undergone a change?" |
12444 | If woman fair he strove to please, Where did he get his"hours of ease"? |
12444 | In China when the subscriber rings up exchange the operator may be expected to ask:"What number does the honorable son of the moon and stars desire?" |
12444 | In Nola Chucky one day I said to a man:"''What is the principal occupation of this town?'' |
12444 | In answer to the question,"Disposition of carcass?" |
12444 | In life''s small things be resolute and great To keep thy muscles trained; know''st thou when fate Thy measure takes? |
12444 | In the grim silence she turned to an old gentleman on her right and said:"Would you like a sonata before going in to dinner?" |
12444 | In what way?" |
12444 | Is Pompey dead? |
12444 | Is Tite dead?" |
12444 | Is a joke that does not produce a laugh a joke at all? |
12444 | Is it a go?" |
12444 | Is it a go?" |
12444 | Is it counterfeit?" |
12444 | Is it much of a walk?" |
12444 | Is it possible that the laugh is not the test of the joke? |
12444 | Is n''t it grand? |
12444 | Is n''t that where we live?" |
12444 | Is n''t there something about that word"sportive,"on the lips of so learned an authority, that tickles the fancy-- appeals to the sense of humor? |
12444 | Is that so, Father?" |
12444 | Is that so?" |
12444 | Is that the idea?" |
12444 | Is that the proper way to beg?" |
12444 | Is there an Absolute in the realm of humor, or must our jokes be judged solely by the pragmatic test? |
12444 | Is there anything the matter?" |
12444 | Is your mother in?" |
12444 | Is your wife at home now?" |
12444 | It read:"When you are through, will you please turn off the lights, lock the door, and put the key under the mat?" |
12444 | It was at a recent examination at her school that the question was put,''Who makes the laws of our government?'' |
12444 | It was"My Lord, will you have some of this?" |
12444 | JENNIE--"What makes George such a pessimist?" |
12444 | JEWS What is the difference between a banana and a Jew? |
12444 | JOHNNY--"Papa, would you be glad if I saved a dollar for you?" |
12444 | JONES--"How''d this happen? |
12444 | Jones busted in, stopped, looked my witnesses over carefully, and said:''Paul, are those your witnesses?'' |
12444 | Just as he reached the clump he heard a voice say:"Why in hell did you play that card?" |
12444 | Just as he was leaving, he said:"Did you hear about that man who died the other day and left all he had to the orphanage?" |
12444 | Just what is the difference between them?" |
12444 | LADY--"And ca n''t you get one?" |
12444 | LADY--"I guess you''re gettin''a good thing out o''tending the rich Smith boy, ai n''t ye, doctor?" |
12444 | LEADING MAN IN TRAVELING COMPANY--"We play_ Hamlet_ to- night, laddie, do we not?" |
12444 | LISPING"Have you lost another tooth, Bethesda?" |
12444 | LITTLE BROTHER--"What''s etiquet?" |
12444 | Leaning over the dash- board, he inquired, in the gentlest of tones:"Pardon me, ladies, but shall I get you a couple of chairs?" |
12444 | Leaning over to the white- haired man at his side, evidently an old member of the congregation, he whispered:"How long has he been preaching?" |
12444 | Lillie''s tone changed to indignation:"Now, Miss Annie, what yo''think? |
12444 | Looking back, he demanded, in a very fever of interest:"Which horn did she blow?" |
12444 | Lost?" |
12444 | Love the sea? |
12444 | MADELINE--"Who was speaking?" |
12444 | MAGISTRATE--"And what was the prisoner doing?" |
12444 | MAGISTRATE--"You admit you stole the pig?" |
12444 | MAKING GOOD"What''s become ob dat little chameleon Mandy had?" |
12444 | MAN--"Is there any reason why I should give you five cents?" |
12444 | MANDY--"What foh yo''been goin''to de post- office so reg''lar? |
12444 | MARRIAGE MRS. QUACKENNESS--"Am yo''daughtar happily mar''d, Sistah Sagg?" |
12444 | MEDICAL INSPECTION OF SCHOOLS PASSER- BY--"What''s the fuss in the schoolyard, boy?" |
12444 | MEDICAL STUDENT--"I mean what did he have?" |
12444 | MEDICAL STUDENT--"What did you operate on that man for?" |
12444 | MESSAGES"Have you the rent ready?" |
12444 | MICE"What''s the matter with Briggs?" |
12444 | MIDDLE CLASSES WILLIE--"Paw, what is the middle class?" |
12444 | MINORITIES Stepping out between the acts at the first production of one of his plays, Bernard Shaw said to the audience:"What do you think of it?" |
12444 | MISSIONS"What in the world are you up to, Hilda?" |
12444 | MISTRESS--"Have you a reference?" |
12444 | MISTRESS--"Who is your intended, Delia?" |
12444 | MOLLYCODDLES"Tommy, why do n''t you play with Frank any more?" |
12444 | MOTHER--"The teacher complains you have not had a correct lesson for a month; why is it?" |
12444 | MOTHER--"What makes you say that, darling?" |
12444 | MR. HENPECK--"Are you the man who gave my wife a lot of impudence?" |
12444 | MR. HENPECK--"Do you know if I am going with her?" |
12444 | MR. HENPECK--"Is my wife going out, Jane?" |
12444 | MR. SLIMPURSE--"But why do you insist that our daughter should marry a man whom she does not like? |
12444 | MRS. HOUSEN HOHM--"Do you expect to be called Miss Arlington?" |
12444 | MRS. HOUSEN HOHM--"What is your name?" |
12444 | MRS. LITTLETOWN--"Doesn''t she get tired of always reading the same one?" |
12444 | MRS. MCGORRY--"Me vain? |
12444 | MRS. MURPHY--"As long as thot?" |
12444 | MRS. PECK--"Henry, what would you do if burglars broke into our house some night?" |
12444 | MRS. POST--"But why adopt a baby when you have three children of your own under five years old?" |
12444 | MUNICIPAL GOVERNMENT"What''s the trouble in Plunkville?" |
12444 | MUSICIANS FATHER--"Well, sonny, did you take your dog to the''vet''next door to your house, as I suggested?" |
12444 | Macbeth?" |
12444 | May I ask how much it cost you?" |
12444 | May I not instruct my Lord High Treasurer to reimburse you for it?" |
12444 | May I open it?''" |
12444 | Mike, seeing Pat crying, exclaimed:"Phat be ye cryin''fer?" |
12444 | Mistook a stranger for an acquaintance?" |
12444 | Mr. Roosevelt seized a pitchfork and-- but where was the hay? |
12444 | NATIVES FRIEND( admiring the prodigy)--"Seventh standard, is she? |
12444 | NATURE LOVERS"Would you mind tooting your factory whistle a little?" |
12444 | NEIGHBOR--"I s''pose your Bill''s''ittin''the''arp with the hangels now?" |
12444 | NEW CONGRESSMAN--"What can I do for you, sir?" |
12444 | NURSE GIRL--"Oh, ma''am, what shall I do? |
12444 | Nagasaki?" |
12444 | Near the station he saw a newsboy smoking, and approached him with:"Say, son, got another cigarette?" |
12444 | Next day Goodwin saw the boy again near the theater, so he asked:"Well, sonny, how did you like the show?" |
12444 | Next day a plantation owner said to one of his men:"Sam, were you in that crowd that gathered last night?" |
12444 | Nobles and heralds by your leave, Here lies what once was Matthew Prior; The son of Adam and of Eve; Can Bourbon or Nassau claim higher? |
12444 | Now then, what would you regard as a fair settlement between you and the railroad company?" |
12444 | Now what did Pompey die of?" |
12444 | Now where is he?" |
12444 | Now who can foresee What his morals_ might_ be? |
12444 | Now, I suppose you do not speak Chinese?" |
12444 | Now, let''s see; what do they accuse you of stealing?" |
12444 | Now, madam, what do you want?" |
12444 | Now, what little boy or girl can tell me what the people of Maine are called?" |
12444 | O''Flarity?" |
12444 | OFFICE BOYS"Have you had any experience as an office- boy?" |
12444 | OLD MAID--"But why should a great strong man like you be found begging?" |
12444 | ONIONS Can the Burbanks of the glorious West Either make or buy or sell An onion with an onion''s taste But with a violet''s smell? |
12444 | OPERA"Which do you consider the most melodious Wagnerian opera?" |
12444 | Once when Dean Briggs, of Harvard, and Edward Everett Hale were on their way to a game at Soldiers''Field a friend asked:"Where are you going, Dean?" |
12444 | One day Mose sought his employer, an acquaintance of mine, and inquired:"''Say, boss, is yo''gwine to town t''morrer?'' |
12444 | One day a hostess asked a well known Parisian judge:"Your Honor, which do you prefer, Burgundy or Bordeaux?" |
12444 | One day a stranger asked him:"Why do you always take the penny? |
12444 | One day an old- timer met him with:"How are you getting along, Pat?" |
12444 | One day he asked:"Why ca n''t you join the church like I did?" |
12444 | One day he remarked to one of his sons:"Can you tell me the reason why the lions did n''t eat Daniel?" |
12444 | One of the girls became indignant and scornfully asked:"What line do you think you are on, anyhow?" |
12444 | Only three months an''as black as thot? |
12444 | Or would you have me wait a year And give you then a hundred clear, If I should find the marriage state As happy as I estimate?" |
12444 | Overwork?" |
12444 | PAT--"Is it dangerous she is?" |
12444 | PAT--"Is it dangerous she is?" |
12444 | PATIENT--"Tell me candidly, Doc, do you think I''ll pull through?" |
12444 | PITTSBURG"How about that airship?" |
12444 | POETS EDITOR--"Have you submitted this poem anywhere else?" |
12444 | POLICE COMMISSIONER--"If you were ordered to disperse a mob, what would you do?" |
12444 | POLICEMAN--"Why did n''t you tell me before?" |
12444 | POLITICAL PARTIES ZOO SUPERINTENDENT--"What was all the rumpus out there this morning?" |
12444 | POLITICIAN--"Now what in thunder did you want to bring up that point for?" |
12444 | PRESENCE OF MIND"What did you do when you met the train- robber face to face?" |
12444 | PRODIGALS"Why did the father of the prodigal son fall on his neck and weep?" |
12444 | PROFESSOR--"Now, Mr. Jones, assuming you were called to attend a patient who had swallowed a coin, what would be your method of procedure?" |
12444 | PROHIBITION"Talking about dry towns, have you ever been in Leavenworth, Kansas?" |
12444 | PROMPTNESS"Are you first in anything at school, Earlie?" |
12444 | PROVIDENCE"Why did papa have appendicitis and have to pay the doctor a thousand dollars, Mama?" |
12444 | PUBLIC SPEAKERS ORATOR--"I thought your paper was friendly to me?" |
12444 | Pat, of course, saw the donkey''s head on his coat, and, turning to the Englishmen, said:"Which of yez wiped your face on me coat?" |
12444 | Presently the maiden asked archly:"Of course, you''ve read''Romeo and Juliet?''" |
12444 | Provoked by her irresponsiveness, he said,"You do n''t seem to care for this magnificent scenery?" |
12444 | QUARRELS"But why did you leave your last place?" |
12444 | QUIRE--"What are those women mauling that man for?" |
12444 | RACE SUICIDE"Prisoner, why did you assault this landlord?" |
12444 | RACES In answer to the question,"What are the five great races of mankind?" |
12444 | RECALL SUNDAY SCHOOL TEACHER--"Johnny, what is the text from Judges?" |
12444 | REMEDIES MISTRESS--"Did the mustard plaster do you any good, Bridget?" |
12444 | REMINDERS The wife of an overworked promoter said at breakfast:"Will you post this letter for me, dear? |
12444 | RESIGNATION"Then you do n''t think I practice what I preach, eh?" |
12444 | RESPECTABILITY"Is he respectable?"'' |
12444 | RETALIATION You know that fellow, Jim McGroiarty, the lad that''s always comin''up and thumpin''ye on the chest and yellin'',''How are ye?''" |
12444 | RICH MAN--"Would you love my daughter just as much if she had no money?" |
12444 | SECOND MUSIC CRITIC--"Why?" |
12444 | SECOND TRUSTEE--"True; but what can we do? |
12444 | SEEDY VISITOR--"Do you have many wrecks about here, boatman?" |
12444 | SENSE OF HUMOR"What of his sense of humor?" |
12444 | SERVANTS TOMMY--"Pop, what is it that the Bible says is here to- day and gone to- morrow?" |
12444 | SHE--"And so you are going to be my son- in- law?" |
12444 | SHE--"How did they ever come to marry?" |
12444 | SHE--"Why?" |
12444 | SHOPPING CLERK--"Can you let me off to- morrow afternoon? |
12444 | SKYBOUGH--"Why have you put that vacuum cleaner in front of your airship?" |
12444 | SLASHER--"Been in a fight?" |
12444 | SOLEMN SENIOR--"So your efforts to get on the team were fruitless, were they?" |
12444 | SON--"May I stay up till he does?" |
12444 | SON--"May I stay up till he does?" |
12444 | SON--"Why do people say''Dame Gossip''?" |
12444 | SOP--"Been scratching your head?" |
12444 | SPINSTERS"Is there anyone present who wishes the prayers of the congregation for a relative or friend?" |
12444 | SPOONLEIGH--"Does your sister always look under the bed?" |
12444 | STEAK"Can I get a steak here and catch the one o''clock train?" |
12444 | STEAM"Can you tell what steam is?" |
12444 | STRANGER--"What''s the fight about?" |
12444 | STUDE--"Do you drink, sir?" |
12444 | STUDE--"Do you smoke, professor?" |
12444 | STUDE.--"Is it possible to confide a secret to you?" |
12444 | SUB- MANAGER--"Why?" |
12444 | SUMMER RESORTS GABE--"What are you going back to that place for this summer? |
12444 | SUNDAY SCHOOL TEACHER--"Willie, do you know what beomes of boys who use bad language when they''re playing marbles?" |
12444 | SURGEON AT NEW YORK HOSPITAL--"What brought you to this dreadful condition? |
12444 | SURPRISE"Where are you goin'', ma?" |
12444 | Said one:"What do you make of that, Bill?" |
12444 | Said the bibulous gentleman who had been reading birth and death statistics:"Do you know, James, every time I breathe a man dies?" |
12444 | Said the two to the tutor,"Is it harder to toot, or To tutor two tutors to toot?" |
12444 | Say, Cap, jest throw on another wagon, will yer?" |
12444 | Schmidt?" |
12444 | See?" |
12444 | Shall a joke be judged by its intent or by its consequences? |
12444 | Shall we stop there?" |
12444 | Shaw?" |
12444 | She here again? |
12444 | She looked fondly down upon him and after a few minutes murmured gently,"Laws, honey, ai n''t yo''shamed to be so han''some?" |
12444 | She was long in returning, and after a tiresome wait the missionary went to the door and called with some impatience:"Are n''t you coming in? |
12444 | Shoot him?" |
12444 | Smith?" |
12444 | Smith?" |
12444 | So I stepped out and asked:''Where are you going with that umbrella, young fellow?'' |
12444 | So proud was he of his father''s valor, his eyes fairly shone, and he cried:"He could n''t knock any brains out of you, could he, Father?" |
12444 | So soon? |
12444 | So we''ll have banns published and when the wedding day comes the parson will say to thee,''Wilt thou have this woman to be thy wedded wife?'' |
12444 | So you think I had better have it?" |
12444 | So, before the group of ministers, he said:"You are Wendell Phillips, are you not?" |
12444 | Soon the silence was broken by the little one''s question:"Mother, may I come down now?" |
12444 | Still another for the Wrights, Finally one of them turned to a little man who had remained silent:"Who do you think?" |
12444 | Suddenly a voice from the rear inquired:"Who''s the printer?" |
12444 | Suppose it does not excite the laugh expected? |
12444 | Suppose the other speakers have not heeded Bacon? |
12444 | TARIFF Why not have an illuminated sign on the statue of Liberty saying,"America expects every man to pay his duty?" |
12444 | TEACHER-"Now, Tommy, what is a hypocrite?" |
12444 | TEACHER--"And why is it nice of them, Corky?" |
12444 | TEACHER--"Now, Johnny, suppose I should borrow$ 100 from your father and should pay him$ 10 a month for ten months, how much would I then owe him?" |
12444 | TEACHER--"Now, Tommy, suppose a man gave you$ 100 to keep for him and then died, what would you do? |
12444 | TEACHER--"Now, Willie, where did you get that chewing gum? |
12444 | TEACHER--"Willie, did your father cane you for what you did in school yesterday?" |
12444 | THE AUTHOR--"Would you advise me to get out a small edition?" |
12444 | THE LADY--"And loving parents?" |
12444 | THE LADY--"Are they bringing you up to be a good and helpful citizen?" |
12444 | THE LADY--"Little boy, have n''t you any home?" |
12444 | THE LADY--"Will you ask your mother to come and hear me talk on''When Does a Mother''s Duty to Her Child Begin?'' |
12444 | THE NEW GIRL--"An''may me intended visit me every Sunday afternoon, ma''am?" |
12444 | TOM--"What does he say?" |
12444 | TOMMY''S AUNT--"Won''t you have another piece of cake, Tommy?" |
12444 | TRADE UNIONS CHAIRMAN OF THE COMMITTEE--"Is this the place where you are happy all the time?" |
12444 | TRAMPS LADY--"Can''t you find work?" |
12444 | TRAVELER--"Can you give me a guarantee that the train wo n''t start?" |
12444 | TREES CURIOUS CHARLEY--"Do nuts grow on trees, father?" |
12444 | TROUBLE"What is the trouble, wifey?" |
12444 | TWINS"Faith, Mrs. O''Hara, how d''ye till thim twins aparrt?" |
12444 | Tell me now, what have ye been doin''wid yer uniform an''arms an''bills? |
12444 | The Englishman turned to his friend and said:"I say, old chap, what_ are_ yonkers?" |
12444 | The angler, after a moment''s thought, exclaimed,"Say, do you know who I am?" |
12444 | The applicant drew himself up and answered haughtily:"What for? |
12444 | The boss, thinking that he would get ahead of Pat, said:"Say, Pat, how many shirts can you get out of a yard?" |
12444 | The doctor pulled up and said:"My dear man, how do you manage to train your dog that way? |
12444 | The following dialogue ensued:"Your name, sir?" |
12444 | The governor listened quietly and then said:"Did I ever tell you about Mose Williams? |
12444 | The laborer contemplated him for a moment and then replied:"Do you think a man with any brains would be working at this kind of a job?" |
12444 | The lady''s eyes sparkled as she responded,"Ah, he says he is asleep, eh? |
12444 | The latter took it, looked it over for a moment or so, and then asked:"Which horse do you want?" |
12444 | The man seized him by the arm and said between pants:"Have you a permit to fish on this estate? |
12444 | The miner responded with a stream of forcible and picturesque profanity, winding up with:"And what kind o''trail did you have?" |
12444 | The minister, to make congenial conversation, inquired:"Have you a dog?" |
12444 | The next day the woman called, and the dialogue was as follows:"Better?" |
12444 | The old fellow rose slowly and drawled out:"Be you going to shoot if I go?" |
12444 | The only question is, how did he do it? |
12444 | The other leaned over and called:"Are yez dead or alive, Mike?" |
12444 | The preacher spent some time praying and talking, and finally the old man said:"What do you want me to do, Parson?" |
12444 | The question is, What would become of you?" |
12444 | The retort came like a flash:"Are you still beating your wife?" |
12444 | The senator turned with a pleased expression on his benign countenance and said,"Major, did you see that pretty girl smile at me?" |
12444 | The sentry, not recognizing him, did not salute, and the major stopped and said:"What''s that you have there?" |
12444 | The teacher asked:"When did Moses live?" |
12444 | The tramp tried to slink past the group without speaking, but one of them called to him:"Well, did you get something from our young brother?" |
12444 | The young man reflected for a moment and then inquired:"You have n''t one about fifty, have you?" |
12444 | The youthful redskin lifted his eyes from his work, calmly surveyed his questioner, and then replied:"No, are you?" |
12444 | Then Willie answered between sobs:"Well, Father, who started this war, anyway?" |
12444 | Then he added,"Be you the gentleman over yonder from New York?" |
12444 | Then he stopped as if that told the whole story, so said the baron,"What of that?" |
12444 | Then it occurred to him,"Why not tell them all?" |
12444 | Then looked up at the lawyer and said:"What''s the matter with this dollar? |
12444 | Then she ventured to ask the brakeman how he had lost his finger:"Cut off in making a coupling between cars, I suppose?" |
12444 | Then the next day the girl in love visited the pretty one and said anxiously:"Well, did you ask him?" |
12444 | Then the parson said to the woman:"Wilt thou have this man to be thy wedded husband?" |
12444 | Then, during a pause in the conversation, little Willie looked up at the young gentleman and piped:"Am I as heavy as sister Mabel?" |
12444 | Then, with the utmost gravity, he asked the boy:"Are you civilized?" |
12444 | Then:"Well, how can_ I_ stop it?" |
12444 | There was a small boy in Quebec, Who was buried in snow to his neck; When they said,"Are you friz?" |
12444 | There was an old man who said,"How Shall I flee from this horrible cow? |
12444 | Thinking that a small drop of whisky might do him good, the captain called Pat aside and said,"Pat, will you have a wee drink of whisky?" |
12444 | Treason doth never prosper: what''s the reason? |
12444 | Turning to her mother, the little girl said:"I look just like you now, Mother, do n''t I?" |
12444 | VANITY MCGORRY--"I''ll buy yez no new hat, d''yez moind thot? |
12444 | VILLAGE GROCER--"What are you running for, sonny?" |
12444 | VILLAGE GROCER--"Who are the fellows?" |
12444 | VISITOR--"And you always did your daring robberies single- handed? |
12444 | VISITOR--"Can I see that motorist who was brought here an hour ago?" |
12444 | VOX POPULI--"Do you think you''ve boosted your circulation by giving a year''s subscription for the biggest potato raised in the county?" |
12444 | Vat does he charge?" |
12444 | W-- who sent the others?" |
12444 | WAITER--"Have another glass, sir?" |
12444 | WEATHER"How did you find the weather in London?" |
12444 | WEIGHTS AND MEASURES"Did n''t I tell ye to feed that cat a pound of meat every day until ye had her fat?" |
12444 | WIDOWS During the course of conversation between two ladies in a hotel parlor one said to the other:"Are you married?" |
12444 | WIFE( to her mother)--"Shall he have another, mother?" |
12444 | WILLIE--"Well, what are the others here for?" |
12444 | WILLIS--"What''s the election today for? |
12444 | WIND VISITOR--"What became of that other windmill that was here last year?" |
12444 | WIVES"Father,"said a little boy,"had Solomon seven hundred wives?" |
12444 | Wad ye like to be buried there too?" |
12444 | Well, will you be kind enough to return and ask him when he intends to wake up?" |
12444 | Were his plans carried out?" |
12444 | Were you run over by a street- car?" |
12444 | What are you crying about, something that happened at home or something that happened in a novel?" |
12444 | What are you going to do about it? |
12444 | What be ye goin''to keep it in?" |
12444 | What can I do for you?" |
12444 | What causes, pray, This unprovoked assault?" |
12444 | What did he get-- five years?" |
12444 | What did you do with the other$ 3?" |
12444 | What did you say?" |
12444 | What do they feed you on?" |
12444 | What do you and I know about it?" |
12444 | What do you get for preaching?" |
12444 | What do you suppose I heard her say to that boy of hers this afternoon?" |
12444 | What do you think?" |
12444 | What do you want?" |
12444 | What do you want?" |
12444 | What do you want?" |
12444 | What do you want?" |
12444 | What do your folks call it?" |
12444 | What does it say there?" |
12444 | What does that mean?" |
12444 | What for you see Baedeker?" |
12444 | What for?" |
12444 | What has appealed to you as the real basis of your unusual vigor of mind and body, and has been to you an unfailing comfort through joy and sorrow? |
12444 | What have I done? |
12444 | What have you got on that wagon?" |
12444 | What is it?" |
12444 | What is your first name?" |
12444 | What is your name?" |
12444 | What is yours?" |
12444 | What made you change your mind again?'' |
12444 | What made you change your mind again?'' |
12444 | What more can I do?" |
12444 | What of the joke that misses fire? |
12444 | What on earth are you doing here this time o''night?" |
12444 | What ought I to do, Oscar?" |
12444 | What prompted you to do it?" |
12444 | What question did the teacher ask, Johnnie?" |
12444 | What shall be the play? |
12444 | What stirred it up?" |
12444 | What the deuce? |
12444 | What was it?" |
12444 | What will follow, I repeat?" |
12444 | What would you suggest?" |
12444 | What would your Majesty have done had I lost both arms?" |
12444 | What would yours be if you were a lion? |
12444 | What''s her address?" |
12444 | What''s the matter with''raise''and''lift''?" |
12444 | What''s the matter?" |
12444 | What''s the matter?" |
12444 | What''s wrong with the school?" |
12444 | Whatever do you mean, my dear?" |
12444 | When a few days later he returned he took the horse back to the stable and asked the man who had given it to him:"Keep this horse for funerals?" |
12444 | When he had listened to the recital of Mrs. Delehanty''s troubles, the lawyer said:"You want to get damages, I suppose?" |
12444 | When shall it be?" |
12444 | When she had finished her story she said:"Dear Billy, if your papa were to die, would you work to support your dear mamma?" |
12444 | When she had finished she said:"Well, Tommy, what have you to say?" |
12444 | Where is it? |
12444 | Where is it?" |
12444 | Where is she?" |
12444 | Where''s the dispute in that?" |
12444 | Whereupon the unmoved lawyer asked:"Have you any other business?" |
12444 | Which do you prefer, a ton of coal or a gallon of good whiskey?" |
12444 | Which will you hab?" |
12444 | While acting as magistrate at an Irish village, Lord Rossmore said to an old offender brought before him:"You here again?" |
12444 | Who goes there?" |
12444 | Who is he telling it to?" |
12444 | Who is your chief, pray?" |
12444 | Who married three wives at a time: When asked,"Why a third?" |
12444 | Who, then, did Cain marry?" |
12444 | Why are n''t you at the head, where you ought to be?" |
12444 | Why did n''t you have a pal?" |
12444 | Why did n''t you run up the side of the hill?" |
12444 | Why did n''t''e buy the''oss and not pay for''i m like any other gentleman?" |
12444 | Why did you take Mrs. Gilkie''s chicken?" |
12444 | Why do n''t you go over into Kentucky?" |
12444 | Why do n''t you try the same?" |
12444 | Why do you call him Izaak Walton? |
12444 | Why not make your note for five hundred, and you and I will split it?" |
12444 | Why not on both?" |
12444 | Why not?" |
12444 | Why not?" |
12444 | Why should I do that?" |
12444 | Why should I know how to cuss any better than he does? |
12444 | Why should n''t I be?" |
12444 | Why should n''t I look happy? |
12444 | Why was it?" |
12444 | Why, I--""No, excuse me,"he interrupted;"what I want to ask is this: What date have you and your mother decided upon for our wedding?" |
12444 | Why?" |
12444 | Why?" |
12444 | Why?'' |
12444 | Will you fix one for me?" |
12444 | Will you kindly let me know whether you liked it or not?" |
12444 | Will you persist in hurling the corner stone of our personal liberty to your wolfish hounds of collectors, thirsting for its blood? |
12444 | Will you-- hic-- come down an''pick out Mr. Smith? |
12444 | Winnie had been very naughty, and her mamma said:"Do n''t you know you will never go to Heaven if you are so naughty?" |
12444 | With a frown he summoned the page and asked:"Did you tell the gentleman from Texas what I said?" |
12444 | Wo n''t you come to the mourners''bench at the next service?" |
12444 | Wo n''t you please tell me?" |
12444 | Would that seem appropriate?" |
12444 | Would you pray for him?" |
12444 | Y''know what I''ll do? |
12444 | YALE UNIVERSITY The new cook, who had come into the household during the holidays, asked her mistress:"Where ban your son? |
12444 | YOUNG DOCTOR--"Why do you always ask your patients what they have for dinner?" |
12444 | Yer lookin''sick; wot is it?" |
12444 | You admit it yourself, do n''t you?" |
12444 | You didn''t--?" |
12444 | You hear dat fool question I am axed? |
12444 | You know how bridegrooms starting off on their honeymoons sometimes forget all about their brides, and buy tickets only for themselves? |
12444 | You know what a tremendous voice he has?" |
12444 | You married for love, did n''t you?" |
12444 | You''ll be sure to remember?" |
12444 | You''re his father, are n''t you?" |
12444 | You''re his mother, are n''t you?" |
12444 | ZONES TEACHER--"How many zones has the earth?" |
12444 | a son of mine grow up and not he able to figure up baseball scores and batting averages? |
12444 | exclaimed her son:"that blue ribbon-- you have n''t been wearing that at the temperance meeting?" |
12444 | exclaimed the Bishop, starting up in assumed terror,"pray, what might that be?" |
12444 | he asked,"Drunk?" |
12444 | he cried;"Did you think,"she replied,"I sat down for the fun of it, Mister?" |
12444 | he said, turning to his son,"who''d''a''s''posed that thing had a colt?" |
12444 | he said,"you hear dat, brederen an''sisters? |
12444 | next Saturday afternoon, at three o''clock, at Lyceum Hall?" |
12444 | remarked Mr. Gladstone;"does a pint of champagne really help you to answer the twenty letters?" |
12444 | said she sweetly;"is that any worse than men going into saloons to get their noses red?" |
12444 | take your choice to cry or laugh; Here Harold lies- but where''s his Epitaph? |
12444 | where''s all the hay?" |
12444 | with your new trousers on?" |
36580 | Alone? 36580 And you?" |
36580 | Another woman? 36580 Do n''t you remember?" |
36580 | Do n''t''ee see? |
36580 | Head screw? |
36580 | How do the ideas underlying plays come into being? 36580 Just what is tragi- comedy, then?" |
36580 | Lose his head? |
36580 | My fault? |
36580 | One Messer Chiappino is your leader? 36580 To my daughter? |
36580 | Well? |
36580 | What do you mean? |
36580 | What job, Bill? |
36580 | What the devil''s a plot except to stuff in fine things? |
36580 | What''s the matter,queried the critic,"anything gone wrong?" |
36580 | What? |
36580 | Where''s Philly, my mare? |
36580 | Why make her? |
36580 | Why not laugh tonight, Hajji? 36580 Why? |
36580 | You-- my son? |
36580 | You? |
36580 | [ 2] Once for all, what istruckling to an audience"? |
36580 | ''Tis a naughty little varlet; who knows that he has not been set on to bring this tale?" |
36580 | ''Where have I seen this story before?'' |
36580 | ( Abu Bakr) When does the sun set?" |
36580 | (_ Addressing a porter who passes, followed by travelers._) Monsieur, at what time does the train start for Lyons? |
36580 | (_ Addressing the official who is near the ticket window._) Monsieur, at what time does the through train start for Lyons? |
36580 | (_ Aloud._) New music? |
36580 | (_ Aloud._) That music, Miss Thornhaugh? |
36580 | (_ Beats down their swords._)_ Enter Tybalt__ Tybalt._ What, art thou drawn among these heartless hinds? |
36580 | (_ Dora sits thoughtfully, Colonel bending over her; a pause._) Wo n''t you play something? |
36580 | (_ Doubtfully._) But can you pay his fee? |
36580 | (_ Exeunt Ambassadors._)_ Giov._ What do the deade do, uncle? |
36580 | (_ Exeunt._) Except for a few lines of rhetoric, could the account in Scene 3 be shortened? |
36580 | (_ Exeunt._) So far as the situation is concerned we might go directly from York''s"fealty to the new made King"to his"What seal is that?" |
36580 | (_ Exit Taylor._)_ Sir John._ So, how d''ye like my Shapes now? |
36580 | (_ Exit._)_ Simo._ For example now, would n''t any one who knew you think you were at the bottom of this? |
36580 | (_ Going towards door; Sir Brice following him up._)_ Sir Brice._ You refuse? |
36580 | (_ Going._)_ Countess._ What means he now? |
36580 | (_ Horse''s hoofs heard starting off._)_ Third Picket''s Voice._(_ Off stage._) Who goes there? |
36580 | (_ Indicating the door right._)_ Lady D._ Where is Mr. Harabin? |
36580 | (_ Looks out._) Why, is n''t that Mr. Rosmer on the mill path again--? |
36580 | (_ No answer._)_ Policeman B._ Will we put up a notice here on the barrel? |
36580 | (_ Pause._) What game? |
36580 | (_ Peeps out between the curtains and the window frame._) But let us see whether--_ Madam Helseth._ Will he venture across the foot- bridge? |
36580 | (_ Points to the cards._)_ Sir Brice._(_ Getting flurried._) My wife and child? |
36580 | (_ She looks pensively at the key._) Ought I to throw it away? |
36580 | (_ Sleeps._)_ Bayes._ Does not that, now, surprise you, to fall asleep in the nick? |
36580 | (_ Summing up._) Claret cup, syphon, one Scotch, and one Irish? |
36580 | (_ Swoons away by his uncle''s body._) Do I still live to press the suffering bosom of the earth? |
36580 | (_ The waiter stops, with a sinking heart._) My father was a witness of what passed to- day, was he not, Mrs. Clandon? |
36580 | (_ They resume their attitudes; a pause._) The weather has been very warm today, has it not? |
36580 | (_ To Blond._) There is n''t any method of getting off that balcony is there? |
36580 | (_ To Bohun._) Anything special for you, sir? |
36580 | (_ To Crampton._) Irish for you, sir, I think sir? |
36580 | (_ To Henriette._) Well, little daughter, are you satisfied?... |
36580 | (_ To Katherine._) Do n''t we? |
36580 | (_ To Mrs. Clandon, timidly, but expectantly._) Anything for you, ma''am? |
36580 | (_ To Rosalie, who enters._) Well? |
36580 | (_ To a group._) Will not some one help me to put on my praying shawl? |
36580 | (_ To his wife._) You brought the opera glasses? |
36580 | (_ Trying ring on Moll''s finger._)_ Yel._ What''s your posy, now, sir? |
36580 | (_ Turns and embraces her._)_ Indiana._ Have I then at last a father''s sanction on my love? |
36580 | (_ Whispers._) You perceive my mind? |
36580 | )[ 66] Why is it that the citation from Shakespeare in the left- hand column is less satisfactory than that in the right- hand? |
36580 | )_ If I talk to him, this outrage meane? |
36580 | )_ Where is the traitor Becket? |
36580 | )__ David._ How is he feeling today? |
36580 | *****_ Lady Windermere._(_ Moves up._) Lord Darlington, will you give me back my fan, please? |
36580 | --"Of what? |
36580 | A door down stage left.__ Enter footman left showing in Lady Darby__ Lady Darby._(_ A lady of about fifty._) Where is Lady Susan now? |
36580 | A report of a cannon as the curtain rises.__ Jennie._(_ R., going up to door C._) Did you hear that? |
36580 | After that-- who knows?" |
36580 | Air:"O, dear, what can the matter be?" |
36580 | All this-- all this-- and-- and what for? |
36580 | All''s cleared-- a stage For trial of the question kept so long: Judge you-- Is love or vanity the best? |
36580 | Am I a married man or a bachelor? |
36580 | Am I addressing one of the foreign war correspondents? |
36580 | Am_ I_ the man?" |
36580 | And I have said no word of this to him: Am_ I_ the man?" |
36580 | And I presume you know what that unfortunate movement led to? |
36580 | And after all, where is the sin in seeing him just once, if at a distance? |
36580 | And how been made archbishop hadst thou told him,"I mean to fight mine utmost for the Church, Against the King?" |
36580 | And how did they get to the settle? |
36580 | And now, my revolters and good friend what do you want? |
36580 | And she came to the train at what hour? |
36580 | And the Am_ I_ the man?" |
36580 | And the corporal says, looking over his shoulder quick and short,''Does he understand?'' |
36580 | And then, as all wait for his excuses, he shifts the burden of speech to his mother with the words,"Has n''t her ladyship anything to say?" |
36580 | And what are we to do with this whole Burke''s Peerage,--the Prime Minister, the Countess, the Slave? |
36580 | And wherefore should she seek The life of Rosamund de Clifford more Than that of other paramours of thine? |
36580 | And will you? |
36580 | And wilt thou pluck my fair son from mine age, And rob me of a happy mother''s name? |
36580 | And yet which is the worst, I wonder, to be at the mercy of a man who loves one, or the wife of a man who in one''s own house dishonors one? |
36580 | And, now, pray, what does please you? |
36580 | Answer you, Sirs? |
36580 | Answer you? |
36580 | Archbishop? |
36580 | Are n''t they lovely? |
36580 | Are n''t you satisfied? |
36580 | Are reports about you and the boys the days long and lonesome? |
36580 | Are the days When the time came, it was hard for long and lonesome? |
36580 | Are the following straight translations from the old French farce,_ Pierre Patelin_,[64] as easy to speak as the revisions? |
36580 | Are the phrasing and thought really his, or Robert Browning''s? |
36580 | Are you now persuaded That Talbot is but shadow of himself? |
36580 | Are your parents living? |
36580 | Are_ you_? |
36580 | As Dumas the younger well said,"How can you tell what road to take unless you know where you are going? |
36580 | At every turn of their dialogue we should be wondering:"Why does not Talbot strike now? |
36580 | At what court? |
36580 | Beauty the lover''s gift-- Lord, what is a lover, that it can give? |
36580 | Bertha? |
36580 | Besides, what danger can a dying woman, One too who longs for death, bring on your head? |
36580 | Besides, what''s the good of a railway guide? |
36580 | Bobby, did he bite you? |
36580 | Brown._ But after taking the but arsenal, why did n''t you flee to the we shall meet together in that mountains, as we thought you would? |
36580 | Brown._ Do they treat_ Brown._ How did you first get you well here, John? |
36580 | But how if I expect the blow, how if I see the storm brewing and threatening for some time about my head or his? |
36580 | But sacrifice? |
36580 | But suppose she wo n''t tell us? |
36580 | But they do n''t play it, do they? |
36580 | But we''re forgetting dinner-- Langford, will you take my wife? |
36580 | But what would my word have been what would my assertions have in opposition to yours? |
36580 | But what? |
36580 | But why should I not look? |
36580 | But will he love me always, this man to whom I am giving my life? |
36580 | But, pray you, tell me Is she sole child to the King? |
36580 | By it, dully._) Who? |
36580 | By the masse I was about to say something, Where did I leave? |
36580 | Call me a hag? |
36580 | Calls off, is he at home? |
36580 | Can Phædra, sick''ning of a dire disease Of which she will not speak, weary of life And of herself, form any plots against you? |
36580 | Can any one feel much doubt what form of drama is_ The Importance of Being Earnest_? |
36580 | Can he save the situation, if he delays? |
36580 | Can there be any question that Shakespeare''s assigned speeches are somehow clearer, more dramatic? |
36580 | Can there be any question which scene holds the attention better? |
36580 | Can you not see that the work of_ falsification_, which a play demands is, of all tasks, the most ungrateful? |
36580 | Chasuble looks astounded._) I mean, of course, you are continually christening, are n''t you? |
36580 | Clandon._(_ Politely._) Sit down, wo n''t you? |
36580 | Colonel bends over Dora at piano._) Going to play any of it now? |
36580 | Consequently we must expect them inside the temple at the beginning of the fifth act, or are they already back again? |
36580 | Could Gaoler send for his litter? |
36580 | Cozzens?" |
36580 | Crowd._ Where did he get his money? |
36580 | Dane''s Defence_,[1] in its third act? |
36580 | Did Shakespeare write the opening lines of_ Measure For Measure_, he the master of exquisitely musical and perfectly chosen dramatic speech? |
36580 | Did n''t we come of our own accord? |
36580 | Did people under such circumstances speak in this way? |
36580 | Did the Sultan not keep you to supper?" |
36580 | Did they speak to each other? |
36580 | Did you feel a yearning for your money? |
36580 | Did_ he? |
36580 | Discern''st thou aught in that? |
36580 | Do I embrace my father? |
36580 | Do I understand aright? |
36580 | Do n''t you believe in-- music-- at first sight? |
36580 | Do these jousts and triumphs hold? |
36580 | Do you know what I am doing? |
36580 | Do you mean the fashion or the side? |
36580 | Do you mean to have no substitute for it? |
36580 | Do you not think of dramatising the story of Faste? |
36580 | Do you sleep any, John? |
36580 | Do you sleep any, John? |
36580 | Do you smoke? |
36580 | Do you turn aside? |
36580 | Do you wish to have it checked? |
36580 | Does the ending, however, show that Hanna is entirely selfish? |
36580 | Does the play signify that the man who chooses to follow women rather than his art is lost? |
36580 | Does this sound like an individual woman or like the author using one of his characters for the sounding phrases of his own thinking? |
36580 | Door bangs._)_ Sutton enters from the dining- room__ Sutton._ Is Master Dick in danger, sir? |
36580 | Dorrison._ Will you give Mrs. Pinchbeck your arm, Colonel? |
36580 | Dream, Or prophecy, that? |
36580 | Duke, did you ever think that the Prime Minister was very fond of the Countess? |
36580 | Emily, my dear, has your aunt been-- I mean has your aunt lost her wits? |
36580 | Enter Ditto, R._)_ Ditto._(_ Petulantly._) Do you realize this is your birthday? |
36580 | Erlynne._(_ C._) How do dropped your fan, Lady you do again, Lord Windermere? |
36580 | Erlynne._(_ C._) How do you do, again, Lord Windermere? |
36580 | Erlynne._(_ C._) How do(_ Picks it up and hands it you do again, Lord Windermere? |
36580 | Even if he belong to the group, relatively very small in the mass of humanity, most interested by"Why did these people do this?" |
36580 | Even when reading some story aloud, do we not often find troublesome full directions as to just how the speakers delivered their lines? |
36580 | Even with you as with the world? |
36580 | Executioner.__ E._"Do n''t you see why I have pardoned him?" |
36580 | Exit Second Footman at door left._)_ Lady D._(_ Going affectionately to Inez, shaking hands very sympathetically._) My dear Mrs. Quesnel, you know? |
36580 | Exit Wilson.__ Lady Eastney._(_ Shaking hands._) You''re busy? |
36580 | Fainall, d''ye hear him? |
36580 | Fainall._ But, dear Millamant, why were you so long? |
36580 | Finally, do we not gain greatly by the characterization of the Duchess in the last lines of the scene? |
36580 | First-- has she seen you? |
36580 | Fitz Urse__ Eleanor._ Dost thou love this Becket, this son of a London merchant, that thou hast sworn a voluntary allegiance to him? |
36580 | Gaoler:"Does it feel comfortable?" |
36580 | Gaoler:"Free? |
36580 | Gent._ And why so? |
36580 | Gent._ But what''s the matter? |
36580 | Gent._ How long is this ago? |
36580 | Gent._ None but the King? |
36580 | Gent._ What''s his name and birth? |
36580 | Gribert, you mean? |
36580 | H._ And did he send it? |
36580 | H._ Eh? |
36580 | H._ From Llandudno? |
36580 | H._ That''s likely, is n''t it? |
36580 | H._ Then what do you mean telling me he''s not got a motor car? |
36580 | H._ What for? |
36580 | H._ What would she be doing coming round by Manchester? |
36580 | H._ What? |
36580 | H._ You''re not afraid of the lightning? |
36580 | Hajji recognizes him Sheikh._ What is he doing there? |
36580 | Hajji:"I am free too, am I?" |
36580 | Hard upon this comes the question:"What will people who have been like these and have passed through this experience do immediately, and thereafter?" |
36580 | Has Hajji not come back yet? |
36580 | Has he gone in to her?" |
36580 | Has he seen her? |
36580 | Have I not chid thee oft, And thou wilt cease not, serving without end? |
36580 | Have n''t you seen her at all? |
36580 | Have these conditions of Nature anything to do with Schilling''s death? |
36580 | Have we more sons? |
36580 | Have you the heart? |
36580 | He asks himself,''What, under such circumstances, can have been going on in our minds?'' |
36580 | He attempts to do so by way of the door.__ Jane._(_ Frightened._) W- w- where are you going? |
36580 | He indicates the ladder with his foot and his eyes._) Who is it? |
36580 | He says to Hajji-- How would Hajji like to become a great power in the state? |
36580 | He starts and stares aghast on seeing King Argimenes__ King Argimenes._ Who are you? |
36580 | Hence the soliloquies:"Thus do I ever make my fool my purse,"as well as"And what''s he, then, that says I play the villain?" |
36580 | Her support? |
36580 | Here--_ Ulrich._ Here? |
36580 | Hev yo''got suthin''fo''me t''night? |
36580 | His bounteous hand to give, and make my heart a present worthy of Bevil''s generosity? |
36580 | His voice is soft and his manner stealthy and mechanical._) Where is Boycott, my friend? |
36580 | How can an audience be expected to know what a dramatist has not settled for himself, the chief of his interests among several? |
36580 | How can one act in that way without reflection, without reason? |
36580 | How can these contrarieties agree? |
36580 | How could we learn from the text that"Duke"is John Hathaway? |
36580 | How dare he appeal to the Executioner, after betraying him to the Sultan? |
36580 | How dare he break into the women''s quarters and then ask for mercy? |
36580 | How decide what to emphasize? |
36580 | How did Claude enter in the following extract from a recent play? |
36580 | How did it get into my hands? |
36580 | How is he to win this attention? |
36580 | How is the transition from one to the other to be gained? |
36580 | How many bedrooms? |
36580 | How many lectures last over an hour? |
36580 | How many of them must be set forth in Act I, and how many may be set apart for"later exposition"? |
36580 | How may all this needed characterization best be done? |
36580 | How may it be given its quickest and fullest development?" |
36580 | How may these qualities, clearness, right emphasis, and consequent movement be gained? |
36580 | How much of the following scene in the original do we think at first sight we can spare? |
36580 | How much story does a play require? |
36580 | How much? |
36580 | How now Ofelia, what''s the news with you? |
36580 | How old are you? |
36580 | How shall I answer, as I ought, this tenderness, so uncommon even in the best of parents? |
36580 | How shall I appear before God? |
36580 | How should a baron love a beggar on horseback, with the retinue of three kings behind him, outroyaltying royalty? |
36580 | How should we know? |
36580 | Hundreds and hundreds of times he told me that.--It would have been very nice, Duke, if Dad had n''t died, would n''t it? |
36580 | I fear, I fear,--_ Duch._ What should you fear? |
36580 | I have n''t forgotten anything? |
36580 | I have n''t seen her? |
36580 | I hear the three old women praying all the time; are they together? |
36580 | I must be brief; lest resolution_ Arth._ What, must I die? |
36580 | I should give_ Helmer._ Well? |
36580 | I should say are you fond of lightning? |
36580 | I so been worth in opposition to yours? |
36580 | I speake not only for eyes Are you more stubborn hard than priviledge, hammered iron? |
36580 | I suppose you know how to christen all right? |
36580 | I''m glad_ she_[ Hopeful I''m glad( Hopeful) or the thin cat?] |
36580 | I. following.__ The Sultan._"Where is the woman? |
36580 | If she wo n''t let the girl escape, at least wo n''t she take the girl to a sanctuary? |
36580 | If so, do they not mitigate the effect upon him of the women? |
36580 | If that does n''t make them sit up, what will?" |
36580 | If that is n''t story, what is it? |
36580 | If we let the dialogue of a play merely state necessary facts, what is the result? |
36580 | If we were as good as we seem, what would the world be? |
36580 | Impossible? |
36580 | In all creative courses the problem is not,"What can we make these students take from us, the teachers?" |
36580 | In another still worse tragedy where one of the principal characters died quite casually, a spectator asked his neighbor,"But what did she die of?" |
36580 | In real life do we surely find out about people at our first, second, or even third meeting? |
36580 | In the answer to the question,"What have they been?" |
36580 | In this situation, what should I do? |
36580 | In_ Othello_, why does Shakespeare bring forward Iago at the end of an act as chorus to his own villainy? |
36580 | Inspired with what new hope, Under what favor''d skies think you to trace His footsteps? |
36580 | Is Richard, Duke of Gloucester, at the opening of_ Richard III_, much more than a re- christened Chorus? |
36580 | Is all dramatic material,_ theatric?_ No, for_ theatric_ does not necessarily mean_ sensational, melodramatic, artificial_. |
36580 | Is he merely telling a story for its own sake, satisfied if the incidents be increasingly interesting till the final curtain falls? |
36580 | Is he not honest? |
36580 | Is he not like thee? |
36580 | Is he not thine own? |
36580 | Is his setting significant for one scene only or has it symbolic values for the whole play? |
36580 | Is it not a mental state rather than physical action which moves us here? |
36580 | Is it not fair A wrathfull doome, and most writ? |
36580 | Is it not odd that most adaptations of successful stories and most novelizations of successful plays are failures? |
36580 | Is it possible? |
36580 | Is it really? |
36580 | Is it without story? |
36580 | Is n''t it? |
36580 | Is n''t the following the real climax? |
36580 | Is not my teeming date drunk up with time? |
36580 | Is not play- writing an art of falsification rather than truth?" |
36580 | Is she a of Nature''s gentlemen, the worst great friend of yours? |
36580 | Is she the niece of"Duke"? |
36580 | Is this extract as interesting as the following? |
36580 | Is this the Talbot, so much fear''d abroad That with his name the mothers still their babes? |
36580 | It is like the cry of the animal goaded beyond endurance._)_ Mary._(_ Screeching._) Call my coffee poison, will ye? |
36580 | It pointed finely the immediate cry of Everyman, O wretched caitiff, whither shall I flee, That I might scape this endless sorrow? |
36580 | It sought to convey, first, last, and always, the facts of the episode or incident represented:"Whom seek ye here, O Christians? |
36580 | It''s done already? |
36580 | Jest or prophecy there? |
36580 | Just before Mrs. Erlynne enters, we have:_ Lady Windermere._ Will you hold my fan for me, Lord Darlington? |
36580 | Just here arises the ever present query,"Why struggle to write what the public does not readily and quickly accept? |
36580 | Just what is it? |
36580 | Just what is meant by this"illustrative action"so often mentioned? |
36580 | Just what is the suspense created near the beginning of the play and developed throughout from sub- climaxes to a final climax? |
36580 | Just what, however, is this action which in drama is so essential? |
36580 | Let me see-- long and slender, and neatly jointed; Just such another gentlewoman-- that''s your daughter, sir? |
36580 | Let traitor be; For how have fought thine utmost for the Church, Save from the throne of thine archbishoprick? |
36580 | Likely to recommend the play to a manager trying to judge from a manuscript the dramatic sense of its unknown author? |
36580 | Lord, have I not made violent haste? |
36580 | Luitolfo is dead then, one may conclude? |
36580 | Madam Helset enters from the right with a basket of table linen._)_ Madam Helset._ I suppose I had better begin to lay the tea- table, ma''am? |
36580 | Make an Archbishop of a soldier? |
36580 | Mariamne, see you? |
36580 | Mariamne, see you? |
36580 | Mary shakes in terror._)_ Sergeant._(_ Bellowing and pointing to the fluid trickling on the floor._) Have you tried to poison us, you God damn hag? |
36580 | Mary, then: a maid, a sister, a girl friend, some one engaged to Tom?] |
36580 | Massey._ Walter would like to hear something, would n''t you, Walter? |
36580 | May I look at it? |
36580 | May we not say that the Vagret family provides a third story? |
36580 | Millamant._ Ay, that''s true-- O but then I had-- Mincing, what had I? |
36580 | Millamant._ How so? |
36580 | Millamant._ Mirabell, did you take exceptions last night? |
36580 | Miss Blank writes,"The line, which was either incorrectly spoken or heard, was not,''How does one know one is one''s self?'' |
36580 | Must we give up this idea? |
36580 | My friend Boycott, do you hear me? |
36580 | My love I can not; that is too divine: And against fate what mortal dares repine? |
36580 | Never to speak to her again, to feel her cheek against mine? |
36580 | Never?" |
36580 | No.--The Baroness? |
36580 | Not fight-- tho''somehow traitor to the King-- My truest and mine utmost for the Church? |
36580 | O farewell honest souldier, who_ Mar._ O, farewell honest souldiers, hath relieved you? |
36580 | O good Horatio, what a thou shouldst die, wounded name What a scandale wouldst thou Things standing thus unknowne, leave behinde? |
36580 | O''Malley._ Do you know if Mr. Warren is in this hotel? |
36580 | O''Malley._(_ Showing him a visiting card._) Pardon, is this your card? |
36580 | ORIGINAL REVISION_ Elise._(_ Looking up from her__ Elise._ Is he coming? |
36580 | ORIGINAL REVSION_ Servant._ Shall I not help_ Servant._ Shall I not help your lordship to your rest? |
36580 | Of the two contending forces, the Church and the Crown, which makes for good, and which for evil? |
36580 | Of what am I afraid, then? |
36580 | Oh, would it were that now? |
36580 | Old Woman._ Is he not the Sultan? |
36580 | On my word she''s a drunken reckless creature, not at all a fit person to take charge of a woman in her first labour: am I to fetch her all the same? |
36580 | On the other hand, who refuses to see_ The Merchant of Venice_ because of the inherent improbability of the exaction of the pound of flesh by Shylock? |
36580 | Ophelia, what''s the matter? |
36580 | Or are we like to have? |
36580 | Or, What good love may I perform for you? |
36580 | Our gentry baffled, and our name disgraced? |
36580 | Phil''s gran''mothah? |
36580 | Plebeian._ Are you a married man or a bachelor? |
36580 | Plebeian._ As a friend or an enemy? |
36580 | Plebeian._ What is your name? |
36580 | Plebeian._ Where do you dwell? |
36580 | Plebeian._ Whither are you going? |
36580 | Pray, Madam, do you pin up your hair with all your letters? |
36580 | Pray, how much may you know of what has taken place in Faenza since that memorable night? |
36580 | Roche._(_ As he mixes the drink._) What d''ye think-- what d''ye think that silly, infatuated feller''s goin''to do? |
36580 | Rosmer._ And you too? |
36580 | Rosmer._ Are you sure of that? |
36580 | Rosmer._ Did he? |
36580 | Rosmer._ What was it you told me once, Madam Helset? |
36580 | SCENE,_ Covent Garden__ Enter Lord Rake, Sir John,& c., with Swords drawn__ Lord Rake._ Is the Dog dead? |
36580 | Sanctuary? |
36580 | Secondly, what are they feeling and thinking in the situations which have occurred to him? |
36580 | See here-- Who''s with Dick? |
36580 | Shall I accuse my love or blame my fate? |
36580 | Shall I fall off-- to please the King once more? |
36580 | Shall a man not have_ half_ a life of his own? |
36580 | Sheikh._ Why should he have to suffer, and Sheikh be pardoned, when Sheikh is the cause of all of Hajji''s woe? |
36580 | Shockin'', ai n''t it? |
36580 | Shuddered with fear or with longing? |
36580 | Sir John, Lady Brute, and Belinda rising from the Table__ Sir John._ Will it so, Mrs. Pert? |
36580 | Sir, I have your permission to retire? |
36580 | Sir, be confident, What is''t distracts you? |
36580 | So much as frown on you? |
36580 | Soon after, Madam Helseth enters from the right._)_ Madam Helseth._ I suppose I''d better begin to lay the table, Miss? |
36580 | South Africa? |
36580 | St. Roche._ Demailly? |
36580 | St. Roche._(_ Taking the tumbler, her eyes never meeting his._) Well, what is he going to do? |
36580 | Stenborg enters; has met him on the stairs; displeased; wants to know what he came back for? |
36580 | Sternhold? |
36580 | Strone? |
36580 | Suppose she tells us to mind our own business? |
36580 | Thanks.... A useful thing, a fan, is n''t it? |
36580 | That dolefully to deed thus is What have I defended[ offended] thee? |
36580 | That is, does it always create emotion in an onlooker? |
36580 | That reminds me, you mentioned christenings I think, Dr. Chasuble? |
36580 | That thou shouldst help me? |
36580 | That_ Becket._ Am I the man? |
36580 | The Magistrate? |
36580 | The Mosque of the Carpenters, where the venerable priest is? |
36580 | The Old Woman says:"Who are you? |
36580 | The cloaks? |
36580 | The disease is vicious and ca n''t be checked._)_ Marian._(_ Anxiously._) You mean my husband will die? |
36580 | The gates are forced._)_ Enter Soldiers_ How say you, madam? |
36580 | The gentle sister of the cruel sons Of Pallas shared not in their perfidy; Why should you hate such charming innocence? |
36580 | The soldiers are in double lines on either side.__ Fitzroy._(_ To Hale._) Nathan Hale, have you anything to say? |
36580 | The test for a would- be writer of plays, choosing among several starting points, should be, not,"Is this true?" |
36580 | The third time appears the iteration,... that same handkerchief? |
36580 | The two men stand close to each other for a moment or two._)_ Sir Brice._ You''ve come to settle your little account, I suppose? |
36580 | Then why are we sitting here? |
36580 | There are deserters? |
36580 | Throw away the key? |
36580 | To live without any government at all? |
36580 | To- night, with these rake- hell soldiers abroad?" |
36580 | Very simply she goes straight to Raymond.__ Raymond._(_ Very simply to Laurence._) Well? |
36580 | Was he born in what the Radical papers call the purple of commerce, or did he rise from the ranks of the aristocracy? |
36580 | Was it simply the tale of a weak man? |
36580 | Was there a purse there? |
36580 | Was-- was it you, sir? |
36580 | We could n''t believe the first reports about you and the boys_ Brown._ Do you know where he is? |
36580 | We could n''t find each other again.... Where is our baggage? |
36580 | We do not need, in the first speech of Elise, anything more than the query,"Yes?" |
36580 | We have become more shame? |
36580 | We should find different names for these divisions,--perhaps, Induction and Finale? |
36580 | Well?" |
36580 | Wells._ You want the truth? |
36580 | Wells._(_ Enthusiastically._) Wonderful? |
36580 | What am I saying? |
36580 | What are the particulars? |
36580 | What are you going to say to Fanny when she comes? |
36580 | What are your politics? |
36580 | What can I say to him? |
36580 | What d''ye think he was telling me the other day? |
36580 | What danger shun you, Or shall I say what grief? |
36580 | What device will make the narrative, under the circumstances, plausible? |
36580 | What did he think was attractively dramatic in his material? |
36580 | What didst not like? |
36580 | What do I bring him? |
36580 | What do we cut for? |
36580 | What do you take me for? |
36580 | What does she_ Serena._ Aunt Deborah had a want? |
36580 | What doth he with a bond That he is bound to? |
36580 | What exactly does this constantly repeated word"Scene"mean? |
36580 | What for? |
36580 | What game have you on hand, that you hunt in couples? |
36580 | What good deede shall we first remember? |
36580 | What has Hajji decided? |
36580 | What has happened to her? |
36580 | What has happened? |
36580 | What has it to do with me? |
36580 | What has n''t she courage for? |
36580 | What if I call my play_ The Irony of Life_?" |
36580 | What is Silvia''s face, but I may spy More fresh in Julia''s with a constant eye? |
36580 | What is her age? |
36580 | What is her last name? |
36580 | What is his relation to Phronie? |
36580 | What is it, in these women, that-- different as they are-- menaces the man and the artist Schilling? |
36580 | What is it? |
36580 | What is my own desert? |
36580 | What is the age of Keith Sanford and what are the relations of each of these to Professor Ward himself? |
36580 | What is the central interest of his proposed play? |
36580 | What is the matter, Aumerle? |
36580 | What is the relation of illustrative action to dramatic situation? |
36580 | What is the result? |
36580 | What is the trouble with the text in the left- hand column-- from an early draft of a play dealing with John Brown and his fortunes? |
36580 | What is your income? |
36580 | What is your object? |
36580 | What is your object? |
36580 | What ist? |
36580 | What meanes these sad and melancholy moodes? |
36580 | What must they be to give rise to such a situation-- not each by himself, but when brought together under the conditions of the scene? |
36580 | What news from Oxford? |
36580 | What number in Belgrave Square? |
36580 | What o''clock is it now? |
36580 | What ought to be done? |
36580 | What shall I do? |
36580 | What shall he do? |
36580 | What shall he give the Young Beggar? |
36580 | What should be the length of an act? |
36580 | What should they come here for? |
36580 | What think you of merely the outside of the House? |
36580 | What tongue should tell the If thou did''st ever hold me in story of our deaths, thy hart, If not from thee? |
36580 | What was it that converted the Becket of Toulouse into the Becket of Clarendon-- the splendid warrior- diplomatist into the austere prelate? |
36580 | What was the aim of this earliest dramatic dialogue? |
36580 | What were it as you wrote down that day, mistress?" |
36580 | What were you talking about? |
36580 | What white horses? |
36580 | What will they think of you? |
36580 | What will you give me now For that same handkerchief? |
36580 | What woman in the whole world? |
36580 | What woman knows? |
36580 | What would my piety be if I pardoned the dagger that tried to kill the descendant of the Prophet? |
36580 | What would other people do? |
36580 | What would ye have of me? |
36580 | What''s that? |
36580 | What''s the matter? |
36580 | What''s the postmark? |
36580 | What, then, is the difference between story and plot? |
36580 | What, then, is the work a real scenario should do? |
36580 | What, then, was lacking? |
36580 | What? |
36580 | When doe they wake? |
36580 | When was it posted? |
36580 | When was she taken there? |
36580 | Where did Hajji get this? |
36580 | Where did Old Woman leave her? |
36580 | Where do I dwell? |
36580 | Where is Zira? |
36580 | Where is the value of the street at the side? |
36580 | Where lies the difficulty? |
36580 | Where''s his mother? |
36580 | Where''s that post- card? |
36580 | Where''s the blunt? |
36580 | Where? |
36580 | Which do you know? |
36580 | Which is more popular with the masses, the man of action or the thinker? |
36580 | Which is the chief essential in good drama? |
36580 | Which is the clearer, which depends more on illustrative action? |
36580 | Which is the more alive today? |
36580 | Whither am I going? |
36580 | Who and what are they? |
36580 | Who are the violets now That strew the green lap of the new come spring? |
36580 | Who bade you stoop? |
36580 | Who but me could think of sleeping on such a night? |
36580 | Who can be so imprudent as to sing that air of Alsace? |
36580 | Who can solve the riddle? |
36580 | Who goes there? |
36580 | Who has the umbrellas? |
36580 | Who is dependent on the Sheikh? |
36580 | Who is he that he does not know of Hajji? |
36580 | Who is he? |
36580 | Who is he? |
36580 | Who is this"Anne"? |
36580 | Who is to do Richelieu? |
36580 | Who knows if the king, your father, Wishes the secret of his absence known? |
36580 | Who opens his mouth to speak such ugly words? |
36580 | Who should be trusted now, when one''s right hand Is perjured to the bosom? |
36580 | Who was Hajji before the Executioner looked with favor on him? |
36580 | Who was your father? |
36580 | Who would not suffer from it? |
36580 | Whom do I want to deceive here? |
36580 | Why call you for a sword? |
36580 | Why can I not make the sun set-- I-- the Sultan? |
36580 | Why could n''t you have died in Florence? |
36580 | Why did he smite me? |
36580 | Why did you drag yourself here all these miles-- to end it_ here_? |
36580 | Why dost thou ask? |
36580 | Why fall? |
36580 | Why go far afield searching for the phrase that shall give charm, grace, beauty? |
36580 | Why have certain monologues such a great effect? |
36580 | Why is he not cloak from chair, puts here, to wake by passionate words cloak on crossing to door some fire within me? |
36580 | Why is it unsatisfactory? |
36580 | Why is there so much emphasis on the awesomeness of Nature on the island? |
36580 | Why lie to myself? |
36580 | Why not Hajji? |
36580 | Why not study their unthinking likes and dislikes and give them what they want?" |
36580 | Why not take her to the Mosque? |
36580 | Why should he have any say in regard to Zira?" |
36580 | Why should he not act out the lines,"I take up my pen, stare into space, listen attentively,--bend over the paper... and nothingness, nothingness"? |
36580 | Why should not Heaven have so inspired the King? |
36580 | Why should not young Hermiston escape clear out of the country? |
36580 | Why should they not, then? |
36580 | Why was I so frightened? |
36580 | Why waste time on a separate scene for the lover? |
36580 | Why, if no change of scene be required, is not a play of one long act desirable? |
36580 | Why, then, should they not write at will either in the form of stories or of plays? |
36580 | Why, too, are"facial play and gestures"more objectionable than the conventional aside? |
36580 | Why? |
36580 | Why? |
36580 | Wife._ So early? |
36580 | Wife:"What have we here?" |
36580 | Will he let me go away at all? |
36580 | Will not your honours bear me company? |
36580 | Will that do? |
36580 | Will this be a good place for a placard? |
36580 | Will you still kill me?" |
36580 | Will you? |
36580 | Wilt please your lordships to withdraw a little? |
36580 | Wilt thou conceal this dark conspiracy? |
36580 | Wilt thou not hide the trespass of thine own? |
36580 | With Phryne, Or Lais, or thy Rosamund, or another? |
36580 | With all this against him, can he save it in any case?" |
36580 | With the concomitants of action and voice, the words take on finality and equal:"What greater proof could I have? |
36580 | With the disappearance of the scrappy effect, is not the result clearer? |
36580 | With which ought we to sympathize? |
36580 | Wo n''t you come_ Lady Plymdale._ My Dear too? |
36580 | Woe, how shall I now put on my praying shawl? |
36580 | Yea, look''st thou pale? |
36580 | Yes or no? |
36580 | Yet at the end of the play one queried:"What is the meaning of it all?" |
36580 | Yet why deride this refuge of the dramatist? |
36580 | You are now going to become an author? |
36580 | You are very happy tonight, are n''t you? |
36580 | You do n''t feel hurt? |
36580 | You do n''t think_ that_, eh? |
36580 | You have a town house, I hope? |
36580 | You know today is my birthday? |
36580 | You mean Dr. William Crawford, the famous specialist? |
36580 | You remember perfectly? |
36580 | You remember the play I told you about, and that splendid situation for my heroine?" |
36580 | You-- will-- not-- relent? |
36580 | Young Beggar._ Young Beggar:"What do I get for siding with you?" |
36580 | Young ones and pretty ones, I wager....(_ Laughter._) Who speaks thus? |
36580 | [ 27] How may we know whether our motivation is good or not? |
36580 | [ 3] Has he, like Brieux in_ Damaged Goods_[4] or_ The Cradle_,[5] an idea he wishes to convey, and so must write a problem play? |
36580 | [ 40] Is anything in_ Shore Acres_, by James A. Herne, more memorable than the last scene? |
36580 | [ 4]_ Idem._ CHAPTER II THE ESSENTIALS OF DRAMA: ACTION AND EMOTION What is the common aim of all dramatists? |
36580 | [ 55] Is not the irony of this group of unsatisfied or dissatisfied people singing"Count your many blessings,"fully climactic? |
36580 | [ 58] Though a new twist is given our emotions, is not something lost to the artistry of the play? |
36580 | [ 6] Ah, heart, heart why wilt thou not break? |
36580 | [ 8] If physical action in and of itself is so often dramatic, is all physical action dramatic? |
36580 | [ Hajj is gagged here:]"At once?" |
36580 | [_ Hajji( Alone)._]"So this is why I was pardoned this morning? |
36580 | \ How dare Hajji come and ask him questions? |
36580 | _ Abr._ Do you bite your thumb at us, sir? |
36580 | _ Abr._ Quarrel, sir? |
36580 | _ Abraham._ Do you bite your thumb at us, sir? |
36580 | _ Actress._ Come here? |
36580 | _ Amin._ I had spoke at first, But that--_ Mel._ But what? |
36580 | _ Anne._ And did you ever think that perhaps the Prime Minister would like to_ marry_ the Countess? |
36580 | _ Anne._ How? |
36580 | _ Anne._ Well, why does n''t he? |
36580 | _ Anne._(_ Reads._)"By the time the grilse come ashore--"_ Musgrave._(_ To himself._) Grilse? |
36580 | _ Ant._ How? |
36580 | _ Ant._ Say a man never marry, nor have children, What takes that from him? |
36580 | _ Ant._ What sayd you? |
36580 | _ Ant._ Where? |
36580 | _ Arth._ Are you sick, Hubert? |
36580 | _ B._ Why did the girl fall in love with that fellow, I wonder? |
36580 | _ Bar._ Have you had quiet guard? |
36580 | _ Barnardo._ Whose there? |
36580 | _ Beat._ They have them? |
36580 | _ Beat._ You have the tablets? |
36580 | _ Beat._(_ As if struck by a sudden idea._) How did you get free? |
36580 | _ Beat._(_ To Patty._) Where''s Grizel? |
36580 | _ Beatrice._(_ Aside._) Not this serpent gone yet? |
36580 | _ Becket._ Am I the man? |
36580 | _ Becket._ Am I the man? |
36580 | _ Becket._ But dost thou think the King Forced mine election? |
36580 | _ Becket._ Friend, am I so_ Becket._ Friend, am I so much better than thyself much better than thyself That thou shouldst help me? |
36580 | _ Becket._ Have you thought of one? |
36580 | _ Becket._ How should I know? |
36580 | _ Becket._ Well-- will you move? |
36580 | _ Becket._ Where, my liege? |
36580 | _ Belinda._ Yes, I have work''d very hard; how do you like it? |
36580 | _ Bill._ The gentleman? |
36580 | _ Braun._ Has she given no hint of any intention to go? |
36580 | _ Braun._(_ After a moment of reflection._) Has there been no change in the course of the week? |
36580 | _ Brown._ Do any feel disgrace You are, in our eyes, a noble or shame? |
36580 | _ Brown._ Do you know where he is? |
36580 | _ Burgundy._ Is it even so? |
36580 | _ Catherine._(_ Alone, the key in her hand._) Oh, what is she doing? |
36580 | _ Chris._ Ask her where she''s been? |
36580 | _ Chris._ Have you thought she may not come at all? |
36580 | _ Cinna._ What is my name? |
36580 | _ Clayton._ Called? |
36580 | _ Clayton._ How do you know it was n''t? |
36580 | _ Clayton._ Well? |
36580 | _ Clayton._ What libretto? |
36580 | _ Clayton._ What was it? |
36580 | _ Clayton._ Where is it? |
36580 | _ Col._ About? |
36580 | _ Col._ Are you fond of thunder-- I mean fond of music? |
36580 | _ Col._ Ca n''t you really? |
36580 | _ Countess._ Is this the scourge of France? |
36580 | _ Countess._ Laughest thou, wretch? |
36580 | _ Countess._ Why, art not thou the man? |
36580 | _ Daup._ Do you know him? |
36580 | _ Davus._ Of what, sir? |
36580 | _ De Lota._ Are you? |
36580 | _ De Lota._ Do you mind? |
36580 | _ Denstroude._(_ On the steps, pausing and looking back._) You cycle at Battersea tomorrow morning? |
36580 | _ Dick._ Hello-- what''s this Alec? |
36580 | _ Dick._ Of course, but where did it come from? |
36580 | _ Dick._ She-- gave it to-- them--? |
36580 | _ Dick._(_ Quietly._) What time do you expect her back? |
36580 | _ Ditto._(_ Stacking packages._) Do n''t you wish you were getting these birthday presents, Katherine? |
36580 | _ Dora._ Does it? |
36580 | _ Duch._ Alas, sir, is it to be ever thus? |
36580 | _ Duch._ All? |
36580 | _ Duch._ Beauteous? |
36580 | _ Duch._ Dare not? |
36580 | _ Duch._ Fye, fie, what''s all this? |
36580 | _ Duch._ He shall be none; We''ll keep him here; then what is that to him? |
36580 | _ Duch._ How doe you affect it? |
36580 | _ Duch._ How? |
36580 | _ Duch._ In a winding sheete? |
36580 | _ Duch._ There needs small conjuration, when your finger May doe it: thus, is it fit? |
36580 | _ Duch._ We''ll try: you are-- so to speak-- my subject yet? |
36580 | _ Duch._ What did I say? |
36580 | _ Duch._ What doe you thinke of marriage? |
36580 | _ Duch._ What is the matter, my lord? |
36580 | _ Duch._ What is the matter? |
36580 | _ Duch._ Why, York, what wilt thou do? |
36580 | _ Duch._ Why, what is it, my lord? |
36580 | _ Dunstan._ Not-- part-- from me? |
36580 | _ E._"Were you Sheikh or just a robber, then?" |
36580 | _ E._"What new slave?" |
36580 | _ Elinor._(_ To Vedah._) Are n''t we? |
36580 | _ Elise._ Yes? |
36580 | _ Elise._ Yes? |
36580 | _ Emilia._ Oh, is that all? |
36580 | _ Emilia._ What will you do with''t, that you have been so earnest To have me filch it? |
36580 | _ Enter Antonio__ Duchess._ I sent for you; sit downe: Take pen and incke, and write: are you ready? |
36580 | _ Enter Barnardo and Francisco,_ Enter two Centinels_ two Centinels__ 1._ Stand: who is that? |
36580 | _ Enter Capulet in his gown and Lady Capulet__ Capulet._ What noise is this? |
36580 | _ Enter Horatio and Marcellus__ Enter Horatio and Marcellus__ Fran._ I think I heare them, stand ho, who is there? |
36580 | _ Enter Lorenzo and Dominic_ O father Dominic, what news? |
36580 | _ Enter a Taylor, with a Bundle under his Arm__ Bully._ How now; what have we here? |
36580 | _ Executioner_:"What are you doing in the bath at this time of night?" |
36580 | _ First Blind Man._ He has n''t come yet? |
36580 | _ Fitz Urse._ Do you hear that? |
36580 | _ Fool._ Well, what dost thou call this very pretty thing? |
36580 | _ Georgie._ Was n''t it? |
36580 | _ Georgie._ Why? |
36580 | _ Gre._ Do you quarrel, sir? |
36580 | _ H._"Have I begun well?" |
36580 | _ H._"Just a robber at the time-- just a robber-- And your mother-- do you remember her?" |
36580 | _ H._(_ with enormous swagger_)"Captain?" |
36580 | _ Henriette._ For what purpose? |
36580 | _ Henriette._ What impressions? |
36580 | _ Henry._ How dost thou know I am not wedded to her? |
36580 | _ Herbert._ I do think the King Was potent in the election, and why not? |
36580 | _ Herbert._ Is it so much heavier_ Herbert._ Is it so much heavier than thy Chancellor''s robe? |
36580 | _ Herbert._ Not heavier than_ Herbert._ Not heavier than thine armour at Thoulouse? |
36580 | _ Herbert._ To please the King? |
36580 | _ Herod._ Mariamne, hear you this? |
36580 | _ Herod._(_ Taking the scroll-- at foot of steps._) Mariamne, hear you this? |
36580 | _ Hoover._ Do n''t know-- but grand opera-- I remember that and libretto--_ Clayton._ You threw it away? |
36580 | _ Hoover._ To Elinor? |
36580 | _ Hoover._ What is it? |
36580 | _ Hoover._ What''s the matter? |
36580 | _ Hoover._ With whom? |
36580 | _ Iago._ A thing for me? |
36580 | _ Iago._ Did Michael Cassio, when you woo''d my lady, Know of your love? |
36580 | _ Iago._ Hast stolen it from her? |
36580 | _ Iago._ Honest, my lord? |
36580 | _ Iago._ My noble lord,--_ Othello._ What dost thou say, Iago? |
36580 | _ Iago._ Think, my lord? |
36580 | _ Iago._ What handkerchief? |
36580 | _ Iago._ What handkerchief? |
36580 | _ Iago._(_ Snatching it._) Why, what is that to you? |
36580 | _ Inez._ And will you say that I am here too? |
36580 | _ Jack._ May I ask you then what you would advise me to do? |
36580 | _ Jane._ Break it down? |
36580 | _ Jane._ Ill? |
36580 | _ Jean._ Well? |
36580 | _ Jean._ What are they doing? |
36580 | _ Jean._ What? |
36580 | _ Johnson._ But, pray, then, how comes it to pass that they know one another no better? |
36580 | _ Johnson._ Pray, sir, who are those so very civil persons? |
36580 | _ Jul._ O, cry you mercy, sir, I have mistook;_ Pro._ But how cam''st thou by this ring? |
36580 | _ Katherine._(_ Cheerily._) Why should n''t I be, Mrs. Brice? |
36580 | _ King Argimenes._ Why do you come here? |
36580 | _ King Richard._ Give me the_ Olivia._ Why, what would you? |
36580 | _ Lady Bracknell._ In what locality did this Mr. James, or Thomas, Cardew come across this ordinary hand- bag? |
36580 | _ Lady Bracknell._ Lady Bloxham? |
36580 | _ Lady Bracknell._ The cloak- room at Victoria Station? |
36580 | _ Lady Bracknell._ Where did the gentleman who had a first- class ticket for this seaside resort find you? |
36580 | _ Lady Bracknell._(_ Makes a note in her book._) In land or investments? |
36580 | _ Lady Brute._(_ Aside._) Do n''t answer him.--Well, what do you advise me? |
36580 | _ Lady Jedburgh._ What a fascinating woman Mrs. Erlynne_ Lady Plymdale._ Really? |
36580 | _ Lady Plymdale._ Really? |
36580 | _ Lady Windermere._(_ Standing_(_ Lady Windermere discovered_ by the fireplace._) Why does n''t at fireplace, L., crosses he come? |
36580 | _ Lau._ What ought he to have to drink? |
36580 | _ Lord Darlington._ No? |
36580 | _ Lord Rake._ The Doctor''s Gown!--Hark you, Knight, you wo n''t stick at abusing the Clergy, will you? |
36580 | _ Lord Windermere._ What do_ Lord Windermere._ What do you mean by coming here this you mean by coming here this morning? |
36580 | _ Luitolfo._ Do you see? |
36580 | _ Lukyn._ Come on? |
36580 | _ Lukyn._ What do you mean? |
36580 | _ Lukyn._ You''ll dare to lock us up all night? |
36580 | _ Lukyn._(_ Horrified._) By George, is it? |
36580 | _ Madam Helseth._ Do you feel the draught, Miss, where you''re sitting? |
36580 | _ Madame Perrichon._ Are you going on in that strain? |
36580 | _ Man- servant._(_ Standing over the bag._) Is there anything more, ma''am--? |
36580 | _ Maravon._ You have probably never heard of the"Lampadophories,"have you? |
36580 | _ Maria._ What can I say? |
36580 | _ Mary._ The kitten, Miss_ Mary._ The kitten, Miss Strone? |
36580 | _ Mirabell._ Does that please you? |
36580 | _ Natalie._(_ Impatiently._) Well? |
36580 | _ Nina._(_ Looking at a cheque._) What is this cheque? |
36580 | _ Nora._ And I? |
36580 | _ Nora._ And how did it turn_ Nora._ Millions of women have out? |
36580 | _ Nora._ How, saved? |
36580 | _ Nora._ You mean I would_ Nora._ You mean I would never have accepted such a never have accepted such a sacrifice? |
36580 | _ Noyes._ My fathah? |
36580 | _ Noyes._(_ Looking at his hands._) Such as-- trade? |
36580 | _ Othello._ What dost thou think? |
36580 | _ Othello._ Why of thy thought, Iago? |
36580 | _ Peasant._ What wouldst thou now, my sad one, ever fraught With toil to lighten my toil? |
36580 | _ Percy._ What do you think I said? |
36580 | _ Perrichon._ And my panama? |
36580 | _ Perrichon._ And the carpet bag? |
36580 | _ Perrichon._ What do you mean? |
36580 | _ Pickle Herring._ You see and you see, and what do you see? |
36580 | _ Pol._ And then sir, doos a this, What was I about to say, a doos, what was I about to say? |
36580 | _ Pol._ Wherefore should you do this? |
36580 | _ Policeman B._ Would the barrel be a good place to put a notice up? |
36580 | _ Polonius._ Mad for thy love? |
36580 | _ Polonius._ What said he? |
36580 | _ Potter._ John Mildmay the master of this house? |
36580 | _ Pro._ How? |
36580 | _ Pro._ Where is that ring, boy? |
36580 | _ Rains._ Is this all? |
36580 | _ Rainsford._ With me, sir? |
36580 | _ Ray._ Has the temperature been taken? |
36580 | _ Ray._ His face is flushed? |
36580 | _ Ray._ How much? |
36580 | _ Ray._ The cough? |
36580 | _ Ray._ The doctor gave you a prescription? |
36580 | _ Ray._ The fever? |
36580 | _ Rebecca._ Do_ you_ believe in them? |
36580 | _ Rebecca._ Now what_ is_ all this about the white horse, Madam Helseth? |
36580 | _ Rebecca._ What makes you fancy that? |
36580 | _ Rebecca._(_ Hastily._) Where? |
36580 | _ Rebecca._(_ Looks at her._) The dead? |
36580 | _ Rebecca._(_ Looks out._) That man there? |
36580 | _ Rosalie._ Madame has not slept? |
36580 | _ Rosmer._ White horses? |
36580 | _ Ruth._ What do you want here? |
36580 | _ S._"The deed?" |
36580 | _ Sabine._ Have n''t you noticed that she is beginning to look like a governess? |
36580 | _ Sam._(_ Aside to Gre._) Is the law of our side, if I say ay? |
36580 | _ Second Blind Man._ Where is the mad woman, and her child? |
36580 | _ Senator Morse._... What great motive--? |
36580 | _ Several_ Man''s...._ Others_ The living one''s.... And we? |
36580 | _ Severine._ But he was alone? |
36580 | _ Severine._ It is some one whom I know? |
36580 | _ Severine._ She? |
36580 | _ Severine._ Tell me, is it true? |
36580 | _ Severine._ Valentine? |
36580 | _ Severine._ Who was the woman? |
36580 | _ Simms._(_ Grumbling._) Fo''dat young good- fo''-nuffin hawg- grubbah t''swallow w''en he done come home? |
36580 | _ Sir Brice._ No? |
36580 | _ Sir Brice._ Simple cutting? |
36580 | _ Sir Brice._(_ Stopping him._) Once for all, will you give me a chance of paying back the six thousand pounds that Lady Skene has borrowed from you? |
36580 | _ Sir John._ Is there? |
36580 | _ Sir Will._ Not mine, sure? |
36580 | _ Sir Will._ What signifies his affection to me, or how can I be proud of a place in a heart where every sharper and coxcomb find an easy entrance? |
36580 | _ Smith._ Where''s the necessity of that, Mr. Bayes? |
36580 | _ Talbot._ Here is the Talbot; who would speak with him? |
36580 | _ The Sheikh from the"Who uses my name in vain?" |
36580 | _ The Very Old Blind Man._ Does any one know where we are? |
36580 | _ Theramenes._ And where, prince, will you look for him? |
36580 | _ Theramenes._ May I, then, learn the meaning of your flight? |
36580 | _ Third Blind Man._ And the beautiful blind girl, where is she? |
36580 | _ Third Blind Man._ Where are you sitting?--Will you come over by us? |
36580 | _ Third Blind Man._ Why did he separate us? |
36580 | _ Ulrich._ Do n''t you understand, my dear Jean? |
36580 | _ Val._(_ Rising._) Rise? |
36580 | _ Verdelet._(_ Aside to Poirier._) Are you going to allow him to make fun of you like that? |
36580 | _ W._"And be strangled myself?" |
36580 | _ W._"Escape?" |
36580 | _ W._"So she''s your daughter? |
36580 | _ W._"Your daughter?" |
36580 | _ Waiter._(_ Brightening perceptibly._) Coffee, miss? |
36580 | _ Witwoud._ Is that the way? |
36580 | _ Yel._ Go to,--you''ll pardon me? |
36580 | _ Yel._ Have you the wideness of her finger, sir? |
36580 | _ Yel._ How, how? |
36580 | _ Yel._ Of what weight, sir? |
36580 | _ Yel._ Say you so, sir? |
36580 | _ Yel._ Will you, i''faith? |
36580 | _ Yel._ You''ll steal away some man''s daughter: am I near you? |
36580 | _ York._ What seal is that, that hangs without thy bosom? |
36580 | _ Young For._ Do you not know me? |
36580 | _ letters._) Is he coming? |
36580 | and, Where put out the eies of Arthur lies your grief? |
36580 | anything happened to Hopeful? |
36580 | both mine eyes? |
36580 | but also the change to that infinitely more dramatic"And I?" |
36580 | but"Can any blow he will strike overcome the seemingly effective plans of the Countess?" |
36580 | but"Will my audience believe it true on sight or because of the treatment I can give it?" |
36580 | but''How is one to know which is one''s real self when one feels so different with different people?''" |
36580 | but, first,"Does place or time, or do both at all determine the action of the piece?" |
36580 | but,"Which of these students has any creative power that is individual? |
36580 | do they eate, Heare musicke, goe a hunting, and bee merrie, As wee that live? |
36580 | door? |
36580 | drop Out at mine eyes in tender womanish_ Hub._ No newes of death, but tears.-- tidings of more hate, Can you read it? |
36580 | found-- I mean--_ Natalie._(_ Impatiently._) Well? |
36580 | given my own wife''s name up to disgrace and shame--? |
36580 | great friend of yours? |
36580 | he finds the transitional scenes which take him back into an earlier episode; in the answer to"What will they become?" |
36580 | her at all? |
36580 | holds then? |
36580 | in time to which the procession enters.__ Macaire._ Well, friends, what cheer? |
36580 | instrument, These eyes that never did, nor To sound the tromp that causeth never shall hell triumph? |
36580 | is it not? |
36580 | is there time? |
36580 | is there time?" |
36580 | is this the man? |
36580 | jun._ Mass, that''s true: posy? |
36580 | jun._ Pardon you? |
36580 | jun._ Shall I make bold With your finger, gentlewoman? |
36580 | jun._ What, sir? |
36580 | long expostulation, Heapes up more griefe, than_ Hub._ Is this your promise? |
36580 | makes he thee his out mine eyes? |
36580 | morning? |
36580 | my sovereign lord, why wilt thou My lord, my life, not speak With full great grief, To me that am thy mother in pain for Hanges as a thief, thy wrong? |
36580 | noise is this? |
36580 | nor,"May it with ingenuity be guessed from the settings and costumes?" |
36580 | not eight hours out of twenty- four? |
36580 | on Thursday, wo n''t you come too? |
36580 | play by a letter from Whom shall they get? |
36580 | secondly,"Will any intelligent observer be vague as to place or time, as the play develops?" |
36580 | shall I leave behind me? |
36580 | silence._) Do they treat you well here John? |
36580 | sister?] |
36580 | son? |
36580 | sowing in my closset, Lord Hamlet with his doublet_ Corambis._ Why, what''s the all unbrac''d, matter my Ofelia? |
36580 | such a change in nature, So great an alteration in a_ Polonius._ With what i''th Prince, name of God? |
36580 | than thy Chancellor''s robe? |
36580 | the news? |
36580 | the women are opposite us? |
36580 | thine armour at Thoulouse? |
36580 | thou as they proceede, Conclude their judgement with so_ Arth._ Is there no remedy? |
36580 | thy blood? |
36580 | turn thy back and run? |
36580 | what do you here alone? |
36580 | what is his Christian name? |
36580 | what need you be so boisterous- rough? |
36580 | what, in blacke? |
36580 | where the Sheikh gives_ H._"You mean when I was-- Sheikh?" |
36580 | where? |
36580 | which replaces Nora''s"How, saved?" |
36580 | who hath relieved you? |
36580 | who is within there? |
36580 | why was I so long? |
36580 | you do, again, Lord Windermere? |
36580 | your Honour to take the benefite of the faire evening? |
36580 | your lordship to your rest? |
36580 | | But Zira? |
36580 | | But his enemy''s money? |
36580 | | Has he lost his power? |
36580 | | What has Sultan done to Executioner? |
36580 | | Who was Zira''s mother? |
58546 | Mary,says Dicky to me,"do n''t you wish that I was five little b''ys and Dot was five little girls? |
58546 | Tell us, ye birds, why come ye here, Into this stable, poor and drear? |
58546 | What shall we give? |
58546 | ''Ere, Mr. h''O''Brien, will you kindly h''assist me? |
58546 | ''Oo''ll be the''erald an''tell''em we''re comin''? |
58546 | ''Ow could we be h''anything but tired and h''angry, I''d like to h''arsk, with such a boss as old Pepper? |
58546 | ''Ow''s the kids this morning? |
58546 | ''Tis sort of lonesome like, now, ai n''t it, John? |
58546 | A fairy- tale, Gillian? |
58546 | Afraid of_ what_, Patience? |
58546 | Ai n''t I done everything? |
58546 | Ai n''t it handsome? |
58546 | Ai n''t she the gay girl in red and green plaid? |
58546 | Ai n''t this a night? |
58546 | All her vases are broken now, and if she had another, Maggie''d just smash it, too, so what''s the use in giving it to her? |
58546 | All the cows, and the sheep, and the little, little lambs? |
58546 | All those for_ you_, Minty- Malviny? |
58546 | Am I to be kept waiting here all day? |
58546 | An''did they do that, thin? |
58546 | An''does he think he desarves to get thim back, I''d like to know? |
58546 | An''what fer need they be wishin''there was tin of thim to mess the house up worse? |
58546 | And Dutch, and everybody? |
58546 | And did I go for to rare and tear about it? |
58546 | And did you? |
58546 | And has n''t it been so every other day in the year since? |
58546 | And if thee broke it, who knows if dear Mother could ever get a new one? |
58546 | And is he a good boy, as boys go? |
58546 | And may not the King''s subject walk upon the King''s highway, Sir Cocksparrow? |
58546 | And now, Mrs. Bonnet, what''s to be done? |
58546 | And oh, could n''t you let me come to your fire a little while to warm myself? |
58546 | And one of''em happened to get broke? |
58546 | And was n''t everything in it in perfect order? |
58546 | And were n''t all the cracks stuffed tight with candy and nuts and raisins? |
58546 | And what does that help, I''d like to know? |
58546 | And what is your name? |
58546 | And who do you think I am, boy, that you presume to want to work in my house? |
58546 | And why is Mother so-- so unkind to poor cousin Phyllis? |
58546 | And with Father away on his ship, who could take care of thee? |
58546 | And wo n''t she_ look_ jolly surprised, too? |
58546 | And you made toast for Him-- where_ is_ His toast, Gretel? |
58546 | And you saw him? |
58546 | And you think you could manage things better, do you? |
58546 | And you-- if you could have more than one, which would you choose, after the red one? |
58546 | And your name is Miss Ann? |
58546 | And, Peter? |
58546 | And_ what_ is it supposed I shall do about it? |
58546 | Angels? |
58546 | Any trouble with icebergs? |
58546 | Are her hands clean? |
58546 | Are n''t you coming to wrap up your things? |
58546 | Are n''t you glad we''ve come to live in this village, Mother? |
58546 | Are n''t you sorry for him, Daisy? |
58546 | Are the others waked yet, Mother? |
58546 | Are there a hundred orphans? |
58546 | Are there any more boys, Gregory? |
58546 | Are there many more dishes, Patience, dear? |
58546 | Are those your Christmas presents? |
58546 | Are we going to see them? |
58546 | Are you a good boy? |
58546 | Are you all fixed? |
58546 | Are you all right? |
58546 | Are you at the head of your class? |
58546 | Are you both safe? |
58546 | Are you kind to animals, Robin? |
58546 | Are you quite sure? |
58546 | Are you sure I''ll like it very much? |
58546 | Are you sure he is n''t coming? |
58546 | Are you the boy that my papa gets his papers of? |
58546 | Are you warm enough? |
58546 | Are you, dear? |
58546 | Are you_ sure_ it is the Christ- Child, Gretel? |
58546 | Are you_ sure_, Sascha? |
58546 | Art mad? |
58546 | Ask such a question about darkies just before Christmas? |
58546 | At the foot? |
58546 | At the wax doll bed, did you say, Hilarion? |
58546 | Be a good lesson for him?... |
58546 | Be ye knockin''the boss again? |
58546 | Bethink thee, Rafe-- what are their names? |
58546 | Bless me, what''s the boy talking about? |
58546 | Bless the child, is she asleep? |
58546 | Boys, have you seen her? |
58546 | Boys, how can you be so naughty? |
58546 | Bread? |
58546 | Brother Fritz, could n''t_ we_ show him the way? |
58546 | But I''m hungry,--how am I going to get anything to eat? |
58546 | But ai n''t there treats and treats? |
58546 | But are n''t there any holes in your mittens? |
58546 | But are your feet warm? |
58546 | But can he be here, think you, Diccon? |
58546 | But does n''t Santa Claus fill your stockings? |
58546 | But how can we do it, Mother? |
58546 | But how did you come to the village? |
58546 | But how is Santa Claus going to know in time? |
58546 | But how shall I make it? |
58546 | But look at her in another light, and surely she is a miracle-- do you not see? |
58546 | But tell me, children, what doth it mean that you were out of your beds at such a strange hour? |
58546 | But what do you think he would like? |
58546 | But what in the world has she been doing to herself? |
58546 | But what of the Prince? |
58546 | But when he found out about it, he felt very badly, indeed,----[_ to_ TED] did n''t he? |
58546 | But whence came you, Rufus? |
58546 | But where is there a hundred of anything? |
58546 | But where_ is_ Eaglefeather, Myles? |
58546 | But why did Mistress Wells make thee think of Christmas? |
58546 | But you are comfortable here, are n''t you? |
58546 | But you said it was a treat, did n''t you, Sally? |
58546 | But, Gillian, what was it thy grandam told about the portraits? |
58546 | But, Mother, do n''t you love me? |
58546 | But, Mother, is n''t a birthday always a happy day? |
58546 | But, Mother, why do the good fathers never allow us to have a Christmas? |
58546 | But, Sister, how will Santa Claus know which is which? |
58546 | Ca n''t I take it, in my hand? |
58546 | Ca n''t we come now, Mother? |
58546 | Ca n''t we do nothin''about it? |
58546 | Ca n''t you remember anything? |
58546 | Ca n''t you talk about anything else? |
58546 | Can I give them the nice things I have brought for them? |
58546 | Can my eyes deceive me? |
58546 | Can she tell stories? |
58546 | Can you explain it, Mr. Bird? |
58546 | Can you think of anything that would be an improvement-- for a Christmas celebration, you know? |
58546 | Children, have you eaten your porridge? |
58546 | Children, what are you doing? |
58546 | Come along, and I''ll help you to water those tin soldiers over there-- you did n''t get that done, did you? |
58546 | Come and help me, will you? |
58546 | Come, now, Mary, you do n''t mean to say you want me to punish him on Christmas morning? |
58546 | Could n''t you wait for him? |
58546 | Could you give me something for him? |
58546 | D''you ever see any? |
58546 | D''you see that, Tibbie? |
58546 | Dear cousin Phyllis, wo n''t you stay and help us-- and tell us why everyone is so sad? |
58546 | Dicky, are you sure you are warm enough? |
58546 | Did I ax ye if ye saw it now? |
58546 | Did I forbid him to serve his King? |
58546 | Did he scare you? |
58546 | Did my little Allison wreathe all this long piece? |
58546 | Did n''t I dress the hundred of them for children, and little poor children, too? |
58546 | Did n''t I_ tell_ you to be careful? |
58546 | Did n''t I_ tell_ you to put a hook and eye in the neck of this? |
58546 | Did n''t I_ tell_ you? |
58546 | Did she scrape her boots thoroughly on the mat before she came up? |
58546 | Did the Baron bring the little Prince and Princess with him? |
58546 | Did yez iver see annything loike the change in the Boss? |
58546 | Did yez tell them about the show, thin? |
58546 | Did you call, Brother Anselmus? |
58546 | Did you do this? |
58546 | Did you ever rob a bird''s nest? |
58546 | Did you ever see such a sight? |
58546 | Did you have any supper? |
58546 | Did you like it? |
58546 | Did you punish him? |
58546 | Did you ring, M''sieu Henri? |
58546 | Did you say they were coming here, Sascha? |
58546 | Did you tell Semyon, Sascha? |
58546 | Didst not hear my Father tell her she must n''t talk of it? |
58546 | Do n''t I work and work all the time? |
58546 | Do n''t they make a fine show? |
58546 | Do n''t this shoe seem a bit tight, ma''am? |
58546 | Do n''t we? |
58546 | Do n''t you feel well? |
58546 | Do n''t you know enough to see that you ought to have waited to ask me, instead of running such a risk? |
58546 | Do n''t you know he''s an old man, oh, hundreds of years old? |
58546 | Do n''t you like to watch the toys grow? |
58546 | Do n''t you like''em? |
58546 | Do n''t you see me sweeping? |
58546 | Do n''t you see that if she had a hundred dolls, of wax or china or rags, she would still have a stupid Christmas? |
58546 | Do n''t you think Jim would be a nice brother, Dot? |
58546 | Do n''t you think people were very happy on that Day? |
58546 | Do n''t you think that when people want to be happy and glad, everyone ought to be good and pleasant, too? |
58546 | Do n''t you think you could, just for this once? |
58546 | Do n''t you think you''d better go and have your hands and faces washed? |
58546 | Do n''t you want to draw on it, Jim? |
58546 | Do n''t you want to go again, Polly? |
58546 | Do n''t you want to take Polly down? |
58546 | Do n''t you wish he''d come and live at the farm, Sonny? |
58546 | Do n''t you wish to- morrow would come quick? |
58546 | Do they say so? |
58546 | Do you always speak the truth, Gilbert? |
58546 | Do you believe it is as bright as the star of Bethlehem? |
58546 | Do you believe it_ is_ the Christ- Child, Gretel? |
58546 | Do you call that being grateful? |
58546 | Do you have to work on Christmas day? |
58546 | Do you mean you are going to show me how? |
58546 | Do you mean you earn your own living? |
58546 | Do you remember, Tibbie, where they all belonged? |
58546 | Do you suppose I could? |
58546 | Do you think I could have one servant about me clothed in such rags as yours? |
58546 | Do you think his pack will hold out? |
58546 | Do you think my pack will hold out for so many? |
58546 | Do you think there''d be any harm in it, if I was to bring her over and let her get one peep? |
58546 | Do you want the treat right off? |
58546 | Do you, Toinette? |
58546 | Does n''t thee remember how he taught us to shoot, and make baskets for thee and the girls? |
58546 | Does n''t thee wish it was Father''s vessel, Roger? |
58546 | Does n''t thee wish so, Desire? |
58546 | Does thee mean truly, Mother? |
58546 | Does thee think it would make it any easier for her to be good, Roger? |
58546 | Does thee think, lad, that savage though thou art, I would drive thee out into the bitter night? |
58546 | Dost see, woman, how swiftly thy ungodly example doth work to corrupt these wenches? |
58546 | Dost think the Christmas boughs in England could have been prettier? |
58546 | Dot, do you want my handkerchief? |
58546 | Dutch, you are n''t worth your salt-- can''t you take care of your stuff? |
58546 | Fern seed? |
58546 | Fern- seed broth? |
58546 | Firm like yourself? |
58546 | Following straight the Noël star? |
58546 | For little children:"Can There Be a Sweeter Story?" |
58546 | Got a Times, boy? |
58546 | Has anything happened? |
58546 | Has n''t he always hunted wolves, every winter? |
58546 | Has n''t it been too hard for poor Brother Sebastian, Brethren? |
58546 | Hast ever seen them, Gillian? |
58546 | Have I not given command that my son''s name shall not pass the lips of any of my people? |
58546 | Have n''t I always maintained that there are two ways of looking at anything? |
58546 | Have n''t you ever seen him? |
58546 | Have n''t you got any sled? |
58546 | Have n''t you heard the parson tell the story of how the bears ate the children who mocked Elisha? |
58546 | Have the dog and the monkey got some other names, too? |
58546 | Have they heard of the tree? |
58546 | Have they, my dear? |
58546 | Have ye tested the walls? |
58546 | Have you a moment to spare for a stranger in the country? |
58546 | Have you got something for everybody? |
58546 | Have you got the papers? |
58546 | Have you lost your way? |
58546 | Have you never heard of the Babushka, Baron? |
58546 | Have you sold all your papers? |
58546 | He can stay as long as he likes, may n''t he, Mother? |
58546 | He wants them all filled with presents for himself.... What''s that you say? |
58546 | Heard whom talking, Diccon? |
58546 | Here, Tim, you run out and telephone to---- Simpson, is it? |
58546 | Hey? |
58546 | Hiding from me? |
58546 | How about lessons? |
58546 | How about the service-- are the maids attentive, Laura? |
58546 | How can I be happy? |
58546 | How could I be cold with a great big coat like this one? |
58546 | How dare you enter this house whence you went but to disgrace my name? |
58546 | How darest thou, with these baubles and fripperies, bring temptation into our very midst? |
58546 | How did thee find Mistress Wells, Mother? |
58546 | How did you get lost? |
58546 | How do you do, Toinette? |
58546 | How do you do, sir, how do you do? |
58546 | How do you do, sir, how do you do? |
58546 | How do you know he did? |
58546 | How do you sell''em, Dutch? |
58546 | How does thee know? |
58546 | How in the world did you get in here? |
58546 | How knew you this? |
58546 | How would you like that? |
58546 | How would you like to go and live with her, and wait on her, and help mind her baby? |
58546 | How''d dat chile''s sho''t legs ebber do ten mile, anyhow? |
58546 | How''d you say you come? |
58546 | How''ll they know? |
58546 | How''s this? |
58546 | Hungry, Eaglefeather? |
58546 | I brought it last night, to have it all ready, and I think it ought to hold enough for all, do n''t you? |
58546 | I do treat you shamefully, do n''t I? |
58546 | I hope you''s feelin''pretty peart? |
58546 | I said, have ye sane it? |
58546 | I say, Miss Catherine, do you think anybody''d mind? |
58546 | I suppose it''s for some Christmas Tree? |
58546 | I told little Prudence she was too young to understand, yet with my years, am I quite sure that I understand it myself? |
58546 | I wish you would stop that everlasting work and come here and tell me why you''re sorry? |
58546 | I wonder if it''s too late to get some children now? |
58546 | I wonder who keeps house for Santa Claus? |
58546 | I wonder why he likes to come down chimneys? |
58546 | I''d just like to know who has a better right to make a noise than I? |
58546 | If Santa Claus has to remember all the letters all the children in the world write him every year, should n''t you think his head must ache? |
58546 | In good sooth, how can I tell? |
58546 | In my spick- span new mittens that Aunt Jennie made me? |
58546 | Invisible? |
58546 | Is all ready, Roger? |
58546 | Is he diligent? |
58546 | Is it a circus, Sally? |
58546 | Is it a circus? |
58546 | Is it freaks, Sally? |
58546 | Is it made of sugar? |
58546 | Is marbles worth a dollar apiece? |
58546 | Is my hat on straight? |
58546 | Is n''t it lots of fun to sell papers and earn money? |
58546 | Is n''t it, Mother? |
58546 | Is n''t it_ beautiful_, Eaglefeather? |
58546 | Is n''t that fine? |
58546 | Is n''t this boy named Peter? |
58546 | Is she? |
58546 | Is that pink and blue? |
58546 | Is that so? |
58546 | Is the Hundred there? |
58546 | Is this like the boughs thee remembers when thee was a little girl, Mother? |
58546 | Is this the Christmas spirit we talked of but now? |
58546 | Is you gomf''table? |
58546 | Is your house hard to find? |
58546 | Is_ this_ the Christmas day, Mother? |
58546 | It could n''t be nicer, could it, Dick? |
58546 | It is n''t? |
58546 | It is not so naughty as some things you might do, but it is making other people unhappy, and do n''t you think that is pretty bad? |
58546 | It''s better than just comin''in like other folks, is n''t it, Bub? |
58546 | Jim, is to- morrow Christmas? |
58546 | Jiminy Christopher, how_ can_ she want five more? |
58546 | Just a week from to- day? |
58546 | Just plumb full? |
58546 | Law, what would I have done when I was a young one, if I''d seen that? |
58546 | Laws, honey, you didn''''spec''to fin''no circus dis time o''night? |
58546 | Let him try it?... |
58546 | Let''s see if you''ve got it now? |
58546 | Listen, do you hear anything? |
58546 | Look at her, the darling little girl, is n''t the very meaning and sweetness of all Christmas in her loving, trusting, innocent little face? |
58546 | Love you, my child? |
58546 | MRS. D. The bride? |
58546 | Marianna, why would n''t Peter try? |
58546 | Marie, how ever can I set the table with you and Jeannette in the way, I''d like to know? |
58546 | May I let him in? |
58546 | May n''t I put it in the cup that''s broken and light it? |
58546 | May we, Mother? |
58546 | May you come in? |
58546 | Maybe you''ll do us the honor to tell us your names? |
58546 | Mayhap thou thinkest_ my_ business is ever of small consequence? |
58546 | Mercy, mercy, what is all this about? |
58546 | Miss Catherine----[_ hesitates, then continues enthusiastically_]----have you seen''em in there? |
58546 | Mother Madelon, may I come in? |
58546 | Mother said it was the Lord''s birthday, and we could n''t help being glad about that, could we? |
58546 | Mother, do n''t they love me at all? |
58546 | Mother, do n''t you think it is too dark to spin? |
58546 | Mother, does n''t thee sometimes wish we were all back in England once more? |
58546 | Mr. Wright, how have these children been behaving themselves? |
58546 | Must Eaglefeather go now? |
58546 | Must n''t we hasten? |
58546 | My mother says I''ve been a good girl-- aren''t you glad? |
58546 | Name? |
58546 | Naughty? |
58546 | No, I do n''t believe he has, for then why do they let him do all the work? |
58546 | No?... |
58546 | Not after all the bitter cold winters and hardships here, Mother? |
58546 | Not anything for anybody else? |
58546 | Not make a noise? |
58546 | Not nothing for Ben? |
58546 | Now I wonder if he would do that? |
58546 | Now what''s to do? |
58546 | Now, Miss Tibbs, what kind of scent will you have on your hands? |
58546 | Now, Mother, ca n''t we sing our carol? |
58546 | Now, ca n''t we have another song? |
58546 | Now, dear, is n''t there_ one more_ you would like? |
58546 | Now, do n''t you think Kitty''s altogether too big for dolls? |
58546 | Now, do you suppose you can find anything for her? |
58546 | Now, what may be the meaning of_ this_? |
58546 | Now, whoever heard of such naughtiness? |
58546 | Oh, Bub, I think our dad would like this, do n''t you? |
58546 | Oh, Diccon, Diccon,--what can they want here? |
58546 | Oh, Diccon, dost believe it? |
58546 | Oh, Dick, I thought we were going to run over that poor gray cat, did n''t you? |
58546 | Oh, Dimitri, why did n''t we beg the Babushka to take us home to the castle? |
58546 | Oh, Dot, is n''t this fun? |
58546 | Oh, Gillian,_ do_ they? |
58546 | Oh, Henri, what is it? |
58546 | Oh, Kitty, what shall we do when Santa Clans comes and asks us how we liked them? |
58546 | Oh, Marianna, do n''t you wonder whom the good Fathers will choose? |
58546 | Oh, Matrena, who can it be? |
58546 | Oh, Mister Santa Claus, am I? |
58546 | Oh, Mother dear, do you hear the singing? |
58546 | Oh, Mother, do you truly think so? |
58546 | Oh, Mother, must we stop now? |
58546 | Oh, Myles, wo n''t thee please put the dishes up for us? |
58546 | Oh, Patience, does n''t thee wish Mother''d come home? |
58546 | Oh, Peter, see that place where there is n''t any dolly? |
58546 | Oh, Rafe, think''st that Gillian speaketh true? |
58546 | Oh, Rafe, what dost mean us to do? |
58546 | Oh, Rafe, what was that? |
58546 | Oh, Sal, what''s that? |
58546 | Oh, Tibbie, what''ll I do? |
58546 | Oh, Tibbie----[_ reaching the end of her good- nature_]----why did I ever think of bringing you here? |
58546 | Oh, Uncle, dear Uncle, surely thou knowest some secret place in this old house where he can lie safe until danger be past? |
58546 | Oh, are you really a fairy? |
58546 | Oh, are you? |
58546 | Oh, children, are you there? |
58546 | Oh, dear, what shall I do about it? |
58546 | Oh, did Eaglefeather make these lovely baskets for us? |
58546 | Oh, do I dare use them? |
58546 | Oh, do n''t you wish it was two_ girls_ the Fathers wanted? |
58546 | Oh, do you mean to go around wherever I like without being seen? |
58546 | Oh, do you suppose he would like it? |
58546 | Oh, do you think the little Christ- Child can see it now, Mother? |
58546 | Oh, is n''t it''most time to hang up the stockings? |
58546 | Oh, is that yerself? |
58546 | Oh, no, Sally, do n''t you remember? |
58546 | Oh, what dost think the Roundhead villains will do to us? |
58546 | Oh, what''s this? |
58546 | Oh, what? |
58546 | Oh, where can he have gone? |
58546 | Oh, where? |
58546 | Oh, you do? |
58546 | Oh,_ did_ you? |
58546 | Oh,_ will_ you, really? |
58546 | Or hath thy grandam? |
58546 | Or is she still far from that pinnacle of elegance to which she aspires? |
58546 | Peter? |
58546 | Phil, did you ever see anything so perfectly grand as that last window? |
58546 | Phyllis, why art idling here with the children? |
58546 | Please connect me with Santa Claus.... Hello, is that you, Santa? |
58546 | Please, mister, is the circus all over? |
58546 | Please-- please, sir, could you tell me the way back to the town? |
58546 | Post, sir? |
58546 | Presents? |
58546 | Pretty severe on his brothers and sisters and parents, was n''t it? |
58546 | Punish him? |
58546 | Really and truly? |
58546 | Right down this chimney? |
58546 | Robin, what are you doing? |
58546 | Roger, is the door fast? |
58546 | Rufus, saidst thou? |
58546 | Run away? |
58546 | S''pose he would? |
58546 | S''pose the boss''ll let us do a stunt like that? |
58546 | S''posing we write a list of the things we want him to bring, too? |
58546 | SIR G. What meaneth the child? |
58546 | SIR G. What would you of me, my men? |
58546 | SIR G. What, then, would you of me? |
58546 | SIR G. You have taken up arms against your King? |
58546 | Santa Claus, have you got the whip and ashes? |
58546 | Say, Tom, do n''t you wish we could_ see_ Santa Claus? |
58546 | Second, then? |
58546 | Seen my duster, Tom? |
58546 | Shall I get you a paper to write things down, so you wo n''t forget? |
58546 | Shall I tell Santa Claus to make it out of rattan, Master Tom? |
58546 | Shall it be Violet, or Roossian Empress, or-- what''s this other?--Lilass Blank? |
58546 | Shall we go over the bump? |
58546 | Shall we measure our garlands? |
58546 | She looks a little like me, does n''t she, with her hair parted in the middle? |
58546 | She said that you were naughty last night? |
58546 | She taken, too? |
58546 | She''s particular, ai n''t she? |
58546 | Should I make my gifts to those who need,''Twould become a time of general greed, When all would think,"What shall we get?" |
58546 | Should you like her as well? |
58546 | Should you? |
58546 | Sing to you? |
58546 | So you want to look out-- see? |
58546 | So you''ve been finding out that it is n''t so easy, after all, to give people what they want, have you? |
58546 | Speaks gushingly._] Are n''t they lovely, the hundred of them? |
58546 | Suppose we say this one with the forget- me- nots? |
58546 | Sure you did your best, Tim?--you did n''t make him mad, maybe? |
58546 | Surely I would rather look pretty myself than have my dress look pretty, would n''t I? |
58546 | TOM_ sits down by the fire, holding his knee._] What do you want? |
58546 | Tell us how you found out where we were, Father? |
58546 | That all? |
58546 | That one? |
58546 | That''s to take place this afternoon? |
58546 | The Babushka? |
58546 | The Christmas Monks? |
58546 | The Peter who works in our garden? |
58546 | The Tower, saidst thou, Rafe? |
58546 | The doll is broke, ai n''t it? |
58546 | The good Fathers have already held two examinations and, will you believe it? |
58546 | The poor old Babushka wondered very much, and said:"Who is the little child, my lord, that you should take such a long, hard journey to find him?" |
58546 | The singing in our meeting on the Sabbath is n''t very joyful, is it, Myles? |
58546 | The venison pasty, Rafe? |
58546 | Thee surely wo n''t work any more to- night? |
58546 | Then he does n''t often do anything wrong? |
58546 | Then will you sing it for us, little maids? |
58546 | Then you are not like other boys? |
58546 | Then, Tom, how_ could_ you be so naughty? |
58546 | There are n''t any bears or wolves coming, Pavlo? |
58546 | There''s no need of me staying, is there? |
58546 | They are n''t, are they, Gillian? |
58546 | This is so cozy-- do you think you_ must_ rout me out? |
58546 | Thou afeard, Diccon? |
58546 | Thou''lt let me come too, Rafe? |
58546 | Thou''lt not go back, then, Mother? |
58546 | To work for me, Rich Johann, who has many servants in his house, to carry out his commands and do his work and run his errands? |
58546 | Toinette, how would you like to be invisible? |
58546 | Toinette, will you show me how to fasten this off? |
58546 | Tom, do you want me to wrap up the knife for you? |
58546 | Truly? |
58546 | Und vat does ve get oud of ut? |
58546 | Und ven der vork is ofer, ve do n''t gets noddings enough to eats-- ain''d? |
58546 | Vot I tells you? |
58546 | Vot you t''ink you do-- hein? |
58546 | Vot you take me for, hein? |
58546 | Wait a minute-- have you any fruit in your rooms? |
58546 | Want something to eat? |
58546 | Was Christmas like this in Old England? |
58546 | Was anything broken? |
58546 | Was ever heard tell of such insolence? |
58546 | Was it excuse, ye said? |
58546 | Was it the front door or the back door? |
58546 | Was n''t everything in it that you asked for? |
58546 | Was n''t that a nice coast, Dick? |
58546 | Was the old woman in the forest all dressed in gray? |
58546 | Was your stocking just awful full? |
58546 | Wat you do here, in M''sieu Henri LeBreton''s room? |
58546 | We all love Santa Claus, do n''t we? |
58546 | We like this, do n''t we, Dot? |
58546 | We''ll all be very, very good next year-- won''t we, children? |
58546 | Well, Kitty, do you think Santa Claus could n''t_ read_ our letters? |
58546 | Well, Mamma, do you think it''s so_ dread_fully naughty to be cross? |
58546 | Well, Mamma, if a fellow did n''t_ feel_ cross at all, but had a very good reason for_ being_ cross, would that be naughty? |
58546 | Well, Mother Madelon, have these children been very good indeed? |
58546 | Well, Mr. Benjamin Franklin Bub, will you h''inform us where you''ails from? |
58546 | Well, Tim, did you get Simpson? |
58546 | Well, Tom, dear, do n''t you want to come and sit with Mamma a little while? |
58546 | Well, and would I be bringing you so far just to show you a dollar? |
58546 | Well, how could he make such dreadful mistakes? |
58546 | Well, ma''am? |
58546 | Well, neither would I, but ca n''t you see how much nicer times we would have if there was a lot of us, on holidays especially? |
58546 | Well, sir, does your charming cousin reach your standard of feminine appearance? |
58546 | Well, this one made a good many,----[_ to_ TED] did n''t he? |
58546 | Well, well, Brother Anselmus, it does seem as if we had found a good boy at last, does n''t it? |
58546 | Well, well, where are you, then? |
58546 | Well, what did you say? |
58546 | Well, what''s the matter wid yerself? |
58546 | Well, what''ud be the trouble here? |
58546 | Well, would you look at''em, John? |
58546 | Well, your Highness? |
58546 | Were n''t you? |
58546 | Were you looking for Santa Claus? |
58546 | Wha-- wha---- Who are you? |
58546 | What about his lessons? |
58546 | What are you all doing here? |
58546 | What are you doing here? |
58546 | What are you driving at? |
58546 | What are you glad for? |
58546 | What are your eyes for? |
58546 | What can be the matter? |
58546 | What can be the meaning of all this coil? |
58546 | What can have got into the child? |
58546 | What can make her so thoughtless and careless and full of discontent? |
58546 | What can we do for you, Toinette, dear? |
58546 | What child is that? |
58546 | What color is it? |
58546 | What did Santa Claus look like? |
58546 | What did he say? |
58546 | What did she do, Father? |
58546 | What did you boys run away for on Christmas Eve-- weren''t you afraid of missing your presents and the Christmas Tree? |
58546 | What did you say, Heinrich? |
58546 | What did you say, then? |
58546 | What did you say? |
58546 | What do the Monks do? |
58546 | What do ye look to find here? |
58546 | What do you fellows suppose their marm''s thinking, about now? |
58546 | What do you mean by it, sir? |
58546 | What do you suppose it has meant to me to have you and Louis and the children wandering over the face of the earth all these months? |
58546 | What do you think of that for a book- mark? |
58546 | What do you want Santa Claus to bring you? |
58546 | What do you want? |
58546 | What does he want, Roger? |
58546 | What does this mean? |
58546 | What for is the butter in the little chiny jar? |
58546 | What for is the fluting- irons? |
58546 | What has the lady so many for? |
58546 | What if the lad have turned her head a bit? |
58546 | What is a man to make of this? |
58546 | What is everybody doing up here? |
58546 | What is it, Mother? |
58546 | What is it? |
58546 | What is it? |
58546 | What is it? |
58546 | What is that? |
58546 | What is the meaning of this, woman? |
58546 | What is your name? |
58546 | What makes you so sure, Mother, dear? |
58546 | What manner of men are the Christmas Monks? |
58546 | What news can_ you_ have to tell, I should like to know? |
58546 | What nice things-- did Santa Claus leave them for you? |
58546 | What of the Prince? |
58546 | What on earth did you expect, child? |
58546 | What on_ earth_ do you spend your time thinking about, I should like to know, anyway? |
58546 | What say? |
58546 | What shall I do? |
58546 | What shall we do about it, sister? |
58546 | What shall we sing? |
58546 | What things, Eaglefeather? |
58546 | What will my father the king say when he hears I have been kept standing in the highway with a rabble of common peasant children? |
58546 | What would Mistress Wells say if she saw Eaglefeather here now? |
58546 | What you have to tell is that the child there has broken one of the dolls, is n''t it? |
58546 | What''d you like to do, Sally? |
58546 | What''s all this secrecy about? |
58546 | What''s it all about? |
58546 | What''s that scratching? |
58546 | What''s that you say? |
58546 | What''s that, Mamie? |
58546 | What''s that? |
58546 | What''s the flour for in the silver box? |
58546 | What''s the matter, Tom? |
58546 | What''s the matter? |
58546 | What''s the matter? |
58546 | What''s the use of my sweeping, Mother, when the boys are so careless? |
58546 | What''s this picture about, Phil? |
58546 | What''s this? |
58546 | What''s this? |
58546 | What''s your name, boy? |
58546 | What, the stocking? |
58546 | What? |
58546 | What? |
58546 | What? |
58546 | What? |
58546 | When did you say you started? |
58546 | When the little girl heard the soft tapping at the door she said:"Shall I open it, Mother?" |
58546 | When was it? |
58546 | When we tried to play games and dance afterwards, what did we do? |
58546 | When you get done, ca n''t you tell just one story, Toinette? |
58546 | When you knew I was coming? |
58546 | When? |
58546 | Whence comes this rush of wings afar? |
58546 | Where are you, anyway? |
58546 | Where art thou? |
58546 | Where art thou? |
58546 | Where can Toinette be? |
58546 | Where did I put it, then? |
58546 | Where did you get them? |
58546 | Where do you sleep? |
58546 | Where have you been all this time? |
58546 | Where is Mother, Patience? |
58546 | Where is Peter? |
58546 | Where is he, boy? |
58546 | Where is the Baroness? |
58546 | Where is your home, my son? |
58546 | Where shall I get any? |
58546 | Where''s my bread? |
58546 | Where''s my pincushion? |
58546 | Where? |
58546 | Which of them would you like the very best? |
58546 | Which one is that? |
58546 | Which should you like for your very own? |
58546 | Which would you take? |
58546 | Whip? |
58546 | Who are you, anyway? |
58546 | Who can wonder, after that, if I do? |
58546 | Who gave them to you? |
58546 | Who is coming, my children? |
58546 | Who is she? |
58546 | Who knocks? |
58546 | Who takes care of you? |
58546 | Who was that? |
58546 | Who will fetch water for me to- night? |
58546 | Who would harbor the wretches? |
58546 | Who''s that I hear calling me? |
58546 | Who''s the gentleman, Sal, in the pretty frame? |
58546 | Whose little girl is this sitting up so late? |
58546 | Whose nice little girl is this? |
58546 | Why ca n''t you stay with us always? |
58546 | Why did n''t I ever see it then? |
58546 | Why did n''t you do that? |
58546 | Why did n''t you ever give anything to Jim and Polly? |
58546 | Why did you do it? |
58546 | Why do n''t you give her a piece of that cake? |
58546 | Why do you carry these gifts to the little child?" |
58546 | Why does n''t Mother like it, Rafe? |
58546 | Why does she think I would drop the sticks? |
58546 | Why in the world do you keep on working and working? |
58546 | Why not? |
58546 | Why not? |
58546 | Why should not I_ help_ them to celebrate it? |
58546 | Why were you wandering all alone this bitter night? |
58546 | Why, Peter? |
58546 | Why, the supper is all ready, but where is that busy bee of ours, Toinette? |
58546 | Why, what child smashes a doll a- purpose? |
58546 | Why, what''s this coming down the road? |
58546 | Why, when I was a young one---- Why, Tibbie, girl-- don''t you think they''re_ lovely_? |
58546 | Why, where is Toinette? |
58546 | Why, who was it for? |
58546 | Why, why, why, what is this? |
58546 | Why? |
58546 | Why? |
58546 | Wid nary bit o''regard to his iligant muscle, Limber Jack? |
58546 | Will I do? |
58546 | Will Papa and Mamma like it? |
58546 | Will Santa Claus mind if I print mine? |
58546 | Will ever old Marta get home? |
58546 | Will he frown and say,"Children should be seen and not heard"? |
58546 | Will he, Mother? |
58546 | Will he? |
58546 | Will they drag him away from here? |
58546 | Will you tell us a story, Toinette? |
58546 | Will you? |
58546 | Wilt not wait, good Gillian? |
58546 | Wo n''t she be surprised? |
58546 | Wo n''t that be helping you too, Toinette? |
58546 | Wo n''t thee tell us more about it, then? |
58546 | Wo n''t you come in? |
58546 | Woman, dost thou forget that we fled from England for this very cause, that we might escape and save our children from just such sinful folly as this? |
58546 | Would my garland measure around the great pasty Dame Joan hath made for to- morrow''s feast, think you, Cicely? |
58546 | Would n''t he be sorry if there was a house anywhere in the_ world_ that he did n''t know about? |
58546 | Would n''t it be fun if Papa came along and bought a paper of you? |
58546 | Would n''t it be nice if there were two of you and two of me? |
58546 | Would n''t you like to ride with him in his old sleigh, though? |
58546 | Would you pay no attention to it, or would you take him to task for his naughtiness? |
58546 | Wrong? |
58546 | Ye gettin''ready for the stick? |
58546 | Yes, I''ve seen that little monkey-- does she really belong here? |
58546 | Yes, how did you come here? |
58546 | You did n''t like the elves''gift, then? |
58546 | You did? |
58546 | You do n''t effer hafe no Christmas? |
58546 | You do n''t mean just to oblige, do you, Sally? |
58546 | You going, too, I suppose? |
58546 | You hear that, Gretel? |
58546 | You is deir vater, hein? |
58546 | You kids, did you say you_ ran away_? |
58546 | You know what it is she has been searching for all these years? |
58546 | You must have something for the Prince and Princess, have n''t you? |
58546 | You tink I vould_ sell_ dem on_ Christmas_? |
58546 | You want me to rock faster? |
58546 | You would you knew what, little mistress mine? |
58546 | You''ll answer straight, wo n''t you? |
58546 | You''re just Peter''s little sister, are n''t you, pet? |
58546 | You''ve given up in despair, and want to fall back on me? |
58546 | You_ wo n''t_? |
58546 | Your name? |
58546 | [ DAISY_ nods._] Daisy, if he has n''t any little children, I do n''t suppose anybody ever gives him any Christmas presents? |
58546 | [ SALLY_ pours a drop in each hand, and_ TIBBIE_ dances as she rubs them together._] Why are the little scissors crooked? |
58546 | [ TIBBIE_ laughs, too, but less heartily._] Now what''ll we do first? |
58546 | [ TIBBIE_ moves her head slowly up and down, absorbed in the process of washing._] What did you get? |
58546 | [ WALTER_ steps forward._] Name? |
58546 | [_ A very gentle knock at the door._] Oh, what was that? |
58546 | [_ Cheerfully._] But, then, you know, this has come hardest on you-- hasn''t it, my Brethren? |
58546 | [_ Covers her face with her hands._] How could the children be so unkind?... |
58546 | [_ Crosses to fireplace._] What_ shall_ I do about these stockings, anyway? |
58546 | [_ Enter the boys._] Myles, has thee seen Roger? |
58546 | [_ Exit._] OSCAR[_ who has been measuring the tree with his arm._] Fritz, do you think the good St. Nicholas can cover such a big tree as this? |
58546 | [_ Folds his arms and shivers._] Can warm? |
58546 | [_ Gets down from stool and helps to wipe one or two cups._] Where are the boys, I wonder? |
58546 | [_ Goes to door._] But maybe you''ve calls to make yourself? |
58546 | [_ His voice gradually rising._] They''ll find him as soon as they get here.... Oh,_ what_ shall I do-- what shall I do? |
58546 | [_ Holds it up._] Do n''t you suppose Papa will be pleased? |
58546 | [_ Jingling of bells in chimney._] What''s that? |
58546 | [_ Leads her over to rug, lifts corner of coat, and discloses_ MINTY- MALVINY_ fast asleep._] Is n''t this your little waif, Laura? |
58546 | [_ Looks about, aside._] I suppose we should examine his Royal Highness first? |
58546 | [_ Makes a face and hunches up her shoulders._ TOM_ refuses to look._] Do ye think that''s rale handsome? |
58546 | [_ Monks bow very slightly._ PRINCE_ and attendants advance a little._] How old are you? |
58546 | [_ Moves the dolls about tentatively._] But what''s the good? |
58546 | [_ No answer._] Do you mean to tell me? |
58546 | [_ Replaces photo face down._] Bonnet, why do n''t you come and do my hair? |
58546 | [_ Rises and stands surveying the two wraps._] Which shall I wear? |
58546 | [_ Sings._] Rosie, what are you crying for now? |
58546 | [_ Sits down in her place._] Oh, did you make these lovely things, children? |
58546 | [_ Stoops to look up it._] Why does n''t everybody keep a chimney like that for my special use? |
58546 | [_ Straightens things, then looks for her duster._ TOM_ watches slyly._] Did I take that cloth downstairs wid me? |
58546 | [_ The men are confused at this turn of affairs._] Only for us? |
58546 | [_ They start._] Phil, what is the matter with Tom? |
58546 | [_ To her._] Minty- Malviny, what are all those things? |
58546 | [_ To her._] See here, Minty- Malviny-- where''s your Mammy-- who owns you, anyway? |
58546 | [_ To herself._] Oh, where can the rash boy have gone? |
58546 | [_ Turns back._] Will nothing move you, my lord? |
58546 | [_ Turns to her again._] But what about Alphonse? |
58546 | [_ Turns to list._] What''s all this at the bottom? |
58546 | [_ Turns to_ BROWNIE,_ and the two walk away from the fire._] Now, did n''t I tell you how it was? |
58546 | [_ Washes_ TIBBIE''S_ hands while they talk._] Did you get anything for Christmas yet, Tibbie? |
58546 | [_ Whispers full of awe._] Are the_ fairies_ about to- night, dear Gillian? |
58546 | _ Do_ they? |
58546 | _ Has_ it? |
58546 | _ Have_ you got the whip, then? |
58546 | _ Me?_ No, sir! |
58546 | _ Must_ I, Mother? |
58546 | _ Stands a moment at door, regarding the assemblage with a sort of absent- minded astonishment._ MRS. D. What is it? |
58546 | _ What_ did I spend months dressing them for? |
58546 | _ Where_ are your ears? |
58546 | _ Where_ are your senses? |
58546 | _ Who_ is this impertinent snip of a boy who dares to insinuate that my master, Santa Claus, is too old and decrepit to do his work any longer? |
58546 | _ Why_ did I dress them? |
58546 | _ Why_ not? |
58546 | _ You_ did n''t think I was going to scold you, did you, dear? |
58546 | do n''t you want a little boy to help you in your house? |
58546 | do you suppose we can get them to look as they did? |
58546 | honest Injun? |
58546 | or the anatomizer played over them like the garden hose? |
58546 | what do I see? |
58546 | what''s happened? |
58546 | whatever is the matter, Master Ted? |
58546 | where are the others? |
58546 | where did you get them dirty hands?" |
58546 | wo n''t thee teach us some Christmas carols, some_ real_ joyful ones-- so I can forget about those bears? |
58546 | you''re talking about this fellow, are you? |
44099 | ), how is it that guns can kick when they have no legs? |
44099 | A Dutch-- S. When is a secret like a paint- brush? |
44099 | A lady asked a gentleman how old he was? |
44099 | A man bought two fishes, but on taking them home found he had three; how was this? |
44099 | A member of the Travelers''wants to know what dish he must have ordered for dinner to be like one journeying to Tangier? |
44099 | A pudding- bag is a pudding- bag, and a pudding- bag has what everything else has; what is it? |
44099 | And ere the day should dawn again, Where might the sailor be? |
44099 | And if you saw a peach with a bird on it, and you wished to get the peach without disturbing the bird, what would you do? |
44099 | And what do they do when they die? |
44099 | And when is a charade like a fir- tree? |
44099 | And, per contra, when does a man sit down to a melancholy-- we had nearly said melon- cholic-- dessert? |
44099 | Apropos of blacks, why is a shoe- black like an editor? |
44099 | Apropos of convents, what man had no father? |
44099 | Apropos of money, etc., why are lawyers such uneasy sleepers? |
44099 | Apropos of pork hanging, what should a man about to be hung have for breakfast? |
44099 | As we are told that A was not always the first letter of the alphabet, please tell us when B was the first? |
44099 | At what period of his sorrow does a widower recover the loss of his dear departed? |
44099 | At what time was Adam married? |
44099 | B R and Y, and O D V. Which are the two most disagreeable letters if you get too much of them? |
44099 | Because Ham was sent there, and his followers mustard( mustered) and bre(a)d. Why is the Hebrew persuasion the best of all persuasions? |
44099 | Because he makes A poke- R and shove- L, and gets paid for so doing? |
44099 | Because it is a gal- pup- ill( gall(_o_)p up(_ h_)ill. What is a dogma-- not a dog ma-- a dogma? |
44099 | Because they nose( knows) everything? |
44099 | Because we_ must_ B before we can C. Why is the letter W like scandal? |
44099 | Did King Charles consent to be executed with a cold chop? |
44099 | Do you know the soldier''s definition of a kiss? |
44099 | Do you know what the_ oldest_ piece of furniture in the world is? |
44099 | Do you rem- ember ever to have heard what the embers of the expiring year are called? |
44099 | Do? |
44099 | Does it take more miles to make a land league than it does a water league? |
44099 | Ever eating, ever cloying, Never finding full repast, All devouring, all destroying, Till it eats the world at last? |
44099 | Give a good definition for ca nt? |
44099 | Give the positive, comparative, and superlative degrees of getting on in the world? |
44099 | Give the positive, comparative, and superlative degrees of the adjective solemn, with illustrations of the meaning of the word? |
44099 | How can a rare piece of acting be well done? |
44099 | How can venison never be cheap? |
44099 | How can you instantly convict one of error when stating who was the earliest poet? |
44099 | How can you make one pound of green tea go as far as five pounds of black? |
44099 | How can you tell a girl of the name of Ellen that she is everything that is delightful in eight letters? |
44099 | How can you, by changing the pronunciation of a word only, turn mirth into crime? |
44099 | How did the sandwiches come into the desert? |
44099 | How do angry women prove themselves strong- nerved? |
44099 | How do lawyers often prove their love to their neighbors? |
44099 | How do we know Lord Byron did not wear a wig? |
44099 | How do we know Lord Byron was good- tempered? |
44099 | How do we know that Jupiter wore very pinching boots? |
44099 | How do you spell"blind pig"in two letters? |
44099 | How does a tipsy man generally look? |
44099 | How is a successful gambler always an agreeable fellow? |
44099 | How is it you can never tell a lady''s real hysterics from her sham ones? |
44099 | How many Spanish noblemen does it take to make one American run? |
44099 | How many people does a termagant of a wife make herself and worser half amount to? |
44099 | How many young ladies does it take to reach from New York to Philadelphia? |
44099 | How so? |
44099 | How so? |
44099 | How to keep yourself dry? |
44099 | How was this? |
44099 | I seldom speak, but in my sleep; I never cry, but sometimes weep; Chameleon- like, I live on air, And dust to me is dainty fare? |
44099 | If Hanlon fell off his trapeze, what would he fall against? |
44099 | If I were to see you riding on a donkey, what fruit should I be reminded of? |
44099 | If Old Nick were to lose his tail, where would he go to supply the deficiency? |
44099 | If Tom owes Bob money and gives him a blow in the eye, why is that a satisfactory settlement? |
44099 | If a Colt''s pistol has six barrels, how many ought a horse pistol to have? |
44099 | If a bear were to go into a dry- goods store, what would he want? |
44099 | If a bee could stand on its hind legs, what blessing would it invoke? |
44099 | If a dirty sick man be ordered to wash to get well, why is it like four letters of the alphabet? |
44099 | If a gentleman asked his lady- love to take one kind of wine, while he drank another, what two countries would he name? |
44099 | If a man attempts to jump a ditch, and falls, why is he likely to miss the beauties of Summer? |
44099 | If a tough beef- steak could speak, what English poet would it mention? |
44099 | If a tree were to break a window, what would the window say? |
44099 | If a young lady were to wish her father to pull her on the river, what classical name might she mention? |
44099 | If all the seas were dried up, what would Neptune say? |
44099 | If an attorney sent his clerk to a client with a bill and the client tells him to"go to the d----l,"where does the clerk go? |
44099 | If an egg were found on a music- stool, what poem of Sir Walter Scott''s would it remind you of? |
44099 | If the poker, shovel, and tongs cost$ 7.75, what would a ton of coals come to? |
44099 | If there was a bird on a perch, and you wanted the perch, how would you get it without disturbing the bird? |
44099 | If you become surety at a police- court for the reappearance of prisoners, why are you like the most extraordinary ass that ever lived? |
44099 | If you drive a nail in a board and clinch it on the other side, why is it like a sick man? |
44099 | If you met a pig in tears, what animal''s name might you mention to it? |
44099 | If you suddenly saw a house on fire, what three celebrated authors would you feel at once disposed to name? |
44099 | If you were invited to an assembly, what single word would call the musicians to their posts, and at the same time tell you the hour to begin dancing? |
44099 | If you were kissing a young lady, who was very spooney( and a nice, ladel- like girl), what would be her opinion of newspapers during the operation? |
44099 | If you wish a very religious man to go to sleep, by what imperial name should you address him? |
44099 | In what age was gum- arabic introduced? |
44099 | In what place did the cock crow so loud that all the world heard him? |
44099 | In what respect do modern customs differ materially from ancient ones? |
44099 | In what tongue did Balaam''s donkey speak? |
44099 | Inform us concerning the difference which exists between a soldier fighting in battle and one who has had his legs shot off? |
44099 | Let us inquire why a vine is like a soldier? |
44099 | Letter E. Why is the letter D like a squalling child? |
44099 | Mention the name of an object which has two heads, one tail, four legs on one side, and two on the other? |
44099 | My first I do, and my second-- when I say you are my whole-- I do not? |
44099 | My first is a prop, my second''s a prop, and my whole is a prop? |
44099 | My first is irrational, My second is rational, My third mechanical, My whole scientific? |
44099 | My first is not, nor is my second, and there is no doubt that, until you have guessed this puzzle, you may reckon it my whole? |
44099 | My first is the cause of my second, and my whole ought never to be broken, though unless it be holy, and be kept so, you ca n''t keep it at all? |
44099 | My_ first_ if''tis lost, music''s not worth a straw; My_ second''s_ most graceful(?) |
44099 | Name the difference between a field of oats and M. F. Tupper? |
44099 | Name the most unsociable things in the world? |
44099 | O and P run a race; we bet upon O, but P wins; why are we then like the fragrant Latakiah which is given us when we ask for the homely bird''s- eye? |
44099 | O tell us what kind of servants are best for hotels? |
44099 | On what day of the year do women talk least? |
44099 | On what side of a church does a yew- tree grow? |
44099 | Pa- pa. How is it the affections of young ladies, notwithstanding they may protest and vow constancy, are always doubtful? |
44099 | Page 11: What Island would form a cheerful luncheon party? |
44099 | Page 22: Why is is a fretful man like a hard- baked loaf? |
44099 | Page 24: Why are certain Member''s speeches in the_ Times_ like a brick wall? |
44099 | Page 26: Why is a boiled herring like a rotton potato? |
44099 | Page 30: and all its guns on board, weigh just before starting on a cruse? |
44099 | Page 58: the other turns his quartz into gold? |
44099 | Page 6: Because they nose( knows) everything? |
44099 | Proposed, and was accepted-- need we say? |
44099 | Some one mentioning that"columba"was the Latin for a"dove,"it gave rise to the following: What is the difference between the Old World and the New? |
44099 | State the difference between a grocer selling a pound of sugar, and an apothecary''s boy with a pestle and mortar? |
44099 | Take away one letter from me and I murder; take away two and I probably shall die, if my whole does not save me? |
44099 | Talking about waistcoats, why was Balaam like a Lifeguardsman? |
44099 | Tell us the best way to make the hours go fast? |
44099 | Tell us why it is vulgar to send a telegram? |
44099 | Tempest? |
44099 | The beginning of eternity, The end of time and space, The beginning of every end, The end of every race? |
44099 | The proverb says,"One swallow does not make Spring;"when is the proverb wrong? |
44099 | There are twelve birds in a covey; Jones kills a brace, then how many remain? |
44099 | To be said to your_ inamorata_, your lady love: What''s the difference between Jupiter and your very humble servant? |
44099 | Transpose it, and to king and saint, And great and good you pay it? |
44099 | Un filou peut- il prendre pour devise, Honneur à Dieu? |
44099 | Watching which dancer reminds you of an ancient law? |
44099 | Watt''s Tupper''s Wordsworth( what''s Tupper''s words worth)? |
44099 | We beg leave to ax you which of a carpenter''s tool is coffee- like? |
44099 | We beg leave to ax you which of a carpenter''s tools is coffee- like? |
44099 | We beg leave to ax you which of a carpenter''s tools is coffee- like? |
44099 | What Christian name, besides Anna, reads the same both ways? |
44099 | What Egyptian official would a little boy mention if he were to call his mother to the window to see something wonderful? |
44099 | What Island would form a cheerful luncheon party? |
44099 | What Islands would form a cheerful luncheon party? |
44099 | What animal took the most luggage in the Ark, and which the least? |
44099 | What are the dimensions of a little elbow room? |
44099 | What are the most disagreeable articles for a man to keep on hand? |
44099 | What author would eye- glasses and spectacles mention to the world if they could only speak? |
44099 | What became of Lot when his wife was turned into a pillar of salt? |
44099 | What can a man have in his pocket when it is empty? |
44099 | What class of people bears a name meaning"I ca n''t improve?" |
44099 | What composer''s name can you give in three letters? |
44099 | What constellation most resembles an empty fire- place? |
44099 | What contains more feet in winter than in summer? |
44099 | What did Jack Frost say when he kissed the violet? |
44099 | What did the pistol- ball say to the wounded duelist? |
44099 | What did the rose say to the sun? |
44099 | What did the seven wise men of Greece do when they met the sage of Hindoostan? |
44099 | What did the sky- terrier do when he came out of the ark? |
44099 | What did the tea- kettle say when tied to the little dog''s tail? |
44099 | What does a man who has had a glass too much call a chronometer? |
44099 | What does a salmon breeder do to that fish''s ova? |
44099 | What does an aeronaut do after inflating his balloon? |
44099 | What does an iron- clad vessel of war, with four inches of steel plating and all its guns on board, weigh just before starting on a cruise? |
44099 | What evidence have we that Adam used sugar? |
44099 | What extraordinary kind of meat is to be bought in the Isle of Wight? |
44099 | What fashionable game do frogs play at-- besides leap- frog? |
44099 | What flowers are there between a lady''s nose and chin? |
44099 | What fur did Adam and Eve wear? |
44099 | What game does a lady''s bustle resemble? |
44099 | What games are most played by soldiers? |
44099 | What goes most against a farmer''s grain? |
44099 | What great astronomer is like Venus''s chariot? |
44099 | What grows the less tired the more it works? |
44099 | What hairy Centaur could not possibly be spared from the story of Hercules? |
44099 | What herb is most injurious to a lady''s beauty? |
44099 | What is a good sleeping- draught? |
44099 | What is a very good definition of nonsense? |
44099 | What is an artist to do when he is out of canvas? |
44099 | What is better than an indifferent singer in a drawing- room after dinner? |
44099 | What is better than presence of mind in a railroad accident? |
44099 | What is it gives a cold, cures a cold, and pays the doctor''s bill? |
44099 | What is it gives a cold, cures a cold, and pays the doctor''s bill? |
44099 | What is it that occurs twice in a moment, once in a minute, and not once in a thousand years? |
44099 | What is more chilling to an ardent lover than the beautiful''s no? |
44099 | What is most like a horse''s foot? |
44099 | What is necessary to a farmer to assist him? |
44099 | What is one of the greatest, yet withal most melancholy wonders in life? |
44099 | What is taken from you before you get it? |
44099 | What is that a woman frequently gives her lovely countenance to, yet never takes kindly? |
44099 | What is that from which you may take away the whole, and yet have some left? |
44099 | What is that thing which we all eat and all drink, though it is often a man and often a woman? |
44099 | What is that thing, and the name of a bird, which, if we had not, we should die? |
44099 | What is that which a young girl looks for, but does not wish to find? |
44099 | What is that which belongs to yourself, yet is used by every one more than yourself? |
44099 | What is that which every one wishes, and yet wants to get rid of as soon as it is obtained? |
44099 | What is that which is always in visible yet never out of sight? |
44099 | What is that which is black, white, and red all over, which shows some people to be green, and makes others look black and blue? |
44099 | What is that which is put on the table and cut, but never eaten? |
44099 | What is that which makes everything visible, but is itself unseen? |
44099 | What is that which must play before it can work? |
44099 | What is that which never asks questions, yet requires many answers? |
44099 | What is that which no one wishes to have, yet no one wishes to lose? |
44099 | What is that which stands fast, yet sometimes runs fast? |
44099 | What is that which the dead and the living do at the same time? |
44099 | What is that which ties two persons and only one touches? |
44099 | What is that which we all swallow before we speak? |
44099 | What is that which you can go nowhere without, and yet is of no use to you? |
44099 | What is that which, supposing its greatest breadth to be four inches, length nine inches, and depth three inches, contains a solid foot? |
44099 | What is that which, though black itself, enlightens the world? |
44099 | What is that which, when you are going over the White Mountains, goes up- hill and down- hill, and all over everywhere, yet never moves? |
44099 | What is the best advice to give a justice of the peace? |
44099 | What is the best day for making pan- cakes? |
44099 | What is the best way of making a coat last? |
44099 | What is the best way to hide a bear; it does n''t matter how big he is-- bigger the better? |
44099 | What is the best way to keep a man''s love? |
44099 | What is the best word of command to give a lady who is crossing a muddy road? |
44099 | What is the characteristic of a watch? |
44099 | What is the cheapest way of procuring a fiddle? |
44099 | What is the differedce betweed ad orgadist ad the influedza? |
44099 | What is the difference between Solomon and Rothschild? |
44099 | What is the difference between a Roman Catholic priest and Signor Mario? |
44099 | What is the difference between a Roman Catholic priest and a Baptist? |
44099 | What is the difference between a chess- player and an habitual toper? |
44099 | What is the difference between a chicken who ca n''t hold its head up and seven days? |
44099 | What is the difference between a choir- master and ladies''dresses, A. D. 1869? |
44099 | What is the difference between a cloud and a whipped child? |
44099 | What is the difference between a correspondent and a co- respondent? |
44099 | What is the difference between a fixed star and a meteor? |
44099 | What is the difference between a hen and an idle musician? |
44099 | What is the difference between a horse who, being entered for a race, is withdrawn, and one who starts in a race and is beaten? |
44099 | What is the difference between a man who has nothing to do and a laborer? |
44099 | What is the difference between a middle- aged cooper and a trooper of the middle ages? |
44099 | What is the difference between a mother with a large family and a barber? |
44099 | What is the difference between a premiere danseuse and a duck? |
44099 | What is the difference between a soldier and a fisherman? |
44099 | What is the difference between a spendthrift and a pillow? |
44099 | What is the difference between a tight boot and an oak tree? |
44099 | What is the difference between a wealthy toper and a skillful miner? |
44099 | What is the difference between a winter storm and a child with a cold? |
44099 | What is the difference between a young lady and a wide- awake hat? |
44099 | What is the difference between a young maiden of sixteen and an old maid of sixty? |
44099 | What is the difference between an alarm bell put on a window at night and half an oyster? |
44099 | What is the difference between an auction and sea- sickness? |
44099 | What is the difference between an honest and a dishonest laundress? |
44099 | What is the difference between homicide and pig- sticking? |
44099 | What is the difference between killed soldiers and repaired garments? |
44099 | What is the difference between photography and the whooping- cough? |
44099 | What is the difference between the Emperor of Russia and a beggar? |
44099 | What is the difference between the cradle and the grave? |
44099 | What is the difference between the earth and the sea? |
44099 | What is the difference between the manner of the death of a barber and a sculptor? |
44099 | What is the difference between the punctual arrival of a train and a collision? |
44099 | What is the first thing you do when you get into bed? |
44099 | What is the greatest instance on record of the power of the magnet? |
44099 | What is the greatest miracle ever worked in Ireland? |
44099 | What is the height of folly? |
44099 | What is the most ancient mention made of a banking transaction? |
44099 | What is the most difficult river on which to get a boat? |
44099 | What is the most melancholy fact in the history of Milton? |
44099 | What is the most wonderful animal in the farm- yard? |
44099 | What is the only form in this world which all nations, barbarous, civilized, and otherwise, are agreed upon following? |
44099 | What is the proper length for ladies''crinoline? |
44099 | What is the superlative of temper? |
44099 | What is the very best and cheapest light, especially for painters? |
44099 | What is the wind like in a storm? |
44099 | What is this? |
44099 | What is worse than raining cats and dogs? |
44099 | What kind of a book might a man wish his wife to resemble? |
44099 | What kind of a cat may be found in every library? |
44099 | What kind of a cravat would a hog be most likely to choose? |
44099 | What kind of a hen lays the longest? |
44099 | What kind of a loan is surest to"raise the wind?" |
44099 | What letter in the Dutch alphabet will name an English lady of title? |
44099 | What letter of the Greek alphabet did the ex- King Otho probably last think of on leaving Athens? |
44099 | What makes a pet dog wag his tail when he sees his master? |
44099 | What makes more noise than a pig in a sty? |
44099 | What mechanic never turns to the left? |
44099 | What moral sentence does a weathercock suggest? |
44099 | What most resembles a cat looking out of a garret window, amid a sheltering bower of jessamine and woodbine? |
44099 | What musical instrument invites you to fish? |
44099 | What must be done to conduct a newspaper right? |
44099 | What number had she at first? |
44099 | What one word will name the common parent of both beast and man? |
44099 | What part of Spain does our cat, sleeping by herself on the hearth- rug, resemble? |
44099 | What part of a bag of grain is like a Russian soldier? |
44099 | What part of a lady''s dress can a blacksmith make? |
44099 | What part of a lady''s face in January is like a celebrated fur? |
44099 | What part of a locomotive train ought to have the most careful attention? |
44099 | What part of your ear would be the most essential for a martial band? |
44099 | What parts of what animals are like the spring and autumn gales? |
44099 | What piece of coin is double its value by deducting its half? |
44099 | What plant is fatal to mice? |
44099 | What poem of Hood''s resembles a tremendous Roman nose? |
44099 | What pomatum do you imagine a woman with very pretty feet uses for her hair? |
44099 | What prevents a running river running right away? |
44099 | What proverb must a lawyer not act up to? |
44099 | What question of three words may be asked Tennyson concerning a brother poet, the said question consisting of the names of three poets only? |
44099 | What relation is the door- mat to the door- step? |
44099 | What river is ever without a beginning and ending? |
44099 | What sea would a man most like to be in on a wet day? |
44099 | What sense pleases you most in an unpleasant acquaintance? |
44099 | What should a man''s wife be like? |
44099 | What should put the idea of drowning into your head if it be freezing when you are on the briny deep? |
44099 | What small animal is turned into a large one by being beheaded? |
44099 | What snuff- taker is that whose box gets fuller the more pinches he takes? |
44099 | What soap is the hardest? |
44099 | What song would a little dog sing who was blown off a ship at sea? |
44099 | What sort of a day would be a good one to run for a cup? |
44099 | What sort of a medical man is a horse that never tumbles down like? |
44099 | What sort of an anchor has a toper an anchoring after? |
44099 | What sort of music should a girl sing whose voice is cracked and broken? |
44099 | What soup would cannibals prefer? |
44099 | What sport does gossiping young ladies remind you of? |
44099 | What step must I take to remove A from the alphabet? |
44099 | What stone should have been placed at the gate of Eden after the expulsion? |
44099 | What thing is that which is lengthened by being cut at both ends? |
44099 | What three figures, multiplied by 4, will make precisely 5? |
44099 | What tongue is it that frequently hurts and grieves you, and yet does not speak a word? |
44099 | What trees has fire no effect upon? |
44099 | What vegetable does a lady''s tongue resemble? |
44099 | What was Joan of Arc made of? |
44099 | What was it gave the Indian eight and ten- legged gods their name of Manitous? |
44099 | What was once the most fashionable cap in Paris? |
44099 | What was the color of the wind and waves in a storm? |
44099 | What was the difference between Noah''s ark and Joan of Arc? |
44099 | What was the most honest bet ever made? |
44099 | What wind should a hungry sailor wish for? |
44099 | What wine is both food and drink? |
44099 | What word is it which, by changing a single letter, becomes its own opposite? |
44099 | What word is there of eight letters which has five of them the same? |
44099 | What word it is of only three syllables which combines in it twenty- six letters? |
44099 | What word of one syllable, if you take two letters from it, remains a word of two syllables? |
44099 | What would be a good epitaph on a duckling just dead? |
44099 | What would be a good motto to put up at the entrance of a cemetery? |
44099 | What would be an appropriate exclamation for a man to make when cold, in a boat, out fishing? |
44099 | What young ladies won the battle of Salamis? |
44099 | What''s that? |
44099 | What''s the difference between Charles Kean and Jonah? |
44099 | What''s the difference between a Bedouin Arab and a milkman in a large way of business? |
44099 | What''s the difference between a bee and a donkey? |
44099 | What''s the difference between a calf and a lady who lets her dress draggle in the mud? |
44099 | What''s the difference between a fish dinner and a racing establishment? |
44099 | What''s the difference between a man and his tailor, when the former is in prison at the latter''s suit? |
44099 | What''s the difference between a professional piano- forte player and one that hears him? |
44099 | What''s the difference between a specimen of plated goods and Columbus? |
44099 | What''s the difference between the cook at an eating- house and Du Chaillu? |
44099 | What''s the difference between the fire coming out of a steamship''s chimney and the steam coming out of a flannel shirt airing? |
44099 | What''s the difference between"living in marble halls"and aboard ship? |
44099 | What, as milliners say, is"the sweetest thing in bonnets?" |
44099 | When Louis Phillippe was deposed, why did he lose less than any of his subjects? |
44099 | When a boy falls into the water, what is the first thing he does? |
44099 | When a church is burning, what is the only part that runs no chance of being saved? |
44099 | When a hen is sitting across the top of a five- barred gate, why is she like a cent? |
44099 | When a horse speaks, why does he do so always in the negative? |
44099 | When are a very short and a very tall judge both the same height? |
44099 | When are babies traveling abroad? |
44099 | When are handcuffs like knapsacks? |
44099 | When are kisses sweetest? |
44099 | When are sheep stationery? |
44099 | When are soldiers most admired by an infant? |
44099 | When are soldiers stronger than elephants? |
44099 | When are thieves like leopards? |
44099 | When asked,"What o''clock, and where''s the cold chicken?" |
44099 | When can a lamp be said to be in a bad temper? |
44099 | When can an Irish servant answer two questions at the same time? |
44099 | When do we make a meal of a musical instrument? |
44099 | When does a farmer double up a sheep without hurting it? |
44099 | When does a farmer have the best opportunity of overlooking his pigs? |
44099 | When does a gourmand find it impossible to bridle-- we ought, perhaps, to say curb-- his appetite? |
44099 | When does a lady think her husband a Hercules? |
44099 | When does a leopard change his spots? |
44099 | When does a man double his capital? |
44099 | When does a man have to keep his word? |
44099 | When does a sculptor explode in strong convulsions? |
44099 | When does rain seem inclined to be studious? |
44099 | When does the eagle turn carpenter? |
44099 | When has a man four hands? |
44099 | When is a ball not a ball? |
44099 | When is a bonnet not a bonnet? |
44099 | When is a book like a prisoner in the States of Barbary? |
44099 | When is a candle like an ill- conditioned, quarrelsome man? |
44099 | When is a carpenter like a circumstance? |
44099 | When is a cigar like a shoulder of pork? |
44099 | When is a clock on the stairs dangerous? |
44099 | When is a house not a house? |
44099 | When is a lady deformed? |
44099 | When is a lawyer like a donkey? |
44099 | When is a man like a green gooseberry? |
44099 | When is a man more than one man? |
44099 | When is a newspaper like a delicate child? |
44099 | When is a newspaper the sharpest? |
44099 | When is a plant to be dreaded more than a mad dog? |
44099 | When is a river not a river? |
44099 | When is a sailor not a sailor? |
44099 | When is a school- master like a man with one eye? |
44099 | When is a slug like a poem of Tennyson''s? |
44099 | When is a soldier like a carpenter? |
44099 | When is a superb woman like bread? |
44099 | When is a thief like a reporter? |
44099 | When is a trunk like two letters of the alphabet? |
44099 | When is a wall like a fish? |
44099 | When is a wall like a fish? |
44099 | When is a window like a star? |
44099 | When is a woman not a woman? |
44099 | When is an estate like a watch? |
44099 | When is an umbrella like suet? |
44099 | When is it a good thing to lose your temper? |
44099 | When is it difficult to get one''s watch out of one''s pocket? |
44099 | When is sugar like a pig''s tooth? |
44099 | When is the Hudson river good for the eyes? |
44099 | When is the music at a party most like a ship in distress? |
44099 | When may a country gentleman''s property be said to consist of feathers? |
44099 | When may a man be said to be personally involved? |
44099 | When may funds be supposed to be unsteady? |
44099 | When may ladies who are enjoying themselves be said to look wretched? |
44099 | When may you be said to literally"drink in"music? |
44099 | When may you suppose an umbrella to be one mass of grease? |
44099 | When my first is broken, it stands in need of my second, and my whole is part of a lady''s dress? |
44099 | When my first is my last, like a Protean elf, Will black become white, and a part of yourself? |
44099 | When two men exchange snuff- boxes, why is the transaction a profitable one? |
44099 | When was Napoleon I. most shabbily dressed? |
44099 | When was paper money first mentioned in the Bible? |
44099 | When was wit a father? |
44099 | When were walking- sticks first mentioned in the Bible? |
44099 | When will water stop running down hill? |
44099 | When you go for ten cents''worth of very sharp, long tin- tacks, what do you want them for? |
44099 | When, D. V., we get off this_ eau_, we''ll have some eau- d- v. How would you increase the speed of a very slow boat? |
44099 | Where did Noah strike the first nail in the ark? |
44099 | Where did the Witch of Endor live-- and end- her days? |
44099 | Where did the executioner of Charles I. dine, and what did he take? |
44099 | Where does a similarity exist between malt and beer? |
44099 | Where is it that all women are equally beautiful? |
44099 | Where should you feel for the poor? |
44099 | Where would you come out? |
44099 | Which animal is the heaviest in all creation? |
44099 | Which are the best kind of agricultural fairs? |
44099 | Which are the lightest men-- Scotchmen, Irishmen, or Englishmen? |
44099 | Which eat most grass, black sheep or white? |
44099 | Which has most legs, a cow or no cow? |
44099 | Which is the coldest river? |
44099 | Which is the more valuable, a five- dollar note or five gold dollars? |
44099 | Which is the richest and which the poorest letter in the alphabet? |
44099 | Which is the smallest bridge in the world? |
44099 | Which of Pio Nino''s cardinals wears the largest hat? |
44099 | Which of the feathered tribe can lift the heaviest weights? |
44099 | Which of the reptiles is a mathematician? |
44099 | Which one of the Seven Wonders of the World are locomotive engines like? |
44099 | Which were made first, elbows or knees? |
44099 | Which would you rather, look a greater fool than you are, or be a greater fool than you look? |
44099 | Which would you rather, that a lion ate you or a tiger? |
44099 | Who are children most sick of? |
44099 | Who are generally most sick of children? |
44099 | Who are the two largest ladies in the United States? |
44099 | Who commits the greatest abominations? |
44099 | Who do they speak of as the most delicately modest young man that ever lived? |
44099 | Who is the greatest terrifier? |
44099 | Who is the oldest lunatic on record? |
44099 | Who took in the first newspapers? |
44099 | Who was Jonah''s tutor? |
44099 | Who was hung for not wearing a wig? |
44099 | Who was it that first introduced salt provisions? |
44099 | Who was the fastest runner in the world? |
44099 | Who was the first man condemned to hard labor for life? |
44099 | Who was the first man? |
44099 | Who was the first to swear in this world? |
44099 | Who was the first whistler, and what tune did he whistle? |
44099 | Who were your grandfather''s first cousin''s sister''s son''s brother''s forefathers? |
44099 | Who would travel fastest-- a man with one sack of flour on his back, or a man with two sacks? |
44099 | Why am I the most peculiar person in the company? |
44099 | Why am I, when prudently laying by money, like myself when foolishly squandering it? |
44099 | Why are Cashmere shawls like persons totally deaf? |
44099 | Why are Irishmen like the Pope? |
44099 | Why are all policemen well behaved and polite? |
44099 | Why are apples like printers''types? |
44099 | Why are artists like washerwomen? |
44099 | Why are bachelors like natives of Ceylon? |
44099 | Why are ballet- women so wicked? |
44099 | Why are blacksmiths the most discontented of tradesmen? |
44099 | Why are book- keepers like chickens? |
44099 | Why are cats like unskillful surgeons? |
44099 | Why are certain Member''s speeches in the_ Times_ like a brick wall? |
44099 | Why are certain Members''speeches in the_ Times_ like a brick wall? |
44099 | Why are circus- horses such slow goers? |
44099 | Why are clergymen like cabinet- makers when performing the marriage ceremony? |
44099 | Why are convicts like old maids going to be married? |
44099 | Why are coopers like musical composers? |
44099 | Why are cripples, beggars, and such like, similar to shepherds and fishermen? |
44099 | Why are deaf people like India shawls? |
44099 | Why are doctors always wicked men? |
44099 | Why are dogs and cats like school- masters and their pupils? |
44099 | Why are fowls gluttonous creatures? |
44099 | Why are good resolutions like fainting ladies? |
44099 | Why are greenbacks like the Jews? |
44099 | Why are hogs more intelligent than humans? |
44099 | Why are hot- house plants like drunkards? |
44099 | Why are ladies so fond of officers? |
44099 | Why are ladies who wear large crinolines ugly? |
44099 | Why are ladies''dresses about the waist like a political meeting? |
44099 | Why are ladies-- whether sleeping on sofas or not-- like hinges? |
44099 | Why are laundresses no better than idiots? |
44099 | Why are lawyers like shears? |
44099 | Why are little boys that loaf about the docks like hardware merchants? |
44099 | Why are men who lose by the failure of a bank like Macbeth? |
44099 | Why are persons with short memories like office- holders? |
44099 | Why are plagiarists like Long Branch hotel- keepers with newly- married couples? |
44099 | Why are seeds when sown like gate- posts? |
44099 | Why are sentries like day and night? |
44099 | Why are stars like an old barn? |
44099 | Why are stars the best astronomers? |
44099 | Why are steamboat explosions like short- hand writers leaving the House of Commons? |
44099 | Why are sugar- plums like race- horses? |
44099 | Why are suicides invariably successful people in the world? |
44099 | Why are tears like potatoes? |
44099 | Why are the Commissioners of Stamps and Taxes like sailors at sea? |
44099 | Why are the Germans like quinine and gentian? |
44099 | Why are the bars of a convent like a blacksmith''s apron? |
44099 | Why are the fixed stars like wicked old people? |
44099 | Why are the labors of a translator likely to excite disgust? |
44099 | Why are the pages of this book like the days of this year? |
44099 | Why are the"blue devils"like muffins? |
44099 | Why are those who quiz ladies''bustles very slanderous persons? |
44099 | Why are two laughing girls like the wings of a chicken? |
44099 | Why are two young ladies kissing each other an emblem of Christianity? |
44099 | Why are very old people necessarily prolix and tedious? |
44099 | Why are women''s_ corsets_ the greatest speculators in the bills of mortality? |
44099 | Why are young children like castles in the air? |
44099 | Why are young ladies born deaf sure to be more exemplary than young ladies not so afflicted? |
44099 | Why are young ladies the fastest travelers in the world? |
44099 | Why are your eyes like post- horses? |
44099 | Why are your lips always at variance? |
44099 | Why are your nose and chin constantly at variance? |
44099 | Why can a fish never be in the dark? |
44099 | Why can no man say his time is his own? |
44099 | Why can no man say his time is his own? |
44099 | Why can not a woman become a successful lawyer? |
44099 | Why can you never expect a fisherman to be generous? |
44099 | Why did Du Chaillu get so angry when he was quizzed about the gorilla? |
44099 | Why did Marcus Curtius leap into the gulf at Rome? |
44099 | Why did the young lady return the dumb water? |
44099 | Why do bishops become wags when promoted to the highest office in the church? |
44099 | Why do girls like looking at the moon? |
44099 | Why do little birds in their nest agree? |
44099 | Why do old maids wear mittens? |
44099 | Why do rusty iron spikes on a wall remind you of ice? |
44099 | Why do sailors working in brigs make bad servants? |
44099 | Why do teetotalers run such a slight risk of drowning? |
44099 | Why do we speak of poetic fire? |
44099 | Why does a Quaker resemble a fresh and sprightly horse? |
44099 | Why does a dog''s tail resemble happiness? |
44099 | Why does a donkey prefer thistles to corn? |
44099 | Why does a dressmaker never lose her hooks? |
44099 | Why does a girl lace herself so tight to go out to dinner? |
44099 | Why does a man who has been all his life a hewer of wood, that is, a wood- cutter, never come home to dinner? |
44099 | Why does a miller wear a white hat? |
44099 | Why does a nobleman''s title sometimes become extinct? |
44099 | Why does a puss purr? |
44099 | Why does a salmon die before it lives? |
44099 | Why does a smoker resemble a person in a furious passion? |
44099 | Why does a stingy German like mutton better than venison? |
44099 | Why does a woman residing up two pairs of stairs remind you of a goddess? |
44099 | Why does a young lady prefer her mother''s fortune to her father''s? |
44099 | Why does the conductor at a concert resemble the electric telegraph? |
44099 | Why does the east wind never blow straight? |
44099 | Why does the lightning turn milk sour? |
44099 | Why had Eve no fear of the measles? |
44099 | Why has Hanlon, the gymnast, such a wonderful digestion? |
44099 | Why has a clock a bashful appearance? |
44099 | Why has the beast that carries the Queen of Siam''s palanquin nothing whatever to do with the subject? |
44099 | Why is A like a honeysuckle? |
44099 | Why is A like twelve o''clock? |
44099 | Why is Great Britain like Palestine? |
44099 | Why is Ireland like a sealed bottle of champagne? |
44099 | Why is Joseph Gillott a very bad man? |
44099 | Why is Kossuth like an Irishman''s quarrel? |
44099 | Why is Mrs. Caudle like a locomotive engine? |
44099 | Why is a Jew in a fever like a diamond? |
44099 | Why is a Joint Company not like a watch? |
44099 | Why is a Turk like a violin belonging to an inn? |
44099 | Why is a bad epigram like a blunt pencil? |
44099 | Why is a bad hat like a fierce snarling pup dog? |
44099 | Why is a baker like a judge in Chancery? |
44099 | Why is a baker the cheapest landlord but the dearest builder? |
44099 | Why is a beautiful woman bathing like a valuable submarine machine? |
44099 | Why is a bee- hive like a bad potato? |
44099 | Why is a black man necessarily a conjurer? |
44099 | Why is a blacksmith the most dissatisfied of all mechanics? |
44099 | Why is a blacksmith the most likely person to make money by causing the alphabet to quarrel? |
44099 | Why is a blundering writer like an arbiter in a dispute? |
44099 | Why is a boiled herring like a rotten potato? |
44099 | Why is a boiled herring like a rotten potato? |
44099 | Why is a box on the ears like a hat? |
44099 | Why is a boy almost always more noisy than a girl? |
44099 | Why is a boy like a puppy? |
44099 | Why is a burglar using false keys like a lady curling her hair? |
44099 | Why is a butcher''s cart like his boots? |
44099 | Why is a cabman, whatever his rank, a very ambitious person? |
44099 | Why is a candle with a"long nose"like a contented man? |
44099 | Why is a cat like a tattling person? |
44099 | Why is a cent like a cow? |
44099 | Why is a city being destroyed like another being built? |
44099 | Why is a coach going down a steep hill like St. George? |
44099 | Why is a congreve box without the matches superior to any other box? |
44099 | Why is a curtain lecture like darkness? |
44099 | Why is a curtain lecture like darkness? |
44099 | Why is a deceptive woman like a seamstress? |
44099 | Why is a dirty man like flannel? |
44099 | Why is a dog''s tail a great novelty? |
44099 | Why is a doleful face like the alternate parts taken by a choir? |
44099 | Why is a door always in the subjunctive mood? |
44099 | Why is a door that refuses to open or shut properly like a man unable to walk, his leg being broken? |
44099 | Why is a drunkard hesitating to sign the pledge like a skeptical Hindoo? |
44099 | Why is a false friend like the letter P? |
44099 | Why is a fashionable woman like a successful gambler? |
44099 | Why is a field of grass like a person older than yourself? |
44099 | Why is a fit of coughing like the falls of Niagara? |
44099 | Why is a flatterer like a microscope? |
44099 | Why is a fool in a high station like a man in a balloon? |
44099 | Why is a fop like a haunch of venison? |
44099 | Why is a fop like a haunch of venison? |
44099 | Why is a four- quart jug like a lady''s side- saddle? |
44099 | Why is a fretful man like a hard- baked loaf? |
44099 | Why is a fretful man like a hard- baked loaf? |
44099 | Why is a gardener better paid than any other tradesman? |
44099 | Why is a girl like an arrow? |
44099 | Why is a good anecdote like a public bell? |
44099 | Why is a good constitution like a money- box? |
44099 | Why is a good sermon like a kiss? |
44099 | Why is a gooseberry- tart, or even a plum- tart, like a bad dime? |
44099 | Why is a gypsy''s tent like a beacon on the coast? |
44099 | Why is a hackney coachman like a conscientious man? |
44099 | Why is a handsome and fascinating lady like a slice of bread? |
44099 | Why is a harmonium like the Bank of England? |
44099 | Why is a harmonium like the Bank of England? |
44099 | Why is a hen walking like a base conspiracy? |
44099 | Why is a hog in a parlor like a house on fire? |
44099 | Why is a horse an anomaly in the hunting- field? |
44099 | Why is a horse constantly ridden and never fed not likely to be starved? |
44099 | Why is a humorous jest like a fowl? |
44099 | Why is a hunted fox like a Puseyite? |
44099 | Why is a jeweler like a screeching florid singer? |
44099 | Why is a judge''s nose like the middle of the earth? |
44099 | Why is a key like a prison? |
44099 | Why is a leaky barrel like a coward? |
44099 | Why is a little dog''s tail like the heart of a tree? |
44099 | Why is a locomotive like a handsome and fascinating lady? |
44099 | Why is a mad bull an animal of convivial disposition? |
44099 | Why is a magnificent house like a book of anecdotes? |
44099 | Why is a man clearing a hedge at a single bound like one snoring? |
44099 | Why is a man digging a canoe like a boy whipped for making a noise? |
44099 | Why is a man for whom nothing is good enough like a hyena galloping? |
44099 | Why is a man going to be married like a felon being conducted to the scaffold? |
44099 | Why is a man hung better than a vagabond? |
44099 | Why is a man in jail and wishing to be out like a leaky boat? |
44099 | Why is a man in poverty like a seamstress? |
44099 | Why is a man looking for the philosopher''s stone like Neptune? |
44099 | Why is a man not prepared to pay his acceptance when due like a pigeon without food? |
44099 | Why is a man on horseback like difficulties overcome? |
44099 | Why is a man searching for the philosopher''s stone like Neptune? |
44099 | Why is a man who never lays a wager as bad as a regular gambler? |
44099 | Why is a man with a great many servants like an oyster? |
44099 | Why is a man''s mouth when very large like an annual lease? |
44099 | Why is a melancholy young lady the pleasantest companion? |
44099 | Why is a milkwoman who never sells whey the most independent person in the world? |
44099 | Why is a miser like a man with a short memory? |
44099 | Why is a miser like a man with a short memory? |
44099 | Why is a most persevering admirer of a coquette like an article she carries in her pocket? |
44099 | Why is a new- born baby like a storm? |
44099 | Why is a new- born baby like a storm? |
44099 | Why is a newspaper like an army? |
44099 | Why is a note of hand like a rosebud? |
44099 | Why is a pack of cards containing only fifty- one, sent home, as perfect as a pack of fifty- two sent home? |
44099 | Why is a pair of skates like an apple? |
44099 | Why is a palm- tree like chronology? |
44099 | Why is a palm- tree like chronology? |
44099 | Why is a partner in a joint- stock concern like a plowman? |
44099 | Why is a pianist like the warder of a prison? |
44099 | Why is a pianist like the warder of a prison? |
44099 | Why is a pig with a twisted tail like the ghost in Hamlet? |
44099 | Why is a plum- pudding like a logical sermon? |
44099 | Why is a pretty girl''s pleased- merry- bright- laughing eye no better than an eye destroyed? |
44099 | Why is a pretty young lady like a wagon- wheel? |
44099 | Why is a prosy story- teller like the Thames Tunnel? |
44099 | Why is a proud lady like a music book? |
44099 | Why is a railroad- car like a bed- bug? |
44099 | Why is a rakish Hebrew like this joke? |
44099 | Why is a retired carpenter like a lecturer on natural philosophy? |
44099 | Why is a rheumatic person like a glass window? |
44099 | Why is a rifle a very insignificant weapon? |
44099 | Why is a room full of married folks like a room empty? |
44099 | Why is a rosebud like a promissory note? |
44099 | Why is a row between Orangemen and Ribbonmen like a saddle? |
44099 | Why is a rumseller''s trade a profitable one to follow? |
44099 | Why is a school- mistress like the letter C? |
44099 | Why is a schoolboy beginning to read like knowledge itself? |
44099 | Why is a sheet of postage stamps like distant relations? |
44099 | Why is a ship just arrived in port like a lady eagerly desiring to go to America? |
44099 | Why is a ship the politest thing in the world? |
44099 | Why is a short man struggling to kiss a tall woman like an Irishman going up to Vesuvius? |
44099 | Why is a sick Jew like a diamond ring? |
44099 | Why is a spendthrift''s purse like a thunder- cloud? |
44099 | Why is a spider a good correspondent? |
44099 | Why is a sporting clergyman like a soldier who runs from battle? |
44099 | Why is a steam engine at a fire an anomaly? |
44099 | Why is a sword that is too brittle like an ill- natured and passionate man? |
44099 | Why is a talkative young man like a young pig? |
44099 | Why is a theological student like a merchant? |
44099 | Why is a thief in a garret like an honest man? |
44099 | Why is a thoughtful man like a mirror? |
44099 | Why is a ticket- porter like a thief? |
44099 | Why is a tiger hunted in an Indian jungle, like a piece of presentation plate? |
44099 | Why is a toll- collector at a bridge like a Jew? |
44099 | Why is a torch like the ring of a chain? |
44099 | Why is a turnpike like a dead dog''s tail? |
44099 | Why is a very amusing man like a very bad shot? |
44099 | Why is a very commonplace female a wonderful woman? |
44099 | Why is a very plain, common- place female a wonderful woman? |
44099 | Why is a very pretty, well- made, fashionable girl like a thrifty housekeeper? |
44099 | Why is a village cobbler like a parson? |
44099 | Why is a vocalist singing incorrectly like a forger of bad notes? |
44099 | Why is a wainscoted room like a reprieve? |
44099 | Why is a waiter like a race- horse? |
44099 | Why is a waiter like a race- horse? |
44099 | Why is a waiter like a race- horse? |
44099 | Why is a washerwoman like Saturday? |
44099 | Why is a washerwoman the most cruel person in the world? |
44099 | Why is a wax candle like Mr. Dickens''--the immortal Dickens''--last book? |
44099 | Why is a wedding- ring like eternity? |
44099 | Why is a well- trained horse like a benevolent man? |
44099 | Why is a well- trained horse like a benevolent man? |
44099 | Why is a wet- nurse like Vulcan? |
44099 | Why is a whirlpool like a donkey? |
44099 | Why is a whisper like a forged$ 5 note? |
44099 | Why is a wide- awake hat so called? |
44099 | Why is a widow like a gardener? |
44099 | Why is a widower like a house in a state of dilapidation? |
44099 | Why is a woman''s beauty like a ten- dollar greenback? |
44099 | Why is a worn- out shoe like ancient Greece? |
44099 | Why is a young lady''s bustle like an historical tale? |
44099 | Why is a youth encouraging a mustache like a cow''s tail? |
44099 | Why is an Irishman turning over in the snow like a watchman? |
44099 | Why is an actress like an angel? |
44099 | Why is an adjective like a drunken man? |
44099 | Why is an aristocratic seminary for young ladies like a flower garden? |
44099 | Why is an artist stronger than a horse? |
44099 | Why is an avaricious merchant like a Turk? |
44099 | Why is an egg like a colt? |
44099 | Why is an egg underdone like an egg overdone? |
44099 | Why is an elephant''s head different from any other head? |
44099 | Why is an expensive widow-- pshaw!--pensive widow we mean-- like the letter X? |
44099 | Why is an infant like a diamond? |
44099 | Why is an insolent fishmonger likely to get more business than a civil one? |
44099 | Why is an irritable man like an unskillful doctor? |
44099 | Why is an old coat like iron? |
44099 | Why is an old man''s head like a song"executed"( murdered) by an indifferent singer? |
44099 | Why is an orange like a church steeple? |
44099 | Why is an umbrella like a pancake? |
44099 | Why is an uncut leg of bacon like Hamlet in his soliloquy? |
44099 | Why is an undutiful son like one born deaf? |
44099 | Why is boots at an hotel like an editor? |
44099 | Why is boots at an hotel like an editor? |
44099 | Why is chloroform like Mendelssohn or Rossini? |
44099 | Why is conscience like the check- string of a carriage? |
44099 | Why is credit not given at an auction? |
44099 | Why is divinity the easiest of the three learned professions? |
44099 | Why is drunkenness like a ragged coat? |
44099 | Why is fashion like a blank cartridge? |
44099 | Why is fashionable society like a warming- pan? |
44099 | Why is flirting like plate- powder? |
44099 | Why is good gas like a true lover? |
44099 | Why is green grass like a mouse? |
44099 | Why is horse- racing a necessity? |
44099 | Why is hot bread like a caterpillar? |
44099 | Why is intoxication like a slop bowl? |
44099 | Why is it dangerous to take a nap in a train? |
44099 | Why is it dangerous to take a walk in the woods in spring? |
44099 | Why is it easy to break into an old man''s house? |
44099 | Why is it impossible for a swell who lisps to believe in the existence of young ladies? |
44099 | Why is it impossible that there should be one best horse on a race- course? |
44099 | Why is it not extraordinary to find a painter''s studio as hot as an oven? |
44099 | Why is it right B should come before C? |
44099 | Why is it that you can not starve in the desert? |
44099 | Why is life the riddle of riddles? |
44099 | Why is lip- salve like a duenna? |
44099 | Why is love always represented as a child? |
44099 | Why is love like a canal- boat? |
44099 | Why is love like a candle? |
44099 | Why is love like a candle? |
44099 | Why is marriage with a deceased wife''s sister like the wedding of two fish? |
44099 | Why is money often moist? |
44099 | Why is my place of business like a baker''s oven? |
44099 | Why is my servant Betsy like a race- course? |
44099 | Why is my servant Betsy like a race- course? |
44099 | Why is opening a letter like taking a very queer method of getting into a room? |
44099 | Why is our meerschaum like a water- color artist? |
44099 | Why is riding fast up a steep ascent like a little dog''s female puppy suffering from the rheumatism? |
44099 | Why is steam power in a locomotive like the goods lading a ship? |
44099 | Why is swearing aloud like an old coat? |
44099 | Why is tea more generally drunk now than a year or two back? |
44099 | Why is the Apollo Belvidere like a piece of new music? |
44099 | Why is the Commander- in- chief like a broker? |
44099 | Why is the Emperor of Russia like a greedy school- boy on Christmas- day? |
44099 | Why is the Empress of the French always in bad company? |
44099 | Why is the French cook at the Union Club like a man sitting on the top of a shot- tower? |
44099 | Why is the Ohio river like a drunken man? |
44099 | Why is the Premier like an alchemist? |
44099 | Why is the Prince of Wales, musing on his mother''s government, like a rainbow? |
44099 | Why is the blessed state of matrimony like an invested city? |
44099 | Why is the final letter in Europe like a Parisian riot? |
44099 | Why is the flight of an eagle_ also_ a most unpleasant sight to witness? |
44099 | Why is the fourth of July like oysters? |
44099 | Why is the hangman''s noose like a box with nothing in it? |
44099 | Why is the history of England like a wet season? |
44099 | Why is the inside of everything mysterious? |
44099 | Why is the isthmus of Suez like the first_ u_ in"cucumber?" |
44099 | Why is the last conundrum like a monkey? |
44099 | Why is the law like a flight of rockets? |
44099 | Why is the letter E a gloomy and discontented vowel? |
44099 | Why is the letter K like a pig''s tail? |
44099 | Why is the letter P like a Roman Emperor? |
44099 | Why is the letter S like a pert repartee? |
44099 | Why is the letter T like an amphibious animal? |
44099 | Why is the letter_ l_ in the word military like the nose? |
44099 | Why is the nine- year- old boy like the sick glutton? |
44099 | Why is the nose on your face like the_ v_ in"civility?" |
44099 | Why is the office of Prime Minister like a May- pole? |
44099 | Why is the palace of the Louvre the cheapest ever erected? |
44099 | Why is the profession of a barrister not only legal, but religious? |
44099 | Why is the profession of a dentist always precarious? |
44099 | Why is the proprietor of a balloon like a phantom? |
44099 | Why is the root of the tongue like a dejected man? |
44099 | Why is the steeple of St. Paul''s church like Ireland? |
44099 | Why is the tolling of a bell like the prayer of a hypocrite? |
44099 | Why is the treadmill like a true convert? |
44099 | Why is this book like an evergreen? |
44099 | Why is wine spoilt by being converted into negus? |
44099 | Why is wit like a Chinese lady''s foot? |
44099 | Why is your considering yourself handsome like a chicken? |
44099 | Why is your eye like a schoolmaster using corporal punishment? |
44099 | Why is your first- born child like a legal deed? |
44099 | Why is your night- cap when on your head like a giblet pie? |
44099 | Why is"T"like an amphibious animal? |
44099 | Why may a beggar wear a very short coat? |
44099 | Why may a professor without students be said to be the most attentive of all teachers? |
44099 | Why may the Commissioners for Metropolitan Improvements never be expected to speak the truth? |
44099 | Why may turnkeys be said to have extraordinary powers of digestion? |
44099 | Why must a Yankee speculator be very subject to water on the brain? |
44099 | Why ought Lent to pass very rapidly? |
44099 | Why ought Shakespeare''s dramatic works be considered unpopular? |
44099 | Why ought a greedy man to wear a plaid waistcoat? |
44099 | Why ought a superstitious person to be necessarily temperate? |
44099 | Why ought golden sherry to suit tipplers? |
44099 | Why should a broken- hearted single young man lodger offer his heart in payment to his landlady? |
44099 | Why should a broken- hearted single young man lodger offer his heart in payment to his landlady? |
44099 | Why should a candle- maker never be pitied? |
44099 | Why should a man never marry a woman named Ellen? |
44099 | Why should a man troubled with gout make his will? |
44099 | Why should a speculator use a high stiffener for his cravat? |
44099 | Why should a teetotaler not have a wife? |
44099 | Why should a thirsty man always carry a watch? |
44099 | Why should battle- fields be very gay places? |
44099 | Why should not ladies and gentlemen take castor oil? |
44099 | Why should painters never allow children to go into their studios? |
44099 | Why should taking the proper quantity of medicine make you sleepy? |
44099 | Why should the ghost in Hamlet have been liable to the window- tax? |
44099 | Why should the poet have expected the woodman to"spare that tree?" |
44099 | Why should the world become blind if deprived of its philosophers? |
44099 | Why should the"evil one"make a good husband? |
44099 | Why should there be a marine law against whispering? |
44099 | Why should travelers not be likely to starve in the desert? |
44099 | Why should we pity the young Exquimaux? |
44099 | Why should well- fed M. P.s object to triennial parliaments? |
44099 | Why was Blackstone like an Irish vegetable? |
44099 | Why was Dickens a greater man than Shakespeare? |
44099 | Why was Eve made? |
44099 | Why was General Washington childless? |
44099 | Why was Grimaldi like a glass of good brandy and water? |
44099 | Why was Herodias''daughter the_ fastest_ girl mentioned in the New Testament? |
44099 | Why was Leander voluntarily drowned? |
44099 | Why was Louis Phillippe like a very wet day? |
44099 | Why was Moses the wickedest man that ever lived? |
44099 | Why was Noah obliged to stoop on entering the Ark? |
44099 | Why was Oliver Cromwell like Charles Kean? |
44099 | Why was Pharaoh''s daughter like a broker? |
44099 | Why was Phidias, the celebrated sculptor, laughed at by the Greeks? |
44099 | Why was it, as an old woman in a scarlet cloak was crossing a field in which a goat was browsing, that a most wonderful metamorphosis took place? |
44099 | Why was the whale that swallowed Jonah like a milkman who has retired on an independence? |
44099 | Why was"Uncle Tom''s Cabin"not written by a female hand? |
44099 | Why were the English victories in the Punjaub nothing to boast of? |
44099 | Why were the Russian accounts of the Crimean battles like the English and French? |
44099 | Why were the Russian accounts of the Crimean battles like the English and French? |
44099 | Why were the cannon at Delhi like tailors? |
44099 | Why will scooping out a turnip be a noisy process? |
44099 | Why would a compliment from a chicken be an insult? |
44099 | Why would a great gourmand make a very clumsy dressmaker? |
44099 | Why would an owl be offended at your calling him a pheasant? |
44099 | Why, asks a disconsolate widow, is venison like my late and never sufficiently- to- be- lamented husband? |
44099 | Why, if a man has a gallery of paintings, may you pick his pockets? |
44099 | Why, suppose we were to bore a hole exactly through the earth, starting from Dublin, and you went in at this end, where would you come out? |
44099 | Why, when you are going out of town, does a railroad conductor cut a hole in your ticket? |
44099 | Why, when you paint a man''s portrait, may you be described as stepping into his shoes? |
44099 | Why_ does_ a man permit himself to be henpecked? |
44099 | Wilt thou? |
44099 | Yet seen each day; if not, be sure at night You''ll quickly find me out by candlelight? |
44099 | You do n''t know what the exact antipodes to Ireland is? |
44099 | You eat it, you drink it, deny who can; It is sometimes a woman and sometimes a man? |
44099 | You like to pay a good price and have the finest work, of course; but what is that of which the common sort is best? |
44099 | You mean to say you do n''t? |
44099 | You name me once, and I am famed For deeds of noble daring; You name me twice, and I am found In savage customs sharing? |
44099 | and all its guns on board, weigh just before starting on a cruise? |
44099 | but how did the sandwiches get there? |
44099 | but what did the sun say to the rose? |
44099 | like a retired waiter? |
44099 | offer his heart in payment to his landlady? |
44099 | what is a kiss? |
44099 | what''s that? |
44099 | when he was quizzed about the gorilla? |
5328 | ''What''s the matter?" |
5328 | ''What''s the matter?'' 5328 Are you on the square?" |
5328 | Aw,said the boy,"what you rubbing it off for?" |
5328 | Ca n''t you change that bar? |
5328 | Ca n''t you give me the thirtieth? 5328 Here, boy,"he hollers,"me likee, what you call um?" |
5328 | How many comedy playlets are there to one serious playlet in vaudeville? 5328 How shall I time my manuscript?" |
5328 | How''s this, then? |
5328 | How''s this? |
5328 | I loved my mother, I hated to leave her, but what can you do with the typhoid fever? |
5328 | Mither av Moses,says Casey,"this is shure the atein fer ye; but what''s thot dilicate little tid- bit o''brown mate?" |
5328 | Play the chorus over, will you? |
5328 | See the difference? 5328 So you''re going to open a week earlier?" |
5328 | There is n''t any love- interest, either-- where''s the girl that sticks to him through thick and thin? 5328 Who for? |
5328 | Why did n''t you say special set at first? |
5328 | ( A girl passes, crying out"Persian Plums-- who will buy?") |
5328 | ( Biz) Do you know what that means? |
5328 | ( Following GOLDIE R.) Come on, Goldie( putting his arms around her, with purse in front of her face), what''s the answer? |
5328 | ( Goes R.) BIRDIE: What are you doing for him? |
5328 | ( Goes into bedroom and takes down coat which is hanging on door C.) EEL:( Lies on couch L.) Have you got enough cale to carry us over there? |
5328 | ( O''MARA exits door L.) PERKINS:( Coming R. C.) Inspector, has this girl Goldie Marshall ever been up before? |
5328 | ( Pulls savagely away from him and crosses R.) DUGAN:( Following GOLDIE R.) Am I? |
5328 | ( Sits on sofa L.) GOLDIE: Old life? |
5328 | ( Starts for door C.) O''MARA: Well, why do n''t you wait till the pinch comes off and then get the story for sure? |
5328 | ( Throws off coat, L.) ALGERNON: What do you mean? |
5328 | ( To GLADYS:) Will you sign the papers? |
5328 | ( To Mrs. W.) Had you missed anything else up to the time of this robbery? |
5328 | ),''cause I ai n''t, see? |
5328 | ):"Are you on the square?" |
5328 | --Oh Miss Carey, what do you charge for a frock like that? |
5328 | --and so you''ve left him, eh? |
5328 | --and then, oh Miss Carey, what do you think was the next thing I discovered? |
5328 | .See-- how to flirt with a handkerchief?" |
5328 | A Pinkerton, hey? |
5328 | A lady? |
5328 | A wide range of themes is shown in even these few playlets, is n''t there? |
5328 | ABU: Ah-- ma Rosa Persh-- ma waf to be-- to- morrow we marry, eh? |
5328 | ALGERNON: What''s the matter with him? |
5328 | ALGERNON: You wo n''t sign? |
5328 | Again, when Paul wishes to be alone with Rose, Mr. Woolf makes Paul turn to Phil and say,"What did I tell you to do?" |
5328 | Ai n''t that practically the limit? |
5328 | Always use an expression which ends with the query,"Did he not?" |
5328 | Am I speaking to Mr. Fallon? |
5328 | Am I speaking to the cashier of the hotel? |
5328 | Am I the sort of man that gives girls--_advice?_( With rough tenderness.) |
5328 | An example of the short introduction is:"D''you know me friend Casey? |
5328 | And did you ever figure out how far a cashier can go in sixty days? |
5328 | And do n''t forget your misery cape and the music that goes with you, will you, mommer? |
5328 | And have you heavy shingle marks on your person, great blue welts? |
5328 | And how about my share of the money? |
5328 | And if the latter,"_ Should_ I write a serious playlet?" |
5328 | And if you saw these bills in the next five minutes you''d be able to swear they''re the same bills you gave me? |
5328 | And if you were married-- to-- to a fellow like me, you''d make him an awfully good wife, would n''t you? |
5328 | And now, what is fit and becoming dialogue? |
5328 | And suppose the neighbors fire their pistols at me and riddle me with bullets, what then? |
5328 | And supposing we ca n''t hold it after we do get it? |
5328 | And we shall proceed? |
5328 | And what the hell kind of a navy do you expect for a nickel? |
5328 | And what''s the answer? |
5328 | And what''s the cause of all the trouble? |
5328 | And where is your mama? |
5328 | And who can die better than he who dies greatly? |
5328 | And you really believe you can make him_ go_? |
5328 | And you tell me if you can hear what I say? |
5328 | And you''re not going to stand for it? |
5328 | And you''ve come to me to help you? |
5328 | Anything wrong? |
5328 | Are You Sure Your Action Is All Vital? |
5328 | Are n''t men brutes, Miss Carey? |
5328 | Are n''t you ashamed of yourself? |
5328 | Are the characters interesting, lovable, hateable, laughable, to be remembered? |
5328 | Are there any bugs in your camp? |
5328 | Are you a flirter? |
5328 | Are you all ready? |
5328 | Are you badly hurt? |
5328 | Are you going back to America with Mr. and Mrs. Schuyler? |
5328 | Are you ill? |
5328 | Are you listening to me? |
5328 | Are you married? |
5328 | Are you the sort of person likely to make a success of writing for vaudeville? |
5328 | Are you there now, Kelly? |
5328 | Are you there? |
5328 | BIRDIE: Ai n''t he the awful scamp? |
5328 | BIRDIE: Alone? |
5328 | BIRDIE: But how do you propose to_ lug her_ there? |
5328 | BIRDIE: Did you get a good look at her? |
5328 | BIRDIE: So, you still want war? |
5328 | BIRDIE: What''s to be done? |
5328 | BROOKY: Another impossible metaphor, my dear fellow; how can one get next to one''s self without being twins? |
5328 | BROOKY: Billy Bradley? |
5328 | BROOKY: But surely you''re not going to enter that apartment house unannounced? |
5328 | BROOKY: Oh I see; well, what about him? |
5328 | BROOKY: Righto, old chap, righto; but what bothers me is, what''s it all about? |
5328 | BROOKY: What robbery is that? |
5328 | BROOKY: What''s he done? |
5328 | BROOKY: Why, are they all foreigners? |
5328 | BROOKY:( Coming C.) Got a story? |
5328 | Borrow it? |
5328 | But is it safe for you to come here, Moe? |
5328 | But what are you doing here? |
5328 | But what help are the labor unions to the working man? |
5328 | But what is really the ideal arrangement of a monologue? |
5328 | But what is this magic that makes of song- writing a mystery that even the genius can not unerringly solve each time he tries? |
5328 | But what is"forceful,"and why does Webster define anything that is dramatic as"theatrical"? |
5328 | But why should they raise the price of eggs? |
5328 | But, if I do n''t, he''ll_ tell!__ What_ am I to do? |
5328 | But, tell me, what do you ask for him? |
5328 | But, you''d keep quiet for ten dollars, would n''t you, if that was all I had? |
5328 | But-- excuse me-- how do you know so many kinds of men if you''ve never been married? |
5328 | By the way, Goldie, what''s the number of your flat on East Broadway? |
5328 | CHAPTER II SHOULD YOU TRY TO WRITE FOR VAUDEVILLE? |
5328 | CHAPTER XII HOW PLAYLETS ARE GERMINATED Where does a playlet writer get his idea? |
5328 | CHAPTER XIX THE ELEMENTS OF A SUCCESSFUL ONE- ACT MUSICAL COMEDY If you were asked,"What is a one- act musical comedy?" |
5328 | CHARLIE: And now, ai n''t you going to, give me a nice, sweet kiss, darling? |
5328 | CHARLIE: Are you very angry at me, Mr. Maynard? |
5328 | CHARLIE: Can I have your daughter? |
5328 | CHARLIE: Guess who it is? |
5328 | CHARLIE: So you love your baby? |
5328 | CHARLIE: Well then, Miss Sourgrass, do you want to earn a dollar? |
5328 | CHARLIE: What uncle? |
5328 | CHARLIE: What will? |
5328 | CHARLIE: What''s the matter with Chlorinda? |
5328 | CHARLIE: Why, Mr. Maynard, what do you mean? |
5328 | CHLORINDA: Ai n''t he jes''too sweet for anything? |
5328 | CHLORINDA: Did you hear what happened to Charlie Doolittle? |
5328 | CHLORINDA: What''s the matter with it? |
5328 | CHLORINDA: Why, why should I laugh? |
5328 | CHLORINDA: Wo n''t I get punch, too? |
5328 | CHLORINDA: Yes, sah; five million dollars? |
5328 | CHLORINDA: You do n''t? |
5328 | COMEDIAN Does she answer you with a handkerchief? |
5328 | COMEDIAN Suppose you ai n''t got a handkerchief? |
5328 | COMEDIAN Vat does that mean? |
5328 | COMEDIAN Who wants to flirt with a handkerchief? |
5328 | COMEDIAN: And den what do you do? |
5328 | COMEDIAN: And does she answer? |
5328 | COMEDIAN: And vat do you do to be disagreeable to ladies? |
5328 | COMEDIAN: But suppose the bulldog flirts with you? |
5328 | COMEDIAN: But vat do you do after you turn down the gas? |
5328 | COMEDIAN: Did n''t I pay for it? |
5328 | COMEDIAN: Does it say that in the book? |
5328 | COMEDIAN: Does she answer you with a handkerchief? |
5328 | COMEDIAN: How do you know so much about flirting? |
5328 | COMEDIAN: How do you make them unhappy? |
5328 | COMEDIAN: I am a rummy? |
5328 | COMEDIAN: Is dat all? |
5328 | COMEDIAN: No what? |
5328 | COMEDIAN: Suppose it ai n''t a nice day? |
5328 | COMEDIAN: Suppose you ai n''t got a handkerchief? |
5328 | COMEDIAN: Vat does that mean? |
5328 | COMEDIAN: Vat kind of a meeting is dot? |
5328 | COMEDIAN: Vat''s dat, a female? |
5328 | COMEDIAN: Vere do you get all dose words? |
5328 | COMEDIAN: What is a gentlemen? |
5328 | COMEDIAN: What is the name of that book? |
5328 | COMEDIAN: What you got against me? |
5328 | COMEDIAN: What''s dot? |
5328 | COMEDIAN: What''s the trouble? |
5328 | COMEDIAN: Who wants to flirt with a handkerchief? |
5328 | COMEDIAN: Why-- what do I do? |
5328 | COMEDIAN: You are what? |
5328 | Ca n''t I have the spot- light to die with? |
5328 | Ca n''t you remember where the money was hid, Joe? |
5328 | Can I sit down? |
5328 | Can you beat that? |
5328 | Can you name more than one or two recent plays so fashioned that have won more than a season''s run? |
5328 | Come-- choose-- whoever has the shortest straw is to show his courage and die for me-- who is it? |
5328 | Convincing evidence, is this not, of the speed with which the curtain must follow the climax? |
5328 | Could a man do that? |
5328 | Could one little scene be added, or even one little passage be left out, without marring the whole? |
5328 | Could there be any more incongruous thing than wives forming a Union? |
5328 | Could there be anything more dramatic than that? |
5328 | Could you hear me? |
5328 | DOWLEH: Ah, Fatima-- can I see you alone? |
5328 | DUDLEY: Have you forgotten, in Germany, Unter den Linden? |
5328 | DUDLEY: Oh, Lena, could I see you alone? |
5328 | DUGAN: Ai n''t I welcome? |
5328 | DUGAN: Am I that homely? |
5328 | DUGAN: Is that so? |
5328 | DUGAN: You know why you were brought here? |
5328 | DUGAN:( Coming down C.) Yes, he''s tickled to death to see you, ai n''t you, Billy? |
5328 | Dat means"Can I come in?" |
5328 | Den vat do you do? |
5328 | Dick, how can I thank you? |
5328 | Did he leave you much? |
5328 | Did you ever write a play? |
5328 | Did you give the Inspector the office? |
5328 | Do n''t tell me there''s any trouble between you and Tom? |
5328 | Do n''t you know me? |
5328 | Do n''t you know what fee means? |
5328 | Do n''t you see that? |
5328 | Do you know how to write? |
5328 | Do you know what that means? |
5328 | Do you know who the murderer is? |
5328 | Do you see how words can kill and soundless movements vivify? |
5328 | Do you still love me? |
5328 | Do you think I ought to get another? |
5328 | Do you think I''d snitch? |
5328 | Do you think I''d squeal on a pal? |
5328 | Do you understand? |
5328 | Do you want to look for yourself? |
5328 | Do you write with ease and find pleasure in the work? |
5328 | Does it lure to laughter? |
5328 | Does it thrill? |
5328 | Does it touch to tears? |
5328 | Does the story grip? |
5328 | Does the story move-- not the bodies of the actors, but the merely mental recounting of the narrative? |
5328 | EEL: Are you sure? |
5328 | EEL: Do you think I''d frisk a stiff? |
5328 | EEL: I say, have you got enough money to hold us till we get to Chi? |
5328 | EEL: Me? |
5328 | EEL: Oh, you did? |
5328 | EEL: So Goldie declared me in on this? |
5328 | EEL: Well, Inspector? |
5328 | EEL: Well, how about your share? |
5328 | EEL: What, one of them record shysters? |
5328 | EEL: Who? |
5328 | EEL: Why? |
5328 | EEL: Will you marry me? |
5328 | EEL:( Jerking away and going R.) How about two years ago? |
5328 | EEL:( Rising and coming R.) Yes, but supposing we ca n''t get work? |
5328 | Even before the fourth speech it all sounded flat and tiresome, did n''t it? |
5328 | Excited? |
5328 | FALLON: And who''d have believed it? |
5328 | FALLON: And, you told Tom? |
5328 | FALLON: And-- he would n''t? |
5328 | FALLON: Chance? |
5328 | FALLON: Do n''t you_ want_ to look? |
5328 | FALLON: Dope fiend, too, hey? |
5328 | FALLON: Have I hurt him? |
5328 | FALLON: He is, is he? |
5328 | FALLON: Here, in this hotel? |
5328 | FALLON: Well? |
5328 | FALLON: What do I want? |
5328 | FALLON: What door? |
5328 | FALLON: What? |
5328 | FELIX: But suppose a fly hops on my nose? |
5328 | FELIX: But what have I got to do with all this? |
5328 | FELIX: Hear what? |
5328 | FELIX: Oh, it was a joke, was it? |
5328 | FELIX: Or suppose some bad boys throw stones at me? |
5328 | FELIX: Say, what''s the matter with you anyhow? |
5328 | FELIX: Well, suppose he does? |
5328 | FELIX: What? |
5328 | FELIX: When do I get something to eat? |
5328 | FELIX: Where''s my share? |
5328 | FLYNN: A jimmy? |
5328 | FLYNN: A widow? |
5328 | FLYNN: Is he working? |
5328 | FLYNN: What do they call you? |
5328 | FLYNN: You know all their monakers? |
5328 | FRED: Is he in love with another woman? |
5328 | FRED: Oh-- they are-- are you boarding here too now? |
5328 | FRED: Tell me, have you ever noticed me coming in or going out of the building? |
5328 | FRED: Then you''re planning a divorce? |
5328 | FRED: Where? |
5328 | Fall for blackmail? |
5328 | First, of what value is the act itself? |
5328 | For example, does n''t a"Jew"aviator who is pestered by an insurance agent or an undertaker, strike you as offering amusing possibilities? |
5328 | For example, take the point in"The Art of Flirtation"beginning: COMEDIAN And does she answer? |
5328 | For example, what do"farce,""comedy,""tragedy"and"melodrama"_ connote_ to you? |
5328 | For instance, how would you go about producing"When it Strikes Home"? |
5328 | For the love of the Chambermaids''Union, where was I Maggie? |
5328 | For what? |
5328 | GLADYS: But tell me, Moe, how are you fixed? |
5328 | GLADYS: Can it be a mortgage on the old farm? |
5328 | GLADYS: Dh, Moe Reiss, do n''t you believe him? |
5328 | GLADYS: Dump? |
5328 | GLADYS: Well? |
5328 | GLADYS: Well? |
5328 | GLADYS: What shall I do? |
5328 | GLADYS: What, hock me sparks? |
5328 | GLADYS: Where have you been all these years, Moe? |
5328 | GLADYS: You dare to speak of love to me? |
5328 | GOLDIE: AIN''T you got no money neither? |
5328 | GOLDIE: Ai n''t this classy? |
5328 | GOLDIE: But the Eel? |
5328 | GOLDIE: Did n''t he shove him in? |
5328 | GOLDIE: Homely? |
5328 | GOLDIE: Then why not let me end it all? |
5328 | GOLDIE: Well, what are you? |
5328 | GOLDIE: Well, what''s he going to get it on then? |
5328 | GOLDIE: What Isaacson? |
5328 | GOLDIE: What do you mean? |
5328 | GOLDIE: What then, lookin''for a sleeper? |
5328 | GOLDIE: What? |
5328 | GOLDIE: Where would I get bail? |
5328 | GOLDIE: Yes, but what have you got to pawn? |
5328 | GOLDIE:( Brushing off coat at door C.) What? |
5328 | GOLDIE:( Coming C.) What''s on your mind now? |
5328 | Genevieve? |
5328 | GoLDffi: Where? |
5328 | Goldie''s flat? |
5328 | Good gracious, do n''t scream so, where do you think you are? |
5328 | Good? |
5328 | HARRY: I''m what? |
5328 | HARRY: I''ve waked up everybody else in the building-- why should_ you_ sleep? |
5328 | HARRY: Why should I''be ashamed? |
5328 | HARVEY: The money? |
5328 | HARVEY: The what? |
5328 | HARVEY: Well, suppose I did; you do n''t expect me to keep my word, do you? |
5328 | HARVEY: What do you want to eat for? |
5328 | HARVEY: Why, what do you mean? |
5328 | HENRY I do n''t know; does it? |
5328 | HENRY( CHUCKLING) And I''m the rich old geezer, eh? |
5328 | Had Gilbert ever seen a levee? |
5328 | Have You Been Too"Talky"? |
5328 | Have You Kept Your Audience in Ignorance Too Long? |
5328 | Have You Lost Your Singleness of Effect by Mixing Playlet Genres? |
5328 | Have You been too Frank at the Beginning? |
5328 | Have you any money? |
5328 | Have you any objection to talking for publication? |
5328 | Have you caught any fish since you came? |
5328 | Have you forgotten-- the summer I met you in Niagara Falls? |
5328 | Have you got it? |
5328 | Have you got the door shut tight? |
5328 | Have you retained counsel? |
5328 | Have you written successful novels or short- stories? |
5328 | Have you? |
5328 | Hazy? |
5328 | He has n''t, hey? |
5328 | He is? |
5328 | He was about to speak to him, when up came a bustling little man who said,"Do you want Miss Headliner for the week of the thirtieth? |
5328 | Hello, is that the cashier? |
5328 | Hello, is this the Corn and Grain Bank? |
5328 | Hello? |
5328 | Here, here, where are you going? |
5328 | Hints on Prices for Various Acts What money can be made by writing vaudeville material? |
5328 | How about that necklace? |
5328 | How about this one? |
5328 | How are they going to secure the money to get away from town? |
5328 | How are you feeling? |
5328 | How are you, Sheik? |
5328 | How can you expect me to believe you? |
5328 | How can you help me in that room, when a fellow''s pumping lead into my stomach in this one? |
5328 | How could business be introduced in this gag-- without having the obvious effect of being lugged in by the heels? |
5328 | How did YOU know that the rest of my party had gone away for the day? |
5328 | How did a sweet young thing like you ever meet such a type of a vertebrate? |
5328 | How did he lose his looks? |
5328 | How did you come to fall in? |
5328 | How did you come to know it? |
5328 | How do I gauge this? |
5328 | How do you feel? |
5328 | How do you mean? |
5328 | How does he recognize a playlet idea when it presents itself to him? |
5328 | How is it possible for a manager to pick a successful play even once in a while? |
5328 | How long will it take you to pack? |
5328 | How many times have you heard someone say of another''s action,"Oh, he did that just for theatrical effect"? |
5328 | How may you know which routine is really the best? |
5328 | How much did you say? |
5328 | How much do you want for the statue? |
5328 | How much of the playlet is achieved when he hits on the idea? |
5328 | How would they know he was connected with the other characters in the playlet if you neglected to tell them beforehand? |
5328 | How would you feel about it? |
5328 | How would you like to"paflouka"with me? |
5328 | How would you stage"When I Lost You"? |
5328 | How''s that husband of yours? |
5328 | How, then, is the writer to get in touch with them? |
5328 | How? |
5328 | Hurt him? |
5328 | I dare you-- understand? |
5328 | I do n''t suppose you''ve ever been held up before? |
5328 | I do n''t suppose you''ve ever been robbed before? |
5328 | I guess he means to hold_ that_ over my head, hey? |
5328 | I have a wife with an affair-- I mean an affair with your wife-- what have you to say about it? |
5328 | I hope so-- but why should the Lord take me for a hundred when he can get me at 70? |
5328 | I thought you said it was a human being? |
5328 | I thought you said we was goin''to begin all over again, and live like decent, respectable people? |
5328 | I want to know if he''s cashed it in yet? |
5328 | I wonder what became of the statue? |
5328 | I wonder where my popper is? |
5328 | I? |
5328 | INSPECTOR: And did he? |
5328 | INSPECTOR: Anyone else? |
5328 | INSPECTOR: Did n''t you prefer charges against him? |
5328 | INSPECTOR: Do you intend to stay here to- night or are you going to get bail? |
5328 | INSPECTOR: How about this Worthington robbery, was n''t he in on it? |
5328 | INSPECTOR: No? |
5328 | INSPECTOR: Now that the Eel''s been sprung, are you going back to him? |
5328 | INSPECTOR: The horseowner? |
5328 | INSPECTOR: Well, have you got anything to say to me before I lock you up for the night? |
5328 | INSPECTOR: Well, you do n''t deny that you and the Eel are sweethearts? |
5328 | INSPECTOR: Well? |
5328 | INSPECTOR: What Dugan? |
5328 | INSPECTOR: What do you know about this Worthington robbery? |
5328 | INSPECTOR: What other motive could Mr. Dugan possibly have had? |
5328 | INSPECTOR: When did you last see him? |
5328 | INSPECTOR: Who else was in the house at the time, besides yourself and the maid? |
5328 | INSPECTOR: Why Dugan? |
5328 | INSPECTOR: Will you kindly be seated? |
5328 | INSPECTOR: Would you suspect them? |
5328 | INSPECTOR: You''re not afraid to talk in front of a couple of newspaper reporters, are you? |
5328 | If I do n''t answer, everything''s O. K., come up; but if I do answer, do n''t come up, see? |
5328 | If I pay you, will you promise not to take the story to the newspapers? |
5328 | If he did, how would the stage hands change the scenery without causing a long and tedious wait? |
5328 | If they are laughing, why are they laughing? |
5328 | If they are quarreling, why are they quarreling? |
5328 | If this sequence of events forms merely a mildly interesting narrative, what, then, is the complication that weaves them into a plot? |
5328 | In other words, what make the best playlet problems? |
5328 | In what order shall I place them to secure the best effect for the whole monologue? |
5328 | Inspector? |
5328 | Is every word, is every action, thoroughly motivated? |
5328 | Is he the one? |
5328 | Is it any wonder my love for him has grown cold? |
5328 | Is it true to life-- truer than life? |
5328 | Is it well constructed-- that is, does it interest every minute of the time? |
5328 | Is it? |
5328 | Is she hard on you? |
5328 | Is that all you''ve got to worry about? |
5328 | Is that what you want? |
5328 | Is that why you had me steal that necklace? |
5328 | Is the dialogue fine? |
5328 | Is there any little thing I can do for you? |
5328 | Is there any other little thing I can do for you? |
5328 | Is this the cafe? |
5328 | Is this the cafe? |
5328 | Is this the dog? |
5328 | Is your hotel detective in the lobby? |
5328 | It is n''t loaded with dynamite, is it? |
5328 | It reads like a fairy tale, does n''t it? |
5328 | JOE: Bless me, am I dreaming, or do I see once more de old plantation? |
5328 | Just three words? |
5328 | KELLY: Blackmail, Mr. Fallon? |
5328 | Keep his love? |
5328 | Keep your hands up in the air-- promise? |
5328 | Kelly, this hotel engages you from the Pinkertons to stay around the place, and-- protect the guests? |
5328 | Killed him? |
5328 | Lena-- MRS. SCHUYLER: Du,"Allmaechtiger Strohsach"--where was I Lena? |
5328 | Lou Mohun? |
5328 | Lovely day, is n''t it? |
5328 | MAGGIE: Vacation? |
5328 | MAGGIE: Why would n''t I? |
5328 | MAYNARD: Angry at you, Charlie? |
5328 | MAYNARD: Are you fond of horses? |
5328 | MAYNARD: Does he enjoy such things? |
5328 | MAYNARD: Five hundred thousand dollars? |
5328 | MAYNARD: I have often wanted to ask you, Mrs. Wilson, where is your husband? |
5328 | MAYNARD: Lend you fifty dollars? |
5328 | MAYNARD: No, no; I mean, did he leave you any property? |
5328 | MAYNARD: Well, Old Black Joe, how are you feeling today? |
5328 | MAYNARD: What can I do for you, Mr. Tremble? |
5328 | MAYNARD: What can I do for you, Old Black Joe? |
5328 | MAYNARD: What on earth are you talking about? |
5328 | MAYNARD: What uncle? |
5328 | MAYNARD: What''s that, you do n''t know where your husband is? |
5328 | MAYNARD: What''s that? |
5328 | MAYNARD: Wo n''t you step inside the house, Mrs. Wilson-- I mean Alice-- and have a glass of birthday punch with the other ladies? |
5328 | MAYNARD: You did n''t smash my hat? |
5328 | MISS CAREY: A lollard? |
5328 | MISS CAREY: Good Lord-- what is it now? |
5328 | MISS CAREY: I do n''t wish to talk it over anywhere, and-- ANGELA: Well, surely, you do n''t think it was wrong of me to leave Harry-- now do you? |
5328 | MISS CAREY: With a man? |
5328 | MOE REISS: A race track tout? |
5328 | MOE REISS: Alphonso? |
5328 | MOE REISS: And what is your name, my little man? |
5328 | MOE REISS: And where is your popper? |
5328 | MOE REISS: Dressuitcase? |
5328 | MOE REISS: It''s true then, it''s true? |
5328 | MOE REISS: What''s the matter with your nose? |
5328 | MOHUN: Have I? |
5328 | MRS. HOWARD: And, you think he wo n''t come back? |
5328 | MRS. HOWARD: But,_ how_, Dick,_ how_? |
5328 | MRS. HOWARD: Dick, did you ever guess why I did n''t marry you? |
5328 | MRS. SCHUYLER: Germany? |
5328 | MRS. SCHUYLER: Niagara Falls? |
5328 | MRS. SCHUYLER: Only one? |
5328 | MRS. SCHUYLER: Remember the night you let me flop? |
5328 | MRS. SCHUYLER: Save me? |
5328 | MRS. SCHUYLER: Were you one of the Blonde Broilers? |
5328 | MRS. SCHUYLER: Why, what''s the matter? |
5328 | MRS. SCHUYLER: Why? |
5328 | MRS. SCHUYLER: Will you? |
5328 | MRS. WILSON: Why Chlorinda, what''s the matter? |
5328 | Makes dresses with a long, thin nose? |
5328 | Man, have you no heart? |
5328 | Me squawk? |
5328 | Me? |
5328 | Mercy, where was I Agnes? |
5328 | Miss Carey, are you asleep? |
5328 | Miss Carey, have you ever seen a man in a canton flannel night shirt? |
5328 | Miss Headliner? |
5328 | Mommer, can I have visions? |
5328 | Mr. Electrician, will you kindly give my dying child a spot- light? |
5328 | My Gawd, what is it now? |
5328 | My wife in that man''s arms? |
5328 | Naturally, this leads us to inquire: is there not some just balance between characters and plot which should be preserved? |
5328 | Need I say that such a climax will be worth while? |
5328 | Never write: What were you doing at Pat''s dinner lathering your face with a charlotte russe? |
5328 | Not in this hotel? |
5328 | Not much chance for a new character, you will say-- but have you thought about the different combinations you can make? |
5328 | Now in the first place, how long had this girl, Goldie Marshall, been in your employ? |
5328 | Now the line"Who wants to flirt with a handkerchief? |
5328 | Now when you see a pretty woman coming along who wants to flirt with you, what is the first thing a man should do? |
5328 | Now when you see a pretty woman coming along who wants to flirt with you, what is the first thing a man should do? |
5328 | Now will you sign the papers? |
5328 | Now will you sign those papers? |
5328 | Now young woman-- get your things together and get ready to go-- young woman, do you hear me? |
5328 | Now, having your points and gags clearly framed in mind and ready to set down on paper, you naturally ask, How shall I arrange them? |
5328 | Now, may I eat? |
5328 | O''MARA: They have? |
5328 | Oh, I wonder who that can be? |
5328 | Oh, the man who made love to me over a plate of frankfurters? |
5328 | Oh, what am I doing? |
5328 | Oh, you can-- Where are they? |
5328 | Oh,_ ca n''t_ you understand? |
5328 | Oh-- are you going to have your luncheon_ alone_? |
5328 | On a public highway? |
5328 | On what stage do people talk more nearly like you and I talk? |
5328 | Or-- to show you that serious songs are not the only ones that may not be producible-- how would you put on"Oh, How that German Could Love"? |
5328 | Our Rose? |
5328 | Over what? |
5328 | PAUL: I wonder what she meant by that? |
5328 | PAUL: Know what? |
5328 | PAUL: Phil-- do you hear? |
5328 | PAUL: Well, then, where''s Phil? |
5328 | PERKINS: I guess it will go pretty hard with him, wo n''t it Inspector? |
5328 | PERKINS: I suppose many a person has been railroaded through the System? |
5328 | PERKINS: Looks mighty like her work, does n''t it, Inspector? |
5328 | PERKINS: Well, he is, is n''t he? |
5328 | PHIL: A bird? |
5328 | PHIL: Am I going to eat? |
5328 | PHIL: Do n''t you remember when I was a"merry merry"with you in the"Blonde Broilers''Burlesque"troupe? |
5328 | PHIL: Do she? |
5328 | PHIL: Grab her in the grape arbor? |
5328 | PHIL: Is there any little thing I can do for you? |
5328 | PHIL: Is there any other little thing I can do for you? |
5328 | PHIL: Say, is n''t there some mistake? |
5328 | PHONSIE: Ai n''t I good, mommer, do n''t you think? |
5328 | PHONSIE: And what prevented him? |
5328 | PHONSIE: But the good always die young, do n''t they, mommer? |
5328 | PHONSIE: Do n''t stand chewing the rag with the bartender, will you, mommer? |
5328 | PHONSIE: I can swear too, popper, want to hear me? |
5328 | PHONSIE: Mommer, when do I eat? |
5328 | PHONSIE: Say, mommer, am I dying? |
5328 | PHONSIE: Who was that, mommer? |
5328 | PHONSIE: Why not, mommer? |
5328 | Pay him? |
5328 | Perhaps you''ve got the$ 50,000 to pay the mortgage? |
5328 | Poison? |
5328 | Put me wise, is this true? |
5328 | Ring any bell? |
5328 | Roosevelt gets a dollar a word, where do I come in? |
5328 | Rubbing his hand over the place where the rest of the meat had gone, he says:"Quack- quack?" |
5328 | SONG:"Who Sent These Persian Plums?" |
5328 | STRAIGHT To your wife? |
5328 | STRAIGHT: Den you squeeze it-- COMEDIAN: And den? |
5328 | STRAIGHT: Do n''t you know? |
5328 | STRAIGHT: Do you expect the book to tell you everything? |
5328 | STRAIGHT: She sighs-- COMEDIAN: And den? |
5328 | STRAIGHT: She''ll press her head upon your manly shoulder-- COMEDIAN: And den-- STRAIGHT: She looks up into your eyes-- COMEDIAN: And den? |
5328 | STRAIGHT: To your wife? |
5328 | STRAIGHT: What are you trying to do, flag a train? |
5328 | STRAIGHT: You hold her tight-- COMEDIAN: And den? |
5328 | STRAIGHT: You put her vaist around your arms-- COMEDIAN: And den? |
5328 | STRAIGHT: You put the other arm around her-- COMEDIAN: And den? |
5328 | STRAIGHT: You sigh-- COMEDIAN: And den? |
5328 | STRAIGHT: You turn down the gas-- COMEDIAN: And den? |
5328 | Say, what is this-- a prize fight? |
5328 | Say, what kind of a game is this anyhow? |
5328 | Second, what can the performer or the producer afford to payor be made to pay for the act? |
5328 | See those blue prints? |
5328 | See? |
5328 | She''s not here-- and you get out-- what do you mean by waking me up at this hour? |
5328 | Sign this paper and the mortgage shall be yours, refuse-- and-- do you mind my coming closer so that I can hiss this in your ear? |
5328 | Since when do dogs carry money? |
5328 | So, I''m fired with the threshold gag? |
5328 | Subject Themes What can you bring to the vaudeville stage in the way of themes that are new? |
5328 | Suppose thieves come around some night and steal the statue? |
5328 | THE FELLOW: Afraid? |
5328 | THE FELLOW: But how did you come to have my letter written to Genevieve? |
5328 | THE FELLOW: But the cigarettes? |
5328 | THE FELLOW: But you''re coming back again? |
5328 | THE FELLOW: Is it possible? |
5328 | THE FELLOW: Promise to hold your hands up until I have finished? |
5328 | THE FELLOW: Shall I tell you_ my_ name? |
5328 | THE FELLOW: Well, turn about is fair play, is n''t it? |
5328 | THE FELLOW: Well, you''ve heard of tom- cods, have n''t you? |
5328 | THE FELLOW: You''re not interested? |
5328 | THE GIRL: About_ me_? |
5328 | THE GIRL: And what are you? |
5328 | THE GIRL: Are you sick? |
5328 | THE GIRL: But what about that other letter? |
5328 | THE GIRL: Can you doubt it? |
5328 | THE GIRL: Do n''t you believe it? |
5328 | THE GIRL: Oh,_ do n''t_ you understand? |
5328 | THE GIRL: To guard the camp? |
5328 | THE GIRL: What? |
5328 | THE GIRL: Who ever heard of such a thing? |
5328 | THE GIRL: YOURS? |
5328 | THE GIRL: Yes, of course, but-- THE FELLOW: Well, why not tom- cats then? |
5328 | THE GIRL: You belong to the camping party flying the flag of the skull and cross- bones, do n''t you? |
5328 | THE GIRL: You dare me, do you? |
5328 | THE GIRL: You mean to insinuate that I have anything in my pocket of a compromising nature? |
5328 | Take away my little dying boy? |
5328 | Tell me, do you think I''ve grown stouter since the days when I was Lena? |
5328 | Tell me-- you do n''t think I''m the biggest liar in the world, do you? |
5328 | That? |
5328 | The Number of Persons How many people shall I have in my playlet? |
5328 | The days of the"Why did the chicken cross the road?" |
5328 | The line,"Who wants to flirt with a handkerchief? |
5328 | The movements are as simple and unagitated as one could imagine, and not one word is spoken, yet could you conceive of anything more dramatic? |
5328 | The words of the title first pop into your mind, do they not? |
5328 | Their material was a lot of jokes of the"Who was that lady I saw you with last night?" |
5328 | Then MISS CAREY from her bed in next room( curtained off, but partly visible) calls out: MISS CAREY: Who is it? |
5328 | Then do not you find yourself whistling that part of the music fitted to those words? |
5328 | Then she leaned over and said:"Do you like bananas?" |
5328 | Think I got someone in there? |
5328 | To the dump?!!! |
5328 | VIOLA: Charlie Doolittle, what does this mean? |
5328 | VIOLA: Girls, do you know why I''ve invited you all today? |
5328 | VIOLA: I wonder if the dog is hungry? |
5328 | VIOLA: Is it a human being? |
5328 | VIOLA: What''s the matter, father? |
5328 | VOICE: Have yez th''rint? |
5328 | Vat do you say? |
5328 | Vat does that mean flirt? |
5328 | Ven you met your friends down the street, vat did you say to them? |
5328 | WHAT IS A PLAYLET PLOT? |
5328 | WHEN TO BEGIN When should you begin to write your playlet? |
5328 | Was it George Cohan who said"a vaudeville audience is of the mental age of a nine- year- old child"? |
5328 | Was your full- evening play accepted and successful? |
5328 | Well, Chlorinda, what brings you out here? |
5328 | Well, how does this strike you? |
5328 | Well, sir, and what can I do for you? |
5328 | Well, sir, what can I do for you? |
5328 | Well, there are some beautiful girls in our new Persian home-- has Phil brought our things from the boat? |
5328 | Well, what do you want to see me about? |
5328 | Well, what have you got to say? |
5328 | Well, what would you do? |
5328 | Well, what''s the next move? |
5328 | Well, who are you? |
5328 | Well-- whoever you are-- what do you mean by waking me at two in the morning? |
5328 | Went out? |
5328 | What Chance Has the Beginner? |
5328 | What about me? |
5328 | What am_ I_ here for? |
5328 | What are the things that make you squirm in your seat and the man next you reach for his hat and go out? |
5328 | What are you doing here? |
5328 | What are you doing? |
5328 | What are you looking for, the ice- box? |
5328 | What brought you to Lake George? |
5328 | What could Genevieve have been doing with those things? |
5328 | What did I tell you to do? |
5328 | What did you do with them? |
5328 | What difference does that make? |
5328 | What disguise? |
5328 | What do you know better than anyone else-- what do you feel keener than anyone else does-- what can you present better than anyone else? |
5328 | What do you mean by butting in, you black devil? |
5328 | What do you mean by kicking me, sir? |
5328 | What do you mean by telling him that I eat tin cans and scrap iron? |
5328 | What do you mean? |
5328 | What do you mean? |
5328 | What do you say? |
5328 | What do you think I am, a Moll? |
5328 | What do you think I am, a school teacher? |
5328 | What do you want for ten cents? |
5328 | What do you want, father? |
5328 | What do you want? |
5328 | What does that mean? |
5328 | What emotions do they suggest? |
5328 | What for? |
5328 | What has been"done to death"in vaudeville? |
5328 | What have I done that you thus pursue me? |
5328 | What have you to say about it? |
5328 | What have you to say about it?" |
5328 | What if I should search your pockets and find a letter that belonged to somebody else? |
5328 | What if my child should die? |
5328 | What interests men and women? |
5328 | What is Dialogue? |
5328 | What is Dramatic? |
5328 | What is a Proper Title? |
5328 | What is an Improper Title? |
5328 | What is it on? |
5328 | What is it you want with me? |
5328 | What is it? |
5328 | What is that, mommer? |
5328 | What is the difference, then, between the man who can"write songs"and the one who can write songs everybody will whistle? |
5328 | What is the reason for their attitude toward each ther? |
5328 | What is there in any art that is really new-- but treatment? |
5328 | What is your idea, daughter? |
5328 | What is your last name? |
5328 | What is"punch,"and how are you going to add it when it is lacking? |
5328 | What kind of a brute have you? |
5328 | What makes you look so unhappy? |
5328 | What material is the statue made of? |
5328 | What need is there for dialogue? |
5328 | What new villainy do you propose? |
5328 | What on earth are you talking about? |
5328 | What success have you had in writing fiction? |
5328 | What then is left me? |
5328 | What was he dojng? |
5328 | What was it I stole from you, Mrs. Worthington? |
5328 | What was that song? |
5328 | What were you wearing the first time you met? |
5328 | What"Good Drama"Is By what standards, then, do producers decide whether a play has at least a good chance of success? |
5328 | What''ll I send you for Christmas, a bunch of sweet forget- me- nots or a barrel of pickles? |
5328 | What''s her name? |
5328 | What''s that, if it is n''t a pocket? |
5328 | What''s that? |
5328 | What''s the matter with you? |
5328 | What''s the matter with you? |
5328 | What''s the matter with your old man? |
5328 | What''s the matter? |
5328 | What''s the meaning of this? |
5328 | What''s the use of putting your money in the bank? |
5328 | What''s this? |
5328 | What''s- a da use to have- a big- a da moon? |
5328 | What-- Mrs. Tom Howard? |
5328 | What-- what sort of a man is he, is he a man I can rely on? |
5328 | What; then you are not a rich man? |
5328 | What? |
5328 | What? |
5328 | What? |
5328 | What? |
5328 | What? |
5328 | When a producer is approached with a request to read a vaudeville act he invariably asks,"What scenery?" |
5328 | When are we going to have lunch, sir? |
5328 | When did you see this-- this_ thing_ last? |
5328 | Where are your refined feet now?) |
5328 | Where did he get you? |
5328 | Where is he? |
5328 | Where is it that slang hits the hardest? |
5328 | Where is it you hear more clever lines than anywhere else? |
5328 | Where to? |
5328 | Where''s Sam? |
5328 | Where''s the fire? |
5328 | Where? |
5328 | Wherein lies the magic? |
5328 | While I was fishing? |
5328 | Who are you, anyhow? |
5328 | Who could have done this? |
5328 | Who is it? |
5328 | Who is it? |
5328 | Who is she? |
5328 | Who was that big stiff, mommer, the instalment man? |
5328 | Who was? |
5328 | Who''s afraid? |
5328 | Who''s got the thirtieth open?" |
5328 | Who''s the girl? |
5328 | Why are those two men out there on the stage? |
5328 | Why did n''t you go with''em? |
5328 | Why do I love money so? |
5328 | Why do n''t you pick up my handkerchief? |
5328 | Why do n''t you reproach me and say something about the weather? |
5328 | Why go to the Northwest, to New Orleans in the 40''s, to the court of Louis XIV, for characters? |
5328 | Why is it that managers do not produce failures all the time? |
5328 | Why should n''t he like me? |
5328 | Why should they kick? |
5328 | Why should_ I_ believe you? |
5328 | Why so economical? |
5328 | Why this fiendish plot? |
5328 | Why waste your time on the EEL? |
5328 | Why, how can you only imagine such a thing? |
5328 | Why, what do you mean, Old Black Joe? |
5328 | Why, what does this mean, Alice? |
5328 | Why, what is the matter, my little man? |
5328 | Why? |
5328 | Why? |
5328 | With everything artistically possible, what is financially advisable? |
5328 | Wo n''t you believe me? |
5328 | Wo n''t you come in and have a sup of beer and a pull at the old man''s pipe? |
5328 | Wo n''t you give me a few days longer to try and raise the money? |
5328 | Wo n''t you say them, Goldie? |
5328 | Wo n''t you sit down? |
5328 | Would it then be correct to suppose that"The System"is a"bigger"playlet than"The Lollard"? |
5328 | Would n''t it better, instead of sending a child to school, to learn him to clean out a cellar? |
5328 | Would you like to take a little trip out in the air with me? |
5328 | Yet, like the world, what would vaudeville be, if love were left out? |
5328 | You do n''t suppose I would keep a dog around the house and never feed him? |
5328 | You do n''t think they''ve given us our liberty, without a string to it, do you? |
5328 | You hear that? |
5328 | You mean to say that this dog goes without food? |
5328 | You say you saw me crush your hat? |
5328 | You should inquire of yourself first,"Is this a comedy or a serious playlet I am about to write?" |
5328 | You take her hand, den you say:"Whose goo- goo luvin''baby is oosum?" |
5328 | You understand? |
5328 | You wo n''t? |
5328 | You''ll attend to that, will you? |
5328 | You''re surely not going back there and hang around the camp all alone? |
5328 | You''re trying to trap me? |
5328 | You''re up on that Worthington robbery, are n''t you? |
5328 | You-- don''t-- like my tone? |
5328 | You? |
5328 | asked the farmer,"How''d you get all cut up-- been in a fight or something?" |
5328 | been out to get the evening paper? |
5328 | has n''t your paper got it? |
7211 | And what is death? 7211 And what''s that to you?" |
7211 | And who''s your masther? |
7211 | But why do I talk of death, That Phantom of grizzly bone? 7211 Can you? |
7211 | Did n''t I see you give that gentlewoman a leather for four- pence, this blessed minit? |
7211 | Did you, sir, throw up a black crow? |
7211 | From whose, I pray? |
7211 | Have not,says Quintilion,"our hand''s the power of exciting, of restraining, of beseeching, of testifying approbation, admiration, and shame? |
7211 | His? 7211 Huff,"and"kauff;"and, pardonnez- moi, how you call d- o- u- g- h--"duff,"--eh? |
7211 | I say, whose house is that there here? |
7211 | I want a letter, sir, if you plase,said I"And whom do you want it for?" |
7211 | Is it Squire Egan you dare say goose to? |
7211 | Is it where the feathery palm- trees rise, And the date grows ripe under sunny skies? 7211 Kauff,"eh? |
7211 | Now who be ye, would cross Lochgyle, This dark and stormy water? |
7211 | O Squire Egan''s your masther? |
7211 | Plow"doe"kauff;and one more r- o- u- g- h--what you call General Taylor,--"Rauff and Ready?" |
7211 | Ruff,ha? |
7211 | Sir, did you tell? |
7211 | Then, sir, I fancy, if you please to try These in my hand will better suit your eye? |
7211 | What consarn is that of yours? |
7211 | What price was Ellsworth''s, young and brave? 7211 What reward have I then, for all my labor?" |
7211 | What sort of eyes can you have got? |
7211 | What''s your boy''s name, good wife, And in what good ship sailed he? |
7211 | What''ud I pay''levenpence for? |
7211 | What, he again? 7211 Where is my cabin- door, fast by the wild wood? |
7211 | Where may I find him? |
7211 | Who do you want it for? |
7211 | Who gave you the directions? |
7211 | Who rules the Duke? 7211 Who rules the king? |
7211 | Why is that man expiring? |
7211 | Why wait we longer, mocked, betrayed, By open foes, or those afraid To speed thy coming through my aid? 7211 Why you stupid rascal,"said he,"if you do n''t tell me his name, how can I give you his leather?" |
7211 | Yes,says I;"Have you anything to say agin it?" |
7211 | ( Are those torn clothes his best?) |
7211 | -- What would''st thou think of him who thus could drive thy comrade from the door? |
7211 | --"And pray, sir, what was''t?" |
7211 | --"I do n''t know what it is,"Replied his friend.--"No? |
7211 | --"Well come, sir, if you please, Here is another sort; we''ll e''en try these; Still somewhat more they magnify the letter, Now, sir?" |
7211 | --"what is he gone? |
7211 | --Nay, ruler of the rebel deep, What matters wind or wave? |
7211 | --Who says this? |
7211 | A wife, sir, did you say? |
7211 | AM I FOR PEACE? |
7211 | Abhor the sword-- stigmatize the sword? |
7211 | Abhor the sword-- stigmatize the sword? |
7211 | Abhor the sword-- stigmatize the sword? |
7211 | About my own boy John? |
7211 | Ah oui; I understand, it is"dauff,"--eh? |
7211 | All this? |
7211 | Ambition? |
7211 | An American no longer? |
7211 | And I ask, What good does anything do? |
7211 | And are gentlemen insensible to their deeds, to the value of them in animating the country in the hour of peril hereafter? |
7211 | And are we prepared to barter these hopes, this sublime moral empire, for conquests by force? |
7211 | And by what definition do you award the name to the creator of an epic, and deny it to the creator of a country? |
7211 | And can he bear, think you, can he bear the sympathizing agonies of a distressed wife? |
7211 | And do we owe all this to the kind succor of the mother- country? |
7211 | And does not Fame speak of me, too? |
7211 | And even if we condescend so far, still can we be justified in taking them, unless we have clear proof that they are criminals? |
7211 | And for what? |
7211 | And hopest thou hence unscathed to go? |
7211 | And how have their fortunes and their power increased, but as the commonwealth has been ruined and impoverished? |
7211 | And how? |
7211 | And if we conquer, what is our policy? |
7211 | And is it possible that neither of these causes, that not all combined, were able to blast this bud of lope? |
7211 | And is the old flag flying still That o''er your fathers flew, With bands of white and rosy light, And field of starry blue? |
7211 | And is there any part of your conduct in which you are, or wish to be, without law to God, and not under the law of Jesus Christ? |
7211 | And is there, amidst this universal wreck, nothing stable, nothing abiding, notating immortal, on which poor, frail, dying man can fasten? |
7211 | And is this all that remains of him?--During a life so transitory, what lasting monument then can our fondest hopes erect? |
7211 | And is this the way, sir, that you are to show yourselves the advocates of order? |
7211 | And murder sullies in Heaven''s sight The sword he draws:-- What can alone ennoble fight? |
7211 | And must I never see thee more, My pretty, pretty, pretty lad? |
7211 | And now what would he do, what would he be if he were here to- day? |
7211 | And now, may I make so bold as to ask whose name I shall enter in my books? |
7211 | And now, my good sir, what may your trouble be? |
7211 | And pray, sir, what in the world is equal to it? |
7211 | And shall we, sir, the pride of our age, the terror of Europe, submit to this humiliating sacrifice of our honor? |
7211 | And since we must fight it through, why not put ourselves in a state to enjoy all the benefits of victory if we gain the victory? |
7211 | And so you ran off, did you? |
7211 | And so you turned sailor to get there? |
7211 | And the thing the farmer uses, how you call him, p- l- o- u- g- h,--"pluff,"is it? |
7211 | And they who founded, in our land, The power that rules from sea to sea, Bled they in vain, or vainly planned To leave their country great and free? |
7211 | And thus the question which had been so often asked, Will the negroes fight? |
7211 | And we who wear thy glorious name, Shall we, like cravens, stand apart, When those whom thou hast trusted, aim The death- blow at thy generous heart? |
7211 | And what does this allusion to the slow coach mean? |
7211 | And what good does that do? |
7211 | And what have we to oppose to them?--Shall we try argument? |
7211 | And what is a conqueror? |
7211 | And what is our country? |
7211 | And what is religion? |
7211 | And what is the amount of this debt? |
7211 | And what is the nature of the times in which we live? |
7211 | And what man, seeing this, And having human feelings, does not blush, And hang his head, to think himself a man? |
7211 | And what were the women of the United States in the struggle of the Revolution? |
7211 | And what would be its termination? |
7211 | And what''s in prayer, but this twofold force,-- To be forestalled, ere we come to fall, Or pardoned being down? |
7211 | And what? |
7211 | And where are the foes who so vauntingly swore That the havoc of war and the battle''s confusion, A home and a country should leave us no more? |
7211 | And where are ye to- day? |
7211 | And where are ye, O fearless men? |
7211 | And where did this seemingly great power go for its support and refuge? |
7211 | And where is the bosom- friend, dearer than all? |
7211 | And who commanded,--and the silence came,--"Here let the billows stiffen, and have rest"? |
7211 | And who, I pray, is to judge of their necessity? |
7211 | And why should I speak low, sailor? |
7211 | And why? |
7211 | And will you preach insurrection to men like these? |
7211 | And will you? |
7211 | And yet, of those lost words is not our whole America one immortal record and reporter? |
7211 | And, if the war must go on, why put off longer the Declaration of Independence? |
7211 | And, sir, is that spirit to be charged here, in this hall where we are sitting, as being"discreditable"to our country''s name? |
7211 | Are despots alone to be reproached for unfeeling indifference to the tears and blood of their subjects? |
7211 | Are men fed with chaff and husks? |
7211 | Are not the streets better paved, houses repaired and beautified?" |
7211 | Are republicans irresponsible? |
7211 | Are they dead that yet act? |
7211 | Are they dead that yet move upon society, and inspire the people with nobler motives and more heroic patriotism? |
7211 | Are they dead that yet speak louder than we can speak, and a more universal language? |
7211 | Are they dead, too? |
7211 | Are they not intended for disorganization in our very midst? |
7211 | Are they not intended to animate our enemies? |
7211 | Are they not intended to destroy our zeal? |
7211 | Are they not intended to dull our weapons? |
7211 | Are we in peace? |
7211 | Are we in war, or under a necessity, as at this time, to enter into a war? |
7211 | Are we not yet revenged?" |
7211 | Are we proposing to disturb it? |
7211 | Are we to resort to the sword when we get defeated at the ballot- box? |
7211 | Are we, then, so much alike? |
7211 | Are women to have no opinions or actions on subjects relating to the general welfare? |
7211 | Are you a native, sir? |
7211 | Are you girded for the fight? |
7211 | Are you good men and true? |
7211 | Are you more stubborn- hard than hammered iron? |
7211 | Are you really prepared to determine, but not to hear, the mighty cause, upon which a Nation''s hopes and fears hang? |
7211 | Are you sick, Hubert? |
7211 | Are your vigilance, your police your common powers of observation, to be extinguished by putting an end to the horrors of war? |
7211 | Arrah, sir, why would I let you be chated, when he was selling them before my face for four- pence a- piece? |
7211 | Ashamed of these tokens and titles, and envious of the flaunting robes of imbecile idleness and vanity? |
7211 | Ashamed to toil, art thou? |
7211 | Ask Him, if your knotted scourges, Matches, blood- extorting screws, Are the means that duty urges Agents of His will to use? |
7211 | Be we men, And suffer such dishonor?--men, and wash not The stain away in blood? |
7211 | Bernard,"quoth Alphonso,"What means this warlike guise? |
7211 | Bought it? |
7211 | Bright jewels of the mine? |
7211 | But I did not call him to order, why? |
7211 | But I have had vat you call e- n- o- u- g- h,--ha? |
7211 | But I would ask, does the recollection of Bunker''s Hill, Saratoga, and Yorktown, afford no pleasure? |
7211 | But if he bar New England out in the cold, what then? |
7211 | But is such to be the fate of Massachusetts,--of New England? |
7211 | But shall you escape the common fate of the instrument of evil? |
7211 | But strew his ashes to the wind Whose sword or voice has served mankind-- And is he dead, whose glorious mind Lifts thine on high? |
7211 | But take the subject in the other way; take it on the grounds stated by the right honorable gentleman over the way, and how does it stand? |
7211 | But the question is asked, Shall we vote money for this purpose? |
7211 | But the right to take ten pounds, implies the right to take a thousand; and what must be the wealth that avarice, aided by power, can not exhaust? |
7211 | But to him, mouldering in his narrow and humble habitation, what are they? |
7211 | But what from traitor''s blood should spring, Save traitor like to thee? |
7211 | But what had we done? |
7211 | But what is politics? |
7211 | But what is this good for? |
7211 | But what need that I exhort you? |
7211 | But what will all their efforts avail? |
7211 | But when shall we be stronger? |
7211 | But where are they? |
7211 | But who are they that our dastardly enemies thus despise?--the consuls, or you, Romans? |
7211 | But will his country receive him? |
7211 | But you take a little more punch after that? |
7211 | But, considered simply as an intellectual production, who will compare the poems of Homer with the Holy Scriptures of the Old and New Testaments? |
7211 | By allowing it to continue even for one hour, do not my right honorable friends weaken-- do they not desert their own arguments of its injustice? |
7211 | By that sin fell the angels: how can man, then, The image of his Maker, hope to win by''t? |
7211 | Ca n''t you be cool like me? |
7211 | Call you that chivalry? |
7211 | Can gentlemen assign any other possible motive for it? |
7211 | Can he endure the formidable presence of scrutinizing, sneering domestics? |
7211 | Can it be that America, under such circumstances, can betray herself? |
7211 | Can it be that she is to be added to the catalogue of republics, the inscription upon whose ruins is: THEY WERE, BUT THEY ARE NOT? |
7211 | Can ministers still presume to expect support in their infatuation? |
7211 | Can not this state of probation be as well undergone without adding to the catalogue of human sufferings? |
7211 | Can parliament be so dead to its dignity and duty, as to give their support to measures thus obtruded and forced upon them? |
7211 | Can sin, can death your worlds obscure? |
7211 | Can they take it upon them to say, that an Indian peace, under these circumstances, will prove firm? |
7211 | Can we cast our votes with their view, and against our own? |
7211 | Can you not come another day?" |
7211 | Can you persuade yourselves that political men and measures are to undergo no review in the judgment to come? |
7211 | Can you say nothing else but money, money, money? |
7211 | Can you, sir, lightly contemplate these consequences? |
7211 | Compassion!--What compassion? |
7211 | Cut off from all hope of royal clemency what are you, what can you be, while the power of England remains, but outlaws? |
7211 | Did I say, better? |
7211 | Did Rolla ever counsel dishonor to his friend? |
7211 | Did he break your head, then? |
7211 | Did it remain their long? |
7211 | Did n''t you pay what he asked? |
7211 | Did not great Julius bleed for justice''sake? |
7211 | Did the battle of Thermopylà ¦ preserve Greece but once? |
7211 | Did the gentleman never hear of the deed of Jael, who slew the dreaded enemy of her country? |
7211 | Did they bring"discredit"on their sex by mingling in politics? |
7211 | Did they never get beaten before? |
7211 | Did you arrive there safely? |
7211 | Did you never hear of Demosthenes, sir, the Athenian orator? |
7211 | Did you say nothing of a crow at all?" |
7211 | Did you take them? |
7211 | Do I love them? |
7211 | Do not men toil? |
7211 | Do the men of England care not, mother, The great men and the high, For the suffering sons of Erin''s isle, Whether they live or die? |
7211 | Do they not, in pointing out places and persons, discharge the duty of adverbs and pronouns? |
7211 | Do we mean to submit to the measures of Parliament, Boston Port Bill and all? |
7211 | Do we mean to submit, and consent that we ourselves shall be ground to powder, and our Country and its rights trodden down in the dust? |
7211 | Do we want a cause, my Lords? |
7211 | Do we want a proof and illustration of all this? |
7211 | Do we want a tribunal? |
7211 | Do ye fear him? |
7211 | Do ye not know his companions? |
7211 | Do ye not know his whole house-- insolent-- impure-- gamesters-- drunkards? |
7211 | Do ye not know this Antony? |
7211 | Do ye not read them, deep cut, defying the tooth of time, on all the marble of our greatness? |
7211 | Do you belong to this house, friend? |
7211 | Do you confess so much? |
7211 | Do you know where Marblehead is? |
7211 | Do you like my voice, James? |
7211 | Do you remind me that we did not return your escaped slaves? |
7211 | Do you reply that in many instances they have violated this compact, and have not been faithful to their engagements? |
7211 | Do you suppose he plans for an imaginary line to divide South Carolina from New York and Massachusetts? |
7211 | Do you think I''ll take a fee for telling you what you know as well as myself? |
7211 | Do you think I''m a fool?" |
7211 | Do you think it wise or humane at this moment to insult them, by sticking up in a pillory the man who dared to stand forth as their advocate? |
7211 | Do you think that single point worth the sacrifice of everything else? |
7211 | Do you think that the benefit they receive should be poisoned by the stings of vengeance? |
7211 | Do you think those yells will be forgotten? |
7211 | Do you want a criminal, my Lords? |
7211 | Does a railroad or canal do good? |
7211 | Does any one ask for the signs of this approaching era? |
7211 | Does anything do any good? |
7211 | Does he not feel that it is as honorable to owe it to these, as to being the accident of an accident? |
7211 | Does he not remember Cornelia, the mother of the Gracchi, who declared that her children were her jewels? |
7211 | Does the honorable gentleman rely on the report of the House of Lords for the foundation of his assertion? |
7211 | Does your resolution fail you for this? |
7211 | Dost thou love thy wife and children? |
7211 | Dr. Ay; pray, sir, are you a glutton? |
7211 | Dr. Do you eat no honey, or jelly, or jam, at breakfast? |
7211 | Dr. Do you take any wine during dinner? |
7211 | Dr. Not above twice a week? |
7211 | Dr. Of course you sleep well and have a good appetite? |
7211 | Dr. Then, perhaps, you are a drunkard? |
7211 | Dr. You are from the West country, I should suppose, sir? |
7211 | Dr. You take a glass of ale and porter with your cheese? |
7211 | Else why so swell the thoughts at your Aspect above? |
7211 | Fear ye foes who kill for hire? |
7211 | First, who think you the most desartless man to be constable? |
7211 | For what is the significance of this prayer? |
7211 | For whither shall he go? |
7211 | From what did it separate his province? |
7211 | Gentlemen, is the happiness of a sensitive and confiding female to be trifled away by such shallow artifices as these? |
7211 | Gentlemen, what does this mean? |
7211 | Give up the Union? |
7211 | Gleams not an eye? |
7211 | HOW''S MY BOY? |
7211 | Had she a brother? |
7211 | Had she a sister? |
7211 | Had you rather CÃ ¦ sar were living, and die all slaves; than that CÃ ¦ sar were dead, to live all freemen? |
7211 | Has Great Britain any enemy in this quarter of the world, to call for all this accumulation of navies and armies? |
7211 | Has He bid you buy and sell us, Speaking from His throne, the sky? |
7211 | Has earth a clod Its Maker meant not should be trod By man, the image of his God, Erect and free, Unscourged by Superstition''s rod To bow the knee? |
7211 | Has he completely done? |
7211 | Has he forgotten Esther, who, by her petition saved her people and her country? |
7211 | Has he forgotten the Spartan mother, who said to her son, when going out to battle,"My son, come back to me with thy shield, or upon thy shield?" |
7211 | Has it not here begun the master- work of man, the creation of a national life? |
7211 | Has it not, in general, contributed to the administering of that government wisely and well since? |
7211 | Has the gentleman done? |
7211 | Has the human race gone mad? |
7211 | Hast thou a charm to stay the morning star In his steep course? |
7211 | Hast thou children? |
7211 | Hast thou, my child, forgot, ere this, A mother''s face, a mother''s tongue? |
7211 | Hath Cassius lived To be but mirth and laughter to his Brutus, When grief and blood ill- tempered, vexeth him? |
7211 | Have any alarms been occasioned by the emancipation of our Catholic brethren? |
7211 | Have not some of these upstarts built private houses and seats, vying with the most sumptuous of our public palaces? |
7211 | Have the principles on which you ground the reproach upon cabinets and kings no practical influence, no binding force? |
7211 | Have we anything new to offer on the subject? |
7211 | Have we disturbed it? |
7211 | Have we gained nothing by the war? |
7211 | Have we suffered a defeat at Blenheim? |
7211 | Have you anything here to repair these damages? |
7211 | Have you considered the resistance, the difficulty, the danger of the attempt? |
7211 | Have you counted up the cost? |
7211 | Have you guarded well the coast? |
7211 | Have you marked and trenched the ground, Where the din of arms must sound, Ere the victor can be crowned? |
7211 | Have you marshalled all your host? |
7211 | Have you not love enough to bear with me, When that rash humor, which my mother gave me, Makes me forgetful? |
7211 | Have you not marked how the human heart bowed to the supremacy of his power, in the undissembled homage of deferential horror? |
7211 | Have you not marked when he entered, how the stormy wave of the multitude retired at his approach? |
7211 | Have you the heart? |
7211 | He has paid his health, his conscience, his liberty for it; and will you envy him his bargain? |
7211 | He hath brought many captives home to Rome, Whose ransoms did the general coffers fill: Did this in CÃ ¦ sar, seem ambitious? |
7211 | He will tell you, did I say? |
7211 | Hear ye yon lion roaring in his den? |
7211 | Hem!--if it''s not an impertinent question, may I ask which way you are travelling? |
7211 | Hope ye mercy still? |
7211 | How came he to die? |
7211 | How came he to the brink of that river? |
7211 | How came this change to pass? |
7211 | How can fleeting words of human praise gild the record of their glory? |
7211 | How can we eat what is not eatable? |
7211 | How could I look to you, mother, How could I look to you, For bread to give to your starving boy, When you were starving too? |
7211 | How could my father sell that which the Great Spirit sent me into the world to live upon? |
7211 | How dare you breathe that air which wafted to the ear of Heaven the groans of those who fell a sacrifice to your accursed ambition? |
7211 | How dared he cross it? |
7211 | How do things go on at home? |
7211 | How from Rebellion''s broken reed We saw his emblem fall, As soon his cursà © d poison- weed Shall drop from Sumter''s wall? |
7211 | How have they deserved it? |
7211 | How have you passed your life? |
7211 | How is each of tile thirty States to defend itself? |
7211 | How long Will he live thus? |
7211 | How long was it before his empire was a dream, his dynasty extinguished in blood, and an enemy on his throne? |
7211 | How many of the richest are reduced, by disease, to a worse condition than this? |
7211 | How shall I define it? |
7211 | How shall I find words to describe its momentous magnificence and its beatific lustre? |
7211 | How shall it be separated? |
7211 | How sinned against you? |
7211 | How so? |
7211 | How the black war- ships came And turned the Beaufort roses''bloom To redder wreaths of flame? |
7211 | How weigh the gift that Lyon gave, Or count the cost of Winthrop''s grave? |
7211 | How will she pay for it? |
7211 | How''s my boy-- my boy? |
7211 | How''s my boy-- my boy? |
7211 | How''s my boy-- my boy? |
7211 | How''s my boy-- my boy? |
7211 | How''s my boy-- my boy? |
7211 | How, if he will not stand? |
7211 | How, if they will not? |
7211 | I am asked, What good will the monument do? |
7211 | I am met with the great objection, What good will the Monument do? |
7211 | I an itching palm? |
7211 | I ask gentlemen, sir, what means this martial array if its purpose be not to force us to submission? |
7211 | I ask why not"traitor,"unqualified by any epithet? |
7211 | I ca n''t approve this hawid waw;-- Why do n''t the parties compromise? |
7211 | I do n''t approve this hawid waw; Those dweadful bannahs hawt my eyes; And guns and drums are such a baw-- Why do n''t the pawties compwamise? |
7211 | I drink a good deal of beer Dr. What quantity of port do you drink? |
7211 | I durst not? |
7211 | I have a bad"cuff,"--eh? |
7211 | I have always insisted that the people of the Northern States were in no manner responsible for slavery in the Southern states; and why? |
7211 | I have likewise sent for a barber, Old F. What, is he to teach you to shave close? |
7211 | I knew the voice of Peace,--"Is there no respite?--no release?-- When shall the hopeless quarrel cease? |
7211 | I must be brief, lest resolution drop Out at mine eyes, in tender womanish tears.-- Can you not read it? |
7211 | I pause for a reply,--- None? |
7211 | I pity the dumb victim at the altar-- But does the robed priest for his pity falter? |
7211 | I thought ten thousand swords must have leaped from their scabbards to avenge even a look that threatened her with insult? |
7211 | I trust it is neither too presumptuous nor too late to ask, Can you put the dearest interest of society at risk, without guilt and without remorse? |
7211 | I''d rack thee, though I knew A thousand lives were perishing in thine-- What were ten thousand to a fame like mine? |
7211 | I''m not their mother-- How''s my boy-- my boy? |
7211 | I''ve dared him oft, before the Paynim spear; Think ye he''s entered at my gate-- has come to seek me here? |
7211 | I-- the child of rank and wealth,-- Am I the wretch who clanks this chain, Bereft of freedom, friends, and health? |
7211 | If I should leave the land of my fathers, whither shall I fly? |
7211 | If I withdraw the charge, will then Your ramrod do the same?" |
7211 | If not-- what matters? |
7211 | If on the ground of injustice it ought to be abolished at last, why ought it not now? |
7211 | If we know him to be a thief, shall we not lay hands on him? |
7211 | If we postpone independence, do we mean to carry on, or to give up, the war? |
7211 | If, sir, freedom of speech is not to remain to us, what is the government worth? |
7211 | In peace, her sails fleck all the seas; Her mills shake every river; And where are scenes so fair as these God and her true hands give her? |
7211 | In the West country it is impossible, I hear to dine without punch? |
7211 | In the name of the immortal gods, what is it, Romans, you would have? |
7211 | In view of our moral, social, and political responsibilities, can we do this? |
7211 | In war, her claim who seek to rob? |
7211 | In what code of honor did you get your authority for that? |
7211 | In what do the struggles in which England has heretofore sympathized, differ from that which is now convulsing America? |
7211 | Inform me, friend, is Alonzo, the Peruvian, confined in this dungeon? |
7211 | Is Sparta dead? |
7211 | Is character valuable? |
7211 | Is his heart still? |
7211 | Is it come to this? |
7211 | Is it dangerous for nations to live in amity with each other? |
7211 | Is it fanaticism for her to believe as your Madison believed, that"slavery is a dreadful calamity?" |
7211 | Is it fanaticism for her to believe with your Henry Clay, that"slavery is a wrong, a grievous wrong, and no contingency can make it right?" |
7211 | Is it humanity? |
7211 | Is it law? |
7211 | Is it my fault that I was Geffrey''s son? |
7211 | Is it not an obligation to the service of God, founded on his authority, and extending to all our relations, personal and social? |
7211 | Is it not fair writ? |
7211 | Is it not so? |
7211 | Is it not the acknowledgment of a wish and object to create political strength, by uniting political opinions geographically? |
7211 | Is it not the science and the exercise of civil rights and civil duties? |
7211 | Is it that insidious smile with which our petition has been lately received? |
7211 | Is it thus we are to understand you?" |
7211 | Is it worth anything? |
7211 | Is knowledge the pearl of price in your estimation? |
7211 | Is life so dear, or peace so sweet as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? |
7211 | Is man possessed of talents adequate to the great occasion? |
7211 | Is mere animal life-- feeding, working, and sleeping like an ox-- entitled to be called good? |
7211 | Is mere wealth, as an ultimate end,--gold and silver, without an inquiry as to their use,--are these a good? |
7211 | Is not our own history one witness and one record of what it can do? |
7211 | Is not the city enlarged? |
7211 | Is not this the very essence of local feeling and local regard? |
7211 | Is peace a rash system? |
7211 | Is splendid folly the measure of its inspiration? |
7211 | Is that all they did to you? |
7211 | Is the mischief in you? |
7211 | Is the old Grecian spirit frozen in your veins, that ye do crouch and cower like base- born slaves, beneath your master''s lash? |
7211 | Is there a man who could not desire a participation in the national glory acquired by the war? |
7211 | Is there a right of secession in the separate States, singly or collectively, other than the right of revolution? |
7211 | Is there any good in this, stopping here? |
7211 | Is there no hand on high to shield the brave? |
7211 | Is there no remedy? |
7211 | Is there still the chill of winter and the gloom of night over thee, Fatherland? |
7211 | Is there, as ye sometimes tell us, Is there One who reigns on high? |
7211 | Is this Union a Commonwealth, a State, or is it merely a confederacy or a copartnership? |
7211 | Is this a dagger, which I see before me, The handle toward my hand? |
7211 | Is this fancy, or is it fact? |
7211 | Is this reason? |
7211 | Is this the Flower of Liberty? |
7211 | Is this the part of wise men, engaged in the great and arduous struggle for liberty? |
7211 | Is this visionary? |
7211 | Is this your promise? |
7211 | Is this, then, a time to remove the foundations, when the earth itself is shaken? |
7211 | Is wisdom its base and summit?--that which it recedes from, or tends toward? |
7211 | Is''t Yon churchyard''s bowers? |
7211 | Is''t death to fall for freedom''s right? |
7211 | Is''t possible? |
7211 | John saw Versailles from Marlà ©''s height, And cried, astonished at the sight,"Whose fine estate is that there here?" |
7211 | Let it then be built up again; here, if anywhere, on these shores of a new world, of a new civilization But how, I may be asked, is it broken down? |
7211 | Lives there a man who has confidence enough to deny it? |
7211 | Loop up her tresses Escaped from the comb, Her fair auburn tresses; While wonderment guesses Where was her home? |
7211 | March off from what? |
7211 | March off from whom? |
7211 | May I thy peril share? |
7211 | May it please your highness To hear me speak his good now? |
7211 | May one be pardoned, and retain the offence? |
7211 | Moves not a hand? |
7211 | Mr. H. After what? |
7211 | Mr. H. And why were they over- worked, pray? |
7211 | Mr. H. Did he, faith? |
7211 | Mr. H. Heard of what? |
7211 | Mr. H. How came he to get so much horse- flesh? |
7211 | Mr. H. My father gone too? |
7211 | Must I budge? |
7211 | Must I endure all this? |
7211 | Must I give way and room to your rash choler? |
7211 | Must I observe you? |
7211 | Must I stand and crouch Under your testy humor? |
7211 | Must the feet of slaves Pollute this glorious scene? |
7211 | Must you with hot irons burn out both mine eyes? |
7211 | My Lords, is it a prosecutor you want? |
7211 | My Lords, the Commons will share in every fate with yon? |
7211 | My Lords, what is it that we want here to a great act of national justice? |
7211 | My boy John-- He that went to sea-- What care I for the ship, sailor? |
7211 | My labor never flags; And what are its wages? |
7211 | My wife, sir? |
7211 | Next tripping came a courtly fair, John cried, enchanted with her air,"What lovely wench is that there here?" |
7211 | No treason was in Sancho''s blood-- No stain in mine doth lie: Below the throne what knight will own The coward calumny? |
7211 | No? |
7211 | No? |
7211 | None ever bore a lovelier child: And art thou now forever gone? |
7211 | Now, sir, what human stomach can stand this? |
7211 | Now, sir, what was the conduct of your own allies to Poland? |
7211 | Now, sir, why can not we have peace, I ask, upon the compromise measures of 1850? |
7211 | Now, when shall come peace? |
7211 | O cruel fate, wilt thou never replace me In a mansion of peace, where no perils can chase me? |
7211 | O landsman, art thou false or true? |
7211 | O, that she knew she were!-- She speaks, yet she says nothing: what of that? |
7211 | O, where treads the foot that would falter for thee? |
7211 | Of England who, with disinterested ardor, fought the battle of the Greeks against the Turks? |
7211 | Of England, who has so often raised her voice on behalf of bleeding, crusaded, denationalized Poland? |
7211 | Of cawce, the twoilet has its chawms; But why must all the vulgah crowd Pawsist in spawting uniforms In cullaws so extremely loud? |
7211 | Of what was your lading composed? |
7211 | Old F. How much had I to pay the cooper, the other day, for barreling you up in a large tub, when you resolved to live like Diogenes? |
7211 | Old F. What reputation, what honor, what profit can accrue to you from such conduct as yours? |
7211 | Old F. What, do you mean to read by the foot? |
7211 | Old F. Will you listen, and be silent? |
7211 | On the side of two hundred and fifty thousand traitors and tyrants, or on the side of four millions of slaves? |
7211 | Or brighten your lives with its glory?-- Our women-- O say, shall they shriek in despair, Or embrace us from conquest, with wreaths in their hair? |
7211 | Or the hands to be folded, till triumph is won And the eagle looks proud, as of old, to the sun? |
7211 | Or was there a dearer one Still, and a nearer one Yet, than all other? |
7211 | Or would he conduct this war so feebly that the whole world would smile at us in derision? |
7211 | Or, What good love may I perform for you? |
7211 | Or, are one million of subjects stronger than three millions? |
7211 | Or, as the law says, how can we think what is not thinkable? |
7211 | Or, do you wish to prepare them for the revocation of these improvident concessions? |
7211 | Or, has the stability of the government, or has that of the country been weakened? |
7211 | Or, how can we drink what is not drinkable? |
7211 | Out of this warlike conflict, when shall come peace? |
7211 | Pardon me; this sounds like a dark dream, like the offspring of a hypochondriac imagination; and yet-- have I been unjust in what I have said? |
7211 | Peace, in such a crisis-- the cry of our opponents-- how is it to be attained? |
7211 | Pray let me ask you Can you read at all?" |
7211 | Pray, sir, who is the lady? |
7211 | R- o- u- g- h is"ruff,"and b- o- u- g- h is"buff,"--ha? |
7211 | Roll-- roll!--"Brothers, what do ye here, Slowly and sadly as ye pass along, With your dull march and low funereal song?" |
7211 | Roll-- roll!--"What is it that ye beat?" |
7211 | Rome, republican Rome, whose eagles glanced in the rising and setting sun,--where and what is she? |
7211 | SHALL CALIFORNIA BE RECEIVED? |
7211 | Say, pilot, what this fort may be, Whose sentinels look down From moated wails that show the sea Their deep embrasures''frown? |
7211 | Shall I be frighted when a madman stares? |
7211 | Shall I be paid with counters? |
7211 | Shall I go to the south, and dwell among the graves of the Pequots? |
7211 | Shall a son of yours ever sit upon the throne? |
7211 | Shall he betake himself to the fireside? |
7211 | Shall he dedicate himself to the service of his country? |
7211 | Shall not rather some monster of your blood efface the memory of your virtues, and make Rome, in bitterness of soul, curse the Flavian name? |
7211 | Shall private men respect the boundaries of private property, and shall a man pay no respect to the boundaries of his country''s rights? |
7211 | Shall the American people, then, be divided? |
7211 | Shall the children of the men of Marathon become slaves of Philip? |
7211 | Shall the majesty of the Senate and people of Rome stoop to wear the chains forging by the military executors of the will of Julius CÃ ¦ sar? |
7211 | Shall these once slaves but now freemen be remanded back to bondage? |
7211 | Shall traitors lay that greatness low? |
7211 | Shall we gather strength by irresolution and inaction? |
7211 | Shall we not count the days and hours that are suffered to intervene, and to delay the accomplishment of such a work? |
7211 | Shall we resort to entreaty and humble supplication? |
7211 | Shall we send a flag of truce? |
7211 | Shall we, then, delay to repair these injuries, and to begin rendering justice to Africa? |
7211 | Shall you see a peaceful old age? |
7211 | Should I have answered Caius Cassius so? |
7211 | Sir A. Ay, a wife-- why did I not mention her before? |
7211 | Sir, are they not words of brilliant, polished treason, even in the very Capitol of the Confederacy? |
7211 | Sir, does he suppose it in his power to exhibit a Carolina name so bright as to produce envy in my bosom? |
7211 | Sir, what are the remedies that are proposed for the present condition of things, and what have they been from the beginning? |
7211 | Sir,--How comes this Junius to have broken through the cobwebs of the law, and to range uncontrolled, unpunished, through the land? |
7211 | Sisters and sire, did ye weep for its fall? |
7211 | So soon art thou, like us, brought low?" |
7211 | Soldier, hast thou a wife? |
7211 | Soldier, imagine thou wert doomed to die a cruel death, in a strange land,--what would be thy last request? |
7211 | Some have sneeringly asked,"Are the Americans too poor to pay a few pounds on stamped paper?" |
7211 | Standeth each man at his post? |
7211 | Steward, How are you, my old boy? |
7211 | Still in thought as free as ever, What are England''s rights, I ask, Me from my delights to sever, Me to torture, me to task? |
7211 | Still, what are you, but a robber-- a base dishonest robber? |
7211 | Suppose ye that the loyal people of this country will submit to such injustice? |
7211 | Tell me, politician, how long did this shadow of a colony, on which your conventions and treaties had not smiled, languish on the distant coast? |
7211 | Tell me, ye who make your pious pilgrimage to the shades of Vernon, is Washington indeed shut up in that cold and narrow house? |
7211 | Tell me, ye who tread the sods of yon sacred height, is Warren dead? |
7211 | Tell me, you traitors, Davis, Pickens, Stephens, and Floyd? |
7211 | That''s hallowed ground-- where mourned and missed, The lips repose our love has kissed;-- But where''s their memory''s mansion? |
7211 | The Egyptian smote her; and who now sits on the throne of the Ptolemies? |
7211 | The Syrian smote her; the smiter died in agonies of remorse; and where is his kingdom now? |
7211 | The age that gloried in thy birth, Shall it behold thee overthrown? |
7211 | The blows of the boldest will carry the day,-- Who''s ready? |
7211 | The breakers roar,--how bears the shore? |
7211 | The clause which does away with trial by jury,--what, in the name of Heaven is it, if it is not the establishment of a revolutionary tribunal? |
7211 | The glory acquired by our gallant tars on the sea, by our Jacksons and our Browns on the land is that nothing? |
7211 | The hunters and their families? |
7211 | The question is, Are we to be stricken down by those who, when they can no longer govern, threaten to destroy? |
7211 | The question is, What will satisfy them? |
7211 | The question now arises, How is he to be guided in the right use of his powers of speech in the delivery of a given piece? |
7211 | The sachems and the tribes? |
7211 | The voice, the glance, the heart I sought,--give answer, where are they? |
7211 | The wealth of seas, the spoils of war? |
7211 | Then I''ll look up; My fault is past.--But, O, what form of prayer Can serve my turn? |
7211 | Then pray, sir, what will you have? |
7211 | Then what is man? |
7211 | Then what reason have they? |
7211 | There came a man into his shop one day--"Are you the spectacle contriver, pray?" |
7211 | There were men with hoary hair Amidst that Pilgrim band; Why have they come to wither there, Away from their childhood''s land? |
7211 | These speeches of his, sown broadcast over the land-- what clear, distinct meaning have they? |
7211 | They are already designating the next victim: must we wait until he has fallen? |
7211 | They are forcing slavery upon the Territories: must we wait until they have succeeded? |
7211 | They ceased to live for ideas, and where are they now? |
7211 | They have added Slave States by a coup d''Ã © tat: shall we wait until they have added Cuba and Mexico? |
7211 | They have violated one solemn compact: how many more must they break before we assert our right? |
7211 | Think ye to fly your fate? |
7211 | This day and all which it stands for,--did it not give us these? |
7211 | This day-- shall ye blush for its story? |
7211 | This, you say, is your every day life; but, upon great occasions, you perhaps exceed a little? |
7211 | Thou choicest gift of Heaven, and wanting which Life is as nothing; hast thou then forgot Thy native home? |
7211 | Thy shores are empires, changed in all save thee-- Assyria, Greece, Rome, Carthage, what are they? |
7211 | To be slaves to such as he, to such as these, were it not the fullest measure of misery conjoined with the fullest measure of disgrace? |
7211 | To go from sacred history to profane, does the gentleman there find it"discreditable"for women to take any interest or any part in political affairs? |
7211 | To incantations dost thou trust, And pompous rites in domes august? |
7211 | To look through plate- glass windows, and pity the brown soldiers,--or sneer at the black ones? |
7211 | To put gilt bands on coachmen''s hats? |
7211 | To sweep the foul sidewalks with the heaviest silks which the toiling artisans of France can send us? |
7211 | To the question,"What have the People ever gained but by Revolution?" |
7211 | To what are we to impute these disorders, and to what cause assign the decay of a State so powerful and flourishing in past times? |
7211 | Try what repentance can: what can it not? |
7211 | Très bien,"huff;"and snuff you spell s- n- o- u- p- h? |
7211 | Up from the ground he sprang and gazed,--but who could paint that gaze? |
7211 | Vat you call H- o- u- g- h,--eh? |
7211 | WHO''S READY? |
7211 | Was he? |
7211 | Was it the winter''s storm, beating upon the houseless heads of women and children? |
7211 | Was it to be rich that you grew pale over the midnight lamp, and distilled the sweetness from the Greek and Roman springs? |
7211 | Was it, then, to raise a fortune, that you consumed the sprightly hours of youth in study and retirement? |
7211 | Was that country a desert? |
7211 | Was that done like Cassius? |
7211 | Was there a man dismayed? |
7211 | Was there ever a bolder captain of a more valiant band? |
7211 | Was there ever a greater appearance of prosperity? |
7211 | Was this ambition? |
7211 | We are asked, what have we gained by the war? |
7211 | We have grown rich for what? |
7211 | We have no slaves at home-- then why abroad? |
7211 | Well, Andy, you went to the postoffice, as I ordered you? |
7211 | Well, how did you save my honor, Andy? |
7211 | Well, sir; but how many will there be at table? |
7211 | Well, what did you find? |
7211 | Well, you told him then, did you? |
7211 | Were he a member of this House, what might not be expected from his knowledge, his firmness, and integrity? |
7211 | Were it otherwise, how could millions find it in their lawgiver, friend, and prophet? |
7211 | Were they devoted exclusively to the duties and enjoyments of the fireside? |
7211 | Were you brought up in this place, sir? |
7211 | What States are to secede? |
7211 | What act has been omitted or been done? |
7211 | What am I to be? |
7211 | What answer will you return to this appeal? |
7211 | What are these but the sister families of one greater, better, holier family,--our country? |
7211 | What breaks the heart of the drunkard''s wife? |
7211 | What care I for the men, sailor? |
7211 | What cause, what excuse do disunionists give us for breaking up the best government on which the sun of heaven ever shed its rays? |
7211 | What clogs my heavy breath? |
7211 | What considerate man can enter a school and not reflect with awe, that it is a seminary where immortal minds are training for eternity? |
7211 | What desperate valor climbed the steeps and filled the moats at Badajos? |
7211 | What did your captain do? |
7211 | What do I mean by national glory? |
7211 | What do I say? |
7211 | What do we understand to have been the conduct of this magnanimous hero, with whom, it seems, Bonaparte is not to be compared? |
7211 | What does Mr. Jefferson Davis plan? |
7211 | What evidence do they present of this? |
7211 | What extended Rome, the heart of banditti, into universal empire? |
7211 | What fairer prospect of success could be presented? |
7211 | What fear we then? |
7211 | What flower is this that greets the morn, Its hues from heaven so freshly born? |
7211 | What fold is this the sweet winds kiss, Fair- striped and many- starred, Whose shadow palls these orphaned walls, The twins of Beauregard? |
7211 | What good can passion do? |
7211 | What good cause have they now that has not existed under every administration? |
7211 | What good would that do? |
7211 | What had we done? |
7211 | What had we of the North usurped that belonged to you? |
7211 | What hallows ground where heroes sleep? |
7211 | What has poor Ireland done, mother, What has poor Ireland done, That the world looks on, and sees us starve, Perishing, one by one? |
7211 | What have I done of which you can complain? |
7211 | What have we done? |
7211 | What hill is that, yonder? |
7211 | What if her eyes were there, they in her head? |
7211 | What if this cursà © d hand Were thicker than itself with brother''s blood; Is there not rain enough in the sweet heavens To wash it white as snow? |
7211 | What interest of the South has been invaded? |
7211 | What is gained and what is lost, When the foe your lines have crost? |
7211 | What is genius? |
7211 | What is good? |
7211 | What is it that gentlemen wish? |
7211 | What is it then to hold the Christian world, and that for centuries? |
7211 | What is it to him but a wide- spread prospect of suffering, anguish and death? |
7211 | What is our present situation? |
7211 | What is that glorious recollection, which thrills through his frame and suffuses his eyes? |
7211 | What is the contest in Virginia now? |
7211 | What is then the difference, but that as you were born a king, and I a private man, you have been able to become a mightier robber than I? |
7211 | What is this wondrous world of his residence? |
7211 | What is to be his fate? |
7211 | What is to become of the army? |
7211 | What is to become of the navy? |
7211 | What is to become of the public lands? |
7211 | What is to remain American? |
7211 | What is your present situation there? |
7211 | What justice has been denied? |
7211 | What kind of a dinner do you make? |
7211 | What marvel is it, then, that gentlemen opposite should deal in such vehement protestations? |
7211 | What matters it, that a man be poor, if he carry into his poverty the spirit, energy, reason, and virtues of a man? |
7211 | What matters it, that a man must, for a few years, live on bread and water? |
7211 | What means more adequate to accomplish the sublime end? |
7211 | What means this implacable fury?" |
7211 | What meant the thunder stroke? |
7211 | What more is necessary than for the people to preserve what they have themselves created? |
7211 | What more would Senators have? |
7211 | What motive, then, could have such influence in their bosom? |
7211 | What name? |
7211 | What of that charge? |
7211 | What passion can not Music raise and quell? |
7211 | What passion can not Music raise and quell? |
7211 | What provision of the Federal Constitution had we violated? |
7211 | What provocation more do we propose to wait for? |
7211 | What reason can you give the nations of the earth to justify it? |
7211 | What rests? |
7211 | What right has the North assailed? |
7211 | What sands were colored with his blood? |
7211 | What sign hast thou to show? |
7211 | What sir, have they gained the principles of justice from us? |
7211 | What sought they thus, afar? |
7211 | What tears can widows weep Less bitter than when brave men fall? |
7211 | What terms shall we find which have not been already exhausted? |
7211 | What the land and houses too? |
7211 | What then? |
7211 | What think you is the duty of England in this life- or- death contest between the North and the South? |
7211 | What will convince them? |
7211 | What would he have? |
7211 | What would he have? |
7211 | What would they have? |
7211 | What''s banished, but set free, From daily contact of the things I loathe? |
7211 | What''s hallowed ground? |
7211 | What''s that to you, sir? |
7211 | What''s the matter? |
7211 | What''s the matter? |
7211 | What''s the mercy despots feel? |
7211 | What, are you recruiting here, eh? |
7211 | What, sir, was the conduct of the South during the Revolution? |
7211 | What, the soldier on duty here? |
7211 | What? |
7211 | When can their glory fade? |
7211 | When do you breakfast, and what do you take at it? |
7211 | When have they deserved it? |
7211 | When shall we have one interest, and one common country? |
7211 | When shall we see an end of discord? |
7211 | When the soldiers were destitute of clothing, or sick, or in prison, from whence did relief come? |
7211 | When the traveller pauses on the plains of Marathon, what are the emotions which most strongly agitate his breast? |
7211 | When was there so much iniquity ever laid to the charge of any one? |
7211 | When we asked a three- fifths representation in Congress for our slaves, was it not granted? |
7211 | Whence should come our fighting men if the bugle should blow? |
7211 | Where are the bones of the robber and his host? |
7211 | Where are the villages, and warriors, and youth? |
7211 | Where bound? |
7211 | Where did the gentleman get this principle? |
7211 | Where did you learn this maxim? |
7211 | Where didst thou leave them? |
7211 | Where does he sleep? |
7211 | Where have they deserved it? |
7211 | Where have you been? |
7211 | Where is Concord, and Lexington, and Princeton, and Trenton, and Saratoga, and Bunker Hill, but in the North? |
7211 | Where is it to stop? |
7211 | Where is the cultivated field, in redeeming which from the wilderness, their vigor has not been displayed? |
7211 | Where is the eagle still to tower? |
7211 | Where is the flag of the republic to remain? |
7211 | Where is the good in counting twelve millions, instead of six, of mere feeding, working, sleeping animals? |
7211 | Where is the justice, then, or where is the law, that protects a member of Parliament more than any other man from the punishment due to his crimes? |
7211 | Where is the line to be drawn? |
7211 | Where is the mother that looked on my childhood? |
7211 | Where is the new police? |
7211 | Where shall that land, that spot of earth be found? |
7211 | Where slept thy thunderbolts? |
7211 | Where will you levy your taxes? |
7211 | Where, then, sir, is this war, which is prolific of all these horrors, to be carried? |
7211 | Whereto serves mercy, But to confront the visage of offence? |
7211 | Which is it? |
7211 | Which shall yield? |
7211 | Who are the Northern laborers? |
7211 | Who bade the sun Clothe you with rainbows? |
7211 | Who can blame them? |
7211 | Who can estimate the results produced by the incomparable efforts of a single mind? |
7211 | Who can tell how far and fast they will travel? |
7211 | Who can tell what Greece owes to this first- born of song? |
7211 | Who can tell what will be the character of the next 15th of March? |
7211 | Who could guess If ever more should meet those mutual eyes, Since upon night so sweet such awful morn could rise? |
7211 | Who filled thy countenance with rosy light? |
7211 | Who gave you your invulnerable life, Your strength, your speed, your fury, and your joy Unceasing thunder, and eternal foam? |
7211 | Who has welcomed in her cities, and cherished in her homes, the illustrious patriot Louis Kossuth? |
7211 | Who is Blennerhassett? |
7211 | Who is here so base, that would be a bondman? |
7211 | Who is here so rude, that would not be a Roman? |
7211 | Who is here so vile, that will not love his country? |
7211 | Who is it that causes to blow the loud winds of winter, and that calms them again in summer? |
7211 | Who is it that rears up the shade of those lofty forests, and blasts them with the quick lightning at his pleasure? |
7211 | Who is so foolish, I beg everybody''s pardon, as to expect to see any such thing? |
7211 | Who is to judge concerning the frequency of these demands? |
7211 | Who is to judge whether the money is properly expended? |
7211 | Who made thee parent of perpetual streams? |
7211 | Who made you glorious as the gates of heaven Beneath the keen full moon? |
7211 | Who rules the President? |
7211 | Who rules the rebel States? |
7211 | Who sank thy sunless pillars deep in earth? |
7211 | Who shall put asunder the best affections of the heart, the noblest instincts of our nature? |
7211 | Who sir, I ask, was he? |
7211 | Who was he? |
7211 | Who was her father? |
7211 | Who was her mother? |
7211 | Who will accuse me of wandering out of the subject? |
7211 | Who will hesitate to give his mite to avert such awful results? |
7211 | Who will say that I exaggerate the tendencies of our measures? |
7211 | Who would n''t give it to you? |
7211 | Who''ll prove it, at his peril, on my head? |
7211 | Who''s armed and who''s mounted? |
7211 | Who''s ready? |
7211 | Who''s ready? |
7211 | Who, sir, were these men? |
7211 | Who, then, is Aaron Burr, and what the part which he has borne in this transaction? |
7211 | Who, with living flowers Of loveliest blue, spread garlands at your feet? |
7211 | Whom do you want, sir,--your coachman or your cook? |
7211 | Whose best wishes and earnest prayers have ever attended the efforts in the cause of freedom of Mazzini and Garibaldi? |
7211 | Whose heart hath never within him burned, As home his footsteps he hath turned, From wandering on a foreign strand? |
7211 | Whose were the arms that drove your bayonets at Vimiera through the phalanxes that never reeled to the shock of war before? |
7211 | Why can not we rise to noble conceptions of our destiny? |
7211 | Why caught each man his blade? |
7211 | Why did all- creating Nature Make the plant for which we toil? |
7211 | Why did he pause? |
7211 | Why did it dote on a fast- fading treasure? |
7211 | Why did you ask the question, then? |
7211 | Why disturb them? |
7211 | Why do we hesitate? |
7211 | Why do we not feel, that our work as a nation is to carry freedom, religion, science, and a noble form of human nature over this continent? |
7211 | Why does a man''s heart palpitate when he is on the point of committing an unlawful deed? |
7211 | Why echoed every street With tramp of thronging feet All flying to the city''s wall? |
7211 | Why is injustice to be suffered to remain for a single hour? |
7211 | Why is it necessary now to overturn them? |
7211 | Why is it that our bright waters all stained and our green fields reddened with fraternal blood? |
7211 | Why is it that the heart of loyal America throbs, heavily oppressed with anxiety and gloom, for the future of the country? |
7211 | Why is it that the land resounds with the measured tread of a million of armed men? |
7211 | Why is that other writhing with agony? |
7211 | Why not? |
7211 | Why ought the slave trade to be abolished? |
7211 | Why should''st thou faint? |
7211 | Why stand we here idle? |
7211 | Why then, why then, sir, do we not as soon as possible change this from a civil to a national war? |
7211 | Why trembled wife and maid? |
7211 | Why was it that she was able, in four days from that in which this cry reached her, to add a new glory to the day of Lexington? |
7211 | Why, gentlemen, who does trouble himself about a warming- pan? |
7211 | Why, sir, what does the gentleman understand by"political subjects?" |
7211 | Why, then, should we defer the Declaration? |
7211 | Why, what difference does that make? |
7211 | Why, what would be the result? |
7211 | Will a jury weaken this our nation''s hope? |
7211 | Will any one answer by a sneer, that all this is idle preaching? |
7211 | Will he shrink from armed insurrection? |
7211 | Will his State justify it? |
7211 | Will his children receive instructions from the lips of a disgraced father? |
7211 | Will it be the next week, or the next year? |
7211 | Will it be when we are totally disarmed; and when a British guard shall be stationed in every house? |
7211 | Will its better public opinion allow it? |
7211 | Will she employ in her councils, or in her armies, the man at whom the"slow unmoving finger of scorn"is pointed? |
7211 | Will the Senator yield to rebellion? |
7211 | Will the Tribunes make up your losses to you? |
7211 | Will the last, and worst, prove luckier? |
7211 | Will the trading and moneyed interests, so powerful in the Northern cities, do their duty? |
7211 | Will they by their verdict pronounce to the youth of our country, that character is scarce worth possessing? |
7211 | Will ye give it up to slaves? |
7211 | Will ye look for greener graves? |
7211 | Will ye to your homes retire? |
7211 | Will you deny him this redress? |
7211 | Will you hang your head and blush in his presence, because he outshines you in equipage and show? |
7211 | Will you make this the exception? |
7211 | Will you put out mine eyes?-- These eyes, that never did, nor never shall, So much as frown on you? |
7211 | Will you shrink from such a meeting? |
7211 | Wilt thou never come, O Death? |
7211 | With pure heart, newly stampt from nature''s mint,( Where did he learn that squint?) |
7211 | Without it, what is man? |
7211 | Woman''s weakness shall not shame me-- why should I have tears to shed? |
7211 | Would any one deny that we are bound, and I would hope to good purpose, by the most solemn sanctions of duty for the vote we give? |
7211 | Would you burst the good people you dog? |
7211 | Would you, for instance, be rich? |
7211 | Yankee landlords do not belong to their house''s[ Aloud] You seem young for a landlord: may I ask how old you are? |
7211 | Yes, Jack, the independence I was talking of is by a marriage-- the fortune is saddled with a wife; but I suppose that makes no difference? |
7211 | Yes; of whom? |
7211 | Yet religion has nothing to do with politics? |
7211 | Yet what can it, when one can not repent? |
7211 | Yet, sir, I presume you would not wish me to quit the army? |
7211 | You all did love him once, not without cause: What cause withholds you then to mourn for him? |
7211 | You are? |
7211 | You blockhead, what did he say to that? |
7211 | You come back from sea And not know my John? |
7211 | You got the letter, then, did you? |
7211 | You then, after this slight repast, take some tea and bread and butter? |
7211 | [ Aloud] Did you accept the invitation? |
7211 | [ Aloud] Where were you born, sir? |
7211 | a greater face of plenty? |
7211 | a greedy dog; why, what did he get he liked so well? |
7211 | and Where lies your grief? |
7211 | and again ratified and strengthened in the Fugitive Slave Law of 1850? |
7211 | and cut left!-- For the parry who needs? |
7211 | and how came it set on fire? |
7211 | and tell me what is this? |
7211 | and what claim founded in justice and right has been withheld? |
7211 | and what were they carrying water for? |
7211 | are not your beings pure? |
7211 | are these acquisitions to brag of? |
7211 | art thou the Thracian robber, of whose exploits I have heard so much? |
7211 | caitiffs, do ye fear? |
7211 | comes there, from the pyramids, And from Siberian wastes of snow, And Europe''s hills, a voice that bids The world he awed to mourn him? |
7211 | cowards, have ye left me to meet him here alone? |
7211 | cried the King,"who is guilty of this crime?" |
7211 | do you not feel the goads and stings of conscious guilt pierce through your savage bosoms? |
7211 | durst not tempt him? |
7211 | ere Freedom found a grave, Why slept the sword, omnipotent to save? |
7211 | for the treasure you must have; and what price she may next demand, who shall tell? |
7211 | for what do you throw away these inestimable blessings-- for what would you exchange your share in the advantages and honor of the Union? |
7211 | good does that do? |
7211 | has the bigoted malignity of any individuals been crushed? |
7211 | have I not as good a right to catechize you, as you had to catechize me? |
7211 | have ye flown? |
7211 | he mutters Brokenly now-- that was a difficult breath-- Another? |
7211 | heard you not Port Royal''s doom? |
7211 | how dare you tread upon the earth which has drank in the blood of slaughtered innocents, shed by your wicked hands? |
7211 | how didst thou pass the guard? |
7211 | is it"duff?" |
7211 | is my hour elapsed? |
7211 | is not this a presage of the dawn Of freedom o''er the world? |
7211 | is the fellow providing an entertainment for my lord mayor and the court of aldermen? |
7211 | is war a state of probation? |
7211 | more bad news? |
7211 | must I stay?" |
7211 | must the bowels of Great Britain be torn out her best blood be spilled-- her treasures wasted-- that you may make an experiment? |
7211 | or is he to cower, and shrink, and fall to the ground? |
7211 | said I;"and a bigger letther than this? |
7211 | said he,"tell me, where mean you to move? |
7211 | says I? |
7211 | silent motionless, ye stand? |
7211 | that better land?" |
7211 | the fishing- place disturbed by his saw- mills? |
7211 | the morning now is bright, Though cloudy it begun; Why ca n''t we aim above as if We had called out the sun?" |
7211 | the settlers will remain in security? |
7211 | then it is"ploe,"like"doe?" |
7211 | then"Row and Ready?" |
7211 | to color meerschaums? |
7211 | to dredge our maiden''s hair with gold- dust? |
7211 | to flaunt in laces, and sparkle in diamonds? |
7211 | to float through life, the passive shuttlecocks of fashion, from the avenues to the beaches, and back again from the beaches to the avenues? |
7211 | to reduce the speed of trotting horses a second or two below its old minimum? |
7211 | to the whole North? |
7211 | upon those whose relatives have been slain, to compensate the murderers? |
7211 | upon those whose whole property has been stolen, to reward the thieves? |
7211 | was it disease? |
7211 | was it hard labor and spare meals? |
7211 | was it the tomahawk? |
7211 | what art can teach, What human voice can reach The sacred Organ''s praise? |
7211 | what danger of nature or man not defied? |
7211 | what do you say provoked you to the point where forbearance ceased to be a virtue? |
7211 | what doubt we to incense His utmost ire? |
7211 | what fire? |
7211 | what is that flame, which now bursts on his eye? |
7211 | what is that sound which now larums his ear? |
7211 | what light through yonder window breaks? |
7211 | what mean those yells and cries? |
7211 | what more shall honor claim? |
7211 | what need you be so boisterous rough? |
7211 | what torches? |
7211 | what, weep you when you but behold Our CÃ ¦ sar, vesture wounded? |
7211 | where thy rod, That smote the foes of Sion and of God? |
7211 | whose funeral''s that?" |
7211 | why, what do the people say, pray? |
7211 | will you join in the strife For country, for freedom, for honor, for life? |
7211 | with eyes so fair, What was thy delighted measure? |
7211 | you great blockhead!--If I could, what need Of paying you for any''helps to read?''" |
32898 | Do they? |
32898 | Do you not see that I am becalmed? |
32898 | For stealing your pictures? |
32898 | For what? |
32898 | Not worth a farthing? 32898 What are Shakespeare''s works worth, all bound together?" |
32898 | Why are there drums in the wars? |
32898 | Why do lawyers''clerks write such wide lines? |
32898 | Why do you ask? |
32898 | Why,asked Moore, the poet,"is love like a potato?" |
32898 | Why,asks a disconsolate widow,"is venison like my late and never- sufficiently- to- be- lamented husband?" |
32898 | Why? |
32898 | Wilt thou? |
32898 | A Dutch- S. Why is the letter D like a hoop of gold? |
32898 | A fig, for is it not an F I G( effigy)? |
32898 | A hunter kills a brace, then how many remain? |
32898 | A man bought two fishes, but on taking them home found he had three; how was this? |
32898 | A necessary attribute of a soldier? |
32898 | AGE CONTEST What age will people reach if they live long enough? |
32898 | ANT CONTEST What is the oldest ant? |
32898 | Actors? |
32898 | And what do they do when they die? |
32898 | At what age should a man marry? |
32898 | At what age will vessels ride safely? |
32898 | At what period in his sorrow does a widower recover from the loss of his dear departed? |
32898 | At what time by the clock is a pun the most effective? |
32898 | At what time of day was Adam born? |
32898 | At what time of life may a man be said to belong to the vegetable kingdom? |
32898 | At what time was Adam married? |
32898 | Athletes? |
32898 | B R and Y, and O D V. What must you add to nine to make it six? |
32898 | Because a man must B before he can C. How long is the longest letter in the English alphabet? |
32898 | Because he hated Abe L. Why is our army like an entry clerk? |
32898 | Because he''s a Jew- ill. Why is an undutiful son like one born deaf? |
32898 | Because his business is to work ore. Why is a garter like the gates of a slaughter house? |
32898 | Because it is an auger- ill. What is the strongest day? |
32898 | Because it is found oftener than any other letter d- o- ing g- oo- d. Why is the letter T like matrimony? |
32898 | Because they are never re(a)d. Why is an architect like a newspaper writer? |
32898 | Beggars? |
32898 | By what female name would an egg object to be called? |
32898 | CHAPTER II MYTHOLOGICAL CONUNDRUMS Where was Time raised? |
32898 | CHAPTER III BIBLICAL CONUNDRUMS What three words did Adam use when he introduced himself to Eve, which read backwards and forwards the same? |
32898 | CHAPTER IX GENERAL CONUNDRUMS Why is a baby like a sheaf of wheat? |
32898 | CHAPTER V CONUNDRUMS OF THE CIVIL WAR PERIOD Why does our army differ from the army of the Revolution? |
32898 | CHAPTER VI GEOGRAPHICAL CONUNDRUMS What would happen if a colored waiter dropped a platter with a turkey upon it? |
32898 | CHAPTER VII LITERARY CONUNDRUMS What American poet may be considered equal to three- fifths of the poets ancient and modern? |
32898 | CHAPTER VIII CONUNDRUMS ON THE ALPHABET What word is it of only three syllables which combines in it twenty- six letters? |
32898 | CITY CONTEST What city is for few people? |
32898 | Can you tell me why A hypocrite''s eye Can better descry Than you or I On how many toes A pussy- cat goes? |
32898 | Chauffeurs? |
32898 | Conundrum( can none drum?). |
32898 | Crowds? |
32898 | Describe a suit of old clothes in two letters? |
32898 | ECHOES What must be done to conduct a newspaper right? |
32898 | For what reason ought a Frenchman who speaks imperfect English and an Englishman who is equally unacquainted with French never to converse together? |
32898 | For what was Eve made? |
32898 | From this fact grew the following conundrum:) Why did a knight take place of a gentleman? |
32898 | Greedy people? |
32898 | Happy people? |
32898 | Home lovers? |
32898 | How can a whipping be ordered for a boy in five Old Testament names? |
32898 | How can an actress appear in two pieces on the same evening? |
32898 | How can you distinguish a fashionable man from a tired dog? |
32898 | How can you instantly convict one of error when stating who was the earliest poet? |
32898 | How can you make one pound of green tea go as far as five pounds of black? |
32898 | How can you shoot one hundred and twenty hares at one shot? |
32898 | How did Adam and Eve feel when they left the Garden of Eden? |
32898 | How did Jonah feel when the whale was going to swallow him? |
32898 | How did the sandwiches get there? |
32898 | How do angry women prove themselves strong nerved? |
32898 | How do eggs show their anger on being called Heggs? |
32898 | How do locomotives hear? |
32898 | How do seamstresses resemble rascals? |
32898 | How do the young ladies show their dislike of mustaches? |
32898 | How do we know Lord Byron was good- tempered? |
32898 | How do we know that Jupiter wore very pinching boots? |
32898 | How do we know that Noah had beer in the ark? |
32898 | How do we know that there was a panic in the early days of Moses? |
32898 | How do you call the ship that carries more passengers than the_ Olympic_? |
32898 | How do you know that the Queen approves of the penny postage? |
32898 | How do you make a Maltese cross? |
32898 | How do you spell"blind pig"in two letters? |
32898 | How does Patrick propose to get over his single blessedness? |
32898 | How does a boy look if you hurt him? |
32898 | How does a ray of light get through a prism? |
32898 | How does a sailor know there''s a man in the moon? |
32898 | How does a tipsy man generally look? |
32898 | How does the Copyright Law affect the war? |
32898 | How does the cavalryman whose horse has thrown him differ from the faithful orderly? |
32898 | How does the letter Y work an impossibility? |
32898 | How does the surgeon, whose bill for an operation has been delayed by executors, resemble his deceased patient? |
32898 | How is a poultry dealer compelled to earn his living? |
32898 | How is it England and Russia conjointly govern the ocean? |
32898 | How is it guns can kick when they have no legs? |
32898 | How is it that the affections of young ladies, notwithstanding that they may protest and vow constancy, are always doubtful? |
32898 | How is it that trees can put on new dresses without"opening their trunks"? |
32898 | How long did Cain hate his brother? |
32898 | How long should a lady''s crinoline be made? |
32898 | How many Spanish noblemen does it take to make an Englishman run? |
32898 | How many apples were eaten in the Garden of Eden? |
32898 | How many cows''tails would it take to reach from Boston to New York? |
32898 | How many peas in a pint? |
32898 | How many sides has a pitcher? |
32898 | How many soft- boiled eggs could the giant Goliath eat upon an empty stomach? |
32898 | How many wives are you allowed by the Prayer- book? |
32898 | How many young ladies does it take to reach from New York to Philadelphia? |
32898 | How should Messrs. Taft and Roosevelt now travel? |
32898 | How should love come to the door? |
32898 | How so?" |
32898 | How was this? |
32898 | How was this? |
32898 | How were Adam and Eve prevented from gambling? |
32898 | How would you express in two letters that you were twice the bulk of your companion? |
32898 | How would you increase the speed of a very slow boat? |
32898 | How would you measure a lover''s sincerity? |
32898 | Hungry people? |
32898 | Hypocrites? |
32898 | If Dick''s father is Tom''s son, what relation is Dick to Tom? |
32898 | If Falstaff had been musical what instrument would he have chosen after dinner? |
32898 | If I kiss a lady by mistake, what weapon do I use? |
32898 | If I walk into a room full of people and place a new penny upon the table in full view of the company, what does the coin do? |
32898 | If I were in the sun and you out of it, what would the sun become? |
32898 | If I were to see you riding on a donkey, what fruit should I be reminded of? |
32898 | If Old Nick were to lose his tail, where should he go to supply the deficiency? |
32898 | If Richard Jones were milking a cow too quickly, what ancient name would that animal mention? |
32898 | If a bee could stand on its hind legs, what blessing would it invoke? |
32898 | If a general should ask in vain for martial music, what word would embody his request? |
32898 | If a man and his wife go to Europe together, what is the difference in their mode of traveling? |
32898 | If a man attempts to jump a ditch and falls, why is he likely to miss the beauties of summer? |
32898 | If a mercenary man were to ask a girl to marry, what flower would he name? |
32898 | If a nice plump Member of Parliament were eaten uncooked by savages, why would he be like Louis Napoleon? |
32898 | If a spider were late to dinner, what would he do? |
32898 | If a tailor and a goose are on the top of a monument, what is the quickest way for the tailor to get down? |
32898 | If a tough beefsteak could speak, what English poet would it mention? |
32898 | If a tree were to break the panes of a window, what would they say? |
32898 | If a woman asks her blind lover the color of a flower, what would he say? |
32898 | If a young lady were to wish her father to pull her on the river, what classical name might she mention? |
32898 | If all the seas were dried up, what would Neptune say? |
32898 | If an uncle''s sister is not your aunt, what relation does she bear to you? |
32898 | If the Greeks had pushed Pan into the Bay of Salamis, what would he have been when he came out? |
32898 | If the acrobat fell off his trapeze, what would he fall against? |
32898 | If the before- mentioned porker wished to demolish the pig''s sty he had built, what quotation would he make? |
32898 | If the poker, shovel, and tongs cost five dollars, what would a ton of coal come to? |
32898 | If thirty- two degrees is freezing point, what is squeezing point? |
32898 | If we were going to kill a conversational goose, what vegetable would she allude to? |
32898 | If you asked the alphabet to come to dinner, which letters could not accept your kind invitation till later in the evening? |
32898 | If you lose a dollar to- day, why would it be a good plan to lose another to- morrow? |
32898 | If you took off your boot and put your foot in the fire, what opera of Verdi''s would it instantly make you? |
32898 | If you were to swallow a man, what sort of man would you prefer? |
32898 | If you were to throw a white stone into the Red Sea, what would it become? |
32898 | If you wish a very religious man to go to sleep, by what imperial name should you address him? |
32898 | In what color should friendship be kept? |
32898 | In what condition is a beer- barrel when it resembles old- fashioned curtains? |
32898 | In what constellation are the two shooting dogs which never go down? |
32898 | In what key should a declaration of love be made? |
32898 | In what order did Noah come from the ark? |
32898 | In what place did the cock crow so loud that all the world heard him? |
32898 | In what relation does the President of the United States stand to Adam? |
32898 | In what respect does an attorney resemble a clergyman? |
32898 | In what respects were the governments of Algiers and Malta as different as light from darkness? |
32898 | In what sort of family does the seventh night of the week come on the sixth? |
32898 | In what sort of syllables ought a parrot to be taught to speak? |
32898 | In what tongue did Balaam''s donkey speak? |
32898 | Is that Ararat? |
32898 | Is there a word in the English language which contains all the vowels? |
32898 | Is there any bird which can recite the"Lays of Ancient Rome?" |
32898 | It went before Queen Mary, it followed King William to the end? |
32898 | Letter E. One letter''s a tree? |
32898 | Like what four letters of the alphabet is a honey- producing insect when in small health? |
32898 | Name the most unsociable things in the world? |
32898 | Name two English words, one of which, being of one syllable only, shall contain more letters than the other of five syllables? |
32898 | Nations? |
32898 | Now of letters that rhyme You must guess them in time; One is an insect busy all day? |
32898 | O I C U R M T. Why did Noah object to the letter D? |
32898 | Of what color are the winds and waves in a storm? |
32898 | Of what color is grass under snow? |
32898 | Of what profession is every child? |
32898 | Of what religious persuasion is the sea? |
32898 | Of what trade is the sun? |
32898 | Office- seekers? |
32898 | Old people? |
32898 | On a frosty day, what are the best fishes to fasten together? |
32898 | On what day of the year do women talk least? |
32898 | On what side of a church does a yew- tree grow? |
32898 | On what supposition could a pocket handkerchief be used to build a house? |
32898 | On which side of a pitcher is the handle? |
32898 | One a bird, think? |
32898 | One is a river that wends on its way? |
32898 | One is a slang word it is best not to say? |
32898 | One is to drink? |
32898 | One means to agree? |
32898 | Pharaoh got a check on the bank of the Red Sea-- crossed by Moses and Co. Why was Pharaoh''s daughter like a broker? |
32898 | Plant a puppy, and what would come up? |
32898 | Plant the setting sun, and what will come up? |
32898 | Pray tell me, ladies, if you can, Who is that highly favored man, Who, though he has married many a wife, May still live single all his life? |
32898 | Reporters? |
32898 | Some one mentioning that"columba"was the Latin for a"dove,"it gave rise to the following: What is the difference between the Old World and the New? |
32898 | Suppose you were to bore a hole exactly through the earth, starting from New York, and you went in at this end, where would you come out? |
32898 | Telegraph operators? |
32898 | That which every one requires, that which every one gives, that which every one asks, and that which very few take? |
32898 | The Basutos of South Africa ask:"What is wingless and legless, yet flies fast and can not be imprisoned?" |
32898 | The Teutonic form was,"What can go in the face of the sun, yet leave no shadow?" |
32898 | The letter M. Why is A like twelve o''clock? |
32898 | The letter"H."STORIES How do you punctuate the sentence,"I saw a five- dollar bill on the street?" |
32898 | The letter"m."Who caught the fossil fishes? |
32898 | The meaning of these letters is not full? |
32898 | The name of what character in history would a person mention in asking the servant to put coal on the fire? |
32898 | The names of which two Greek poems will you mention on alluding to their author''s peculiar manner and indisposition? |
32898 | These letters do the best of all? |
32898 | These letters form a literary composition? |
32898 | These letters form a material to wear? |
32898 | These letters form a tree? |
32898 | These letters will decompose? |
32898 | These two letters are not at all hard? |
32898 | To what age do most people look forward? |
32898 | Truthful people? |
32898 | U- r- a- bu- t- l- n. What is that which occurs twice in a moment and not once in a thousand years? |
32898 | Under what circumstances are a builder and a newspaper reporter equally likely to fail? |
32898 | Unhappy people? |
32898 | Upon what guard do the New York Zouaves most desire to be put? |
32898 | Was Othello thinking of his wife when he killed her? |
32898 | Was it John Byrom who, in comparing two celebrated musicians, said one was Tweedledum, the other only Tweedledee? |
32898 | Was our mother Eve High or Low Church? |
32898 | What Egyptian official would a little boy mention if he were to call his mother to the window to see something wonderful? |
32898 | What English poet does a mummy resemble? |
32898 | What Indian battle tried the metal( mettle) of the English soldiers? |
32898 | What Tory do the Whigs want on their side? |
32898 | What age are we forbidden to worship? |
32898 | What age belongs to travelers? |
32898 | What age do a number of people enjoy in common? |
32898 | What age do milliners delight in? |
32898 | What age do people get stuck on? |
32898 | What age does the bride desire? |
32898 | What age does the child in primary school dislike? |
32898 | What age does the infant in arms pass through? |
32898 | What age does the small boy enjoy? |
32898 | What age is an indication of wealth? |
32898 | What age is most important to travelers? |
32898 | What age is necessary for a clergyman? |
32898 | What age is neither more nor less? |
32898 | What age is required at sea? |
32898 | What age is served for breakfast? |
32898 | What age is shared by a doctor and a lawyer? |
32898 | What age is the young lady most interested in? |
32898 | What age is used in turkey stuffing? |
32898 | What age signifies the farmer? |
32898 | What ancient king was often literally in his contemporaries''mouth? |
32898 | What animal keeps the best time? |
32898 | What animals always have gaiters on? |
32898 | What animals are admitted at the opera? |
32898 | What animals are always seen at a funeral? |
32898 | What animals are in the clouds? |
32898 | What ant hires his home? |
32898 | What ant is a beggar? |
32898 | What ant is an officer? |
32898 | What ant is angry? |
32898 | What ant is joyful? |
32898 | What ant is learned? |
32898 | What ant is obstinate? |
32898 | What ant is prayerful? |
32898 | What ant is proud? |
32898 | What ant is successful? |
32898 | What ant is trustworthy? |
32898 | What ant is well informed? |
32898 | What ant is youngest? |
32898 | What ant lives in a house? |
32898 | What ant points out things? |
32898 | What ant sees things? |
32898 | What ant tells things? |
32898 | What are the features of the cannon? |
32898 | What are the worst letters of recommendation? |
32898 | What are those things, which, though they appear twice in every day, and twice in every week, yet are only seen twice in a year? |
32898 | What author would eye- glasses and spectacles mention to the world if they could only speak? |
32898 | What barrel is best fitted for a soldier''s helmet? |
32898 | What becomes every woman? |
32898 | What becomes of all the pins? |
32898 | What benefit can be derived from a paper of pins? |
32898 | What best describes and most impedes a Pilgrim''s Progress? |
32898 | What bird made the Yankee dish, bird''s- nest pudding, and for what other bird was it made? |
32898 | What burns to keep a secret? |
32898 | What celebrated battle was fought in a dirty slum? |
32898 | What change of identity did the"Beggar''s Opera"effect? |
32898 | What city of the world do artists make the most drawings of? |
32898 | What coat is finished without buttons and put on wet? |
32898 | What comes after cheese? |
32898 | What consolation has the homely girl? |
32898 | What constitutes a weighty discourse? |
32898 | What countryman is a ploughman? |
32898 | What countryman is the devil? |
32898 | What countryman was Burns? |
32898 | What county of England, if you dislike it extremely, would you run the chance of being stifled in? |
32898 | What death does the sculptor die? |
32898 | What did Adam and Eve do when they got out of Eden? |
32898 | What did Adam first plant in the Garden of Eden? |
32898 | What did Io die of? |
32898 | What did Lot do when his wife turned to salt? |
32898 | What did Queen Elizabeth take her pills in? |
32898 | What did a blind man take at breakfast which restored his sight? |
32898 | What did the cat say when she looked out of the window of the ark? |
32898 | What did the muffin say to the toasting fork? |
32898 | What did the pistol ball say to the wounded duelist? |
32898 | What did the sunbeam say to the violet? |
32898 | What did the whale gain in the little transaction between him and Jonah? |
32898 | What did they find under the Maine? |
32898 | What divine law did the whale obey when he swallowed Jonah? |
32898 | What do ladies look for when they go to church? |
32898 | What does a hen do when she stands on one foot? |
32898 | What does an iron- clad vessel of war, with four inches of steel plating and all its guns on board, weigh just before starting on a cruise? |
32898 | What does that young man deserve who loves always to be in a playhouse? |
32898 | What does the lamp post become when the lamp is removed? |
32898 | What does y- e- s spell? |
32898 | What evidence have we that Adam used sugar? |
32898 | What fashionable game do frogs play at-- besides leap- frog? |
32898 | What fish is most valued by a loving wife? |
32898 | What flower most resembles a bull''s mouth? |
32898 | What fruit is like a Guy Fawkes? |
32898 | What fruit is on a cent? |
32898 | What fur did Adam and Eve wear? |
32898 | What games do the waves play at? |
32898 | What garden crop would save draining? |
32898 | What girl does Echo think can best answer questions? |
32898 | What gives a cold, cures a cold, and pays the doctor? |
32898 | What goes most against a farmer''s grain? |
32898 | What goes over the water and under the water, but never touches the water? |
32898 | What great astronomer is like Venus''s chariot? |
32898 | What great scholar is this same Finis, because his name is to almost every book? |
32898 | What grows bigger the more you contract it? |
32898 | What had better be done when there is a great rent on a farm? |
32898 | What hands are those which work night and day, yet never wear out; which, although they strike, do not stop? |
32898 | What have ears but hear not? |
32898 | What have eyes and see not? |
32898 | What have feet and walk not? |
32898 | What have hands but work not? |
32898 | What have mouths but eat not? |
32898 | What have noses but smell not? |
32898 | What have tongues but talk not? |
32898 | What have you now before you which would give you a company, a veiled lady, and a noisy toy? |
32898 | What herb is most injurious to a lady''s beauty? |
32898 | What herb is there that cures all diseases? |
32898 | What impermeable fabric is a sparrow like? |
32898 | What injury did the Lavinia of Thomson''s"Seasons"do to young Palemon? |
32898 | What is Hobson''s choice? |
32898 | What is Majesty deprived of its externals? |
32898 | What is a better investment the worse it is? |
32898 | What is a button? |
32898 | What is a dogma? |
32898 | What is a good way to make money fast? |
32898 | What is a heavy incidental expense? |
32898 | What is a kiss? |
32898 | What is a man like who is in the middle of the Thames and ca n''t swim? |
32898 | What is a ring? |
32898 | What is a very frequent mistake clergymen make in their sermons? |
32898 | What is a waste( waist) of time? |
32898 | What is a young lady who refuses you? |
32898 | What is an Englishman''s notion of woman''s mission? |
32898 | What is an oyster heap likely to become? |
32898 | What is better than God, worse than the devil, what the dead live on, and the living would die if they lived on? |
32898 | What is better than an indifferent singer in a drawing room after dinner? |
32898 | What is better than presence of mind in a railway accident? |
32898 | What is disgusting to all but those who swallow it? |
32898 | What is higher and handsomer when the head is off? |
32898 | What is it that every man overlooks? |
32898 | What is it that goes up and down hill, but never moves? |
32898 | What is it that has four legs and only one foot? |
32898 | What is it that is queer about flowers? |
32898 | What is it that opens to all comers, advertises only the doctors, and yet is good for everything that ails you? |
32898 | What is it that walks with its head downward? |
32898 | What is it we all frequently say we will do and no one has ever yet done? |
32898 | What is it which covers a multitude of sin(ner)s? |
32898 | What is it which every one wishes for, and yet wants to get rid of as soon as it is obtained? |
32898 | What is it which more people lie under than upon? |
32898 | What is it? |
32898 | What is larger than a nutmeg? |
32898 | What is lengthened by being cut at both ends? |
32898 | What is more foolish than sending coals to Newcastle? |
32898 | What is most like a hen stealing? |
32898 | What is most like a horse''s foot? |
32898 | What is necessary to a farmer to assist him? |
32898 | What is smaller than a mite''s mouth? |
32898 | What is tantalizing? |
32898 | What is that if you take the whole away some remains? |
32898 | What is that thing which we all eat and drink, although it is often a man and often a woman? |
32898 | What is that which a cat has but no other animal? |
32898 | What is that which a woman frequently gives her lovely countenance to, yet never takes kindly? |
32898 | What is that which becomes too young the longer it exists? |
32898 | What is that which belongs to yourself, yet is used by every one more than yourself? |
32898 | What is that which comes with a coach, goes with a coach, is of no use to the coach, and yet the coach can not go without it? |
32898 | What is that which denotes the state of mind and of the body? |
32898 | What is that which divides by uniting and unites by dividing? |
32898 | What is that which every living being has seen, but will never see again? |
32898 | What is that which every one frequently holds yet rarely touches? |
32898 | What is that which fastens two people together, yet touches only one? |
32898 | What is that which has a mouth but never speaks, and a bed but never sleeps in it? |
32898 | What is that which has four legs and flies in the air? |
32898 | What is that which has never been felt, seen, or heard,--never existed, and still has a name? |
32898 | What is that which if you name it even you break it? |
32898 | What is that which if you take away all the letters remains the same? |
32898 | What is that which is above all human imperfections, and yet shelters the weakest and most depraved, as well as the best of men? |
32898 | What is that which is often given you, which you never have, yet which you often give up? |
32898 | What is that which is put on the table and cut, but never eaten? |
32898 | What is that which is white, black, and red all over, which shows some people to be green, and makes others look black and blue? |
32898 | What is that which lives in winter, dies in summer, and grows with its root upwards? |
32898 | What is that which never asks questions, yet requires many answers? |
32898 | What is that which no one wishes to have, yet no one wishes to lose? |
32898 | What is that which the dead and the living do at the same time? |
32898 | What is that which the fox has and the hare most wants? |
32898 | What is that which travels about, goes much up and down, and wears shoes, but never had any shoes? |
32898 | What is that which we often catch yet never see? |
32898 | What is that which we often return but never borrow? |
32898 | What is that which works when it plays and plays when it works? |
32898 | What is that which you can keep even after giving it to somebody else? |
32898 | What is that which, although only four inches long and three inches wide, contains a solid foot? |
32898 | What is that which, the more you take from it, the larger it grows? |
32898 | What is that which, though black itself, enlightens the world? |
32898 | What is that which_ will be_ yesterday, and_ was_ to- morrow? |
32898 | What is the action of the moon? |
32898 | What is the age of communication? |
32898 | What is the age of profanity? |
32898 | What is the age of slavery? |
32898 | What is the best advice to give a justice of the peace? |
32898 | What is the best bet ever made? |
32898 | What is the best day for making pancakes? |
32898 | What is the best description of"rapid consumption"? |
32898 | What is the best key to a good dinner? |
32898 | What is the best kind of agricultural fair? |
32898 | What is the best material for kites? |
32898 | What is the best place to sow wild oats? |
32898 | What is the best thing to do to enjoy the happiness of courting? |
32898 | What is the best thing to make in a hurry? |
32898 | What is the best thing to make in a hurry? |
32898 | What is the best way of making a coat last? |
32898 | What is the best way to double a flock of sheep? |
32898 | What is the best way to hide a bear; it does n''t matter how big he is-- the bigger the better? |
32898 | What is the best way to keep a man''s love? |
32898 | What is the best way to make the hours go fast? |
32898 | What is the best way to prevent water coming into your house? |
32898 | What is the best way to raise strawberries? |
32898 | What is the brightest idea of the day? |
32898 | What is the characteristic of a watch? |
32898 | What is the cheapest candy? |
32898 | What is the coldest place in an opera house? |
32898 | What is the difference between Kossuth and a half- starved countryman? |
32898 | What is the difference between Nineveh and a donkey- boy? |
32898 | What is the difference between Solomon and Rothschild? |
32898 | What is the difference between a French pastry- cook and a billsticker? |
32898 | What is the difference between a Roman Catholic priest and a Baptist? |
32898 | What is the difference between a baby and a shipwrecked sailor? |
32898 | What is the difference between a beehive and a diseased potato? |
32898 | What is the difference between a bright scholar and shoe polish? |
32898 | What is the difference between a butcher and a flirt? |
32898 | What is the difference between a butterfly and a volcano? |
32898 | What is the difference between a cat and a document? |
32898 | What is the difference between a certain part of Africa and the shade of Hamlet''s father stalking in winter? |
32898 | What is the difference between a chess- player and an habitual toper? |
32898 | What is the difference between a cloud of rain and a beaten child? |
32898 | What is the difference between a correspondent and a corespondent? |
32898 | What is the difference between a cow and a rickety chair? |
32898 | What is the difference between a donkey and a postage stamp? |
32898 | What is the difference between a duck with one wing and one with two? |
32898 | What is the difference between a farmer and a seamstress? |
32898 | What is the difference between a fisherman and a lazy schoolboy? |
32898 | What is the difference between a good and a bad governess? |
32898 | What is the difference between a honeycomb and a honeymoon? |
32898 | What is the difference between a last will and testament and a man who has eaten as much as he can? |
32898 | What is the difference between a milkmaid and a swallow? |
32898 | What is the difference between a mouse and a young lady? |
32898 | What is the difference between a new sponge and a fashionable man? |
32898 | What is the difference between a physician and a magician? |
32898 | What is the difference between a piece of honeycomb and a black eye? |
32898 | What is the difference between a potato and a soldier? |
32898 | What is the difference between a professional pianoforte player, and the one who hears him? |
32898 | What is the difference between a sailor and a soldier? |
32898 | What is the difference between a soldier and a fisherman? |
32898 | What is the difference between a spendthrift and a feather bed? |
32898 | What is the difference between a sweep and a man in mourning? |
32898 | What is the difference between a tight boot and an oak tree? |
32898 | What is the difference between a volunteer and an omelet? |
32898 | What is the difference between a wealthy toper and a skillful miner? |
32898 | What is the difference between a widow and a window? |
32898 | What is the difference between a young lady and a wide- awake hat? |
32898 | What is the difference between a_ première danseuse_ and a duck? |
32898 | What is the difference between an engine- driver and a schoolmaster? |
32898 | What is the difference between an honest and dishonest laundress? |
32898 | What is the difference between fog and a falling star? |
32898 | What is the difference between forms and ceremonies? |
32898 | What is the difference between killed soldiers and repaired garments? |
32898 | What is the difference between living"in marble halls"and aboard ship? |
32898 | What is the difference between love and war? |
32898 | What is the difference between one yard and two yards? |
32898 | What is the difference between perseverance and obstinacy? |
32898 | What is the difference between photography and whooping- cough? |
32898 | What is the difference between some women and their looking- glasses? |
32898 | What is the difference between the Emperor of Russia and a beggar? |
32898 | What is the difference between the North and South Pole? |
32898 | What is the difference between the Prince of Wales and a fountain? |
32898 | What is the difference between the Prince of Wales, an orphan, a bald- headed man, and a gorilla? |
32898 | What is the difference between the ancient Israelites and modern washstands? |
32898 | What is the difference between the cradle and the grave? |
32898 | What is the difference between the earth and the sea? |
32898 | What is the difference between two celebrated Saxon leaders of the fifth century and two others famous in these days? |
32898 | What is the dryest subject? |
32898 | What is the end to which all like to come? |
32898 | What is the first thing you do when you get into bed? |
32898 | What is the gentlest kind of spur? |
32898 | What is the geometrical form of an escaped parrot? |
32898 | What is the great motive for traveling? |
32898 | What is the greatest eye- sore in a farmyard? |
32898 | What is the greatest feat, in the eating way, ever known? |
32898 | What is the greatest instance of cannibalism on record? |
32898 | What is the greatest miracle ever worked in Ireland? |
32898 | What is the hardest conundrum? |
32898 | What is the height of folly? |
32898 | What is the key- note to good manners? |
32898 | What is the largest room in the world? |
32898 | What is the last blow a defeated ship gives in battle? |
32898 | What is the last remedy for a smoky chimney? |
32898 | What is the longest word in the English language? |
32898 | What is the military definition of a kiss? |
32898 | What is the most difficult river on which to get a boat? |
32898 | What is the most favorable season to have your letters from India? |
32898 | What is the most indigestible age? |
32898 | What is the most popular paper at a summer resort? |
32898 | What is the most suitable dance to wind up a frolic? |
32898 | What is the most wonderful animal in the farmyard? |
32898 | What is the noblest musical instrument? |
32898 | What is the oldest coupler in use? |
32898 | What is the oldest lunatic on record? |
32898 | What is the oldest piece of furniture in the world? |
32898 | What is the only form in this world which all nations, barbarous and civilized and otherwise, are agreed upon following? |
32898 | What is the only pain of which every one makes light? |
32898 | What is the principal part of a horse? |
32898 | What is the proper newspaper for invalids? |
32898 | What is the ruling ant? |
32898 | What is the smallest bridge in the world? |
32898 | What is the smallest room in the world? |
32898 | What is the superlative of temper? |
32898 | What is the value of a word? |
32898 | What is the very best and cheapest light, especially for painters? |
32898 | What is the wandering ant? |
32898 | What is the weight of the moon? |
32898 | What is the worst kind of fare for a man to live on? |
32898 | What is the worst thing to catch afire? |
32898 | What is the worth of a woman? |
32898 | What is wind like in a storm? |
32898 | What is worse than raining cats and dogs? |
32898 | What islands would form a cheerful luncheon party? |
32898 | What key in music will make a good officer? |
32898 | What kin is that child to his own father who is not his own father''s son? |
32898 | What kind of a cat do we generally find in a large library? |
32898 | What kind of a cravat would a hog be most likely to choose? |
32898 | What kind of a pen does the plagiarist use? |
32898 | What kind of a swell luncheon would hardly be considered a grand affair? |
32898 | What kind of cottages did Adam''s sons prefer? |
32898 | What kind of servants are best for hotels? |
32898 | What king was he? |
32898 | What lady of the Dante family is most often spoken of? |
32898 | What language should a linguist end with? |
32898 | What letter in the Dutch alphabet will name an English lady of title? |
32898 | What letter in the alphabet is necessary to make a shoe? |
32898 | What letter is that which is invisible, but never out of sight? |
32898 | What letter is the pleasantest to a deaf woman? |
32898 | What made the tart tart? |
32898 | What makes a pair of boots? |
32898 | What makes a pet dog wag his tail when he sees his master? |
32898 | What makes more noise than a pig in a sty? |
32898 | What makes the ocean get angry? |
32898 | What man had no father? |
32898 | What medicine ought to be given to misers? |
32898 | What moral sentence does a weathercock suggest? |
32898 | What most frequently becomes a woman? |
32898 | What musical instrument invites you to fish? |
32898 | What must all the letters of the alphabet be in order to possess infinite sagacity? |
32898 | What nation has always overcome in the end? |
32898 | What nation is it which, when allied to us, becomes the very home of despair? |
32898 | What nationality were they while coming down? |
32898 | What one sentence expresses the wish of both the Southern Confederacy and the United States government? |
32898 | What one word will name the common parent of both beasts and man? |
32898 | What other edifice does a man sometimes carry about with him besides a sty in his eye? |
32898 | What ought to be Sir Edwin Landseer''s motto? |
32898 | What part of Spain does your cat, sleeping by herself on the hearth- rug, resemble? |
32898 | What part of a bag of grain is like a Russian soldier? |
32898 | What part of a car resembles a person? |
32898 | What part of a fish is like the end of a book? |
32898 | What part of a fish weighs most? |
32898 | What part of a lady''s face in January is like a celebrated fur? |
32898 | What part of a lion is a new- born infant like? |
32898 | What part of one''s head is fit to eat? |
32898 | What part of speech is kissing? |
32898 | What part of your ear would be the most essential for a martial band? |
32898 | What pen ought never to be used for writing? |
32898 | What person in the Bible died a death that no one else ever died-- and a part of whose shroud is on every dining table? |
32898 | What piece of music did the Romans, at the time of the early Christians, most enjoy? |
32898 | What poem of Hood''s resembles a tremendous Roman nose? |
32898 | What precious stone is like the entrance to a field? |
32898 | What prescription is the best for a poet? |
32898 | What prevents a running river running right away? |
32898 | What proof have we that Cowper was in debt? |
32898 | What proverb must a lawyer_ not_ act up to? |
32898 | What question is that to which you positively must answer yes? |
32898 | What relation is a loaf of bread to a locomotive? |
32898 | What relation is the door- mat to the threshold? |
32898 | What remedy does an Irishman take for a scolding wife? |
32898 | What river is ever without a beginning and ending? |
32898 | What river is that which runs between two seas? |
32898 | What roof never keeps out the wet? |
32898 | What rose is"born to blush unseen"? |
32898 | What route should our army take at the present? |
32898 | What scene in the life of Moses, the lawgiver, reminds us of a gladiatorial show at Rome? |
32898 | What sea is most traveled by clever intellectual people? |
32898 | What sea would a man like most to be in on a wet day? |
32898 | What sense pleases you most in an unpleasant acquaintance? |
32898 | What shape is a kiss? |
32898 | What should a clergyman preach about? |
32898 | What single word would you put down for$ 40 borrowed from you? |
32898 | What small animal is turned into a larger one by beheading it? |
32898 | What smells most in a chemist''s shop? |
32898 | What snuff- taker is that whose box gets fuller the more pinches he takes? |
32898 | What soap is hardest? |
32898 | What sort of a cold is necessary to insure your getting on well at Court? |
32898 | What sort of a day would be a good one to run for a cup? |
32898 | What sort of a face does the auctioneer like best? |
32898 | What sort of a musical instrument resembles a bad hotel? |
32898 | What sort of medicine is most like a sick monkey? |
32898 | What sort of men are most aboveboard in their movements? |
32898 | What sort of music should a girl sing whose voice is cracked and broken? |
32898 | What sort of sympathy would you rather be without? |
32898 | What sort of tune do we all enjoy most? |
32898 | What soup would cannibals prefer? |
32898 | What step must I take to remove A from the alphabet? |
32898 | What stone should have been placed at the gate of Eden after the expulsion? |
32898 | What the vilest? |
32898 | What three acts comprise the chief business of some women''s lives? |
32898 | What three letters give the name of a famous Roman general? |
32898 | What toe would you rather kiss than the Pope''s? |
32898 | What tongue is that which frequently hurts and grieves you, and yet does not speak a word? |
32898 | What trade is more than full? |
32898 | What trade never turns to the left? |
32898 | What tree bears the most fruit to market? |
32898 | What tree is of the greatest importance in history? |
32898 | What trees has fire no effect upon? |
32898 | What tune makes everybody glad? |
32898 | What two Christian names read the same both ways? |
32898 | What two ages often prove illusory? |
32898 | What two beaus can every lady have near at hand? |
32898 | What two letters do boys delight in to the annoyance of their elders? |
32898 | What two letters express the most agreeable people in the world? |
32898 | What two letters make a county in Massachusetts? |
32898 | What two reasons are there why a young lady going to the altar is certainly going wrong? |
32898 | What was Joan of Arc made of? |
32898 | What was Noah busy about in the ark? |
32898 | What was Othello''s occupation in Venice? |
32898 | What was Pharaoh''s chief objection to Moses? |
32898 | What was four weeks old when Cain was born, and is not yet five? |
32898 | What was once the most fashionable cap in Paris? |
32898 | What was the cause of the potato rot? |
32898 | What was the difference between Shakespeare and Queen Elizabeth? |
32898 | What was the first surgical operation performed without the aid of instruments? |
32898 | What was the most melancholy fact in the history of Milton? |
32898 | What were the last words of the bugler who was gored by the bull? |
32898 | What were the odds at the battle of Aliwal? |
32898 | What wild animals may be correctly shut up in one enclosure? |
32898 | What will eventually change the size of the auto? |
32898 | What wind should a hungry sailor wish for? |
32898 | What word contains the five vowels in their order? |
32898 | What word is it, which, by changing a single letter, becomes its own opposite? |
32898 | What word is there of eight letters which has five of them the same? |
32898 | What word is there of five letters, that, by taking two away, leaves but one? |
32898 | What word makes you sick if you leave out one of its letters? |
32898 | What word of four syllables represents Sin riding on a little animal? |
32898 | What word of one syllable, if you take two letters from it, remains a word of two syllables? |
32898 | What word of six letters admits of five successive elisions, leaving at each abbreviation a well- known word? |
32898 | What word of six letters contains six words besides itself, without transposing a letter? |
32898 | What word of ten letters can be spelled with five? |
32898 | What words may be pronounced quicker and shorter by adding syllables to them? |
32898 | What would a bear want if he should get into a dry- goods store? |
32898 | What would a pig do if he wished to build himself a habitation? |
32898 | What would give a blind man the greatest delight? |
32898 | What young ladies won the battle of Salamis? |
32898 | What''bus has found room for the greatest number of people? |
32898 | What''s the difference between a bee and a donkey? |
32898 | What''s the difference between a gardener and a billiard marker? |
32898 | What''s the difference between a middle- aged cooper and a trooper of the Middle Ages? |
32898 | What''s the difference between an Irishman frozen to death and a Highlander on a mountain- peak in January? |
32898 | When Charles I was beheaded, of what dish did the executioner dine, and where? |
32898 | When Louis Philippe was deposed, why did he lose less than any of his subjects? |
32898 | When a church is burning, what is the only part that runs no chance of being saved? |
32898 | When an old woman in a scarlet cloak was crossing a field in which a goat was browsing, what took place? |
32898 | When are candles and women most alike? |
32898 | When are handcuffs like knapsacks? |
32898 | When are kisses sweetest? |
32898 | When are lawyers circumstances? |
32898 | When are sheep stationery? |
32898 | When are volunteers not volunteers? |
32898 | When are words musical? |
32898 | When can an Irish servant answer two questions at the same time? |
32898 | When can you carry water in a sieve? |
32898 | When could you eat a lady''s hand? |
32898 | When did Abraham sleep five in a bed? |
32898 | When did fruit first begin to swear? |
32898 | When did"Chicago"begin with a"C"and end with an"e"? |
32898 | When does English butter become Irish butter? |
32898 | When does a blacksmith make a row in the alphabet? |
32898 | When does a cook break the game laws? |
32898 | When does a donkey weigh least? |
32898 | When does a lady think her husband a Hercules? |
32898 | When does a leopard change his spots? |
32898 | When does a man sneeze three times? |
32898 | When does a man stand a good chance of being completely sewn up? |
32898 | When does a man''s hair resemble a packing box? |
32898 | When does a musician fail? |
32898 | When does a pig become landed property? |
32898 | When does a son not take after his father? |
32898 | When does the House of Representatives present one of the most ludicrous spectacles? |
32898 | When does the eagle turn carpenter? |
32898 | When does the tongue assume the functions of the teeth? |
32898 | When has a man brown hands? |
32898 | When he makes a poke- R and shove- L. What did the old woman say when she looked into the empty flour barrel? |
32898 | When is a United States soldier like a man with a ragged coat? |
32898 | When is a baby like a breakfast cup? |
32898 | When is a bank note like iron? |
32898 | When is a beaver hat a wide- awake? |
32898 | When is a bill not a bill? |
32898 | When is a black dog not a black dog? |
32898 | When is a blow from a lady welcome? |
32898 | When is a boat like a heap of snow? |
32898 | When is a bonnet not a bonnet? |
32898 | When is a borough like a ship? |
32898 | When is a boy not a boy? |
32898 | When is a butcher a thorough thief? |
32898 | When is a candle like an ill- conditioned, quarrelsome man? |
32898 | When is a charade like a fir- tree? |
32898 | When is a cigar like a shoulder of pork? |
32898 | When is a clock on the stairs dangerous? |
32898 | When is a doctor like a cross- tempered man? |
32898 | When is a fast young man nearest heaven? |
32898 | When is a fish above its station? |
32898 | When is a fruit- stalk like a strong swimmer? |
32898 | When is a girl like a mirror? |
32898 | When is a lady deformed? |
32898 | When is a lady''s arm not a lady''s arm? |
32898 | When is a lawyer like a donkey? |
32898 | When is a man a muff? |
32898 | When is a man a spoon? |
32898 | When is a man incapable of performing a bare- faced action? |
32898 | When is a man like a cannon- ball? |
32898 | When is a man like frozen rain? |
32898 | When is a man most likely to get floored( flawed)? |
32898 | When is a man thinner than a lath? |
32898 | When is a man''s pastor really and truly his brother? |
32898 | When is a member of Congress ferocious? |
32898 | When is a nation like a baby? |
32898 | When is a nose not a nose? |
32898 | When is a pie like a poet? |
32898 | When is a piece of wood like a queen? |
32898 | When is a pint of milk not a pint? |
32898 | When is a policeman like the good Samaritan? |
32898 | When is a policeman very like a rainbeau? |
32898 | When is a river like a young lady? |
32898 | When is a river not a river? |
32898 | When is a rushlight like a tombstone? |
32898 | When is a sailor not a sailor? |
32898 | When is a sailor not a sailor? |
32898 | When is a schoolboy like a postage stamp? |
32898 | When is a schoolmaster like a man with one eye? |
32898 | When is a skein of thread like the root of an oak? |
32898 | When is a slug like a poem of Tennyson''s? |
32898 | When is a soldier charitable? |
32898 | When is a soldier like a watch? |
32898 | When is a straight field not a straight field? |
32898 | When is a subject beneath one''s notice? |
32898 | When is a superb woman like bread? |
32898 | When is a teapot like a kitten? |
32898 | When is a thief like a reporter? |
32898 | When is a tourist in Ireland like a donkey? |
32898 | When is a tradesman at the seaside, though in London? |
32898 | When is a wall like a fish? |
32898 | When is a woman a live wire? |
32898 | When is a young lady like an acrobat? |
32898 | When is a young lady not a young lady? |
32898 | When is a young lady''s cheek not a cheek? |
32898 | When is it a good thing to lose your temper? |
32898 | When is it dangerous to enter a church? |
32898 | When is it easiest to read? |
32898 | When is love deformed? |
32898 | When is music like vegetables? |
32898 | When is she absurdly in love? |
32898 | When is she actively in love? |
32898 | When is she ambitiously in love? |
32898 | When is she demonstratively in love? |
32898 | When is she foolishly in love? |
32898 | When is she treated too familiarly? |
32898 | When is she weakly in love? |
32898 | When is silence likely to get wet? |
32898 | When is sugar like a pig''s tooth? |
32898 | When is the letter L like a piece of unparalleled generosity? |
32898 | When is the river Thames good for the eyes? |
32898 | When is the wind like a woodchopper? |
32898 | When is truth not truth any longer? |
32898 | When is water most likely to escape? |
32898 | When may a chair be said to dislike you? |
32898 | When may a lady be absolutely pronounced to be quite past recovery? |
32898 | When may a loaf of bread be said to be inhabited? |
32898 | When may a man be said to be literally immersed in his business? |
32898 | When may a man be said to be personally involved? |
32898 | When may a man be said to be personally involved? |
32898 | When may a man be said to be really over head and ears in debt? |
32898 | When may a man be said to breakfast before he gets up? |
32898 | When may a man be said to have four hands? |
32898 | When may a man''s coat- pocket be empty and yet have something in it? |
32898 | When may a room that is full of people be said to be empty? |
32898 | When may a ship be said to be in love? |
32898 | When may a ship be said to be in love? |
32898 | When may an army be said to be totally destroyed? |
32898 | When may ladies who are enjoying themselves be said to look wretched? |
32898 | When may two people be said to be half- witted? |
32898 | When may you be said literally to"drink in"music? |
32898 | When she is asked,"What''s o''clock, and where''s the cold chicken?" |
32898 | When was B the first letter of the alphabet? |
32898 | When was Napoleon I most shabbily dressed? |
32898 | When was beef the highest? |
32898 | When was beef- tea introduced into England? |
32898 | When was the first gambling? |
32898 | When was the greatest destruction of poultry? |
32898 | When were there only two vowels? |
32898 | When will there be but twenty- five letters in the alphabet? |
32898 | When would a farmer have the best opportunity for overlooking his pigs? |
32898 | When you give a lady a lock of your hair, what else does she receive from you at the same time? |
32898 | When you listen to your little brother''s drum, why are you like a just judge? |
32898 | When you see a lady in distress, what should you pull up, and what bury? |
32898 | Whence proceeds the eloquence of a lawyer? |
32898 | Where are bank checks mentioned in the Bible? |
32898 | Where are we most likely to find the sky blue? |
32898 | Where can you find every word of your last interesting conversation with Miss all written down, word for word? |
32898 | Where did Noah keep his bees? |
32898 | Where did Noah strike the first nail in the ark? |
32898 | Where did he go? |
32898 | Where did the Witch of Endor live-- and end- her days? |
32898 | Where does one see breakers ahead on land? |
32898 | Where have you the most extended view? |
32898 | Where is it that all women are equally beautiful? |
32898 | Where is the cheapest place to buy poultry? |
32898 | Where is the theater mentioned in the Bible? |
32898 | Where ought children who bite their fingers to be sent? |
32898 | Where should you feel for the poor? |
32898 | Where was Humboldt going when he was thirty- nine years old? |
32898 | Wherein did the prophet Jonah differ from the modern theologians? |
32898 | Which animal is the heaviest in all creation? |
32898 | Which animal took most luggage into the ark, and which the least? |
32898 | Which are the lightest men-- Scotchmen, Irishmen, or Englishmen? |
32898 | Which are the most seasonable clothes? |
32898 | Which are the two hottest letters in the alphabet? |
32898 | Which are the two smallest things mentioned in the Scripture? |
32898 | Which constellation resembles an empty fireplace? |
32898 | Which eat more grass, black sheep or white? |
32898 | Which has most legs, a cow or no cow? |
32898 | Which is better, getting the girl of your choice or a shoulder of mutton? |
32898 | Which is heavier, a pound of gold or a pound of feathers? |
32898 | Which is heavier, the half or the full moon? |
32898 | Which is the better playwright, William Shakespeare or Brinsley Sheridan? |
32898 | Which is the coldest river? |
32898 | Which is the greatest number, six dozen dozen or half a dozen dozen? |
32898 | Which is the laziest plant, and which the most active? |
32898 | Which is the left side of a plum pudding? |
32898 | Which is the merriest sauce? |
32898 | Which is the most ancient of trees? |
32898 | Which is the ugliest hood ever worn? |
32898 | Which member of Congress wears the largest hat? |
32898 | Which of the feathered tribe can lift the heaviest weights? |
32898 | Which of the letters of the alphabet are the most authentic on a bill or bond? |
32898 | Which of the planets would a tortoise like best to live in? |
32898 | Which of the stars should be subject to the game laws? |
32898 | Which one of a carpenter''s tools is coffee like? |
32898 | Which one of the Seven Wonders of the World are railway engines like? |
32898 | Which one of the United States is the largest and most popular? |
32898 | Which travels faster, heat or cold? |
32898 | Which word in the English language contains the greatest number of letters? |
32898 | Which would you rather-- look a greater fool than you are, or be a greater fool than you look? |
32898 | Which would you rather-- that a lion ate you or a tiger? |
32898 | Who always sits with his hat on before the queen? |
32898 | Who are the best astronomers? |
32898 | Who commit the greatest abominations? |
32898 | Who first introduced salt pork into the Navy? |
32898 | Who first introduced walking- sticks? |
32898 | Who had the first free entrance into a theater? |
32898 | Who has most need to pray to be delivered from temptation? |
32898 | Who is he that has a fine wit in jest? |
32898 | Who is the first little boy mentioned by a single word in the history of England? |
32898 | Who is the greatest terrifier? |
32898 | Who is the man who carries everything before him? |
32898 | Who is the most popular preacher? |
32898 | Who is your greatest friend? |
32898 | Who may be said to have had the largest family in America? |
32898 | Who took the first newspapers? |
32898 | Who was Jonah''s tutor? |
32898 | Who was first interested in horse racing? |
32898 | Who was hanged for not wearing a wig? |
32898 | Who was the fastest runner in the world? |
32898 | Who was the first man condemned to hard labor for life? |
32898 | Who was the first postman? |
32898 | Who was the first unfortunate speculator? |
32898 | Who was the first whistler, and what tune did he whistle? |
32898 | Who was the greatest financier of early times? |
32898 | Who was the most wretched of all the murderers of Julius CÃ ¦ sar? |
32898 | Who was the oldest man that ever lived, yet who died before his father did? |
32898 | Who were the first mathematicians mentioned in the Bible? |
32898 | Who were the original bog- trotters? |
32898 | Who won the first horse race in the Bible? |
32898 | Who wrote most, Dickens or Bulwer? |
32898 | Why am I, when prudently laying by money, like myself when foolishly squandering it? |
32898 | Why are Addison''s works like a looking- glass? |
32898 | Why are American greenbacks like the Jews? |
32898 | Why are Jeff Davis''s letters of marque like secrets? |
32898 | Why are Parliamentary reports called"Blue Books?" |
32898 | Why are a couple of first- rate breech- loaders like two beautiful young ladies? |
32898 | Why are airship inventors like musicians? |
32898 | Why are artists like washerwomen? |
32898 | Why are bad women like ivy? |
32898 | Why are baldheaded men in danger of dying? |
32898 | Why are bells the most obedient of inanimate things? |
32898 | Why are birds melancholy in the morning? |
32898 | Why are bishops like superannuated washerwomen? |
32898 | Why are bookkeepers like chickens? |
32898 | Why are books your best friends? |
32898 | Why are cats like unskillful surgeons? |
32898 | Why are chickens liberal? |
32898 | Why are clouds like coachmen? |
32898 | Why are coals like poor laboring men? |
32898 | Why are cobblers like a famous physician? |
32898 | Why are confectioners so much sought for? |
32898 | Why are corn and potatoes like Chinese idols? |
32898 | Why are country girls''cheeks like well- printed cottons? |
32898 | Why are cowardly soldiers like tallow candles? |
32898 | Why are cripples and beggars similar to shepherds and fishermen? |
32898 | Why are deaf people like India shawls? |
32898 | Why are doctors always wicked men? |
32898 | Why are eyes like stage- horses? |
32898 | Why are fixed stars like pen, ink, and paper? |
32898 | Why are fixed stars like wicked old men? |
32898 | Why are frames put about tomato plants? |
32898 | Why are good intentions like fainting ladies? |
32898 | Why are good women like ivy? |
32898 | Why are guns like trees? |
32898 | Why are hogs more intelligent than humans? |
32898 | Why are hot rolls like caterpillars? |
32898 | Why are kisses like creation? |
32898 | Why are ladies bathing like a Yankee drink? |
32898 | Why are ladies like hinges? |
32898 | Why are ladies who wear large crinolines ugly? |
32898 | Why are ladies''eyes like persons separated by the Atlantic Ocean? |
32898 | Why are lamps like the Thames? |
32898 | Why are laundresses good navigators? |
32898 | Why are lawyers and doctors safe people by whom to take example? |
32898 | Why are lawyers like shears? |
32898 | Why are lawyers such uneasy sleepers? |
32898 | Why are mortgages like burglars? |
32898 | Why are our fashionable ladies like a certain class of the city employees? |
32898 | Why are persons with short memories like office- holders? |
32898 | Why are pipes all humbugs? |
32898 | Why are plagiarists like seashore lodging- house keepers with newly married couples? |
32898 | Why are policemen particularly required in a hop ground? |
32898 | Why are poor relations like fits of the gout? |
32898 | Why are ripe potatoes in the ground like thieves? |
32898 | Why are sailors bad horsemen? |
32898 | Why are sailors in a leaky vessel like dancing masters? |
32898 | Why are seasick excursionists like a strong opposition in Congress? |
32898 | Why are seeds when sown like gate- posts? |
32898 | Why are sentries like day and night? |
32898 | Why are sharpers like sparrows? |
32898 | Why are sheep the most dissipated of animals? |
32898 | Why are sidewalks in winter like music? |
32898 | Why are some ministers worse than Brigham Young? |
32898 | Why are stars like an old barn? |
32898 | Why are sugar- plums like racehorses? |
32898 | Why are suicides invariably successful people in the world? |
32898 | Why are teeth like verbs? |
32898 | Why are the English the worst judges of cattle in the world? |
32898 | Why are the Germans like quinine and gentian? |
32898 | Why are the Royal Academicians the greatest swells ever known? |
32898 | Why are the abbreviations of degrees tacked on to a man''s name? |
32898 | Why are the actions of men like great rivers? |
32898 | Why are the bars of a convent like a blacksmith''s apron? |
32898 | Why are the fourteenth and fifteenth letters of the alphabet of more importance than the others? |
32898 | Why are the hours from one to twelve like good Christians? |
32898 | Why are the men appointed to wind up the affairs of a bank whose treasurer has defaulted, as bad as the treasurer himself? |
32898 | Why are the pages of a book like the days of a man? |
32898 | Why are the relics of the departed like a man whose pocket has been robbed and the thief escaped? |
32898 | Why are the shot and shell of the blockading squadron like lovers''vows? |
32898 | Why are the speeches of an orator heard through a phonograph like the State House dome? |
32898 | Why are the"blue devils"like muffins? |
32898 | Why are there more marriages in winter than in summer? |
32898 | Why are they the greatest of coquettes? |
32898 | Why are three couples going to be married like penny trumpets? |
32898 | Why are two lovers pledged to each other like the Federal Army before Washington? |
32898 | Why are two t''s like hops? |
32898 | Why are two watches given as prizes like a happy married couple? |
32898 | Why are two young ladies kissing each other an emblem of Christianity? |
32898 | Why are unsuccessful contestants for a prize like Shakespeare? |
32898 | Why are very old people necessarily prolix and tedious? |
32898 | Why are volunteers like Lord Nelson? |
32898 | Why are volunteers like old maids? |
32898 | Why are washerwomen foolish people? |
32898 | Why are washerwomen unreasonable? |
32898 | Why are weary people like carriage wheels? |
32898 | Why are women like churches? |
32898 | Why are women so crooked and perverse in their conditions? |
32898 | Why are wooden ships, as compared with ironclads, of the female sex? |
32898 | Why are worn- out clothes like children without parents? |
32898 | Why are you most likely to miss the 12:50 train? |
32898 | Why are young children like castles in the air? |
32898 | Why are young ladies bad grammarians? |
32898 | Why are your nose and chin constantly at variance? |
32898 | Why ca n''t a thief easily steal a watch? |
32898 | Why can Satan never be uncivil? |
32898 | Why can a fish never be in the dark? |
32898 | Why can hotel boarders dine off the gong? |
32898 | Why can no clergyman have a wooden leg? |
32898 | Why can not rebels ever dress well? |
32898 | Why can not the Irish perform the play of"Hamlet?" |
32898 | Why can not you make a venison pasty of buck venison? |
32898 | Why can the pall- bearers at a young lady''s funeral never be dry? |
32898 | Why can the weight of an illuminating argument never be accurately determined? |
32898 | Why can you never expect a fishmonger to be generous? |
32898 | Why can you never tell real hysterics from sham ones? |
32898 | Why could not Napoleon III insure his life? |
32898 | Why did Adam bite the apple Eve gave him? |
32898 | Why did Joseph''s brethren put him in the pit? |
32898 | Why did Louis Philippe omit to take his umbrella when he left Paris? |
32898 | Why did Marcus Curtius leap into the gulf in Rome? |
32898 | Why did n''t he stay there? |
32898 | Why did the Highlanders do most execution at Waterloo? |
32898 | Why did the population of Rome decrease just before the fall of the empire? |
32898 | Why did the young lady return the dumb waiter? |
32898 | Why do British soldiers never run away? |
32898 | Why do architects make excellent actors? |
32898 | Why do dentists make good politicians? |
32898 | Why do fat men love their ease so much? |
32898 | Why do girls kiss each other, and men not? |
32898 | Why do girls like looking at the moon? |
32898 | Why do little birds in their nests agree? |
32898 | Why do love letters have a financial value? |
32898 | Why do not men and their wives agree better nowadays? |
32898 | Why do sailors working in brigs make bad servants? |
32898 | Why do so many people in China travel on foot? |
32898 | Why do teetotalers run such a slight risk of drowning? |
32898 | Why do the recriminations of married couples resemble the sound of waves on the shore? |
32898 | Why do we all go to bed? |
32898 | Why do we assume that Moses wore a wig? |
32898 | Why do we speak of poetic fire? |
32898 | Why do women seek husbands named William? |
32898 | Why do you think that a judge of the criminal court is looked upon with contempt? |
32898 | Why does B stand before C? |
32898 | Why does a blow leave a blue mark? |
32898 | Why does a cat rest better in summer? |
32898 | Why does a donkey eat a thistle? |
32898 | Why does a dressmaker never lose her hooks? |
32898 | Why does a duck come out of water? |
32898 | Why does a duck go into water? |
32898 | Why does a fox- hound wag his tail? |
32898 | Why does a man permit himself to be henpecked? |
32898 | Why does a man who has been all his life a woodcutter, never come home to dinner? |
32898 | Why does a nobleman''s title sometimes become extinct? |
32898 | Why does a person who is ailing lose his sense of touch? |
32898 | Why does a piebald pony never pay toll? |
32898 | Why does a puss purr? |
32898 | Why does a rich lady act prudently by marrying a penniless man? |
32898 | Why does a salmon die before it lives? |
32898 | Why does a student never lead a sedentary life? |
32898 | Why does a tall man eat less than a short man? |
32898 | Why does a tallow chandler live better than another man? |
32898 | Why does a woman residing up a pair of stairs remind you of a goddess? |
32898 | Why does a young lady prefer her mother''s fortune to her father''s? |
32898 | Why does a young man study law? |
32898 | Why does he continue in the profession? |
32898 | Why does he leave the profession? |
32898 | Why does the conductor cut a hole in your railroad ticket? |
32898 | Why does the east wind never blow straight? |
32898 | Why does the mayor order the saloons closed after a great fire? |
32898 | Why does the rope dancer invariably have to repeat his performances? |
32898 | Why had Eve no fear of the measles? |
32898 | Why has Massachusetts done more towards the war loan than any other State? |
32898 | Why has a barber more than one life? |
32898 | Why has the acrobat such a wonderful digestion? |
32898 | Why have chickens no fear of a future state? |
32898 | Why have the inhabitants of the city of Boston less need of foreign bards than those of any other city? |
32898 | Why is A like a honeysuckle? |
32898 | Why is Canada like courtship? |
32898 | Why is China a desirable country for a man to select a wife in? |
32898 | Why is English grammar like gout? |
32898 | Why is General McClellan like the Established Church? |
32898 | Why is Great Britain like Palestine? |
32898 | Why is I the luckiest of all the vowels? |
32898 | Why is Ireland likely to become rich? |
32898 | Why is Major General McClellan like Charles Dickens? |
32898 | Why is New York City like a flash light? |
32898 | Why is O the most charitable letter in the alphabet? |
32898 | Why is O the noisiest of all vowels? |
32898 | Why is Orpheus always in bad company? |
32898 | Why is Paris like the letter F? |
32898 | Why is President Lincoln like a mariner on a desolate shore? |
32898 | Why is T the happiest letter in the alphabet? |
32898 | Why is Troy weight like an unconscientious person? |
32898 | Why is U the gayest letter in the alphabet? |
32898 | Why is Westminster Abbey like a hearth? |
32898 | Why is a Bostonian''s brain like a book of conundrums? |
32898 | Why is a Freshman like a telescope? |
32898 | Why is a Jew in a fever like the famous Koh- i- noor diamond? |
32898 | Why is a Jew''s harp like a good dinner? |
32898 | Why is a Wall Street lamb like a surgical convalescent? |
32898 | Why is a Welshman like a beggar? |
32898 | Why is a bad gimlet like a prophesier of ill events? |
32898 | Why is a baker a most improvident person? |
32898 | Why is a bald head like heaven? |
32898 | Why is a bald- headed man like a hunting dog? |
32898 | Why is a ball discharged in the air like an article for soldiers''comfort? |
32898 | Why is a bankrupt husband an ardent lover? |
32898 | Why is a beautiful woman at her marriage festival like one on horseback? |
32898 | Why is a bee- hive like a spectator? |
32898 | Why is a belle like a locomotive? |
32898 | Why is a black man necessarily a conjurer? |
32898 | Why is a blacksmith the most dissatisfied of all mechanics? |
32898 | Why is a blockhead deserving of promotion? |
32898 | Why is a blush an anomaly? |
32898 | Why is a book like a king? |
32898 | Why is a boy like a puppy? |
32898 | Why is a bride, weary of her apartment home, like a wrecked automobile? |
32898 | Why is a bullet like a tender glance? |
32898 | Why is a butcher''s cart like his top boots? |
32898 | Why is a butler like a mountain? |
32898 | Why is a candle like an atheist? |
32898 | Why is a carpenter like a languid dandy? |
32898 | Why is a cat going up three pairs of stairs like a high hill? |
32898 | Why is a certain kind of coach like the exclusive option on a certain girl''s kisses? |
32898 | Why is a chicken served to a minister like a theological student? |
32898 | Why is a clever wit like a chemist? |
32898 | Why is a coach going down a steep hill like St. George? |
32898 | Why is a comet more like a dog than the dog- star? |
32898 | Why is a commercial traveler whose"walk in life"is selling eggs, certain to be successful? |
32898 | Why is a committee of inquiry like a cannon? |
32898 | Why is a competent lawyer like a bloodstone set in jet? |
32898 | Why is a conductor on a car like a firefly? |
32898 | Why is a congreve- box without matches superior to all other boxes? |
32898 | Why is a cook like a barber? |
32898 | Why is a cook more noisy than a gong? |
32898 | Why is a corpse like a man with a cold? |
32898 | Why is a correct knowledge of grammar indispensable to young clergymen? |
32898 | Why is a cracker like death? |
32898 | Why is a cross old bachelor like the preceding conundrum? |
32898 | Why is a cunning man like a shoemaker? |
32898 | Why is a dead doctor like a dead duck? |
32898 | Why is a dead hen better than a live one? |
32898 | Why is a deceptive woman like a seamstress? |
32898 | Why is a defeated army like wool? |
32898 | Why is a department store like a country sewing circle? |
32898 | Why is a diamond in a cup of cold water like the Union? |
32898 | Why is a dirty man like flannel? |
32898 | Why is a discredited politician like an unpopular dentist? |
32898 | Why is a dissipated young man like Berlin, the capital of Germany? |
32898 | Why is a dog biting his own tail like a good manager? |
32898 | Why is a dog like a man four feet ten inches tall? |
32898 | Why is a dog like a tree? |
32898 | Why is a dog with a lame leg like a boy ciphering? |
32898 | Why is a dog''s tail like an expressman? |
32898 | Why is a door always in the subjunctive mood? |
32898 | Why is a dressmaker braver than an actor? |
32898 | Why is a drunkard hesitating to sign the pledge like a skeptical Hindoo? |
32898 | Why is a false friend like the letter P? |
32898 | Why is a false oath like a trial in the criminal court? |
32898 | Why is a fancy dancer like an old- fashioned country woman? |
32898 | Why is a farmer surprised at the letter G? |
32898 | Why is a father who frequently thrashes his boy likely to be prosecuted? |
32898 | Why is a fiddle like a man who gives money to make up a quarrel? |
32898 | Why is a fiddle- maker like an apothecary? |
32898 | Why is a fiddler like a man in amaze? |
32898 | Why is a field of grass like a person older than yourself? |
32898 | Why is a fish- hook like the letter F? |
32898 | Why is a flea like a long winter? |
32898 | Why is a flirt like an india- rubber ball? |
32898 | Why is a fool in a high station like a man in a balloon? |
32898 | Why is a fortified town like a pudding? |
32898 | Why is a fortunate man like a straw in the water? |
32898 | Why is a four- quart measure like a sidesaddle? |
32898 | Why is a gardener like a detective- story writer? |
32898 | Why is a girl like an arrow? |
32898 | Why is a glass- blower the most likely person to set the alphabet off at a gallop? |
32898 | Why is a good husband like dough? |
32898 | Why is a good joke like the modern ballot box? |
32898 | Why is a good pun like a good cat? |
32898 | Why is a good story like a church bell? |
32898 | Why is a good wife like the devil? |
32898 | Why is a gooseberry tart like a bad coin? |
32898 | Why is a greenback more desirable than gold? |
32898 | Why is a hack- horse a miserable creature? |
32898 | Why is a hammer like a general? |
32898 | Why is a hen looking into a rotten pumpkin like the Southern Confederacy? |
32898 | Why is a hen walking across the road like a conspiracy? |
32898 | Why is a high rate of fare on a railroad like an overloaded gun? |
32898 | Why is a high wind like a dumb man in distress? |
32898 | Why is a holly bush like a corpse? |
32898 | Why is a horse an anomaly in the hunting- field? |
32898 | Why is a horse like the letter O? |
32898 | Why is a horse that is constantly rid, though never fed, never starved? |
32898 | Why is a human being like an earthen jug? |
32898 | Why is a jeweler like a prisoner in solitary confinement? |
32898 | Why is a jeweler like a screeching singer? |
32898 | Why is a joint company not like a watch? |
32898 | Why is a judge''s nose like the middle of the earth? |
32898 | Why is a kiss like a rumor? |
32898 | Why is a kiss like a sermon? |
32898 | Why is a lame beggar inconsistent? |
32898 | Why is a lame dog like the side of a mountain? |
32898 | Why is a lamp like a house? |
32898 | Why is a lance like the moon? |
32898 | Why is a lawyer like an honest man? |
32898 | Why is a lead pencil like a perverse child? |
32898 | Why is a leaky barrel like a coward? |
32898 | Why is a little dog''s tail like the heart of a tree? |
32898 | Why is a looking- glass very complaisant? |
32898 | Why is a love of the ocean like curiosity? |
32898 | Why is a lover''s heart like a whale? |
32898 | Why is a loyal gentleman like a miser? |
32898 | Why is a mad bull an animal of convivial disposition? |
32898 | Why is a madman equal to two men? |
32898 | Why is a man hanged better than a vagabond? |
32898 | Why is a man just knighted like a nutmeg? |
32898 | Why is a man looking for the philosopher''s stone like Neptune? |
32898 | Why is a man marrying a second time like_ sal volatile_? |
32898 | Why is a man riding swiftly up hill like one who presents a young lady with a young dog? |
32898 | Why is a man taking a hedge at a single bound like one snoring? |
32898 | Why is a man upstairs beating his wife an honorable man? |
32898 | Why is a man who has parted from his bed like one obliged to keep it? |
32898 | Why is a man who never lays a wager as bad as a regular gambler? |
32898 | Why is a man who runs in debt like a clock? |
32898 | Why is a man whose"heart is in his mouth"through fright, like a cabbage? |
32898 | Why is a man with corns on his feet like a certain favorite vegetable? |
32898 | Why is a marine painter like a large vessel? |
32898 | Why is a mirror like a dissatisfied and ungrateful friend? |
32898 | Why is a miserly uncle with whom you have quarreled like a person with a short memory? |
32898 | Why is a missionary like a pig roasting on a spit? |
32898 | Why is a mother rocking her child to sleep liable to arrest? |
32898 | Why is a mother who spoils her child like a person building castles in the air? |
32898 | Why is a mouse entering a mouse trap like a diplomat arguing his policy? |
32898 | Why is a mouse like hay? |
32898 | Why is a muddy road a guardian of the public safety? |
32898 | Why is a music teacher like a baseball coach? |
32898 | Why is a nabob like a beggar? |
32898 | Why is a negro woman like a doorway? |
32898 | Why is a new- born baby like a storm? |
32898 | Why is a newspaper like a lame man? |
32898 | Why is a newspaper like an army? |
32898 | Why is a note of hand like a rosebud? |
32898 | Why is a pair of skates like an apple? |
32898 | Why is a patent safety Hansom cab a dangerous carriage to drive in? |
32898 | Why is a peach- stone like a regiment? |
32898 | Why is a pelted actor like a pardoned criminal? |
32898 | Why is a pen manufacturer a corrupt man? |
32898 | Why is a pensive widow like the letter X? |
32898 | Why is a person of short stature like an almanac? |
32898 | Why is a person who asks questions the strangest of all individuals? |
32898 | Why is a photograph like a member of Congress? |
32898 | Why is a piano like an onion? |
32898 | Why is a pictorial riddle like a second kiss? |
32898 | Why is a picture like a fine woman? |
32898 | Why is a pig in the drawing- room like a house on fire? |
32898 | Why is a playhouse like a punch bowl? |
32898 | Why is a pleasure trip to Egypt fit only for very old gentlemen? |
32898 | Why is a portrait of Queen Elizabeth like a wager which is neither lost nor won? |
32898 | Why is a postman in danger of losing his way? |
32898 | Why is a pretty girl like a locomotive engine? |
32898 | Why is a pretty girl''s pleased- merry- bright- laughing- eye no better than an eye destroyed? |
32898 | Why is a pretty young lady like a wagon- wheel? |
32898 | Why is a printing press like the forbidden fruit? |
32898 | Why is a proposal like the first conviction for drunkenness? |
32898 | Why is a prosy preacher like the middle of a wheel? |
32898 | Why is a proud girl like a music book? |
32898 | Why is a prudent man like a pin? |
32898 | Why is a race at a circus like a big conflagration? |
32898 | Why is a ragged beggar like a clergyman near the end of his sermon? |
32898 | Why is a resolution like a looking glass? |
32898 | Why is a retired actor like an extortioner? |
32898 | Why is a rich farmer like a man with bad teeth? |
32898 | Why is a rooster on a fence like a penny? |
32898 | Why is a schoolboy being flogged like your eye? |
32898 | Why is a schoolmistress like the letter C? |
32898 | Why is a sedan chair like the world? |
32898 | Why is a ship in a stream like a nail? |
32898 | Why is a shoeblack like an editor? |
32898 | Why is a shoemaker like a true lover? |
32898 | Why is a shoemaker more charitable than another man? |
32898 | Why is a short man struggling to kiss a tall woman like an Irishman going up Vesuvius? |
32898 | Why is a short negro like a white man? |
32898 | Why is a sleepy servant like a warming pan? |
32898 | Why is a smith a dangerous companion? |
32898 | Why is a smith like a ferryman? |
32898 | Why is a solar eclipse like a woman whipping her boy? |
32898 | Why is a specimen of handwriting like a dead pig? |
32898 | Why is a spendthrift, with regard to his fortune, like the water in a filter? |
32898 | Why is a spendthrift, with regard to his fortune, like the water in a filter? |
32898 | Why is a spider a good correspondent? |
32898 | Why is a sporting clergyman like a soldier who runs from battle? |
32898 | Why is a staircase like a back- biter? |
32898 | Why is a statistician like a writer of one of the Six Best Sellers? |
32898 | Why is a steamboat a good place to sleep in? |
32898 | Why is a steel- trap like the small- pox? |
32898 | Why is a straw hat like kissing through the telephone? |
32898 | Why is a stupid servant like a church bell? |
32898 | Why is a sword belt like a cow upon a common? |
32898 | Why is a thief like a bolus given to a lady? |
32898 | Why is a thief like a knocker? |
32898 | Why is a thief like a philosopher? |
32898 | Why is a treadmill run by convicts like a true convert? |
32898 | Why is a true and faithful friend like a garden seed? |
32898 | Why is a turnpike like a dead dog''s tail? |
32898 | Why is a very amusing man like a very bad shot? |
32898 | Why is a very demure young lady like a tugboat? |
32898 | Why is a vessel being blown out to sea like a bankrupt householder? |
32898 | Why is a vine like a soldier? |
32898 | Why is a waiter like a race- horse? |
32898 | Why is a washerwoman like Saturday? |
32898 | Why is a watch like the moon? |
32898 | Why is a watch- dog bigger by night than in the morning? |
32898 | Why is a water lily like a whale? |
32898 | Why is a wax candle like Dickens''last work? |
32898 | Why is a wedding ring like eternity? |
32898 | Why is a wide- awake so called? |
32898 | Why is a widower in love again like a good gardener? |
32898 | Why is a woman who tries to drive a balky horse like a successful actress? |
32898 | Why is a woman''s beauty like a gold coin? |
32898 | Why is a woman''s thought like the telegraph? |
32898 | Why is a woman, when blindfolded, like an ignorant school teacher? |
32898 | Why is a worn- out shoe like ancient Greece? |
32898 | Why is a young lawyer in his office like one of his chickens roosting on his neighbor''s fence? |
32898 | Why is a young man engaged to a young lady like a man sailing for a port in France? |
32898 | Why is a young man who seldom attends church, sitting in the pulpit of a leaky church in a rain storm, like one who constantly attends church? |
32898 | Why is an abstract of a lecture like a sentimental boy and girl kissing? |
32898 | Why is an aged man like a deserted house? |
32898 | Why is an airship bequeathed you by your father like the portrait of an ancestor? |
32898 | Why is an alligator the most deceitful of animals? |
32898 | Why is an apple like a good song? |
32898 | Why is an apron like peas? |
32898 | Why is an aristocratic seminary for young ladies like a flower garden? |
32898 | Why is an artist stronger than a horse? |
32898 | Why is an astronomer like a theatrical manager? |
32898 | Why is an author the most wonderful man in the world? |
32898 | Why is an autoist whose machine has been completely wrecked like a reformed autoist? |
32898 | Why is an automobilist who exceeds the speed limit like a social reprobate? |
32898 | Why is an egg like a colt? |
32898 | Why is an egg overdone like an egg underdone? |
32898 | Why is an elephant''s head different from every other head? |
32898 | Why is an elevator man like an aëronaut? |
32898 | Why is an extremely religious Roman Catholic lady only a very virtuous goose? |
32898 | Why is an eyelid like the wadding to a gun? |
32898 | Why is an honest friend like orange chips? |
32898 | Why is an honest poor man like a dishonest bankrupt man? |
32898 | Why is an island like the letter T? |
32898 | Why is an office with no work to do like a good dinner eaten by an invalid? |
32898 | Why is an old coat like iron? |
32898 | Why is an old man''s head like a song executed by an indifferent singer? |
32898 | Why is an orange like a church steeple? |
32898 | Why is an organ an enemy to religion? |
32898 | Why is an owl in the daylight like the President of the United States? |
32898 | Why is an uncomfortable seat like comfort? |
32898 | Why is an unskillful physician like Peleus''son, Achilles? |
32898 | Why is any divorced man like a man playing at ten pins? |
32898 | Why is attar of roses never moved without orders? |
32898 | Why is chloroform like Mendelssohn? |
32898 | Why is coal the most contradictory article known to commerce? |
32898 | Why is confessing to a father confessor like killing bees? |
32898 | Why is divinity the easiest of the three learned professions? |
32898 | Why is electricity like the police when they are wanted? |
32898 | Why is fashion like a blank cartridge? |
32898 | Why is flirting like plate- powder? |
32898 | Why is geology considered a deep science? |
32898 | Why is gritty coffee like the Subway? |
32898 | Why is horse racing a necessity? |
32898 | Why is it almost certain that Shakespeare was a broker? |
32898 | Why is it dangerous for a teetotaler to have more than two reasons for the faith that is in him? |
32898 | Why is it dangerous to walk out in the spring? |
32898 | Why is it difficult to flirt on mail steamers? |
32898 | Why is it easy to practice rotation of crops on the prairies? |
32898 | Why is it extraordinary not to find a painter''s studio as hot as an oven? |
32898 | Why is it illegal for a man to possess a short walking stick? |
32898 | Why is it impossible for a swell who lisps to believe in the existence of young ladies? |
32898 | Why is it impossible for the government to grant the request of our Southern brethren? |
32898 | Why is it impossible that there should be a best horse on a race course? |
32898 | Why is it no offense to conspire in the evening? |
32898 | Why is it not flattery to tell an old lady that she is"as beautiful as an angel?" |
32898 | Why is it only natural that the memory of Guy Fawkes should be execrated? |
32898 | Why is it quite reasonable that Dickens''later plots should be complicated? |
32898 | Why is it that I can not spell Cupid? |
32898 | Why is it that the sun always rises in the East? |
32898 | Why is it unjust to blame cabmen for cheating us? |
32898 | Why is it vulgar to send a telegram? |
32898 | Why is it vulgar to sing and play by yourself? |
32898 | Why is lip- salve like a chaperon? |
32898 | Why is love always represented as a child? |
32898 | Why is love like a candle? |
32898 | Why is love like the Erie Canal? |
32898 | Why is marriage with a deceased wife''s sister like the wedding of two fish? |
32898 | Why is matrimony like an invested city? |
32898 | Why is money often moist? |
32898 | Why is no country free? |
32898 | Why is one of the new Treasury notes like a young lady''s love letter? |
32898 | Why is one stall of a two- stall stable like a pretty girl? |
32898 | Why is one who uses hair dye like a suicide? |
32898 | Why is opening a letter like taking a very queer method of entering a room? |
32898 | Why is paper like a beggar? |
32898 | Why is quizzing like the letter D on horseback? |
32898 | Why is sealing wax like a rifleman? |
32898 | Why is selling off bankrupt goods like preparing a dish of soup? |
32898 | Why is swearing like an old coat? |
32898 | Why is the American Union a puzzle to the most profound astronomers? |
32898 | Why is the Bank of England like a thrush? |
32898 | Why is the Brooklyn Bridge like merit? |
32898 | Why is the Delaware River like an inkstand? |
32898 | Why is the Emperor of Russia like a greedy schoolboy on Christmas Day? |
32898 | Why is the Empress of the French always in bad company? |
32898 | Why is the Fourth of July like oysters? |
32898 | Why is the Hudson River like a shoe? |
32898 | Why is the Isthmus of Suez like the first U in cucumber? |
32898 | Why is the Republican Party like a celebrated English ruler of the seventeenth century,"Oliver Cromwell, the Blacksmith"? |
32898 | Why is the aspiring poet about to approach an editor with his verses like a consumptive? |
32898 | Why is the aëronaut whose airship plows into the earth like a successful speculator? |
32898 | Why is the city of Washington like a despairing old maid? |
32898 | Why is the crabbed old bachelor who made the above conundrum like a harp struck by lightning? |
32898 | Why is the divorce court like certain newspapers? |
32898 | Why is the dove a very cautious little dear? |
32898 | Why is the emblem of America more lasting than that of France, England, Ireland, or Scotland? |
32898 | Why is the engineer of a train like an aëronaut? |
32898 | Why is the figure 9 like a peacock? |
32898 | Why is the flight of an eagle a most unpleasant sight to witness? |
32898 | Why is the fresh young upstart like an aërial postman? |
32898 | Why is the game of Blindman''s Buff like sympathy? |
32898 | Why is the glass I drank out of yesterday like Nebuchadnezzar in his debased condition? |
32898 | Why is the humiliated braggart like the small boy who has drunk the washing fluid? |
32898 | Why is the inside of everything mysterious? |
32898 | Why is the latest thing in a fashionable gown like the South African bushman''s club? |
32898 | Why is the leading horse in a wagon- team like the acceptor of a bill? |
32898 | Why is the letter B like a fire? |
32898 | Why is the letter D like a sailor? |
32898 | Why is the letter D like a squalling child? |
32898 | Why is the letter E a gloomy and discontented vowel? |
32898 | Why is the letter F like a cow''s tail? |
32898 | Why is the letter K like a pig''s tail? |
32898 | Why is the letter N like a pig? |
32898 | Why is the letter P like a Roman emperor? |
32898 | Why is the letter R a profitable letter? |
32898 | Why is the letter S like a pert repartee? |
32898 | Why is the letter S like a sewing- machine? |
32898 | Why is the letter T like Easter? |
32898 | Why is the letter T like an amphibious animal? |
32898 | Why is the letter W like a maid of honor? |
32898 | Why is the letter W like a scandal? |
32898 | Why is the list of celebrated musical composers like a saucepan? |
32898 | Why is the man who falls in the kennel approved of? |
32898 | Why is the map of Turkey like a frying- pan? |
32898 | Why is the meeting of lovers like a battle? |
32898 | Why is the most discontented man the most easily satisfied? |
32898 | Why is the nose on your face like the v in civility? |
32898 | Why is the nurse of an insane ward like a popular opera star? |
32898 | Why is the old elm on Boston Common like the ladies of Boston? |
32898 | Why is the palace of the Louvre the cheapest ever erected? |
32898 | Why is the present moment like skim- milk? |
32898 | Why is the proprietor of a balloon like a phantom? |
32898 | Why is the proprietor of a balloon like a phantom? |
32898 | Why is the rebellion like the world? |
32898 | Why is the road- bed laborer on a railroad like a hunted bear in the mountains? |
32898 | Why is the root of the tongue like a dejected man? |
32898 | Why is the rudder of a steamboat like a hangman? |
32898 | Why is the rumseller''s trade a profitable one to follow? |
32898 | Why is the science of self- defense like low tide? |
32898 | Why is the steeple of St. Paul''s Church, London, like Ireland? |
32898 | Why is the sun like a good loaf? |
32898 | Why is the superintendent of a children''s play- ground like a stranded vessel? |
32898 | Why is the tolling of a bell like the prayer of a hypocrite? |
32898 | Why is the wall going to decay? |
32898 | Why is the wick of a candle like Athens? |
32898 | Why is the_ Outlook_ like a man of fourscore? |
32898 | Why is there a bad audience at the playhouse when the pit is full? |
32898 | Why is there no such thing as an entire day? |
32898 | Why is traveling by the Subway dangerous? |
32898 | Why is turkey a fashionable bird? |
32898 | Why is twice ten like twice eleven? |
32898 | Why is whispering in company like a forged bank note? |
32898 | Why is wit like a Chinese lady''s foot? |
32898 | Why is your favorite puppy like a doll? |
32898 | Why is your nose in the middle of your face? |
32898 | Why is your shadow like a false friend? |
32898 | Why is your thumb, when putting on a glove, like eternity? |
32898 | Why may a beggar wear a very short coat? |
32898 | Why may a dyspeptic hope for a long life? |
32898 | Why may not the proprietor of a forest fell his own timber? |
32898 | Why may we doubt the existence of the Giants''Causeway? |
32898 | Why must a Yankee speculator be very subject to water on the brain? |
32898 | Why must a fisherman be very wealthy? |
32898 | Why ought Adam to have been perfectly satisfied with his wife? |
32898 | Why ought Charles I to have preferred burning to decapitation? |
32898 | Why ought a greedy man to wear a plaid waistcoat? |
32898 | Why ought cocks to be the smoothest birds known? |
32898 | Why ought venison to be only half- cooked? |
32898 | Why ought women to be employed in a post- office? |
32898 | Why should Columbus be classed among astronomers rather than among explorers? |
32898 | Why should a candle- maker never be pitied? |
32898 | Why should a man named Benjamin marry a girl named Annie? |
32898 | Why should a man never marry a woman named Ellen? |
32898 | Why should a man troubled with gout make his will? |
32898 | Why should a straw hat never be raised to a lady? |
32898 | Why should a teetotaler never take a wife? |
32898 | Why should alchemists and astrologers be females? |
32898 | Why should free seats at church be abolished? |
32898 | Why should good- natured people never go to small dancing parties? |
32898 | Why should it not be loyal for a Union lady to accept a token of regard from a lover at the present time? |
32898 | Why should men think there is a world in the moon? |
32898 | Why should n''t you go to church if you have a cough? |
32898 | Why should not soldiers meddle with nutcrackers? |
32898 | Why should one never complain of the price of a car ticket? |
32898 | Why should onions be planted near the potatoes in a garden? |
32898 | Why should potatoes grow better than any other vegetable? |
32898 | Why should the largest tree be near a church? |
32898 | Why should the male sex avoid the letter A? |
32898 | Why should the poet have expected the woodman to"spare that tree?" |
32898 | Why should we pity the young Esquimaux? |
32898 | Why should wire be used to train string beans? |
32898 | Why should you always choose white cows? |
32898 | Why should you never have a tailor who does not understand his trade? |
32898 | Why should you never make love in the country? |
32898 | Why should you never sleep in a railway train? |
32898 | Why was Blackstone like an Irish vegetable? |
32898 | Why was Bulwer more likely to get tired of novel- writing than Warren? |
32898 | Why was Cain an enemy of President Lincoln? |
32898 | Why was Cain''s murder like the main strength of his leg? |
32898 | Why was Dickens a greater writer than Shakespeare? |
32898 | Why was John the Baptist like a penny? |
32898 | Why was Leander voluntarily drowned? |
32898 | Why was Martin Luther like a dyspeptic robin? |
32898 | Why was Moses the wickedest man that ever lived? |
32898 | Why was Noah obliged to stoop on entering the ark? |
32898 | Why was Paradise like a cucumber? |
32898 | Why was William Tell like a post? |
32898 | Why was it a mistake to imagine that Robinson Crusoe''s island was uninhabited? |
32898 | Why was n''t Peary buried in New York? |
32898 | Why was our last question like a young lady sitting on theological works? |
32898 | Why was the Shah of Persia, during his visit to England, the best card- player in the world? |
32898 | Why was the capture of Fort Hatteras like an English nobleman''s mansion? |
32898 | Why was the country of Phoenicia like an automobile? |
32898 | Why was the first day of Adam''s life the longest? |
32898 | Why was the giant Goliath very much astonished when David hit him with a stone? |
32898 | Why was the whale which swallowed Jonah like a milkman who has retired on an independence? |
32898 | Why were the gates of Eden shut after Adam and Eve went out? |
32898 | Why will Americans have more cause to remember the letter S than any other letter in the alphabet? |
32898 | Why will scooping out a turnip be a noisy process? |
32898 | Why would Samson have made an excellent actor? |
32898 | Why would a compliment from a chicken be an insult? |
32898 | Why would a pelican make a good lawyer? |
32898 | Why would an owl be offended at your calling him a pheasant? |
32898 | Why would it be impossible to starve in the desert of Sahara? |
32898 | Why would the colors of our national ensign make a good dress for ladies? |
32898 | Why would young ladies make good volunteers? |
32898 | Why would young ladies of the present day make good pugilists? |
32898 | Why, if a man has a gallery of paintings, may you pick his pockets? |
32898 | Why, when a very fat man gets squeezed coming out of the opera, does it make him complimentary to the ladies? |
32898 | Why, when the rebels smite us upon the right cheek, should we refuse to turn towards them the left cheek also? |
32898 | Why, when you are out in a boat, should you never be surprised by a sudden squall? |
32898 | Why, when you paint a man''s portrait, may you be described as stepping into his shoes? |
32898 | Why? |
32898 | Wild beasts? |
32898 | Wise people? |
32898 | With the Wolofs the riddle of the wind asks,"What flies forever and rests never?" |
32898 | With what two animals do you always go to bed? |
32898 | Y( why?). |
15338 | ''And he puts in the capital?'' 15338 ''And what''s there to be reticent about, ma''am?'' |
15338 | ''And why,''said the uncle, with an amused smile,''why, Tommy, do you desire me to make a noise like a frog?'' |
15338 | ''And you know your Bible?'' |
15338 | ''Any of you men want to go to work?'' 15338 ''Are you guilty or not?'' |
15338 | ''Besides,''my son? 15338 ''Could you perhaps tell me something that is in it?''" |
15338 | ''Do n''t want to risk it, eh?'' 15338 ''Do n''t you want to be on the winning side?'' |
15338 | ''Do you put in much capital?'' 15338 ''Ere, you,"he said to a man on top,"do n''t you want Westminster Abbey?" |
15338 | ''Got to? 15338 ''How do you know ours will be the winning side?'' |
15338 | ''I wonder,''she said, with an embarrassed laugh,''if these ultra- short skirts will ever go out?'' 15338 ''Is that so, uncle?'' |
15338 | ''Power of initiative, my lord?'' 15338 ''So you attend Sunday- school regularly?'' |
15338 | ''Uncle, give me that colt, will you?'' 15338 ''Well, my lad,''said the sergeant,''you know the Germans have been trying for more than a year and a half to win and have failed, do n''t you?" |
15338 | ''What do you want of the rag- bag?'' 15338 ''What kind of a place is it?'' |
15338 | ''Why not?'' 15338 ''With what hand did you do it?'' |
15338 | ''Wot''s this here feller charged with?'' 15338 A bookseller? |
15338 | A fowl? 15338 A hunting license?" |
15338 | A_ red_ one-- can''t you find it_ now_? |
15338 | Age? |
15338 | Ah, how many loads do you take in a day? |
15338 | Ah, the Americans,said a Frenchman standing by,"Where have they not been?" |
15338 | Ah,replied the good man with a grateful expression on his face,"and you have come back to repay me?" |
15338 | Ai n''t de license all right? 15338 Ai n''t got no sense? |
15338 | Ai n''t they fer sale? |
15338 | Ai n''t what nice? |
15338 | Ai n''t you''fraid when it thunders? |
15338 | Am I as sick as all that? |
15338 | Anwas she spanked, too, when she was bad?" |
15338 | An''why should I get out of the way? |
15338 | An''ye think he was mair clever than Rabbie Burns? |
15338 | And I suppose you are both pretty highly valued, George, eh? |
15338 | And about how long do you keep it up? |
15338 | And are the divorce laws so very liberal in your section? |
15338 | And can you tell us what George Washington was remarkable for? |
15338 | And did her mother spank her? |
15338 | And did n''t I do it? |
15338 | And did they tell you their age? |
15338 | And did you actually go to Rome? |
15338 | And did you catch my hired man in motion? |
15338 | And did you post it? |
15338 | And do you not know that you can accomplish more with animals by speaking to them? |
15338 | And do you set the alarm? |
15338 | And how are you today? |
15338 | And how does it work? |
15338 | And how is that? |
15338 | And how is your husband keeping? |
15338 | And how long have you been in domestic service? |
15338 | And is your husband at work? |
15338 | And now does n''t he threaten to split your head with an ax? |
15338 | And now, sir,turning to the other,"What have you to say?" |
15338 | And should I go to heaven? |
15338 | And the Egyptians? |
15338 | And this expression,''The banquet- table groaned''--do you think that is proper? |
15338 | And what did my little son learn about this morning? |
15338 | And what do they boil locomotives for? |
15338 | And what is a farmer? |
15338 | And what is a man who does both? |
15338 | And what under heaven do you expect from that? |
15338 | And what''s that? |
15338 | And when can you come? |
15338 | And where are the Jews? |
15338 | And where did you hide it? |
15338 | And who are you? |
15338 | And why should that make you so sad? |
15338 | And would the bear have to go too? |
15338 | And you did n''t answer it? |
15338 | And you had a position as watchman once, did n''t you? |
15338 | And you know your way to announce? |
15338 | And you lost the cat all right? |
15338 | And you worked a while as a caretaker, did n''t you? |
15338 | And you would n''t begin a journey on Friday? |
15338 | And you? |
15338 | And young? |
15338 | And your pals sitting at the next table-- would they also not shoot the Germans if they tried to invade this country? |
15338 | And, the plural of child? |
15338 | And,continued the woman anxiously,"do you make any inquiries as to the origin of the fire?" |
15338 | Any damage done your way? |
15338 | Any news, Brown? |
15338 | Anything going on here tonight? |
15338 | Are caterpillars good to eat? |
15338 | Are green bananas full of starch? |
15338 | Are n''t you afraid America will become isolated? |
15338 | Are n''t you ever going home? |
15338 | Are oysters good to eat in March? |
15338 | Are there no short cuts, father? |
15338 | Are they wild oats,queried the youth,"that you''ve got to sneak up on''em in the dark?" |
15338 | Are ye sure it was lost, Sandy? |
15338 | Are you a lawyer? |
15338 | Are you aware,he remarked to the milkman,"that we require this milk for the hitherto recognized purposes?" |
15338 | Are you going away? |
15338 | Are you hurt? |
15338 | Are you interested in a loose- leaf encyclopedia? |
15338 | Are you mamma''s mother? |
15338 | Are you of the opinion, James,asked a slim- looking man of his companion,"that Dr. Smith''s medicine does any good?" |
15338 | Are you one of the heroes? |
15338 | Are you sure of that? |
15338 | Are you sure you can prove my client is crazy? |
15338 | Are you sure your auditors understood all of your arguments? |
15338 | Are you taking me by the hour or by the day? |
15338 | Are you willing to swear that you know more than half of them? |
15338 | Arrah, Biddy,said one,"did ye hear him last Sunday when he preached on''Hell''?" |
15338 | Aw, why ca n''t I just powder it like you do yours? |
15338 | Be you our preacher? |
15338 | Been hunting today? |
15338 | Beg pardon, but where is the sea? |
15338 | Big job, was n''t it? |
15338 | Bobby, do you know you''ve deliberately broken the eighth commandment by stealing James''s candy? |
15338 | Boy, have you got a handkerchief? |
15338 | Boys,she said,"do n''t you know that it is Sunday and you must n''t play ball in the front- yard? |
15338 | But I thought I saw one in your kitchen? |
15338 | But are you sure? 15338 But do n''t you hear the alarm in the morning, Rufus?" |
15338 | But it is broken? |
15338 | But surely you have heard of Puddin''head Wilson? |
15338 | But what do I want with money? |
15338 | But what in the world made you think that? |
15338 | But where is the saucer? |
15338 | But who will take me out,she sighed,"And who will glove my hands, And who will kiss my ruby lips When you are in foreign lands?" |
15338 | But why should I work? |
15338 | But why the hurry? |
15338 | But why would you not shoot the Germans? |
15338 | But you got it? |
15338 | But your fiancà © has such a small salary, how are you going to live? |
15338 | But, Maria,demanded Uncle Josh,"how can you blame them two Rhode Island Reds for what happened twenty- five years ago?" |
15338 | But, Mollie,she demanded,"do n''t you trust him?" |
15338 | But, Sandy, man,objected the host,"ye''re not going yet, with the evenin''just started?" |
15338 | But, doctor, do n''t you think I''m a bit crazy? |
15338 | But, father, what am I to do without a riding habit? |
15338 | But, laird--"Will ye listen to me, Donald? 15338 But,"interrupted the famous director,"can you_ act_?" |
15338 | By indulging in foolish pleasures, I suppose? |
15338 | By the way, did you mail the letters I gave you yesterday? |
15338 | Ca n''t see anything, hey? |
15338 | Ca n''t you cash your check in the mornin''? |
15338 | Ca n''t you do without them? |
15338 | Ca n''t you make it any sooner? |
15338 | Ca n''t you pull a tooth without a rehearsal? |
15338 | Can you lend me a postage- stamp? |
15338 | Can you make anything out of the news from Europe? |
15338 | Can you remember the title? |
15338 | Can you sign your name? |
15338 | Can you support a family? |
15338 | Can you tell me what a smile is? |
15338 | Can your little baby brother talk yet? |
15338 | Certainly,said the real- estate dealer calmly,"and you have n''t, have you?" |
15338 | Civics? 15338 Come, find my book-- why make a row?" |
15338 | Corn bread? 15338 Could you not have settled your differences by a peaceful discussion of the matter, calling in the assistance of unprejudiced opinion, if need be?" |
15338 | Dark breakfast? 15338 Dat thing? |
15338 | Did Brummell wear a satin vest? |
15338 | Did any patient order a postage stamp? |
15338 | Did he leave any address? |
15338 | Did he tell you to go prowling round all night? |
15338 | Did n''t anybody criticise you for filming an automobile in ancient Babylon? |
15338 | Did n''t that fetch him? |
15338 | Did nature make you, papa? |
15338 | Did they feed you well? |
15338 | Did what? |
15338 | Did you ever hear about that home brew blowing up? |
15338 | Did you ever hear the story of the deacon''s daughter? 15338 Did you go to the fight last night?" |
15338 | Did you hear about the defacement of Mr. Skinner''s tombstone? |
15338 | Did you hear me come downstairs this time, mamma? |
15338 | Did you imagine that was within the right of a tenant? |
15338 | Did you laugh him to scorn?'' |
15338 | Did you not strike it repeatedly with a club? |
15338 | Did you read it? |
15338 | Did you scream? |
15338 | Did you see the girls next door,she asked--"The Hill twins?" |
15338 | Did you try the simple plan of counting sheep for your insomnia? |
15338 | Died at second? |
15338 | Dinah, did you wash the fish before you baked it? |
15338 | Do Englishmen understand American slang? |
15338 | Do I get all this for my dollar? |
15338 | Do der minister lif in dis house? |
15338 | Do n''t you enjoy your meals? |
15338 | Do n''t you ever feel sick going up and down in this elevator all day? |
15338 | Do n''t you ever say anything when you have nothing to say? |
15338 | Do n''t you find it hard these times to meet expenses? |
15338 | Do n''t you know I''m a''painless dentist''? |
15338 | Do n''t you know that you should always hand me notes and cards on a salver? |
15338 | Do n''t you know, dear,said the mother,"that it is very wicked to behave so? |
15338 | Do n''t you object to all this talk about the high cost of everything? |
15338 | Do n''t you remember that Macbeth said to him,''Thou canst not say,I did it"''?" |
15338 | Do n''t you see my signature there on the register? |
15338 | Do n''t you think it''s great? |
15338 | Do n''t you think our friend Crossum might loom up as a dark horse? |
15338 | Do n''t you wind it up? |
15338 | Do you act toward your wife as you did before you married her? |
15338 | Do you believe honesty is the best policy? |
15338 | Do you consider yourself financially able to do so? |
15338 | Do you drive it yourself? |
15338 | Do you find public office an easy berth? |
15338 | Do you find that prohibition has deprest Crimson Gulch? |
15338 | Do you imagine I could be so hard- hearted as to deprive you poor fellows of your employment? |
15338 | Do you keep any servants? |
15338 | Do you know what it is to go before an audience? |
15338 | Do you know who''s talking in there now? |
15338 | Do you know,asked the guide,"that it took millions and millions of years for this great abyss to be carved out?" |
15338 | Do you know,remarked the girl,"you remind me strongly of Banquo''s Ghost?" |
15338 | Do you like codfish? |
15338 | Do you like it? |
15338 | Do you like that? |
15338 | Do you mean that little weedy, undersized creature? |
15338 | Do you mean to say you do n''t know? |
15338 | Do you mean to tell me that is a finished painting? |
15338 | Do you mean to tell this court,he demanded,"that you can determine the make of a car by studying its track? |
15338 | Do you really mean to call me a liar? |
15338 | Do you say''two- spot,''or''the deuce''? |
15338 | Do you think that I am going to let any foreigner lick me? |
15338 | Do you think the motor will entirely supersede the horse? |
15338 | Do you understand what you are to swear to? |
15338 | Do you want a narrow man''s comb? |
15338 | Do you want a steak for a dollar or a dollar and a half? |
15338 | Do you want a ticket one way or one that will take you there and back? |
15338 | Do you want to sell a mule? |
15338 | Do you wish me to vote for the same candidate that you do? |
15338 | Do you wish to wear a surplice? |
15338 | Do you wonder why? |
15338 | Doan yo''''membeh whut de good book sez''bout turnin''de odder cheek? |
15338 | Doctor''s orders? |
15338 | Doctor,she gasped,"you''re a good fellow, are n''t you? |
15338 | Doctor,she inquired of a country physician,"can you tell me how it is that some folks be born dumb?" |
15338 | Does nobody know? |
15338 | Does what you see here today please you? |
15338 | Does your family have any trouble with servants? |
15338 | Does your husband ever lie to you? |
15338 | Does your wife neglect her home in making speeches? |
15338 | Done? 15338 Eh, what do you say?" |
15338 | Eh, what? |
15338 | Eh? |
15338 | Enjoy my meals? |
15338 | Er-- aw-- what was the denomination of the bill you loaned me? |
15338 | Er-- what were you-- er-- talking about? |
15338 | Exactly how far is it between the two towns? |
15338 | Excuse me, madam, would you mind walking the other way and not passing the horse? |
15338 | Father, is the zebra a black animal with white stripes or a white animal with black stripes? |
15338 | Father, what is a convalescent? |
15338 | Father,asked Prince Edward, placing his finger on the Colonel''s picture,"Mr. Roosevelt is a very clever man, is n''t he?" |
15338 | Father,said he, thoughtfully,"what part of speech is woman?" |
15338 | Father,she said at the close of his lecture,"when you see a cow, ai n''t you''fraid?" |
15338 | Fine attitude, eh? |
15338 | From your husband? 15338 Give up my nice, pleasant office and stay home?" |
15338 | Going fishing? |
15338 | Had any experience acting without audiences? |
15338 | Haf you Der Hohenzollernspiel? |
15338 | Happy? 15338 Hard? |
15338 | Has Bobbie been eating between meals? |
15338 | Has Jobkins any money? |
15338 | Has Owens ever paid back that$ 10 you loaned him a year ago? |
15338 | Has it? |
15338 | Has n''t he choked you into insensibility? |
15338 | Has n''t he dragged you the length of the room by your hair? |
15338 | Has the line been busy? |
15338 | Has this bill been endorsed by the Prohibition party? |
15338 | Has your publicity man written the usual biographical notices and arranged for a series of dinners in my honor? |
15338 | Have they found it out yet? |
15338 | Have you a book called''Shapes of Fear''? |
15338 | Have you a life of Sairy Gamp? |
15338 | Have you a visiting card? |
15338 | Have you any alarm- clocks? |
15338 | Have you any cooks on hand? |
15338 | Have you any flesh- colored stockings in stock? |
15338 | Have you any references? |
15338 | Have you been touching the barometer, Jane? |
15338 | Have you consulted your doctor, Rufus? |
15338 | Have you ever had any experience in handling high- class ware? |
15338 | Have you ever had appendicitis? |
15338 | Have you ever taken a tail- spin in an airplane? |
15338 | Have you fed the pigs, Biddy? |
15338 | Have you found one? |
15338 | Have you heard my last joke? |
15338 | Have you looked by your pockets? |
15338 | Have you lost half a crown? |
15338 | Have you never noticed the lady on the dollar? |
15338 | Have you poured water on her head? |
15338 | Have you seen the announcement of my death in the paper? |
15338 | Have you the rimes of Edward Lear? |
15338 | Have you? |
15338 | Have your great minds selected a title for my forthcoming work? |
15338 | Have your salesmen,he asked,"prepared for their semi- annual trip among the down- trodden booksellers?" |
15338 | Having any success with your garden? |
15338 | Hear the boss has had a fever? 15338 Here, boy,"said the man to the boy who was helping him drive a bunch of cattle,"hold this bull a minute, will you?" |
15338 | Hollerin''for who? |
15338 | Hoo dae ye mak''that oot? |
15338 | Hoo is''t, Geordie,asked a customer,"ye''ve altered the smaal clock and not the gran''faither''s clock?" |
15338 | How are you getting on at your new place? |
15338 | How can you tell when a woman is only shopping? |
15338 | How come, I''se out? |
15338 | How come, niggah? |
15338 | How could I? |
15338 | How could you do that when you had no letters? |
15338 | How could you say those are fine biscuits? |
15338 | How d''you make that out an epigram? |
15338 | How did Cranbury ever manage to get so deeply in debt as he is? |
15338 | How did that private ever get in here? |
15338 | How did you earn your dollar? |
15338 | How do the Joneses seem to like their little two- room kitchenette apartment? |
15338 | How do you get down? |
15338 | How do you know that Blinks has had a raise in salary? |
15338 | How do you know that I have been swimmin''? |
15338 | How do you know? |
15338 | How do you know? |
15338 | How do you know? |
15338 | How do you like my pound cake, dearie? |
15338 | How do you manage to remember all these things, Rose? |
15338 | How do you manage to sell so many fireless cookers? |
15338 | How do you mean a letter from your wife? 15338 How do you pronounce''pneumonia''?" |
15338 | How do you sell your music? |
15338 | How do you spell Schenectady? |
15338 | How do you spell''anemic,''please? |
15338 | How does it work? |
15338 | How does she get along with her family? |
15338 | How does your boy Josh like his job in the city? |
15338 | How far have you studied, Johnny? |
15338 | How fine? |
15338 | How is he? |
15338 | How is it, Jimmy, that you alone out of my entire staff seem to have a pocketknife with you? |
15338 | How is it? |
15338 | How is that? |
15338 | How is the missus? |
15338 | How is this, William? |
15338 | How is your little brother, Johnny? |
15338 | How long do you want them? |
15338 | How many fish yer got, mister? |
15338 | How many head o''live stock you got on the place? |
15338 | How many miles behind? |
15338 | How many revolutions does the earth make in a day? 15338 How much did Daniel Lambert weigh?" |
15338 | How much do I owe you? |
15338 | How much do you want? |
15338 | How much for vun? |
15338 | How much is it? |
15338 | How much is the deficit that you expect my subscription to meet? |
15338 | How much life insurance do you think a man ought to carry? |
15338 | How much shall we make out of it? |
15338 | How much vas dose collars? |
15338 | How much will it be? |
15338 | How much? |
15338 | How muchee Melican monee? |
15338 | How mush do I owe you? |
15338 | How now am I to do it? |
15338 | How now? |
15338 | How old, I pray, was Sister Ann? |
15338 | How so? |
15338 | How so? |
15338 | How was it, then, Pat, that I saw you pass the factory on your bicycle during the morning? |
15338 | How was that? |
15338 | How was the trip over? |
15338 | How will you have your roast beef? |
15338 | How''d that city hired man of yours pan out? |
15338 | How''s business? |
15338 | How''s business? |
15338 | How''s that? |
15338 | How''s this, waiter? 15338 How?" |
15338 | How? |
15338 | How_ do_ you use this catalog? |
15338 | Huh? |
15338 | I ask if you can write your name? |
15338 | I beg pardon? |
15338 | I guess you do n''t remember me? |
15338 | I hear you are going to marry Archie Blueblood? |
15338 | I say, Hodge, why do you always put''dictated''on your letters? 15338 I sent the first stanza to the editor of the Correspondence Column with the inquiry,''Can anyone give me the rest of this poem?'' |
15338 | I suppose you ai n''t the chap that pulled the cord? |
15338 | I suppose you do not know where Boston is? |
15338 | I suppose you get home once in a while? |
15338 | I sure have,admitted the Celt,"and did n''t you see me running home to get the money to pay for it?" |
15338 | I understand,said the clerk,"You mean one of our porous plasters?" |
15338 | I vas standing on the street corner the other day and a cop came along and said to me,''Holy Moses, are you here again?'' |
15338 | I wonder how that idea originated? |
15338 | I''m thinking of getting married, pa. What''s it like? |
15338 | I--"Did n''t I tell you to get a report on any and every man asking for credit? |
15338 | I? 15338 If a man brings his car to me to be repaired, and it costs me sixty cents, and I charge him sixteen dollars, what per cent profit would I be making?" |
15338 | If the lamb had been good and sensible,said the little boy, gravely,"we should have had him to eat, would n''t we?" |
15338 | Ikey,said the teacher,"can you give me a definition for''a bargain''?" |
15338 | In January? |
15338 | In Washington, Lieutenant de Tessan was approached by a pretty American girl, who said:''And did you kill a German soldier?'' |
15338 | In a bad way? |
15338 | In recognition of his heroic service, I suppose? |
15338 | Indeed,said the lady, quick as a flash,"and pray what are you doing there?" |
15338 | Is Judge David Poggenburg stopping here? |
15338 | Is Mr. Smith in the audience? |
15338 | Is dem you- all''s chickens? |
15338 | Is dis whar de redemtion bo''d is at? |
15338 | Is he after me or my vote? |
15338 | Is he in the habit of beating you? 15338 Is hero- ing a criminal career?" |
15338 | Is it an accident? 15338 Is it the motion going down?" |
15338 | Is it the stopping that does it? |
15338 | Is it true? |
15338 | Is my son getting well grounded in the classics? |
15338 | Is n''t my society good enough for them? |
15338 | Is n''t she? 15338 Is that all? |
15338 | Is that all? |
15338 | Is that the Dickel Liquor Company? |
15338 | Is that where we got our green cook? |
15338 | Is the barrel full, my lad? |
15338 | Is the show this evening fit for church women to see? |
15338 | Is the world safe for democracy now, papa? |
15338 | Is there any one there? |
15338 | Is there anything you do n''t understand? |
15338 | Is this the hosiery department? |
15338 | Is this your essay? 15338 Is this your little boy, Aunt Liza?" |
15338 | Is your husband a good provider, Dinah? |
15338 | Is your husband in? |
15338 | Is your wife cheerful about it? |
15338 | Is your wife''s mother enjoying her trip to the mountains? |
15338 | It vos bretty big vactory? |
15338 | John, are you happy there? |
15338 | John,she remarked,"do you know that next Sunday will be the twenty- fifth anniversary of our wedding?" |
15338 | Judge, Your Honor,cried the prisoner at the bar,"have I got to be tried by a lady jury?" |
15338 | La, Miss Daviess,he replied,"don''you- all know colored folks well''nough to know dat dey don''need no''casion foh a p''rade?" |
15338 | Large on the top, sir, and small at the bottom? |
15338 | Law, ma''am, what''s de use ob washin''er fish what''s lived all his life in de water? |
15338 | Liberal? 15338 Little boy- eh? |
15338 | Little girl, why are n''t you provided with an umbrella? |
15338 | Live stock? |
15338 | Ma, do cows and bees go to heaven? |
15338 | Ma, is Mr. Jones an awfully old man? |
15338 | Ma, what does the''home- stretch''mean? |
15338 | Madam,said the professor,"can we get corn bread here? |
15338 | Maggie, dear,he said,"had n''t you better take some fiction with you to while away the time?" |
15338 | Mamma, if a bear should swallow me, I should die, should n''t I? |
15338 | Mamma, what does it mean when you''re wined and dined? |
15338 | Mamma,she asked,"what''s to keep them from crawling up his other arm?" |
15338 | Mamma,she sobbed,"did Gran''ma spank you when you was little?" |
15338 | Married? |
15338 | Marry him? |
15338 | Mary,he said to the Irish waitress at the hotel where he was stopping,"you''ve been in this country how long?" |
15338 | May I ask whar yo''live, sah? |
15338 | May I take this book home please, or is n''t it a_ running_ book? 15338 Morris,"he said,"your oldest daughter was married about five years ago, was n''t she? |
15338 | Mother,asked Tommy,"do fairy tales always begin with''Once upon a time''?" |
15338 | Mother,he asked,"will Charlie Chaplin go to heaven?" |
15338 | Mother,said he, finally,"what does D-- d stand for?" |
15338 | Mourning? |
15338 | Mr. Brown, are you married? |
15338 | Mr. Brown,he began,"what is a popinjay?" |
15338 | Mr. Toppan, what is law? |
15338 | Mrs. Johnson, you know Mrs. Wilson, do you not? |
15338 | My boy, how came you by those? |
15338 | My boy,said the minister, when they were closeted together,"who is that elderly gentleman you attend church with?" |
15338 | My man,he said,"What is the matter?" |
15338 | Need more exercise? |
15338 | Never boast? 15338 No way for me to git in it, then?" |
15338 | No, there is nothing I want today,said the customer,"But will you just examine my line of goods?" |
15338 | No, what was it? |
15338 | No,said Blathers,"I ca n''t do that; but suppose you give me five hundred dollars and keep the car, eh? |
15338 | No,said his father;"what makes you ask a question like that while we are eating?" |
15338 | Not bad, is it? |
15338 | Nothin'', eh? |
15338 | Now can any of you give me the name of a town in France? |
15338 | Now then, Tommy,he exclaimed,"what are you doing?" |
15338 | Now will this train reach its destination on time? |
15338 | Now, Britzmann, what do you make in the factory? |
15338 | Now, Britzmann,said the lawyer for the plaintiff,"what do you do?" |
15338 | Now, Harold,said the teacher,"if there were eleven sheep in a field and six jumped the fence how many would there be left?" |
15338 | Now, Mick,asked the plater,"what size is the plate?" |
15338 | Now, Tommy,she pursued,"if your father were busy all day and said he would have to go back to the office at night, what would he be doing?" |
15338 | Now, tell me,she said, at the close of the lesson,"who will get the biggest crown?" |
15338 | Now,continued the teacher when Jimmy had finished writing,"can you find a better form for that sentence?" |
15338 | Of course he''d say that; but what did you do? |
15338 | Of course you have your little theory about the cause of the high cost of living? |
15338 | Of what were you accused? |
15338 | Oh, is n''t he? 15338 Oh, it is, is it?" |
15338 | Oh, say, who was here to see you last night? |
15338 | Oh, she broke it? |
15338 | Oh, we all must have-- but have we? |
15338 | Oh, were you? |
15338 | Oh, what''s the matter, ma''am? |
15338 | Oh,said she, turning a wrathful tearful face to her mother,"Why do n''t you obey your mother?" |
15338 | Oh-- who won? |
15338 | Or are you just going in? |
15338 | Ou est, m''sie, la grand Larousse? |
15338 | P. S.--Do you furnish clothes for your vampires? 15338 PRACTICAL"BUSINESS MAN( sneeringly)--"You''re a holier- than- thou guy, eh?" |
15338 | Pa, a man''s wife is his better half, is n''t she? |
15338 | Pa, what are ancestors? |
15338 | Pa, what is a retainer? |
15338 | Pa, what''s an actor? |
15338 | Pa, what''s phonetic spelling? |
15338 | Pa,inquired a seven- year- old seeker after the truth,"is it true that school- teachers get paid?" |
15338 | Papa, you there? |
15338 | Papa,said Evelyn, solemnly,"ai n''t you''fraid of nothing in the world but mama?" |
15338 | Pardon me,said he to Jones,"but what would you say if I sat on your hat?" |
15338 | Parson, you are n''t by any chance a Baptist, are you? |
15338 | Pat, what''s that piece of blank paper you have in your hand? |
15338 | Paw, what is an advertisement? |
15338 | Paw, what''s the longest period of time? |
15338 | Pay yo for what, boss? |
15338 | Phwat''s this fince for? |
15338 | Please send me,he shouted,"a bicycle, a tool chest, a--""What are you praying so loud for?" |
15338 | Please, Jedge,interrupted Mrs. Rastus from the rear of the court room,"will yo''Honah jes''kinder split dat sentence? |
15338 | Please, ma''am,Edgar piped out,"do you want us to draw a hen or a rooster?" |
15338 | Please, which is right? 15338 Pop, what do we mean by a good listener?" |
15338 | Pop, what is a promoter? |
15338 | Postman? |
15338 | Pretty? 15338 Rastus, how is it you have given up going to church?" |
15338 | Ready to give him an argument, eh? |
15338 | Rufus, are n''t you feeling well? |
15338 | Sah? |
15338 | Samantha, what''s thet chune the orchestry''s a- playin''now? |
15338 | Say, Sam, why do you- all carry that parrot around with you on the wagon? |
15338 | Say, dad, what keeps us from falling off the earth when we are upside down? |
15338 | Say, mama, was baby sent down from heaven? |
15338 | Say, mister, where''s the telephone? |
15338 | See here, what''s wrong with you anyway? |
15338 | See those people? |
15338 | Shall I call you''doctor''or''professor''? |
15338 | Shall I show him in?. |
15338 | Shall it be said we are clothed in male armor? |
15338 | Shall you need it a long time? |
15338 | She called Sammy up to the desk and said,''Sammy, do n''t you know that was very anti- social?'' |
15338 | Shot anything? |
15338 | Shure, he does; vy not? |
15338 | Sick, eh? |
15338 | Sir,screeched the wild- haired man,"are you opposed to free speech?" |
15338 | Six? |
15338 | Smith, what do you intend to do when you are released from the service? |
15338 | So that is O''Ryan, is it? |
15338 | So you got your poem printed? |
15338 | So you kicked your landlord downstairs? |
15338 | So you want to marry Alice, do you? |
15338 | So you want to marry my daughter, eh? |
15338 | So you''re a moonshiner? |
15338 | So? |
15338 | Some un sick at yo''house, Mis''Carter? |
15338 | Speculating? |
15338 | Still looking for an honest man? |
15338 | Stranger in the town, sir? |
15338 | Suppose success do n''t come at first, What are you goin''to do? 15338 Suppose you jack it up and run a new car under it?" |
15338 | Suppose,said the dealer,"you accidentally broke a very valuable porcelain vase, what would you do?" |
15338 | Suspicious actions? |
15338 | Sworn off? |
15338 | T- t- t- tough or t- t- tender? |
15338 | Tell me,then said the child,"how many children have you got?" |
15338 | Ten minutes? |
15338 | Thank you, missy,replied the colored woman, smiling broadly,"but which gen''man''s lap was you sittin''on?" |
15338 | Thankful? 15338 That so?" |
15338 | That so? |
15338 | That so? |
15338 | That? 15338 The Argonne?" |
15338 | The conductor, who was departing, looked back and snarled:''What''ll you do? |
15338 | The flu? |
15338 | The interrogation''Where did you get it?'' 15338 The motion going up?" |
15338 | The right of way is ours, is n''t it? |
15338 | The ruin, my lord? |
15338 | Them was nice folk you waited on, Mamie, ai n''t they? |
15338 | Then if a man marries twice there is n''t anything left of him, is there? |
15338 | Then the small favor I am about to ask you will no doubt be granted? |
15338 | Then what do you sell them for? |
15338 | Then what do you want me to write about? |
15338 | Then what is it? |
15338 | Then where is the general passenger agent? |
15338 | Then why did n''t you ask him to go home? |
15338 | Then why did you not bring some of them with you? |
15338 | Then why have n''t you paid up? |
15338 | Then why were n''t you drowned? |
15338 | Then you lost? |
15338 | Then you understand it thoroughly? |
15338 | Then, why do n''t you stop butting in? |
15338 | Then,he retorted promptly,"may I not claim my reward as an astronomer?" |
15338 | Then,said Beryl, looking at him and then at her reflection in the mirror,"do n''t you think nature is turning out better work than she used to?" |
15338 | Then,said the salesman meekly,"will you let me use a part of your counter to look at them myself, as I have not had the opportunity for some time?" |
15338 | There was a dead silence for a few moments, when one of the loafers spoke up and queried,''What doing, and what do yer pay?'' 15338 These''ere, guv''nor?" |
15338 | Thet so, Hiram? 15338 Think so?" |
15338 | This car cost me thirty- five hundred dollars, Blathers, but I''ll let you have it for two thousand, eh? 15338 To those high food prices?" |
15338 | To what do you attribute your long life, Uncle Mose? |
15338 | To which party do you refer? |
15338 | Tommy,said the Sunday- school teacher, who had been giving a lesson on the baptismal covenant,"can you tell me the two things necessary to baptism?" |
15338 | Twenty or thirty bushels? |
15338 | Twenty or thirty dozens? |
15338 | Two dozen? |
15338 | Vell, vy do n''t you look in dot? |
15338 | Very good,said the polite clerk,"and how long did you wish to take it for?" |
15338 | WILLIE,asked a New York teacher of one of her pupils,"how many make a million?" |
15338 | Wa- al, say,inquired the farmer in surprise,"what time air I goin''ter git ter see the town?" |
15338 | Wal, you''re goin''to be, ai n''t ye? |
15338 | Want any''elp, chum? |
15338 | Was he, indeed? 15338 Was it you wot did dat trick? |
15338 | Was papa the first man who ever proposed to you, mama? |
15338 | Was that God? |
15338 | Watcha doin''wi''thet thar thermometer, boy? |
15338 | Water? |
15338 | Well, George,asked the man of law, when the waiter was shown in,"what can I do for you? |
15338 | Well, George,said the president of the company to old George,"how goes it?" |
15338 | Well, Jimmy,said the patient, when the boy came to report,"what did they say?" |
15338 | Well, John,asked the boss,"which did you find the stickiest?" |
15338 | Well, John,asked the teacher,"what is it?" |
15338 | Well, John,she said finally,"tell me_ why_ you want your Ford car buried with you?" |
15338 | Well, Maria,said Jiggles after the Town Election,"for whom did you vote this morning?" |
15338 | Well, Rena? |
15338 | Well, Sam, what crime did you commit to be put in those overalls and set under guard? |
15338 | Well, about how hard? |
15338 | Well, auntie, have you got your photographs yet? |
15338 | Well, boys, how do you like it? |
15338 | Well, did he run fast? |
15338 | Well, do you think she''d like you to have two pieces here? |
15338 | Well, have you seen any without a little boy? |
15338 | Well, how did folks stay on before the law was passed? |
15338 | Well, how do you pronounce it? |
15338 | Well, my little man, did you want to see me? |
15338 | Well, now,said Ian Hay,"is n''t that provoking? |
15338 | Well, since you do n''t pay rent, why not get something better? |
15338 | Well, then, why do n''t they trade back? |
15338 | Well, well,replied the man, rubbing his hands,"if it had n''t been for an apple where would the clothing business be today?" |
15338 | Well, what about the hundred bones? |
15338 | Well, what did she say? |
15338 | Well, what do you want? |
15338 | Well, what does he do now? |
15338 | Well, what have you done, anyway? |
15338 | Well, what is a middleman, Pop? |
15338 | Well, what is your sentence, Tommy? |
15338 | Well, where you been? |
15338 | Well, where''s the general superintendent? |
15338 | Well, who started this blamed thing anyhow? |
15338 | Well, why not? |
15338 | Well, why should a dozen or so be trying for it? 15338 Well, will you buy a carload?" |
15338 | Well,commented the Fool,"if this is true, why do n''t we learn to expect it?" |
15338 | Well,he asked,"how do you get on with the ladies?" |
15338 | Well,mused six- year- old Harry, as he was being buttoned into a clean white suit,"this has been an exciting week, has n''t it, mother? |
15338 | Well,queried the landlady in a peevish tone,"have you anything to say against the coffee?" |
15338 | Well,replied the clothing- dealer,"I guaranteed it to wear like iron, did n''t I?" |
15338 | Well,responded Senator Sorghum with deliberation,"what is a majority? |
15338 | Well,said the manager after a moment''s thought,"suppose we call it$ 5,000 a week?" |
15338 | Well,said the storekeeper,"why do n''t you exchange your little sister for a boy?" |
15338 | Well,said the"Tommy"who was escorting him,"what about me? |
15338 | Well? |
15338 | Well? |
15338 | Well? |
15338 | Well? |
15338 | Went on a furlong? 15338 Were you happy when you started for France?" |
15338 | Were you very sick with the''flu,''Rastus? |
15338 | Were you-- er-- the proprietor? |
15338 | Wha''s you will- power? |
15338 | Whaddy ya want-- pink, yellow, or black? |
15338 | Whar yo''all ben scrappin''in dis yar war, boss? |
15338 | What about it? |
15338 | What about? |
15338 | What are all those flowers, straw hats and palm- leaf fans scattered about for? |
15338 | What are the boys doing now? |
15338 | What are the directions? |
15338 | What are the luxuries of life? |
15338 | What are their names, Lindy? |
15338 | What are those posts sticking out all the way up? |
15338 | What are you cutting out of the paper? |
15338 | What are you doin''of, James? |
15338 | What are you doing there, Robert? |
15338 | What are you doing, my little men? |
15338 | What are you going to call it? |
15338 | What are you going to do next? |
15338 | What are you going to do with it? |
15338 | What are you going to make of your son Charley? |
15338 | What are you hunting, bub? |
15338 | What are you looking for now, then? |
15338 | What are you making such a noise for? |
15338 | What are you raising? |
15338 | What are you saying? |
15338 | What are you? |
15338 | What are your reasons for wanting a divorce, madam? |
15338 | What brought you here, my man? |
15338 | What can he do? |
15338 | What coal is it? 15338 What code is that?" |
15338 | What color is your body? |
15338 | What d''ye mean by live stock? 15338 What d''yo''-all want?" |
15338 | What dictionary is the best? |
15338 | What did he say? |
15338 | What did he talk about? |
15338 | What did he tell you, Mose? |
15338 | What did she say? |
15338 | What did you learn at the school? |
15338 | What did you realize on it? |
15338 | What do you call this stuff? |
15338 | What do you do that for? |
15338 | What do you have reference to? |
15338 | What do you mean by making a silly blunder like that? |
15338 | What do you mean by treblin''your price on me? 15338 What do you mean,"said Bill,"by bringing me in cold cakes?" |
15338 | What do you mean? |
15338 | What do you mean? |
15338 | What do you pay for them? |
15338 | What do you sell them for? |
15338 | What do you think he did? |
15338 | What do you think is the matter with you this morning? |
15338 | What do you think is the most difficult thing for a beginner to learn about golf? |
15338 | What do you think of my library? |
15338 | What do you think of the animals? |
15338 | What do you think of the candidates? |
15338 | What do you think of this disarmament idea? |
15338 | What do you wish? |
15338 | What do you wish? |
15338 | What does autosuggestion mean? |
15338 | What does he want to talk for when all he has to do is yell a while to get everything in the house that''s worth having? |
15338 | What does he want? |
15338 | What for, my boy? |
15338 | What for? |
15338 | What for? |
15338 | What good,asked the angry would- be passenger,"are the figures set down in these railway time- tables?" |
15338 | What has happened now? |
15338 | What has mamma''s darling been doing this morning? |
15338 | What has that got to do with being a detective? |
15338 | What has that got to do with it? 15338 What has that got to do with it?" |
15338 | What if we loses this blinkin''war after all, Bill? |
15338 | What in the world are you doing with them? |
15338 | What in the world are you talking about, my dear? |
15338 | What is a Gorgonzola cheese? |
15338 | What is a complete sentence? |
15338 | What is a gardener? |
15338 | What is considered a good score on these links? |
15338 | What is equity? |
15338 | What is it, Bridget? |
15338 | What is it, Edgar? |
15338 | What is it? |
15338 | What is it? |
15338 | What is new? |
15338 | What is poetry of motion? |
15338 | What is that? |
15338 | What is that? |
15338 | What is the fare to Kokomo? |
15338 | What is the littlest one named? |
15338 | What is the matter, little girl,he kindly asked;"are you hurt?" |
15338 | What is the plural of man, Willie? |
15338 | What is the square of 96? |
15338 | What is this leathery stuff? |
15338 | What is this wonderful machine? |
15338 | What is worrying you now? |
15338 | What is your last name then? |
15338 | What is your last name? |
15338 | What is your name? |
15338 | What is your name? |
15338 | What is your opinion of relativity? |
15338 | What kind of a boy does youse want? |
15338 | What kind of a factory? |
15338 | What kind of a license? |
15338 | What kind of a plant is the Virginia creeper? |
15338 | What kind of a time is he having on his motor- trip? |
15338 | What kind of coal do you wish, mum? |
15338 | What makes you think so, Samanthy? |
15338 | What makes you think that? |
15338 | What might you be trying to do? |
15338 | What name are you calling? |
15338 | What names do you wish? |
15338 | What occupation have you here in Baltimore? |
15338 | What of it? |
15338 | What of that? |
15338 | What position is that, my dear? |
15338 | What prompts you to make such a ridiculous request? |
15338 | What puzzles you? |
15338 | What reward? |
15338 | What seems silly? |
15338 | What seems to be the matter, Jones? |
15338 | What shall we say of the former Senator? |
15338 | What should one do if cats have fits? |
15338 | What sort of a chap is Bill to camp out with? |
15338 | What streets have you? |
15338 | What wages do they give you here? |
15338 | What was her name? |
15338 | What was it? |
15338 | What was the epitaph? |
15338 | What will it cost? |
15338 | What woman first invented mitts? |
15338 | What would be a good way to raise revenue and still benefit the people? |
15338 | What would my husband say? |
15338 | What would you say,began the voluble prophet,"if I were to tell you that in a very short space of time all the rivers will dry up?" |
15338 | What you- all doin''? |
15338 | What''s Blinks going to do with his new noiseless typewriter? |
15338 | What''s a''hoosit,''Katje? |
15338 | What''s an optimist? |
15338 | What''s become of your chauffeur? |
15338 | What''s civics? |
15338 | What''s coming off out in front there? |
15338 | What''s it about? |
15338 | What''s that piece of cord tied around your finger for? |
15338 | What''s that? |
15338 | What''s the difference between valor and discretion? |
15338 | What''s the difference,she asked the solemn man at the end of the table,"between a turkey dinner and a mess of stewed prunes?" |
15338 | What''s the difference? |
15338 | What''s the idea? |
15338 | What''s the matter, do n''t you like nuts? |
15338 | What''s the matter, old man? 15338 What''s the matter?" |
15338 | What''s the matter? |
15338 | What''s the matter? |
15338 | What''s the occasion for the parade, Tom? |
15338 | What''s the score, Jim? |
15338 | What''s the trouble? |
15338 | What''s yer bill o''fare? |
15338 | What''s your time? |
15338 | What''s yours? |
15338 | What,she asked,"do you think is the most wonderful thing man ever made?" |
15338 | What? |
15338 | What? |
15338 | Whatever put such an idea into your mind? |
15338 | When does this occur? |
15338 | When will we have peace, papa? |
15338 | When you see a bumblebee, ai n''t you''fraid? |
15338 | When you sold me this house, did n''t you say that in three months I would n''t part with it for$ 10,000? |
15338 | When''s the bloomin''war goin''to end? |
15338 | Where are you going? |
15338 | Where are you speaking from? |
15338 | Where are you working now? |
15338 | Where did you get that, Scotty? |
15338 | Where do you live in the city-- close in? |
15338 | Where do you work? |
15338 | Where is Tough Jim? |
15338 | Where is he? 15338 Where is that book I used to see?" |
15338 | Where is that clock I gave you? |
15338 | Where is the general freight agent? |
15338 | Where is the general manager? |
15338 | Where is the head of the legal department? |
15338 | Where is the prisoner? |
15338 | Where is your lawyer this time? |
15338 | Where shall I put this apple peel? |
15338 | Where''s Asia? |
15338 | Where''s that hotel that used to advertise,''All the Comforts of Home for One Dollar''? |
15338 | Where''s the boy? |
15338 | Which do you prefer? |
15338 | Which side is it best to lie on, Doc? |
15338 | Who are you? |
15338 | Who are you? |
15338 | Who can furnish a clear definition of a politician? |
15338 | Who done it? 15338 Who ferried souls across the Styx?" |
15338 | Who goes there? |
15338 | Who goes there? |
15338 | Who goes there? |
15338 | Who goes there? |
15338 | Who is your family doctor? |
15338 | Who led the army in that recent expedition? |
15338 | Who said that? |
15338 | Who said''To labor is to pray?'' |
15338 | Who told you that? |
15338 | Who was it, Willie? |
15338 | Who was that? |
15338 | Who was the patron saint of Ireland? |
15338 | Who were they from? |
15338 | Who won the war? |
15338 | Who''s running the blame railroad, anyway? |
15338 | Who,asked the officiating clergyman, formally but impressively,"gives this bride away?" |
15338 | Whose? |
15338 | Why are school- teachers like Ford cars? |
15338 | Why are you dressed like that? |
15338 | Why are you driving that second nail? |
15338 | Why are you fighting so? |
15338 | Why are you so pensive? |
15338 | Why did n''t you get out of the way? |
15338 | Why did n''t you stop when I signaled you? |
15338 | Why did you kick John? |
15338 | Why did you leave their communion, Mr. Dickson, if I may be permitted to ask? |
15338 | Why did you make off with the pocketbook you saw this lady drop in the street? |
15338 | Why did you think that? |
15338 | Why did your wife leave you? |
15338 | Why do n''t you advertise a thousand reward and no questions asked? |
15338 | Why do n''t you get out and hustle? 15338 Why do n''t you get rid of that mule?" |
15338 | Why do n''t you move into more comfortable quarters, old man? |
15338 | Why do n''t you pay your bills? |
15338 | Why do you always look in the glass? |
15338 | Why do you bring a check with the cocktails? |
15338 | Why do you do that? |
15338 | Why do you feed every tramp who comes along? 15338 Why do you have an apple as your trade- mark?" |
15338 | Why do you look so sorrowful, Dennis? |
15338 | Why father, that''s just what you put in, was n''t it? |
15338 | Why have I never married? |
15338 | Why have words roots, pa? |
15338 | Why is dat, boss? |
15338 | Why is it you never get to the office on time in the morning? |
15338 | Why is it, Bob,asked George of a very stout friend,"that you fat fellows are always good natured?" |
15338 | Why is it, Sam, that one never hears of a darky committing suicide? |
15338 | Why is it, Sam,he said, addressing the waiter,"that poor men usually give larger tips than rich men?" |
15338 | Why is that? |
15338 | Why not? 15338 Why not?" |
15338 | Why not? |
15338 | Why not? |
15338 | Why not? |
15338 | Why on earth does n''t somebody write a book on how to get a seat after you do get in? |
15338 | Why should n''t you? |
15338 | Why so? |
15338 | Why worry? |
15338 | Why''s that? |
15338 | Why, Auntie,exclaimed the officer,"why do n''t you want me to take it down?" |
15338 | Why, Doc? 15338 Why, Henry,"asked the statesman,"why are you eating out here alone?" |
15338 | Why, Johnny,exclaimed the shocked teacher,"do you mean to say that you do n''t want to go to heaven?" |
15338 | Why, William,replied his teacher,"what would it take to make you happy?" |
15338 | Why, dad,said he, in an injured tone,"do n''t you know that everything is marked down after the holidays?" |
15338 | Why, er- er- er,stammered Mr. Newlywed,"I do n''t think you pounded it enough, did you?" |
15338 | Why, grandma? |
15338 | Why, how could that be? |
15338 | Why, look here,said the merchant who was in need of a boy,"are n''t you the same boy who was in here a week ago?" |
15338 | Why, my little girl? |
15338 | Why, so it is, father,--whose wife shall I take? |
15338 | Why, what class? |
15338 | Why, what''s this? |
15338 | Why, who invited you here? |
15338 | Why, you''re perfectly capable of doing your own wishing, are n''t you? |
15338 | Why,asked the good man, with an anxious look,"is she dead?" |
15338 | Why,said the witness, with a beaming smile,"are these men interested in the case, too?" |
15338 | Why? 15338 Why? |
15338 | Why? |
15338 | Why? |
15338 | Why? |
15338 | Why? |
15338 | Why? |
15338 | Will I be likely to see him again? |
15338 | Will that be all? |
15338 | Will the nations always fight to have peace, papa? |
15338 | Will we make it up before we reach New York? |
15338 | Will ye, now? |
15338 | Will you be back? |
15338 | Will you be my wife? |
15338 | Will you be my wife? |
15338 | Will you have me for your wife? |
15338 | Will you mend it? |
15338 | Will you,fiercely demanded the general,"show the white feather in a season when feathers are not worn?" |
15338 | William,asked the teacher of a rosy- faced lad,"can you tell me who George Washington was?" |
15338 | Willie,said the teacher sternly,"what did I whip you for yesterday?" |
15338 | Witnesses? |
15338 | Women,she cried,"will you give way to mannish fears?" |
15338 | Wot''s up? |
15338 | Wotcher wages? |
15338 | Would you like me to ask your mother first? |
15338 | Would you like some views of the hotel to send to your friends? |
15338 | Would you shoot on the Germans if they invaded Switzerland? |
15338 | Would your Majesty deign to tell me the value of the cross? |
15338 | Ye think a fine lot of Shakespeare? |
15338 | Yes, Sue? 15338 Yes, mother,"said the boy obediently;"and shall I take that vase you won at Mrs. Jones''whist party, and give it back to her?" |
15338 | Yes,replied the friend;"the kind we feed to our horses?" |
15338 | Yes,replied the sympathetic friend,"but what has that to do with the wobegone expression on your face?" |
15338 | Yes,said the Judge;"and what will happen if you do not tell the truth?" |
15338 | Yes; but where were you born? |
15338 | Yes; but why do you ask? |
15338 | Yes? |
15338 | Yes? |
15338 | Yess? 15338 You are an actor?" |
15338 | You are one of those''read''men, ai n''t you Henry? |
15338 | You are sure he ran? |
15338 | You been to school, ai n''t you? |
15338 | You did n''t do it on your employer''s time, did you? |
15338 | You do n''t find nothing wrong with me, doctor? |
15338 | You do n''t make anything at that? |
15338 | You do n''t say? |
15338 | You had a job as janitor once, did n''t you? |
15338 | You mean you sell me a ticket to get to a certain place by a certain time and then you give me no assurance I''ll be there at that time? |
15338 | You mind if I leave baby here? |
15338 | You must have heard the bell, boys; why did you not come? |
15338 | You say Henry ran? |
15338 | You say this doctor has a large practice? |
15338 | You say you have good references? |
15338 | You shall have it,said Buddha, and turning to the Protestant,"What do you wish?" |
15338 | You there? |
15338 | You vant to know vot I make in der vactory? |
15338 | You would like to know what meal it was? |
15338 | You wrote this report of last night''s banquet, did you? |
15338 | You''re not going to sell him, are you, daddy? |
15338 | Your Honor,he asked,"will you charge the jury?" |
15338 | Your Honor,he said,"I beg your pardon; but do you follow me?" |
15338 | _ Going Up_SMITH--"Do you realize that we are beholding the completion of a great cycle in history?" |
15338 | ''18( otherwise)--"Think about it? |
15338 | ''Arrison?" |
15338 | ''For the third and last time, as a gentlemaun,''I sez,''will ye gie me thot watch?'' |
15338 | ''How would you define power of initiative?" |
15338 | ''Now, Sam, what have you to say?'' |
15338 | ''Ow do I know? |
15338 | ''Well, boss,''he finally said,''ai n''t dat the very thing we''re about to try?''" |
15338 | ''What do you think of that?'' |
15338 | ''Wo n''t you please give me this colt, then, and pray for one for yourself?''" |
15338 | ''Wull ye gie me it?'' |
15338 | --_E.H._"Do you think there''s a chance of prohibition''s being repealed, after all?" |
15338 | 1921--"Did you see that movie called''Oliver Twist''?" |
15338 | A colored woman one day visited the court- house in a Tennessee town and said to the judge:"Is you- all the reperbate judge?" |
15338 | A comrade communicated the sad news to another gallant Scot, who asked, anxiously:"Where''s his head? |
15338 | A fire to call the engines out? |
15338 | A homebrew Bacchus''raisin dance? |
15338 | A little boy''s mother in the congregation whispered to her son,"Is n''t it wonderful? |
15338 | A salesman stopping in one of the towns asked the old darky bus driver about it:"Say, uncle, why have they got the depot way down here?" |
15338 | A second car approached and stopped, whereon the tourist reached for his pocketbook and asked in an embarrassed manner,"How much?" |
15338 | A skidding auto turned about? |
15338 | A stranger, having admired the animal, asked the farmer:"What will you take for your cow?" |
15338 | A street car left the track perhaps? |
15338 | A suburban housewife relates overhearing this conversation between her Cape girl and the one next door:"How are you, Katje?" |
15338 | A.--"Does your husband consider you a necessity or a luxury?" |
15338 | ACCIDENTS Hearing a crash of glassware one morning, Mrs. Blank called to her maid in the adjoining room,"Norah, what on earth are you doing?" |
15338 | ACTORS AND ACTRESSES FIRST ACTRESS( behind the scenes)--"Did you hear the way the public wept during my death scene?" |
15338 | AD WRITER--"When do you want me to prepare that copy for the sale of antiques you have been planning?" |
15338 | AFFABLE WAITER--"How did you find that steak, sir?" |
15338 | AGATHA-"Is your former cook happy since she inherited a fortune?" |
15338 | AGE HE--"How old are you?" |
15338 | AGRICULTURE"Crop failures?" |
15338 | ALIBI TEACHER--"What is an alibi?" |
15338 | ALICE--"Did that make you want to marry her?" |
15338 | ALICE--"You''d take me out with you, if you had, would n''t you?" |
15338 | ALIMONY_ Or Go to Jail_"Is there any way a man can avoid paying alimony?" |
15338 | ALPHABET MOTHER( who is teaching her child the alphabet)--"Now, dearie, what comes after''g''?" |
15338 | ANTICIPATION"Mr. Blinks,"said she,"do you think that anticipation is greater than realization?" |
15338 | APPLICANT-"Do you happen to have a daughter, sir?" |
15338 | ASKER--"Could you lend me a V?" |
15338 | ASKER--"Have you a friend that would lend me a V?" |
15338 | ASSISTANT--"Are there any others you wish for?" |
15338 | ASSISTANT--"What are you going to do?" |
15338 | AUNT--"You''ll be late for the party, wo n''t you, dear?" |
15338 | AUTOMOBILE TOURISTS"Why do you turn out for every road hog that comes along?" |
15338 | AUTOMOBILES AND AUTOMOBILING"Has this car got a speedometer?" |
15338 | AVIATION TOMMY( to Aviator)--"What is the most deadly poison known?" |
15338 | AVIATOR--"And that is--?" |
15338 | Abner, ai n''t that nice?" |
15338 | Accordingly, the teacher started off with the question:"Now in this present terrible war, who is our principal ally?" |
15338 | After another block there was the same performance:"''Scuse me, boss, but whar d''you say you wanter go?" |
15338 | After he had climbed in, the cabby leaned over and asked,"What street do you want?" |
15338 | After tea Mrs. Timson asked:"Did you remember about the water, Thurza?" |
15338 | After the first hole the Englishman asked:"How many did you take?" |
15338 | After the kiss the little girl drew back sharply, sniffed and said:"''Why, mamma, you''ve been using father''s perfume, have n''t you?''" |
15338 | After the man had driven on the mother asked:"Why did n''t you take the nuts when he told you to?" |
15338 | After walking some distance the boy noticed his father was very silent evidently pondering over something, so he said,"Father, how much did you get?" |
15338 | Ai n''t they got any health laws in that town?" |
15338 | Alarm- clock:----? |
15338 | Alcott?" |
15338 | Along comes a flivver and the driver uncranks himself, gets out and stretches, and asks:"How far is it to Kansas City?" |
15338 | Already? |
15338 | Among other questions, the specialist asked,"Do you ever hear voices without being able to tell who is speaking, or where the sound comes from?" |
15338 | An English clergyman turned to a Scotchman and asked him:"What would you be were you not a Scot?" |
15338 | An Irishman who was rather too fond of strong drink was asked by the parish priest:"My son, how do you expect to get into Heaven?" |
15338 | And addressing again the soldier, he asked:"Is this generally the view held in the Swiss Army in regard to a possible German invasion? |
15338 | And came another wire in mid- afternoon:"How much snow there now?" |
15338 | And did n''t I tell you then that I wanted an older boy?" |
15338 | And discretion?" |
15338 | And how much does he put away every Saturday night, my dear?" |
15338 | And if we save or lose an hour or two what''s the odds? |
15338 | And what is his business?" |
15338 | And when do you expect to strike it, my good man?" |
15338 | And where would you like your spirit to sit? |
15338 | And who can pay a gardener? |
15338 | And you, sir?" |
15338 | Andrew ran up to his mother in great excitement and said:"Mamma, is that one a collector?" |
15338 | Answering the question,"When is a woman old?" |
15338 | Are all the Swiss soldiers so Germanophil?" |
15338 | Are n''t you quick at anything?" |
15338 | Are n''t you willing to trust your doctor, Rufus?" |
15338 | Are there various kinds?" |
15338 | Are things going badly?" |
15338 | Are you a teetotaler?" |
15338 | Are you able to sit up?" |
15338 | Are you sure he said in January?" |
15338 | Are you the president or the vice- president of the society?" |
15338 | Are you trying to climb where the chosen are, Where the feet of men are few? |
15338 | As a friend, and man to man, who do you think stands the best chance of getting the property when I am gone?" |
15338 | As soon as I took yere note ye''d draw the twenty poonds, would ye no?" |
15338 | At last he voiced his trouble:"But were they all Disciples? |
15338 | At the close of her discourse, she put this question to the class:"What high office in a nation could such a wonderful man fill?" |
15338 | At the wedding reception the young man remarked:"Was n''t it annoying the way that baby cried during the whole ceremony?" |
15338 | BAGGAGE TOMMY( just off train, with considerable luggage)--"Cabby, how much is it for me to Latchford?" |
15338 | BAILIE--"An''what will ye be daein on Saturday?" |
15338 | BALDNESS BALD HEADED GUEST--"Well, sonny, what is it that amuses you?" |
15338 | BAPTISM"You do n''t know me, do you, Bobby?" |
15338 | BEAUTY, PERSONAL"Is she very pretty?" |
15338 | BELLEVILLE--"Is Glenshaw getting ready for the fishing season?" |
15338 | BESSIE--"Then why did n''t he say walk?" |
15338 | BILLS COLLECTOR--"Did you look at that little bill I left yesterday, sir?" |
15338 | BLONDINE--"Isn''t Bennie Beanbrough the thick one?" |
15338 | BLUCK--"Why do vessels leaving New York make the greatest speed the first three miles?" |
15338 | BLUFFING VISITOR( at private hospital)--"Can I see Lieutenant Barker, please?" |
15338 | BOXCAR HARRY--"Beg pardon, ma''am, but do you happen to have some pie or cake that you could spare an unfortunate wanderer?" |
15338 | BREATHLESS VISITOR--"Doctor, can you help me? |
15338 | BRIGHT CHILD--"And when are they going to burn Mr. Lloyd George, daddy?" |
15338 | BROOKLYN"Where can I find a map of Brooklyn, old man?" |
15338 | BROWN( angrily)--"Why do n''t you see my wife about it and not come to me?" |
15338 | BULL--"How do I know? |
15338 | Be this the place?" |
15338 | Born? |
15338 | Brown?" |
15338 | Brown?" |
15338 | Business? |
15338 | But how am de wireless telegraph?" |
15338 | But how can I give it to him when he''s dead?" |
15338 | But how did you know where I''m from?" |
15338 | But if I had one I''d want to cash it when I wanted to, would n''t I? |
15338 | But is he required to chase it, too?" |
15338 | But suppose we are bad, then what will become of us?" |
15338 | But tell me, do you libr''yites Believe in fairies too? |
15338 | But what can you expect? |
15338 | But where are the guests''rooms?" |
15338 | But why does n''t she?" |
15338 | By the way, where is he going?" |
15338 | CALLER--"Is your mother at home, Elsie?" |
15338 | CANDIDATES TED--"So you think I''m wasting my time making love to that rich girl?" |
15338 | CANDOR"How is your wife this morning, Uncle Henry?" |
15338 | CANVASSER--"May I have a few minutes of your time?" |
15338 | CAPITAL AND LABOR WILLIE--"Paw, what is the difference between capital and labor?" |
15338 | CAPTAIN( speaking to raw recruit trying to drill)--"What was your occupation before entering the army?" |
15338 | CARD INDEX MINING- STOCK PROMOTER--"Where can I hide? |
15338 | CHEMIST--"Are they both for the same person, or shall I wrap them up separately?" |
15338 | CHICKEN STEALING An old negro was charged with chicken- stealing, and the judge said:"Where''s your lawyer, uncle?" |
15338 | CHILD LABOR SOUTHERNER--"Why are you Northerners always harping on the children employed in Southern factories?" |
15338 | CHILDREN JOHNNY--"What makes the new baby at your house cry so much, Tommy?" |
15338 | CHRISTMAS GIFTS"Is n''t this too absurd?" |
15338 | CHURCH ATTENDANCE"What''s the idea of free pews?" |
15338 | CHURCH SCOTT--"What is your notion of an ideal church?" |
15338 | CLASSIFIED AD MANAGER--"Do you want this placed under Business Opportunities or Matrimony?" |
15338 | CLEANLINESS"Ma, do I have to wash my face?" |
15338 | CLERK--"Why, sir?" |
15338 | CLIENT--"And how much will the real thing cost, with lots of publicity and everything?" |
15338 | COHEN, THE DEBTOR--"Cash, you say? |
15338 | COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES SOPH.--"How does it happen you came to Harvard? |
15338 | COMEDIAN--"My memory is n''t very accurate, but is n''t there a book called''Alice Threw the Looking- glass''?" |
15338 | COMMANDER--"What''s his character apart from this leave- breaking?" |
15338 | COMMITTEE BOBBIE--"What is a committee, pa?" |
15338 | CONDUCTOR--"Do you mind if I put your bag out of the way, sir? |
15338 | CONGRESS"How is the law made?" |
15338 | CONSCIENCE Wilson and Wilton were discussing the moralities when the first put this question:"Well, what is conscience, anyhow?" |
15338 | CONSOLATION FIRST WALL STREET BROKER--"Anything to do today?" |
15338 | CONVIVIAL GENT--"Wha''she call- calling me; Billy or William?" |
15338 | CORRESPONDENCE SCHOOLS_ The Stamp of Learning_"Pa, what''s a postgraduate?" |
15338 | COURTESY"How do you like your new music- master?" |
15338 | COW--"Can you beat it? |
15338 | CRABSHAW--"Why do you wish to leave school and go to work when you''re so young?" |
15338 | CREDIT FIRST CREDIT MAN--"How about Jones of Pigville Center?" |
15338 | CUBIST TEACHER--"Can anyone give an impressionistic definition of New York?" |
15338 | CURES_ A Testimonial_ DOCTOR--"Did that cure for deafness really help your brother?" |
15338 | CURRENT EVENTS MRS. BARR--"Henry, what are current events?" |
15338 | Ca n''t the leading man act as if he were in love with the star?" |
15338 | Ca n''t you see one is black and the other brown?" |
15338 | Can I book your order?" |
15338 | Can I have his house?" |
15338 | Can any one give me another example?" |
15338 | Can you arrange it for him?" |
15338 | Can you fix it?" |
15338 | Can you promise that?" |
15338 | Clean saving of a thousand, eh? |
15338 | Corn bread, did yo''say?" |
15338 | Crawley- Smith?" |
15338 | DAD--"Postscript? |
15338 | DAYLIGHT SAVING"Is your husband in favor of daylight saving?" |
15338 | DEAF- AND- DUMB BEGGAR--"Do you think it looks like rain, Bill?" |
15338 | DEMAGOG"Father,"said the small boy,"what is a demagog?" |
15338 | DENTIST( inserting rubber gag, towel, and sponge)--"How''s your family?" |
15338 | DEPARTING GUEST--"Enjoyed ourselves? |
15338 | DETECTIVES HOKUS--"How does Sleuthpup rank as a detective?" |
15338 | DIAGNOSIS FRIEND--"What is the first thing you do when a man presents himself to you for consultation?" |
15338 | DIBBS--"How do you make that out?" |
15338 | DICKEY--"Yes; why?" |
15338 | DIPLOMACY"Father,"said the small boy,"what is an overt act?" |
15338 | DISCRETION WILLIE--"Pa, what is discretion?" |
15338 | DOCTORS"What is your greatest wish, Doctor, now that you have successfully passed for your degree?" |
15338 | DOMESTIC FINANCE LITTLE TOMMY--"What does''close quarters''mean, Ma?" |
15338 | DOMESTIC RELATIONS HUSBAND( newly married)--"Don''t you think, love, if I were to smoke, it would spoil the curtains?" |
15338 | DORA-"How did you vote?" |
15338 | DREAMS"Mother, was n''t that a funny dream I had last night?" |
15338 | DRUGGIST--"Something else, miss?" |
15338 | Dentist, speaking to patient about to have a tooth extracted--"Have you heard the latest song hit?" |
15338 | Detroit a reliable car?" |
15338 | Dickson?" |
15338 | Did he enjoy it?" |
15338 | Did n''t I promise you a nickel a week to keep him awake?" |
15338 | Did n''t you feel shaky?" |
15338 | Did n''t you hear me say we were out against four to one?" |
15338 | Did n''t you stop and spell your names, as I told you?" |
15338 | Did you ever try gin and ginger ale?" |
15338 | Did you ever try to sell any?" |
15338 | Did you have any luck?" |
15338 | Did you put anything like that in this prescription?" |
15338 | Did you say sun was or was not shining?" |
15338 | Dis razor hurt you, sah?" |
15338 | Do n''t forget to tell her I called, will you?" |
15338 | Do n''t it trouble you?" |
15338 | Do n''t the Bible say plain and flat:''What God hath j''ined togither, let not man put asunder''?" |
15338 | Do n''t they teach you the common abbreviations in school?" |
15338 | Do n''t you know his name?" |
15338 | Do n''t you know that drink is mankind''s worst enemy?" |
15338 | Do n''t you like the beautiful country?" |
15338 | Do n''t you see dar''s nowhere else to put you?" |
15338 | Do they?" |
15338 | Do you believe in them?" |
15338 | Do you ever tell lies?" |
15338 | Do you expect company?" |
15338 | Do you hear dot?" |
15338 | Do you keep them all clean?" |
15338 | Do you know that when Woodrow Wilson was your age he was head of the school?" |
15338 | Do you know why a sane man will whimper and cry And weep o''er a ribbon or glove? |
15338 | Do you know? |
15338 | Do you long for"a job that is worth one''s while?" |
15338 | Do you mean to say your parents did not come from Ireland?" |
15338 | Do you think I''m a cold- storage plant?" |
15338 | Do you think she is reliable?" |
15338 | Do you think that you can manage it?" |
15338 | Do you want a colt so very badly?'' |
15338 | Do you want the earth with a little red fence around it for a cent?" |
15338 | Do you want to win? |
15338 | Does a sweetheart, or a wife, Love you, little star of"Life?" |
15338 | Does he dig in a ditch, or blaze a trail, Where the dreams of men may run? |
15338 | Does that young man never go to church, then?" |
15338 | Drink? |
15338 | During the conversation that took place, the politician asked,"And I may count upon your support, may I not?" |
15338 | ED--"Have you forgotten you owe me five dollars?" |
15338 | EDITH--"Dick, dear, your office is in State street, is n''t it?" |
15338 | EDITH--"How does Fred make love?" |
15338 | EDITORS"An editor is a man who puts things in the paper, is n''t he?" |
15338 | EMPLOYER( coming upon colored porter looking through the dictionary)--"What are you doing, Sam; looking up some more big words for another speech?" |
15338 | EMPLOYER--"Too strict, is she?" |
15338 | ENTHUSIAST--"Don''t the spectators tire you with the questions they ask?" |
15338 | ENTHUSIASTIC AVIATOR( after long explanation of principle and workings of his biplane)--"Now, you understand it, do n''t you?" |
15338 | EXCITABLE PARTY( at telephone)--"Hello? |
15338 | EXE--"Why not plead that you have a previous engagement?" |
15338 | EXPERIENCE"Did you ever realize anything on that investment?" |
15338 | EXTRAVAGANCE"What made you a multi- millionaire?" |
15338 | Early in the morning one winter''s day, came a wire from a friend in Chicago:"How''s the weather today out there?" |
15338 | Easy, is n''t it? |
15338 | FAILURES BROWN--"Back to town again? |
15338 | FAIR CUSTOMER( to salesman displaying modern bathing suit)--"And you''re sure this bathing suit wo n''t shrink?" |
15338 | FANNING--"What''s become of that rubber stamp,''Dictated, but not read,''that you used to use on your letters?" |
15338 | FASHION"Is n''t your wife dogmatic?" |
15338 | FATHER--"Who is he this time?" |
15338 | FINANCE"Dad,"said little Reginald,"what is a bucket- shop?" |
15338 | FIRST ARTIST--"The umbrella you lent me? |
15338 | FIRST COMMUTER--"Do you have to take such an early train as this?" |
15338 | FIRST LABORING MAN--"Wot''s a minimum wage, Albert?" |
15338 | FIRST LADY--"Did you vote with all those vile people?" |
15338 | FIRST LITTLE GIRL--"What''s your last name, Annie?" |
15338 | FIRST MERCHANT( as reported in the New York"Trade Record")--"How''s business?" |
15338 | FIRST OFFICER--"Did you get that fellow''s number?" |
15338 | FIRST SOUTHERNER--"Were you in New York long enough to feel at home?" |
15338 | FIRST TRAVELER( cheerily)--"Fine day, is n''t it?" |
15338 | FIRST WAR- CORRESPONDENT--"Did your dispatch get past the censor?" |
15338 | FISH The teacher asked,"Who can tell me what an oyster is?" |
15338 | FISHING UNLUCKY FISHERMAN--"Boy, will you sell that big string of fish you are carrying?" |
15338 | FOOD CONSERVATION"Well, Ezri, how''d jer make out with yer boarders this year?" |
15338 | FOOD DINER--"See here, where are those oysters I ordered on the half shell?" |
15338 | FOOLS"Did you really call this gentleman an old fool last night?" |
15338 | FORDS"So you bought one of those automobiles they tell so many funny stories about?" |
15338 | FOREIGNERS TEACHER--"Who was the first man?" |
15338 | FORESIGHT"Are you going to pay any attention to these epithets that are being hurled at you?" |
15338 | FORTUNE- TELLER--"You wish to know about your future husband?" |
15338 | FRANK--"When you proposed to her I suppose she said:''This is so sudden?''" |
15338 | FREE VERSE YOUNG THING--"I wonder why they call it free verse?" |
15338 | FRENCH LANGUAGE"Does your son who is abroad with the troops understand French?" |
15338 | FRIEND--"After you got through, how did you find out what it was?" |
15338 | FRIEND--"But, I say, that was written about autumn, was n''t it?" |
15338 | FRIEND--"To what do you attribute your rapid rise in your profession?" |
15338 | FRIEND--"What do you learn from that?" |
15338 | FROSH--"Yes, and say, would n''t that make a peach of a book?" |
15338 | Father Duffy is credited by the New York World with this after- dinner story:"An old sexton asked me,''Father, were n''t the Apostles Jews?'' |
15338 | Favorite living master? |
15338 | Finally one day he called and said:"How iss my wife?" |
15338 | Finally, she turned to a young man who was showing her through, and asked:"What is that big thing over there?" |
15338 | Five hundred dollars for that antique? |
15338 | Fixing the man with his eye, the admiral asked:"Did you get that medal for eating, my man?" |
15338 | Fogarty?" |
15338 | GARAGES"What do they sell in that last garage besides gasoline, father?" |
15338 | GARDENING"I suppose you are going to raise potatoes in your garden?" |
15338 | GAS DISSATISFIED HOUSEHOLDER--"Do you mean to say that this meter measures the amount of gas we burn?" |
15338 | GENIUS WILLIE--"Paw, what is the difference between genius and talent?" |
15338 | GILLIS--"Who are they?" |
15338 | GIRL( to druggist)--"Could you fix me a dose of castor oil so as the oil wo n''t taste?" |
15338 | GIRL--"Well, your chair is n''t nailed to the floor, is it?" |
15338 | GOSSIP"They say--""Who say?" |
15338 | GRAMERCY--"Why do n''t you have your old car repainted?" |
15338 | GREENE--"And did he?" |
15338 | GRIGGS( obliged to face him)--"Just what were you saying?" |
15338 | GUEST--"Who is the next speaker?" |
15338 | George Washington Jones, colored, was trying to enlist in Uncle Sam''s army, and the following conversation ensued with the recruiting officer:"Name?" |
15338 | Get her a new dress?" |
15338 | Give it up? |
15338 | Going up to Moses, he demanded harshly,"Moses, do you know the Ten Commandments?" |
15338 | Golden star and star of blue-- With one soul God gave to you-- Do you know how proud we are Of the golden service star? |
15338 | Grievous the pain; but, in the day When all the cost is counted o''er, Would it be best that ye should say:"We lost no loved ones in the war?" |
15338 | HAPPY--"How''s that?" |
15338 | HE( cautiously)--"Would you say''Yes''if I asked you to marry me?" |
15338 | HE--"Hadn''t you better practise while your father is supplying the raw materials?" |
15338 | HE--"Not quite a lady, is she?" |
15338 | HENLEY--"How are you getting on with your writing for the magazines?" |
15338 | HERBERT--"Why do you say that?" |
15338 | HEREDITY"What is heredity?" |
15338 | HEWITT--"Don''t you think I stand a good chance of making a fortune out of that mine?" |
15338 | HIX--"For a vacation, I suppose?" |
15338 | HOME BREW TIPS--"Why not try a home- brew receipt?" |
15338 | HOSTESS( at party)--"Does your mother allow you to have two pieces of pie when you are at home, Willie?" |
15338 | HOWELL--"What sort of a fellow is he?" |
15338 | HURRY--"Has he crashed?" |
15338 | HUSBAND--"Why do n''t you give it to the laundress?" |
15338 | HUSBAND--"Will it be ready then?" |
15338 | Hair? |
15338 | Has not your mother said something to you about this habit of his?" |
15338 | Has the strike been settled?" |
15338 | Have you any witnesses to stand for you?" |
15338 | Have you ever been fired? |
15338 | Have you got the engineer''s plans for the new bridge?" |
15338 | Have you read it?" |
15338 | Having tasted it, he exclaimed:"Which did you put in first, the whisky or the water?" |
15338 | He asked, pointing to the lettering:"That''s my name, I suppose?" |
15338 | He came back home, and his brother meeting him at the depot said:"Vell, Abie, did you find out vat ditto is?" |
15338 | He knew if he had the million you''d be easy,"FOUNTAIN PENS"Why do they call''em fountain pens? |
15338 | He must read the day''s record through, Then would n''t one sigh, And would n''t he try A great deal less talking to do? |
15338 | He said,''Littul man, how do you feel?'' |
15338 | He turned excitedly to his steward:"Look here, where''s the ruin, man?" |
15338 | He went out and met a friend, and the friend said:"Well, how is your wife?" |
15338 | Healthy? |
15338 | Hearst?" |
15338 | His brother said:"I buy ditto?" |
15338 | His mother, noticing a troubled look on his face as he looked about, said:"What''s the matter, dear? |
15338 | His question, innocent enough in appearance, dear knows, was this:"''Would you mind making a noise like a frog, uncle?''" |
15338 | His strong- minded fiancà © e looked sternly at him for a moment and replied,"Good enough for me? |
15338 | How can you say that no one knows it?" |
15338 | How did he do it?" |
15338 | How did it happen?" |
15338 | How did this policeman get here?" |
15338 | How did you know it was a Ford?" |
15338 | How do I know, for example, that you''re honest?" |
15338 | How do you account for it?" |
15338 | How do you know that it is any good?" |
15338 | How do you like my hat?" |
15338 | How do you like your editor? |
15338 | How does it feel? |
15338 | How does that old saying go:''Of two evils always choose--?" |
15338 | How far are they from here?" |
15338 | How far is it to Lexington?" |
15338 | How high did you say? |
15338 | How in the world did you happen to call him that?" |
15338 | How long must I wait for the half- portion of duck I ordered?" |
15338 | How many hods of mortar have yuh carried up that ladder today?" |
15338 | How many shares do you want?" |
15338 | How many?" |
15338 | How much did it bring you in? |
15338 | How much water at this rate have you hauled in all?" |
15338 | How much will such a course cost, and how long will it take?" |
15338 | How shall I classify it?" |
15338 | How shall I get rid of my present husband?" |
15338 | How so?''" |
15338 | How was that?" |
15338 | How was that?" |
15338 | How''s his temperature today?" |
15338 | I asked him why?" |
15338 | I did not know your mother was ill."LITTLE GIRL--"No, it is my aunt who is ill."NEIGHBOR--"What is the matter with your aunt?" |
15338 | I have n''t seen him for weeks?" |
15338 | I sez,''Who d''yer blinkin''well think you''re a- talkin''to? |
15338 | I suppose you know the man who''s running against me?" |
15338 | I''m sorry-- was it a secret?" |
15338 | INDUSTRY Andrew Carnegie was once asked which he considered to be the most important factor in industry-- labor, capital, or brains? |
15338 | INQUIRER( at South Station)--"Where does this train go?" |
15338 | INSOMNIA BARK--"So you have been cured of your insomnia? |
15338 | INSTALMENT PLAN"I wonder will Smithers always allude to his wife so lovingly as''my own''?" |
15338 | INTERVIEWER--"What is your wife''s favorite dish?" |
15338 | INTRODUCTION What can be more fitting than that a compiled book should have a compiled introduction? |
15338 | If a man dies, does lie live again? |
15338 | If any over- critical reader fails to find them humorous, may not the fault possibly be due to his own imperfect sense of humor? |
15338 | If we never had to utter,"Wo n''t you pass the bread and butter, Likewise push along that platter Full of meat?" |
15338 | In fact, as she was leaving his cell she said:"May I ask you why you are in this distressing place?" |
15338 | In his rapture he exclaimed,"But do you think, my love, I am good enough for you?" |
15338 | In the course of his examination these questions were put to an old negro who was appearing as a witness:"What is your name?" |
15338 | In trouble?" |
15338 | Instead of sitting at a desk''Mid undone labours, grimly lurking-- Oh, say, what is there picturesque In working? |
15338 | Is dere much money in dat?" |
15338 | Is he running on the Progressive ticket?" |
15338 | Is it immoral?" |
15338 | Is it love?" |
15338 | Is journalism with you a life- work or merely a means to a higher literary end? |
15338 | Is n''t that Smithson who just went by in his automobile? |
15338 | Is n''t that so, Sam?" |
15338 | Is n''t that something?" |
15338 | Is that it?" |
15338 | Is that my dog?" |
15338 | Is there any one here who knows how to pray?" |
15338 | Is this a party wire?" |
15338 | Is this hotel American or European?" |
15338 | Is this lady your wife?" |
15338 | Is this you, mother, dear?" |
15338 | Is you?" |
15338 | Is your heart for success athrob? |
15338 | It is n''t so hard, is it?" |
15338 | It is only that each has forgotten Something he used to remember: Black bat goes searching... searching.... White owl says over and over Who? |
15338 | It''s a fine line ye''re keeping, is n''t it?" |
15338 | JACK--"Did you tell her that what you said was in strict confidence?" |
15338 | JANITOR--"Down to zero, is it? |
15338 | JEEMS--"Yes; but do n''t you teach us to love our enemies?" |
15338 | JEWETT--"How is that?" |
15338 | JEWS Pat, answering questions in applying for a job as keeper of the pound, came to the query,"What are rabies and what would you do for them?" |
15338 | JOHNNY--"Ten hours a day? |
15338 | JONES--"How much were you beaten by?" |
15338 | JONES--"How so?" |
15338 | JONES--"Took a drop? |
15338 | JONES--"Well, if a haitch, a hay, two hars, a hi, a he s, a ho and a hen do n''t spell''Arrison, then what does it spell?" |
15338 | JOURNALISM"I represent The Daily Scoop, At what time did his lordship die?" |
15338 | JUDGE--"You let the burglar go to arrest an automobilist?" |
15338 | JUNKMAN( smiling)--"Any empty bottles?" |
15338 | JUNKMAN--"Any rags, paper, old iron to sell?" |
15338 | Johnson?" |
15338 | Jones?" |
15338 | Jones?" |
15338 | Junkins?" |
15338 | Just what does Scribbler write?" |
15338 | Know''st thou not all germs of evil In thy heart await their time? |
15338 | LABOR AND CAPITAL"What''s the difference between capital and labor?" |
15338 | LADY( to small boy who is fishing)--"I wonder what your father would say if he caught you fishing on Sunday?" |
15338 | LADY--"You say your father was injured in an explosion? |
15338 | LANDLADY--"Just when are you going to pay your arrears of room rent?" |
15338 | LAUNDRY"Did the laundry man find those cuffs he lost last week?" |
15338 | LAWYERS LAWYER--"Are you aware, sir, that what you contemplate is illegal?" |
15338 | LAZY MIKE--"You know the fellow that goes alongside the train and taps the axles to see if everything''s all right? |
15338 | LEA--"I wonder if Professor Kidder meant anything by it?" |
15338 | LEAGUE OF NATIONS"Why do you object to the League of Nations?" |
15338 | LEGISLATION"Have you made any resolutions or turned over a new leaf or anything like that?" |
15338 | LEGISLATORS"Do you think we are happier for the conveniences of telegraph and telephone?" |
15338 | LEISURE THE CHILD--"Mother, what is''leisure''?" |
15338 | LIBRARIAN--"Oral, of course?" |
15338 | LITTLE WILLIE--"What is a lawyer, pa?" |
15338 | LOST AND FOUND OLD GENTLEMAN( in street car)--"Has anyone here dropped a roll of bills, with a rubber elastic around them?" |
15338 | Little Marie was sitting on her grandfather''s knee one day, and after looking at him intently for a time she said:"Grandpa, were you in the ark?" |
15338 | Little kiddies over there-- Solemn eyes and tangled hair-- Ten years old? |
15338 | Look here, mister, how do you know my husband is n''t at the club when I have n''t told you my name?'' |
15338 | Lovers are plenty, but fortunes are few Why lose wages that carry me Better by far than a husband could do? |
15338 | Lucky we do n''t live in those times, what?" |
15338 | M.D.--"Would you have the price if I said you needed an operation?" |
15338 | MA--"Really?" |
15338 | MACPHERSON( at the box office)--"Will ye kindly return me the amount I paid for amusement tax?" |
15338 | MAG.--"Wot is''platonic affection,''Liz? |
15338 | MAGISTRATE( to policeman)--"Officer, what is this man charged with?" |
15338 | MAGISTRATE( to prisoner)--"What is your name?" |
15338 | MAGISTRATE--"Where do you live?" |
15338 | MAJORITY"You do n''t mean to tell me you ever doubt the wisdom of the majority?" |
15338 | MAMMA--"How do you feel this morning, Robert? |
15338 | MAN FROM MISSOURI--"Have you never been seasick?" |
15338 | MANAGER--"Can''t you find some way to make yourself busy around here?" |
15338 | MANDY--"Rastus, you all knows dat yo''remind me of dem dere flyin''machines?" |
15338 | MARJORIE--"Will I get everything I pray for, mama?" |
15338 | MARKSMANSHIP"Why do you compare my marksmanship with lightning?" |
15338 | MARRIAGE"Hubby, if I were to die would you marry again?" |
15338 | MASCOTS"Does a rabbit''s foot really bring good luck?" |
15338 | MAUDE--"And now?" |
15338 | MAUDE--"What makes you think his intentions are serious?" |
15338 | MAYOR OF TOWN--"Why so, Mooney? |
15338 | MEDICINE DOCTOR--"What? |
15338 | MIKE--"How is that, Pat?" |
15338 | MIKE--"Would ye trust such a party as thot?" |
15338 | MISTRESS( to butler)--"Why is it, John, every time I come home I find you sleeping?" |
15338 | MOTHER( after visitor had gone)--"Bobby, what on earth made you stick out your tongue at our pastor? |
15338 | MOTHER--"Joan, darling, run and call Fido, will you?" |
15338 | MOTHERS Answers to the question"what is Mother?" |
15338 | MOVIE OPERATOR--"What shall I do with this film? |
15338 | MR. EXE--"Did you tell the cook that the beefsteak was burned?" |
15338 | MR. GOODTHING--"How does your sister like the engagement ring I gave her, Bobby?" |
15338 | MR. ISOLATE( wearily).--"Purgatory? |
15338 | MR. MEEK--"Doctor would you mind telling her yourself?" |
15338 | MR. NEWLYWED--"Did you sew the button on my coat, darling?" |
15338 | MR. NEWRICHE--"What makes you think so?" |
15338 | MRS. BROWN--"And what did you say to him?" |
15338 | MRS. CASEY--"An''phwat are yez doin''wid thot incoom- tax paper, Casey?" |
15338 | MRS. GLABBERDEEN--"Of course you, too, must often change cooks?" |
15338 | MRS. HOMESPUN--"What''ll we contribute to the minister''s donation- party?" |
15338 | MRS. KNAGG--"Did the doctor ask to see your tongue?" |
15338 | MRS. LESSNER--"Do you think it''s true that poor Lydia has n''t smiled since her marriage?" |
15338 | MRS. SMYTHE DE WILLOUGHBY--"Was the grocer''s boy impudent again this morning, Clara, when you telephoned the order?" |
15338 | MRS. SUBBUBS( to tramp)--"Out of work, are you? |
15338 | MULES"Is you gwine ter let dat mewel do as he pleases?" |
15338 | MUSICAL STUDENT--"That piece you just played is by Mozart, is n''t it?" |
15338 | Married or single? |
15338 | Masefield?" |
15338 | May I ask if you''re a relative?" |
15338 | May I borrow yours, sir, to keep me dry while I run to the station?" |
15338 | Mayor, do you see any objection to my being put in poor Tom Smith''s place?'' |
15338 | Miss SNOWFLAKE--"What did Jim Jackson git married for?" |
15338 | Moses scratched his chin for a moment, and then, in an equally harsh voice, said:"Parson, yo''do n''t think yo''kin beat me do yo''? |
15338 | Mother asked"Why?" |
15338 | Must our play day Be a gray day Locked behind a prison wall? |
15338 | Must our proud day Be a shroud day With rehearsals once a week? |
15338 | Must the Sun day Be the one day When the sun is banned to all? |
15338 | Must the feast day Be the least day, Robbed of all the things we''d seek? |
15338 | Must the rest day Be a pest day? |
15338 | Must we backward turn to find The kind of day To while away The stalwart modern mind? |
15338 | Must we bore ourselves to death By boding ill From sitting still To curb each merry breath? |
15338 | My dear, do n''t you know? |
15338 | NAMES, PERSONAL"Why do you call the baby Bill?" |
15338 | NATIONALITY"But are you an American citizen?" |
15338 | NED--"But you got a check did n''t you?" |
15338 | NEIGHBOR''S MAID--"And what did they talk about?" |
15338 | NEIGHBOR--"Got much money in your bank, Bobby?" |
15338 | NEIGHBOR--"How is your mother this morning?" |
15338 | NEW MAN ON THE ROAD--"What is the best time for me to see the head of this firm I''m working for, boy?" |
15338 | NEW MISTRESS--"How about the afternoon off?" |
15338 | NEWSPAPER PROPRIETOR--"Well, what''s your idea?" |
15338 | NODD--"Are you sure your wife knows I''m going home to dinner with you?" |
15338 | NULLERFORD--"Do you know anybody who favors government control of the railroads?" |
15338 | NURSES FREDDIE--"Are you the trained nurse mama said was coming?" |
15338 | New car?" |
15338 | Not bad, is it?" |
15338 | Now I understand the three years all right; but what the ten days were for I''d like to know?" |
15338 | Now play one of your own, wo n''t you?" |
15338 | Now that the good times are over, how about a little honest business?" |
15338 | Now what does that word mean to you, children?" |
15338 | Now, I ask you, would you like a husband you had to keep in an aquarium?" |
15338 | Now, can you say all that?" |
15338 | Now, do you understand?" |
15338 | Now, how about it? |
15338 | Now, how do you spell''mouse''?" |
15338 | Now, what does that prove?" |
15338 | O''HOULIHAN--"Pwhut''s a pessimist, Mike?" |
15338 | OCCUPATIONS PAPA--"But has n''t your fiancà © got a job?" |
15338 | OCEAN TRAVEL"Terribly rough, is n''t it?" |
15338 | OFFICE BOY--"Gee whiz: Am I expected to do the work and find it, too?" |
15338 | OFFICE BOYS Boss--"Can''t you find something to do?" |
15338 | OFFICER( to private)--"What are you doing down in that shell- hole? |
15338 | OFFICER( to recruit)--"Goodness gracious, man, where are all your shots going? |
15338 | OFFICER--"Is that soup ready, Jones?" |
15338 | OKE--"Would you be satisfied if you had all the money you wanted?" |
15338 | OLD LADY( to motorman on her first drive on an electric car)--"Would it be dangerous, conductor, if I was to put my foot on the rail?" |
15338 | OPPORTUNITY"But did n''t Opportunity ever knock at your door?" |
15338 | OUIJA BOARD"Do you think Mrs. Spinnix cheated at the ouija board?" |
15338 | On coming to himself, he asked faintly,"What was it?" |
15338 | On profits tightens all the reins, Who has to suffer all the pains? |
15338 | On the man replying"No, sir,"the admiral rapped out:"Then why the deuce do you wear it on your stomach?" |
15338 | One day I proposed marriage to her, and what do you think she did? |
15338 | One day he said to his mother:"Mama, how did uncle grow so big and tall?" |
15338 | One day she said:"Mother, do you know that it is better to be a Christian Scientist than anything else?" |
15338 | One morning Jorkins looked over his fence and said to his neighbor, Harkins:"What are you burying in that hole?" |
15338 | One morning it was absent, as usual, and I said,''Maggie, where is the stepladder?'' |
15338 | One morning she said to her husband:"Did you have any mail this morning, dear?" |
15338 | One of them asked,"Why is the pancake like the sun?" |
15338 | One of them thought she would have some fun, and called to a little girl standing near,"Are there any shows in town?" |
15338 | Or a mother, proud but sad, Who gave all, her only lad? |
15338 | Or have they gone in search of the Fourteen Points? |
15338 | Out in Kansas, for instance, a native observed a stranger looking around and ventured to say,"Good morning, sir, House hunting?" |
15338 | PARSON BLACK( sternly)--"Did you come by dat watehmelyun honestly, Bruddeh Bingy?" |
15338 | PARSON WHITE--"Brudder Lamkins, how did yer son come outen de trial?" |
15338 | PASSENGER( after first night on board ship)--"I say, where have all my clothes vanished to?" |
15338 | PASSENGER--"Are you blind, man? |
15338 | PATIENT--"And will my nerve be as good as yours then?" |
15338 | PEACE"Why were all the nations fighting, papa?" |
15338 | PENFIELD--"What do you know about Bestseller''s new book?" |
15338 | PENMANSHIP Mr. Brown had just registered and was about to turn away when the clerk asked:"Beg pardon, but what is your name?" |
15338 | PERKINS--"By what?" |
15338 | PERSUASION"Mother,"said a twelve- year- old of Baltimore,"did you tell father I wanted a new bicycle?" |
15338 | PESSIMISM TED--"What''s the difference between a pessimist and a cynic?" |
15338 | PHIL--"Was he glad to see you?" |
15338 | PITTSBURG PITTSBURG MAN( telephoning to Long Island from New York)--"Ten cents? |
15338 | POLICE"Why does n''t the policeman pay his fare?" |
15338 | POLICEMAN--"Lost yer mammy,''ave yer? |
15338 | POLITICIANS"And why is he here?" |
15338 | POLITICS GREEN--"What is the hardest work you ever did?" |
15338 | POSTAL SERVICE WILLIS--"What did you think of that fellow''s carrying the message to Garcia?" |
15338 | PREPAREDNESS GRUBBS--"Are you planning to make any good resolutions?" |
15338 | PRICES"Have any trouble in getting your money back?" |
15338 | PRISON VISITOR--"What terrible crime has this man committed?" |
15338 | PRISONER--"How can that be, your honor, when I was arrested for getting rid of it?" |
15338 | PROF.--"What happened to Babylon?" |
15338 | PROF.--"What happened to Tyre?" |
15338 | PROFESSOR AT AGRICULTURAL SCHOOL--"What kinds of farming are there?" |
15338 | PROFESSOR--"So, sir, you said that I was a learned jackass, did you?" |
15338 | PRONUNCIATION"Was n''t it_ fearful_ about the Reims cathedral?" |
15338 | PROSECUTING ATTORNEY( investigating election fund)--"Dave, what happened to you before you reached the polls?" |
15338 | PROSECUTOR--"Did you take that money, too, Dave?" |
15338 | PROSECUTOR--"Did you take the money?" |
15338 | PROSECUTOR--"Then, Dave, how did you vote?" |
15338 | PSYCHOLOGY"Father,"said the small boy,"what is psychology?" |
15338 | PUNCTUATION"Ca n''t you stretch a point?" |
15338 | PUNS"Have you a little fairy in your home?" |
15338 | PURGATORY MARMADUKE ISOLATE( of Lonelyville).--"Pa, what is Purgatory?" |
15338 | Paper, mister?" |
15338 | Parents alive yet? |
15338 | Presently, seeing the visitors glancing around the room, he said:"Well, what do you think of our stuff, anyway?" |
15338 | Previous experience? |
15338 | Put them up to look as if they''d been caught today, will you?" |
15338 | Puzzled, he demanded:''Then how the deuce did the Jews let go of a good thing like the Catholic Church and let the Eytalians grab it?''" |
15338 | Q. Nativity? |
15338 | QUESTIONS"You understand your duties thoroughly, do n''t you?" |
15338 | RAILROADS"Where''s the president of this railroad?" |
15338 | RASTUS-"How''ll it be if Ah pays seben- fifty, Jedge? |
15338 | RASTUS--"How much, boss?" |
15338 | RASTUS--"No, Mandy, how''s dat?" |
15338 | RAYMOND--"What the deuce do you mean by telling Joan that I am a fool?" |
15338 | RECRUITING POLICEMAN( rounding up draft suspects)--"Have you got a card?" |
15338 | REGRETS_ Who Am I?_ I am frequently most potent in the morning, but I am willing to abide with you at any time. |
15338 | RELATIVES"Have you any relatives living in the country?" |
15338 | REPARTEE"Pa, what is repartee?" |
15338 | ROADS"How are the roads in this section?" |
15338 | RUPERT--"What did you do with the cuffs I left on the table last night?" |
15338 | Roe?" |
15338 | Roosevelt then said:"Then if your father had been a horsethief and your grandfather had been a horsethief you would be a horsethief?" |
15338 | SACRIFICES"George, where are your school- books?" |
15338 | SALARIES"And about the salary?" |
15338 | SALES MANAGER--"Had much experience?" |
15338 | SALESMEN AND SALESMANSHIP"Hey, what did you go and sell them apples fer?" |
15338 | SAM--"Something easy?" |
15338 | SAM--"Who was the first Kaiser?" |
15338 | SAVING SON--"Dad, what is a savings account?" |
15338 | SCEPTIC--"If you have such an infallible remedy for baldness, why do n''t you use it?" |
15338 | SCHOLARSHIP"What''s the matter? |
15338 | SCHOOL- TEACHER( to little boy)--"If a farmer raises 3,700 bushels of wheat and sells it for$ 2.50 per bushel, what will he get?" |
15338 | SECOND HE--"Why do you say that?" |
15338 | SECOND LOAFER--"Wat''ave they struck for?" |
15338 | SECOND NAVVY--"Why? |
15338 | SECOND( more hopefully)--"Why do n''t you tell the truth and get a good night''s rest?" |
15338 | SECRETS"Can you keep a secret, Peggy?" |
15338 | SENATORS"What is your position on this great question?" |
15338 | SETTLEMENT WORKER( visiting tenements)--"And your father is working now and getting two pounds a week? |
15338 | SHE( fluttering visibly)-"Oh, did you?" |
15338 | SHE( still more cautiously)--"Would you ask me to marry you if I said I would say''Yes''if you asked me to marry you?" |
15338 | SHE( thoughtfully)--"Did you ever think much about reincarnation, dear?" |
15338 | SHE--"How will I know until I get it?" |
15338 | SHE--"I wonder why men lie so?" |
15338 | SHE--"Tore it up? |
15338 | SHE--"What makes you imagine I should ever want another like you?" |
15338 | SHE--"What''s the man running for?" |
15338 | SHE--"Why do n''t you talk of higher things once in a while?" |
15338 | SILAS( in a whisper)--"Did you git a peep at the underworld at all while you wuz in New York, Ezry?" |
15338 | SLAPSTICK DIRECTOR--"Can''t you suggest a novel from which we could adapt a comedy?" |
15338 | SMALL SCOUT--"Dad, what are the silent watches of the night?" |
15338 | SMITHSON--"Do you know that Noah was the greatest financier that ever lived?" |
15338 | SMOKING"Have a cigar?" |
15338 | SOCIALISTS"What''s the difference between a socialist and a plutocrat?" |
15338 | SOCIETY"Dad, what''s a social scale?" |
15338 | SPELLING If an S and an I, and an O and a U, With an X at the end spell"su,"And an E and a Y and an E spell I, Pray what is a speller to do? |
15338 | SPINSTERS"Helen,"said the teacher,"can you tell me what a''myth''is?" |
15338 | STENOGRAPHERS"How many stenographers have you?" |
15338 | STEWARD--"Where did you put them last night?" |
15338 | STRANGER--"Upon what plan are your city institutions conducted?" |
15338 | STRATEGY WILLIE WILLIS--"Pa, what''s strategy?" |
15338 | STUDENT( writing home)--"How do you spell''financially''?" |
15338 | SUBURBS"Pa, what is a suburb, anyhow?" |
15338 | SUBWAYS"There''s no danger in riding in these subways, is there?" |
15338 | SUNDAY SCHOOLS"Ef yo''had your choice, Liza, which would yo''rather do-- live, or die an''go to heaven?" |
15338 | SURPRISE"Do you think Gladys was surprised when I proposed to her?" |
15338 | SYNONYMS TEACHER--"Hawkins, what is a synonym?" |
15338 | Said A to B:"I do n''t believe you even remember the Lord''s Prayer, do you?" |
15338 | Salary expected? |
15338 | Same kind as you sent me last?" |
15338 | See? |
15338 | Senator Hoar used to tell with glee of a Southerner just home from New England who said to his friend,"You know those little white round beans?" |
15338 | Shall I accept him?" |
15338 | Shall I chase them away?" |
15338 | Shall I make some apple sauce out''n hit, mum?" |
15338 | She explained her dilemma and the colored woman listened in silence, then she said:"Where do yo''live, missus?" |
15338 | She looked at him and said,"Are you shaving?" |
15338 | Should I wake him?" |
15338 | Since then in every sort of place I''ve met with Mark and heard him joke, Yet how can I describe his face? |
15338 | Skinner?" |
15338 | So she makes that up too, does she?" |
15338 | Suddenly he called to the new clerk:"Did you give George Callahan credit?" |
15338 | Suddenly he turned to the priest:"See here, old chap,"he demanded,"is this thing perfectly safe?" |
15338 | Surprised, she asked:"Did you really do that?" |
15338 | TARDINESS MR. PECK--"Would you mind compelling me to move on, officer? |
15338 | TEACHER--"And what was Nelson''s farewell address?" |
15338 | TEACHER--"Do you know the population of New York?" |
15338 | TEACHER--"In what part of the Bible is it taught that a man should have only one wife?" |
15338 | TEACHER--"Thomas, will you tell me what a conjunction is, and compose a sentence containing one?" |
15338 | TEACHER--"What lesson do we learn from it?" |
15338 | TEACHER--"You remember the story of Daniel in the lion''s den, Robbie?" |
15338 | TEACHERS FATHER( meaningly)--"Who is the laziest member of your class, Tommy?" |
15338 | TELEGRAPH"Why did you strike the telegraph operator?" |
15338 | THE COURT--"Considering that you are the wife of the prisoner, do you think you are qualified to act as a juror in this case?" |
15338 | THE FATHER--"But have you enough money to marry my daughter?" |
15338 | THE LADY-"So you''re really one of the strikers?" |
15338 | THE PUBLISHER--"How are you going to introduce accurate local color in your new story of life in Thibet? |
15338 | THE TOMBSTONE MAN( after several abortive suggestions)--"How would simply,''Gone Home''do?" |
15338 | THE VISITOR--"Does your new baby brother cry much, Ethel?" |
15338 | TILDA--"How come I say mo''''lasses when I ai n''t had none yet?" |
15338 | TODAY--"What do we care for prices? |
15338 | TOMMIE--"What makes you think that?" |
15338 | TOMMY--"Father, what''s the future of the verb''invest''?" |
15338 | TOMMY--"How much does it take to kill a person?" |
15338 | TOMMY--"How much for my luggage?" |
15338 | TOMMY--"Why do the ducks dive?" |
15338 | TOMORROW--"What do we care for prices? |
15338 | TOURIST( in village notion- store)--"Whaddya got in the shape of automobile- tires?" |
15338 | TRADE UNIONS TEACHER--"If a man gets four dollars for working eight hours a day, what would he get if he worked ten hours a day?" |
15338 | TRAMP--"That so, mum? |
15338 | TRIGGS--"What are they?" |
15338 | Taking in the size of the boy and then glancing back at the book she remarked,"This is rather technical, is n''t it?" |
15338 | That so earnestly ye lean From the spirit to the clay? |
15338 | The Function of Humor In an article entitled"Why Do We Laugh?" |
15338 | The Irishman looked at him suspiciously for a moment, then said:"What the devil do I want a ticket there an''back for when I''m here already?" |
15338 | The Tax? |
15338 | The boarder watched him a little while and then said:"What on earth are you howling for? |
15338 | The canny Scot replied with a merry twinkle in his eye,"Which is the most important leg of a three- legged stool?" |
15338 | The couple agreed, and at the proper moment the clergyman said:"Will those who wish to be united in the holy bond of matrimony please come forward?" |
15338 | The deft designer, what of her? |
15338 | The editor of The Reporter humbly submits to the editor of The Digest this bit of pathos:"What shape, madam, was the pocketbook you lost?" |
15338 | The farmer scratched his head for a moment, and then said:"Look a- here, be you the tax assessor or has she been killed by the railroad?" |
15338 | The following is reported as an incident to his vigil:"Who goes there?" |
15338 | The host''s son was at the table, and one of the New York clergymen said to him:"My lad, what did you think of your father''s sermon?" |
15338 | The minister noticed that the pigs were very strange in their manner, so he said:"My good lady, why are the pigs so excited?" |
15338 | The minister, surprised and confused, turned to the keeper and said:"Shall I stop speaking?" |
15338 | The mother, quite anxious, exclaimed,"Where can Aunt Mary be?" |
15338 | The teacher had asked,"Why did David say he would rather be a door- keeper in the house of the Lord?" |
15338 | The workman was busily employed by the roadside, and the wayfarer paused to inquire,"What are you digging for?" |
15338 | The young man reflected a moment, and then asked,"How many are there of you, sir?" |
15338 | The young woman urged the child to come to her, saying again:"Wo n''t you give me a kiss?" |
15338 | Then comes a Buick and the chauffeur says:"How far is it to Kansas City?" |
15338 | Then he anxiously turned to his mother and exclaimed:"Ma, which one are you going to keep?" |
15338 | Then he remarked bitingly:"How will you have your tea, Miss Brown?" |
15338 | Then he said"Then perhaps you knew Tom Sawyer?" |
15338 | Then the clergyman turned to a gentleman from Ireland and asked him:"And what would you be were you not an Irishman?" |
15338 | Then what did you have your eyes closed for?" |
15338 | Then why do n''t you light it again?" |
15338 | Then why is it people brag about them?" |
15338 | Then, the following colloquy occurred:"Did n''t you get my letter?" |
15338 | Then:"Mother, why do n''t you boil daddy?" |
15338 | There ca n''t but one be elected, can there?" |
15338 | They ask,"What does that represent?" |
15338 | They charged the bug with bigamy; Now what could the poor thing do? |
15338 | They like to have it quiet up there, do n''t they?" |
15338 | They thought she was going blind, and so a surgeon operated on her and found--""Yes?" |
15338 | Throw down your pole, chuck out your bait And say your fishin''s through? |
15338 | Throw up the sponge and kick yourself And growl, and fret, and stew? |
15338 | To the woman who was bending over the washtub he said:"Madam, I am the census- taker; how many children have you?" |
15338 | Troubled with sleeplessness? |
15338 | Turning to the daughter of the house, he asked sternly:"Do you yourself, Miss Fuller, think the girls who dance these dances are right?" |
15338 | Turning to the mother, he inquired,"What is the name of the child?" |
15338 | Two bootblacks nabbed for shooting craps? |
15338 | Two nurse- maids were wheeling their infant charges in the park when one asked the other:"Are you going to the dance tomorrow afternoon?" |
15338 | UNFORTUNATE PEDESTRIAN( who has been knocked down and dazed)--"Where am I? |
15338 | Understan'', Rastus?" |
15338 | VEGETARIANS"Ever bothered with tramps out your way?" |
15338 | VISITOR--"What about?" |
15338 | VISITOR--"What''s that new building on the hill yonder?" |
15338 | VISITOR--"Why does your servant go about the house with her hat on?" |
15338 | Voice? |
15338 | WAITER( confidently)--"Would you mind just letting me''ave another look at the bill, sir?" |
15338 | WAITER--"And will you take the macaroni au gratin, sir?" |
15338 | WAITER--"What strike, sir?" |
15338 | WARD HEELER--"Are women trying to reform politics?" |
15338 | WATKINS--"Just what is democracy, anyway?" |
15338 | WEARY RHODES--"What ja gona do?" |
15338 | WHAT HE SAID TO HIS PARTNER--"Well, how''s the garden coming along? |
15338 | WIFE( trying to think of The Hague)--"Let''s see, what is the name of the place where so much was done toward promoting peace in the world?" |
15338 | WILLIE( doing his homework)--"What is the distance to the nearest star, Auntie?" |
15338 | WILLIE--"Paw, why is the way of the transgressor hard?" |
15338 | WILLIS--"Did the war do anything for you?" |
15338 | WILLIS--"Going to the party?" |
15338 | WILLIS--"What makes you think it is easier for a rich man to land in Society than for an immigrant to land in America?" |
15338 | WISDOM"Father, have you cut all four of your wisdom teeth?" |
15338 | WIVES"Are you the captain of your soul?" |
15338 | WORRY"Did n''t you use to belong to a Do n''t Worry Club years ago?" |
15338 | Walk?'' |
15338 | Was he a steady chap Ryan?" |
15338 | Was n''t there something said about a movement to have it reduced?" |
15338 | Was there a dull thud? |
15338 | We''ve been at Gallipoli, Mesopotamia, the plains of Bethlehem, and--""The plains of Bethlehem?" |
15338 | Were n''t there_ any_ Methodists?" |
15338 | Were they lost?" |
15338 | What are they for, I should like to know?" |
15338 | What are those things you are driving? |
15338 | What are ye daein the morrow nicht?" |
15338 | What are you going into?'' |
15338 | What are you locked up here for?" |
15338 | What are your qualifications?" |
15338 | What can I do for you?" |
15338 | What causes winter underwear? |
15338 | What d''ye want a watch fer? |
15338 | What did he say, pet?" |
15338 | What did she die of?" |
15338 | What do I know about surplices? |
15338 | What do you call her Postscript for?" |
15338 | What do you expect us to do? |
15338 | What do you mean, child?" |
15338 | What do you suppose I came to consult you for?" |
15338 | What do you think I am, a college graduate?" |
15338 | What do you think it was?" |
15338 | What do you think of him?" |
15338 | What do you think of mine?" |
15338 | What do you think the servants are for?" |
15338 | What do you want to do with this extra one?" |
15338 | What do you want?" |
15338 | What does Ghoughphteightteau spell? |
15338 | What does this mean? |
15338 | What drove our honest pen to rhyme? |
15338 | What else do you want to know?" |
15338 | What happened?" |
15338 | What happened?" |
15338 | What have I to be thankful for? |
15338 | What have the various expeditions to the North Pole accomplished?" |
15338 | What have you done it for?" |
15338 | What have you to say in your defense?" |
15338 | What in the world gives you that idea?" |
15338 | What in thunder is a poor editor to do anyhow? |
15338 | What is he doing?" |
15338 | What is he suffering from?" |
15338 | What is it men in ev''ry clime, Will talk about till end of time? |
15338 | What is it moulds the life of man? |
15338 | What is it, anyhow?'' |
15338 | What is it? |
15338 | What is it?" |
15338 | What is it?" |
15338 | What is the title of it?" |
15338 | What is your income from art? |
15338 | What is your motto, my son?" |
15338 | What is your name, age, and salary? |
15338 | What is your proposition?" |
15338 | What is yours?" |
15338 | What makes some black and others tan? |
15338 | What makes the Cost of Living high? |
15338 | What makes the Libyan Desert dry? |
15338 | What makes the Zulu live in trees, And Congo natives dress in leaves, While others go in fur and freeze? |
15338 | What makes the summer warm and fair? |
15338 | What makes us rush and build a fire, And shiver near the glowing pyre-- And then on other days perspire? |
15338 | What makes you ask?" |
15338 | What makes you think so?" |
15338 | What marvel from the fabled isles That drew the eye from Paris styles? |
15338 | What number immediately comes into your mind?" |
15338 | What number was it you wanted?" |
15338 | What on earth could I do with him? |
15338 | What poems have been written by just looking through a window; and as for literature in general, who does not remember the window in Thrums? |
15338 | What seed did you use?" |
15338 | What swayed the living mass? |
15338 | What then?" |
15338 | What was the best interview you ever wrote? |
15338 | What was the nature of the trouble you consulted him about?" |
15338 | What would a policy for$ 20,000 cost?" |
15338 | What would you think of a soldier without a gun?" |
15338 | What would you want to go for, anyhow? |
15338 | What''s happened to your box for the blind?" |
15338 | What''s he done got de matter of''m?" |
15338 | What''s he want of such a speed demon?" |
15338 | What''s that mean?" |
15338 | What''s the difference between the city and the country?" |
15338 | What''s the matter? |
15338 | What''s the secret?" |
15338 | What''s up? |
15338 | What''s your notion of a hospitable house?" |
15338 | What? |
15338 | What? |
15338 | What?" |
15338 | When I made a mistake yesterday he said:''Pray, mademoiselle, why do you take so much pains to improve upon Beethoven?''" |
15338 | When I want a shirt mended I take it to my wife and flourish it around a little and say,''Where''s that rag- bag?'' |
15338 | When Paderewski was on his last visit to America he was in a Boston suburb, when he was approached by a bootblack who called:"Shine?" |
15338 | When did he get a car?" |
15338 | When he had sufficiently gained his breath he spoke:"Which one?" |
15338 | When his brother arrived he showed him the bills and said:"Vat do it mean you shall buy ditto for a closing( clothing) business?" |
15338 | When labor gets dissatisfied, And would conditions override, Who gets submerged beneath the tide? |
15338 | When lovely woman wants a favor, And finds, too late, that man wo n''t bend, What earthly circumstance can save her From disappointment in the end? |
15338 | When managers and actors fight And theaters are closed at night, Who sees amusement out of sight? |
15338 | When street- cars cease to run, and balk At all conciliation talk, Who has to pay the freight and walk? |
15338 | When strikes put up the price of food, And each side holds firm attitude, Who always has to make loss good? |
15338 | When, after much labor, the document was completed, the client asked:"Have you fixed this thing, as I wished it, tight and strong?" |
15338 | When, where, and why did you paint it? |
15338 | Where am I?" |
15338 | Where are the clothes of yesteryear-- And of the year before? |
15338 | Where are the clothes of yesteryear? |
15338 | Where are you-- out driving or at a four- o''clock tea?" |
15338 | Where does he live? |
15338 | Where have you been since you took my order?" |
15338 | Where is it?" |
15338 | Where would you go to dig a can of worms?" |
15338 | Where''d you get that idea?" |
15338 | Where''ll I begin?" |
15338 | Where''s the lady?" |
15338 | Where? |
15338 | Where? |
15338 | Which of your paintings do you consider your best work? |
15338 | Whit wad ye say to Union Street?" |
15338 | Who in disputes which rise each day, Is not permitted any say, But always loses either way? |
15338 | Who is she?" |
15338 | Who is this, I say?" |
15338 | Who is this? |
15338 | Who is your favorite dead master? |
15338 | Who knows? |
15338 | Who outspoke you?" |
15338 | Who will forget his smoking bout With Mount Vesuvius-- our cheers-- When Mount Vesuvius went out And did n''t smoke again for years? |
15338 | Who would venture to predict a woman''s ballot twenty- four hours before election?" |
15338 | Who''s chickens did you''spose dey was?" |
15338 | Whose?" |
15338 | Whut''s dis yere haid for?" |
15338 | Why a cook will put sugar for salt in a pie? |
15338 | Why an ostrich will travel for miles? |
15338 | Why are jokes preceded by the so- called title, which is virtually the conclusion, or what Twain termed the"nub"? |
15338 | Why ca n''t I cease a slave to be, And taste existence beatific On some fair island hid in the Pacific? |
15338 | Why did n''t yer keep hold of her skirt?" |
15338 | Why did n''t you stop?" |
15338 | Why did she leave you?" |
15338 | Why do n''t you get a more interesting preacher?" |
15338 | Why do n''t you have him arrested?" |
15338 | Why do n''t you keep your account in a bank that has plenty of money?" |
15338 | Why do n''t you leave him?" |
15338 | Why do n''t you try my plan?" |
15338 | Why do n''t you want a lawyer?" |
15338 | Why do you ask that question?" |
15338 | Why do you want job? |
15338 | Why have n''t you sent us anything? |
15338 | Why is n''t every one happy?" |
15338 | Why learn to economize in politics? |
15338 | Why should one with great pains and poor prospects of success attempt to do what has already been well done? |
15338 | Why should the teachers get paid when us kids do all the work?" |
15338 | Why should they strangely disappear-- All the old clothes of yesteryear? |
15338 | Why the tigers and lions creep out of their lair? |
15338 | Why, how''s that? |
15338 | Why?" |
15338 | Why?" |
15338 | Why?" |
15338 | Will it ever make a change for the better? |
15338 | Will you lend me one?" |
15338 | Will you take yer heggs fried, same as this''ere gentleman?" |
15338 | William thought this over seriously for a few minutes, then said:"Mama, what kind of a boy was papa?" |
15338 | With but three minutes to catch his train, the traveling salesman inquired of the street- car conductor,"Ca n''t you go faster than this?" |
15338 | With the sobs rising in her throat, she held up her plate as high as she could and said:"Does anybody want a clean plate?" |
15338 | Without windows there would be no ghost stories, for how could the rain beat on the pane, or the wind come in short gusts through the cracks? |
15338 | Wo n''t you have a glass of soda while waiting?" |
15338 | Wo n''t you see if you ca n''t fix it so I can use them privately? |
15338 | Wonder who it belongs to?" |
15338 | Would n''t some bread and butter do?" |
15338 | Would n''t you like to add a little to the amount?" |
15338 | Would the butcher, baker, grocer Get our hard- earned dollars? |
15338 | Would you mind telling me about how much the wedding cost you?" |
15338 | X.--"Bothered with time- wasting callers, are you? |
15338 | Y.--"But suppose it''s some one you want to see?" |
15338 | Y.--"What is your plan?" |
15338 | YOUNG HOPEFUL--"Father, what is a traitor in politics?" |
15338 | YOUNG HOPEFUL--"Well, then, what is a man who leaves his party and comes over to yours?" |
15338 | YOUNG LADY--"What makes it stay up?" |
15338 | YOUNG SON--"What is luck, father?" |
15338 | YOUNG WOMAN( to be neighbor at dinner)--"Guess whom I met today, doctor?" |
15338 | You know everything- what''s a cosmopolitan?" |
15338 | You know something about punctuation, do n''t you?" |
15338 | You make me stop and wonder Why I find you there to- night, Is it some worry or some fright That leaves you colorless, and oh, so white? |
15338 | You may analyze this and say, what is there in it? |
15338 | You remember things now?" |
15338 | You want to know''oo told me that, mum?" |
15338 | You- all do n''t s''pose Uncle Sam is gwine to put a$ 10,000 man in the first- line trenches, do you?" |
15338 | Young M.D.--"Well, Dad, I''m hanging out my shingle; ca n''t you give me some rules for success?" |
15338 | _ Consolation_"How did your novel come out?" |
15338 | _ Cupid_ Why was Cupid a boy, And why a boy was he? |
15338 | _ Do You Believe In Fairies?_ The world is full of people Who are under the impression That libr''ry work in general Is the easiest profession. |
15338 | _ Fishin''_"Supposin"fish do n''t bite at first, What are you goin''to do? |
15338 | _ Hard to Find_ LIBRARIAN--"What kind of book do you want-- fictional, historical, philosophical--?" |
15338 | _ I And Me_ I wonder just what kind of guy Am I? |
15338 | _ Its Friendly Way_"How are we to meet the high cost of living?" |
15338 | _ Sunday the Thirteenth_ Must the new morn Be a Blue morn? |
15338 | _ Superfluous_"What''s that you''re goin''to give Bill?" |
15338 | _ Twenty- One Plus_ FIRST SUFFRAGIST--"How old do you think Mabel is?" |
15338 | _ Unseen, Unheard_ TEACHER--"What does a well- bred child do when a visitor calls to see her mother?" |
15338 | _ Up- to- date_ KIND STRANGER--"How old is your baby brother, little girl?" |
15338 | _ Who Can Tell?_ Dear Sirs,--About the engine. |
15338 | _ Why_ Do you know why the rabbits are caught in the snare Or the tabby cat''s shot on the tiles? |
15338 | _"How? |
15338 | and the Bolsheviki?" |
15338 | are you not a member of the African Church?" |
15338 | exclaimed his mother;"do n''t you know it''s wicked to play marbles for''keeps''? |
15338 | exclaimed she,"what in the world has happened to you?" |
15338 | exclaimed the physician,"are you old Tom''s son?" |
15338 | he demanded,"that you stand so much lower in your studies for the month of January than for December?" |
15338 | he was asked;"what is the Spanish flu like, Sam?" |
15338 | how long has this been going on?" |
15338 | how shall I define Thy shapeless, baseless, placeless emptiness? |
15338 | no supper ready? |
15338 | queried his Honor"What was he doing that seemed suspicious?" |
15338 | replied the recruit;"if he''d do that to Lord Roberts, what would he do to plain Mike Flanagan?" |
15338 | said Sam;"do n''t you all know what de flu is? |
15338 | said a hearer, in sympathetic tones;"and what were you in for?" |
15338 | said the sergeant,"why did n''t you answer right when the sentry challenged you?" |
15338 | she persisted,"does it make any difference which of these cars I take to Greenwood Cemetery?" |
15338 | shouted the irate farmer,"Well, why does the sign say,''Fine for Hitching''?''" |
15338 | so much and go round with a straw in your mouth?" |
15338 | so you want a job, eh? |
15338 | the lady exclaimed,''You''re mighty sure about it, are n''t you? |
15338 | to''lend''or''loan''?" |
15338 | what is the matter with you?" |
15338 | why should I marry me? |
15338 | wo n''t you- all tell Marse Bob please not to go out no moh till I kin git his clo''es round to him?" |
15338 | you broke the Sabbath?" |
36984 | Ai n''t he home? |
36984 | But how do I know? |
36984 | Ca n''t you be late for once? |
36984 | Has anybody been notified? |
36984 | No, really? |
36984 | No, really? |
36984 | Somebody slipped a rope round his neck and strangled him and you did n''t wake up? |
36984 | Then why ca n''t I see him? |
36984 | Were n''t you sleepin''in the bed with him? |
36984 | Who is spying on you? |
36984 | Why-- where is he? |
36984 | You do n''t_ know_? |
36984 | _ Dead_? |
36984 | ''I m a Troutbeck man an''she a Troutbeck girl? |
36984 | ''S Hattie Brown came in? |
36984 | ''S river raisin''? |
36984 | ''Tis Christmas Eve, Timmie; ye have n''t forgot that, have ye? |
36984 | ''n then, what''ll_ I_ do? |
36984 | A Turkish bath? |
36984 | A calm, you say? |
36984 | A change, you say? |
36984 | A clear passage? |
36984 | A connoisseur of what? |
36984 | A duel? |
36984 | A garden in that sand? |
36984 | A gentleman? |
36984 | A ghost? |
36984 | A joke? |
36984 | A rabbi? |
36984 | A rogue and a cheat? |
36984 | A useless tragedy, is n''t it, Anna? |
36984 | A what? |
36984 | A_ dear_ friend? |
36984 | About how much, Mr. Rosenbloom? |
36984 | About myself? |
36984 | Above love, too? |
36984 | Absolutely? |
36984 | Addressed to whom? |
36984 | Admonition, eh? |
36984 | Afraid of being unfaithful to him? |
36984 | Afraid she''ll catch cold? |
36984 | Afraid? |
36984 | Afraid? |
36984 | After? |
36984 | Again please,"Daughter dear, do you know anything about the papers in the safe?" |
36984 | Ah, he said that it was me, did he? |
36984 | Ah, not well? |
36984 | Ah, really? |
36984 | Ah, so he came? |
36984 | Ah, so? |
36984 | Ah, the costumiere? |
36984 | Ah, what are you saying? |
36984 | Ah, what are you talking about? |
36984 | Ah, what signifies tobacco? |
36984 | Ah, where is he? |
36984 | Ai n''t I? |
36984 | Ai n''t it wonderful? |
36984 | Ai n''t she covered enough to suit you? |
36984 | Ai n''t that true? |
36984 | Ai n''t we got as much horse sense as them Ioway Indians? |
36984 | Ai n''t we, boys? |
36984 | Ai n''t ye got no cheerful news to tell? |
36984 | Ai n''t you comin''up soon, Lon? |
36984 | Ai n''t you got a flag or something... some little mark of respect to cover his nibs? |
36984 | Ai n''t you the Missus''new model? |
36984 | Airey sits silent again for long._] Is Mary in the''ouse? |
36984 | All fixed fer the night, eh? |
36984 | All from old women? |
36984 | All the more as we are-- are we not going to amuse ourselves? |
36984 | Am I a lady or not, Mr. Lezinsky? |
36984 | Am I losing my mind? |
36984 | Am I never to see you again? |
36984 | Am I not right? |
36984 | Am I not right? |
36984 | Am I right, Carolina? |
36984 | Am I stooping? |
36984 | Am I terrible? |
36984 | Am I the first? |
36984 | Am I the man to deny it? |
36984 | Am I? |
36984 | An independent person like she is, with such a tremendous lot of personal views, and when I met her, what was I then? |
36984 | An''the girls-- how''ll they find their way home? |
36984 | An''what that owd woman could never do, d''ye think our Mary''ll do it? |
36984 | And Anna? |
36984 | And I hesitate? |
36984 | And I pray you, Mother? |
36984 | And I shall never leave it-- why should I? |
36984 | And I''m stealing it, do you understand me? |
36984 | And I''ve never asked for much from you, have I, David? |
36984 | And Mr. Hansen? |
36984 | And Spiridón asks for 500 roubles? |
36984 | And William? |
36984 | And a minute ago you loved me? |
36984 | And afterwards? |
36984 | And all corrupt? |
36984 | And all this simply because I wounded your vanity? |
36984 | And are the poor eyes as bad as ever? |
36984 | And are ye come for to tell Mary this...? |
36984 | And are you satisfied now? |
36984 | And are you to blame for this? |
36984 | And as it''s all right I may kiss you again, may n''t I? |
36984 | And been engaged to them? |
36984 | And by what miracle does Astéryi Ivanovitch hope that God and St. Nicholas will save your soul? |
36984 | And d''you s''pose any of''em would believe that-- any o''them skippers I''ve beaten voyage after voyage? |
36984 | And d''you think you''re tellin''me something new, Mr. Slocum? |
36984 | And did you ever see a tiger tear a woman to pieces in a zoo, right before your eyes? |
36984 | And did you really think that I''d fall in with your little game? |
36984 | And do I have to pay the interest or not? |
36984 | And do n''t you know how to play any longer? |
36984 | And do you really think it an honor for one to remain with you? |
36984 | And does she learn anything from it? |
36984 | And each upon beholding the other exclaims-- Can it be possible that this is he? |
36984 | And even if this be true, will he continue to love you always? |
36984 | And for the lady''s coat? |
36984 | And have n''t you taught her anything else? |
36984 | And he fell into the sea, did n''t he? |
36984 | And he is n''t ashamed of it, is he? |
36984 | And he''ll have to tell your mother? |
36984 | And her son was worthy of her love? |
36984 | And how about you? |
36984 | And how did she-- look? |
36984 | And how many generations of the Miskells are buried in it? |
36984 | And if I command? |
36984 | And if I did was it you yourself led me to lavish it or some other one? |
36984 | And if I want? |
36984 | And if I wish it? |
36984 | And if she loved him? |
36984 | And if she loved him? |
36984 | And if she repulsed him for virtue''s sake, for duty''s sake? |
36984 | And if she were right? |
36984 | And if you do n''t have me any more? |
36984 | And if you''re going to cry again, it might just as well be wet, might n''t it? |
36984 | And is it going out of this you are, Mike McInerney? |
36984 | And is it in Curranroe you are living yet? |
36984 | And is it to leave me here after you you will? |
36984 | And is it true, Olivia? |
36984 | And is that all? |
36984 | And is the hotel below also yours? |
36984 | And it was quite clear that his victim was Sasha? |
36984 | And just think, if you get tired of me in the same way? |
36984 | And leave me to get out of this before people all alone? |
36984 | And make her give you the key to the piano, and you play something so I can go out in harmony.--Harmony-- do you understand that, Lydia? |
36984 | And married you without your love? |
36984 | And now are we even? |
36984 | And now we''re going to be good children again, are n''t we? |
36984 | And now you pronounce your"No, really?" |
36984 | And now you want to become a sculptor? |
36984 | And now you''re going to your bride, Gustav? |
36984 | And now, what is the upshot of it all? |
36984 | And now-- can you pardon me? |
36984 | And our David-- and our Julius-- and our Benny, even-- what_ must_ they wear? |
36984 | And she said"Is it?" |
36984 | And suppose I expected"Yes"from you? |
36984 | And suppose she should turn the tables and want to be my matchmaker? |
36984 | And that ate the gooseberries themselves from off the bush? |
36984 | And that rooted up my Champion potatoes? |
36984 | And that''s why you so love the Bambino they keep in the Sacristy closet? |
36984 | And the Other Feller? |
36984 | And the Pole? |
36984 | And the pants? |
36984 | And the stove, too? |
36984 | And the vestments? |
36984 | And then? |
36984 | And they really accepted his drama? |
36984 | And this? |
36984 | And this? |
36984 | And vodka too? |
36984 | And was it easy for you, Benvenuta-- always easy in your heart, to give up the world? |
36984 | And was it you, by chance, who advised your cousin to forget Laura? |
36984 | And we wo n''t have to break up our little home, will we? |
36984 | And what are these facts? |
36984 | And what could you have done? |
36984 | And what did I say when you scolded me? |
36984 | And what did Mrs. Wright do when she knew that you had gone for the coroner? |
36984 | And what did the robber do? |
36984 | And what did you do, grandmother? |
36984 | And what do I get? |
36984 | And what do you say to the banshee? |
36984 | And what does it say? |
36984 | And what else? |
36984 | And what happened myself the fair day of Esserkelly, the time I was passing your door? |
36984 | And what happened? |
36984 | And what is the vodka for? |
36984 | And what is this? |
36984 | And what shall I do there when I have spent the ten roubles? |
36984 | And what was the motive of the crime? |
36984 | And what''ave ye said to Bill? |
36984 | And what''r_ you_ doin''here? |
36984 | And when we talk about Knut you wo n''t say"So- o"any more? |
36984 | And when will you drive the Russians out of there? |
36984 | And where is your army? |
36984 | And who could blame her? |
36984 | And who says the contrary? |
36984 | And why do n''t you go? |
36984 | And why should n''t I like it? |
36984 | And why should you use Mr. Rosenbloom''s money? |
36984 | And why was that? |
36984 | And yet thou wilt not go? |
36984 | And yet, for all their worries, what would we do without the ladies? |
36984 | And you ask me to forgive you? |
36984 | And you believe in me, eh? |
36984 | And you believe that that is n''t so? |
36984 | And you ca n''t raise the money? |
36984 | And you did n''t bring away my own eels, I suppose, I was after spearing in the Turlough? |
36984 | And you learned to imitate my handwriting? |
36984 | And you mean--? |
36984 | And you never see him in the street? |
36984 | And you never told me anything? |
36984 | And you promise me not to worry meanwhile? |
36984 | And you think that because you are a romantic creature that you can insult me without being punished? |
36984 | And you too, my friend-- what is your name? |
36984 | And you without e''er a man in the house? |
36984 | And you''ll kiss and be friends? |
36984 | And you''re bothering me with them now? |
36984 | And you''re not even_ ashamed_ of it? |
36984 | And you, Mr. Hammer? |
36984 | And you, grandpop? |
36984 | And you, madame? |
36984 | And you? |
36984 | And your mother? |
36984 | And, Finley, you wo n''t forget_ me_, will you?... |
36984 | And-- and a half hour later you were sipping hot brandy in the Schwanhausen castle? |
36984 | And-- what else? |
36984 | Anna, I will send Maddalena to help you with your luggage? |
36984 | Anne, where are you? |
36984 | Answered it? |
36984 | Any objection? |
36984 | Any reason why he should sprawl? |
36984 | Any wonder that this is what became of you? |
36984 | Anyhow, what difference does it make? |
36984 | Anything the matter, sir? |
36984 | Are all these your children? |
36984 | Are all those my cards too? |
36984 | Are n''t you a little too optimistic? |
36984 | Are n''t you deluding yourself? |
36984 | Are n''t you glad to be here with me? |
36984 | Are n''t you glad to see your father? |
36984 | Are n''t you going home? |
36984 | Are n''t you going to cover the boy before you let them enter? |
36984 | Are n''t you going to smoke? |
36984 | Are n''t you lonely since Kruger died? |
36984 | Are n''t you making a mistake? |
36984 | Are n''t you rather"rushing"me? |
36984 | Are n''t you satisfied? |
36984 | Are these for the Shrove Tuesday play? |
36984 | Are they being carried out? |
36984 | Are they going to use them? |
36984 | Are they happy together? |
36984 | Are things just as you left them yesterday? |
36984 | Are we any better off, with everybody treating us as though we were living together to prove a principle? |
36984 | Are you Madame le Bargy? |
36984 | Are you a bachelor? |
36984 | Are you a convict, a felon, Sasha? |
36984 | Are you a newcomer? |
36984 | Are you a prophet as well as a scholar? |
36984 | Are you a rabbi or a poor blind tailor-- yes? |
36984 | Are you able to make out the words? |
36984 | Are you afraid of me? |
36984 | Are you afraid of me? |
36984 | Are you afraid? |
36984 | Are you afraid? |
36984 | Are you afraid? |
36984 | Are you beginning all over again? |
36984 | Are you calmer now? |
36984 | Are you gittin''plumb loco drivin''out so late in autymobiles? |
36984 | Are you glad I spoke to you? |
36984 | Are you going away again? |
36984 | Are you going to kill me? |
36984 | Are you going to start that again? |
36984 | Are you going to talk stuck up again, Helms? |
36984 | Are you going? |
36984 | Are you gone? |
36984 | Are you ill? |
36984 | Are you leaving me so soon? |
36984 | Are you lowerin''the boats? |
36984 | Are you mad, Boy, mad? |
36984 | Are you making yourself ready to come? |
36984 | Are you married? |
36984 | Are you not afraid of him? |
36984 | Are you not afraid to go out? |
36984 | Are you not angry now? |
36984 | Are you not considered one of the foremost men of letters in America? |
36984 | Are you not the only writer who has successfully portrayed the emotional side of American life? |
36984 | Are you quite comfortable, grandma dear? |
36984 | Are you ready for the question? |
36984 | Are you ready, Bolling? |
36984 | Are you ready? |
36984 | Are you so certain about it? |
36984 | Are you so certain, old man, that you wo n''t be able to paint any more, that you wo n''t have any relapse? |
36984 | Are you so sure of it? |
36984 | Are you sorry? |
36984 | Are you speaking in earnest? |
36984 | Are you starting on that again now? |
36984 | Are you still angry? |
36984 | Are you sure I am an honest man? |
36984 | Are you sure it is to me you should tell it? |
36984 | Are you sure that you would recognize him? |
36984 | Are you sure-- I do my best? |
36984 | Are you sure? |
36984 | Are you surprised at it? |
36984 | Are you talking to me, Señora? |
36984 | Are you there? |
36984 | Are you to blame for it? |
36984 | Are you unwell? |
36984 | Are you_ really_ safe, Florrie? |
36984 | Arrayed in innocence, what touch of grace Reveals the scion of a courtly race? |
36984 | Art thou dreaming, my child? |
36984 | As I understood them from Berman''s letter? |
36984 | As a matter of fact, what were you afraid of? |
36984 | Ashamed of being in love? |
36984 | Ashamed of it? |
36984 | Aside from that, what motive could I have had for dragging you into it? |
36984 | Assume the hypothesis, would n''t you leave me in that case? |
36984 | Astéryi walks to and fro smoking a cigarette._] Will you not have your game of patience as usual? |
36984 | At last? |
36984 | At the Club? |
36984 | At what time does the train leave from Poggio? |
36984 | At your age? |
36984 | Atalanta looks at Benvenuta wonderingly._] The vinedresser''s baby-- did you ever hold him in your arms? |
36984 | Aunt Harriet, tell me why these dead old men mean so much to you? |
36984 | Baroness de Meauville? |
36984 | Be ye hungry, Timmie? |
36984 | Be ye shure, Timmie? |
36984 | Because he was one of those who are kings? |
36984 | Because he''s a postal inspector? |
36984 | Because she knows that you have read-- did I not tell you? |
36984 | Because the wife of a friend-- who at the same time happens to be your wife-- has been intimate with you? |
36984 | Because what? |
36984 | Before I went away? |
36984 | Being you, how can I judge as I? |
36984 | Believe? |
36984 | Benvenuta remains, waiting patiently for a word from the Abbess._] Well, my little sister? |
36984 | Benvenuta stands still in an attitude of deep humility._] Well, little Sister? |
36984 | Better? |
36984 | Between us? |
36984 | Blindly? |
36984 | Blood transfusion? |
36984 | Bolling too? |
36984 | Boss, will you have me taken off at once or wo n''t you? |
36984 | Both of us? |
36984 | Both of us? |
36984 | Both of us? |
36984 | Bound to what? |
36984 | Bryant 4253? |
36984 | Bryant 4253? |
36984 | Burn it? |
36984 | But I do n''t see.... You''re not wearing...? |
36984 | But I never said she was the only one, did I? |
36984 | But I''m not... how shall I put it? |
36984 | But a sudden thought strikes him._] What name did you give? |
36984 | But after...? |
36984 | But afterwards you developed her intellect and educated her, did n''t you? |
36984 | But ai n''t they workin''in the store? |
36984 | But are n''t we living together so as to have more freedom? |
36984 | But are you sure it will do any good? |
36984 | But ca n''t I improvise a little? |
36984 | But do n''t they ask ye in to get warm whin ye''ve maybe come so far? |
36984 | But do tell me, grandma, did that story really happen in that way? |
36984 | But do you know why you''ve got the worst of it in this struggle? |
36984 | But do you think she ever remembers that she has to thank me really for her proficiency? |
36984 | But fifteen days ago? |
36984 | But from where do they all come? |
36984 | But have you seen the monument? |
36984 | But he ca n''t be a rabbi now, can he? |
36984 | But he is n''t taking anything now, is he? |
36984 | But he was n''t a bad fellow, was he? |
36984 | But how about us, Louise? |
36984 | But how can I love what no longer exists? |
36984 | But how could he know anything about it? |
36984 | But how could you help perceiving that he was something more than indifference to you? |
36984 | But how do I know this is n''t a trick To water your sheep, and get the laugh on me? |
36984 | But how has little brother been passing the time, when his little dove had flown away? |
36984 | But how yuh goin''--? |
36984 | But how yuh goin''t''stop her? |
36984 | But how? |
36984 | But if I see him tremble, Mr. Sud, would n''t I ask him if he had a chill? |
36984 | But if I want it? |
36984 | But in the hottest weather-- maybe-- some Septembers-- even so late yet-- ain''t it, Mrs. Rooney? |
36984 | But in this house? |
36984 | But just allow me to ask, who is true and faithful in love? |
36984 | But might he not appear in an interlude? |
36984 | But need there be any quarrels? |
36984 | But nobody knows it except you and me-- don''t you see? |
36984 | But perhaps I had rather-- Will he fall soon, Mr. Policeman? |
36984 | But she does from everybody else? |
36984 | But she must have had one, or why should she have a cage? |
36984 | But stop-- how did it all happen? |
36984 | But suppose another man came along with all the qualities that you want in a man? |
36984 | But suppose he is the one who kills you? |
36984 | But surely he has not heard it already? |
36984 | But tell me, how was it that she was n''t able to succeed in educating the other man-- in educating him into being really modern? |
36984 | But that other fellow, that Casalonga-- what does he want? |
36984 | But then everybody believes that we''re utterly, almost stupidly in love with one another, what can you expect? |
36984 | But there is a curious dark mark in the center of his forehead-- or is it a round, dark hole?_] LON[_ petulantly_]. |
36984 | But this here-- what is it? |
36984 | But this is pure cannibalism, is n''t it? |
36984 | But this notion of running and telling the first person who happens along.... What a position does it leave me in? |
36984 | But what I have been figuring out, is this-- so long as you believe that you can go on working after you leave here, it''s all right, is n''t it? |
36984 | But what about? |
36984 | But what attitude ought I to assume? |
36984 | But what can I do if I have n''t it? |
36984 | But what can I do when I have n''t the money? |
36984 | But what can I do? |
36984 | But what did Inkwell do? |
36984 | But what did we care? |
36984 | But what did you say, Anna? |
36984 | But what do you suppose went with it? |
36984 | But what hospital? |
36984 | But what is it you want me to do for you, Joe? |
36984 | But what is the use of talking nonsense? |
36984 | But what of this sort of existence? |
36984 | But what of us? |
36984 | But what was I to do? |
36984 | But what will people say, friend Zurita? |
36984 | But when is he going to fall? |
36984 | But where can Juanito be? |
36984 | But who''ll take a egg out o''somebody''s ear? |
36984 | But why are you so excited? |
36984 | But why did he allow her to go this far? |
36984 | But why did you say you did? |
36984 | But why did you want to? |
36984 | But why do n''t you save him? |
36984 | But why do you call this a terrible tragedy? |
36984 | But why do you come now? |
36984 | But why do you harp on that subject just now? |
36984 | But why is it locked? |
36984 | But why must she pound him so hard? |
36984 | But why not? |
36984 | But why should I have to do it? |
36984 | But why should n''t you live longer than she, since you are younger? |
36984 | But why? |
36984 | But will Anna be ready? |
36984 | But will you listen to him? |
36984 | But wo n''t you tell me? |
36984 | But would n''t they be afeard o''this great city, an''would they iver find us here? |
36984 | But you are not angry with me, are you? |
36984 | But you are not sorry? |
36984 | But you ca n''t love two people at the same time? |
36984 | But you do, do n''t you, David? |
36984 | But you have n''t shown them to any one? |
36984 | But you loved Berman all the time, did n''t you? |
36984 | But you wo n''t be here to- morrow, will you? |
36984 | But your future? |
36984 | But, Juanito, what delayed you so? |
36984 | But, grandmother, is it not wonderful at seventy and seventy- five to love so beautifully and purely as you and grandfather have loved? |
36984 | But, if she be dead, Wherefore these garlands?-- Or does he think she will come back, alive? |
36984 | But_ ought_ I to be sitting here with you? |
36984 | But_ ought_ you to waste your time like that? |
36984 | But_ ought_ you...? |
36984 | By the by, did n''t that make you at all jealous? |
36984 | By the way, has anything been moved? |
36984 | By the way, how did you know I was back? |
36984 | By the way, what are you doing to- night? |
36984 | By what right do you criticize my actions? |
36984 | CORP. Is that true? |
36984 | Ca n''t I fetch you somethin''? |
36984 | Ca n''t I see the missus, jest for a minute? |
36984 | Ca n''t I tell my story in my own way? |
36984 | Ca n''t bear what, Annie? |
36984 | Ca n''t stop-- where''s the kids? |
36984 | Ca n''t we remain here? |
36984 | Ca n''t you get a drink? |
36984 | Ca n''t you give me any better reply than that? |
36984 | Ca n''t you hear''em laughin''and sneerin''--Tibbots n''Harris n''Simms and the rest-- and all o''Homeport makin''fun o''me? |
36984 | Ca n''t you make up your minds? |
36984 | Ca n''t you realize that? |
36984 | Ca n''t you say that you are about to go away on a trip and that you can not see her? |
36984 | Ca n''t you see he''s a born preacher? |
36984 | Ca n''t you see that? |
36984 | Ca n''t you stand my looking at you? |
36984 | Ca n''t you talk about anything else? |
36984 | Ca n''t you trust me? |
36984 | Cain''t I take a thimbleful now''n then without all this jawin''? |
36984 | Cain''t thee answer? |
36984 | Cain''t you stay where you was put-- with a heap o''rocks on top o''ye? |
36984 | Call that honest? |
36984 | Can I borrow the paper, too? |
36984 | Can I help it if they are heavy? |
36984 | Can I speak to Mr. Fenton? |
36984 | Can Sparta ask less of her King? |
36984 | Can a man''s trusting his wife make him ridiculous? |
36984 | Can it be possible that you read without requiring any? |
36984 | Can it be that it is over? |
36984 | Can it be true, Anne, that you do care? |
36984 | Can it soon be taught? |
36984 | Can they go in? |
36984 | Can this wild beast be Praskóvya''s son? |
36984 | Can you believe that I have felt that way too? |
36984 | Can you bind him when you find him; Prithee, where? |
36984 | Can you explain to me why it is that you''re so jealous, and at the same time so sure of yourself? |
36984 | Can you fall or ca n''t you? |
36984 | Can you let me have some soda water? |
36984 | Can you not guess? |
36984 | Can you play of this[_ Mockingly to First Chinese._] For us? |
36984 | Can you play? |
36984 | Can you realize how dreadful that is, Aleck? |
36984 | Can you realize how dreadful that is, children? |
36984 | Can you take my picture? |
36984 | Can you tell that to Sparta? |
36984 | Can you trust her not to talk? |
36984 | Can you? |
36984 | Can your theories survive a test? |
36984 | Certain? |
36984 | Charles, I wo n''t stand this? |
36984 | Charles, do I have to stand here and be insulted? |
36984 | Charles, why do n''t you do something? |
36984 | Children, who wants a cigarette? |
36984 | Coaxingly._] Goin''t''take me t''Horseman''s t''night f''r lobster? |
36984 | Collars and ties? |
36984 | Come over-- wh''ar? |
36984 | Come, what''s all this? |
36984 | Comin'', sir? |
36984 | Cool is the night, what needs it? |
36984 | Corydon is seated on the ground, tossing the confetti up into the air and catching it._] Hello, what''s that you''ve got there, Corydon? |
36984 | Corydon, come to the wall a minute, will you? |
36984 | Could I love Maurice and see him stay behind? |
36984 | Could I really want him to save his body for me when thousands were giving theirs for France? |
36984 | Could I see her, do you think? |
36984 | Could Olga have gathered from them that you were not indifferently disposed toward him? |
36984 | Could he even answer me? |
36984 | Could n''t we cover her just a little? |
36984 | Could n''t you tell? |
36984 | Could n''t you_ cut_ his lines? |
36984 | Could there be aught but love between us after all these years? |
36984 | Could they have been stolen? |
36984 | Could you give me a large book to work on? |
36984 | Curt, why have you asked me if the forest incident happened that way? |
36984 | Curt-- are not you going with the others? |
36984 | D''y''really wanta know w''at I think? |
36984 | D''y''think I''m goin''t''stay in this house t''be talked to like that? |
36984 | D''ye mind the nights she''s been out like an old shepherd wi''t''sheep? |
36984 | D''ye mind the nights when she was but a lile''un an''we found''er out in the dawn sleepin''snug again the side o''a fat ewe? |
36984 | D''ye think I''ve not been tore in two wi''wantin''to close my eyes an''walk like others into it an''never think what is to come? |
36984 | D''ye think I''ve not seed t''soft, gentle things that are given to other women, an''not envied them? |
36984 | D''you know what I was doin''when you came in? |
36984 | D''you know, I think you must be getting old, Or fat, or something,--stupid, anyway!-- Ca n''t you put on some other kind of collar? |
36984 | D''you really think he''s crazy? |
36984 | D''you think I''m as mean as that? |
36984 | D''you think I''ve not seen their ugly looks and the grudgin''way they worked? |
36984 | D''you want anything, Annie? |
36984 | Dance, forsooth-- to what music, sister? |
36984 | Dance? |
36984 | Daughter, dear, do you know anything about the papers in the safe? |
36984 | Daughter, dear, do you know anything about the papers in the safe? |
36984 | Daughter, dear-- do you know anything about the papers in the safe? |
36984 | Dead-- old-- men--? |
36984 | Death is surely not so much worse than life? |
36984 | Delivery?--I wonder-- will it be delivery? |
36984 | Diane, do you think that I loved my son? |
36984 | Did I ever reproach you, moralize, lecture? |
36984 | Did I say that-- possibly? |
36984 | Did Inkwell really take them? |
36984 | Did ever one hear such stuff? |
36984 | Did he ever speak of it? |
36984 | Did he make that up, do you suppose? |
36984 | Did it ever occur to you that there may be no later on? |
36984 | Did my husband make it up for you? |
36984 | Did n''t David and Julius and Benny live without a baby- carriage? |
36984 | Did n''t I give it all into your hand? |
36984 | Did n''t I have you taken off at night? |
36984 | Did n''t I know it? |
36984 | Did n''t I say it was a prophecy? |
36984 | Did n''t I say so? |
36984 | Did n''t it ever occur to you that a thief might drop in on you some night? |
36984 | Did n''t she leave him twenty years ago? |
36984 | Did n''t she say what her errand was? |
36984 | Did n''t you have a mind of your own when you were nineteen? |
36984 | Did n''t you hear what I said? |
36984 | Did n''t you once write that"When marriage comes in at the door, freedom flies out at the window"? |
36984 | Did n''t you say you had read all my books? |
36984 | Did n''t you tell her that? |
36984 | Did n''t you think of what she would be like, did n''t you plan her, did n''t you pray that she might be fine and great and beautiful? |
36984 | Did n''t you? |
36984 | Did n''t you? |
36984 | Did not my messenger come the other day? |
36984 | Did our David or Julius or Benny ever have such a baby- carriage? |
36984 | Did she have little children? |
36984 | Did she really? |
36984 | Did she say? |
36984 | Did the doctor say that Joe is worse? |
36984 | Did the maid let you in? |
36984 | Did thee guess it at all, I wonder? |
36984 | Did y''see her? |
36984 | Did ye ever hear of a man who was n''t crazy do the things he does? |
36984 | Did ye hear any talk in the fo''c''s''tle? |
36984 | Did ye hear how bad the dipthery is? |
36984 | Did ye hear''bout Jim Kelly drinkin''again? |
36984 | Did ye hear''bout the Beckers? |
36984 | Did you call me? |
36984 | Did you catch the subtlety of that line? |
36984 | Did you ever play the piano? |
36984 | Did you ever see anything equal of it? |
36984 | Did you ever see those verses? |
36984 | Did you expect to have a private room all to yourself? |
36984 | Did you find it indiscreet of me? |
36984 | Did you get a good start with the scandal? |
36984 | Did you get a squint at his hands? |
36984 | Did you get the thread of gold? |
36984 | Did you have a good time, then? |
36984 | Did you hear him call me Clara? |
36984 | Did you hear him? |
36984 | Did you hear it? |
36984 | Did you hear that, Eudosia? |
36984 | Did you hear, Aleck? |
36984 | Did you hear? |
36984 | Did you hear? |
36984 | Did you know John Wright, Mrs. Peters? |
36984 | Did you not leave me without a word? |
36984 | Did you often quarrel with your sister? |
36984 | Did you part friends? |
36984 | Did you read the"personal notes"? |
36984 | Did you say he is going to fall soon? |
36984 | Did you say wine? |
36984 | Did you see it? |
36984 | Did you see the advance notices in the paper this morning, Jack-- saying the Pot- Boiler is sold out three weeks in advance? |
36984 | Did you understand it that way, too? |
36984 | Did you want to see Florence? |
36984 | Did you want to see Madame le Bargy? |
36984 | Did you, sir? |
36984 | Did you-- love him-- so much? |
36984 | Didst thou not read the warning on the scroll? |
36984 | Do I love her? |
36984 | Do I? |
36984 | Do me the favor, Mrs. Rooney-- you should speak to me first before you give it to Mrs. Cohen-- yes? |
36984 | Do n''t they niver give ye nothin''to ate at the gran''houses when ye''d be takin''the roses? |
36984 | Do n''t y''see I''m readin''? |
36984 | Do n''t you dare? |
36984 | Do n''t you ever long to come back to us, to the old home where you were born? |
36984 | Do n''t you ever think of us? |
36984 | Do n''t you fast enough every day? |
36984 | Do n''t you hear I am going? |
36984 | Do n''t you hear the flutter of wings? |
36984 | Do n''t you know how old you are, sir? |
36984 | Do n''t you know it yourself, Mr. Strickland? |
36984 | Do n''t you know me? |
36984 | Do n''t you know that he is bound? |
36984 | Do n''t you know that it means death for any man to enter the apartments of the Queen? |
36984 | Do n''t you like being told you look jolly? |
36984 | Do n''t you love cuckoos? |
36984 | Do n''t you miss us all, just the least little bit? |
36984 | Do n''t you pay the rent this afternoon to the agent? |
36984 | Do n''t you recognize me? |
36984 | Do n''t you regret running off with... him... and spreading sorrow in our hearts? |
36984 | Do n''t you remember? |
36984 | Do n''t you remember? |
36984 | Do n''t you see that it is impossible to submit to such an indignity? |
36984 | Do n''t you see that it is necessary that she have your help in order to support my presence? |
36984 | Do n''t you see that it is utterly impossible? |
36984 | Do n''t you see that''s what they are waiting for? |
36984 | Do n''t you see what we''ve done? |
36984 | Do n''t you see? |
36984 | Do n''t you think I''m very beautiful and wise? |
36984 | Do n''t you think it is an improvement? |
36984 | Do n''t you think it is too late even now? |
36984 | Do n''t you understand? |
36984 | Do n''t you understand? |
36984 | Do n''t you understand? |
36984 | Do n''t you want to? |
36984 | Do n''t you? |
36984 | Do n''t you? |
36984 | Do n''t you? |
36984 | Do n''t you? |
36984 | Do people often come by the side door? |
36984 | Do you believe one marries a woman because she is virtuous? |
36984 | Do you believe that he will pass this way? |
36984 | Do you believe that? |
36984 | Do you catch it? |
36984 | Do you expect Aunt Harriet to live as long as you do? |
36984 | Do you expect me to stay here until the Second Advent? |
36984 | Do you forget that you''re my husband? |
36984 | Do you forget that you''re my wife? |
36984 | Do you hear that? |
36984 | Do you hear what he says? |
36984 | Do you hear what he says? |
36984 | Do you hear, ladies and gentlemen? |
36984 | Do you hear? |
36984 | Do you hear? |
36984 | Do you hunt? |
36984 | Do you intend to listen to me or not? |
36984 | Do you know I''m jealous of your future wife? |
36984 | Do you know how a woman is constituted? |
36984 | Do you know the lady? |
36984 | Do you know the man? |
36984 | Do you know what I have noticed, Krakau? |
36984 | Do you know what I mean? |
36984 | Do you know what I suspect? |
36984 | Do you know what I thought of when the idea of a woman for Maurice came into my mind? |
36984 | Do you know what all this illusive quality, this sphinx- like mystery, this profundity in your wife''s temperament all really comes to? |
36984 | Do you know what that means? |
36984 | Do you know what the maid told me? |
36984 | Do you know what you are, then? |
36984 | Do you know where your husband is? |
36984 | Do you know who I am, and of what family in the world? |
36984 | Do you know, I do n''t even know your Christian name yet? |
36984 | Do you know, I think it would have been just as well not to have had any nudes? |
36984 | Do you know-- I''m going to tell you the whole story-- do you know how the thing seems to me now? |
36984 | Do you like Wedgewood? |
36984 | Do you like it? |
36984 | Do you mean it? |
36984 | Do you mean that she is not clear in her mind? |
36984 | Do you mean that''s my temperament? |
36984 | Do you mean that''s my temperament? |
36984 | Do you mean to say I''m not justified? |
36984 | Do you mean to say I''m not religious? |
36984 | Do you mean to say that scamp Casalonga has any letters? |
36984 | Do you mean to say you''ve been in love with girls before? |
36984 | Do you mean to tell me it''s genuine if it is n''t stolen? |
36984 | Do you mean, by all that, that you''ve written my books? |
36984 | Do you mean-- Maurice? |
36984 | Do you mind if I call you Margie? |
36984 | Do you mind? |
36984 | Do you mind? |
36984 | Do you never think about yourself? |
36984 | Do you never think of him? |
36984 | Do you never wish to be free either? |
36984 | Do you not know? |
36984 | Do you not see that I am odious to her? |
36984 | Do you not see that he is a slave? |
36984 | Do you not see the eikons? |
36984 | Do you not understand, Astéryi Ivanovitch? |
36984 | Do you not want to drink tea? |
36984 | Do you object to going out with me? |
36984 | Do you pay taxes? |
36984 | Do you perhaps want to insult grandma? |
36984 | Do you promise surely? |
36984 | Do you promise? |
36984 | Do you realize it? |
36984 | Do you realize that the premature death of your husband will be the subject of all the speakers? |
36984 | Do you realize the enormity of it? |
36984 | Do you realize what this day means to all of us? |
36984 | Do you really think that? |
36984 | Do you remember Casalonga? |
36984 | Do you remember Hamlet? |
36984 | Do you remember how Madame tried to get him to swim? |
36984 | Do you remember how beautiful his voice was? |
36984 | Do you remember how we met for the first time? |
36984 | Do you remember how we used to tease him? |
36984 | Do you remember that window? |
36984 | Do you remember the little tree you planted once? |
36984 | Do you remember what happened to Adam Harbee? |
36984 | Do you remember what they said? |
36984 | Do you require anything more of me? |
36984 | Do you see how her nervousness and her few words at once suggest that there is a link between Mrs. Pencil and Inkwell? |
36984 | Do you see now that you were wrong? |
36984 | Do you see the cannon all trained? |
36984 | Do you see the foe around you? |
36984 | Do you see who is coming? |
36984 | Do you sneeze? |
36984 | Do you stand here and sanction this nonsense? |
36984 | Do you still keep on using the fig leaves, even though they''re a trifle withered-- you do n''t use any term of endearment? |
36984 | Do you still love him? |
36984 | Do you still remember finding out my special colors? |
36984 | Do you suggest it would be possible for one of us women to get herself liked by other women? |
36984 | Do you suppose Caroline would mix up with a couple of swine like that? |
36984 | Do you suppose that I will fight with this rascal, with the first knave who happens along? |
36984 | Do you suppose that I will submit meekly to such an indignity? |
36984 | Do you suppose that all a person gets out of this remarkable occasion is a good dinner? |
36984 | Do you talk this way always? |
36984 | Do you think I am afraid of you? |
36984 | Do you think I am going to break my neck for your measly ten dollars? |
36984 | Do you think I came for that purpose? |
36984 | Do you think I enjoy spending my time with a dunce? |
36984 | Do you think I should like to give him that satisfaction, that I should like to make his prophecy come true? |
36984 | Do you think I write lines to be cut? |
36984 | Do you think I''d be willing to enter into a flirtation with a strange woman, if I did n''t want to keep on living with you? |
36984 | Do you think because you have big fists and a steer''s neck that I am afraid of you? |
36984 | Do you think he would have remained a saint all this time if he had lived? |
36984 | Do you think it is possible to forget a thing which has made so deep an impression on one''s life? |
36984 | Do you think she blames herself? |
36984 | Do you think she did it? |
36984 | Do you think so, Tsumu? |
36984 | Do you think so? |
36984 | Do you think so? |
36984 | Do you think so? |
36984 | Do you think that either Espinosa or the mayor are of a caliber to deserve statues? |
36984 | Do you understand? |
36984 | Do you understand? |
36984 | Do you understand? |
36984 | Do you use a shoe brush as a handkerchief? |
36984 | Do you want to have proofs? |
36984 | Do you want to hear how well? |
36984 | Do you want to see what Mrs. Peters is going to take in? |
36984 | Do you want, then, to be your wife''s inferior? |
36984 | Do you wish it so? |
36984 | Do you wish that I speak to her? |
36984 | Do you wish to retire for a few minutes and commit to memory? |
36984 | Do you, Charles? |
36984 | Do you? |
36984 | Do? |
36984 | Does Joe see himself building houses in Heaven? |
36984 | Does Madame le Bargy live here? |
36984 | Does Olga know of your feelings toward Berman? |
36984 | Does any one else call you Eve? |
36984 | Does he hear? |
36984 | Does he live here? |
36984 | Does it contribute to your greater serenity? |
36984 | Does it even mean a baby- carriage what costs five dollars? |
36984 | Does it ever come out? |
36984 | Does it matter? |
36984 | Does it take pictures? |
36984 | Does n''t Mr. Sud know his own plot? |
36984 | Does n''t it thrill your spine? |
36984 | Does n''t your heart yearn to see the little flowers that have sprouted on its branches? |
36984 | Does n''t your maid know what you have? |
36984 | Does she now? |
36984 | Does that mean you like me? |
36984 | Does that pay wages to a cutter? |
36984 | Does this happen very often? |
36984 | Does your father still refuse to arbitrate? |
36984 | Does_ Rosch Hoschana_ mean a roast goose by us? |
36984 | Dogs, where are you running?... |
36984 | Don''choo like''em? |
36984 | Don''choo want''nuther choclick, Jim? |
36984 | Done with him? |
36984 | Dost thou not know that thy mother is on her death- bed? |
36984 | Dost thou not see sadness and anxiety in the Master''s face? |
36984 | Dost thou persist? |
36984 | Drink from wise men? |
36984 | Eh...? |
36984 | Eh? |
36984 | Eh? |
36984 | Eh? |
36984 | Eh? |
36984 | Eh? |
36984 | Eh? |
36984 | Eh? |
36984 | Elsie de Wolfe? |
36984 | Enemies, then? |
36984 | Er you referrin''to me? |
36984 | Evelyn? |
36984 | Even? |
36984 | Ever seen the first husband? |
36984 | Ever since mother died and you and I came here to live? |
36984 | Ever think of it that way, Mrs. Peters? |
36984 | Every one without exception? |
36984 | Exactly as you told it? |
36984 | Excuse me, Mr. Paolo, is it true what they say in the village? |
36984 | Excuse the question, but is your wife really as deep as all that? |
36984 | F''give y''? |
36984 | FLORIO Has all the brightness fallen from her eyes, The glory and the wonder from her face? |
36984 | FLORIO Has she come? |
36984 | FLORIO Have you no pride, my Lady Violante? |
36984 | FLORIO Have you the table heaped with delicacies In the green space by the fountain- shaken pool? |
36984 | FLORIO Remember that young nobleman who died For love of you?... |
36984 | FLORIO Shriveled woman? |
36984 | FLORIO Why have you come again? |
36984 | FLORIO[_ calling from within_] Who is it speaks without? |
36984 | FLORIO[_ from within, after a brief space_] Who is it calls me? |
36984 | Fair play? |
36984 | Fairies''eyes be used to darkness, but can they see where it is black night in one corner an''a blaze o''light in another? |
36984 | Fallin''? |
36984 | Fifthly, have you coveted your neighbor''s ass, his ox, his slave, his wife? |
36984 | Fight? |
36984 | Find out myself? |
36984 | Florencio? |
36984 | Florrie-- d''you remember that time... the first time you let me hold your hand? |
36984 | Follow Love and find his guerdon In no maiden whatsoever? |
36984 | For all time...? |
36984 | For goodness''sake, where are you looking? |
36984 | For how long? |
36984 | For me? |
36984 | For ten dollars? |
36984 | For what other way is there for a girl to get free, than by getting the so- called husband to act as cover? |
36984 | For what? |
36984 | For whom are you waiting? |
36984 | For whose benefit am I doing this? |
36984 | For why? |
36984 | Forgive me like I forgive you? |
36984 | Forgive? |
36984 | Fourthly, have you blasphemed? |
36984 | Frank''s fire did n''t do much up there, did it? |
36984 | From Siberia? |
36984 | From jade? |
36984 | From the pure youths on the steamer, eh? |
36984 | From where? |
36984 | From which pocket does it come? |
36984 | Fur what? |
36984 | Gambling, too? |
36984 | Gentleman''s agreement? |
36984 | Gentlemen, did you hear? |
36984 | Get wise to my own family? |
36984 | Gietel? |
36984 | Girls are funny things, are n''t they? |
36984 | Glad and glad? |
36984 | Go away? |
36984 | Go on... say it... what else? |
36984 | Go? |
36984 | God of Israel, shall I go blind because you would have a baby- carriage for our unborn son? |
36984 | God of Love,-- How can He be God of Love if He dries up the stream of thy heart and blinds thy reason as the clouds blind the eyes of the Sun? |
36984 | Going already? |
36984 | Good God, what''s this? |
36984 | Good ones? |
36984 | Good- day, little brother; how have you been getting on? |
36984 | Got a pass? |
36984 | Got any terbaccer, Doc? |
36984 | Got matches? |
36984 | Got the hump, mate? |
36984 | Granddad gave it to her when they were sweethearts, did n''t he, Clara? |
36984 | Grandma? |
36984 | Grandmother again? |
36984 | Had n''t I better straighten up a bit before your guests come? |
36984 | Had n''t you better go until... for a while? |
36984 | Has Indra judged me and found me free of error? |
36984 | Has he been here long? |
36984 | Has he been that way all the time? |
36984 | Has he got bees in his bonnet again? |
36984 | Has he no passport then? |
36984 | Has he not been too blind to see that your soul outshines your beauty? |
36984 | Has her hair turned white? |
36984 | Has it taught you to love your husband? |
36984 | Has it? |
36984 | Has madam consumed those? |
36984 | Has my mother any money? |
36984 | Has my mother any money? |
36984 | Has n''t he hit the mark? |
36984 | Has n''t that ever happened to you? |
36984 | Has n''t your wife got just one weak point? |
36984 | Has no one entered your house since you have been here? |
36984 | Has she been this way for a long time? |
36984 | Has she had a fainting spell? |
36984 | Has she, Jim? |
36984 | Has that man the audacity to present himself in my house? |
36984 | Has the Queen summoned me? |
36984 | Has the man become serious for once in his life? |
36984 | Has the sea a soul? |
36984 | Has there been no clergyman here yet? |
36984 | Has your grandson been here yet? |
36984 | Hast thou no craving less remote than this? |
36984 | Hath it not been said in the scriptures that thy parents are thy God? |
36984 | Have I been so long your slave that I no longer know your wish? |
36984 | Have I ever raised my hand against you two in all these years? |
36984 | Have I lied? |
36984 | Have I made myself clear? |
36984 | Have I said anything to hurt you? |
36984 | Have I? |
36984 | Have I?--and did you use to love him in those days? |
36984 | Have a cigarette? |
36984 | Have n''t the years taught you the cheapness of revenge? |
36984 | Have n''t they seen your letters come week by week, and your presents? |
36984 | Have n''t we anything you want? |
36984 | Have n''t we heard enough of this? |
36984 | Have n''t you any brains of your own? |
36984 | Have n''t you ever wondered why it was never open? |
36984 | Have n''t you got a grain of feeling left? |
36984 | Have n''t you got a skeleton in the cupboard, old chap, which you hide even from yourself? |
36984 | Have n''t you got some old wedding gifts? |
36984 | Have n''t you read to- day''s paper? |
36984 | Have the priests gone yet, Juanito? |
36984 | Have they gone, Juanito? |
36984 | Have they shut me up with a maniac? |
36984 | Have we the right to say to them how they shall lay the bricks in the foundation for their next life? |
36984 | Have you any bonbons with you? |
36984 | Have you any children? |
36984 | Have you any one to fight me? |
36984 | Have you anybody to take care of you, seeing that you are so helpless yourself? |
36984 | Have you been reading this paper while I was out? |
36984 | Have you been speaking to Joe about-- Heaven? |
36984 | Have you brought it, dear? |
36984 | Have you brought peppermints with you? |
36984 | Have you changed your mind, Mr. Ivory? |
36984 | Have you decided to accept my proposition? |
36984 | Have you done? |
36984 | Have you ever heard the poignant breathing of the stars? |
36984 | Have you ever listened to the sapphire soul of the sea? |
36984 | Have you ever smelt the powdery mists of the sun? |
36984 | Have you ever visited that city? |
36984 | Have you ever_ known_ anybody of that name? |
36984 | Have you finished your meditation? |
36984 | Have you forgotten me, Astéryi Ivanovitch? |
36984 | Have you forgotten so soon the oaths you took? |
36984 | Have you forgotten the cuckoo? |
36984 | Have you forgotten the oath pledged of old, with Ulysses and Agamemnon? |
36984 | Have you forgotten? |
36984 | Have you found out? |
36984 | Have you given her soul a chance to grow? |
36984 | Have you gone stark out of your mind? |
36984 | Have you got by any chance some new yarns? |
36984 | Have you got her photograph? |
36984 | Have you had a lady visitor? |
36984 | Have you had one minute of happiness in your whole life? |
36984 | Have you heard about father''s appointment? |
36984 | Have you known even how to suspect? |
36984 | Have you known how to see when it was right that you should see? |
36984 | Have you lost all that money? |
36984 | Have you no appreciation? |
36984 | Have you noticed How steadily, yet with what a slanting eye They graze? |
36984 | Have you noticed that he spends more time than he used to in the library? |
36984 | Have you noticed the condition of her nails? |
36984 | Have you plenty of money? |
36984 | Have you seen her? |
36984 | Have you seen him again? |
36984 | Have you shown this to any one? |
36984 | Have you spirits of ammonia? |
36984 | Have you the money ready? |
36984 | Have you the same play ready for the movies? |
36984 | Have you thought of that? |
36984 | Have you two been quarreling? |
36984 | Have you your own towels by you? |
36984 | Have you? |
36984 | Have you? |
36984 | Have''e a cane? |
36984 | Have''e? |
36984 | He bore me off to Rome.... FLORIO You loved me, then? |
36984 | He did? |
36984 | He died.... Do you not understand? |
36984 | He holds his cloak about his brow._] FLORIO Where is Olivia? |
36984 | He inspects the box, trying to decide whether he can pry open its lock._][_ The voice of an old, infirm man in the adjoining room_]: Seth? |
36984 | He is-- he is-- VIOLANTE Not smitten by the Plague? |
36984 | He looks a good deal like you just the same.... Do n''t you want to borrow this for a few days? |
36984 | He looks about the room, dazed by the light, and fixes his attention on Astéryi._] Who are you? |
36984 | He loves you so much? |
36984 | He murdered no one? |
36984 | He rises, goes to the door, opens it._] Who''s there? |
36984 | He should take it in a little on the shoulders, Mr. Rosenbloom? |
36984 | He wears glasses with very thick lenses._] Where are the children? |
36984 | He went of his own free will? |
36984 | He''s left his last will an''testament? |
36984 | He''s the villain, is n''t he? |
36984 | Heaven knows I do not lack the will to rid myself of this painted puppet, but where is the instrument ready to my hand? |
36984 | Hello, Miss Carey, how are you? |
36984 | Hello, what are you doing, Thyrsis? |
36984 | Hello, what''s this, for God''s sake?--What''s the matter? |
36984 | Her father? |
36984 | Her voice is low, even, and-- what is the adjective? |
36984 | Here? |
36984 | Heve a smoke, Lon? |
36984 | Hey? |
36984 | Hey? |
36984 | Hm.--Is that your last word? |
36984 | Ho, so you''ve changed your mind?--It''s different, Is n''t it, when you want a drink yourself? |
36984 | Hot for September, is n''t it? |
36984 | How about Reggie? |
36984 | How about a run down to Coney? |
36984 | How about the movies? |
36984 | How about the townfolks? |
36984 | How about this evening? |
36984 | How about this? |
36984 | How am I going to fight with this man? |
36984 | How am I looking at you then? |
36984 | How am I to profit by the transaction? |
36984 | How are we ever going to fight over it? |
36984 | How can I be joyful at the news if you tell it so sadly? |
36984 | How can I be sure? |
36984 | How can I go on? |
36984 | How can I know now? |
36984 | How can I learn it? |
36984 | How can I learn the first principles? |
36984 | How can I stop this man from talking? |
36984 | How can I take your picture if you are sitting on my camera? |
36984 | How can I think of supper at such a moment? |
36984 | How can any one_ want_ to die? |
36984 | How can he be sad,--he who has risen above joy and sorrow, pleasure and pain, hate and love? |
36984 | How can he get a drink? |
36984 | How can it be hateful to be married if it''s splendid to be in love? |
36984 | How can it be interpreted otherwise? |
36984 | How can it hurt him? |
36984 | How can she? |
36984 | How can the newspaper know the plot before the playwright does? |
36984 | How can we build when you do n''t give us any lines? |
36984 | How can you ask? |
36984 | How can you be sure of that at all? |
36984 | How can you be? |
36984 | How can you dare? |
36984 | How can you give me them? |
36984 | How can you say that I have never loved? |
36984 | How can you say that? |
36984 | How can you say that? |
36984 | How can you tell me that-- that I did n''t love him? |
36984 | How can you think of such a thing? |
36984 | How could I figger on this ice? |
36984 | How could I help it if I was n''t able to paint any more? |
36984 | How could I use that money? |
36984 | How could a woman know then what she really wanted? |
36984 | How could he explain what he did n''t understand himself? |
36984 | How could he suspect? |
36984 | How could he tell you of what was a mystery to him? |
36984 | How could it be helped? |
36984 | How could you? |
36984 | How could_ that_ be? |
36984 | How d''y''mean? |
36984 | How dare you say so? |
36984 | How dare you speak to me like that? |
36984 | How dare you speak to me so? |
36984 | How dare you? |
36984 | How did he come to inspire such love in every one who came near him? |
36984 | How did he get up there? |
36984 | How did he know? |
36984 | How did it manifest itself-- that disease, I mean? |
36984 | How did she seem to feel about your coming? |
36984 | How did you come to do such a thing? |
36984 | How did you find out? |
36984 | How did you get into this position? |
36984 | How did you know that? |
36984 | How did you like the after- dinner speeches? |
36984 | How did you manage to know it? |
36984 | How did you manage to know that? |
36984 | How did you say she was, Nanette? |
36984 | How do I know? |
36984 | How do you account for that? |
36984 | How do you account, then, for his conduct? |
36984 | How do you know there''s anything wrong? |
36984 | How do you know these things? |
36984 | How do you mean, Nanette? |
36984 | How do you mean-- queer? |
36984 | How do you mean? |
36984 | How do you propose to take it? |
36984 | How do you want one to speak with you? |
36984 | How far will''e go i''price? |
36984 | How fur did yer say it wuz? |
36984 | How fur is it? |
36984 | How fur is it? |
36984 | How have you come back from the grave-- you who were dead and buried these twenty years and more? |
36984 | How have you learnt my name? |
36984 | How have you risen from the dead? |
36984 | How is Larsen''s brain fever getting along? |
36984 | How is Madame? |
36984 | How is it that I have lost my faith in the future, in the future of our unfortunate land?" |
36984 | How is little Madge? |
36984 | How is that, Gietel? |
36984 | How is your throat, Helms? |
36984 | How it pleases you, eh? |
36984 | How long ago? |
36984 | How long did you know Maurice? |
36984 | How long have you been here? |
36984 | How long have you been here? |
36984 | How long have you been home? |
36984 | How long was he with you? |
36984 | How long would it take us to reach home-- if we started now? |
36984 | How long y''been home? |
36984 | How many children have you? |
36984 | How many lumps? |
36984 | How many times must I tell you that my name is Menelaus and that it is n''t"Moo Moo"? |
36984 | How much do you want? |
36984 | How much for these, Solly? |
36984 | How much money have you got there-- Gietel? |
36984 | How much money have you saved up for the house on Sasha''s tomb? |
36984 | How much will you bet? |
36984 | How much you ask for that carriage, Mrs. Rooney? |
36984 | How much? |
36984 | How often have I asked you not to refer to me as the mistress? |
36984 | How old are you, Mr. Buffe? |
36984 | How old are you, my boy? |
36984 | How old are you? |
36984 | How old are you? |
36984 | How old? |
36984 | How shall I have the face to present myself to- morrow before the monument? |
36984 | How should I know? |
36984 | How should I not know? |
36984 | How should I want to know? |
36984 | How should his eyes get better when he gives them no chance? |
36984 | How soon do you suppose they''ll be through, looking for the evidence? |
36984 | How soon will they be ready? |
36984 | How wan and pale do moon- kissed roses grow-- Does thou not fear my kisses, Pierrot? |
36984 | How was I going to know the porter would chase him away? |
36984 | How will I find you in Chicago? |
36984 | How will that end it? |
36984 | How will they bring you back to consciousness when he falls? |
36984 | How would she do? |
36984 | How would you like that? |
36984 | How yer goin''ter git it? |
36984 | How''bout_ my_ rights''n pleasures? |
36984 | How''d I know there was n''t no money in th''bank? |
36984 | How''ll the shepherds find their way without the sthar to guide thim? |
36984 | How''ll we git there? |
36984 | How''s that? |
36984 | How''s your mother-- and little Ruth? |
36984 | How-- different? |
36984 | How-- what were you saying-- about a woman? |
36984 | How? |
36984 | How? |
36984 | How? |
36984 | Huh? |
36984 | I am so ignorant-- but what is this? |
36984 | I angry with you? |
36984 | I ask you that, Solly? |
36984 | I ask you, Solly? |
36984 | I ask you-- have we the right to tear down the building they designed when they were here before? |
36984 | I asked you what your cue was? |
36984 | I bade her wait without.... Florio, could it be true you loved this woman? |
36984 | I been always first whalin''skipper out o''Homeport, and-- don''t you see my meanin'', Annie? |
36984 | I been lookin''for you, Florrie.--Where you been? |
36984 | I beg your pardon, what do you know about these things anyway? |
36984 | I beg your pardon? |
36984 | I ca n''t hear? |
36984 | I ca n''t turn back now, you see that, do n''t you? |
36984 | I can not hear? |
36984 | I can not_ live_ with.... How do you like this gown? |
36984 | I hate it from the first.... How did it start? |
36984 | I have killed a man and you embrace me for that? |
36984 | I hope that he has left you a nice way of living? |
36984 | I hope you brought it with you, Paquita? |
36984 | I loved him-- do you hear? |
36984 | I must go? |
36984 | I only need to see such a romantic creature from the distance to get so angry that I have cramps in the calves? |
36984 | I really believe you''re beginning to have sympathy-- for him? |
36984 | I repeat the question, have I to pay the interest or not? |
36984 | I s''pose you heard of it? |
36984 | I said,"How do, Mrs. Wright, it''s cold, ai n''t it?" |
36984 | I say, when you work now, does the great joy of creation come over you? |
36984 | I send my David or Julius with them, Mr. Rosenbloom? |
36984 | I should be delighted to act as one of your seconds, with our good friend here-- what is your name? |
36984 | I suppose you do n''t think that she''d be able to love more than once? |
36984 | I suppose you made the reservation in my own name? |
36984 | I suppose you still intend to be present? |
36984 | I take my roast goose now-- then I sure get it.... How much you charge Mr. Rosenbloom for this[_ points to the suit_], Solly? |
36984 | I tell you something and immediately I think should I tell her? |
36984 | I thought I made it plain to you that my manager will return from town and then you will get your money? |
36984 | I thought of Harry and the team outside, so I said a little sharp:"Ca n''t I see John?" |
36984 | I thought the stage went through to Hollow Eye to- night? |
36984 | I trust that we do not intrude? |
36984 | I walked from there to here-- then I says,"Why, what did he die of?" |
36984 | I wanted to be with you, David, do n''t you see? |
36984 | I warn you not to sell so much as one copy? |
36984 | I was in the neighborhood looking at some real estate-- Hello, Inkwell-- how''s the strike? |
36984 | I wo n''t let him see me, and then I''ll run straight away? |
36984 | I wo n''t tie him so hard-- you understand? |
36984 | I wonder if it has a bitter taste? |
36984 | I wonder if she was goin''to quilt it or just knot it? |
36984 | I wonder they to give you leave to come ask am I living yet or dead? |
36984 | I wonder what happened to it? |
36984 | I wonder where my maid is? |
36984 | I wonder whether that has ever occurred to you? |
36984 | I wonder why I used to be so glad? |
36984 | I wrote that? |
36984 | I''d much prefer Making the little song you spoke of making, About the lamb, you know, that thought himself A shepherd!--what do you say? |
36984 | I''ll buy the dictionary and now[_ sweetly_] wo n''t you tell me your name? |
36984 | I''m not asking you about a stable, I''m asking you whether I have to pay that interest to- morrow or not? |
36984 | I''m to walk to t''church o''Tom''s arm...? |
36984 | I, the father of a family? |
36984 | I-- madam? |
36984 | I? |
36984 | I? |
36984 | I? |
36984 | I? |
36984 | I? |
36984 | I? |
36984 | I? |
36984 | I? |
36984 | I? |
36984 | I? |
36984 | I? |
36984 | I?? |
36984 | I?? |
36984 | I??? |
36984 | I??? |
36984 | I??? |
36984 | I?????? |
36984 | I?????? |
36984 | I?????? |
36984 | I?????? |
36984 | I?????? |
36984 | I?????? |
36984 | I??????? |
36984 | I??????? |
36984 | I??????? |
36984 | I??????? |
36984 | I??????? |
36984 | I??????? |
36984 | I??????? |
36984 | If I am not Andrea''s father, who is? |
36984 | If I gave in to Jane Ann entirely, where the devil do''e think I should be at all? |
36984 | If I must set you a penance, what would you have it be? |
36984 | If a musician can transpose music by sight, ca n''t you do the same to dialogue? |
36984 | If he had any doubts about me-- about us-- why did n''t he say so? |
36984 | If he had, then what would be the use of being in paradise? |
36984 | If he is alive, where is he? |
36984 | If he riveted you to him so strongly that you could n''t be parted from him, then of course you''d give me up? |
36984 | If he should die? |
36984 | If it is good? |
36984 | If it is true? |
36984 | If one hides them well even from oneself? |
36984 | If only we could show them to--[_ She glances toward the Sacristy closet, stops, and goes on._] Sister Rosalba, can you make them dance? |
36984 | If the man is n''t able to drive her very blood to her head, how can he possibly enjoy the pretty spectacle? |
36984 | If they ca n''t see him how are they going to know him? |
36984 | If you art born of us, thou canst not have a heart of stone? |
36984 | If you had the wish o''yer heart for yer Christmas dinner an''a good fairy to set it all afore ye? |
36984 | If you treat all your enemies so well-- what must you do for your friends? |
36984 | If you''re at the Bar, why are you down here instead of up in London working? |
36984 | If your present union should end, and some day your soul needs-- some one? |
36984 | In any circumstances it was not even eleven when you were safely out of danger? |
36984 | In exchange, eh? |
36984 | In heaven''s name? |
36984 | In here? |
36984 | In me? |
36984 | In order not to think of the past, you resort to drink? |
36984 | In sculpture? |
36984 | In short, then, it was half- past ten? |
36984 | In that voice of coming back to familiar things._] Wonder how they are finding things upstairs? |
36984 | In the first place, have you killed? |
36984 | In town? |
36984 | In what light do we appear at this time? |
36984 | In which pocket, Mr. Rosenbloom? |
36984 | In which pocket, Mr. Rosenbloom? |
36984 | Indeed? |
36984 | Ingenious, was n''t it? |
36984 | Interested, but why are you interested? |
36984 | Is Madame very ill? |
36984 | Is Praskóvya Petróvna not at home? |
36984 | Is Praskóvya Petróvna not at home? |
36984 | Is Praskóvya not at home? |
36984 | Is anything then impossible simply because you ca n''t understand it? |
36984 | Is he as prudish as all that? |
36984 | Is he gone? |
36984 | Is he in there? |
36984 | Is he jealous, then? |
36984 | Is he just as much of a fool as ever? |
36984 | Is he long in his abiding Anywhere? |
36984 | Is he so? |
36984 | Is he so?--or is he-- very beautiful? |
36984 | Is he still living? |
36984 | Is he tied? |
36984 | Is he too such As dare not walk abroad nor breathe the air Lest he should drink infection? |
36984 | Is it all right? |
36984 | Is it any wonder she was bored? |
36984 | Is it difficult? |
36984 | Is it folly, Is it mirth, or melancholy? |
36984 | Is it for me to know also, Mother? |
36984 | Is it for this that ye come to me to- day? |
36984 | Is it from the gospels, or a saint''s story? |
36984 | Is it in here? |
36984 | Is it like the portrait you painted? |
36984 | Is it meant to be his little wife? |
36984 | Is it my hat, Or is n''t it? |
36984 | Is it necessary? |
36984 | Is it possible? |
36984 | Is it queer in the head you are grown asking me to bring in a stranger off the road? |
36984 | Is it sitting up by the hearth you are wishful to be, Michael Miskell, with cold in the shoulders and with speckled shins? |
36984 | Is it so painful that you have found them? |
36984 | Is it the light in your eyes, mister? |
36984 | Is it too much to hope that you might be still and happy? |
36984 | Is it true? |
36984 | Is it true? |
36984 | Is it true? |
36984 | Is it wishful for my death you are? |
36984 | Is love all schooling, with no time to play? |
36984 | Is n''t he jolly? |
36984 | Is n''t heliotrope in rhythm with the faint reflection of passion? |
36984 | Is n''t it a case of six of one and half- a- dozen of the other? |
36984 | Is n''t it a glorious day? |
36984 | Is n''t it better now that I am away from home? |
36984 | Is n''t it natural for me to think of Knut''s welfare? |
36984 | Is n''t it nice to talk about him like this... calm and friendly?... |
36984 | Is n''t it queer?... |
36984 | Is n''t it so, ladies and gentlemen? |
36984 | Is n''t it time we were going? |
36984 | Is n''t it true? |
36984 | Is n''t it? |
36984 | Is n''t she apt to have knowledge of the ancient race? |
36984 | Is n''t that enough? |
36984 | Is n''t that enough? |
36984 | Is n''t that funny? |
36984 | Is n''t the morning sun on your side? |
36984 | Is n''t their future at stake? |
36984 | Is n''t there any sawdust or sand about? |
36984 | Is n''t there something else That people eat?--some humble vegetable, That grows in the ground? |
36984 | Is n''t your father going to join us? |
36984 | Is nobody''s private life to be secure? |
36984 | Is not Penelope, the model wife of your cousin Ulysses, an exception? |
36984 | Is not the Queen--? |
36984 | Is not this park like a paradise? |
36984 | Is not this the very essence of humility? |
36984 | Is she as charming, as good- looking, as striking as ever? |
36984 | Is she asleep? |
36984 | Is she here?... |
36984 | Is she ill? |
36984 | Is she in her room? |
36984 | Is she pretty? |
36984 | Is she trying to yank it out of his chest? |
36984 | Is she...? |
36984 | Is she...? |
36984 | Is that all right? |
36984 | Is that all you have? |
36984 | Is that any way fer a wife to act? |
36984 | Is that man here? |
36984 | Is that much to ask? |
36984 | Is that not so then, Astéryi Ivanovitch? |
36984 | Is that now a suit of clothes you have brought with you? |
36984 | Is that really so? |
36984 | Is that so? |
36984 | Is that so? |
36984 | Is that the effect the music has upon him? |
36984 | Is that the page, Paquita? |
36984 | Is that the tone? |
36984 | Is that what is called convulsions, papa? |
36984 | Is that what the Germans are going to teach us-- to be machines like themselves? |
36984 | Is that what you are saying now? |
36984 | Is that what you''re driving at? |
36984 | Is that you, Anna? |
36984 | Is that you, Anna? |
36984 | Is that your daughter, lady? |
36984 | Is the Reverend Father coming? |
36984 | Is the author in town? |
36984 | Is the café yours? |
36984 | Is the doctor coming again? |
36984 | Is the name familiar to you? |
36984 | Is there a cat? |
36984 | Is there anything wrong? |
36984 | Is there anything you wish, madam? |
36984 | Is there no oracle, no voice to speak, Interpreting to me the word I seek? |
36984 | Is there no priest here, no devoted maid? |
36984 | Is there no spring? |
36984 | Is there no spring? |
36984 | Is there no way, Varvára? |
36984 | Is there, indeed? |
36984 | Is this Thursday? |
36984 | Is this a civilized country in which we live? |
36984 | Is this my scene, or not? |
36984 | Is this painful? |
36984 | Is this some trick to catch me? |
36984 | Is this the spirit in which my advances are received? |
36984 | Is your hearing perfectly clear? |
36984 | Is your work interesting? |
36984 | It brings good luck then? |
36984 | It gains by repetition, does n''t it? |
36984 | It is Wednesday, If you must know.... Is this my artichoke, Or yours? |
36984 | It is Wednesday, If you must know.... Is this my artichoke, Or yours? |
36984 | It is n''t port wine, is it? |
36984 | It is n''t the first time you''ve made the same stupid remark.... Do you mean to insinuate that he is n''t my grandson? |
36984 | It is sure though-- but are you listening? |
36984 | It looks rather well, does n''t it? |
36984 | It reminds one of the anecdote:"How could your Majesty say that?" |
36984 | It was about the vinedresser''s baby in your father''s garden? |
36984 | It was on the twenty- fifth of August we were married, David, was n''t it? |
36984 | It was quite simple, do n''t you remember? |
36984 | It was the west wind, I suppose, that devoured my green cabbage? |
36984 | It was then that you lost your way? |
36984 | It wo n''t hurt you, will it? |
36984 | It would, would n''t it? |
36984 | It''ll all be over by this time to- morrow night, and that''s a great stand by, is n''t it? |
36984 | It''s absurd to quarrel on such a fine day, is n''t it? |
36984 | It''s perfectly revolting, is n''t it? |
36984 | It''s the midnight train for Chicago, is n''t it? |
36984 | It''s-- it''s foolish-- isn''t it? |
36984 | It''s-- not as if I really_ knew_ you, is it? |
36984 | Jack-- hello!--where''d_ you_ come from? |
36984 | Jaw, I suppose? |
36984 | Jewels?--And where did you ever get them? |
36984 | Jim-- ever get a piece runnin''in yer head so y''ca n''t get it out? |
36984 | Jimmie!--Where is Mary? |
36984 | Jimmie, you remember Hamlet? |
36984 | Joe looks up in alarm._] Who is that coming? |
36984 | Joe, what are you looking for? |
36984 | Joys above, Are there many, or not any? |
36984 | Just empty talk, eh? |
36984 | Just look at it? |
36984 | Just now in that chair? |
36984 | Just what sort of a chap do you think I am? |
36984 | Katie, dear, can you realize it? |
36984 | Keeney''s voice is full of mockery._] You''s found out it ai n''t safe to mutiny on this ship, ai n''t you? |
36984 | Keeney''s voice trembles._] Do n''t you know me, Annie? |
36984 | Keep us all up here after our time is worked out till the last man of us is starved to death or frozen? |
36984 | Kickapoo? |
36984 | Killed? |
36984 | Know the Pierponts? |
36984 | Knut behaved very nicely, did n''t he? |
36984 | LIZZIA Even if she die they are to bring her hither.... VIOLANTE Hither? |
36984 | LIZZIA Have you no fear of God? |
36984 | LIZZIA What you have said were true ten days ago-- Do I not know him, Lady?... |
36984 | LIZZIA You would not stay? |
36984 | LIZZIA[_ reëntering_] You have not gone, my Lady Violante? |
36984 | LUT''ER[_ with a wan smile that memory illuminates._] An''who''ll play the pianny? |
36984 | La, what a woman!--How should I know? |
36984 | Ladies and gentlemen, a lost soul wishes to make its peace with God--[_He shouts._] My son, do n''t you wish to make your peace with God? |
36984 | Later on? |
36984 | Laura Lorente? |
36984 | Lavished it, is it? |
36984 | Let him call me his own dear little sweetheart, and I''ll get red all over before him, shall I? |
36984 | Let me see-- what was her name? |
36984 | Let the poor chap criticize, ca n''t you? |
36984 | Like that? |
36984 | Like this? |
36984 | Like this? |
36984 | Like what? |
36984 | Like what? |
36984 | Like_ what_? |
36984 | Listen? |
36984 | Little Sister, when I forgave you your fault, did you doubt my wisdom? |
36984 | Lon? |
36984 | Lonesome profession, is n''t it, old man? |
36984 | Looking into her face._] D''you think you_ could_ forgive me? |
36984 | Lord, what have I done to deserve it? |
36984 | Love you? |
36984 | Lydia, have you no religion? |
36984 | Ma? |
36984 | Madam never weeps or is sad? |
36984 | Madam, dear, dear Madam, what is it? |
36984 | Madame and I were talking only yesterday of his garden-- did we ever tell you of the garden he had when he was a boy? |
36984 | Mademoiselle-- are you-- Nanette? |
36984 | Many? |
36984 | Maricela? |
36984 | Mary, can you realize it? |
36984 | Mary, have ye gone clane to slape? |
36984 | Master? |
36984 | May I ask why? |
36984 | May I ask you a question? |
36984 | May I at least sit down? |
36984 | May I have a cigarette, too? |
36984 | May I have just what I like? |
36984 | May I know your name? |
36984 | May I open these? |
36984 | May I see what you''re doing? |
36984 | May I see your crown? |
36984 | May I see? |
36984 | May I sit down here for a moment? |
36984 | May I suggest something, sir? |
36984 | May I? |
36984 | May he come in? |
36984 | May one ask why? |
36984 | May we come in? |
36984 | Maybe you could rip out the sleeves from Mr. Rosenbloom''s coat? |
36984 | Me? |
36984 | Me? |
36984 | Me? |
36984 | Me? |
36984 | Me? |
36984 | Me? |
36984 | Merciful heavens, can this be she?" |
36984 | Michael Miskell is it? |
36984 | Might I ask how she pretended to educate you? |
36984 | Might n''t I speak with her for a moment? |
36984 | Miss Rivers, what''s the matter? |
36984 | Miss Segal, why is it that during all the time that I have boarded with you I have made no declaration of love, that I have never proposed marriage? |
36984 | Miss Segal, will you permit me to see Berman''s letter? |
36984 | Miss... may I have a word with you? |
36984 | Mocks Fanny''s tone._] What''s up? |
36984 | Money? |
36984 | Money? |
36984 | Monsieur Robert, why did you act in that way just now? |
36984 | Mother is n''t ill? |
36984 | Mother, ca n''t you find something for him to eat? |
36984 | Mother, could ye get me a cup o''wather? |
36984 | Mr. De Brandeis? |
36984 | Mr. Fenton, would you mind doing me a favor? |
36984 | Mr. Slocum, did you ever hear o''me pointin''s''uth for home with only a measly four hundred barrel of ile in the hold? |
36984 | Mr. Strickland? |
36984 | Mr. Wouldby, is it getting over? |
36984 | Mrs. Abbey, have you worked for many people living together, like Mr. Pendleton and myself? |
36984 | Mrs. Pencil, may I introduce Mr. Inkwell--[_Inkwell and Mrs. Pencil bow slightly._] Will you have a dish of tea? |
36984 | Mrs. Peters? |
36984 | Must I be even plainer? |
36984 | Must n''t I? |
36984 | Must one be forever singing lamentations? |
36984 | Must she pound him? |
36984 | Must you pay all that? |
36984 | Must you rattle those pieces like that? |
36984 | Must you see her? |
36984 | Mutiny? |
36984 | My God, is this true? |
36984 | My darling child, are you alive? |
36984 | My daughter...? |
36984 | My dear!--Where are your arms? |
36984 | My dear, How many fingers have you? |
36984 | My dear-- my dear little Great One, can you hear my voice through the door? |
36984 | My dear-- what is it? |
36984 | My last question: What message do you wish to leave for your fellow citizens before you depart for the better world? |
36984 | My money in the bank? |
36984 | My soul is empty, desolate... as if an abyss had opened before me.... What have I now in life for? |
36984 | My telegrams?!? |
36984 | My telegrams?!? |
36984 | Myself? |
36984 | Nanette, when he was little, when he was a boy growing up, did you never think of me? |
36984 | Nanette, will you believe it, that I suffer actually with every man in the trenches? |
36984 | Need any help? |
36984 | Need we? |
36984 | Never condemned? |
36984 | Never different? |
36984 | Never heard it attributed to anybody? |
36984 | Never once in all your travels? |
36984 | Never? |
36984 | Nice? |
36984 | Nine ridges, is it? |
36984 | No longer engaged? |
36984 | No one has seen these things,--have they? |
36984 | No supper? |
36984 | No tomb- house? |
36984 | No, Señora, I will come to this, if you do not object? |
36984 | No, how can I? |
36984 | No, really? |
36984 | No, really? |
36984 | No, really? |
36984 | No, really? |
36984 | No, sir? |
36984 | No? |
36984 | No? |
36984 | No? |
36984 | No? |
36984 | No? |
36984 | No? |
36984 | No? |
36984 | No? |
36984 | No? |
36984 | No? |
36984 | No? |
36984 | Nobody else will know? |
36984 | Nobody throws his money in the street, but you ca n''t get along without spending money, can you? |
36984 | Nobody to visit you? |
36984 | Nobody? |
36984 | Nonsense, dear, what can happen? |
36984 | Nor ever felt his lips soft and moist against your cheek, nor his fingers warm on your neck? |
36984 | Not bad, eh? |
36984 | Not come to reason yet? |
36984 | Not dead? |
36984 | Not even me? |
36984 | Not for anything could I keep what is not my own-- I tell you, Solly....[_ Pleadingly._] But just to keep it for a few hours, maybe? |
36984 | Not me? |
36984 | Not that I am referring to the Nuñez family.... How do you suppose those ladies enliven their Wednesday evenings? |
36984 | Not the least bit-- the Christians say it''s Providence that guides our actions, others call it Fate, are n''t we quite guiltless? |
36984 | Not thus? |
36984 | Not_ know_ me? |
36984 | Nothing? |
36984 | Now do you know? |
36984 | Now he wants to steal my view of the street, too? |
36984 | Now he was there.... What should I do? |
36984 | Now if he''ll let me choose-- Isn''t there a joker in it somewhere? |
36984 | Now in the matter of the relics and vestments? |
36984 | Now is this to the point? |
36984 | Now tell me why you are so over- filled with joy? |
36984 | Now tell me, what am I to do? |
36984 | Now you may rest easy-- Oh, God, what do I see? |
36984 | Now, grannie, what would ye be sayin''? |
36984 | Now, have you anything to say? |
36984 | Now, just what would I take? |
36984 | Now, sir, tell me what you expect to be paid for this performance? |
36984 | Now, there''s your line of"what is it?" |
36984 | Number thirteen? |
36984 | OLIVIA Command that woman hence; She is the source and cause of all our ill. FLORIO What does this mean? |
36984 | OLIVIA So he had faith I would not die? |
36984 | OLIVIA What test? |
36984 | OLIVIA Yea, I am she-- but where is Florio? |
36984 | OLIVIA[_ astonished_] And shrink to hate? |
36984 | OLIVIA[_ to Lizzia_] Would he not love me still if it were true? |
36984 | Obviously? |
36984 | Of the author? |
36984 | Of what crime have you been guilty? |
36984 | Of what? |
36984 | Of whom? |
36984 | Oh, I am, am I? |
36984 | Oh, are you going to look at the portulaca? |
36984 | Oh, had n''t you? |
36984 | Oh, he was a father of that sort, was he? |
36984 | Oh, is n''t Madam here? |
36984 | Oh, my poor child, what is it? |
36984 | Oh, that is beautiful-- I mean, what did you tell him? |
36984 | Oh, that''s it, is it? |
36984 | Oh, to be sure, you''ve given a fine lot, have n''t you? |
36984 | Oh, what are you doing, Mrs. Hale? |
36984 | Oh, what must I do? |
36984 | Oh, yes.... How do I know this is n''t a trick To get upon my land? |
36984 | Oh, you recognize me, eh? |
36984 | Oh, you showed them to Jane, too? |
36984 | Oh, you''re not used to it, eh? |
36984 | Oh, you''ve got a brother, eh? |
36984 | Oh,''tis you, is it? |
36984 | Oh-- father-- and I can save you? |
36984 | Oh-- who''s hurt? |
36984 | Oh... down by Market Wharf? |
36984 | Oil? |
36984 | Old luster? |
36984 | Old master, I suppose? |
36984 | Olivia starts forward to go to Florio._] VIOLANTE[_ to Olivia_] Do you flinch now? |
36984 | On my desk? |
36984 | On what better thing could money be spent? |
36984 | Once? |
36984 | Only you wo n''t say things to me like that again, will you? |
36984 | Or Summensen? |
36984 | Or are you another thief? |
36984 | Or do they sometimes quarrel? |
36984 | Or do you think I''m joking? |
36984 | Or for the Cuffes from Claregalway? |
36984 | Or letting me help you, perhaps? |
36984 | Or push my head into a stone wall? |
36984 | Order? |
36984 | Ought I let him in? |
36984 | Over what? |
36984 | PAOLO[_ putting his two hands on Mario''s shoulders and facing him._] To run away-- do you understand? |
36984 | Pa ai n''t gone an''left it t''yuh? |
36984 | Pa''s dyin''fur sure? |
36984 | Painful? |
36984 | Painful? |
36984 | Painted anything pretty? |
36984 | Perhaps we are to live in a trinity, are we? |
36984 | Perhaps you will allow me to help you? |
36984 | Permit me to ask what right you have to insult me? |
36984 | Peters shakes her head._] You did n''t know-- her? |
36984 | Picture, eh? |
36984 | Pierrot, do n''t you love Me now? |
36984 | Please tell me that you have ordered the strikers to come to father''s terms? |
36984 | Plenty of fresh linen? |
36984 | Policeman, did n''t he confess and make his peace with heaven? |
36984 | Policemen, did you hear? |
36984 | Policemen, did you hear? |
36984 | Policemen, do you hear? |
36984 | Policemen, have you taken every measure? |
36984 | Pommy, do you still love me as much as you did? |
36984 | Pommy, why do you stoop so? |
36984 | Pommy? |
36984 | Poor Gustav, can you forgive me, can you? |
36984 | Practically proposed? |
36984 | Praskóvya''s son? |
36984 | Pretty, is n''t it? |
36984 | Prick my finger? |
36984 | Prideful over not sitting with the novices this night, eh? |
36984 | Prithee where, Goes Love a- hiding? |
36984 | Promised? |
36984 | Queer, ai n''t it? |
36984 | Questionable means? |
36984 | Quite epigrammatic, eh? |
36984 | Quite right, we must part-- but before that, we''ll say good- by to each other, wo n''t we? |
36984 | Quite so-- but all the rest? |
36984 | Quite; but why did she marry him? |
36984 | Ranchin''? |
36984 | Re- a- lly? |
36984 | Re- a- lly? |
36984 | Re- a- lly? |
36984 | Re- a- lly? |
36984 | Read it, or shall I read it to you? |
36984 | Really, he''s serious, is he, quite serious? |
36984 | Really? |
36984 | Really? |
36984 | Really? |
36984 | Really? |
36984 | Really? |
36984 | Recaredo Casalonga? |
36984 | Reckon''t wuz common ker''sene? |
36984 | Reconciliation? |
36984 | Reggie''s in love with you, is n''t he? |
36984 | Reggie? |
36984 | Reggie? |
36984 | Ridiculous? |
36984 | Rooney looks through the window at a man turning in from the street._] Is it himself coming home? |
36984 | Rooney pushes the money away._] And so you sell that fine baby- carriage.... That carriage holds my Benny, too, maybe? |
36984 | Rooney turns to the door._] Must you go so quick, Mrs. Rooney? |
36984 | Ruler, will you have a smoke with me in the orangerie? |
36984 | Sand''s hot on yer bare naked feet, ai n''t it? |
36984 | Sasha? |
36984 | Say, Clara, where is that old picture of Cousin Paul? |
36984 | Say, boy, you''re here again? |
36984 | Say, got a date for to- morrow evening? |
36984 | Say, have you any idea of what you have done? |
36984 | Say, is it very bad up there? |
36984 | Say, what are you talking about? |
36984 | Say, what''s this? |
36984 | Say, you''ll tell me your name, wo n''t you? |
36984 | Say-- an inch? |
36984 | Secondly, have you stolen? |
36984 | Secret? |
36984 | See here, are you trying to blackmail me? |
36984 | See the new cap on her? |
36984 | See? |
36984 | See? |
36984 | See? |
36984 | See? |
36984 | See? |
36984 | See? |
36984 | See? |
36984 | Seen a ghost, Joey, my dear, or is it Kezia come to her senses at last, think you? |
36984 | Seen this case often, I suppose? |
36984 | Serious? |
36984 | Seth is regarding the box intently._] PA. Seth? |
36984 | Seven years? |
36984 | Shall I ask them to come in? |
36984 | Shall I bring the torches, too? |
36984 | Shall I call Sister Grimana? |
36984 | Shall I call the guards? |
36984 | Shall I drive them away? |
36984 | Shall I dry them for you? |
36984 | Shall I go back? |
36984 | Shall I go on? |
36984 | Shall I guess? |
36984 | Shall I order the boiling oil? |
36984 | Shall I outlive the bitter winter? |
36984 | Shall I prepare the samovar? |
36984 | Shall I run away from my creditors in a balloon? |
36984 | Shall I wake up the First and Fourth, sir? |
36984 | Shall we go back to the library? |
36984 | Shall we go hand in hand to meet eternity? |
36984 | Shall we hear more? |
36984 | Shall we make it unanimous, Clara? |
36984 | Shall we say twenty minutes? |
36984 | Shall we starve the children on Rosch Hoschana? |
36984 | Shanta, where is Shanta? |
36984 | Share him? |
36984 | She asked of her own accord, without you saying anything? |
36984 | She be set on it? |
36984 | She changes the subject hastily._] W''at''s a news down town? |
36984 | She composes herself and puts her hands on her aunt''s shoulders._] Where is the key to the piano? |
36984 | She does not know, then, that you have read? |
36984 | She follows the look and instinctively puts her hand to the ring._] Trust you? |
36984 | She gives you a baby- carriage? |
36984 | She grabs his arm and turns him around to face her-- intensely._] And I''ve always been a good wife to you, have n''t I, David? |
36984 | She has confided nothing to you, nor to Grimana? |
36984 | She has done this for me, for me, do you understand? |
36984 | She has n''t it on hand? |
36984 | She has no friends to love? |
36984 | She has relatives, I suppose? |
36984 | She is n''t listening at the door, is she? |
36984 | She never loved me? |
36984 | She said so? |
36984 | She that''as not been further than''er garden- gate these ten years? |
36984 | She then speaks petulantly._] What would ye be thinkin''? |
36984 | She told it to him-- do you understand? |
36984 | She was going to-- what is it you call it, ladies? |
36984 | She wo n''t see me? |
36984 | She would n''t be able to remember? |
36984 | She would n''t know me? |
36984 | She''s an independent character, is she? |
36984 | Shepherds? |
36984 | Should I fast and give our David and Julius and Benny a shadow-- maybe-- for a little sister?... |
36984 | Should n''t we make sure to buy this baby- carriage? |
36984 | Should you give away such a basket, Mrs. Rooney? |
36984 | Sir, why do n''t you leave when you are ordered? |
36984 | Sister Benvenuta, did I hear you call for me, or wish for me to come? |
36984 | Sister Rosalba? |
36984 | Sisters, is this the solemn judgment I bespoke on these trinkets? |
36984 | Sit down, wo n''t ye? |
36984 | So I have never had your love, eh? |
36984 | So I''ve been a devil, eh? |
36984 | So he has had his way at last and desecrated the statue of our poor brother with the figures of those naked women? |
36984 | So he was a saint, was he, that son of hers? |
36984 | So he was a sinner after all? |
36984 | So now Anna is disposed to go? |
36984 | So she took me fer a friend that''d croaked, eh? |
36984 | So soon? |
36984 | So that''s the way you understand it, too? |
36984 | So the little brother wants to mystify me a bit, does he? |
36984 | So they think that? |
36984 | So this is what it comes to then? |
36984 | So this scamp Casalonga is here, is he? |
36984 | So you and your wife did n''t have quite identical views? |
36984 | So you are not going to pay immediately? |
36984 | So you ca n''t pay? |
36984 | So you chose the girl? |
36984 | So you have been all the way to St. Pantaléimon''s in the Marsh? |
36984 | So you really like me? |
36984 | So you think there are few honest men? |
36984 | So you were afraid? |
36984 | So you wo n''t tell me if we go to- morrow? |
36984 | So you would give your life for a glimpse of the Queen? |
36984 | So, you''ll really come? |
36984 | So-- e? |
36984 | So-- o? |
36984 | So? |
36984 | So? |
36984 | So? |
36984 | So_ you_ have troubles? |
36984 | Society? |
36984 | Solly leben, did I keep it back-- the five dollars? |
36984 | Some suggestion? |
36984 | Something personal? |
36984 | Soon? |
36984 | Spending so much money? |
36984 | Spiridón has been here? |
36984 | Spoiled, sir? |
36984 | St. Petersburg? |
36984 | Standin''still? |
36984 | Stevens? |
36984 | Still, if I really_ ought n''t_ to be here.... Do_ you_ think I ought n''t to be here? |
36984 | Still-- do you know what I shall do? |
36984 | Stock? |
36984 | Stolen? |
36984 | Strange, is n''t it? |
36984 | Such a tragedy is unfolding itself right before your very eyes-- and you-- What are you making such big eyes for again? |
36984 | Suddenly a voice sounded,--"_who is crying here?_"the voice seemed to be near-- the footsteps were audible--"who''s crying here?" |
36984 | Suddenly a voice sounded,--"_who is crying here?_"the voice seemed to be near-- the footsteps were audible--"who''s crying here?" |
36984 | Suits me to a"T."How about you, my dear? |
36984 | Sulking again, are you? |
36984 | Suppose Anna and I go meanwhile? |
36984 | Suppose I told you that there once_ was_ an Alfred Stevens? |
36984 | Suppose he drops farther? |
36984 | Supposing I try to find out? |
36984 | Sure enough? |
36984 | Sure you are n''t a lawyer? |
36984 | Sure, take it with you.... And lend me your chess men, will you? |
36984 | Suspecting themselves...."They are struggling to overcome their guilty passion, but how long will they continue to struggle? |
36984 | Suspiciously._] W''at y''askin''all these questions f''r, anyways? |
36984 | Swindling? |
36984 | THE NEIGHBOR[_ without paying any attention to the Old Woman, but entirely addressing the woman on the bed._] How''s yer cough? |
36984 | Tactless of me, but how could I guess? |
36984 | Taking a step or two toward Mix._] Did you see her face? |
36984 | Tell me about your father? |
36984 | Tell me first how it came about that she did marry you, and whether she married you or you her? |
36984 | Tell me whether you like me? |
36984 | Tell me, Benvenuta, when you were in the world, did you ever see mothers and babies-- tiny babies-- not old at all? |
36984 | Tell me, Louise: does he love you, and do you love him? |
36984 | Tell me, how does a woman manage so that she is admired by her husband for full fifty years, as you are by grandfather? |
36984 | Tell me, now, did n''t you ever feel jealous of him, of the survival of his memory in your own self? |
36984 | Tell me, what ought I to wear? |
36984 | Tell me, what was it like? |
36984 | Tell me-- and if she loved him? |
36984 | Than with you? |
36984 | That I might borrow another''s eye so as to see you as you really were, not as you appeared to me? |
36984 | That last is not so extraordinary-- do you know anything about transfusion? |
36984 | That last one got you... eh? |
36984 | That soft white kitten? |
36984 | That was the old Count? |
36984 | That we were engaged? |
36984 | That would be August, the latter part of August, would n''t it? |
36984 | That''s a little hard on Charles, is n''t it? |
36984 | That''s because you know very well that I am designated for the place of honor-- tell me now when-- and where? |
36984 | That''s exactly what I did, do you understand? |
36984 | That''s it, is it? |
36984 | That''s it, is it? |
36984 | The Abbess turns to the Sister Sacristan._] What have you there? |
36984 | The Queen? |
36984 | The Thief walks into their midst._] Who is there? |
36984 | The Toro? |
36984 | The best lute player among the lay sisters is ill. You can play from notes? |
36984 | The coat is of what color? |
36984 | The coat is to be like the coat on the second figure to the left from the center of the picture? |
36984 | The doctor did n''t make your eyes no better, Solly? |
36984 | The earnest- money? |
36984 | The face again? |
36984 | The fellow is waiting? |
36984 | The flowers--? |
36984 | The girl''s father? |
36984 | The hospital doctor? |
36984 | The last time, what? |
36984 | The lute- playing comes in well at last, does it? |
36984 | The man, perhaps? |
36984 | The money? |
36984 | The more admirable eh? |
36984 | The motive? |
36984 | The name is Stevens.... Oh, you have one reserved in that name already? |
36984 | The office? |
36984 | The old longing re- awoke in my bosom but I told myself that one of my years had no right to expect happiness and love? |
36984 | The pants? |
36984 | The pay''s not bad? |
36984 | The play is really more important than the players-- isn''t it? |
36984 | The pure youth? |
36984 | The question is, What do you want me to have? |
36984 | The question we''ve got to decide and decide very quickly is, What would you like to have me take? |
36984 | The sight of the beauties or the smell of their stinking flesh? |
36984 | The sky is clear, the weather is beautiful, and has he to fall and be shattered to death? |
36984 | The three dimensions? |
36984 | The toll gatherer just now met me in the road and asked, why are you always worrying, Grigorji Stepanovitch? |
36984 | The traditional one that it takes to catch the first? |
36984 | The vodka? |
36984 | Thekla, have you nothing to reproach yourself with? |
36984 | Them? |
36984 | Then I do n''t think you can know much about it, can you? |
36984 | Then all suspicion on your part was out of the question? |
36984 | Then give me another stateroom.... What? |
36984 | Then have I ventured and encountered Love? |
36984 | Then if that''s so, why are n''t you easy on the subject? |
36984 | Then if you''re in love, why do n''t you get engaged? |
36984 | Then perhaps you can explain to me what was the use of all this silence? |
36984 | Then the story he told us of his meeting with Monsieur Laugier-- that was n''t true? |
36984 | Then there is something else to follow? |
36984 | Then thou comest? |
36984 | Then what became of him? |
36984 | Then what it comes to is that she has n''t educated me at all? |
36984 | Then what yuh gettin''so excited''bout? |
36984 | Then what? |
36984 | Then where''d we be? |
36984 | Then why are you so upset, and why do you reproach yourself? |
36984 | Then why did you allow him to throw himself away? |
36984 | Then why did you go without even leaving your shadow? |
36984 | Then why do you complain that the priests have taken your bench? |
36984 | Then why do you say so-- e like that? |
36984 | Then why make all this fuss about him? |
36984 | Then why these secret messages, and the gold thread, and the gardener''s child''s coat to be got by stealth? |
36984 | Then will you kindly tell me what your cue is? |
36984 | Then you ai n''t goin''--to turn back? |
36984 | Then you''re not the new model? |
36984 | Then, with forced ease._] Taking a train to Chicago? |
36984 | Then-- are you unwell? |
36984 | There could n''t possibly be any objection to it, could there? |
36984 | There is a delicate imitation of a tragic actress in the way she tells her story._] I wonder if I can make you understand? |
36984 | There was one of my letters in that wallet, was n''t there? |
36984 | There''s no particular virtue about standing, is there? |
36984 | There''s nothing else? |
36984 | There''s this Sheffield tray? |
36984 | There, you can see for yourself-- well, when and where? |
36984 | These very letters? |
36984 | These? |
36984 | They''re a rotten lot an''who should know et better than me? |
36984 | Think what? |
36984 | Think you can be firm and bear up under it? |
36984 | Thirdly, have you committed adultery? |
36984 | This Finley? |
36984 | This all you was to take in? |
36984 | This evening you come for them? |
36984 | This lady for Judith? |
36984 | This shoulder or this one? |
36984 | This was also natural, was n''t it? |
36984 | Thou canst not go? |
36984 | Thou cursest thy birth? |
36984 | Thou, whom I sought, dear Dryad of the trees, How art thou designate-- art thou Heart''s- Ease? |
36984 | Though all love''s lessons be a holiday, Yet I will humor thee: what wouldst thou play? |
36984 | Three an''a half mile.... Will you go, Lut''er? |
36984 | Three years, did I say? |
36984 | Through gambling? |
36984 | Thy life belongs to God? |
36984 | To Fanny? |
36984 | To expose your life? |
36984 | To life? |
36984 | To mention what? |
36984 | To no''the''ard? |
36984 | To speak to me? |
36984 | To steal your eggs is it? |
36984 | To stir his tired veins like magic wine, What visitants across his spirit glance, Lying on lilies, while he watch me dance? |
36984 | To that chair, Nanette? |
36984 | To the duel? |
36984 | To trespass on your crops is it? |
36984 | To what? |
36984 | To whom? |
36984 | To_ you_? |
36984 | Toddy? |
36984 | Too far above you? |
36984 | Took any? |
36984 | Trust you? |
36984 | Truth is thy witness? |
36984 | Tryin''t''freeze me out? |
36984 | Trying to control himself._] Where was this? |
36984 | Tsumu, are you married? |
36984 | Twelve hundred-- and for what was my husband indebted to you? |
36984 | Ugly? |
36984 | Undress? |
36984 | Unfair? |
36984 | Unless? |
36984 | Until to- morrow then? |
36984 | Upon whom depends this danger-- from you or from me? |
36984 | Us? |
36984 | Used you to pull Reggie''s hair? |
36984 | VIOLANTE Ah, so you trust that you, with fond deceit, May find some magic way to cozen him? |
36984 | VIOLANTE Ah, then, there is another? |
36984 | VIOLANTE And did not you love me? |
36984 | VIOLANTE And yet you dare not put him to the test? |
36984 | VIOLANTE Before you came-- whom loved he then? |
36984 | VIOLANTE Fears he, then, the Plague so? |
36984 | VIOLANTE Forever? |
36984 | VIOLANTE I''ll have him forth-- are you ready for the trial? |
36984 | VIOLANTE Not even for gold? |
36984 | VIOLANTE Not look upon me? |
36984 | VIOLANTE Then, it is true? |
36984 | VIOLANTE When you remove your veil Behind which ugliness that beggars hell Lies hidden-- OLIVIA[_ dazed_] Ugliness? |
36984 | VIOLANTE Where keeps he, then? |
36984 | VIOLANTE You have no pity on me?... |
36984 | VIOLANTE You love another, then? |
36984 | VIOLANTE[_ flaming_] What new freak of his is this? |
36984 | VIOLANTE[_ halting and hesitating_] Have you forgotten the first time you saw my face And sent a sonnet to me?... |
36984 | VIOLANTE[_ indignant_] How? |
36984 | VIOLANTE[_ mocking_] Ah... in sooth? |
36984 | VIOLANTE[_ triumphantly, to Olivia_] You heard? |
36984 | Valdivieso? |
36984 | Vodka in here? |
36984 | W''at right they got not t''cash my check? |
36984 | W''at y''askin''all these questions f''r, anyways? |
36984 | W''at y''gettin''s''het up about? |
36984 | W''at y''talkin''''bout? |
36984 | W''at''s a matter with you? |
36984 | W''at''s a matter? |
36984 | W''at''s a use o''takin''it s''hard? |
36984 | W''at''s bitin''you? |
36984 | W''atev''r made y''think that? |
36984 | W''y do n''t y''go out an''dig in th''ditch? |
36984 | WON''T you sit down, madame? |
36984 | Wait? |
36984 | Waiting for Sister Benvenuta, are you? |
36984 | Want me to help you straighten up? |
36984 | Want to bet I know how you convinced her? |
36984 | Was ever she heard to screech or to cry for the Miskells? |
36984 | Was he wrong, Mr. Strickland? |
36984 | Was her collar stitched all right, Mrs. Rooney? |
36984 | Was it Axel? |
36984 | Was it better I kept silent? |
36984 | Was it necessary that she tell you this? |
36984 | Was it necessary to run all over the country? |
36984 | Was it not so? |
36984 | Was it of you I''ve been dreaming? |
36984 | Was it you who begged Mario to come with us? |
36984 | Was it-- Maurice? |
36984 | Was my mamma home then? |
36984 | Was n''t even here? |
36984 | Was n''t it because I knew that you did n''t love me, and because I wanted your love, not merely your respect? |
36984 | Was n''t your life with us at home better? |
36984 | Was she dead? |
36984 | Was that a footstep? |
36984 | Was that why you used to quarrel with your sister? |
36984 | Was the play an awful bore? |
36984 | Was there no other way? |
36984 | Was this included in thy comedy? |
36984 | Wat d''y''say? |
36984 | Water?--what for?--what do I want of water? |
36984 | We are all going? |
36984 | We can be a beautiful example to other people, and show them how to lead the pure natural lives of the later Greeks? |
36984 | We can share him, ca n''t we? |
36984 | We did n''t touch that coat, Mr. Rosenbloom-- except Solly looks when I told him what he should do to it-- ain''t it, Solly? |
36984 | We have come to that? |
36984 | We reconcile ourselves? |
36984 | We''re kind of used to one another, are n''t we? |
36984 | Wednesday.... Will it be Tuesday, then to- morrow, By any chance? |
36984 | Wednesday.... Will it be Tuesday, then, to- morrow, By any chance? |
36984 | Well, Annie? |
36984 | Well, I guess it''s good for the liver, too.... Gimme one, Giz? |
36984 | Well, I will warn him, though, I fear, too late-- What Pierrot ever has escaped his fate? |
36984 | Well, Mistress Perverse and Disobedient? |
36984 | Well, after all, what does that matter? |
36984 | Well, are n''t we incidently? |
36984 | Well, are we all to live merely to do our duty? |
36984 | Well, but what are you going to do? |
36984 | Well, has he returned yet? |
36984 | Well, how are your armies getting along? |
36984 | Well, how''s Padie-- and the children? |
36984 | Well, if I may take the liberty to ask, who is her father? |
36984 | Well, if you want it that way, Mr. Lezinsky.... You have the suit ready this evening anyhow? |
36984 | Well, is n''t he your godson? |
36984 | Well, ladies, have you decided whether she was going to quilt it or knot it? |
36984 | Well, say on... what else?... |
36984 | Well, sir? |
36984 | Well, so far so good; but what does your husband say on the point? |
36984 | Well, stop it now, ca n''t you? |
36984 | Well, this is_ Alfred_ Stevens.... You have it reserved in that name? |
36984 | Well, w''at''s bitin''_ you_? |
36984 | Well, well, of what advantage is that? |
36984 | Well, what about him? |
36984 | Well, what is it, Miss Ivory? |
36984 | Well, what is your cue? |
36984 | Well, what now? |
36984 | Well, what then? |
36984 | Well, what''s your name? |
36984 | Well, why shouldn''I? |
36984 | Well, you asked me in, did n''t you? |
36984 | Well, you were going to smoke, were n''t you? |
36984 | Well, you''ll sit down again anyhow, wo n''t you? |
36984 | Well, young people, what are we going to do next? |
36984 | Well,''ast seed un? |
36984 | Well-- what of it? |
36984 | Well? |
36984 | Well? |
36984 | Well? |
36984 | Well? |
36984 | Well? |
36984 | Well? |
36984 | Well? |
36984 | Well? |
36984 | Were n''t you glad to come? |
36984 | Were n''t you told that he''s tied to the rock? |
36984 | Were the others like me? |
36984 | Were you afraid without old Praskóvya to protect you? |
36984 | Were you listening? |
36984 | Were you looking for me? |
36984 | Were you present when it was taken? |
36984 | Were you so splendidly off before? |
36984 | Wh-- at did you say? |
36984 | Whadda you think this is,--a dress- rehearsal? |
36984 | What a tragedy? |
36984 | What a tragedy? |
36984 | What about Bob Lockwood? |
36984 | What about William? |
36984 | What about him when I go back? |
36984 | What about the noble present? |
36984 | What about your mother, Louise? |
36984 | What ails thee, lass? |
36984 | What ails you? |
36984 | What am I thinking of? |
36984 | What am I to undress for? |
36984 | What am I, then? |
36984 | What amuses you so? |
36984 | What are all the pins for? |
36984 | What are the dogs howling about? |
36984 | What are the games that small moon- maids enjoy: Or is their time all spent in staid employ? |
36984 | What are the men goin''to do''bout it? |
36984 | What are these letters? |
36984 | What are they about? |
36984 | What are they? |
36984 | What are you about? |
36984 | What are you afraid of? |
36984 | What are you anyway? |
36984 | What are you doing now? |
36984 | What are you doing there? |
36984 | What are you doing, Lydia? |
36984 | What are you doing, Señor? |
36984 | What are you doing? |
36984 | What are you doing? |
36984 | What are you doing? |
36984 | What are you doing? |
36984 | What are you going to do with a man like this? |
36984 | What are you going to do with a man who takes it like this? |
36984 | What are you going to do, Louise? |
36984 | What are you going to do? |
36984 | What are you going to do? |
36984 | What are you going to do? |
36984 | What are you going to take up then? |
36984 | What are you going to tell them? |
36984 | What are you muttering about? |
36984 | What are you saying, Sir William? |
36984 | What are you saying? |
36984 | What are you saying? |
36984 | What are you saying? |
36984 | What are you standing back of me for? |
36984 | What are you talking about? |
36984 | What are you talking about? |
36984 | What are you talking about? |
36984 | What are you telling me this for? |
36984 | What are you watching? |
36984 | What be I thinkin''of? |
36984 | What becomes of social pretensions after that? |
36984 | What boss? |
36984 | What brings you here, Spiridón? |
36984 | What can I do to effect that? |
36984 | What can I know? |
36984 | What can I say to her, Nanette, when my own grief finds no comfort? |
36984 | What can a person say to such a woman? |
36984 | What can a person say to that? |
36984 | What can be the cause of it? |
36984 | What can it be? |
36984 | What can it be? |
36984 | What can one say to that? |
36984 | What can they want with me? |
36984 | What can time change for us? |
36984 | What can we do with him? |
36984 | What can we do? |
36984 | What can you do with a thing like that? |
36984 | What can you know of my loss? |
36984 | What celebratin''? |
36984 | What costs a cutter? |
36984 | What could Casalonga tell us anyway? |
36984 | What could I have done? |
36984 | What could I say to her? |
36984 | What could there be in our love for each other that was wrong? |
36984 | What d''yer say, Lut''er? |
36984 | What d''yuh want? |
36984 | What danger is there? |
36984 | What date is that letter? |
36984 | What deception? |
36984 | What did I tell you? |
36984 | What did he say? |
36984 | What did he say? |
36984 | What did she say? |
36984 | What did she say? |
36984 | What did she want? |
36984 | What did you do, grandma? |
36984 | What did you say about the next time? |
36984 | What did you say to her, old chap? |
36984 | What did you say to make her angry? |
36984 | What did you say? |
36984 | What did yuh come here fur? |
36984 | What did''e say to''er? |
36984 | What do I care what you want? |
36984 | What do I need of arms? |
36984 | What do I want? |
36984 | What do the brick- layers want? |
36984 | What do the fools want to go home fur now? |
36984 | What do we next? |
36984 | What do you always lie so fer? |
36984 | What do you call it then, coming here after me like this? |
36984 | What do you know about it? |
36984 | What do you mean by all this? |
36984 | What do you mean by coming now and handing the bill for your presents? |
36984 | What do you mean by saying such things to me? |
36984 | What do you mean by that? |
36984 | What do you mean by that? |
36984 | What do you mean by this cross- examination? |
36984 | What do you mean, better? |
36984 | What do you mean-- like this? |
36984 | What do you mean? |
36984 | What do you mean? |
36984 | What do you mean? |
36984 | What do you mean? |
36984 | What do you mean? |
36984 | What do you mean? |
36984 | What do you mean? |
36984 | What do you mean? |
36984 | What do you mean? |
36984 | What do you mean? |
36984 | What do you mean? |
36984 | What do you mean? |
36984 | What do you mean? |
36984 | What do you mean? |
36984 | What do you old friends want to quarrel for? |
36984 | What do you propose to do with this man? |
36984 | What do you propose? |
36984 | What do you say-- what do you mean? |
36984 | What do you say? |
36984 | What do you say? |
36984 | What do you say? |
36984 | What do you see? |
36984 | What do you suppose she was so nervous about? |
36984 | What do you take me for, a fool? |
36984 | What do you think he will do when he learns that she is gone? |
36984 | What do you think of that? |
36984 | What do you think of? |
36984 | What do you think, friend Zurita? |
36984 | What do you think? |
36984 | What do you think? |
36984 | What do you think? |
36984 | What do you want up there? |
36984 | What do you want with me? |
36984 | What do you want? |
36984 | What do you want? |
36984 | What do you want? |
36984 | What do you want? |
36984 | What do you wish of me? |
36984 | What do you wish, Paolo? |
36984 | What do you wish? |
36984 | What do you wish? |
36984 | What doctor? |
36984 | What does Ruler think? |
36984 | What does he say? |
36984 | What does he say? |
36984 | What does he think? |
36984 | What does he want with me? |
36984 | What does it matter? |
36984 | What does it represent? |
36984 | What does the Señora wish? |
36984 | What does the lady wish? |
36984 | What does"viz"mean? |
36984 | What else can there be? |
36984 | What else did he say? |
36984 | What else did you expect? |
36984 | What else do you want? |
36984 | What else have you? |
36984 | What else is there left for us if they give up, too? |
36984 | What face? |
36984 | What feelings are you experiencing? |
36984 | What flowers? |
36984 | What for? |
36984 | What for? |
36984 | What for? |
36984 | What fur? |
36984 | What good should half a dollar do? |
36984 | What good were there in that? |
36984 | What good would she be to you? |
36984 | What had I to tell you? |
36984 | What had_ you_ to give? |
36984 | What happened then?... |
36984 | What happens to that carriage, Mrs. Rooney? |
36984 | What has happened new from this discovery? |
36984 | What has happened? |
36984 | What has he done to make him the villain? |
36984 | What has he done? |
36984 | What have I done? |
36984 | What have I to be afraid of? |
36984 | What have the dogs got to do with it? |
36984 | What have they made of you? |
36984 | What have they to do with you coming here? |
36984 | What have you done with him? |
36984 | What have you done with my overcoat? |
36984 | What have you done? |
36984 | What have you done? |
36984 | What have you done? |
36984 | What have you ever done for me? |
36984 | What have you to say to him? |
36984 | What help have you given me? |
36984 | What husband ever was afraid? |
36984 | What husband would n''t be? |
36984 | What ideas were these? |
36984 | What if I should tell you that Maurice still lives, Diane? |
36984 | What if all these years he had been an outcast, living in degradation? |
36984 | What if he should lower his price? |
36984 | What if he should say that he would take 420 roubles? |
36984 | What if he should say that he would take 450 roubles? |
36984 | What if it did? |
36984 | What is Krakau doing over there? |
36984 | What is Love? |
36984 | What is a man to do? |
36984 | What is he gazing at? |
36984 | What is it all about? |
36984 | What is it called? |
36984 | What is it he wants? |
36984 | What is it you wish? |
36984 | What is it you wish? |
36984 | What is it you''ve craving? |
36984 | What is it, Joe dear? |
36984 | What is it, Louise? |
36984 | What is it, Mr. Ivory? |
36984 | What is it, Mrs. Rooney? |
36984 | What is it, Sophie? |
36984 | What is it, child? |
36984 | What is it, dear? |
36984 | What is it, dear? |
36984 | What is it, my angel? |
36984 | What is it, my child? |
36984 | What is it, my dear? |
36984 | What is it? |
36984 | What is it? |
36984 | What is it? |
36984 | What is it? |
36984 | What is it? |
36984 | What is it? |
36984 | What is it? |
36984 | What is it? |
36984 | What is it? |
36984 | What is it? |
36984 | What is it? |
36984 | What is it? |
36984 | What is it? |
36984 | What is love? |
36984 | What is that? |
36984 | What is that? |
36984 | What is the Fool laughing at? |
36984 | What is the answer to that?... |
36984 | What is the book? |
36984 | What is the first sign of fear? |
36984 | What is the matter with me? |
36984 | What is the matter with you, anyway? |
36984 | What is the matter? |
36984 | What is the matter? |
36984 | What is the matter? |
36984 | What is the matter? |
36984 | What is the secret? |
36984 | What is the sense of saying I do not want you on my side the wall? |
36984 | What is the use of all these words? |
36984 | What is the use of promising? |
36984 | What is the use of the courts? |
36984 | What is the vodka for? |
36984 | What is there to explain? |
36984 | What is this big book? |
36984 | What is this light, and whither am I come To sleep beneath the stars so far from home? |
36984 | What is this petulance? |
36984 | What is this that you are saying? |
36984 | What is this trouble between you and your sisters- in- law? |
36984 | What is this? |
36984 | What is this? |
36984 | What is your general position? |
36984 | What is your name? |
36984 | What is your name? |
36984 | What is your proposition, Mr. Inkwell? |
36984 | What is yours, Lydia? |
36984 | What kind of a change? |
36984 | What kind of a meeting? |
36984 | What kind of a right? |
36984 | What kind of a way is that? |
36984 | What kind of business is that? |
36984 | What knowledge is required? |
36984 | What luck could there be in a place and a man not to be in it? |
36984 | What made you choose that name? |
36984 | What made you think I was married? |
36984 | What manner of God is He that deprives a dying mother of her son? |
36984 | What matters the tribe? |
36984 | What mischief have you been up to, for you to kiss me? |
36984 | What mischief? |
36984 | What more could the silly fellow want? |
36984 | What must I do? |
36984 | What must I next? |
36984 | What mystery explains this solitude? |
36984 | What need of further oaths? |
36984 | What now? |
36984 | What of it? |
36984 | What of it? |
36984 | What of? |
36984 | What of? |
36984 | What on earth do you take me for? |
36984 | What on earth were girls made for if not to be kissed? |
36984 | What ought I to do? |
36984 | What personages have we here? |
36984 | What put that in your head? |
36984 | What put that into your head? |
36984 | What reason? |
36984 | What remains for me? |
36984 | What right have brick- layers to make rules for my father? |
36984 | What right have you to send him away? |
36984 | What ring? |
36984 | What say you, Thyrsis, do they only question Where next to pull?--Or do their far minds draw them Thus vaguely north of west and south of east? |
36984 | What say you, Thyrsis, shall we make a song About a lamb that thought himself a shepherd? |
36984 | What seek ye here? |
36984 | What shall I do? |
36984 | What shall I play? |
36984 | What shall my dance say? |
36984 | What shepherds? |
36984 | What should I care for roast goose? |
36984 | What should I do with combs and brushes? |
36984 | What should I gain by loving her? |
36984 | What should he do to the pants? |
36984 | What should there be? |
36984 | What signifies Crannagh and the mills of Duras? |
36984 | What sort of a coat do you wish? |
36984 | What sort of a question is that, madam? |
36984 | What sort of logic is that? |
36984 | What story? |
36984 | What the devil''s the matter with your doors? |
36984 | What the devil-- pardon the language-- do I care for your manager? |
36984 | What the hell''r''you gabbin''? |
36984 | What then? |
36984 | What time is it now? |
36984 | What time shall I have for that with all the extra work and my back broken? |
36984 | What troubles you about it? |
36984 | What twist? |
36984 | What was I to do? |
36984 | What was it, Grimana? |
36984 | What was that bell? |
36984 | What was that? |
36984 | What was the number of that last one? |
36984 | What was the use of offending anybody? |
36984 | What was there to be afraid about? |
36984 | What way did my means go from me is it? |
36984 | What were you afraid of? |
36984 | What were you doing in Siberia? |
36984 | What will be done to us? |
36984 | What will become of us? |
36984 | What will happen to you if the King hears of this? |
36984 | What will it be? |
36984 | What will it be? |
36984 | What will people say? |
36984 | What will they live on? |
36984 | What will your husband do while they are extolling the genius of our brother, and he knows that he never had any? |
36984 | What would he think of you? |
36984 | What would my wife say? |
36984 | What would we-- what would we like to have you take? |
36984 | What would ye be thinkin''? |
36984 | What would you do if we had kids? |
36984 | What would you give if you could kiss me? |
36984 | What would you know about wide houses? |
36984 | What would you like to have me take? |
36984 | What would you wear? |
36984 | What wouldst thou now? |
36984 | What wouldst thou of the maiden of the moon? |
36984 | What yer got, Giz? |
36984 | What you mean? |
36984 | What yuh doin'', Seth? |
36984 | What yuh doin''? |
36984 | What''ll I get cured of? |
36984 | What''re ye shiverin''''bout? |
36984 | What''s a man compared to an idea? |
36984 | What''s ailin''_ you_, Lut''er? |
36984 | What''s come to thee, lass? |
36984 | What''s his name? |
36984 | What''s that there under the table? |
36984 | What''s that to me? |
36984 | What''s that you are pouring? |
36984 | What''s that? |
36984 | What''s that? |
36984 | What''s that? |
36984 | What''s that? |
36984 | What''s that? |
36984 | What''s that? |
36984 | What''s that? |
36984 | What''s that? |
36984 | What''s the good of being alive at all if one is n''t to be in love? |
36984 | What''s the hell''s a corpse got to do with habits? |
36984 | What''s the matter with her? |
36984 | What''s the matter with you, Softy? |
36984 | What''s the matter, Louise? |
36984 | What''s the matter? |
36984 | What''s the matter? |
36984 | What''s the matter? |
36984 | What''s the matter? |
36984 | What''s the matter? |
36984 | What''s the matter? |
36984 | What''s the matter? |
36984 | What''s the news? |
36984 | What''s the next remedy, think you? |
36984 | What''s the row to- day? |
36984 | What''s the trouble with him? |
36984 | What''s the use? |
36984 | What''s this you''ve thought up? |
36984 | What''s up? |
36984 | What''s up? |
36984 | What''s wrong? |
36984 | What, again? |
36984 | What, you here again? |
36984 | What-- was she doing? |
36984 | What? |
36984 | What? |
36984 | What? |
36984 | What? |
36984 | What? |
36984 | What? |
36984 | What? |
36984 | What? |
36984 | What? |
36984 | What? |
36984 | What? |
36984 | What? |
36984 | What? |
36984 | What? |
36984 | What? |
36984 | What? |
36984 | What? |
36984 | What? |
36984 | What? |
36984 | What? |
36984 | What? |
36984 | What? |
36984 | What? |
36984 | What? |
36984 | What_ do_ you do? |
36984 | What_ do_ you mean? |
36984 | Whatever made you come downstairs? |
36984 | Whatever made you think so? |
36984 | When a woman comes to me for a gown, I do n''t measure body, why should I? |
36984 | When do I see the Queen? |
36984 | When the men in our family have been clergymen for four generations? |
36984 | When thou turn me from this portal, Whither shall I, hapless mortal, Seek love out and win again Heart of me that thou retain? |
36984 | When was a Wilde ever slave to money? |
36984 | When was he here? |
36984 | When you have collected spot cash? |
36984 | When you talk with him? |
36984 | When you were not suffering, as you are suffering now, did you know how to see the way I suffered? |
36984 | When? |
36984 | When? |
36984 | Whence came, dear Queen, such magic melody? |
36984 | Where are they? |
36984 | Where are you going with my glasses? |
36984 | Where are you going? |
36984 | Where are you going? |
36984 | Where are you, Olivia? |
36984 | Where are you? |
36984 | Where are you? |
36984 | Where can Julie be? |
36984 | Where can that scamp Juanito be? |
36984 | Where did it come from? |
36984 | Where did they come from? |
36984 | Where did you find it? |
36984 | Where did you get them? |
36984 | Where did you get this wisdom from? |
36984 | Where did you learn all this? |
36984 | Where did you suddenly get the courage? |
36984 | Where do these stockings and things go? |
36984 | Where do you come from? |
36984 | Where do you come from? |
36984 | Where do you want these things to go? |
36984 | Where in books can I find escape from the grim reality of being hitched for life to such a wife? |
36984 | Where in the world are you? |
36984 | Where is Dascha? |
36984 | Where is Kanada? |
36984 | Where is Mary? |
36984 | Where is he? |
36984 | Where is he? |
36984 | Where is he? |
36984 | Where is he? |
36984 | Where is it? |
36984 | Where is she? |
36984 | Where is she? |
36984 | Where is that letter? |
36984 | Where is the key? |
36984 | Where is the key? |
36984 | Where is this thing going to stop? |
36984 | Where is your passport? |
36984 | Where shall I look? |
36984 | Where shall I put it? |
36984 | Where we goin''? |
36984 | Where you been, Florrie? |
36984 | Where''s my coat? |
36984 | Where''s my wife? |
36984 | Where''s the King? |
36984 | Where''s the will an''testament? |
36984 | Where''s your wife? |
36984 | Where, oh where? |
36984 | Where, where is an ass? |
36984 | Where? |
36984 | Where? |
36984 | Which did you choose? |
36984 | Which do you think is the greater love, Diane, the love which endures for the moment, or the love which endures for all time? |
36984 | Which doctor? |
36984 | Which now of the two of ye is Mike McInerney? |
36984 | Which pocket yer pills in, Giz? |
36984 | Which secret? |
36984 | Which way was I to turn? |
36984 | Who are you? |
36984 | Who are you? |
36984 | Who are you? |
36984 | Who are you? |
36984 | Who are_ you_? |
36984 | Who art thou, lady? |
36984 | Who brought this here? |
36984 | Who brought you up? |
36984 | Who buys that carriage, Mrs. Rooney? |
36984 | Who can establish the punctilious ratio between necessity and desire? |
36984 | Who can read the secret of the Fates? |
36984 | Who can say? |
36984 | Who cheats? |
36984 | Who comes hither? |
36984 | Who gave thee life? |
36984 | Who has been drinking here? |
36984 | Who has been eating here? |
36984 | Who has been here, Goldie? |
36984 | Who in the world wide is asking you to eat them? |
36984 | Who is Cousin Paul? |
36984 | Who is he? |
36984 | Who is he? |
36984 | Who is he? |
36984 | Who is her father, if I am not? |
36984 | Who is it is calling me by my name? |
36984 | Who is it you''re moving? |
36984 | Who is it? |
36984 | Who is quarreling? |
36984 | Who is she? |
36984 | Who is she? |
36984 | Who is spying on you? |
36984 | Who is spying on you? |
36984 | Who is spying on you? |
36984 | Who is the man you accuse, eh? |
36984 | Who is the master? |
36984 | Who is this man who resurrects the Dead? |
36984 | Who is this mortal Who ventures to- night To woo an immortal? |
36984 | Who is this? |
36984 | Who knows? |
36984 | Who knows? |
36984 | Who made him boss here? |
36984 | Who made you boss here? |
36984 | Who put it into his head not to paint any more? |
36984 | Who sat here? |
36984 | Who shoots? |
36984 | Who that has seen his face can doubt that he is a master, and a cruel one? |
36984 | Who threw this rag here? |
36984 | Who told yuh? |
36984 | Who took care of you? |
36984 | Who wants to smoke? |
36984 | Who was he then? |
36984 | Who was here at the time? |
36984 | Who was it set with his feet in the oven last winter, an''let Jack Tompkins break into them cottages--_with keys_? |
36984 | Who was it? |
36984 | Who was that? |
36984 | Who was the artist? |
36984 | Who was your mother? |
36984 | Who would ever have dreamed he could have been forgotten so soon? |
36984 | Who would have known this for my portrait? |
36984 | Who''d buy them? |
36984 | Who''ll row? |
36984 | Who''s Pommy? |
36984 | Who''s afraid? |
36984 | Who''s coming? |
36984 | Who''s drinking? |
36984 | Who''s gettin''het up? |
36984 | Who''s going to punish that? |
36984 | Who''s going with me? |
36984 | Who''s smoking? |
36984 | Who''s stuck up? |
36984 | Who''s the woman, and the children? |
36984 | Who''s there? |
36984 | Who''s thinking of self? |
36984 | Who''s this meant to be? |
36984 | Who''s to speak fur ye? |
36984 | Who, do n''t you remember me, sir? |
36984 | Who, then, is going to fall? |
36984 | Who? |
36984 | Who? |
36984 | Who? |
36984 | Who_ are_ you? |
36984 | Whom are you talking to? |
36984 | Whom do you mean? |
36984 | Whom do you think you are talking to? |
36984 | Whom will you choose? |
36984 | Whose are they, then? |
36984 | Whose coat is this? |
36984 | Whose face? |
36984 | Whose room is that? |
36984 | Whose voice is this Wrangling and breaking in upon my peace? |
36984 | Why am I honored with these confidences? |
36984 | Why are n''t you drinking? |
36984 | Why are they beating drums? |
36984 | Why are you not wearing your crown? |
36984 | Why are you so quiet, Bolling? |
36984 | Why are you trying to stop me? |
36984 | Why art sad, sweet Moon? |
36984 | Why art thou pale, fond lover of the moon? |
36984 | Why art thou sad? |
36984 | Why ca n''t we both be compromised? |
36984 | Why ca n''t you? |
36984 | Why can I not forget about it? |
36984 | Why could n''t we claim we''d lost something very valuable, something we''d never had? |
36984 | Why d''you ask me such a question, Annie? |
36984 | Why did Adámek say that it was you? |
36984 | Why did I ever come? |
36984 | Why did he drag me into the street? |
36984 | Why did it have to be just mine? |
36984 | Why did n''t Knut send regards to me in his birthday letter? |
36984 | Why did n''t thee speak? |
36984 | Why did n''t you bring her along with you, Mrs. Rooney? |
36984 | Why did n''t you keep it with you? |
36984 | Why did n''t you tell me so? |
36984 | Why did n''t you tell me? |
36984 | Why did n''t you turn it over to the clerks? |
36984 | Why did she marry me, then? |
36984 | Why did they have to pick out_ my_ lover? |
36984 | Why did you bring them here? |
36984 | Why did you come to see me, Mademoiselle? |
36984 | Why did you come? |
36984 | Why did you drag me into the street? |
36984 | Why did you go to that chair? |
36984 | Why do n''t they save him? |
36984 | Why do n''t they save me?" |
36984 | Why do n''t they take him off? |
36984 | Why do n''t you do something? |
36984 | Why do n''t you drop into Smith''s soda parlor? |
36984 | Why do n''t you follow the others? |
36984 | Why do n''t you get the wine, Krakau? |
36984 | Why do n''t you go in for reform? |
36984 | Why do n''t you hang up your cap? |
36984 | Why do n''t you light your pipe? |
36984 | Why do n''t you move? |
36984 | Why do n''t you save him? |
36984 | Why do n''t you sit down? |
36984 | Why do n''t you speak out, then? |
36984 | Why do n''t you stop? |
36984 | Why do n''t you take something to make you grow? |
36984 | Why do they disturb my peace? |
36984 | Why do you always throw those confounded later Greeks in my face? |
36984 | Why do you bother with those poor letters? |
36984 | Why do you fear for it? |
36984 | Why do you go on playing that game? |
36984 | Why do you hold him back? |
36984 | Why do you look around like that? |
36984 | Why do you look at me like that, Solly? |
36984 | Why do you look at me like that? |
36984 | Why do you prolong this torment? |
36984 | Why do you say it so sadly? |
36984 | Why do you say such things? |
36984 | Why do you say that that is all over? |
36984 | Why do you say that? |
36984 | Why do you speak like that? |
36984 | Why do you suppose that she will not be glad to see him? |
36984 | Why do you take on such a severe tone? |
36984 | Why do you wear heliotrope and the same shade as mine? |
36984 | Why does n''t she look ridiculous when I stay out all night? |
36984 | Why does the great Queen envy Tsumu? |
36984 | Why go on for twenty years sacrificing her own life to a fantastic image? |
36984 | Why have the Gods made woman necessary to man, and made them fools? |
36984 | Why have you asked nothing more of me? |
36984 | Why have you come? |
36984 | Why have you returned? |
36984 | Why have you spoilt what you began so well? |
36984 | Why in heaven''s name should n''t I worry? |
36984 | Why is n''t he going to fall? |
36984 | Why is the door locked? |
36984 | Why make a trip to the pump necessary? |
36984 | Why me? |
36984 | Why must I always come along too? |
36984 | Why must I promise you blindly? |
36984 | Why must some people get so fussy and cross when they reach a certain age? |
36984 | Why not leave it to chance? |
36984 | Why not the new model who is coming to- day to pose for my Apollo? |
36984 | Why not, Curt? |
36984 | Why not, if it please her to do so? |
36984 | Why not-- if she is stupid? |
36984 | Why not? |
36984 | Why not? |
36984 | Why not? |
36984 | Why not? |
36984 | Why not? |
36984 | Why not? |
36984 | Why not? |
36984 | Why not? |
36984 | Why not? |
36984 | Why not? |
36984 | Why not? |
36984 | Why not? |
36984 | Why not? |
36984 | Why not? |
36984 | Why should I ask him? |
36984 | Why should I be so musical and sad? |
36984 | Why should I be so particular? |
36984 | Why should I bring misfortune to you? |
36984 | Why should I give it up now that the world has gone mad? |
36984 | Why should I have told you? |
36984 | Why should a man with so much money miss a little for a few hours? |
36984 | Why should any one object? |
36984 | Why should n''t I worry? |
36984 | Why should n''t Mrs. Abbey give us her opinion? |
36984 | Why should n''t you take it from the money you had? |
36984 | Why should we help the brick- layers? |
36984 | Why should we make ourselves ridiculous? |
36984 | Why should we wear crowns? |
36984 | Why should you have ambitions? |
36984 | Why should you move away now, Mrs. Rooney? |
36984 | Why should you not be here? |
36984 | Why should you say"poor creatures"? |
36984 | Why should you weep? |
36984 | Why spoil it by anti- climax? |
36984 | Why strange? |
36984 | Why tell him? |
36984 | Why this agitation? |
36984 | Why will you talk like an idiot? |
36984 | Why wo n''t you fight? |
36984 | Why would n''t it be wide? |
36984 | Why would n''t they be knocked by the thunder, the same as the tree, or some storm that came up from the west? |
36984 | Why, Lydia? |
36984 | Why, children, what is it? |
36984 | Why, have you been in America? |
36984 | Why, that''s not tight at all.... How''s this? |
36984 | Why, what do you mean? |
36984 | Why, what of? |
36984 | Why.... What...? |
36984 | Why? |
36984 | Why? |
36984 | Why? |
36984 | Why? |
36984 | Why? |
36984 | Why? |
36984 | Why? |
36984 | Why? |
36984 | Why? |
36984 | Why? |
36984 | Why? |
36984 | Why? |
36984 | Wi-- wi-- will you have some more t-- tea? |
36984 | Wi-- wi-- will you have some more tea? |
36984 | Wi-- will-- will you have some m-- more-- t-- tea? |
36984 | Will he fall here? |
36984 | Will he shut up? |
36984 | Will it not be deemed strange by the ladies present? |
36984 | Will she come home with us? |
36984 | Will she go? |
36984 | Will sixpence ruin''e? |
36984 | Will the Hempsteds be in? |
36984 | Will the men turn to willin''or must we drag''em out? |
36984 | Will ye be coming, Mrs. Airey? |
36984 | Will ye get it for her, mother? |
36984 | Will ye sit down? |
36984 | Will ye tie it, Ann? |
36984 | Will yer go, Lut''er? |
36984 | Will you allow me to sit here next to you? |
36984 | Will you be my wife? |
36984 | Will you go to your bench? |
36984 | Will you have one now? |
36984 | Will you listen to me? |
36984 | Will you not excuse me? |
36984 | Will you not excuse me? |
36984 | Will you not take your crown from your head? |
36984 | Will you now drive me back to it? |
36984 | Will you obey? |
36984 | Will you permit me to see Berman''s letter? |
36984 | Will you pose for it? |
36984 | Will you promise to tell me? |
36984 | Will you read my manuscript, sir? |
36984 | Will you smoke? |
36984 | Will you take care of it for me-- Alfred Stevens? |
36984 | Will you tremble again please? |
36984 | Wilt thou hold my heart forever? |
36984 | Wine, eh? |
36984 | Wings? |
36984 | With me? |
36984 | Without Praskóvya Petróvna? |
36984 | Without a model, and yet so lifelike? |
36984 | Without a reconciliation? |
36984 | Wo n''t be here? |
36984 | Wo n''t he? |
36984 | Wo n''t the time come when he will grow indifferent to you? |
36984 | Wo n''t you come back home with me? |
36984 | Wo n''t you complain to your postal clerk son- in- law, too? |
36984 | Wo n''t you give me time to carry my parcels into my room? |
36984 | Wo n''t you have a chair? |
36984 | Wo n''t you have the goodness to tell me whether you have ever seen a man fall? |
36984 | Wo n''t you please not tell me any more? |
36984 | Wo n''t you please turn back? |
36984 | Wo n''t you read it to him? |
36984 | Wo n''t you sit down on the couch there? |
36984 | Wo n''t you sit down? |
36984 | Woman or wife? |
36984 | Woman, do you know who that IS? |
36984 | Woman, what foolish mockin''is this? |
36984 | Women? |
36984 | Would I shield you? |
36984 | Would it be impudent to beg a kiss? |
36984 | Would it be something unpleasant? |
36984 | Would n''t he like it himself? |
36984 | Would n''t he like us to be happy? |
36984 | Would n''t it be better to leave off now, so that you can rest for a little? |
36984 | Would n''t you like to make his acquaintance, so as to pour out your heart to him if you want to? |
36984 | Would n''t you like to see it again? |
36984 | Would n''t you like to take my arm chair too, and my pictures? |
36984 | Would she let lodgings if she had? |
36984 | Would they accept me again, do you think? |
36984 | Would you believe it, Mrs. Rooney? |
36984 | Would you call Florrie a... a... well one o''them high- strung girls? |
36984 | Would you check with the bishop? |
36984 | Would you like it? |
36984 | Would you like something to rest your feet on? |
36984 | Would you like to see them? |
36984 | Would you like to see your answer? |
36984 | Would you mind skipping the scene to- day? |
36984 | Would you object if I used your name? |
36984 | Would you? |
36984 | Would you? |
36984 | Wright?" |
36984 | Write me a letter? |
36984 | Y''got the liver pills? |
36984 | Y''never c''n tell w''at these women''re goin''t''do-- can yer? |
36984 | Y''wouldn''have me look worse''n one o''these furriners, would y''? |
36984 | Ye ai n''t goin''to set up''til they git home? |
36984 | Yeh, but what come o''yer first wife? |
36984 | Yes or no? |
36984 | Yes, Mr. Rosenbloom? |
36984 | Yes, Mrs. Hale? |
36984 | Yes, Mrs. Hale? |
36984 | Yes, Mrs. Rooney? |
36984 | Yes, Pa? |
36984 | Yes, Solly? |
36984 | Yes, Solly? |
36984 | Yes, Solly? |
36984 | Yes, Solly? |
36984 | Yes, Solly? |
36984 | Yes, Solly? |
36984 | Yes, did n''t you hear? |
36984 | Yes, do you know him? |
36984 | Yes, how did you manage that? |
36984 | Yes, nothing makes Mr. Rosenbloom to lose his cheek, ai n''t it, Solly? |
36984 | Yes, sir? |
36984 | Yes, what then? |
36984 | Yes, where is it? |
36984 | Yes, why do you? |
36984 | Yes, why should n''t I? |
36984 | Yes-- but-- but then how can I believe-- that we are really on an equality? |
36984 | Yes--? |
36984 | Yes... what else?... |
36984 | Yes? |
36984 | Yes? |
36984 | Yes? |
36984 | Yes? |
36984 | Yes? |
36984 | Yes? |
36984 | Yes? |
36984 | Yes? |
36984 | Yes? |
36984 | Yes? |
36984 | Yes? |
36984 | Yes?... |
36984 | Yet how am I to live? |
36984 | You ai n''t mad, be you? |
36984 | You ai n''t out of your mind--[_Anxiously._] be you? |
36984 | You ai n''t, ai n''t you? |
36984 | You and I are not saints, are we, Astéryi Ivanovitch? |
36984 | You and the Madame intend leaving to- morrow, do n''t you? |
36984 | You are going to sit down? |
36984 | You are going? |
36984 | You are keeping something from me? |
36984 | You are not ill, my child? |
36984 | You are not performing any secret penance? |
36984 | You are nothing? |
36984 | You are willing to fight with me, are you-- a respectable man, the father of a family? |
36984 | You are young and have a healthy animal appetite; but why deck sentimentalism on your horns? |
36984 | You are? |
36984 | You are_ sure_ you never knew anybody of that name? |
36984 | You believe_ that_? |
36984 | You ca n''t possibly be angry and laugh at the same time, can you? |
36984 | You ca n''t pretend that I should feel badly about the fate of Luciano? |
36984 | You ca n''t save your own life? |
36984 | You ca n''t see in the dark, can you? |
36984 | You count as little? |
36984 | You dare call Moo Moo a fool? |
36984 | You despise me? |
36984 | You did n''t like her? |
36984 | You did n''t, is it? |
36984 | You did? |
36984 | You do n''t ask him? |
36984 | You do n''t begin work on it, yet? |
36984 | You do n''t believe that such a thing is impossible? |
36984 | You do n''t call that collecting? |
36984 | You do n''t claim the picture is by Sargent or Whistler? |
36984 | You do n''t hate the Jewish religion, Mrs. Rooney? |
36984 | You do n''t know when that will be, sir? |
36984 | You do n''t mean a duel? |
36984 | You do n''t mean to tell me that you think these letters are genuine? |
36984 | You do n''t say? |
36984 | You do n''t think she''d be the sort to fly off the handle an''do... well, somethin''desp''rate? |
36984 | You do n''t_ know_? |
36984 | You do not approve, sister? |
36984 | You do not hear? |
36984 | You do not know me? |
36984 | You got into it without my assistance, did n''t you? |
36984 | You have heard him threatening to fall on my head, have n''t you? |
36984 | You have n''t any other? |
36984 | You have never regretted giving up his distinguished name, have you, Carolina, for this humble one of mine? |
36984 | You have observed her of late? |
36984 | You have read it? |
36984 | You have sent for us, Mother? |
36984 | You have some intention in this, Father? |
36984 | You hear? |
36984 | You knew him well? |
36984 | You knew of this love? |
36984 | You knew? |
36984 | You know Madame le Bargy personally? |
36984 | You know of it? |
36984 | You know that the Devil is in him? |
36984 | You know what a gift I have for talk? |
36984 | You know what a rabbi is by us, Mrs. Rooney? |
36984 | You love me, do n''t you, David? |
36984 | You love this shriveled woman? |
36984 | You loved each other all that time? |
36984 | You loved her infinitely? |
36984 | You made that? |
36984 | You make presents, eh, Solly? |
36984 | You mean she has grown old? |
36984 | You mean she is so stricken she ca n''t talk with me? |
36984 | You mean that I told an untruth? |
36984 | You mean that they did n''t get on very well? |
36984 | You mean to say you do n''t care at all-- that you have never cared? |
36984 | You mean to say you found them, By digging around in the ground for them? |
36984 | You mean you''d let the sheep Go thirsty? |
36984 | You mean your soul? |
36984 | You mean-- spirits? |
36984 | You mean?... |
36984 | You must help her celebrate, do you hear? |
36984 | You must keep it-- that''s part of the bargain, is n''t it? |
36984 | You now reached the night lodging of the robber-- here you were resting? |
36984 | You recognize your old friend and pardner, do you, Lon Purdy? |
36984 | You remember-- a few minutes ago, you spoke the name of Alfred Stevens? |
36984 | You reproach me? |
36984 | You reserved a stateroom? |
36984 | You saw her, then? |
36984 | You say Madame has changed? |
36984 | You see? |
36984 | You seem for once in a way, to be awfully keen on youth? |
36984 | You sent off the trunks this afternoon? |
36984 | You stole my honor, and I could only win back mine by taking yours-- wasn''t I right? |
36984 | You surely do n''t expect me to quarrel with you in public? |
36984 | You suspect the reason? |
36984 | You thank me for telling you your doom? |
36984 | You think it was fair...? |
36984 | You think she waits till spring to sell that baby- carriage? |
36984 | You think so? |
36984 | You think so? |
36984 | You think that my love was not as great as yours? |
36984 | You think you are right, eh? |
36984 | You think you''re a thief, do n''t you? |
36984 | You think--? |
36984 | You told him that since my husband''s death I receive no one? |
36984 | You told me about it here-- in this room, was it not? |
36984 | You told people I wrote these letters? |
36984 | You understand? |
36984 | You want th''whole box, do n''t yer? |
36984 | You well now, Mr. Rosenbloom? |
36984 | You were afraid that she would say no? |
36984 | You were glad enough to get away after a year of it, were n''t you? |
36984 | You were in an awful hurry about throwing that money down, were n''t you? |
36984 | You were n''t raised round here, were you? |
36984 | You were the man, then, I saw on the steamer? |
36984 | You who were dead? |
36984 | You will come, wo n''t you? |
36984 | You will excuse me if I read aloud? |
36984 | You will go if I give you money? |
36984 | You will? |
36984 | You wish them to be looked over, as usual? |
36984 | You wish to fight a duel? |
36984 | You wished me to help you? |
36984 | You wo n''t forget to smile? |
36984 | You wo n''t give me my money? |
36984 | You wo n''t? |
36984 | You would n''t have me deny her_ ev''rythin''_?... |
36984 | You would n''t like to forgive me? |
36984 | You would not strike me? |
36984 | You wrote them yourself?!? |
36984 | You wrote them yourself?!? |
36984 | You wrote:"If all that I have, and all that I am, is too little to lay before you, how can these poor flowers be much?" |
36984 | You''d be taking an unfair advantage, too; I could n''t kick a lady, could I? |
36984 | You''ll have him hurled from the wall of the palace to a forest of waiting spears below? |
36984 | You''re a regular devil, do you know that? |
36984 | You''re afraid I''m going to miss the train?... |
36984 | You''re going to marry again? |
36984 | You''re not making love to me, you naughty boy? |
36984 | You''re not serious? |
36984 | You''re not trying to kid me, ma''am? |
36984 | You''re not? |
36984 | You''re sure they ca n''t be traced? |
36984 | You''re the ass now, are you? |
36984 | You''re the old gentleman, are n''t you, you old duck? |
36984 | You''ve brought the fool here too? |
36984 | You''ve come, then, to warn me? |
36984 | You''ve heard of him? |
36984 | You-- you love me enough to be troubled for my sake, a little, dear? |
36984 | You? |
36984 | You? |
36984 | You? |
36984 | You? |
36984 | Your Majesty, are we to read no longer to- day? |
36984 | Your dream? |
36984 | Your hearing has gotten a good deal worse this year, has n''t it? |
36984 | Your penance, Benvenuta? |
36984 | Your sword? |
36984 | Your_ what_? |
36984 | Youth is the time to be in love, is n''t it? |
36984 | Yuh do n''t want Ma t''heve it, does yuh? |
36984 | Yuh swear yuh wo n''t never tell? |
36984 | Yuh wo n''t never try an''make out I done it next time we run agin each other fur district school- inspector? |
36984 | Yuh''member what yuh done t''Rogers when he did n''t leave yuh paint his bath- house? |
36984 | [_ A good deal startled, he looks at her as if he were about to ask,"How did you know that?" |
36984 | [_ A long pause._] May he...? |
36984 | [_ A look around the room._] Oh, I_ wish_ I''d come over here once in a while? |
36984 | [_ A noise in the room on the right._] Who''s in there making such a noise? |
36984 | [_ Absently he picks up a lily which has fallen to the ground, and repeats._] Why came I here, and why am I Pierrot? |
36984 | [_ Advancing toward the thief and speaking all in one sentence._] What have you taken? |
36984 | [_ After a pause._] Do you know why Luciano killed himself? |
36984 | [_ After a slight hesitation, he sits down again._] W''at y''quarrelin''''bout? |
36984 | [_ After another pause._] An''what would shepherds do in a ghreat city? |
36984 | [_ Almost breaking down._] Joe, why did n''t you tell me? |
36984 | [_ Analytikos sits deep in thought._] Well? |
36984 | [_ And then very intimately to Menelaus._] Where''s the Queen? |
36984 | [_ And then with deep bitterness._] Why did n''t_ he_ marry Helen when we all wanted her? |
36984 | [_ Argumentatively._] And one ca n''t help being in love with people when one_ is_ in love, can one? |
36984 | [_ As a premonition of the truth comes over him._] Where is Shanta? |
36984 | [_ At her silence he turns furiously upon her._] Have you?... |
36984 | [_ Caren opens the door a crack._] Are there any... women? |
36984 | [_ Changing her manner suddenly and rising._] Joe, would n''t you like a cup of tea? |
36984 | [_ Charles accepts one from his beautiful case._] And you, madame? |
36984 | [_ Close to him._] Mother is not seriously ill? |
36984 | [_ Comes on his left, takes hold of his head and kisses him._] Wo n''t he laugh now a little? |
36984 | [_ Coughs nervously._] How? |
36984 | [_ Coughs._] Who are you and what is your business here? |
36984 | [_ Cries out._] What are you going for? |
36984 | [_ Crosses herself._] Have ye forgot the time o''all the year it is? |
36984 | [_ Crosses herself._] VIOLANTE Do they call you Olivia? |
36984 | [_ Doña Laura rises; Don Gonzalo also rises._] What time can it be? |
36984 | [_ Enter Kanada._] Ah, Kanada, how be it with you to- day? |
36984 | [_ Evelyn stamps her foot with rage-- turning away from him._] My dear girl, what_ is_ the matter? |
36984 | [_ Examines the skates._ But could n''t you save them for Eileen? |
36984 | [_ Excitedly._] What is it he thinks he''s goin''to do? |
36984 | [_ Exit Varvára._] Do you play patience here every night? |
36984 | [_ Gives him bread._] Do you want to eat? |
36984 | [_ Glancing sharply at the Mate._] You ai n''t turnin''no sea lawyer, be you, Mr. Slocum? |
36984 | [_ Gloomily._] Who''ll be spokesman over the buyin''? |
36984 | [_ Grasping Madame''s arms, she trembles and sobs._] Oh, how can I ever tell you? |
36984 | [_ Growing a little oratorical._] Why do I do this? |
36984 | [_ Gustav laughs._] What are you laughing at, old man? |
36984 | [_ He becomes conscious of the noise of approaching footsteps and the light of the torches from below._] Who is that? |
36984 | [_ He comes very close to her, and speaks very gently, as if to a child._] You have n''t shown your ring to any one, have you, Anne? |
36984 | [_ He eyes them closely._] Great friends? |
36984 | [_ He gathers his belongings._] What are you running after me for? |
36984 | [_ He gets up._] Do you know how Bret Harte describes the adulteress? |
36984 | [_ He gives her no time to answer._] You''re not twenty, are you? |
36984 | [_ He goes again toward her._] Nine o''clock, then? |
36984 | [_ He goes behind the square table on the left and comes in front of the sofa._] Will you listen to me and obey me? |
36984 | [_ He goes to the telephone._] Hello, Madison Square 7900... Pennsylvania? |
36984 | [_ He hands her a coat and a pair of trousers._] Why should you bother to bring them in? |
36984 | [_ He hands them over._] What train do we take, sir? |
36984 | [_ He leans forward and looks out the French door, then turns to her impatiently._] What are you waiting for? |
36984 | [_ He leans very close to her._] What are you doing now? |
36984 | [_ He mutters phrases from the Torah._] You hear me, Solly? |
36984 | [_ He nods._] Really and truly? |
36984 | [_ He pauses._] Did she inclose the money? |
36984 | [_ He picks up the closed suitcase._] Shall I go now? |
36984 | [_ He places an arm around Paolo''s shoulders._] Are you persuaded that I love you? |
36984 | [_ He salutes the Fool._] Where do you hail from? |
36984 | [_ He shouts to the man on the rock._] How are you feeling? |
36984 | [_ He shouts._] Listen, wo n''t you hurry up and fall? |
36984 | [_ He sits._] You will pay day after to- morrow? |
36984 | [_ He stresses the words with intense irony._] Do you remember the_ last_ time you pulled that trick? |
36984 | [_ He takes the shawl from the Prostitute, and wraps himself and the boy in it._] What? |
36984 | [_ He turns round behind the square table and comes over to Adolf on the right._] Do n''t you mind if she''s out all night? |
36984 | [_ He walks up and down._] After all, what does all this disturbance mean? |
36984 | [_ He whistles three or four more bars of the same refrain._] Like it? |
36984 | [_ Hears a noise; listens attentively._] Are they already returning? |
36984 | [_ Helping Bolling to the chair._] Our heartiest congratulations, eh, Bolling? |
36984 | [_ Holds it up._] Did she have a bird, Mrs. Hale? |
36984 | [_ Hunting._] Joe, what were you and Aunt Harriet arguing about? |
36984 | [_ Hysterically._] I''m an honest man, d''ye hear me? |
36984 | [_ Impatiently._] Why do n''t you answer the door? |
36984 | [_ Joe suddenly sits erect and looks first toward the French door and then toward the window._] I wonder what you will do when I go? |
36984 | [_ Jumps up._] I ask you: do I have to pay that interest to- morrow or not? |
36984 | [_ Kicks his foot against the pans under the sink._] Not much of a housekeeper, would you say, ladies? |
36984 | [_ Lezinsky stops for a moment and lets his eyes rest on the baby- carriage._] Ai n''t it a beautiful, stylish baby- carriage, Solly? |
36984 | [_ Listens to the dogs._] Why are the dogs whining like this to- night? |
36984 | [_ Long silence._] When shall I see you smile, Anna? |
36984 | [_ Looks at Louise._] What''s the matter with madam? |
36984 | [_ Luka goes out._] Well, what can we do? |
36984 | [_ Mario starts._] You know? |
36984 | [_ Mischievously._] But ought_ you_ to throw stones at me? |
36984 | [_ More kindly._] Where was it ye''ve been all o''the time-- the fo''c''s''tle? |
36984 | [_ More quietly._] Do n''t you see what I''m gettin''at? |
36984 | [_ Moves a piece._] Going to have chocolate to- day? |
36984 | [_ Moves a piece._] Is there anything about you in the paper? |
36984 | [_ No response._] So it must be Sister Benvenuta, must it? |
36984 | [_ Pause._] Have n''t you heard recently-- from him? |
36984 | [_ Pause._] Strange, is n''t it? |
36984 | [_ Pause._] Which is it? |
36984 | [_ Pause._] You are n''t going? |
36984 | [_ Pause; he laughs happily._] I say, what am I to call you? |
36984 | [_ Perplexed, to the crowd._] What did he say? |
36984 | [_ Puts the box on the shelf and re- covers it; in doing so makes a slight noise._] PA. What''s that noise? |
36984 | [_ Puts the glasses on the wash stand._] Shall I light the lamp? |
36984 | [_ Putting on her hat viciously._] D''y''think I''m goin''t''stand that kind of a thing? |
36984 | [_ Questioningly._] Will the fairies show thim the way? |
36984 | [_ Reads._]"Anne, my darling--"I say, what does this mean? |
36984 | [_ Relapsing into forgetful eagerness._] Tell me, where, then, is his Olivia now? |
36984 | [_ Seeing the bird- cage._] Has the bird flown? |
36984 | [_ Seth makes no answer._] PA. D''yuh hear? |
36984 | [_ Seth''s smile is his only response._] Pa still owns it, do n''t he? |
36984 | [_ Settling himself to draw._] Where is she, by the way? |
36984 | [_ She angrily tears her handkerchief._] What are you standing there for? |
36984 | [_ She comes over to him._] Have n''t you made up for him to me? |
36984 | [_ She goes to the door at the right, but after looking into the other room, steps back._] You coming with me, Mrs. Hale? |
36984 | [_ She goes toward him in a menacing manner._] Who has been here? |
36984 | [_ She hands Anne an envelope, goes to the door, then stops._] What does he say, Anne? |
36984 | [_ She jumps up and paces about the room._] What am I going to do with myself? |
36984 | [_ She kisses him on the forehead._] There, it''s all right now? |
36984 | [_ She laughs bitterly._] How can you make such a statement? |
36984 | [_ She leans back._] The public immediately asks, Why did the thief take nothing from 2819 Sargent Road? |
36984 | [_ She rushes to take Diane in her arms._] Nanette, what have you done, what have you done? |
36984 | [_ She smiles through her tears._] And are n''t you ashamed? |
36984 | [_ She smiles._] It''s a wonderful thing to inspire such confidence in people? |
36984 | [_ She takes a pencil and little notebook out of her pocket._] May I copy it in my"Harold Notebook"? |
36984 | [_ She taps her foot impatiently._] Well-- well-- will you come? |
36984 | [_ Silence._] Did he lie to me? |
36984 | [_ Slowly and gazing toward the window._] Sounds rather pretty, does n''t it? |
36984 | [_ Smiles._] That is quite new, is it not? |
36984 | [_ Standing up._] I see she goes on calling you brother all the time-- do you always keep up the comedy for the benefit of your two selves? |
36984 | [_ Strokes it._] Do you like me to stroke your hair? |
36984 | [_ Suddenly stopping and leaning forward._] Mrs. Peters? |
36984 | [_ Suddenly, bluntly._] And what will be the effect of all this upon you? |
36984 | [_ Sweetly._] Are you coming to- morrow? |
36984 | [_ Sweetly._] Is that Mr. Fenton? |
36984 | [_ Takes a revolver from the pocket of his coat and examines it._] Got your''n? |
36984 | [_ Takes out snuff box._] Will you have some? |
36984 | [_ The Sister Sacristan carrying the lute and some music, enters from the chapel._] Are all the sisters assembled? |
36984 | [_ Thekla looks contemptuous._] Why you and that husband of yours managed to get downed? |
36984 | [_ Then eagerly._] What do they say? |
36984 | [_ Then to the woman._] Ai n''t they late? |
36984 | [_ There is a pause._] You would n''t be happier telling me all about it? |
36984 | [_ Thoughtfully._] You do n''t think I''m unfair? |
36984 | [_ To Hansen._] Have they had a fight? |
36984 | [_ To Lizzia_] Is there nothing will cure his madness? |
36984 | [_ To Sophie._] Have you packed everything? |
36984 | [_ To the Bastard_]: And your little heir is here also? |
36984 | [_ To the Prostitute._] What do dogs see at night? |
36984 | [_ To the Sheriff._] You can send Frank out for me, ca n''t you? |
36984 | [_ To the Sheriff._] You''re convinced that there was nothing important here-- nothing that would point to any motive? |
36984 | [_ To the reporter._] May I give you a lift back to town? |
36984 | [_ Triumphant._] Why should n''t I say it? |
36984 | [_ Trying to control his chattering teeth-- derisively._] Who d''ye think it were-- the Old Man? |
36984 | [_ Turns to her husband as the door closes._] Yes, Solly? |
36984 | [_ Watching Anne''s face._] You''re not angry, are you, Anne? |
36984 | [_ Whisks out his note- book; amiably to the photographers._] Have you taken any pictures yet, gentlemen? |
36984 | [_ Who has entered._] To do what? |
36984 | [_ With a flash of anger._] Why did n''t you tell me this before? |
36984 | [_ With even greater anxiety._] You did n''t go down by the river? |
36984 | [_ Without stopping for an answer, he crosses the room and starts to remove his hat and coat._] Where''s the sister? |
36984 | [_ Yawns, picks up confetti bowl._] Shall we begin? |
36984 | [_ Yelling._] Do n''t I keep telling you''til there''s not a breath left in my body, that there ai n''t no class here? |
36984 | [_ suspiciously._] What you got t''do with her? |
36984 | _ Always?_[_ Starts forward and looks at him, puzzled._] CECIL[_ quite unconscious_]. |
36984 | _ Do n''t_ you? |
36984 | _ Do_ you go to an office every day? |
36984 | _ I_ told you? |
36984 | _ Other_ girls? |
36984 | _ What?_ SETH. |
36984 | _ Why_ could n''t he have planted an apple tree? |
36984 | _ Won_ her? |
36984 | but how fair he is, Would it be wrong to rouse him with a kiss? |
36984 | do you still remember that once, shortly after our engagement, we lived in this very room, eh? |
36984 | dost thou not recognize thine aged father? |
36984 | in that enchanting strain Days yet unlived, I almost lived again: It almost taught me that I most would know-- Why am I here, and why am I Pierrot? |
36984 | is he coming back? |
36984 | it''s my fault? |
36984 | it''s you, Spiridón? |
36984 | p 1 m 1w WHERE SHALL WE GO? |
36984 | p 1 m 2w LUCK? |
36984 | poor scholar, wast thou never taught A little knowledge serveth less than naught? |
36984 | whatever be this that you''ve got here? |
36984 | when, be it soon or late, What Pierrot ever has escaped his fate? |
36984 | who is Olivia? |
36984 | who is that? |
36984 | you? |